Photographs of Claudia

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Photographs of Claudia Page 22

by KG MacGregor


  many of these people at the wedding knew Claudia better than

  she did. They had shared holidays, special occasions and years

  of milestones. She doubted anyone in the room knew she and

  Claudia had once been lovers, although Eva’s reference to her as

  “the one from Monterey” had been intriguing.

  All night she had hoped for a private moment, and while

  she suspected she might find Claudia now in the ladies’ room,

  she had more tact than to follow her there. That didn’t preclude

  stepping into the hallway in hopes of catching her on the way

  back to the reception. Since Claudia had made no attempt of her

  own to personalize their encounter, Leo had dim expectations

  about what any conversation would bring. All she wanted was a

  few minutes, seconds even, to tell Claudia she was happy for the

  wonderful life Eva had so obviously given her. She would hide

  her longing and regret, and continue to fulfill the promise she

  had made to both of them long ago—to support the decisions

  Claudia had made in pursuit of her own dreams. And she wanted

  to prove that she had managed to have a good life as well, despite

  her prediction long ago that she wouldn’t, not without Claudia.

  She slid her camera off the mount and sauntered through the

  crowd to the door. Expecting to see clusters of people milling

  about, she was surprised to find the hallway deserted. As she

  turned back to the ballroom, a movement from the corner caught

  her eye—a hand holding a champagne flute was peeking out from

  a large wingback chair. Tiptoeing closer, she spied a pair of black

  high heels on the floor…size six was her guess.

  The significance of the moment almost overwhelmed her. It

  was their first moment alone together since leaving the parking

  lot in Big Sur so many years ago, when she had been so anxious

  that her promise of love would not be enough to overcome

  Claudia’s uncertainty. Though her fears had proven true, her love

  had never diminished and she wondered if the woman before

  her—now mature and confident—shared even a trace of those

  feelings.

  Claudia’s eyes were closed and her bare feet were tucked

  beneath her, a pose that if not for her silver hair would have

  made her look younger than her forty-six years. Leo had always

  thought her a lovely woman, but in repose she was especially

  beautiful. Any photographer worth her salt would see this as a

  scene worth saving.

  The flash of the camera caused Claudia to blink.

  Leo lowered the camera and smiled apologetically. “Sorry. It

  was too good to pass up.”

  “It’s okay. I just had to get out of there for a few minutes.”

  “I don’t blame you. Believe it or not, I caught your daughter

  out here about an hour ago in the same chair.”

  “The poor girl’s been running on pure adrenaline for the last

  three days. I hope they don’t sleep through their honeymoon.”

  “Where are they going?”

  “They’ve signed up to work three weeks at a village in Kenya.

  They’ve both gone there for projects with their friends before,

  0

  but they never had time to go together.” The pride on her face

  was obvious.

  “Sounds like something you would have done.” Eva had

  obviously taken after her mother in that vein, just as Claudia had

  followed her grandmother.

  “I appreciate the compliment, Leo, but Eva’s her own girl.

  She runs circles around me with all of her causes and volunteer

  work.” She straightened out her legs and wiggled her toes. “My

  feet are killing me.”

  “I’m not surprised.” Leo picked up one of the patent leather

  heels. “I don’t believe human beings were meant to wear shoes

  like this.”

  “I probably shouldn’t have taken them off. I doubt I’ll be able

  to get them back on.”

  “Keep pouring the champagne and no one will notice if

  you’re barefoot.” Leo set her camera on the coffee table next to

  the empty glass, fighting the urge to sweep Claudia’s feet into her

  lap for a massage as she took a seat on the adjacent sofa. “It was

  a lovely wedding—one of the most beautiful I’ve ever done. And

  I’ve done at least a thousand.”

  “I’d drink to that but my glass is empty.”

  “You want me to get you another? I can walk back in there

  easily because I’m wearing sensible shoes.”

  Claudia chuckled. “Thanks, but I’d better not. I’m already

  dangerously close to telling my sister-in-law that her earrings

  make her ass look big. She’d probably rip them off so fast she’d

  hurt somebody.”

  Leo joined her in a conspiratorial laugh, appreciating that

  Claudia trusted her enough to share an inside family joke. Now

  if they could just get past the superficial small talk. Even after

  twenty-three years, a part of her felt closer to Claudia than to

  anyone else on earth and what she wanted to talk about was deep

  and personal.

  “Did you get a chance to eat? There’s an obscene amount of

  food in there.”

  “Yes, I did. Thank you.”

  Shifting suddenly, Claudia leaned over and picked a stray

  hair off Leo’s pants. “I see you got another cat.”

  “No, actually I didn’t. Madeline lived to be almost twenty-

  two. I lost her just last year, but I’ve discovered that her fur lives

  on forever.”

  “Twenty-two years old!” Claudia shook her head in

  amazement.

  “Most of it was on the windowsill in the parlor. I had to put

  a stepstool there when she was about eighteen. And I carried her

  upstairs to bed every night.”

  “I bet it broke your heart to lose her.”

  It had, and as she thought back on their years together, it had

  occurred to her that she had gotten Madeline the same year she

  met Claudia. “We’ve all had losses.”

  Claudia nodded solemnly. “I got your card. Thank you. I’m

  really sorry I didn’t write back. I just…”

  “It’s okay. I didn’t send it for you to answer. I just wanted you

  to know I was thinking of you.”

  “It meant a lot to me. All of my friends came through.”

  Leo didn’t want to dwell on a difficult time, especially not on

  such a joyous occasion. “Speaking of your friends, I was hoping

  Maria and Sandy would be here, but Eva said Maria wasn’t able

  to get around yet. I haven’t seen them in a couple of years.”

  “I don’t see them as often as I’d like, but we still have

  Thanksgiving together every year. Even Dad comes with me

  now that Mom’s gone.”

  When Maria and Sandy had first moved to San Luis Obispo,

  Leo had struggled with jealousy to know they remained in close

  contact with Claudia. By mutual agreement they withheld their

  secondhand updates, though Maria had passed on from time

  to time that Claudia was doing well. That had turned out to be

  something of a consolation.

  Their silence extended for almost a full minute, but it felt

  more restful to Leo than aw
kward.

  Finally Claudia released a deep sigh and leaned forward

  to brace her elbows on her knees. “I think I’ve used up all my

  chitchat for today.”

  The words cut like a knife, but Leo was determined not to

  let it show. Instead, she transitioned into professional mode and

  pushed herself up from the couch. “It’s okay. I should probably

  go back inside and get some more pictures for your daughter.”

  “No, that’s not what I meant at all.” She placed her hand

  on Leo’s knee to stop her from standing, her eyes shining with

  emotion. “This is the first time I’ve seen you in twenty-three

  years and all I meant was that I can’t seem to say anything of

  substance. Before we know it the wedding will be over and you’ll

  be gone again.”

  Leo’s eyes darted between Claudia’s pleading look and the

  hand on her leg, the latter like a brand burning through to her

  bones. “I’m not the one who leaves.”

  “There you are!” A middle-aged woman emerged from the

  ballroom. “I thought I might find you hiding out here.”

  Claudia groped the floor with her feet for her shoes and

  gripped the arms of the chair to stand. “You caught me, Lena.”

  “Don’t get up. You deserve to take it easy. I just wanted to say

  thank you for everything. Bob’s saying goodbye to Todd and Eva.

  They are such a lovely couple.”

  “Thank you. Have you met our photographer? This is

  Leonora Westcott. She does the most incredible work, and she

  happens to be one of my oldest and dearest friends.”

  “How do you do?” Leo said as she jumped to her feet, skeptical

  of Claudia’s sentiment. It was more likely she was making excuses

  for why they were in the hallway talking.

  “Lena and Todd’s mother are sisters,” Claudia told Leo.

  “Yes, I remember from the photos after the wedding.”

  “Are you staying in the hotel?” Claudia asked.

  “No, we’re driving back to the city. Bob thought we should

  leave now to beat the fog.” Her husband emerged from the

  ballroom and joined her.

  Claudia walked barefoot with them to the exit.

  Leo sat glued to the couch, angry with herself for her cynicism.

  Why had she assumed the worst about Claudia’s intentions? She

  would never have said something so cutting. And just like the

  allusion to chitchat, her own words had come out like a careless

  retort. She had meant to offer reassurance that she would always

  be there to listen, not to throw it in Claudia’s face that she had

  left. “Damn it,” she muttered under her breath. She needed just

  another minute or two of privacy to clear that up, but it was too

  late. The guests had begun trickling out of the ballroom to leave,

  and all of them seemed to want one last word with the mother of

  the bride. Leo was determined to wait them out so she could at

  least finish their night on an up note.

  Unfortunately, it wasn’t to be. When the overnight guests

  headed for the elevator as the last band said goodnight, Claudia

  had been swept up in the crowd. Her only signal to Leo had been

  a furtive glance cut short by Todd’s grandfather, who had been

  clamoring for her attention all night. The wedding breakfast

  offered another small window to talk to each other, but there was

  no reason to think it would be any different from tonight. This

  weekend was supposed to be about Eva and Todd, not her and

  Claudia. But if Claudia was serious about saying something “of

  substance,” she was just as serious about listening.

  With a check of her watch, she returned to the ballroom.

  It was after midnight and she had a two-hour drive home to

  Monterey—in the fog—and then back to shoot the breakfast at

  ten a.m. Why on earth had she turned down the offer of a room

  in the hotel? Not that she would be sleeping. Her head would

  race all night with the uncertainty about where she and Claudia

  stood.

  A leather pouch containing her two cameras sat by the door

  of the ballroom with her tripod. Throughout the evening, she

  had ferried her equipment to her car, and had only this final load.

  She took one last look around for a stray lens cap, light filter

  or anything else she might have overlooked, dragging out the

  packing process for as long as she could in hopes Claudia would

  return after getting her guests off to bed. Not even a goodnight,

  she thought morosely.

  The hotel staff had begun to strike the ballroom, breaking

  down tables and carting off dishes and used linens. An industrial

  vacuum cleaner drowned out most of the banter among the

  workers.

  Leo shouldered her heavy bag and grasped the tripod, keeping

  one hand free for her car keys. The valet had allowed her to park

  her Volvo station wagon in the circle so she could load, and he

  helped her stow the last of her gear in the back.

  She swallowed hard to calm the lump in her throat as she

  slid into the driver’s seat and buckled up. Mindlessly she put the

  car into gear and started forward, almost hitting a bellman who

  suddenly appeared in her headlights.

  “Miss Westcott, I have a note for you.”

  With shaking hands, she took the envelope and reached for

  a bill.

  “Not necessary,” he said. “Mrs. Pettigrew took care of me

  already.”

  In the light from the dashboard, she recognized Claudia’s

  hand. Sunset Suite, fourth floor.

  The hotel’s luxurious foam slippers felt like clouds on her

  feet. It had taken forever to get Karl on his way so she could send

  for Leo, but now that twenty minutes had passed, it was likely she

  had already gone. Eva had said Leo declined the invitation to stay

  at the hotel, which meant she was on the road back to Monterey.

  Claudia wanted to think she had left before the bellman reached

  her. Otherwise it meant she had waved off the invitation. She also

  wanted to believe she was part of the reason Leo had come to

  Eva’s rescue at the last minute, and not only as a favor to Maria.

  Even if she had, it was clear she harbored resentment about how

  things had ended for them so long ago.

  Tomorrow would be another circus but she had to try again

  to finish what they had started in the hallway. Except now the

  problem was bigger than just her inability to articulate all the

  things in her head. From Leo’s abrupt reminder of which one

  of them had walked away, a thousand apologies might not be

  enough to heal the chasm between them. They had lived whole

  lives apart. True healing would take the impossible—winding

  back the clock so she could choose again—but choosing Leo had

  never been an option thanks to Marjorie. All she could hope was

  that Leo would let her back into her life, no matter what the

  terms.

  Once she decided Leo wasn’t coming to her suite, she

  scrubbed her face and changed into silk pajamas and the hotel’s

  soft terrycloth robe. The eight o’clock alarm would come very

  early, and she had to keep up a cheerful mood unti
l the last

  guest left. Then she could get plastered in the bar and put it on

  Marjorie’s tab.

  The king-sized bed, turned down and stacked with six plush

  pillows, looked inviting, even as she doubted she would do it

  justice once she closed her eyes. What she needed tonight was to

  shift her thoughts from worrying about Leo to being happy for

  Eva and Todd. They’d had the wedding her mother had hoped

  she would have, but her own situation back in 1987 had called

  for a bit more decorum. With her baby bump showing in a pale

  green dress, she and Mike had married on the veranda of his

  parents’ home with only their immediate families in attendance.

  If a miserable wedding meant an equally miserable marriage,

  then she had high hopes for her daughter and son-in-law after

  today’s extravaganza.

  Finally convinced she could fall asleep, she turned out the

  lights in the parlor and retreated to her bedroom. A faint knock

  at the door barely caught her ear.

  Through the peephole she could see Leo shifting nervously

  from one foot to the other. She flung open the door.

  “Am I too late?”

  Their eyes met and held for several seconds. Then Claudia

  opened her arms as joy erupted inside her. “Never.”

  Leo hugged her fiercely, cradling her head against her

  shoulder. It was neither romantic nor sexual, but it was the most

  intimate sensation Claudia had felt in years.

  “I’m so glad you came back.”

  “I’ll always come back,” Leo whispered.

  Claudia tightened her grip, fighting the urge to risk a kiss.

  It was enough for now just to hold each other like this, and her

  heart would break if Leo rebuffed her. “I have so many things to

  tell you.”

  “Just tell me this feels good.”

  “Nothing else has ever felt like this.” They had so much

  ground to make up, but this was exactly where she wanted to

  start, with both of them admitting their feelings were still alive.

  “I can’t tell you how many times I’ve wished I could go back and

  choose again.”

  “No, Claudia.” Leo broke their embrace to look her in the

  eye. “You can’t second-guess yourself now. Look at the woman

  your daughter has become. That’s all because of the choices you

  made. Would you change anything about her?”

 

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