Chapter 23It was just shy of noon when dark voluminous clouds began weaving across the sky like textile being laced through a loom. Winds had started picking up, suggesting another storm was encroaching. Some voices didn’t age; some did. Carmie’s mother’s sounded like centuries-old vellum. The New Jersey accent sounded even more tired. It was as if the joy of life had been syphoned from the woman like gas from an Edsel. I offered condolences, for which she expressed gratitude. “Did you know my daughter long?” “Long enough to recognize that she was a caring and gracious person.” “That’s—that was my Carmelita. . . . How about her husband?” “I didn’t know him as well as I did Carmie.” It was a little white lie, but one that might bring favor and, subsequently, additional information. “

