saw a woman doctor in Atlanta. She ran some tests. We're waiting for the results.'
That was all lies. She knew perfectly well why they could not have children - she had been sterilized.
She had gone to a doctor in Atlanta, but not for fertility testing - she had simply had a routine checkup.
Luke was sick at heart. It was a terrible deception. Why had she lied? He looked at the next paragraph.
This procedure may cause depression at any age, but in your case, having it six weeks before your wedding -
Luke's mouth fell open. There was something terribly wrong here. Elspeth's deception had begun shortly before they got married.
How had she managed it? He could not remember, of course. But he could guess. She could have told him she was having a minor operation. She might even have said vaguely that it was a 'feminine thing'.
He read the whole paragraph.
This procedure may cause depression at any age, but in your case, having it six weeks before your wedding, it was almost inevitable, and you should have returned to your doctor for regular consultations.
Luke's anger subsided as he realized how Elspeth had suffered. He reread the line: "You are underweight, you suffer insomnia, and when I saw you, you had obviously been crying, although you said nothing was wrong.' She had put herself through some kind of personal hell.
But although he pitied her, the fact remained that their marriage had been a lie. Thinking about the house he had just searched, he realized that it did not feel much like a home to him. He was comfortable here in the little study, and he had felt a start of recognition on opening his closet, but the rest of the place presented a picture of married life that was alien to him. He did not care for kitchen appliances and smart modern furniture. He would rather have old rugs and family heirlooms. Most of all, he wanted children - yet children were the very thing she had deliberately denied him. And she had lied about it for four years.
The shock paralysed him. He sat at his desk, staring through the window, while evening fell over the hickory trees in the back yard. How had he let his life go so wrong? He considered what he had learned about himself in the last thirty-six hours, from Elspeth, Billie, Anthony and Bern. 'Had he lost his way slowly and gradually, like a child wandering farther and farther from home? Or was there a turning point, a moment when he had made a bad decision, taken the wrong fork in the road? Was he a weak man, who had drifted into'misfortune for lack of a purpose in life? Or did he have some crucial flaw in his character?
He must be a poor judge of people, he thought He had remained close to Anthony, who had tried to kill him, yet had broken with Bern, who had been a faithful friend. He had quarrelled with Billie and married Elspeth, yet Billie had dropped everything to help him and Elspeth had deceived him.
A large moth bumped into the closed window, and the noise startled Luke out of his reverie. He looked at his watch and was shocked to see that it was past seven. : If he hoped to unravel the mystery of his life, he needed to start with the elusive file. It was not here, so it had to be at Redstone Arsenal. He would turn out the .lights and lock up the house, then he would get the black car out of the garage and drive to the base.
Time was pressing. The launch of the rocket was scheduled for ten-thirty. He had only three hours to find out whether there was a plot to sabotage it Nevertheless, he remained sitting at his desk, staring through the window into the darkened garden, seeing nothing.
7.30 P.M.
One radio transmitter is powerful but short-lived - it will be dead in two weeks. The weaker signal from the second mil last two months.
There were no lights on in Luke's house when Billie drove by. But what did that mean? There were three possibilities. One: the house was empty. Two: Anthony was sitting in the dark, waiting to shoot Luke. Three: Luke - was lying in a pool of blood, dead. The uncertainty made her crazy with fear.
She had screwed up royally, maybe fatally. A few hours ago, she had been well placed to warn Luke and