The Overnight Socialite

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The Overnight Socialite Page 13

by Bridie Clark


  He hates me, she thought miserably. Lucy felt exhausted from nervousness. I'll never fit into this world. I should just save us both the disappointment and back out now.

  Max caught her attention as they waited for the elevator doors to open. "Hey! I'm sorry about your dress."

  "Thanks," Lucy said quietly. "I know I shouldn't mention how much things cost, but--"

  "Lucy--" Wyatt warned her over his shoulder.

  "No, it's nice to meet someone who actually appreciates the value of a dollar. My sister and Cornelia, they practically toss their clothes after one wear."

  "Seriously? I make a lot of my own clothes, so they mean something to me." Wyatt suddenly had a grip on her elbow. She stopped herself short. She'd almost forgotten she was pretending to be someone else. "It was nice to meet you," she said, as she and Wyatt wedged themselves into the elevator next to Eloise and Trip. Her eyes met Max's briefly as the doors shut.

  "Someone's got an admirer!" Eloise teased.

  Despite her many failures, not to mention Wyatt's stony silence, Lucy couldn't help but feel a tinge of happiness as the elevator plunged down to the lobby. At least she'd managed to make a favorable impression on one person that evening. And a handsome one person at that.

  16

  Bright, cultured, beautiful, and the heiress of a major timber fortune . . . have you met her yet? If not, you will soon--and you're in for a delight. Lucia Haverford Ellis, graduate of Miss Dillard's and old chum of Wyatt Hayes (they're still just chums, if you believe them) has burst onto the New York social scene like a much-needed breath of fresh air.

  --Rex Newhouse, www.rexnewhouse.com

  I do not get it." Cornelia speared a fork through a bite of veal and shoved it between her glossy lips. Then she grabbed a roll and tore off a significant piece, plunging it in olive oil. "Did you see him put his hand on the small of her back and sort of glide her around the room? Totally trying to get to me. It's beyond obvious."

  Uh-oh, Fernanda thought. Cornelia downing carbs is never a good sign. She looked around Fred's to see if anyone was watching. Cornelia had become a semi-celebrity, and Fernanda didn't want rumors of her friend's distress-eating spreading from Barneys to the rest of the civilized world.

  "Why aren't you touching your food?" Cornelia stabbed at her veal so viciously her friend shuddered.

  "I didn't notice any lower-back thing," Fernanda said, cramming her mouth with a bite of chop-chop salad. She hoped the next table was out of earshot.

  "Whatever. He brought her to his mother's house. What is that about?"

  "She told Max that they're practically family. Old friends. Nothing romantic between them."

  "Like family?" Cornelia took another bite of her roll and lowered her voice to a hiss. "Please. I lost my V to my 'cousin' Selden. Don't be so naive. This Lucy chick's got her gold-digging hooks into him."

  "Well, she doesn't hold a Rigaud candle to you," Fernanda said. "I'm sure he'll come to his senses." At least Cornelia didn't read Rex Newhouse's blog today, thought Fernanda, or she'd be flying off the handle. Her personal assistant must have wisely decided not to print it out with the rest of her morning reads (ever since a Parisian dermatologist had warned Cornelia that sitting in front of a computer could prematurely age her skin, she'd hired a girl to surf the Web for her). Rex had devoted an entire post to Lucia Haverford Ellis. Clearly, he was just as enamored with the newcomer as Max and Wyatt Hayes were. In the short time since Dottie's dinner party, Lucy had shown up on Wyatt's arm at three different events. To make matters worse, she'd been flawlessly beautiful and heavily photographed at each one. She called to mind a young Katharine Hepburn, thought Fernanda--the slightly boyish, strong beauty that only good genes could account for.

  "Uh, waiter?" Cornelia heaved an irritated sigh, holding up the bread basket for a refill. "I know he will, but when? It's been six weeks already."

  Fernanda made neutral noises and took another bite of salad. She was running out of comforting words. As usual, Cornelia hadn't asked about her budding romance with Parker Lewis, and bringing it up would have been insensitive to her friend's current heartache. She pushed her thoughts elsewhere. "How was Tamsin's bachelorette?"

  "Misery. Her friends from Trinity put together this horrible bar crawl--we had to drive around the city on a 'party bus' and wear sombreros and act like we weren't roasting in cheese-ball hell."

  Fernanda tried again. "Is Tam getting excited for the wedding?" "Getting emaciated is more like it. She looks like a blonde bobble-head. Really let the Adderall thing get away from her. It's super tragic."

  Fernanda nodded. "Do you think it'd be wildly too soon to bring Parker to the wedding?" Oops. She had Parker on the brain, and the question she'd been weighing for days had just kind of popped out. "I don't know, it would be really fun to have him there--"

  "Are you insane?" Cornelia asked. "Definitely, definitely too soon."

  "You're probably right." Fernanda couldn't help feeling disappointed, but it was sage advice. "Plus I'd hate to call Tamsin two weeks before the wedding, pleading for a plus one."

  "And there'll be a lot of cute guys there--all the New York boys plus the Palm Beach crowd, and Henry Baker's San Fran people. You don't want to put all your eggs in one basket, Fern. I mean, Parker did just get divorced. He's probably not looking for anything serious right now. I don't want to see you get hurt again."

  Fernanda swallowed. She knew Cornelia was just looking out for her, but sometimes her best friend had a knack for saying exactly what Fernanda didn't want to hear. "You're probably right. It just feels different this time."

  Cornelia rolled her eyes. "You say that every time, right before you go 'method' and start acting like a total stranger. Remember Brice, that lax-player from Dartmouth? You hid your Gucci and started doing keg stands every night. Then for Mark, you became, like, this silent geisha, until he dumped you for his intern. And then Armstrong, that club promoter--God, that was the worst. You had to spend a month at Promises, remember, to get him--and everything that came with him--out of your system."

  "My track record is lousy, I know." Fernanda was not enjoying Cornelia's guided tour down memory lane. "But that's the thing about Parker. He's so laid-back, I feel like I can be myself around him. You're right, though, I know you're right. Why rush it?"

  "Exactly," Cornelia agreed, sitting back in her chair. "You don't think Wyatt would bring Skankerella, do you?"

  "He wouldn't!"

  "He'd better not." Cornelia swallowed the rest of her roll. "It's bad enough that he's going to see me in that hideous bridesmaid gown. I'll never forgive Tamsin for choosing it. Not a drop of sex appeal. But at least it might keep her father from groping me in the receiving line." Cornelia's BlackBerry buzzed on the table. "Hi, Daph," she said, holding up a manicured finger to Fernanda. "What do you mean, his wife doesn't want me there. I've got to be there. Howard Galt's sixtieth birthday is all anyone's been talking about for weeks. I can't miss it." She cocked her head. Fernanda could hear Daphne's high-pitched voice yammering. "Fine, work on it. And I'll see you tomorrow at two. Have your assistant Berry me Dafinco's address."

  "I still can't believe you're going to have your own perfume," Fernanda said when she'd hung up. "Like SJP or J-Lo--"

  "Please. We're only selling Socialite at Bergdorf, Barneys, and Saks Fifth Avenue--each bottle costs at least $250, the glass is handblown in Italy."

  "Handblown. Amazing. I can't wait."

  Cornelia reached across the table to spear Fernanda's two remaining croutons. "So Howard Galt's birthday party is supposed to be major. But his lame-ass new wife doesn't want me there. Like I'm still interested in that dinosaur--I'm so over my old guy phase. Whatever. Can we shop? My stylist has been pulling up the pukiest stuff lately. Even the stuff I have to pay for is hid. You've got to help me."

  "I'd love to!" Fernanda said. All of Barneys was underneath them and she'd called in sick at Christie's that morning. "I need something, too. Parker wants us to have dinner
with some of his friends from--"

  "You're the best!" cheered Cornelia. "Your turn to pick up lunch, sweetie?"

  Fernanda tried not to mind. "You bet," she said, waving for the check.

  Wyatt, wearing only a towel, padded across the white-tiled floor at the Racquet Club. After a full morning at his computer, composing the early chapters of his book, he was looking forward to his steam-sauna-pool routine. He was really working again; his deal with Harvard University Press had been made official last week. If The Overnight Socialite became the crossover academic-and-commercial knockout he and Kipling thought it could be, it would be worth all his efforts.

  Max Fairchild, also clad in a towel, was an intrusion on these thoughts. "Wyatt! I was hoping to run into you, man."

  Wyatt grimaced. Judging by Max's absurdly chiseled physique, the guy spent way too much time working out. "How are you?" he asked, hoping desperately that Max wouldn't try to keep the conversation going. He really needed to unwind.

  No such luck. "Well, I'm good. I mean, I'm okay. But I was wondering about something. Er, someone. Are you dating Lucy? The girl you brought to your mother's house?"

  "Lucy? No, she's just an old friend." Wyatt recited the party line, but he also felt territorial. The last thing Lucy needed was a distraction.

  "Okay, that's what she told me, too. So you wouldn't have a problem with my taking her out?" Max looked elated.

  "I wouldn't have a problem with your asking her out," Wyatt replied. "But don't be upset if she puts you off. She's very serious about her work. Doesn't have much time for a personal life."

  Max nodded. "Well, I've got to try. She's one of the cooler girls I've met in a long time. You going to the steam room, too?"

  "Sauna," Wyatt decided. He'd had enough of Max Fairchild. "See you around."

  "She should call this Spill in Aisle Three," Lucy muttered, looking at one of the pieces with open bewilderment. Wyatt stifled a laugh. They'd crossed the threshold into the art exhibition of new works by Libet Vance. It was already filled with downtown galleristas posing thoughtfully in front of the installations.

  Libet, daughter of a famous bad-boy artist, had expressed herself by configuring pieces of whole fruit--pineapples, mangos, Asian pears--into what could be roughly described as sculpture. Some of the bananas were beginning to spot with brown--a giveaway that the artist had thrown together her entire show that week. Libet might view it as art, thought Lucy, but most people she knew would consider it last Monday's breakfast.

  Wyatt looked at her critically. "Are you chewing gum? Spit it out! You look like a cow chewing her cud."

  Lucy sighed. She and Wyatt had been out several times this week, and each time he found something minuscule to freak out over. She spit her fluorescent Bubbalicious into the palm of her hand. "Are you in an especially bad mood tonight, or is it me?"

  "Throw it out! What if someone wants to shake your hand?"

  Lucy just laughed and tossed it into the trash can behind the bar. "It's gum, Wyatt. Do you honestly think people are paying such close attention?"

  "Of course they are. You just entered a party on my arm." He gestured toward two photographers, currently photographing Libet and her father in front of a wreath of mangos and kiwis. "They'll zero in on us next, just watch." Lucy straightened her dress, a bronzed-jacquard sheath that Eloise had pulled for her. It set off her olive skin and dark hair perfectly. "Now follow me, I want you to meet Rex Newhouse," Wyatt said. "You need to thank him for his profile."

  "So how are things going with Wyatt and his new girl?" probed Binkie Howe. She and Dottie were catching up over cocktails at the Colony Club. "He seemed smitten at your dinner party. Oh, was Cornelia fuming!"

  "They're just friends," Dottie said. That was what Wyatt wanted her to say, wasn't it? It was easier than the truth, that was for sure.

  "Friends, my foot. He had that glow, Dot. That glow you and his father used to have. I've seen it all before!"

  The mention of her late husband made Dottie's heart ache, as it always did. How she wished her son could find that kind of love. Instead, he was taking advantage of a poor girl who didn't have family or friends around to protect her. The day after her party, she'd cornered him at his apartment and begged him to reconsider his actions. What would happen to Lucy after Wyatt's little experiment had run its course? How would Lucy feel when he revealed her as a fraud, an impostor? Wyatt had spewed some nonsense about making sure Lucy found a nice job working for some designer, as if that were compensation for turning her life upside down. She'd raised a man who was incapable of thinking beyond himself.

  "Mark my words," Binkie continued. "She's the one!"

  Dottie smiled weakly. "She does seem lovely, doesn't she? I just hope she can survive my son."

  "You're overreacting. Nobody even noticed!" Lucy chased after Wyatt, who had charged ahead to wave down their car on Little West 12th, but it was hard to navigate the cobblestones in heels. They'd barely arrived at Libet's party when he pulled the rip cord.

  "Nobody noticed, thanks to me," he said, not looking at her. He rapped on the car window, waking Mark the driver, who unlocked the doors. "I yanked you out of the room--"

  "He's Bono! He's used to being photographed."

  "You sprang at him with your camera phone like a tourist hopping off a bus in Malibu. You can't seem so starstruck! What did I tell you about visible signs of excitement?"

  Lucy groaned. "I know. But my friend Doreen is such a fan--"

  "You're clearly not ready yet for civilization. We need more practice." Wyatt pulled out a cigarette and noticed his hand was shaking slightly as he lit it. If she kept screwing up like this, his book would flatline.

  "I don't! Honestly, Wyatt, I get it--"

  "Then explain why you asked me to hold your purse so you could hitch up your--I don't know what, your undergarments? Or why you insisted on touching your earrings ten times a minute to make sure they hadn't slipped from your earlobes?"

  "It's nerve-racking, wearing a hundred thousand dollars' worth of jewelry clipped onto each ear!"

  "You made that abundantly clear."

  "Okay, I'm sorry!" She sank into the backseat of the car, exhausted. "But I thought Rex and I had a nice conversation. I said all the stuff we'd talked about--"

  Wyatt took a deep breath. "You were fine with Rex. That's true. But we still have work to do. I don't think you realize how much is at stake for both of us."

  Lucy glanced over at him, a sudden sympathy in her eyes. "The watch has been in your family for a few generations. It must have a lot of sentimental value, huh?" She rested her hand on his arm. "I don't want you to lose. I'll work harder."

  He nodded, feeling a pinprick of guilt for not sharing his real incentive. "We've got a few more parties this week. Just enough time to get you fully prepped for the wedding next weekend. Your first real test."

  17

  Mr. and Mrs. Mortimer Winthrop

  request the honour of your presence

  at the marriage of their daughter

  Tamsin Dean Winthrop

  to Mr. Henry Baker

  Saturday, the twenty-fourth of January

  6 PM

  Bethesda-by-the-Sea

  Palm Beach

  Black tie

  Wyatt lit up a fresh cigarette and surveyed the vast back lawn of the Hayes estate, bursting in tropical lushness. He didn't know whether it was the Florida heat or the anticipation of the evening's events that had provoked the sheen of perspiration on his face and neck. Tonight would be the wedding of the year: the union of two old and powerful families from opposite coasts, two glamorous young socials, one ironclad prenup. Wyatt wiped his palms on his Turnbull & Asser tuxedo pants. He was nervous enough to be the groom. The balmy air seemed laced with excitement, even danger--how often could you say that about a Saturday night in Palm Beach?

  Because Dottie was spending a week at Lyford Cay, a vacation from her life of leisure, her palatial Spanish-style spread belonged to Lucy and Wyatt
for the weekend. Wyatt had momentarily worried that it might feel awkward, just the two of them inhabiting this house--but after spending 24/7 with each other for over a month, it would have felt more peculiar if Lucy were more than a shout away. So she was staying in the yellow room, he in the blue. (Dottie's home also boasted a violet room, an apricot room, a sand-and-turquoise room, and a periwinkle-and-sage room--with so many spare bedrooms, the primary colors had quickly run out and she'd had to turn to the Crayola spectrum, plus combos.)

  Wyatt knew that people would see the two of them arrive together and assume that the Hayes hacienda had become a love nest. Their careful story that he and Lucy were old friends, like cousins, had met implicit resistance with everyone except Max Fairchild: it was a detail people quickly overlooked in sizing them up as a couple. Wyatt had decided to stop fighting the current. If the social world and its onlookers saw them as a dashing duo, why not? She'd cleaned up so well--so beautifully, in fact--that he no longer worried about his rep. Besides, it only strengthened the impression that Lucy had taken her rightful place of prominence in East Coast society.

 

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