175
nose tickled. He tried to ignore it and failed, convulsing in a huge sneeze.
“Bad spirits,” intoned Madame Flaubert.
Now that his eyes were open to the dim light, he could see her fantastic draperies in all their garishness; purples, reds, oranges, a flowered fringed shawl wrapped around those red tresses. Her half-closed eyes glittered at him as she pretended, and he was sure it was pretense, to commune with whatever mediums communed with. He didn’t know. He was a rational, well-educated Fleet officer. He’d had nothing to do with superstitions since his childhood, when he and a friend had convinced themselves that a drop of each one’s blood on a rock made it magic.
“May they fly away, the bad spirits, may they leave him safe and free ...”
Madame Flaubert went on in this vein for awhile longer as Ford wondered what courtesy required. His aunt, as before, looked completely miserable, sitting stiffly on the edge of her chair and staring at him. He wanted to reassure her, but couldn’t think how. He felt like a dirty wet rag someone had wiped up a bar with. The pungent smoke of some sort of a floral incense blurred his vision and made his eyes water. Finally Madame Flaubert ran down and simply sat, head thrown back. After a long, dramatic pause, she sighed, rolled her head around as if to ease a stiff neck and stood.
“Coming, Quesada?”
“No ... I think I’ll sit with him a bit.”
“You shouldn’t. He needs to soak in the healing rays.”
Madame Flaubert’s face loomed over his. She had her lapdog in hand and it drooled onto him. He shuddered. But she turned away and waddled slowly out of his cabin. His great-aunt simply looked at him.
Ford cleared his throat, more noisily than he could have wished, and said, “I’m sorry, Aunt Quesada . . . this is not what I had in mind.”
She shook her head. “Of course not. I simply do not understand.”
“What?”
176
“Why Seraphine is so convinced you’re dangerous to me. Of course you didn’t really come just to visit. I knew that. But I’ve always been a good judge of men, young or old, and I cannot believe you mean me harm.”
“I don’t.” His voice wavered, and he struggled to get it under control. “I don’t mean you any harm. Why would I?”