Charles
Another "informal chat" with the senator.
Charles stifled a yawn. He had taken Julie out to Montauk for the long weekend—Friday, Saturday, and Sunday at the beach. The purely American holiday held a special significance for him, allowing him to celebrate his own personal independence from England. The sunburn he'd developed on the beach—and he deserved it for leaving his shirt off most of yesterday—had kept him awake half the night.
"By the way," the senator said as Charles got up to leave, "I heard a strange story over the weekend. Seems that sometime last month a woman in Monroe with a lifelong history of a clubbed left foot was accosted by a man who chased her, knocked her down, and straightened out her foot right there on the side of the road."
Charles rolled his eyes. The man never tired of the subject! He didn't want to waste more time here. He was to meet Sylvia shortly when she dropped Jeffy off for a few days of testing. He was looking forward to seeing her. "An apocryphal tale if I ever heard one. Which one of the saints was it? Anthony? Bartholomew?"
The senator smiled. "No. Actually, the description she gave matches Dr. Alan Buhner quite closely."
Bulmer again! The senator seemed to be developing an obsession with the man. Between Sylvia and the senator, every conversation seemed to turn to Alan Bulmer lately. Charles had met him only once, but he was getting bloody sick of hearing about him.
"Just let me guess," Charles said before Senator McCready could go on. "Her supposedly deformed foot is now bloody perfect. Right?"
The senator nodded. "Right. Only 'supposed' isn't quite accurate. I understand the woman's deformity has been common knowledge for many years. There's no evidence of it now."
Charles smirked at the senator's gullibility. "Got any before-and-after X rays?"
"None that can be found. Apparently the woman suffered from an unfortunate combination of poverty and ignorance— she never sought help for it."
"How convenient," Charles said with a laugh.
"Would X rays convince you?"
"Not likely. Especially not old ones. They could be of someone else's foot."
It was the senator's turn to laugh, and there seemed to be genuine good humor in the sound.
"That's what I like about you, Charles! You accept nothing at face value. You trust no one! I take great comfort in knowing that if you believe in something, it's certainly safe for me to do the same."
"I've told you before, Senator—I don't believe in things. I either know something or I don't. Belief is a euphemism for ignorance combined with sloppy thinking."
"You've got to believe in something sometime."
"You are free to believe that if you wish, Senator. I bloody well don't."
Deliver us all from men who "believe," Charles thought as he walked out into the hall.
Marnie, his secretary, held up a yellow slip of paper as he walked into his office.
"Mrs. Nash is at the front desk."
Charles' spirits lifted. Sylvia had been so bloody preoccupied lately, she seemed to have no time left for him. He knew she was worried about Jeffy, but there seemed to be more to it than that.
Well, she was here now and that offered an opportunity to revive the relationship. Perhaps it wasn't going to be a Blue Monday after all.