“Look it up,” I told him. “Please.”

An older woman stepped out from the ring of guests at the edge of the room then.

Eleanor Brooks.

Silver-haired now but unmistakable. One of my father’s oldest friends. She had known him since before he married my mother, before I was born, back when he still lived in the little split-level near Bloomfield and thought his whole life would be something simpler.

She looked at me first, long and searching, and then at my mother.

“Linda,” she said coolly, “you told me your daughter was unemployed and refused to take your calls.”

A crack of noise went through the room.

My mother said nothing.

“Mrs. Brooks,” I said, nodding to her. “It’s good to see you.”

Her face softened. “Thea. You look… well.”

“I am.”

Her eyes flicked to the papers. “It seems I was given a very different impression.”

I turned back to my mother.

“You told them I couldn’t survive on my own,” I said. “You told them I was unstable, irresponsible, practically homeless.”

“That’s not exactly what I said—”

“No?” I asked. “Then what did you say? Since you haven’t spoken to me in ten years.”