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Authors: Dominick Dunne

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It was impossible not to think that Gerald’s death, coming when it did, was some form of comment on the fruits of victory. Certainly it muted all the celebratory aspects of the victory.

It was crushing, of course, for Luanne Utley, who wanted only to settle the unfinished business of her daughter’s life. She has returned to New York. She is making a new life for herself. One night I took her to dinner at Borsalino’s. It was only at the end of the evening, when I returned her to her apartment at Sixty-second and Park, that we both realized we had not mentioned the trial once. She said she thought that was progress.

From the day he returned home from the Southampton Hospital, Constant had been intending to go away someplace, so as not to be near Charlotte. Since his accident on the Montauk Highway and the discovery that Wanda Symanski had been in the car with him, their personal relationship had become acrimonious. But Johnny Fuselli’s death, and the family’s certainty of my intentions, had thwarted Constant’s plans.

Charlotte stuck by Constant all through the trial as the most loyal of wives. She even went through with a television appearance with Constant on “20/20,” after his acquittal, in which she introduced her children, little Charlotte and Constant Junior, to Barbara Walters, her interviewer, and played
the role of wife in a happy American family that had come through a distressing ordeal. After the trial, she waited nearly a year before she slipped off quietly to the Dominican Republic and divorced Constant. She returned to Baltimore with her two children. When Henry Valentine Jessup, Jr., receives his divorce from Margo Jessup in June, he and Charlotte Bradley plan to marry, although those plans have not, as of this time, been made public. They have bought a farm in Frederick, Maryland. Visitation rights preclude little Charlotte and Constant Junior from visiting their father in Scarborough Hill.

Rosleen Shea Bradley returned to Nogales, Arizona. She has resumed her position as dental technician in the office of Dr. Hector Sabiston. Her son, Desi Bradley, has returned to Arizona State, where he is majoring in journalism. Other than Maureen’s son, Gregory, no member of the Bradley family saw Desi, although he and his mother were visited at their hotel by Sims Lord. A handsome financial settlement was offered Desi, which he declined.

Six months ago, in February, Kitt Bradley Chadwick burned to death in her bed in her apartment at the Rhinelander Hotel in New York. According to the newspaper accounts, the cause of the blaze was a dropped cigarette. At the request of her family, the alcoholic content of her body was not made public. The funeral Mass was at St. Thomas More Church in New York. I slipped into the choir loft, unobserved, to watch and say good-bye to dear Kitt. They were all there, including Cheever Chadwick, the estranged husband whom she had never divorced. The Mass was low. There were no eulogies. There was no music. Only the unexpected appearance of a hysterical, grief-stricken woman, who threw herself on the casket during Communion, upsetting
the spray of white orchids, marred the tranquillity of the service. It was Agnes Bradley, wearing Esme Bland’s gray wig, who escaped from the Cranston Institute in Maine to attend the service for the only member of the family who had consistently visited her and brought her presents over the years. Kitt once told me she told things to Agnes she told to no other person in the world. “She is the only person I feel safe discussing my family with,” she said. Grace, Countess Bradley, recognized Agnes at once, but the others didn’t, not having seen her for years and years. She was returned to the Cranston Institute in Maine the following day.

Later, I met Claire for lunch at Borsalino’s. She wanted to hear about Kitt’s funeral. Claire and I have gone back together. The boys are overjoyed. As are we. We talk now. She reads everything I write. “Put yourself into this more,” she says. Or, “Distance yourself here. You’re too involved.” We are having another child in August. We are hoping for a girl this time, although we refuse to let the doctor tell us what he knows it is going to be.

At the 1992 Democratic Convention at Madison Square Garden in New York, Constant Bradley did not make the vice-presidential nominating speech for Senator Albert Gore, as had been his father’s fervent wish and for which his father had pulled strings and called in markers. Nor did he make the seconding speech. He was at the convention, however, on the floor of the Garden, often glimpsed in intense political conversations with important figures in the party. He was interviewed often by television newspersons, several of whom he had come to know during his trial. Each time he let it be known that he was going to run for his old seat in Congress. “I am sensitive to the fact that the electorate’s perception of me personally has become an issue,” he said.
Before he could finish, however, his interviewer spotted Mrs. Harriman in the crowd and shifted his camera over to her.

Grace Bradley was granted her most ardent wish: she was made a papal countess by Pope John Paul II for her philanthropic work. She does not use her title in the United States, but she does register as Countess Bradley at the Ritz Hotel in Paris when she goes abroad twice a year to order her clothes. She still belongs to The Country Club. She dines there every Thursday night, her cook’s night off, accompanied now by Sis Malloy, who has become Grace’s companion. “Get my shawl, Sis. It’s chilly in the dining room tonight. Ask Corky to turn up the heat.” Corky does quite a good imitation of her. Sometimes a granddaughter accompanies them, a daughter of Maureen or Des. Grace goes early and is out before most of the members arrive. No one speaks to her. She has not heard from her Southampton friends Honour and Baba and Sonny and Count Stamirsky since Constant’s trial. She still goes to Mass at seven every morning, driven by Bridey, who has surrendered her kitchen duties to a younger relation. “I never sit in the same pew with Missus,” said Bridey to Fatty Malloy recently. “She don’t like that. I always sit in the back of the church, and she’s way up in front where the priest can see her.”

“I don’t see any of them from one year to the next,” said Mrs. Leverett Somerset. “Someone could have a dinner dance for two hundred, and they wouldn’t be there.”

Hurricane Carmela blew out the windows on each side of the main doors of the Bradley Library at the Milford School in Connecticut, severing the arm of Gregory Bradley Tierney, the grandson of the late Gerald Bradley, who donated the library in 1973. The arm has been sewed back on,
but it will be a year before doctors can tell whether the operation was successful. An associate at the Boston office of Louis I. Kahn, the late architect who designed the building, issued a statement today saying that the windows were not part of the original plan for the library, but had been added later at the insistence of the patron’s daughter.

In the hurricane, the porte cochere of The Country Club in Scarborough Hill was ripped off. Grace Bradley was not asked, as her late husband had once been, to undertake the rebuilding of the porte cochere, which was not covered by insurance. Nor would she have contributed if she had been asked.

In August, two boys were fishing off a rowboat in Whalebone Cove in Hadlyme, Connecticut. It was the season for carp. One boy had a bite on his line. Or thought he had a bite. He needed assistance from his friend to pull in his catch, but it was not the giant carp he thought it would be. Instead, it was a brown garbage bag, years old. Inside, they found part of a baseball bat. There was a shirt with a label from Brooks Brothers, old and worn after years in the water, darkly stained on the shirttail. There was a pair of loafers from Lobb in London, and another pair from Kofsky’s. The boys took their find to the Country Store in Hadlyme.

“What do you suppose it is?” asked one.

Paul, the proprietor, remembered that several years earlier two divers sent by the police in Scarborough Hill had spent several days in Whalebone Cove looking for a brown garbage bag. Somewhere, in some drawer, he had their card.

I was struck by the memory of Johnny Fuselli, blood pouring out of his broken nose, his eyes accepting the fate that was befalling him. “Tell me, Johnny,” I screamed at him.
“Where? Where did you dump the garbage bag? It will be your salvation, Johnny. Tell me! It will be your salvation!” His head was going underwater; only his lips showed. “Whalebone Cove,” he said. I told it to Luanne Utley. I told it to Captain Riordan. I told it to the new chief of police in Scarborough Hill. They found the name on a map, a tiny little cove off the Connecticut River, but the searches came to naught.

Salvation at last. Purgatory behind him, I know now that Johnny Fuselli has ascended into the Kingdom of Heaven.

Look for the latest New York Times bestseller by
DOMINICK DUNNE

ANOTHER CITY, NOT MY OWN

Gus Bailey, journalist to high society, knows the sordid secrets of the very rich. Now he turns his penetrating gaze to a courtroom in Los Angeles, witnessing the trial of the century unfold before his startled eyes. As the infamous case and characters begin to take shape and a range of celebrities from Frank Sinatra to Heidi Fleiss share their own theories of the crime, Bailey bears witness to the ultimate perversion of principle and the most amazing gossip machine in Hollywood—all wrapped in a marvelously addictive true-to-life tale of love, rage, and ruin.…

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DOMINICK DUNNE:

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When navy ensign Billy Grenville, heir to a vast New York fortune, sees showgirl Ann Arden on the dance floor, it is love at first sight. And much to the horror of Alice Grenville—the indomitable family matriarch—he marries her. Ann wants desperately to be accepted by high society and become the well-bred woman of her fantasies. But a gunshot one rainy night propels Ann into a notorious spotlight—as the two Mrs. Grenvilles enter into a conspiracy of silence that will bind them together for as long as they live.…

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A reporter’s journey into the world of the superrich—and the dark secrets they keep
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PEOPLE LIKE US

The way journalist Gus Bailey tells it, old money is
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Jules Mendelson is wealthy. Astronomically so. He and his wife lead the kind of charity-giving, art-filled, high-society life for which each has been carefully groomed. Until Jules falls in love with Flo March, a beautiful actress/waitress. What Flo discovers about the superrich is not a pretty sight. And in the end, she wants no more than what she was promised. But when Flo begins to share the true story of her life among the Mendelsons, not everyone is in a listening mood. And some cold shoulders have very sharp edges.…

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Available in bookstores everywhere.
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To Hannah
with love

By Dominick Dunne

Fiction

ANOTHER CITY, NOT MY OWN
*

AN INCONVENIENT WOMAN
*

PEOPLE LIKE US
*

A SEASON IN PURGATORY
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THE TWO MRS. GRENVILLES
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THE WINNERS

Nonfiction

FATAL CHARMS
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THE MANSIONS OF LIMBO
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