“Well,” Charlie said, “you’ll be missed.”
“Yes, of course,” Winnie said, and returned to poking colored pins into a Styrofoam ball.
It was a pleasure to get into my own car, to set the radio to NPR and listen to All Things Considered. Someday soon when they thanked their corporate sponsors and the charitable trusts, the Fortune Family Foundation would be among them. With the help of the bankers, I’d been earmarking money for years, and in the near future there would be enough to make an endowment.
When I finally found a place to park in Harvard Square, I stepped out of the underground lot and into a pre-Christmas flurry. Christmas lights blinked in greens and reds in the trees around the square and car horns blared in the dusk. It was four-thirty and soon everyone would be rushing home.
A skinny Salvation Army Santa rang a bell outside the Harvard Coop and I dropped several bills into the receptacle that stood beside him.
“Merry Christmas,” he said.
“And to you,” I answered, and smiled. I always liked Christmas and New England winters, especially evenings when the air was so crisp it felt like it might break from the sky like an icicle from a tree.
I went into the Harvard Coop to look for a gift for the Bentleys. I settled on a book of photography that showed writers in their natural habitats—like animals. Max was in the book. The caption might have read: “A native of suburban Boston, this exotic beast has found a home in the industrial-style lofts of Tribeca located in downtown New York City. Tribeca attracts some of the most successful of his species.” Instead, it just said: “Max Wellman, Tribeca Loft.”
With gift in hand, I walked toward the Bentleys’ house. Bentley’s wife, Melody, answered the enormous oak door. She took a brief look at me, then pulled me into her ample chest. She smelled of wet clay. She always smelled of wet clay. When Bentley had finally gotten married, he hadn’t chosen from his plethora of worshipful students. Instead, he had chosen a woman he met at a party, a woman several years older than he was, a woman who had retired at forty after making her money in fashions for plus-size women. Bentley called it “fashion for fatties.”
“Darling, you look horrible,” Melody said.
“Thanks,” I said.
“I didn’t mean it like that. Well, you know what I mean.”
I didn’t know really, except perhaps that the stress was beginning to show. Melody led me into the kitchen, where Bentley was grinding coffee beans. Since he had given up drinking, he’d become a coffee connoisseur. He gave coffee the same attention he once gave to his brand of scotch.
He asked if I’d prefer Kona, French roast, or a special Brazilian blend.
“I wouldn’t know one from the other,” I said.
“Jeez, Jane,” Bentley said, “you don’t look too well. Are you sick?” He looked closely at my face, which was, as usual, devoid of makeup. Melody offered me a plate of Christmas cookies. I took two and sat in a bentwood chair at their pine table.
“I’m not sick,” I said. “I’m perfectly well.”
“I like your new haircut, Jane,” Melody said. “Evan, you didn’t say anything about Jane’s new haircut.” Melody always looked polished. She wore a flowing artistic shirt and slim pants. She was one of those women who always knew how to do the best with what they had, probably a necessity in her former business. Her brown helmet of hair was straight and smooth, and to the untrained eye it looked as if she wasn’t wearing makeup. Because of Miranda, my eye was trained. What I was looking at in Melody was not the lack of makeup, but rather the skillful application of it.
Bentley put a cup of coffee in front of me. “Nice haircut,” he said. “Try the Kona.”
The coffee tasted like sludge. I added several inches of cream from a pitcher on the table.
“He’s back,” I said. I used an ominous voice and tried to be funny, but it was lost on them. Everything I said or did was lost on someone these days.
“Who’s back?” Bentley asked.
“Max Wellman,” I said. “I already told you that his sister and her husband ended up renting our house. Bad enough. But it turns out he was a college friend of my brother-in-law’s. Charlie—the brother-in-law—is helping him find a house, some perfect place for him and some nymphet to settle down.” I took a bite of the cookie in my hand. It was a homemade Christmas cookie, but it was shaped like a Star of David. Melody was Jewish. I think she forgot to add sugar to the batter, but it would have been rude to spit it out, so I kept eating.
“Is that the Max Wellman you’re so jealous of?” Melody asked Bentley.
“I never said I was jealous of him,” Bentley said.
“You did too. You said he stole the girl you wanted.” Bentley turned toward the sink, and when he turned back his face had the flush of a sunburn.
For a few months after Max left, Bentley and I had dated, or I suppose you could call it that. I always thought he was too old for me, and besides, if Max still resided in my heart all these years later, you can only imagine how many rooms he inhabited then. The real difference between my dates with Bentley and our meetings in connection with the Review was that on our dates Bentley paid. He kissed me a few times, drunkenly. I hadn’t liked the taste of him and his kisses were too wet.
“It wasn’t just the girl,” Melody said. “I think if Evan were to admit it, he’d like to have the career Max has.” Melody sat heavily in the chair beside me.
Bentley had broken out of his writer’s slump after the Review started to get him attention. He had written two more novels, both to critical acclaim, but neither of them had made much money. It wasn’t that he needed money, but if you took money as a sign of the world’s appreciation, the world hadn’t valued him enough.
Melody sipped her coffee. She took it black, which was either a sign of true love or of a complete absence of taste buds.
“Who wouldn’t envy Max Wellman?” Bentley asked. “That hardly makes me unique among writers. Anyway, things always work out for the best. If I got that girl, I wouldn’t be here with you.”
Though the words were kind, the tone was not. He probably wasn’t thrilled to have Melody hanging out his dirty laundry in front of me. And what was more awkward was that she didn’t realize that the girl she was talking about, the memory of Bentley’s she had to expose in order to save herself from its shadow, was me.
I didn’t know that I’d become a piece of Bentley’s mythology. He never acted unhappy after I told him I’d rather that we remain friends, yet he had created a story, an imaginary lost love, a struggle between himself and Max Wellman for the love of a woman. The truth was that Max was long gone by the time I started to date Bentley.
This lost love of his was all in his head, a part of the stories we create about ourselves that become our histories. After we tell our stories enough times, they become true for us, and maybe that’s all that matters. I had done it with Max, written the role of jilted lover, then played it with the finesse of a Shakespearean actor. Perhaps my suffering was my own creation just like Bentley’s was his.
“It’s hard to watch him move on with his life,” I said.
“When you haven’t moved on with yours?” Bentley asked.
“I have,” I said, though I didn’t feel like I had.
“She certainly has,” Melody said. “Look at the work of the foundation. You told me that when you started on it, no one had ever even heard of it. Now, there isn’t a bookstore or newsstand in Boston and probably other cities, too, that doesn’t carry the Euphemia Review. Because of Jane, you get asked to speak all the time.”
“I would hope that it has something to do with my books,” Bentley said.
“Of course it does,” I said, but we both knew that on the strength of his books alone, Bentley would not have the career he had today.
“So what’s Jack Reilly like?” Bentley asked. He knew how important it was for me to discover a new talent, especially now.
“I haven’t found him yet.”
“I gue
ss you’ll have to move on to the next one,” Bentley said.
“I can’t.”
“Why not?”
“Because he’s the next great thing.”
“And you know this how?”
“From the story.”
“It’s a good story, Jane. A very good story, but it’s just a story.”
“I’m going to find him,” I said.
“I’ve never heard of a writer applying for a fellowship, then disappearing. There must be something off about him. Maybe he’s a criminal. Maybe he’s in jail.”
This would fit my fantasies about the man from Lynn, the city of sin. But even if he was in jail, he could still be my next great discovery. Literary inmates were all the rage.
“He’s not in jail,” I said.
“Give it the holidays and then move on. That’s my suggestion,” Bentley said.
“Evan, you’re so practical. Sometimes too practical for an artist. Can’t you see that Jane is passionate about this?” Melody asked.
“Passion is something best kept locked up,” Bentley said. He had put his passion in a cage when he left the bottle behind. Sometimes I missed the old Bentley, the one who sneaked into a room off the kitchen during a literary lunch at the Ritz and took a torch to an ice sculpture of Jane Austen’s head. And although his writing had matured and the reviewers liked it, the verve, the humor of that first book, his first great success, never came again.
“I think he’s fallen for Charlie’s sister Lindsay,” I said. Until I had said it out loud like that, I had kept myself from believing it. I wanted someone, anyone, to come rushing in and say, “No, that’s not true.”
“Who? Jack Reilly?”
“Max Wellman.”
“That’s that, then,” Bentley said. “Give it up. Sometimes you have to give things up, Jane.”
He looked at me with pity, as if I were now, only at this late stage, having to learn the hard lessons of life.
“Come and see my new sculpture,” Melody said.
She took me into her workroom. She pulled a wet rag off a lump of clay to reveal the bust of a man.
“It’s very bad, isn’t it?” she asked.
“It captures him,” I said, though I wasn’t sure who it was. I hoped that the bust was supposed to be either Bentley or some other recognizable figure.
“You think?” she asked.
“Absolutely.”
If it was Bentley and if she had, indeed, captured him, I wondered what the implications of that were. Do we all try to capture the people we love, either in clay, with words, or even just in our imaginations?
We returned to the kitchen. Bentley had made a fire in the brick fireplace and we sat in front of it with our legs stretched out. Melody and I drank snifters of brandy and Bentley held his perpetual coffee cup.
It began to snow, so rather than go back to Winnie’s, I decided to stay in the Bentleys’ guest room. Melody gave me one of Bentley’s oversize T-shirts to sleep in. I felt a bit like a fraud now, knowing that I was a part of a history he remembered so differently than I did. Down the hall the two of them were in bed, chatting the way I imagined couples did before they went to sleep.
I stood by the window and looked out. The flakes got bigger and bigger under the street lamps. I watched for a long time until the street was covered with fresh snow.
Chapter 18
Skating on the Frog Pond
Max invited us to his sister’s house—my house—for hot cider and skating on the Frog Pond at the Boston Common.
“Has your sister done her tree already?” Lindsay asked. The girls were home from Wheaton and we were having drinks at the Maples’.
“She doesn’t have one,” Max said.
“No tree?”
“They’re Jewish,” I said. Max smiled at me. My stomach did a little flip when he looked at me like that. I was dismayed to find that the more I saw Max, the more I wanted to see him. Even when he was right there, I walked around with a vague longing for him.
Max had changed. There was more of the actor about him. But as long as I could remember what it was like to have him twist toward me in bed, I couldn’t pull myself away. I don’t think it was hope, exactly, that kept me there; it was more like obsessive fascination—maybe it was hope.
This, if anything, explains why I didn’t leave. I had thought, very briefly, about going to Palm Beach, but quickly dismissed it. I even started looking for apartments in Boston, but Winnie said she couldn’t do without me. Even though I knew that no one was indispensable, Winnie’s marriage was on shaky ground and I felt that the presence of someone else kept it from sliding downhill.
“I know they’re Jewish,” Heather said. She was sitting on the arm of Max’s chair. Those girls couldn’t get enough of his physical proximity. They were always snuggling up to him like stuffed animals. “But why don’t they have a tree? Don’t you even have a Hanukkah bush?” she asked.
Max patted her leg in the accepting way of a man who has become successful and is now ready to round out his world by marrying a silly girl. He couldn’t see past their inexhaustible delight in him, past the family embrace. I think some romantic love works that way: you fall not only for the person, but also for a vision of yourself in their world.
The day came for the skating party and I wasn’t thrilled about being a guest in my own home. Still, there was enough curiosity in me to make me join the group. We all piled into Charlie’s car and headed toward the city.
When we walked into the front hallway of the house, I got ready for a jolt to my solar plexus, but it didn’t come. The hall was unchanged except for Max’s sister, Emma, who came forward to greet us. After we took off our coats and banged any excess snow from our boots, Emma put her arm around me and leaned in.
“Jane, I want you to feel just as at home here as you would if we weren’t here.”
That was impossible, but to say so would have been neither gracious nor polite. I tried for an authentic smile and thanked her. Emma had draped our staid sofas with exotic throws and pillows. The look was American Pedigree Meets Casablanca.
Though I had only been out of the house for a little less than a month, it looked more faded than I remembered. Maybe I was seeing it through fresh eyes. It had always had the shabbiness of old money. Did the worn damasks, chintzes, and satins look different to me now because their shabbiness would soon spring, not from old money, but from no money at all?
My college friend Isabelle had been shattered when her parents had sold the family home. It was as if they were selling off a childhood that could never be recaptured. She was thirty-two when it happened, but she still felt as if something was irrevocably lost. I had expected to feel that way, and was surprised to find that my prevailing feeling was relief.
Emma looked at me warily. How much had Max told her about us?
Max’s sister, having married Joseph Goldman, was now Emma Goldman.
“What could I do?” she said. “I loved the guy. His name is Goldman, so I took it. I suppose I didn’t have to, but I’m traditional about some things.”
“I don’t get it,” Heather said. “What’s wrong with the name Emma Goldman?”
“There’s nothing wrong with it,” Emma said, looking at Max.
“She was a famous anarchist,” I said.
“A what?” Lindsay asked.
“An anarchist,” I said. “It’s someone who believes that government and law should be abolished.”
“Good thing we have Jane to translate for us. We’d never be able to cope,” Lindsay said.
“Anyway, it would never work,” Heather said.
“What wouldn’t?” Emma asked.
“You can’t get rid of government.” Heather said this with great authority. “It’s the silliest idea I ever heard.”
Joe Goldman joined us. His entrance interrupted the conversation, a very good thing under the circumstances. I didn’t know what a producer was supposed to look like, but it wouldn’t have surprised me to l
earn that Joe Goldman was typical of the species. His walk was brisk, his smile welcoming. If there was something anywhere to be produced, he looked fully capable of producing it. We followed him into the living room, where he had contrived the perfect winter scene: a glowing fire, cookies warm from the oven, caramel apples. The cider, both hard and soft, was served in glass mugs and garnished with sticks of cinnamon.
“No food?” Max teased.
Emma smacked him on the shoulder with her palm. “Is this not the perfect winter tableau?” She curtsied and spread out her hands, palms up.
“Did you steal it from the set of Little Women?” he asked.
“Steal? Don’t be silly. We don’t steal, we borrow,” she said.
Emma wore her happiness lightly but carefully, like a lace shawl. Even if she hadn’t been Max’s sister, she was the type of woman I would have wanted to befriend.
Joe and Emma stayed behind by the fire while the rest of us trooped to the Boston Common. Heather’s friend Buddy showed up, so there were three couples—and me. I was used to being the odd one out, but it felt worse when Max was there. The Wheaton girls were wearing short pleated skating skirts. I wore black jeans, a little too tight for skating. I’m a good skater and know what to wear to be comfortable, but I was aiming for a little more style than usual, and my aim wasn’t good.
Lindsay walked beside me on the way to the Common.
“You used to know Max, didn’t you?” Lindsay asked.
“Yes,” I said.
“I think he’s wonderful. It’s amazing that he hasn’t tried to sleep with me yet. He’s such a gentleman.”
“You haven’t even been out alone together, have you?” I asked.
“Well, no, but that could be easily arranged.” She slipped on a piece of ice and grabbed me to keep from falling. She pulled me off-balance, but I managed to stay upright.
“How is your writing going?” I asked.
“I haven’t really done anything during the vacation. We’ve been so busy. I wanted to ask you. You are so good at figuring things out. You seem to know more than we do, about almost everything. What do you think of me and Max?”
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