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R Is for Ricochet

R Is for Ricochet

Titel: R Is for Ricochet
Autoren: Sue Grafton
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hasn't had much success. You can pass the paper on to Mattie once you've studied it yourself."
    Henry said, "William, would you sit down? You're giving me a crick in my neck." He left his rocker and took another wineglass from the kitchen cabinet. He poured wine to the brim and passed the glass to me, slopping some liquid on my hand.
    William declined to sit until he'd pulled out my chair. I settled myself with a murmured "Thank you" and then I made a show of running a finger down the column of reference and unit numbers from his doctor's report. "You're in good shape," I remarked as I passed the paper to Mattie.
    "Well, I still have palpitations, but the doctor's adjusting my medication. He says I'm amazing for a man my age."
    "If you're in such terrific health, how come you're off to the urgent care center every other day?" Henry snapped.
    William blinked placidly at Mattie. "My brother's careless with his health and won't acknowledge that some of us are proactive."
    Henry made a snorting sound.
    William cleared his throat. "Well now. On to a new subject since Henry's apparently unable to handle that one. I hope this is not too personal, but Henry mentioned your husband is deceased. Do you mind my asking how he was taken?"
    Henry was clearly exasperated. "You call that a different subject? It's the same one – death and disease. Can't you think of anything else?"
    "I wasn't addressing you," William replied before returning his attention to Mattie. "I hope the topic isn't too painful."
    "Not at this point. Barry died six years ago of heart failure. I believe cardiac ischemia is the term they used. He taught jewelry making at the San Francisco Art Institute. He was a very talented man, though a bit of an eccentric."
    William was nodding. "Cardiac ischemia. I know the term well. From the Greek,
ischein,
meaning 'quench' or 'seize,' combined with
haima,
or 'blood.' A German pathology professor first introduced that term in the mid-1800s. Rudolf Virchow. A remarkable man. What age was your husband?"
    "William,"
Henry sang.
    Mattie smiled. "Really, Henry. I'm not sensitive about this. He died two days shy of his seventieth birthday."
    William winced. "Pity when a man's struck down in his prime. I myself have suffered several episodes of angina, which I've miraculously survived. I was discussing my heart condition with Lewis, just two days ago by phone. You remember our brother, I'm sure."
    "Of course. I hope he and Nell and Charles are all in good health."
    "Excellent," William said. He shifted in his chair, lowering his voice. "What about your husband? Did he have any warning prior to his fatal attack?"
    "He'd been having chest pains, but he refused to see the doctor. Barry was a fatalist. He believed you check out when your time is up regardless what precautions you take. He compared longevity to an alarm clock that God sets the moment you're born. None of us knows when the little bell will ring, but he didn't see the point in trying to second-guess the process. He enjoyed life immensely, I'll say that about him. Most folks in my family don't make it to the age of sixty, and they're miserable every minute, dreading the inevitable."
    "Sixty! Is that right? That's astonishing. Is there a genetic factor in play?"
    "I don't think so. It's a little bit of everything. Cancer, diabetes, kidney failure, chronic pulmonary disease…"
    William put his hands on his chest. I hadn't seen him so happy since he'd had the flu. "COPD. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. The very term brings back memories. I was stricken with a lung condition in my youth -"
    Henry clapped his hands. "Okay, fine. Enough said on that subject. Why don't we eat?"
    He moved to the refrigerator and took out a clear glass bowl piled with coleslaw, which he plunked on the table with rather more force than was absolutely necessary. The chicken he'd fried was piled on a platter on the counter, probably still warm. He placed that in the center of the table with a pair of serving tongs. The squat little crockery pot now sat on the back of the stove, emitting the fragrance of tender beans and bay leaf. He removed serving utensils from a ceramic jug and then took down four dinner plates, which he handed to William, perhaps in hopes of distracting his attention while he brought the rest of the dinner to the table. William set a plate at each place while he quizzed Mattie at length about her mother's death from acute bacterial meningitis.
    Over supper Henry steered
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