Read Death Wears a Beauty Mask and Other Stories Online
Authors: Mary Higgins Clark
This morning, as she studied her husband, Sunday thought back
over the months they had spent together, days that until this morning had remained almost carefree. Now, seeing the genuine concern in Henry's eyes, she covered his hand with hers. “You're worried about Tommy. I can tell. What can we do to help him?”
“Not very much, I'm afraid. I'll certainly check to make sure the defense lawyer he has hired is up to the task, but no matter who he gets to represent him, the prospects look bleak. Think about it. It's a particularly vicious crime, and when you look at the circumstances it's hard not to assume that Tom did it. The woman was shot three times, with Tommy's pistol, in Tommy's library, right after he told people how upset he was that she had broken up with him.”
Sunday picked up one of the papers and examined the picture of a beaming Thomas Shipman, his arm around the dazzling thirty-year-old who had helped to dry his tears following his wife's death. “How old is Tommy?” Sunday asked.
“I'm not sure. Sixty-five, I'd guess, give or take a year.”
They both studied the photograph. Tommy was a trim, lean man, with thinning gray hair and a scholarly face. In contrast, Arabella Young's wildly teased hair framed a boldly pretty face, and her body possessed the kind of curves found on
Playboy
covers.
“A May-December relationship if I ever saw one,” Sunday commented.
“They probably say that about us,” Henry said lightly, forcing a smile.
“Oh, Henry, be quiet,” Sunday said. Then she took his hand. “And don't try to pretend that you aren't really upset. We may still be newlyweds, but I know you too well already to be fooled.”
“You're right, I am worried,” Henry said quietly. “When I think back over the past few years, I can't imagine myself sitting in the Oval Office without Tommy at my side. I'd only had one term in the Senate before becoming president and in so many ways I was still very green. Thanks to him I weathered those first months without
falling on my face. When I was all set to have it out with the Soviets, Tommyâin his calm, deliberate wayâshowed me how wrong I'd be to force a confrontation but then publicly managed to convey the impression that he was only a sounding board for my own decision. Tommy is a true statesman, but more to the point, he is a gentleman, through and through. He's honest, he's smart, he's loyal.”
“But surely he's also a man who must have been aware that people were joking about his relationship with Arabella and just how smitten he was with her? Then when she finally wanted out, he lost it,” Sunday observed. “That's pretty much the way you see it, isn't it?”
Henry sighed. “Perhaps. Temporary insanity? It's possible.” He lifted his breakfast tray and put it on the night table. “Nevertheless, he was always there for me, and I'm going to be there for him. He's been allowed to post bond. I'm going to see him.”
Sunday quickly shoved her tray aside, barely managing to catch her half-empty coffee cup before it spilled onto the quilt. “I'm coming too,” she said. “Just give me ten minutes in the Jacuzzi and I'll be ready.”
Henry watched his wife's long legs as she slid out of bed. “The Jacuzzi. What a splendid idea,” he said enthusiastically. “I'll join you.”
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Thomas Acker Shipman had tried to ignore the army of media camped outside, near his driveway. When he and his lawyer pulled up in front of his house, he had simply stared straight ahead and barged his way from the car to the house, desperately trying not to hear the roar of questions hurled at him as he passed. Once inside, however, the events of the day finally hit him, and he visibly slumped. “I think a scotch may be in order,” he said quietly.
His attorney, Leonard Hart, looked at him sympathetically. “I'd say you deserve one,” he said. “But first, let me once again reassure you that if you insist, we'll go ahead with a plea bargain, but I'm
compelled to once more point out to you that we could put together a very strong insanity defense, and I wish you'd agree to go to trial. The situation is so clear that any jury could understand: you went through the agony of losing a beloved wife, and on the rebound you fell in love with an attractive young woman who at first accepted many gifts from you, then spurned you. It is a classic story, and one that I feel confident would be received sympathetically when coupled with a temporary insanity plea.”
As he spoke, Hart's voice became increasingly passionate, as though he were addressing a jury: “You asked her to come here and talk it over, but she taunted you and an argument ensued. Suddenly, you lost your head, and in a blinding rage so intense that you can't even remember the details, you shot her. The gun normally was kept locked away, but this evening you had it out because you had been so upset that you actually had entertained thoughts of killing yourself.”
The lawyer paused in his presentation, and in the moment of silence the former secretary of state stared up at him, a puzzled look on his face. “Is that actually how you see it?” he asked.
Hart seemed surprised at the question. “Why, yes, of course,” he replied. “There are a few details we have to iron out yet, a few things that I'm not completely clear on. For example, we'll have to explain how you could simply leave Miss Young bleeding on the floor and go up to bed, where you slept so soundly that you didn't even hear your housekeeper's scream when she discovered the body the next morning. Based on what I know, though, I would think that at the trial we would contend that you were in a state of shock.”
“Would you?” Shipman asked wearily. “But I wasn't in shock. In fact, after I had that drink, I just seemed to start floating. I can barely remember what Arabella and I said to each other, never mind recalling actually shooting her.”
A pained look crossed the lawyer's face. “I think, Tom, that I must beg you not to make statements like that to anyone. Will you
promise me, please? And may I also suggest that certainly for the foreseeable future you go easy on the scotch; obviously it isn't agreeing with you.”
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Thomas Shipman stood behind the drapes as he peered through the window, watching as his rotund attorney attempted to fend off a charge by the media. Rather like seeing the lions released on a solitary Christian, he thought. Only in this case, it wasn't Attorney Hart's blood they were after. It was his own. Unfortunately, he had no taste for martyrdom.
Fortunately, he had been able to reach his housekeeper, Lillian West, in time to tell her to stay home today. He had known last evening, when the indictment was handed down, that television cameras would be camped outside his house, to witness and record every step of his leaving in handcuffs, followed by the arraignment, the fingerprinting, the plea of innocence, and then this morning's less-than-triumphal return home. No, getting into his house today had been like running the gauntlet; he didn't want his housekeeper to be subjected to that too.
He did miss having someone around, though. The house felt too quiet, and lonely. Engulfed by memories, his mind was drawn back to the day he and Constance had bought the place, some thirty years ago. They had driven up from Manhattan to have lunch at the Bird and Bottle near Bear Mountain, then had taken a leisurely drive back to the city. Impulsively, they had decided to detour through the lovely residential streets in Tarrytown, and it was then that they came across the
FOR SALE
sign in front of this turn-of-the-century house overlooking the Hudson River and the Palisades.
And for the next twenty-eight years, two months, and ten days, we lived here in a state of happily ever after, Shipman thought. “Oh, Constance, if only we could have had twenty-eight more,” he said
quietly as he headed toward the kitchen, having decided on coffee instead of scotch as the drink he needed.
This house had been a special place for them. Even when he served as secretary of state and had to travel so much of the time, they managed to have occasional weekends together here, and always it was a kind of restorative for the soul. And then one morning two years ago, Constance had said, “Tom, I don't feel so well.” And a moment later she was gone.
Working twenty-hour days had helped him numb the pain somewhat. Thank God I had the job to distract me, he thought, smiling to himself as he recalled the nickname the press had given him, “The Flying Secretary.” But I not only kept busy; Henry and I also managed to do some good. We left Washington and the country in better shape than it's been in for years.
Reaching the kitchen, he carefully measured out enough coffee for four cups and then did the same with the water. See, I can take care of myself, he thought. Too bad I didn't do more of it after Constance died. But then Arabella entered the scene. So ready with comfort, so alluring. And now, so dead.
He thought back to the evening, two days ago. What had they said to each other in the library? He vaguely remembered becoming angry. But could he actually have been angry enough to carry out such a terrible act of violence? And how could he possibly have left her bleeding on the library floor while he stumbled up to bed? He shook his head. It just didn't make sense.
The phone rang, but Shipman only stared at it. When the ringing stopped, he took the receiver off the hook and laid it on the counter.
When the coffee was ready, he poured a cup and with slightly trembling fingers carried it into the living room. Normally he would have settled in his big leather chair in the library, but not today. Now he wondered if he would ever be able to enter that room again.
Just as he was getting settled, he heard shouting from outside. He knew the media were still encamped on his street, but he couldn't imagine the cause of such a racket. Yet before he even pulled back the drapes far enough to allow him to peer outside, he had guessed what had caused the furor.
The former president of the United States had arrived on the scene, to offer friendship and comfort.
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The Secret Service personnel tried valiantly to clear a path for the Britlands as they forged their way through the crowd of reporters and cameramen. With his arm protectively around his wife, Henry paused, indicating his willingness to offer at least a cursory statement: “As always in this great country, a man is innocent until proven guilty. Thomas Shipman was a truly great secretary of state and remains a close friend. Sunday and I are here today in friendship.”
Having made his statement, the former president turned and headed toward the porch, ignoring the barrage of questions the reporters hurled at him. Just as they reached the top step leading to the porch, Tom Shipman unlocked and opened the front door, and his visitors glided inside without further incident.
It was only when the door had closed behind the Britlands, and he felt himself enclosed in a firm and reassuring bear hug, that Thomas Shipman began to sob.
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Sensing that the two men needed some time to talk privately, Sunday headed to the kitchen, insisting against Shipman's protest that she prepare lunch for the three of them. The former secretary kept saying that he could call in his housekeeper, but Sunday insisted that he leave everything to her. “You'll feel a lot better when you have
something in your stomach, Tom,” she said. “You guys say your hellos and then come join me. I'm sure you must have everything I need to make an omelet. It'll be ready in just a few minutes.”
Shipman, in fact, quickly regained his composure. Somehow just Henry Britland's presence in his home gave him the sense, at least for the moment, that he could handle whatever it was that he would have to face. They went to the kitchen, finding Sunday already at work on the omelet. Her brisk, sure movements at the chopping board brought back for Shipman a recent memory of Palm Beach, and of watching someone else prepare a salad, while he dreamed of a future that now could never be.
Glancing out the window, he realized suddenly that the shade was raised, and that if somebody managed to sneak around to the back of the house, there would be a perfect opportunity to snap a candid photo of the three of them. Swiftly, he moved across the room and lowered the shade.
He turned back toward Henry and Sunday and smiled sadly at the two of them. “You know, I recently got talked into putting an electronic setup on the drapes in all the other rooms, something that would let me close them either by a timer or by a mere click of the control. I never thought I'd need that in here, though. I know almost nothing about cooking, and Arabella wasn't exactly the Betty Crocker type herself.”
He paused and shook his head. “Oh, well. It doesn't matter now. And besides, I never did like the damn things. In fact, the drapes in the library still don't work right. Every time you click to either open or close them, you get this loud cracking noise, almost like somebody firing a gun. Oddly appropriate, wouldn't you say? I mean, since there really was a gun fired in there less than forty-eight hours ago. You've heard about events casting their shadows before them? Well . . .”
He turned away for a moment, the room silent except for the
sounds of Sunday getting the omelet ready for the pan. Then Shipman moved to the kitchen table and sat across from Henry. He was reminded almost immediately of the times they had faced each other across the desk in the Oval Office. He looked up, catching the younger man's eye. “You know, Mr. President, Iâ”
“Tommy, knock it off. It's me. Henry.”
“All right, Henry. I was just thinking that we are both lawyers, andâ”
“And so is Sunday,” Henry reminded him. “Don't forget. She did her time as a public defender before she ran for office.”
Shipman smiled wanly. “Then I suggest that she's our resident expert.” He turned toward her. “Sunday, did you ever have to launch a defense where your client had been dead drunk at the time the crime was committed, in the course of which he not only shot his . . . ah . . . friend, three times, but left her sprawled out on the floor to bleed to death while he staggered upstairs to sleep it off?”