She hadn’t wanted to acknowledge that her mind had drifted to Pete more than once since she and Vivian had returned from the Village. Even as she’d brushed and pinned her hair into soft waves and shimmied into the most beautiful dress she’d possibly ever wear, he had crisscrossed her thoughts. Was it wrong to be preparing to go out on a fancy date with one guy while you were pondering a date with another?
Such was life inside the Barbizon, she’d learned. In short order she’d discovered the hotel was more of a play than a residence, populated by three distinct casts of characters. There were the glamour girls like Agnes Ford who dashed out every night, the echo of their heels reverberating on marble as they disappeared with square-jawed men into idling pastel sedans. Then there were the supporting players, the girls from Iowa and Maine and Louisiana who had won their local chamber of commerce’s modeling search or beauty contest and, brimming with bravado and squaring their shoulders, had arrived on the doorstep of the hotel to find fame, fortune, and a rich husband, not necessarily in that order. The Katie Gibbs girls like Dolly were also part of this group, the ones whose nights out meant movies with their girlfriends and eyelash-fluttering at strangers in the coffee shop afterward, or not-so-cozy nights in the television room, their faces blank in the ashy reflection of the tube. And finally there were the Women, skulking about the halls, their faces hardened a little more each day, like individual pictures of Dorian Gray. During the day they ventured out to their jobs as bookkeepers and librarians and English literature teachers; at night they returned to rooms that had become cells.
And then there was her, Laura Dixon of Greenwich, Connecticut, former debutante, Smith junior, Mademoiselle college editor, about to go to El Morocco with arguably the city’s biggest catch. These were, without question, the bona fides of a glamour girl. And yet inside she felt empty, inauthentic. She loved the dress, loved feeling pretty and feminine and envied, and her heart danced with adrenaline from anticipation of the night ahead. But deep down, didn’t she feel more at home in the cluttered, dusty confines of Connie Offing’s bookstore, thumbing through an old copy of Rebecca? Was she really not the second Mrs. de Winter, shapeless and nameless, swept up in Maxim’s world of romance and intrigue but never quite at home?
She hadn’t told Marmy about Box. Her mother was difficult to impress, but Laura knew that would have done it, and in some ways that prospect was worse than not impressing her. Laura had managed to put off Marmy’s New York visit, decrying Mademoiselle obligations that didn’t exist. But that wouldn’t work much longer. It was bad enough being unsure of who she was in a moment like this; she knew exactly who she was when she was in a room with her mother. And that girl she despised.
Only a few others remained on the mezzanine. It was a peculiarity of the Barbizon that girls took pains not to notice one another on occasions such as this—no one wanted confirmation that the girl next to her had a more inviting evening approaching than she did. Any comparison was done with a faux smile, darting eyes. Laura felt like she was suffocating. She started pacing again. It was like waiting for your name to be called as a finalist at the Miss America Pageant.
“He’s here!” Dolly stage-whispered, bounding onto the mezzanine. “I gotta tell you, he looks really good.” She pulled Laura to the edge of the shadows of the balcony. “Look.”
There he stood, not far from the elevator bank. Girls buzzed about him like caffeinated bees. More than one dropped pretense and outright stared. His blond hair was once again perfectly cresting. He wore a fitted white dinner jacket and black trousers.
“Please tell me you didn’t say anything embarrassing to him,” Laura said.
“Oh, hush up and go.”
Laura picked up her bag and wrap, shot Dolly a questioning look. “Well, here goes nothing.”
Descending the staircase, she felt like she was in the opening credits of The Loretta Young Show, minus the applause. But really, weren’t these girls silently applauding? She was tonight’s winner, and tomorrow they would all be talking, trying to guess what had happened. And secretly hoping it had all gone very, very badly.
But that was tomorrow.
Box Barnes approached her at the bottom of the staircase, leaned in for a light kiss on the cheek. “You look incredibly beautiful,” he whispered.
She did the most un–Laura Dixon thing she could think of: Standing there, a hundred eyes on her in the middle of the Barbizon, she extended her arms and twirled, laughing. “Do you like my dress?” she asked. “It’s new.”
Laura could not recall having ever witnessed a woman smoking through a cigarette holder, other than in movies. Her arm in Box’s, winding her way through the bejeweled and bedecked throng in front of El Morocco, all she could do was stare at the woman with the shocking white hair spun around her head like cotton candy, elegantly puffing through the long silver holder.
Angelo, the club’s formidable maitre d’, gave a barely discernible nod as they approached, sweeping them past the red velvet rope into the club. Flashbulbs popped. “Box! Over here!” yelled one photographer. Laura smiled. “Hey, Boxy, who’s the girl tonight?” yelled another. Her smile vanished.
He guided her through the crowd, his hand never leaving the small of her back. “I just noticed,” he said, “you’re not wearing the gloves.”
“They were lovely. But it was too warm out.”
He slipped his hand into hers. “Good.”
They stepped down the few stairs leading to the main room. It was actually a tad on the gaudy side—the lavender walls, too much crystal, too many centerpieces, too many candles—but watching the coterie of couples waltzing around the dance floor, all of its slightly vulgar qualities faded away, until all that was left was supple light, perfume, the gentle rustle of skirts, and the soft click of shoes. A clarinet tumbled out the notes of Cole Porter.
Her eye caught a stunning couple circling to their left. “He looks like Errol Flynn,” she said.
Box leaned in. “That is Errol Flynn.”
The host told them he’d seat them in a moment.
“I don’t understand,” Laura said. “Why is everyone crowded onto the right side of the room, when there’s all of these empty tables on the left?”
“Because that is Siberia. No one with any self-respect would be caught dead sitting on the left side of Elmo’s. Only the tourists, and they only get in on slow nights, which aren’t many. Angelo hates them, thinks they diminish the place.” The host waved them over. “Great. We’re ready,” Box said, moving her to the right. “Let’s go.”
It took a good hour before Laura found herself truly relaxing, despite the fact that she never left the security of their blue-and-white zebra-striped booth. They nibbled on small plates and drank champagne, and she fought to concentrate on the conversation, a near impossibility with so much stimulus arriving from all corners. Gowns gathered as they were threaded through openings between tiny tables. The throaty laughter of men drifting by on clouds of smoke from expensive Cuban cigars. Flickering candlelight hidden under tiny lampshades, dotting tables around the room like constellations. The husky urgency in the chanteuse’s voice. The quick glint of light on a silver cigarette case being opened and proffered for a lady. The clink of ice cubes swirling in an emptying cocktail glass. The danger of a surreptitious wink.
Laura felt Box’s breath on her neck, turned to see him again leaning into her, his hand sliding behind her along the shelf of the banquette. “You’re writing this,” he said.
Oh, that smile. “What?”
“You’re writing this. I can almost hear the Olympia typewriter pinging every few seconds as the carriage slides back and forth inside your head. You’re here, but you’re not really here. You’re still acting like an observer instead of a participant.”
Her avocation had come up in the cab ride over; she’d playfully threatened that she had only agreed to the date because she was going to write a tell-all for Mademoiselle. Now she felt embarrassed about it. She took a casual taste
of her champagne. “Not everyone is to the manor born, sir. This is new for some of us. You have to spot me a period of adjustment.”
“It isn’t like you’re exactly from the wrong side of the tracks. You grew up where?”
“Greenwich.”
“And you go to school where?”
“Smith.”
“Neither exactly Flatbush. This can hardly be all that new.”
“Knowing how to dance a waltz is not the same thing as having a full dance card. I am not going to inherit a department store in the middle of Manhattan.”
“No. You are going to marry well and raise lovely children in an immaculate center-hall Colonial somewhere in Rye.”
She felt her hackles flare. “What do you—”
“Wait, wait! That came out wrong.”
“That happens a lot with you, doesn’t it?” It carried more bite than she’d intended.
The frankness of his reply caught her by surprise. “It’s what people expect. And I’m stupid enough sometimes to fall into the trap of playing the role.” He shrugged, gulped some champagne.
“You can’t just leave it like that. Explain.”
“I have, shall we say, a reputation, of which you are no doubt aware. It gets me into trouble, and it gets me blamed for things I didn’t do or say, but if I’m being honest, it also gets me great tables at restaurants and brings in a lot of publicity for the store. But it’s a character, a version of me I put out for public consumption. It’s not really me.”
Or is this—the candid, sensitive guy—not really you? she wondered. Is this the act?
He laughed. “You’re sitting there thinking, ‘This guy is full of shit.’ Sorry. I shouldn’t have said that, either. God! I’m making a mess of this.”
It was her turn for candor. “Why did you want me to come here with you? We talked for five minutes, and it didn’t exactly go well. And by your own admission, you are not at a loss for company.”
He smiled. “Because you’re different.”
“How do you know I’m different? According to you, I’m just some girl who’s going to end up in a center-hall Colonial.”
“Ah! Okay. See, let me explain what I meant. That’s one possible outcome, and certainly the most likely for a girl with your background. But I don’t think that’s really the life you’re looking for. In fact, I imagine you’re looking for something radically different. The only question is whether you’re brave enough to actually step off the path you’re on, the safe route, and go for uncharted waters.” He grinned, grabbed his glass.
How much time had she spent with this man—a few hours over three very different interludes? And yet already she’d identified his pattern: Charm, disarm, attack. But behind the twinkling teasing in his eyes, she saw something else, something she found genuine, which indicated that he found her worth more than just fleeting interest. But wasn’t this the trap every girl fell into with men like Box Barnes: believing they were different, they were special, they were the one to turn the frog—or more accurately, the rogue—into the prince?
“I’m getting worried,” he said, turning his gaze to watch Kitty Carlisle and Moss Hart do the cha-cha.
“What do you have to be worried about?”
“These contemplative silences.”
“Are you afraid of a thinking girl?”
“I’m afraid of a girl who thinks too much.”
She placed her elbows onto the table, crossing her arms. “Can I ask you something?”
“Fire away.”
“This place. This whole life. The constant parties, the tuxedos, the travel. Do you ever tire of it?”
“Honestly? No.” He looked into her eyes with an intensity she found slightly unnerving. “And just to be clear: It’s not all parties and airplanes. I work hard. Harder than I get credit for. But to your point, I do enjoy a nice life. And no, I don’t tire of it. I think it would be disingenuous to say otherwise. Will I tire of it? Perhaps. But what is there to tire of? Beauty? Fine wine and fine food? Interesting people saying interesting things? I live a life that I am very fortunate to live, I’ve never denied that or taken it for granted.” He laughed. “Well, I may have taken it for granted. But I no longer do. And I see no reason to apologize for it, or to not enjoy it.”
“Hmmm.”
“‘Hmmm’? What does that mean?”
She shrugged, leaned back into the banquette. “I don’t know. I wish I could be as self-assured in my convictions. I love this, being here, but it doesn’t feel real to me somehow. This isn’t how the real world lives.” If she was going to consider dating this man, she needed to be able to be honest. He needed to understand she was a girl who spoke her mind, even if her mind was occasionally muddled. These days, often.
He glanced away. “Who gets to decide what the ‘real world’ is, Laura? Answer me that.”
They were interrupted by a hand on Box’s shoulder. An oily banker associate of his father, named Cathcart or something similarly Old Money sounding, here with his wife to do a smile-and-greet. They demurred Box’s offer to join them for a drink but lingered by the booth for several minutes, talking about the music, the weather, the performance of that new musical Damn Yankees they’d caught earlier in the week at the 46th Street Theatre. Laura smiled, nodded, tried not to fidget with her pearls. She laughed delicately in all the right places. If Marmy had managed to teach her one thing, it was how to take a social cue.
The waiter brought fresh coupes of champagne. “Tell me something embarrassing about yourself,” Laura said after the man and his wife had gone. She wasn’t completely sure why she was asking. Actually, yes, she was. She needed affirmation, some evidence, that his life had not been as perfect and as flawless as his appearance belied.
He chuckled. “Wow, you really are going to be a journalist, aren’t you?”
“Come on,” she pressed. “Just one thing.”
He pushed his fingers through his hair, searching for an answer. “Okay . . . Well, reports to the contrary, for the most part I have always been a very obedient child. I was raised with order, you have to understand. When I was seven, I was attending a very fancy private school here in Manhattan. I was originally supposed to go to school in London, but the Nazis had just come to power in Germany, and my parents were nervous about sending me to Europe amid that kind of political unrest.
“My mother has always loved music, so I decided that I would try out for the Christmas musical at school. Mind you, I had very little actual musical talent, but I was determined. Well, it turned out I couldn’t sing, and I had no aptitude for playing a musical instrument, either. But I was a decent dancer.”
“I look forward to seeing you prove that.”
He nodded. “So they put me in the big closing number of the Christmas pageant,” he continued, “which I think had far more to do with my parents’ philanthropy than my budding talent. Anyway, the director, Mrs. Powell—it’s always amazing that I can’t remember where I put my keys this morning, but I will never in my life ever forget Mrs. Powell—she had this station below the stage, almost in the orchestra pit, where she would give us our cues and yell out instructions over the music. Things like, ‘Sharper kicks!’ and ‘To the right!’ If you messed up, she was merciless. I’m not kidding. She could have worked for the Gestapo.”
He delivered a casual wave to a couple entering across the room. “Anyway, the night of the pageant she’s stationed in her usual space below the stage, and everyone’s parents are there, including mine, which only made it worse, because there is no place in the world that is busier during Christmastime than a department store in New York City, and even then I was savvy enough to realize the kind of pressure my mother must have exerted to get my father there.
“So I’m in the wings, and I am in full panic. I mean, panic. I can’t remember a single step, and I am sure I am going to go out there in front of all these people—the wealthiest, most important families in New York—and freeze. But then I think to myself, ‘I just h
ave to look at Mrs. Powell. She’ll be shouting to us along with the music, and if I just do what Mrs. Powell says, I’ll be fine.’
“I can’t even remember what the song was. It may have been ‘Sleigh Ride.’ In any case, for the big finale we were all supposed to form this sort of kick line, with girls in the middle and boys on the ends, and I can’t remember the steps at all. So I look down and I see Mrs. Powell looking at me and she’s yelling, ‘Show me those high knees! Let’s see those high knees!’
“But what I kept hearing was, ‘Show me your heinies! Let’s see those heinies!’ So right there, on cue, I turned my back to the audience, pulled down my pants, and showed everyone my heinie.”
Laura’s hands flew to her face. “You’re making that up!”
“Hand to God,” he said, laughing with her. “I never make up stories that make me look bad.” He reached over, pulling her left hand away from her face and kissing it gently. For a few breathless seconds, their eyes met wordlessly.
They were still locked as he pointed to the orchestra. “Ha! Do you hear that? My favorite Cugat number. ‘Miami Beach Rhumba.’” He slid out of the booth, pulling her toward him. “C’mon. They’re playing our song.”
They whirled around the floor to Cugat’s catchy mix of horn and staccato percussion, and Laura let herself surrender to the magic of El Morocco and the man dancing her through it. And she thought it impossible to imagine another night when she might again feel this alive.
TEN
“So,” Dolly said, stabbing at her eggs, “I think I have been very patient and waited long enough. We’re here, we’re all awake, we have our food, so it is time to start talking, Laura Dixon. From the beginning, please.”
That they were even here, eating brunch, was incredible enough, Laura thought. Hadn’t she just tumbled into bed six hours earlier? Box had insisted they go to P.J. Clarke’s for hamburgers after El Morocco closed at four, and Laura had been astonished to see it crowded with the tuxedos, gowns, and wraps she’d left around the corner, the Manhattan gentry packed into tables gobbling greasy-spoon fare in all of their frippery and finery. Fitzgerald was right: The rich were different.
Searching for Grace Kelly Page 10