Based Upon Availability

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Based Upon Availability Page 1

by Alix Strauss




  Based Upon Availability

  Alix Strauss

  To M.E

  For being the smartest person I know.

  For being right about everything.

  And for always being there.

  You continuously amaze me.

  To Lisa Rosenstein

  A better friend would be hard to find.

  The great advantage of a hotel is that

  it’s a refuge from home life.

  GEORGE BERNARD SHAW

  Contents

  Epigraph

  Chapter 1

  Morgan

  Chapter 2

  Morgan

  Chapter 3

  Morgan

  Chapter 4

  Morgan

  Chapter 5

  Morgan

  Chapter 6

  Morgan

  Chapter 7

  Morgan

  Chapter 8

  Morgan

  Chapter 9

  Morgan

  Chapter 10

  Anne

  Chapter 11

  Trish

  Chapter 12

  Sheila

  Chapter 13

  Robin

  Chapter 14

  Ellen

  Chapter 15

  Franny

  Chapter 16

  Louise

  Chapter 17

  Morgan

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Praise

  Other Books by Alix Strauss

  Credits

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  Chapter 1

  Morgan

  The Four Seasons Hotel

  Today is my dead sister’s birthday. She would have been thirty-five.

  I eye the clock, 11:20 a.m., and phone my mother with the intention of asking if she’d like to have lunch at the hotel so she won’t be alone. I barely got through Thanksgiving dinner at their house, and feel as though I’ve OD’d on my parents rather than turkey and stuffing, but I’m desperate for her to share a Dale story, a memorable moment I’ve forgotten. I wish we had the type of relationship where we could do that, console each other like war buddies, reach for a hand from across the table, while carefully maneuvering past our wineglasses. I could give her my napkin, watch her dry her eyes. She would pass it back, smile lightly, tell me how much she misses her first child, then add how thankful she is to have another. Just once I’d like her to phone and say, “Your father and I are going to synagogue, and then we’ll light a candle at home in memory. I’ll make a roast chicken and we can grieve together. If you’d like, we’ll pick you up in a cab in a few minutes.”

  When she answers on the third ring, she sounds irritated. She tells me she’s late for a hair appointment, that the cleaners have lost her good dress shirt, which she intended to wear today to some luncheon.

  “Women for Women’s Rights or women who care about…I don’t know. I can’t recall,” she says.

  I search for something in her voice, an indication that she remembers, but when I get nothing, reply with silence.

  “Morgan, are you still there?”

  I am, but I can’t find my voice. Can’t gulp down enough air into my lungs to say anything.

  “Are you smoking?” she asks.

  “No.”

  “Why do you sound so breathless?”

  “I was exercising.” One lie on my sister’s birthday, what’s the harm?

  “In the apartment? You’ve got a beautiful gym at the hotel, it’s such a perk.”

  “You and Dad could use it if you wanted,” I push out. Even though I’m already at work I don’t correct her.

  “I couldn’t get your father to go down there if you offered a free buffet. Just blocks from his office, you’d think he’d be able to work out once a week…” Her voice trails off.

  I visualize my parents at the gym, confused by the equipment, scared to take a class. My mother assumes spinning is a cycle on the washing machine, and my father thinks it’s when you’ve had too much to drink. There’s a clacking sound coming from her end as she digs around in her makeup drawer, probably looking for a lipstick, Crimson or Dusty Velvet.

  As a child, I loved to watch my mother dress for a party or a dinner date. I have vague memories of Dale and I sitting on her bed, studying her reflection in a huge oval mirror that hung above a black lacquered vanity table. Dale had just had her first operation. They’d found a tiny tumor on her spine and after they removed it she had to wear a back brace for six months. Watching my mother change for a party was one of the only activities she could do.

  My father, a hand, arm, and shoulder specialist, would often work late, performing surgical procedures, and meet her at the agreed spot: theater, restaurant, supper club. My mother would get dressed with an audience of two. We’d sit with her as she made herself up, watching her apply makeup, aching to blot our lips on tissues, take long, delicate strokes of mascara to make our lashes bold just like hers. Dale would pretend to rub blush onto my checks and blend it into my skin. Within minutes, our mother would metamorphose into a beautiful woman. Dark hair cupped her face, dewy skin was clean and lightly dusted with matte powder, her big brown eyes added a youthful appearance. And her lips were full and smudge-proof. She was perfect.

  I peer at my reflection now, wondering if my mother and I are sharing this moment, if we’re both staring at ourselves at the same time—and if we are, what she sees. Traces of a dead daughter? Cruelty of time? Lasting, positive work from a plastic surgeon or two? I’m about to ask her a question that would require her to look at a calendar, but her line beeps.

  “Morgan, I’ve got another call. I’ll talk with you later.” She clicks over to someone else leaving me looking at the phone like one of those actors on a soap who’s just found out their identical twin sister has slept with their husband. I’m still holding the receiver when a staticky recording of an operator comes on. “If you’d like to make a call, please hang up and dial your number.” I want to make another call. I’m just not sure to who.

  Instead I hang up the receiver, push back my chair, reach for my navy blazer, my cell phone, my employee card, which I stick into the back pocket of my slacks, do a quick check in the mirror, and pass though the sales office, saying a friendly hello to my co-workers.

  Rather than wait for the elevator, I take the stairs. Instead of thinking about Dale, I focus on the clicking of my heels against the shiny stone, the heaviness of my breathing as I strain for air, the idea that a nuclear war could happen and I’m so far underground that I’d be safe—all things that usually calm me, but don’t.

  Upstairs on the main floor of the Four Seasons Hotel I survey the clean, crisp lobby, take stock of the efficiency of my staff, of the attractive patrons who stay with us, sometimes for a night, others for days.

  I walk to the front desk and slide over to the side that’s momentarily not in use.

  The turnover of our hotel is tremendous. According to the computers, every three minutes and forty-nine seconds someone is either checking in or out. There are three small boxes responsible for imprinting room assignments and security codes to the key cards. Upon checking out, the information is erased and a new number and code is given. When I select the room cards I never glance at the computer, let alone the guest’s profile that automatically pops up on the screen when the room key is activated. I like to do this without help.

  I close my eyes, run my fingers over the duplicate guest’s keys. Like a deck of cards waiting to be fanned out by a magician, I remove one and stick it in the box. 1709 lights up in green. In the six years I’ve worked here, I’ve never gotten this room, until today. I’ve been in 70 percent of the quarters, and I’m as familiar w
ith each line as I am with my own apartment. I know which has the best layout, the grandest view, the largest bathroom, the nicest closets. That the corner rooms are twenty-five square feet larger than the regular ones. That the water pressure in suite 2510 will never be as powerful as the others, no matter how many times we try to fix it. That Oprah will only stay in the Presidential Suite, and that the housekeeping once found a wad of cum on the wall in room 615.

  I take the elevator up with an attractive Japanese couple who are decked out in Gucci. I bow my head as I exit, then utter good-bye in Japanese. They smile politely, returning the bow as the closing doors disconnect us.

  The floor is quiet, deserted. Not surprising since 11:40 a.m. isn’t a heavily trafficked time. Three or four hours earlier, the hallway was active with men in crisp white shirts and expensive ties, newspapers tucked under their arms, cell phones already attached to their ears. The women dress in smart pantsuits or good-girl skirts and pull boxy, black suitcases on wheels. Then there are the young, pretty ones who wear jeans and V-neck sweaters. Sunglasses hide their faces, baseball hats cover their heads, underwear is tucked in a pocket of their coats or hidden safely away in their Prada handbags. Those who want to sleep in never can because the slamming of doors pulled harshly by the fire-friendly hinges is endless. But now, all is quiet.

  I knock on door 1709 and wait for an answer. When another knock produces no response I slide my passkey easily, professionally, into the opening. I announce myself, hand on the door, body half in, half still in the hall. “Housekeeping,” I say. Lie two—okay, two fibs on Dale’s birthday.

  Nothing.

  I glide in and stand in the entranceway, close my eyes, tilt my head slightly to the right and catch the light aroma of…lily. A woman is staying here. The fragrance is mature, yet fresh.

  I scan the area. Some people leave their room in a disgraceful mess. Liquor bottles and half-eaten eight-dollar candy bars or potato chip bags sit open, haphazardly placed wherever the guest felt like leaving them. Some abandon empty soda cans overnight so that the sticky rims have left marks on the leather blotters or glass tables. Leftovers from dinner reside on the floor by the door, uncovered and picked over. Towels are discarded on the bathroom tile or tossed carelessly on the beds, the wetness seeping through the sheets. Not this woman. Though housekeeping hasn’t been here yet, you can tell by the way she’s left the room that she’s respectfully tidy. Even her shopping bags from Bergdorf, Dior, and Ferragamo are stacked neatly on the chair by the couch.

  In the closet closest to the door is a stylish duffel bag, which is free of flight check-in tickets or stickers. It’s too large to fit under the seat of an airplane, but small enough to carry without struggling, and would fit comfortably on a train or in the back of a car.

  I check the mini refrigerator and bar to see what’s been consumed. Everything is untouched. I don’t need to look at the price card and, like a game show contestant on an upscale version of Lifestyles of the Rich and Unhappy, can announce the cost of each child-size item. I close the bar door and inspect the desk area. The leather-bound directory, blot board, notepad, stationery, in-room ser vice listing, and menu all seem undisturbed.

  I enter the bedroom, noticing that the pillows have been aligned and placed up against the headboard, the comforter and sheet pulled up and smoothed out.

  The bathroom is clean, used towels folded neatly over the tub. On the vanity table sit three small LV bags. The first is filled with enough Chanel makeup to impress the salespeople at Barneys. I apply some blush, Warm Mocha, with the enclosed brush, then spray some of her Jessica McClintock perfume on my wrist.

  Another bag holds a set of Chanel travel-size bottles: toner, face cleanser, eye cream, moisturizer, and anti-aging serum. I save the best part for last. The third bag is filled with personal items: toothbrush, toothpaste, eyedrops, and a bottle of pills. I love the sight of a punched-out V or K. A few small tablets of lavender or yellow or white pills—mood enhancers, elevators and downers, painkillers and relaxants—all in similar small see-through rusty-colored plastic bottles with white tops. Valley of the Dolls anyone? I read the recommended dose, then see if I know the name of the doctor or patient. Her medication selection is disappointing. There’s only one type of pill inside, and the bottle of Xanax belongs to Ben Theron. Her husband? Lover? I reach for a glass, fill it with water, wash down one of Mr. Theron’s pills, which I’m hoping will help me relax, then wipe the glass clean and replace it in its original spot.

  Back in the bedroom, I open another closet, several pairs of pants hang motionless next to a navy jacket. The first dresser drawer has a sweatshirt and matching pants, control top underwear, and T-shirts. The next drawer reveals three silk shirts. I touch the cream-colored one, then remove it from its resting spot. It smells like her perfume. I twirl in front of the mirror, the silk shirt held up to my chest, until I feel dizzy. I fall back onto on the bed, her shirt draped over me like a shadow.

  I tally up the information: Chanel products are too mature for most women in their thirties. The shopping bags are from sophisticated, high-end neighborhood stores. The clothing has a mature feel, too. On the nightstand is this month’s Town & Country and Vogue along with a Discman and several CDs. Anyone in their twenties or thirties would own an iPod or MP3 player. People who bring their own music selections are usually seasoned travelers who spend more time in hotels, airports, and train stations than at the office. There’s no laptop, so this might be a pleasure trip. She didn’t fly here, and she’s too chic and product-oriented to live in a small rural place, so my guess is she lives in a large urban city like DC or Boston.

  I close my eyes and listen: to the buzz of the florescent light above me, the low murmur from the TV escaping from the next room, the hum of the refrigerator, the annoying ticking of the clock on the desk, the distant zooming noise from the cars outside, the deep, hollow sound of my breathing as I wait for the Xanax to take effect.

  Fifteen minutes later I fold the shirt, return it to the drawer, fix the bedspread, and slip out unnoticed.

  I watch the ladies parade into the bar of the Four Seasons Hotel, their muffled, yet distinctive voices getting louder. They look like a pack of tourists following a guide, who, unfortunately, in this instance, is my mother, Rose Tierney.

  “Morgan, we’re here!” Acting as if she’s Norma Desmond descending the staircase, my mother signals to me from across the room.

  She’s both breathtaking and distancing. A-list in the looks department, Wicked Witch in the nurturing arena. I want to run to her, open armed, ready for her embrace, and I want to run away as the reality sets in that she will never be the person I’d hoped she’d become.

  Within seconds I’m accosted by the smell of several flowery and sweet fragrances making me think I’ve entered a stale perfumery. I glance at my mother’s friends, their faces already embroidered in my memory. They’re as familiar to me as the conversations that take place in the hotel’s lounge every Wednesday either before or after they’ve played bridge at the club next door. Somehow Midtown Manhattan’s Four Seasons has become a halfway house for wayward Upper East Siders.

  I smile like a good daughter and fall, rather slip, easily into the role I’m expected to play. I excel at this. My whole family does. By thirty-two, I had assumed a curtain would have dropped, followed by several adoring minutes of applause, and an award would have arrived on my doorstep: Best Acting in a Family Drama. But it didn’t, and the ovation hasn’t started, and from what I can tell, intermission isn’t coming for years.

  Usually I can find a way to escape, a reason to be MIA. It’s a large hotel with over 368 rooms. I could be anywhere: in a budget meeting, speaking with housekeeping, planning a corporate event, showing a room, dealing with a celebrity in crisis. The list of excuses for a general manager of a hotel is endless. But today I’ve been caught. Today I’ve been inducted, or abducted, into my mother’s ritual tea hour.

  It takes several minutes for them to settle in. Shop
ping bags are stacked noisily on the unoccupied banquette, recently completed bridge scorecards are removed from pockets and purses, fur coats, hats, and wool scarves are draped over the backs of the mahogany chairs. The sound of the wooden legs scraping against marble floor, the snap of white cloth napkins, of water being poured into glasses, of bangle bracelets clinking and scratching against the fine china plates all seem to converge. It’s a musical ballet, rhythmic and smooth. Dramatic and entertaining.

  The only way to tell my mother’s friends apart is by their drink orders: White or Red Wine, Cosmo, Martini, Gin & Tonic.

  “The food is good here,” White Wine says.

  “Yes, the food is good here,” agrees Martini.

  “Marvelous,” announces Cosmo.

  “I just love it,” my mother contributes, winking at me before taking a swig of watered-down scotch. “And having a child who runs the show doesn’t hurt either.”

  “I tell Robert he can’t take me anywhere else for my birthday, it’s always here.”

  “I know,” says Red Wine, slapping the top of the table. “I love high tea. It’s absolutely charming.”

  “Best in New York.”

  “And there’s so much food.”

  I watch them eye the traditional three-tier holders. Two have been set in the middle of the table, each filled with warm berry scones and mini lemon poppy seed muffins, egg, tuna, and cucumber finger sandwiches, quarter-size salmon and cream cheese on toasted brioche, cookies, and coconut macaroons. As they reach for the snacks, rings on appropriate fingers, a rainbow of nail colors flashes. What the hell am I doing here?

  “I wouldn’t dare eat this by myself,” continues Gin & Tonic.

 

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