Merrick - Anne Rice [62]
“This suitcase is filled with such objects, isn’t it?” I asked. “These are by no means the most significant of the lot?” I glanced about. “What else is hidden in this attic?”
She shrugged. For the first time she looked hot and uncomfortable under the low roof.
“Come on,” she said politely, “let’s us pack up the suitcase and go down to the kitchen. Tell your people not to open all those boxes, just to move them to where they will be safe. I’ll make you some good coffee. I make the best coffee. I make better coffee than Cold Sandra or Great Nananne. Mr. Talbot, you’re about to faint from the heat, and Mr. Lightner, you’re too worried. No one’s going to break into this house any time ever, and your house has guards all over night and day.”
She rewrapped the axe blade, the idol, and the perforator carefully, then closed the suitcase and snapped its two rusted locks. Now, and only now, did I see the withered old cardboard tag on it listing an airport in Mexico, and the stamps that indicated the suitcase had traveled many miles beyond that.
I held my questions until we had come down into the cooler air of the kitchen. I realized that what she’d said about my failing in the heat above had been perfectly true. I was almost ill.
She set the suitcase down, took off her white pantyhose and her shoes, and turned on a rusted round fan above the refrigerator, which oscillated drowsily, and set to work to make the coffee, as she had said.
Aaron rummaged for sugar, and in the old “ice box,” as she called it, found the pitcher of cream still fresh and quite cold. That didn’t much matter to Merrick, however, because it was milk she wanted for coffee and she heated it to just below a boil.
“This is the way to do it,” she told us both.
At last we were settled at a round oak table, whose white painted surface had been wiped quite clean.
The café au lait was strong and delicious. Five years among the Undead can’t kill the memory. Nothing ever will. I piled the sugar into it, just as she did, and I drank it in deep gulps, believing thoroughly that it was a restorative, and then I sat back in the creaky wooden chair.
All around me, the kitchen was in good order, though a relic of former times. Even the refrigerator was some sort of antique with a humming motor on top of it, beneath the creaking fan. The shelves over the stove and along the walls were covered by glass doors, and I could see all the accouterments of a place where people regularly take their meals. The floor was old linoleum and very clean.
Suddenly, I remembered the suitcase. I jumped and looked about. It was right beside Merrick on the empty chair.
When I looked at Merrick I saw tears in her eyes.
“What is it, darling?” I asked. “Tell me and I’ll do my level best to make it right.”
“It’s just the house and everything that ever happened, Mr. Talbot,” she answered. “Matthew died in this house.”
This was the answer to a rather momentous question, and one which I had not dared to voice. I can’t say I was relieved to hear it, but I couldn’t help but wonder who might lay claim to the treasures which Merrick regarded as her own.
“Don’t you worry about Cold Sandra,” said Merrick, directly to me. “If she was going to come back for these things, she would have come back a long time ago. There was never enough money in the world for Cold Sandra. Matthew really loved her, but he had plenty of money, and that made all the difference in the world.”
“How did he die, darling?” I asked.
“Of a fever from those jungle places. And he’d made us all get all our shots too. I don’t like needles. We got shots for every disease you can imagine. Yet still he came back sick. Some time afterwards, when Cold Sandra was