Wedding Bell Blues (Watts) - страница 106

was one, too.”

With a shaking hand, Lily set down her cup. “You...knew?”

Big Ben smiled. “Honey, just ’cause we live in a little-bitty town in Georgia don’t mean we’restupid. Benny Jack never cared nothin’ ’bout girls, and you know what they say: A tiger don’t change hisstripes.”

“So you were going to help me keep Mimi even though you knew I was a lesbian?”


Jeanie shrugged. “Don’t see why not. You’re a good mama.”

“And besides,” Big Ben said, “I took a real dislike to them Maycombs. Never could stand peoplewho meddle around in their grown children’s affairs. After your younguns is out of your house, what theydo is their bizness.”

Ben was mute again, but Lily could tell it was a different kind of muteness from before — amuteness that came from the realization that in all his years, he had never given his parents enough creditfor being decent, intelligent human beings.

“Well, I’m very touched by your support,” Lily said, “but no matter how supportive you are, itwon’t do us a bit of good if Sheila and Tracee go blabbing about us all over town.”

“I wouldn’t worry about Sheila and Tracee,” Big Ben said. “I took care of them.”

Lily thought of all those stuffed hunting trophies that littered the McGilly house. “You didn’t ...

shoot them, did you?”

Big Ben let out a big belly laugh and slapped his thigh. “Naw, honey, I didn’t shoot ’em. ’Course,I’d like the sight of my bank book a little better if I had shot ’em. I bought ’em off ... it was the easiestthing in the world. You give ’em a little money to buy somethin’ shiny with, and they’ll shut right up.

They’re no better than magpies, those women. I went to the safe in the house and peeled ’em each off fivethousand-dollar bills — pocket change was all it was. I told ’em if they breathed a word of what they seenat your house, that’d be the last of my money they’d ever see.”

Ben shook his head in wonder, and Lily rose to kiss Big Ben and Jeanie. “You’re the best father-and mother-in-law a lesbian in a sham marriage ever had.”

The doorbell rang before Lily had a chance to sit down. She opened the door to see GrannyMcGilly, holding the sleeping Mimi in her arms.

“I took her to the playground over in Callahan and ran her some,” Granny said. “Once the carstarted moving, she went out like a light.”

Lily took Mimi from Granny McGilly and held her close. The little girl smelled of sunshine andsleep, and Lily inhaled deeply.

The courtroom of the Faulkner County Courthouse did not have the polished wood sheen ofcourtrooms on TV shows. The once-white walls were dingy, and Lily, Ben, and Buzz Dobson were seated