him. At least thirty. Though who am I to say? Fredâs that much older than I am.
Her attempt to be rational wasnât working. The difference between her early forties and Fredâs early fifties hardly seemed to matter, but at twenty-one, Andrew was still a college student and her baby. She was fighting an uphill battle to try to remember that he was an adult.
âI knew her mother,â Annie said. âShe looks just like her.â
âKnew?â
âShe died young. Hit by a truck. Those girls had to finish growing up by themselves. Their father was never much use. Then he died, too.â
How much difference had that made in how Sylvia turned out? Joan had been a grown woman by the time her own parents died. Young, but grown. âAnd she has a sister?â
âTwo or three. Theyâve scattered. Sylviaâs pretty much on her own now. I wonder if sheâll lose her job over this business.â
âShe said she had vacation time coming.â
âIf they honor it,â Annie said.
âShe works at Fulford. Why wouldnât they honor it?â
âYou never know. People can always find an excuse to let you go.â
âIf she loses her job, the orchestra might lose her for good.â A new worry, but she banished it. The orchestra was her other job. It wasnât fair to the center to let it intrude here. âAnything happening here, Annie?â
Annie tucked her knitting into its bag and yielded Joanâs desk chair. She waved at the mail. âA few phone messages, but nothing to worry about. You want me to put your name in the pot for lunch?â The center was a senior nutrition site, which served low-cost hot meals at noon. Annie called them âeats for old folks,â but anyone was welcome to eat there, and Joan did from time to time, especially during the cold winter months.
âYes, please.â She hadnât asked Andrew to fix her a sandwich while he was raiding the kitchen for Sylvia, and the elderly Fuji apple in her desk drawer wouldnât see her through the day. Odds were good she wouldnât manage supper before rehearsal in the evening, either.
Routine as it was, the rest of the morning flew by. Long before lunchtime, the meat loaf and apple pie were calling to Joanâs nose. She made herself take part in the centerâs late-morning exercise class to make up for the morning walk sheâd missed, but also to keep herself from drooling over the papers on her desk.
When the time finally came, Sylvia Purcell was the topic of those gathered at the long folding tables.
âI remember how we loved those woods when we were children,â one man said. âWe tramped through them and thought we were great outdoorsmen.â
âAnd what are we going to breathe when they cut down all the trees, Iâd like to know,â said his wife. âSomeone ought to give that girl in the tree a medal.â
âHer father would split a gut if he knew she was pulling such a dumb stunt,â a second man said.
âI think her mother would get a kick out of it,â said the woman next to him. âShe was big on environmental causes. That woman had more causes than anyone else I know.â
âShe cared about poor people,â Annie said. âAnd this project theyâre fighting is for poor people.â
âYes,â said Mabel Dunn. âLike Cindy Thickstun. You know Cindy, and her daughter. The daughter has four little kids and barely makes ends meet. Since her husband took off, sheâs been living with her mom. That makes six people in Cindyâs little two-bedroom house. Cindyâs sleeping on the sofa, and her grandchildren are really getting on her nerves, day after day, all cramped like that. She canât pay their rent, and sheâs desperate to move them into decent housing her daughter can afford. I know theyâre on the list for those apartments. Thatâs who Miss