backwards, and then she turned to look at Mona, who had barely stepped out on the porch.
She looked Mona up and down suddenly, as if something had made an impression on her, and then she froze, looking into Mona’s eyes.
“What is it?” asked Mona.
“You’re pregnant,” said Mary Jane.
“Oh, you’re just saying that because of this shirt or smock or whatever.”
“No, you’re pregnant.”
“Well, yeah,” said Mona. “Sure am.” This girl’s country voice was infectious. Mona cleared her throat. “I mean, everybody knows. Didn’t they tell you? It’s going to be a girl.”
“You think so?” Something was making Mary Jane extremely uneasy. By all rights, she should have enjoyed descending upon Mona and making all kinds of predictions about the baby. Isn’t that what self-proclaimed witches did?
“You get your test results back?” asked Mona. “You have the giant helix?” It was lovely up here in the treetops. Made her want to go down into the garden.
Mary Jane was actually squinting at her, and then her face relaxed a little, the tan skin without a single blemish and the yellow hair resting on her shoulders, full but sleek.
“Yeah, I have the genes all right,” said Mary Jane. “You do too, don’t you?”
Mona nodded. “Did they tell you anything else?”
“That it probably wouldn’t matter, I’d have healthy children, everybody always did in the family, ’cept for one incident about which nobody is willing to talk.”
“Hmmmmm,” said Mona. “I’m still hungry. Let’s go downstairs.”
“Yeah, well, I could eat a tree!”
Mary Jane seemed normal enough by the time they reached the kitchen, chattering about every picture and every item of furniture she saw. Seemed she’d never been in the house before.
“How unspeakably rude that we didn’t invite you,” said Mona. “No, I mean it. We weren’t thinking. Everybody was worried about Rowan that afternoon.”
“I don’t expect fancy invitations from anybody,” said Mary Jane. “But this place is beautiful! Look at these paintings on the walls.”
Mona couldn’t help but take pride in it, the way Michael had refurbished it, and it occurred to her suddenly, as it had upwards of fifty million times in the last week, that this house would someday be hers. Seemed it already was. But she mustn’t presume on that, now that Rowan was OK again.
Was Rowan ever going to be really OK? A flash of memory came back to her, Rowan in that sleek black silk suit, sitting there, looking at her, with the straight dark eyebrows and the big, hard, polished gray eyes.
That Michael was the father of her baby, that she was pregnant with a baby, that this connected her to both of them—these things suddenly jarred her.
Mary Jane lifted one of the curtains in the dining room. “Lace,” she said in a whisper. “Just the finest, isn’t it? Everything here is the best of its kind.”
“Well, I guess that’s true,” said Mona.
“And you, too,” said Mary Jane, “you look like some kind of princess, all dressed in lace. Why, we’re both dressed in lace. I just love it.”
“Thanks,” said Mona, a little flustered. “But why would somebody as pretty as you notice somebody like me?”
“Don’t be crazy,” said Mary Jane, sweeping past her into the kitchen, hips swinging gracefully, high heels clicking grandly. “You’re just a gorgeous girl. I’m pretty. I know I am. But I like to look at other girls who are pretty, always have.”
They sat together at the glass table. Mary Jane examined the plates that Eugenia set out for them, holding hers up to the light.
“Now this is real bone china,” she said. “We got some of this at Fontevrault.”
“Really, you still have those sorts of things down there?”
“Darlin’, you’d be amazed what’s in that attic. Why, there’s silver and china and old curtains and boxes of photographs. You should see all that. That attic’s real dry and warm too. Sealed tight up there. Barbara Ann used to live up there. You know who she was?”
“Yeah, Ancient Evelyn’s mother. And my great-great-grandmother.”
“Mine too!” declared Mary Jane triumphantly. “Isn’t that something.”
“Yep, sure is. Part of the entire Mayfair experience. And you should look at the family trees where it gets all crisscrossed, like if I were to marry Pierce for instance, with whom I share not only that great-great-grandmother, but also a great-grandfather, who also pops up … damn, it’s the hardest thing to keep track of. There comes a point in the life of every Mayfair when you spend about a year drawing family trees everywhere, trying just to keep it clear in your mind