Blood Runs Thicker Than Truth by Katy Abel
When a minister runs over one of her parishioners in her car, she is asked to face some difficult truths. Image generated with OpenAI The sky was as dark as a good cabernet and yes, she had been drinking. Not drinking like a fish but swimming through the kitchen after dinner, warm from the wine brought by members of the board who knew her penchant for a merlot with cherry undertones. Afterwards, guests departed, bottles open-mouthed and waiting, she had paused as if there was an actual decision to be made about whether to pour the remnants down the drain. Tossing the question instead of the wine, she drank while gathering plates and goblets and wiping counters. Then she turned off the lights to get ready to head up to the church. It was a ritual everyone enjoyed; dinner at the minister's house followed by the quarterly board meeting in the parish house. The dinner had gone well, Sarah thought. Moroccan chicken, a heaping platter of saffron rice studded with pistachios...