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Authors: Christina Schwarz

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BOOK: All Is Vanity
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These questions! I wanted to throw my hands up to block them. Of course, this last was perfectly reasonable. I would ask it, if someone told me she was writing a novel.

For a second or two I made divots in my shrimp risotto, as I summoned my descriptive and analytical skills. “Well, there’s a guy, a man,” I began, “who was in Vietnam. And he’s home now. In southern California.”

“Margaret’s from L.A.,” Ted put in.

“Well, Glendale, really,” I said, relieved to be on firmer ground. “More Middle America on the West Coast.”

“So what happens?” slept-in-hair woman asked.

“Well, he comes home,” I continued. “Actually, he is home, already. When the novel starts. In southern California.”

“There are flashbacks to the war,” Ted tried again, helpfully.

“But what happens?” slept-in-hair asked again, forking a generous helping of rice and shrimp into her mouth.

“Well, he seems to be doing a lot of cooking,” I said. “Maybe he should try making risotto.” I laughed to show this was a joke. No one joined in, not even Ted. I couldn’t blame them. I wasn’t even sure how it was funny myself. “And he shops for groceries. To support the cooking.” I was losing them. The host was refilling
wine glasses. The hostess was heading for the kitchen. “I guess it’s really about aimlessness in post-Vietnam America,” I ventured in desperation.

“Oh, that’s interesting,” Zachary said. “Would you say that the seventies were aimless? I’d say they were full of purpose.”

“Misguided purpose,” someone said. There was general laughter and for a few blessed moments discussion detoured into the reintroduction of the crocheted vest, but they were not through with me yet.

“Where have your stories been published?” asked the other easy chair woman, who was, I suddenly remembered with acute embarrassment, an editor at the
Paris Review
.

“I’ve never,” I said, glancing apologetically at Ted, “been published.”

“Oh, well,” Sally said cheerfully, “you know Emily Dickinson never got published!” She took a swig of her wine, as if toasting the prospect of a similar fate for me.

If at times during my previous career I’d felt I’d been living some of the more pitiful moments of
Good-bye, Mr. Chips
, this clearly was
Lord of the Flies
, and I was Piggy.

Over dessert, someone complimented Sally on her
New York Times
profile, and she launched into a story about the photographer’s obsession with finding backgrounds that would provide strong contrast to her clothes. She revealed that one photo had, in fact, been taken in the bathroom. I could not fault Sally Sternforth. She had not, after all, written a multiple-prize-winning book simply to spite me. Yet, she had sized me up and satisfied herself that I was nowhere near her stature, and for that I gave myself permission to wish that the tarte Tatin would give her heartburn.

“I just never imagined,” Sally concluded, beaming, “that anything like this would happen before I was forty.”

As we walked home along those same East Village blocks that had made me feel like a true writer only a week before, the first fall breeze rose off the East River and swept the stray food wrappers and pages of
The Village Voice
toward the gutters. I shivered.

“What kind of writer would want that kind of attention?” Ted asked loyally, putting his arm around me. A man was peeing in the middle of St. Marks Place. I thought longingly of Washington, D.C., a place where people’s pictures were taken in their bathrooms only when they were caught in the midst of criminal or compromising activity.

On Ninth Street, Ted paused to riffle through a stack of magazines waiting on the curb for the next morning’s recycling pickup, and I sounded my depths. Was Sally’s my idea of success? Was I as arrogant as she, believing it was only a matter of time and a judiciously placed call from my publicist before the world fell at my feet? Such a person deserved to be struck down and that Sally had been rewarded was simply a prime example of the way society actually worked, not a lesson to guide the course of my own life.

A professional magazine scavenger had swooped up on his bike and was trying to trade last month’s
Architectural Digest
for the current
Vogue
Ted had just picked up. I shook my head.
Architectural Digests
were thick on the ground; we’d already read it.

At home, I flipped my laptop open, slipped off my shoes, and drew my feet under me in my traditional writing position.

“You’re not going to work now, are you?” Ted protested.

“I just had an idea,” I said, “on the way home.”

I did not have an idea. I wanted to rail to Letty about my disgrace. When I accessed my e-mail, however, I saw that she had beaten me to the punch.

Margaret

Well, now I hate our house. Four hours ago it was fine, maybe a little cramped, certainly not architecturally distinctive, but fine. Now it shames me, every bit of it
.

“But what about those curtains?” you’ll protest, because you are my friend. Those curtains you made for the living room with the aqua-and-yellow vintage material from Fabric and Foam? “Shabby,” I will say to you. “And two of them are crooked.” “What about the mint green Formica kitchen counters with the silver stars and moons and asteroids? You chose this house above all the other nondescript boxes in Beverly-wood because of that Formica,” you will say to me. And I will say to you—“Tacky.”

Face it, Margaret, 23 Hummingbird Lane is a starter house, and anyone living in a starter house this far into the race is a loser
.

We went to a party tonight as part of the vetting process for this job Michael may or may not want. (He’s decided, at least, to be vetted.) The hosts were some people in Sherman Oaks—she does museum development; he’s in the industry—some kind of studio executive—anyway, something I have no concrete concept of
.

It’s not that I’ve never been in a nice house before. We grew up in nice houses, didn’t we? Not as nice as this house in Sherman Oaks, but still, decent-sized with a good scale to the rooms and some attention to detail. That my parents’ house is nicer than mine never bothered me, though. That’s a different generation. Everyone knows housing is more
expensive now. Even that people only ten or even five years older than we are have nicer houses never bothered me. We would catch up, I thought, when Michael got tenure
.

These people—Zoe and Brad—they’re younger, Margaret. They’re younger and they have a better house. Not just better. It’s so vastly superior that the two structures should not even be classified as the same species
.

Their house, for instance, is built into the canyon and has a redwood deck from which you overlook the Valley—an ocean of lights like iridescent plankton. Our house has a cement slab with a clear view of 24 Hummingbird Lane, a beige ranch with a dominant garage door. Their house has an entry area, a formal dining room, a family room, a Sub-Zero refrigerator, and a blue enamel Viking oven. We have Sears appliances, a dining el, and no version at all of the rest of that stuff
.

“Stuff!” you say disdainfully. “Why should you care about stuff?” And you’re right. It’s not the stuff so much as the graciousness that seems to go with it, the careless way Zoe stuck the knife in the marinated goat cheese, the unstudied fan of green cocktail napkins on the oak buffet, Brad’s generous hand with the single malt, the cleanliness of their infant, Hannah, in her pale pink Baby Guess sleeper
.

If I were the kind of person that lived in that house, I wouldn’t have painted my toenails in the car on the way to the party; I would not have told my babysitter to microwave frozen enchiladas for my children’s dinner; I would not have hemmed my trousers with Scotch tape. I would be serene; I would be respectable; I would be a better Letty
.

You scoff. Yes, I can hear you scoffing away. But you have to agree that surroundings are important. If you feel sunnier in a bright room than in a murky one, wouldn’t it follow that in a spacious, well-organized house, you’d feel generous and in control?

It’s not just that, though. I admit that the reason I most hate my
house now is that if Michael takes this job, we’ll have to invite Zoe and Brad into it. And then they will see that we are not as good as they are. “That’s not true,” you say. I know. I know. But they’ll think it anyway; you know they will. There will be a supercilious smile behind their eyes as they admire the “creative” way I’ve converted footlockers into end tables and the “artsy” look of our fabric-draped couch and the fact that I’ve produced sushi and grapefruit Campari granité in a kitchen without counter space. As they drive up Beverly Glen, they will talk about how warm Michael is and how kind I am, and then they will say, “Yes, it’s too bad.” She will incline her head lovingly toward him and he will give the varnished wooden stick shift of his luxury coupe a fond caress, and they both will feel relieved that they each chose to marry someone perhaps a little less warm and a little less kind, but infinitely more at home with high-end appliances
.

Your green friend
,

L

I shared with Letty the benefits of my own insights that evening, my fingers sprightly on the keyboard.

Letty

Do not doubt yourself! Brad and Zoe will doubtless be fighting for custody of Baby Guessed Hannah when he discovers she can’t do a thing with a footlocker and she realizes he loves his car more than his wife. I do agree, however, that surroundings are important, and I’m sure you would feel better in a better house—although you would not be better, since you already are the best Letty there is. Just wondering—if Michael takes the job, wouldn’t you be able to move into a house that more closely reflects the true Letty?

I continued with a two-page account of my own humiliation and determination to seek revenge, until Ted begged me to come to bed.

“It’s going well, huh?” he asked, holding the blanket open for me. For the first time in a month, the night was quiet, free of the air conditioner’s roar, and we needed more than a sheet.

“I hope so,” I said. Tomorrow, I’d decided, I would read all that I had written that summer. I would bravely lay out my pages and pull my story from them. After all, I’d filled two legal pads in the library, not to mention the twenty or so pages I’d generated during odd hours at home. Somewhere among all those words, the core of a really fine novel lurked, a piece of writing better, more daring, more moving, more socially relevant, than anything someone as insensitive and attention-hungry as Sally Sternforth could possibly have written.

“I bet you never expected anything like this would happen to you before you were forty,” Ted whispered, pulling me toward him.

CHAPTER 6
Margaret

AT TEN O’CLOCK THE FOLLOWING MONDAY
I placed before me on the false wood grain of the library table everything I’d written all through July and August. Having matured over the summer, and thus no longer believing that any sentence I constructed was necessarily publishable, I had purchased a set of multihued highlighters to mark the “good” (orange), the “passable” (blue), and the “needs work!” (green).

I expected, in fact, that entire paragraphs might be unsalvageable and so deserve no highlighting at all. I warned myself not to let this upset me. I did not, after all, aspire to be one of those writers who get by on brilliant prose style alone. I was attempting to capture the essence of a man who’d been through America’s most
reviled war, a man who’d suffered cruel self-revelations when called upon to give his all, a man who’d returned to an unwelcoming country, but was getting on with his life all the same. This, I reminded myself, would certainly take several drafts.

“Getting On,” I scribbled in the top margin of the first page. It might be a good title, suggesting as it did the sort of colorless plodding I had come to see as Robert’s chief characteristic.

Simon smiled at me encouragingly before bending his head to his page. This would be one of our last days together and we planned to have a real lunch to lament his going and to celebrate the reason for it. He’d been offered a job as editor in chief of a new magazine called
In Your Dreams
, dedicated to publishing the rambling stories, interesting only to those who personally dreamed them, with which people bored their analysts.

BOOK: All Is Vanity
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