Authors: Eileen Goudge
Tags: #Fiction, #Contemporary Women, #Family Life, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Sagas, #General
week, not just Friday. I’ll fast for forty days on Lent. I’ll devote my life to serving others.
When Rose came into the apartment, Nonnie was watching “The Lawrence Welk Show.” She
barely glanced up from her knitting.
“You’re late,” she croaked. “I left supper in the oven for you.” Since the night Marie left,
Nonnie had been keeping off Rose’s back. Rose wondered if her grandmother was regretting her
awful words.
“That’s okay. I’m not hungry,” Rose said.
[62] In the tiny dark bedroom she’d shared with Marie, the other bed was bare, sheets removed,
its worn chenille spread pulled tight over the mattress. Clean circles in the dust atop the dresser
marked the places where Marie’s bottles of perfume and skin lotions had stood. Gone, too, the
snapshots and twenty-five-cent photo-booth strips that had been tucked inside the mirror frame.
In Marie’s side of the closet, the empty hangers swung together with a hollow metallic ticking as
Rose hung up her sweater.
It was as if Marie had died. Rose shivered and, only half-aware of what she was doing, made
the sign of the cross.
Then, crouching on the floor, she peeled back a frayed edge of the mustard-brown carpeting
that had come untacked. Underneath was a loose floorboard. She found the metal nail file she
kept in the bottom dresser drawer, and pried up the loose board with it. Underneath was a space
just big enough for an old metal Band-Aid box. Her secret place. No one else knew about it. Not
Marie. Not even Brian.
Rose opened the Band-Aid box, and shook out a lump of gray cotton. Slowly, she unwrapped
it, revealing the glittering treasure hidden within.
A ruby earring, gleaming in her hand like a frozen drop of blood.
The memory came rushing back. Seven years ago—had it been that long? She saw it in her
mind as clearly as if it were happening now. The elegant lady in the mink coat. Rose had seen her
standing just outside the schoolyard fence one day. She didn’t look like any of the mothers. More
like a queen. Or a mysterious movie star, in that beautiful mink coat, and a hat with a little veil
that dipped over her eyes.
Then she’d realized those mysterious eyes underneath the veil were staring at
her.
At first Rose
had been sure she was wrong. She’d even glanced back over her shoulder to see if there was
someone behind her. But, no, the lady was looking straight at her. Her eyes big and somehow
wet-looking, like the clear green marbles in her collection, the ones that were worth ten cat’s
eyes.
Rose cautiously drew a little closer. Sad and lost, that’s how the lady looked. But it didn’t
make any sense. Why should she be? Someone dressed as beautiful as that had to be rich, and
rich people [63] never had worries like the grown-ups Rose knew. It was a cold day, and the lady
seemed to shiver, drawing her mink coat more tightly about her. Ruby earrings twinkled in her
ears. What could she want?
As Rose came through the gate amid the noisy, jostling throng of classmates, the woman took
several jerky steps forward, crying out in a thin strangled voice, “Wait!”
Startled, Rose paused, remembering that she’d been told by Nonnie and the Sisters, not once
but at least fifty times, never
ever
to talk to strangers. But somehow she couldn’t run away. Her
saddle shoes felt as if they were stuck onto the sidewalk. Her arms and legs frozen in place.
Rose waited, as if hypnotized by that beautiful, somehow haunted face, its fragile bones jutting
from pale creamy skin. Soft hair, the color of autumn leaves, floated over her fur collar. Rose was
reminded of a snowflake that would melt if she touched it. The woman’s flowerlike mouth
trembled. Her eyes brimmed with tears. She seemed on the verge of speaking, but she pulled back
abruptly as if she’d changed her mind.
Instead, she reached up with a gloved hand—it had been trembling, Rose remembered—and
unscrewed the ruby from her right ear.
As Rose stood there, too shocked to protest, the lady pressed the tiny earring, icy cold, into her
palm. Then she had run off, high heels clattering on the frozen sidewalk, ducking into a long
sleek limousine that waited at the curb, disappearing as if in a puff of smoke.
Rose had been sure of it. The lady was her Guardian Angel. Everyone had one, Sister Perpetua
said. But Rose hadn’t believed it was true for her ... until that day.
And now she had the earring to prove it.
Rose held it up to the light, a ruby in the shape of a teardrop dangling from a tiny gold and
diamond stud. Even in the dim room, it blazed with a light of its own, causing Rose to suck her
breath in with wonder even though she’d looked at it a hundred times. Yes, magic. Heaven-sent
magic.
And she needed its magic now, more than ever.
“Don’t leave me, Bri,” she whispered, clenching it tightly in her fist, more passion in her heart
than a thousand rosaries could have summoned. “Please don’t ever leave me.”
Chapter 2
NEW YORK CITY, 1963
Rachel frowned at her plate, at the fried egg centered between two neat triangles of toast.
Round as a daisy, and not a single bubble. Bridget, she knew, fried them inside a cookie cutter to
keep the edges smooth. So they would be as perfect as everything in this house. The fork in her
hand, Mama’s Carder silver, was polished to mirror brightness. She caught a distorted glimpse of
her reflection in it now, round blue eyes, a scatter of light brown hair.
“I’m not going,” Rachel said, quietly answering her mother’s question.
How could she? After last night with Gil? Get dressed up, flirt, pretend nothing was wrong.
God, what a joke that would be.
Gil’s words came back now, pricking her,
“Why don’t you just admit it, Rachel? You’re not so
goddamn moral. That’s not why you won’t go all the way with me. It’s because you really don’t
like sex. You’re frigid. Or maybe it’s a girl you want. ...”
Rachel brought the tines of her fork down hard into the yolk, watching it burst, ooze across the
fine Blue Willow plate, obscuring the weeping willow and the three tiny figures crossing the
bridge.
She was furious at Gil—of all the pompous asses at Haverford, he took the prize!—but
underneath the thought itched at her,
God, what if it’s true?
Face it,
she told herself,
it’s not just Gil who leaves you cold. Something’s been missing with
every guy so far.
Twenty, and still a virgin. Not, as Gil had pointed out, because she was so moral. No. Worse.
The truth was, she just hadn’t
felt
like it so far.
Rachel stared down at the ruined egg yolk, feeling slightly nauseated. Only this sickness had
nothing to do with the mess on her plate, she knew, or the beers she’d drunk last night.
[65] It all boiled down to sex, she thought. Everything. Fashions. Perfume. Magazine covers.
Even those television ads for toothpaste. It seemed as if everyone in the whole world was either
thinking about it, talking about it, or doing it.
So what’s wrong with me?
Was it like learning to swim? Either you were good at it, or you sank like a rock?
Or maybe she’d been born this way. Normal on the outside. Pretty even. Rachel remembered
when she was a child, Great-aunt Willie in her mink smothering her in a furry, perfumed
embrace, then grabbing a handful of cheek in each gloved hand, crowing, “Just like a little baby
doll! So dainty! And those blue eyes, Sylvie, she must have gotten them from Gerald! But where
did that pretty little doll’s face come from? Not from you or your mama. I wonder who?”
“The Girl with the Watering Can,”
Rachel had replied solemnly.
That was what Mama always said, anyway, that Rachel reminded her of the Renoir painting.
She had showed Rachel the picture in a book, a little girl with waves of red-gold hair and bright
Wedgwood-blue eyes that matched her dress, standing stiffly posed in a garden, holding a
watering can.
Rachel had hated that picture, and once in a black mood had scribbled over it with a crayon.
Why were people always telling her she was dainty and cute and precious? She’d longed to run
through the echoing rooms of their big house, instead of walking softly as Mama always
admonished, to shout at the top of her lungs, and turn cartwheels on the patterned rugs. Not be
like some doll or a girl holding a stupid watering can, but like a bird or a wild creature, doing as
she pleased, not caring what people thought of her.
Now she wondered if she had been worrying all that time about the wrong thing. Wishing she
were tall and fierce like the Amazon women she’d read about, when all along there was
something wrong with her on the
inside.
Some awful undetected deformity. Missing hormones, or
a paralyzed sex drive. Or even, God forbid, something actually wrong with her
down there.
“Rachel, what’s gotten into you?” Mama’s voice broke into her thoughts.
Rachel looked up. Daddy, she saw, was absorbed in his paper, but Mama was regarding her
with that sad, faintly bewildered [66] expression she always seemed to wear whenever they
disagreed about something. Could she tell Mama? Mama, who surrounded herself only with
beautiful things, chamber music always on the stereo, silk scarves and embroidered
handkerchiefs, her precious roses. She looked like a flower herself, slim and elegant, with those
wide forest-green eyes and her pale, almost white-blond hair. Eight-thirty in the morning, and she
already had on lipstick, wearing her daisy-print Lilly Pulitzer housecoat to see Daddy off to the
bank.
She’d probably be so shocked. She’s never talked about sex, at least not to me. I wonder if
she’s ever felt that way, passionate about Daddy
... or
anyone.
“I’m just not up to it, that’s all,” Rachel said. “That calculus exam did me in; I had about
twenty minutes’ sleep all last week.” She sighed, and picked up a triangle of toast, dipping one
corner in the gooey egg. “When I went into pre-med, I thought I’d mostly be dissecting things
like sheep’s eyes and cow hearts, not integers.”
Rachel saw her mother wince. Plainly, Sylvie still hated the idea of her becoming a doctor.
Rachel felt a flash of irritation toward her.
Dammit, I
won’t
be like her. Like a pair of silk stockings, lovely but perishable. Doing Good
Works, but not getting my hands dirty.
Then Rachel was struck by a new, disturbing thought.
Suppose I’m more like her than I realise.
If Mama doesn’t care much for sex
—
and I couldn’t possibly imagine her doing It with Daddy the
way Sophia Loren did It with Marcello Mastroianni in
Divorce Italian Style—
then what if a thing
like that could be inherited, like the color of my eyes, or hair?
“The party isn’t for another two weeks,” Sylvie reminded her gently. Her mother smiled faintly
as she poured milk from a silver creamer into her coffee, and began slowly, gracefully, to stir it,
her spoon chiming against the Limoges cup. “I was just thinking. Remembering when Mason
taught you to swim—you must have been four or five. The first winter Daddy bought the place in
Palm Beach. Isn’t that right, Gerald?”
Daddy looked up from the
Wall Street Journal.
“Mmm? Oh, yes, yes. You and that little boy
were always up to one thing or another. Most of it no good.” He caught Rachel’s eye, giving her a
wink, and for an instant she felt the invisible ring that enclosed just the two of them.
Then she thought with a pang,
He looks so old.
[67] Rubbed smooth with age, like Mama’s antique silver tea set. She saw the freckled ridge of
his scalp beneath the silver hair fine as cobwebs, the rust that lightly blotched his face, and felt
almost pain at the thought of how close she might be to losing him.
She remembered when he used to lift her, swinging her up, up over his head. And she,
suspended in the air, looking down into his sparkling eyes, seeing his love for her, perfect and
shining, had felt ... oh, bliss.
Then she thought of sitting in his lap in the dim, leather-smelling coolness of his study
listening to music, such fun because each record had a story, and Daddy would tell it, pretending
to be all the different characters. Some of them so silly, and some so sad. So by her eighth
birthday, she knew every libretto by heart. Then he’d taken her, just the two of them, to the
Metropolitan Opera, which she’d thought was the most beautiful place in the world, and they’d
seen her favorite,
The Marriage of Figaro.
But now, damn it, he seemed not just thinner, but frail somehow, moving more cautiously, eyes
somehow burning, as if there were a fire inside him, consuming him bit by bit.
She remembered with a pang that awful day three years ago, when the call came that Daddy
had been rushed to the Intensive Care Unit at New York Hospital. She had dashed over from
school, and, too anxious even to wait for the elevator, had bolted up the stairwell. She finally
reached his room, disheveled, out of breath, panting. Looking at him, gray and shrunken under