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Girl About Town

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by Adam Shankman




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  Two times, a gunshot changed Lucille’s life. The first time, at least, she hadn’t pulled the trigger.

  This time, though, the gun was cold and heavy in her hand, so heavy that her slim wrist trembled as she aimed it here, there, all around the room full of society’s brightest butterflies fluttering under glittering lights. With a start, she saw someone who wasn’t supposed to be there, a young man in a suit almost too well cut, lounging in the corner. No, she couldn’t let him distract her. She had to focus on the job at hand.

  She searched around for her target, something to focus on so she could blot out the sight of him. Why was he here? But the show must go on, so she took a deep breath, fixed a smile on her face, and pulled the trigger.

  Ruby. That was the name of the girl she shot. Red, red ruby, an obscene scarlet jewel pinned to her breast, dripping blood.

  Around her, women screamed, and Lucille swooned elegantly to the ground, as her acting coach had taught her. Ruby, though—she fell to the cold tile with a loud thump. There was nothing beautiful about her death scene.

  PART ONE

  NEW YORK CITY

  1931

  ONE

  It was never quiet where Lucille lived. Sometimes, in rare free moments away from the monotony of a washerwoman’s steam and scalding water, her mother, Ida, would lovingly read aloud from one of the few precious books that hadn’t been pawned. Shakespeare’s arcadian visions or poems about sylvan greenery, where thoughts were never interrupted by anything more jarring than birdsong and the baaing of sheep . . . Lucille would close her eyes, listening to her mother’s gentle schoolteacher voice, and dream about a place like that. Though maybe without the sheep. She’d seen raw wool loaded into the textile factory, and from what she witnessed, sheep must be as filth-crusted and degenerate as any Lower East Side bum. How clean things are in poetry, how dirty in real life.

  In their tiny tenement, eight people lived in two small rooms. Her father, in a steady decline since an injury in the Great War, was now practically bedridden, unable to work, or do much more than sleep or beg for the morphine that helped that sleep come when they could afford it. They could rarely afford anything beyond bare sustenance, but sometimes even that was denied to give her father the gift of dreamless slumber. Cabbage or peace, it came to. A holiday was cabbage and peace.

  Her two older brothers jauntily ran the streets most of the day and half the night, coming home drunk, grunting, and penniless—but they’d had money at some point every day, to get the liquor, so why didn’t they ever bring any of it home? The three youngest, two girls and a boy, were in school for part of the day. But even when the tiny apartment was half empty, it was still tumultuous. People were on every side of them, roaring through the cardboard-thin walls, stomping on the ceiling, brawling below their feet, bickering at their doorstep. Life in a Lower East Side tenement was a constant cacophony of the worst sounds mankind could make.

  Lucille should have been in school, but she’d dropped out a few months ago to help her mother in their small, struggling laundry business. Truant officers didn’t seem to care whether a poor girl in the slums got a proper education. Now Lucille spent her days dashing through the city, picking up dirty clothes and delivering them again the next day, pristine.

  Her mother specialized in dainty items—the lace shawls of proud old women, the undergarments of flighty young women—and had amassed a small but devoted clientele. The tubs of boiling water and lye took up half of their living space, but she washed only small precious things and could charge more, since the delicate furbelows required special care. Sometimes she spent an hour coaxing the frills on a fine set of knickers into place. A young woman rich enough to wear such undergarments could easily find someone to pay for their expert cleaning.

  But as the Depression deepened, her clientele was dwindling. People’s investments weren’t so secure anymore, and in times of financial crisis, married men leave their mistresses for their wives.

  “Mother,” Lucille said that evening, as she’d said many evenings before, “you could try again, couldn’t you? Just try? Maybe someone needs a teacher now.”

  But her mother only shook her head and rubbed tallow into her red, cracked hands. “It’s too late for me,” she said, her voice weary. “This is my life, and I accept it. Yes, it’s difficult, and perhaps not very . . . well . . . pretty. But I have you and your brothers and sisters, and you all bring more beauty into my life than I could have ever hoped for.” Then, seeing her daughter’s creased brow, she caught her in her arms. “It’s not all bad, is it?” she asked Lucille. “We’ve got each other.” She took her daughter’s smooth hands in her work-roughened ones and pulled her into a swaying motion. “And remember, you don’t need money to dance.”

  Suddenly, miraculously, her despondency was gone. She sang a Gershwin tune and spun her daughter. Both of them were giggling as they tried the modern steps. But her mother had grown up with ragtime, and a moment later she abandoned the jazz hit for the music of her own teen years, humming and tapping out the syncopated rhythms of Scott Joplin.

  They didn’t happen often, these moments of abandon and sheer fun. When they did, they were a tonic for all that was wrong with their lives. Her mother’s sweet lilting voice, the energy of their dancing, seemed to drive away every worry. Lucille and her mother had been dancing together almost since she could walk, perfecting their little routines of everything from waltzes and tangos to their take on modern fox-trots and swing.

  But they never had more than a few moments of joy. Loutish reality, like a drunken boor, inevitably tapped on her shoulder and cut into their dance. Now their gaiety was interrupted by a low groan from Lucille’s father. They stopped abruptly, looking guiltily toward the sound. Lucille pressed her lips together, waiting to see if he might go back to sleep.

  His fit came on him strongly. It started with moans that rose and rose until they crescendoed in agonized cries. Lucille never knew if it was the pain that drove him mad at times or the memories of trench warfare. He never meant to be violent, she was sure, but every one of them had been bruised when they’d tried to hold him down during his fits.

  Their reprieve was over. “I’ll stay and help you,” Lucille told her mother.

  “No, Lucille, you go, or Mrs. Fahntille and Mr. Rosen will be cross.” She handed over a small packet of knickers and slips wrapped in white paper and gave her a kiss on the cheek. Lucille watched her mother’s careworn eyes turn to the lumpy bed in the corner of the room.

  Lucille bit her lip. She pitied her father, of course, but she wondered if he would be in the same state whether he was rich or poor. Would the nightmares chase him on the softest feather bed, the old pains bite him through the finest patent coil-spring mattress? In his throes, would he strike out at the nation’s finest physicians as indiscriminately as he unconsciously struck his own wife when she lay a cooling compress on his fevered brow?

  No, the one she really felt sorry for was her mother. At times—frequently when Lucille was a child, less often now—she could see in her mother the vital spark of youth. It came when she danced, when she read some favorite poem aloud. Within her still, though buried deep, were all the hopes of her girlhood, giddy and free, and also the more domestic hopes of her young womanhood as a new bride and mother. Now, Lucille could see, the weight of seven people pre
ssed heavily on her shoulders. Every morsel of food that passed their lips came from her labor. What if she should get sick? The loss of only a few days’ income would be enough to put them on the streets and cast them all, particularly the girls, into a degradation from which there would be no escape.

  Every second of every day, this fear hid in her mother’s eyes. Yet there was still, Lucille could see, an almost childlike hope, little more than a wish made on a lucky clover, that things might change. What Lucille wouldn’t do to feed that tiny hopeful spark in her mother’s breast until it burst into a flame that would engulf all their wretchedness and poverty!

  Lucille’s dreams were undoubtedly fresher than her mother’s, but to her they seemed no more possible. What could she, a sixteen-year-old girl with no skills and hardly any education, do to save her family?

  “Skedaddle!” Her mother sighed again and gave her a pat on the rump, sending her out into the world.

  And so, feeling guiltily relieved, Lucille left, stepping over a familiar drunk in the hallway, skirting half-naked children on the stoop, and ignoring the wolf whistle.

  But I have to get ahead, somehow, she thought desperately. Ahead, and out, away from this filth.

  On that evening Lucille would have done anything to escape her situation—if only she’d known how. . . .

  Then she saw what she saw, that terrible thing—and did what she did, that terrible thing—and her entire life changed.

  TWO

  Isn’t that like you? Late to your own birthday party.” Violet Ambrose leaned into Frederick’s shoulder, crushing the soft fur of her snow-leopard capelet against his sleeve. “And in morning dress, too. Oh, Frederick.”

  Frederick Preston Aloysius van der Waals looked down indulgently at the angelic face that regarded him with proprietary affection. She had earned the right to lovingly criticize him when he’d proposed to her in the cab half an hour before. It wasn’t the most romantic setting, he knew, but the jewelry box from Black, Starr, and Frost, with its outsized diamond ring, had made such an uncomfortable lump in his pocket, particularly considering the other bodily agitations caused by the press of her leg in the back of the cab, that he’d found he couldn’t wait. Coming home from a matinee of the comic play As Husbands Go, he was unable to contain his enthusiasm any longer. She was sweet. She was clever. She was beautiful. She made him happy.

  But then, just about everything made Frederick happy. His life, almost without exception, had been ideal. Violet was the cherry on top.

  Of course she’d said yes. “We’re perfect for each other,” she’d murmured against his lips as they’d sealed the deal. For just a second that word filled him with foreboding. Perfect, like a sharp-cut diamond, cold and unchanging. Could anything be truly perfect? And if that grand expectation should fail to be realized, what would become of their lives? What kind of facade would they erect to maintain the illusion of perfection? What lies would they tell each other?

  Then she’d kissed him, and he’d breathed in the scent she always wore, Patou’s Joy, and the dark premonitions wafted away like so much cigarette smoke when the cocktail party has broken up. What on earth was wrong with perfect?

  They might really have been made for each other. Frederick had grown up with all of the elite bright young things whose daddies were New York millionaires. Cream had mingled with cream for so long that the current crop had gotten too used to one another. The same stories, the same jokes, the same liaisons were repeated over and over. Certainly some of them would pair off in the end, but Frederick had been thrilled one night to see a new face across the room at one of his father’s many parties, a face like a mischievous seraph haloed in auburn hair.

  Violet, of old Philadelphia stock, was novel and exciting, a refreshing change from the friends he had known all his life. They’d clicked instantly, magically, and if Frederick had a suspicion that their fathers—newly business partners—had thrown them together, he didn’t care.

  Now, nearly a year after their first meeting, they were officially engaged and on their way to Frederick’s seventeenth birthday party. Like everything his father touched, it promised to be an affair of Babylonian extravagance.

  “Shall we tell everyone tonight?” Frederick asked as the cab pulled up in front of the Pierre Hotel. The driver waited patiently, certain of a generous tip. Since falling in love, Frederick had taken to hailing public cabs instead of relying on his father’s small fleet of chauffeured cars. Not that he necessarily got up to anything he didn’t want his father to know about, but the kisses, the petting, were precious to him, and felt more so when they were at least a little bit secret.

  Oh, who was he kidding? he thought as he saw the doorman eyeballing him. His father’s spy network rivaled the U.S. government’s, and though he mostly used it to unearth business secrets, Frederick wouldn’t be surprised if his father already knew, somehow, about his engagement. He caught the cabbie’s eye, imagining him flashing secret hand signals to a shabby towheaded girl scurrying by carrying a paper-wrapped bundle, who would relay the gossip directly to Mr. van der Waals’s office. Frederick didn’t mind. His father was his idol. If he had more time for his son, Frederick might even have considered him his best friend.

  “What’s so funny?” Violet asked when he chuckled, looking slightly piqued not to be in on the joke.

  “Oh . . . nothing. Do you think my father will give his consent?”

  “I am rather a bounder,” she said, lowering her eyelashes and giving him a beguiling sidelong glance. “Maybe I’m only marrying you for your money.”

  They both laughed at this. Though neither paid particularly close attention to their fathers’ businesses, they knew that their respective funds were almost limitless and that, as only children, their wealth, even if not joined in holy matrimony, was extravagant.

  “Would you marry me even if I were a pauper?” he asked, still joking, knowing her answer without a doubt.

  To his amazement, she cocked her head, considering him. “No,” she said at last, and his face fell. “Well, you see,” she went on, light and careless as a meringue, “we wouldn’t have met if you were poor, would we? I’m only being practical. How would I have gotten to know all your lovely qualities if you were a busboy or an elevator operator?”

  He supposed that made sense, but still, how easy it would have been for her to say, Of course, darling. . . .

  “And what exactly are my loveliest qualities?” he asked, nuzzling her cheek.

  “Oh, Frederick, you’re so very . . . Oh, look, there’s Maybelle and Fritzie.” She rolled down the window. “Yoo-hoo, darlings. Here we are!” She turned to Frederick. “Come on, everyone is waiting for you.”

  The cabbie opened the door, and Violet rested her hand indifferently on his arm as she flashed one slim silk-clad leg and stood, beaming at her friends, a spectacle even to those passersby not lucky enough to know her. People actually stopped and stared, as if she were a movie star.

  Or even, Frederick thought with another disturbing flash of introspection that was utterly unlike him, as if she were actually important: a president, a diplomat, an arbiter of the world’s fate instead of merely its fashion.

  I must be getting old, he decided with a wry twist to his mouth. Engagement could age a man, he’d heard.

  He rose beside her, and she nestled her hand in the crook of his arm. For a moment they stood thus, bound together, she looking at the adoring world, he gazing not at her beauty, but up at the facade of the fabulous Pierre Hotel, where he and his father lived. The creamy limestone base merged into an elegant tower of blond brickwork topped with a slanting copper roof and winking stylized dormers.

  “Beautiful, isn’t it?” he breathed.

  “Thank you. . . . Oh, the Pierre, you mean? Ye-es . . . But, darling, that reminds me of what I meant to talk to you about. What do you think of One Beekman Place when we marry? This is all very well and good, but the Beekman is infinitely more chic. Oh, Frederick, I cannot tell you how I long to e
scape from Park Avenue, with all those dreary grandparents! Do you know, I don’t think there is a single person under thirty within a block of Daddy’s house. When we marry, we can get one of those darling suites at the Beek, or why not an entire floor, like you have here?”

  “Two floors,” he said absently. Her idea about One Beekman Place was something of a shock. Having spent the better part of his life living in hotels—first the Ritz-Carlton, and lately the Pierre—he was anxious for something more intimate, less public. He was tired of running into everyone under the sun in the elevator, of having chats forced on him in the lobby, of eating nearly every meal in the hotel restaurant. He’d prefer one of New York’s cozier little mansions. Well, as cozy as ten thousand square feet could be and as little as several million dollars could buy. But still, a home of their own, without neighbors on the stairs and busybody busboys gossiping about his affairs.

  “Yes, of course. What does he do with the other floor, anyway?”

  “It’s his office.”

  “How dreary. I’m so glad you won’t have to work.” Fredrick tried to interrupt, to tell her that he had every intention of working alongside his father just as soon as he went to college and his father thought he was ready to be initiated into all the secrets of the family businesses. But, excited in her golden vision of her future—their future—she talked right over him. “Just think of the parties we’ll have! Let’s get two floors at the Beek, just like you have here. Only we can use one entire level for our ballroom. Our own personal ballroom—imagine! Oh, Frederick, how I love you!” But her dreamy eyes didn’t seem to be quite looking into his. Was it the ballroom-to-be she loved?

  Violet started walking toward the lobby, beneath the cream and gold canopy where a doorman waited as if the sole purpose of his existence were to open the door for her. “What do you think about a spring wedding?”

 

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