"You needed Daniel to escape from prison for motivation? What's this all about?" Linda set the Bible down, open. Samantha kept staring at the pencil notes in the margins. They were dense as bees clustered in a hive.
"You remember that time you were in the hospital?"
"Of course." In a soft voice. The woman was gazing steadily at Sam. Wary.
The spring before the Croyton murders Pell had told Sam he was serious about retreating to the wilderness. But he wanted to increase the size of the Family first.
"I want a son," Pell had announced with all the bluntness of a medieval king bent on heirs. A month later Linda was pregnant.
And a month after that she'd miscarried. Their absence of insurance relegated them to a line at a lower-tier hospital in the barrio, frequented by pickers and illegals. The resulting infection led to a hysterectomy. Linda was devastated; she'd always wanted children. She'd told Sam often that she was meant to be a mother, and, aware of how badly her parents had raised her, she knew how to excel at the role.
"Why are you bringing this up now?"
Sam picked up a cup filled with tepid tea. "Because it wasn't supposed to be you who got pregnant. It was supposed to be me."
"You?"
Sam nodded. "He came to me first."
"He did?"
Tears stung Sam's eyes. "I just couldn't go through with it. I couldn't have his baby. If I did he'd have control over me for the rest of my life." No point in holding back, Sam reflected. She gazed at the table and said, "So I lied. I said you weren't sure you wanted to stay in the Family. Ever since Rebecca joined, you were thinking about leaving."
"You what?"
"I know. . . ." She wiped her face. "I'm sorry. I told him that if you had his baby it'd show how much he wanted you to stay."
Linda blinked. She looked around the room, picked up and rubbed the cover of the holy book.
Sam continued, "And now you can't have children at all. I took them away from you. I had to choose between you and me, and I chose me."
Linda stared at a bad picture in a nice frame. "Why are you telling me this now?"
"Guilt, I guess. Shame."
"So this confession then, that's about you too, right?"
"No, it's about us. All of us. . . ."
"Us?"
"All right, Rebecca's a bitch." The word felt alien in her mouth. She couldn't remember the last time she'd used it. "She doesn't think before she says things. But she was right, Linda. None of us're leading normal lives. Rebecca should have a gallery and be married to some sexy painter and be flying around the world. But she's jumping from older man to older man--we know why now. And you should have a real life, get married, adopt kids, a ton, and spoil 'em like crazy. Not spend your time in soup kitchens and caring for children you see for two months and never again. And maybe you could even give your dad and mom a call. . . . No, Linda, it isn't a rich life you're living. And you're miserable. You know you are. You're hiding behind that." A nod at the Bible. "And me?" She laughed. "Well, I'm hiding even deeper than you are."
Sam rose and sat next to Linda, who leaned away. "The escape, Daniel coming back like this . . . it's a chance for us to fix things. Look, here we are! The three of us in a room together again. We can help each other."
"And what about now?"
Sam wiped her face. "Now?"
"Do you have children? You haven't told us a thing about your mysterious life."
A nod. "I have a son."
"What's his name?"
"My--?"
"What's his name?"