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Authors: Swan Huntley

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BOOK: We Could Be Beautiful
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Even though it had been the right thing to do, I still hated it that we had sold. It felt like my father was preserved in that apartment, and without it there was no palpable evidence of him: nothing to remind me of his peppery smell, or of the particular way the air rushed in through the window of his study sometimes, blowing apart all his papers. Besides a few trips to the dentist and exactly two baby showers (bane of my existence), I had managed to avoid the Upper East Side completely since Mom had left. Which hadn’t been hard. Especially since my sister, in a move that surprised everyone—everyone being me because I was the only one left, at least the only consistently coherent one—had relocated all the way across town to the Upper West Side to be near her doctor husband’s practice, and now lived conveniently within blocks of our mother.

Walking with William now, I felt surprisingly at ease being here. I wasn’t as pissed off or as sad as I’d expected to be. The reservoir reminded me of so many things, and I actually felt like sharing them. It was out of character for me to open up so easily. I took this as a good sign.

“We used to drink vermouth on those rocks in high school.” I pointed to the gray boulders. “And, oh my God, one day, walking here with my dad—maybe I was five, six?—I threw my stuffed panda bear into the water, over this gate.” I touched the metal. It was warm. Herman circled back because we had stopped. He sniffed my toes.

“Did you?” William said thoughtfully. He was a good listener. He paid attention. He understood how to draw people out of themselves. He put a hand on the metal next to mine. “Why did you do that?”

“I don’t know,” I said, trying to remember, but nothing came to mind. “I became difficult around that age.”

“Really?”

“My dad said I changed when my sister was born. I was jealous.”

A pause. “I didn’t know you had a sister.”

“Caroline. She’s younger, so you wouldn’t have known her, I guess.”

“No,” he said. “Our families must have lost touch by then.”

“Why, do you think? Did something happen?”

In a lower voice, he said, “I think people simply lose touch sometimes.” He looked at the water. His nose in profile was long, dignified. He had the strong jaw of a warrior. I couldn’t see his eyes.

Then, without words, he took my hand and led me to the street, which wasn’t far. We walked over the cobblestones to the curb. We had spent almost two hours together, and I had assumed for some reason that our date would include dinner. I thought the next words out of his mouth would be, “Catherine, I would love the pleasure of having dinner with you,” or at least “How do you feel about sushi?” But instead he said, “I have an appointment for a haircut,” and looked at his watch—a Patek Philippe with roman numerals and a simple black band—“at four o’clock.” This seemed like a too-abrupt ending (had I done something wrong?), and his hair looked great, but I said, “Okay, right, haircuts are important,” and smiled (too enthusiastically; I was overcompensating), and reminded myself that two hours was a very long time and that I had to stop being unrealistic with men. It was unrealistic to think you would meet a man for coffee and then never leave his side. We weren’t teenagers.

He raised his long, elegant arm for a cab. “Perfect,” he said in his cool, even way. I got the impression then that William was a person who wouldn’t show you what he didn’t want you to see. Because it was four-fifteen and he didn’t seem stressed at all that he was late. He was serene, the flat surface of unmoving water, liquid that appeared solid. I remember thinking, He must be great at his job.

Looking back, this might have been my first little warning. A haircut, now? It felt like a lie. What was he hiding? At the time this warning registered in only the vaguest way—a slight constriction in my chest, maybe, a tiny pang that disappeared, a single skipped beat I told myself didn’t matter. It was just a haircut. It was nothing.

A cab stopped. He stepped forward and opened the door in one fluid movement. The way he moved had a naturally sensual quality to it. We watched Herman jump in and then jump back out. Was it odd that we said nothing about that? Was it odd that we hadn’t been speaking? Then William put his fingers below my chin like my face was something delicate, and he kissed me. His lips were perfect. And his taste: of mint dipped in sea salt. He was careful, confident, familiar, strange. He was exactly what I’d been waiting for.

3

T
he next day Susan made a circle with her finger on the couch and said, “Is this new?”

“Do you like it?” I had bought two new couches. We sat on one and looked at the other. White, downy fabric that reminded me of clouds (who doesn’t want a couch like a cloud?) paired with a low-backed, contemporary body that was long and near to the floor.

I had been redecorating. I was going through a phase of wanting everything in the house to be white. It felt cleaner to me, and softer, and, as my architect had rightly pointed out, white didn’t compete with the art.

“It’s good,” she said, in her absolute way. Susan spoke only in absolutes. She was the most decisive person I knew. She also had good taste, so her opinion mattered to me. I was relieved she approved of the couch.

Today Susan wore a giant yellow scarf that looked more like a blanket and was feeling a lot better after her episode with the flu, though she still wanted to baby herself, which was why she was swaddled, drinking tea, and which was also why she had conveniently planned this visit to coincide with Dan the masseur’s usual Sunday appointment. Dan loved me, so he usually didn’t mind adding another body to the roster, especially if it was Susan.

Susan was my closest friend. We had gone to Deerfield together and now basically led parallel lives—same gym, same hairdresser, same magazines in the bathroom. Physically we were total opposites, which was annoying only because it disproved my theory that short people and tall people didn’t mix in meaningful ways, though this theory still held up with everyone in my life besides Susan. I was tall, Susan was short. I had brown hair, Susan had blond hair. Susan was fair-skinned, I was olive-skinned. Our color themes even extended to the tea we were drinking right now. Me: Earl Grey. Susan: chamomile.

“I think one of my people got me sick,” she said, curling her small legs underneath her blanket/scarf.

“Who? Henry?”

“Please, don’t say his name.” She mock-cringed. “Oh, I need to text him. Thanks for reminding me.” She rummaged around her giant salmon-pink purse until she found her phone. I was surprised it wasn’t in her hand already. Susan was a little addicted to the screen.

By “her people,” Susan (lovingly) meant the people who worked at her shop, Bonsai, an adorable little boutique that sold, obviously, bonsai trees. It turned out Susan had landed on a gold mine with this very niche market that combined artistry and minifauna, and she was killing it. Henry was her manager. He was also twenty-four and wanted to fuck her. He’d made this obvious through the many doting cards he left around the shop for her to find. With his spirited curly hair and the cutoffs he wore in summer, Henry looked like a gardener from a ’90s movie. (“I half expect to find him singing into a hose every time I go in there,” she said once.) But as much as she thought sleeping with Henry would be “wholly entertaining,” he was too young, and he was her employee. Susan had self-respect, or at least she wanted it to appear that way. So her approach was to dismiss the cards entirely—she didn’t mention them to Henry at all. Yes, of course she kept them. She kept them in a box at home, and that was no one’s business.

Working was a big thing Susan and I had in common. Most of our friends didn’t work, especially the ones from Deerfield. They were too busy raising kids (or paying people to do that) and taking care of the household (or telling their assistants how to do that) and going to Pilates and lunch and dotingly removing their husbands’ coats at night after long moneymaking days at the office.

Susan and I, both still childless (she didn’t want them) and unmarried (which bothered me more than it bothered her), owned small businesses within a few blocks of each other in the West Village, where we both also lived. Mine was a handmade stationery shop. The goal in starting it was to promote new artists and give them a way to make some extra cash while giving people cool, original, not-Hallmark cards. Susan had actually named the shop for me: Leaf. First we thought Paper, but that was taken, and Leaf—ha—went with the bonsai theme. As in bonsai trees had leaves, most of the time. (Yes, we may have come up with this idea while tipsy on pink champagne one late afternoon at Le Gigot.)

Although neither of us actually needed to work, we often did. It was nice to have something tangible and straightforward to do during the day. I hated to be such a cliché, but if I had nothing to do, I shopped. Which was bad, but better than drugs. Of course I was grateful to have the luxury to buy whatever I wanted, but I also knew I didn’t fully understand gratitude for material things like other people did. By “other people” I obviously meant poorer people, which also happened to be most people. I knew I was lucky because people told me I was lucky. I knew it to the extent that I could know it. But I actually resented my good fortune sometimes—I may have had distorted, oversimplified notions that romanticized a hunter-gatherer, stranded-on-a-desert-island-in-a-good-way(?)-type life—and this, the resenting, proved that I didn’t get it at all, because, as Susan pointed out, “Only trust-fund babies have the audacity to resent money.” She was allowed to say this because she was a trust-fund baby, too.

I watched her beady little blue eyes scan the screen. Susan was pretty in sort of a pinched way. She had small features: a button nose and the itty-bitty mouth of a pocket-sized fairy. As a child she had been adorable. Now she was what people usually called “cute.” She hated that—no one called tall people “cute.” But, she argued, she did get more leg room where tall people didn’t, though this would have been more advantageous if she flew coach, which would never happen.

She chuckled to herself, said, “Wow.”

“What?”

“Nothing.”

In a way Susan and I were still the skinny, naive girls we’d been at Deerfield. When she said “Nothing” now, I saw her saying “Nothing” at age fourteen, when she’d had a crush on Tommy Charles and didn’t want to talk about it.

“Um.” She looked up. She had forgotten what she was going to say. And then she remembered. “Oh, should we get sandwiches?”

“I don’t know. Do you want a sandwich?”

“I wouldn’t be asking you if I didn’t want one.”

“Okay, but let’s order in.”

“Oh yeah, I’m not walking anywhere.”

So I called the sandwich place and ordered our sandwiches. I got a veggie hummus wrap and a Coke for Dan, like a real Coca-Cola, which no adult except Dan actually drank, and which was hilariously not in sync with his holistic approach to life at all.

I took a sip of my tea and noticed how the leaves on the tree outside my window were so much bigger and greener than they had been the week before. I thought, You can be in the same rut for so long, and then, seemingly out of nowhere, everything changes and you remember what the point is. The point, of course, is love. To love someone, to be loved by someone: that is the point.

Even in my best relationships, I wasn’t sure I had ever been truly in love. This bothered me. A lot. I thought about it all the time. I was sure it was part of the incompleteness I had always felt. None of the people I’d been with seemed to be the missing piece. They were always the wrong shape, sometimes very obviously and other times in a more irritatingly mysterious way. I told myself I was not stupid to think that with William it would be different, though of course I knew I had said this many times before.

I didn’t know why I was waiting to tell Susan about him. Usually it would have been the first thing out of my mouth. Maybe I didn’t want to jinx it. Or I didn’t want to find out that she hated him, because if she did, her opinion would be hard to cast aside. I had to tell her, though, and if I waited too much longer she’d accuse me of withholding. “Do you know William Stockton?”

Susan looked up immediately. “Stockton, Stockton,” she said quickly. She was a person who talked very fast unless she was sad. When she was sad, she talked very slow. “I know Maureen Stockton, I know Callan or Cameron Stock
ard
. William. William. Will-yam. Does he do Dick or Will or anything?”

“I don’t know.”

“Not helpful.”

I drank more tea, even though I knew it would be cold now, which it was.

“Who is he?”

I gave it to Susan in bullet points. Those resonated with her. “Met him at the gala, we had coffee yesterday, he just moved back from Europe, he knows my family, he knew them before I was born. Very good-looking, has a dog, literally just moved back.”

“Huh.” Susan stretched her feet out onto the glass coffee table, with one foot on either side of the lilies I had bought earlier. She curled her toes back (her toenails matched her fingernails today: eggplant), then pointed them forward. She kept doing this, back and forth, and we stared at her feet because they were something to stare at. “Is he married? Kids? Why is he back now?”

“Work.”

Susan, a lover of gossip, squinted attentively as I went on to explain William’s memories of Eighty-Fourth Street and of my parents, and what he looked like (very tall, maybe six-four, gray hair, sensitive eyes, strong jaw, chiseled yet childlike features; I had been thinking about words to describe him), and the kiss at the end. I skipped the part about the haircut.

“Sensitive eyes? Okay, you’re fucked.”

“I know. But it’s good, right? Doesn’t it sound good?”

“Definitely good,” Susan said, “almost too good.” When she looked up and saw my reaction to that—not happy—she said, “But listen, you deserve it. Oh my God, you deserve it. After the ride you’ve had, and Fernando—shit, girl.” She pointed a finger in the air. “Good stuff is coming, don’t worry.”

By “the ride you’ve had,” Susan meant: all the terrible people you’ve chosen, including, most recently, Fernando Delarus, who asked you to marry him and then left you for someone else—not even a young model but an old, old woman, so the only problem could have been your personality.

BOOK: We Could Be Beautiful
6.72Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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