Beauty (10 page)

Read Beauty Online

Authors: Louise Mensch

Tags: #Fiction, #Contemporary Women, #General

BOOK: Beauty
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Next, it was at the Lincoln Center, a free event, and she hung out afterwards.

‘Mr Johnson . . . my name’s Laura. Laura Fielding. I so admire your politics. Are you going to run? I’d love to volunteer.’

‘Thank you . . .’ He nearly said, ‘honey,’ but stopped himself in time. ‘What are your contact details?’

She handed over a number on a piece of paper. That low-cut dress, modest below the knees, but – goddamn – what a pair!

He called that night – nothing special, just sounding her out. She was breathy, full of admiration. He was a great man. She wanted him to run. She wanted to help.

‘How can I serve?’ she said.

Shelby had invited her to the next event. She helped lay out programmes. She was diligent, and very discreet. She was also totally sexually available.

‘I want an older man,’ she said. ‘Somebody who knows what he’s doing.’

‘I’m married,’ he said, weakly.

She pouted and stuck out those fantastic breasts. ‘Come on, Shelby, I can’t be the first. Anyway, I want to come along for the
ride
. All the way to Washington.’

He couldn’t resist. He didn’t want to. And now, here she was, in his limo. His
aide
– in a fantastic short skirt, with old-fashioned stockings high up her thighs, and he could see a glimpse of milky-white flesh like a glimpse of heaven.

‘We’ll head to the hotel,’ he told the driver.

‘Oh my God.’ He stared at the ceiling, panting. ‘That was incredible . . . Unbelievable.’

None of the momentary distractions he’d been with before – and there had been one or two . . . hookers, strip-club hostesses – had given him anything like this amount of pleasure. Her firm, tight young body, the beautiful face . . . Echoes of lust were still throbbing in his groin.

‘We have to do it again.’ His mind was already on to the next time, the next campaign stop, the next hotel. Shelby indulged his fantasies. After he was elected a hero, she’d be given a nice safe job in his office. Nothing too big, of course, but something to keep her always available. Every powerful man should have a sexy mistress. He flashed on Laura Fielding in a silk blouse, tight pencil skirt, seamed stockings. Sucking on a pencil. Sucking on him. ‘Maybe I’ll see you next week? At Albany?’

‘Oh, I can’t come up to Albany.’ She was across the room, already getting dressed, briskly pulling on some new clothes – a pair of jeans and a sweater. Not the clinging red number she’d been wearing earlier. Laura Fielding was the perfect lay – you banged her, and then she got right up and got
herself
out of the door. ‘I’m busy.’

‘When will I see you?’ Shelby propped himself up on his elbows, looking after her.

‘Don’t worry.’ Laura wasn’t looking at him. ‘You’ll hear from me soon enough.’

The Johnson townhouse was a sedate fantasy of old money.

Walnut panelling lined the Victorian elevator. There was imported Italian marble in the bathrooms, a maid’s apartment in the attic, a private garden and a library.

It was the perfect backdrop for the moneyed politician. Or for a bright young buck, launching himself into society – into the same glorious future his mother and father had enjoyed.

Edward Johnson loved his home. He especially loved how it smelled of his mother – the one perfect woman in the world. As her only child, Penelope Johnson had pampered and spoiled Edward since the day he was born. He loved wandering into her boudoir, drinking in the scent of her powder and rosewater. He loved seeing her dressed in evening gowns, tucking him into bed. He loved watching her give orders to the cook, kiss his father on the cheek and generally behave like the perfect wife. Edward loved perfection and his house and mother were the apex of it.

One day, Mrs Edward Johnson would be a replica of his sainted mother. He adored her and, when his friends called him Mommy’s Boy, Edward replied, ‘Absolutely!’

He was sitting on the covered terrace at the back of his bedroom, eating stuffed olives and sipping an iced tea. Edward regularly went back home for Sunday lunch; that was the great advantage of Columbia – he didn’t need to stay in his student apartment any more than he wanted to.

‘Darling! Lunch!’ his mother called.

‘Coming!’ he shouted.

The housekeeper had set up their table al fresco, because his mother preferred to dine in the garden in spring. She was immensely proud of this ritual. Father was back from his travels, electioneering, and the three of them would sit around and chitchat over a glass or two of chilled Chablis, a Waldorf salad and some carved ham.

Shelby Johnson was already sitting down, the
New York Times
sports section laid out in front of him, when Edward arrived. His wife was hovering, wearing a light yellow silk dress and a smug expression. Shelby’s ascent in the polling was smooth, her social dominance almost complete.

‘Some wine, sir?’ A butler hovered as Edward threw himself into his seat.

‘Yes. Of course.’

‘Oh, you’re here, Mr Edward. There’s a package for you.’ The old housekeeper, Selina, came forward and handed him a manila envelope.

‘What’s this?’ he asked.

‘It was hand-delivered earlier, sir. There’s one for you, too, Mrs Johnson.’

‘Thank you, Selina. That’s all for now,’ his mother said.

‘Wait.’ Edward felt the first stirrings of unease. ‘Hand-delivered? By whom?’

‘A young lady.’ The older woman turned to leave.

‘Wait!’ Edward said, sweating. ‘Mom! Don’t open that—’

Too late. Penny had already neatly ripped the paper and, as he stared in horror, the large, colourful, glossy pictures poured out – nearly twenty of them. They scattered over the table, across it, spilling everywhere, polluting his eyes.

Shelby Johnson – Edward’s father.

Shelby Johnson – Penny’s husband.

Shelby Johnson – for Congress.

There he was, in all his elderly glory, ridiculously naked, pink-faced, erect. A young woman was straddling him. Her face was blocked out, cut off, but there was no denying it. Shelby Johnson, handcuffed; Shelby Johnson, gagged; Shelby Johnson, licking a pair of stilettos.

Penny Johnson went ashen.

One of the butlers moved forward, to pick up the shots.

‘Get back!’ Edward barked. ‘Leave it! Leave us!’

‘Sir . . . ?’

‘Now!’

There was a clatter as all the staff withdrew. Penny Johnson started to wail, a keen, high-pitched shriek.

‘I . . . I don’t know . . . These are faked . . .’

Shelby was puce, muttering. He felt sick. He was dizzy. He gripped the table, hoping not to faint.

‘I need to lie down,’ he whimpered.

A small, neatly folded piece of letter paper fluttered out of the dreadful envelope to the paving stones of their terrace. Mechanically, Edward picked it up. His mother snatched it from him, held it in trembling hands. Then she read it aloud – the worst words Edward had ever heard in his life:


Since your son fucked me for his amusement, I fucked your husband for mine.

There was no signature.

Penny Johnson screamed and ripped up the note. She rounded on Shelby. ‘You goddamned bastard!’

‘It was a mistake . . .’

But Penny was rifling through the pictures. ‘A mistake? A mistake? These will wind up in the press. I’ll be a laughing stock!’

Shelby looked, moaned in horror. It was worse than being caught cheating. He was ridiculous – totally ridiculous.

He thought of all his friends, laughing. The nudges at the club. The sly looks in the boardroom.

‘I can find her, Mother . . .’ Edward said. ‘I can get her—’

‘Get her? You
got
her already, whoever she is . . . You found the lowest whore in the world.’

‘Mother!’ His mother was swaying. He rushed to steady her. ‘I won’t . . . let her do anything . . .’

‘Find the bitch. Her name is Laura Fielding,’ his father said.

Edward moaned in his throat.
Fielding
. The name he’d used. ‘That’s not her real name.’

‘Just find her. What will it take to buy her off?’

‘I don’t know,’ Edward said.

‘Find her.’

He looked. He looked for two days. But she was gone, vanished from his sight. The apartment was locked up – sold, so the super told him, twice in a month.

‘She lived here.’ A hundred-dollar bill loosened his throat. ‘Sure, she bought the apartment from the landlord. Sold it three weeks later. She made a nice profit on it, real nice.’ He was admiring. ‘I couldn’t believe . . . Used to be a dump, before her. That kid is going places.’

Yeah – going to jail. For blackmail
.

He rang the coffee shop, but she hadn’t gone back since she was fired. There was nothing registered in the phone book. And then, on day four, Edward had a bright idea.

He reconnected his old cellphone – the cheap one he’d bought to woo Dina Kane.

Almost instantly, the text came through. It had been waiting for him:

Missing me? You can call.

He rang the number and left a message. In an hour, she rang him back.

‘You fucking bitch!’

‘How are you, Edward? Don’t tell me you’ve stopped laughing about our little tryst. I thought you and your friends were so amused by it?’

‘What do you want? Money? Isn’t that what whores want?’ He was vicious in his contempt, his hatred. ‘How much will it take?’

Edward’s family was already shattered. His mother had demanded a divorce and locked herself in her room, throwing things and drinking. His dad had slunk off to the Pierre hotel. He wanted the nightmare to be over, but the pictures were burned into his brain. He blamed his father, and Shelby blamed him, and Penny was diving into the vodka.

‘You think I’d ask for money?’

‘We don’t want those photos in the press.’

‘And?’ she replied, coolly.

‘How much?’
Name a figure. I’ll come after you till the end of time. Whatever it takes.

‘I’m not a blackmailer, Edward. That’s a felony.’

He bit his lip; he had been hoping to go to the police. Edward’s father had contacts there, lots of them.

‘If I send those photos to the press, that’s my right – first amendment, and all that stuff.’

‘What do you
want
?’

‘Nothing. But I’m happy to offer you some advice. If I were your father, I wouldn’t run for office, and if I were you, I’d drop out of college. You don’t deserve to study when girls like me can’t.’

‘Drop out of college?’ He’d be nothing – a trust-fund brat who couldn’t hack it.

‘It’s your choice, of course, but doesn’t your mother need you?’

I hate you
, he thought. ‘You
are
blackmailing me.’

‘Hey, you can ignore the advice if you want, Edward Johnson. Nothing you do will affect how I use the photos – or don’t use them. What I want is for you to stay the hell out of my life. Got it?’

She was too clever to fall into his trap. He hated her.

‘You used my father like a toy.’

‘A toy? Like you used me? And how many other girls?’ Dina’s voice was ice. ‘Was my mother a toy when you went hunting for information about my background, just so you could humiliate me in bed? You said my mom was the town slut. Well, what about your dad? Seems we have something in common, no?’ She laughed, and he flinched, hearing the loathing in that sound. ‘Get over it, Edward. Volunteer at a homeless shelter. You know – do something useful. Goodbye.’

And she hung up.

Edward Johnson looked at the phone for a long time.

Then he made two calls. By the end of the day, Shelby Johnson was no longer a candidate for office, and Edward Johnson had dropped out of college. He didn’t ring Dina Kane to tell her.

He knew she would be checking up.

‘You little prick,’ Shelby Johnson said.

He stared down at his son, sitting there on the couch in his sterile hotel suite. Behind him, the television news channel had his face on it. His goddamned face – not in triumph, the way it was meant to be when he was elected, but grim, like a mug shot.

Shelby Johnson pulling out of Congressional Race. Shock exit by Shelby Johnson. Johnson leaves family home . . .

The headlines scrolled across the screen like a horrible ribbon of smut beneath the pretty, bland faces of the newsreaders, who were talking about him, talking about his family. His marriage. His disgrace.

‘We don’t know exactly what happened, Joanne, but we have to speculate that some kind of affair is possible. After all, Mr Johnson left the family home last night.’

‘His wife briefly left the house this morning and was seen without her wedding ring.’

‘The thought of a Shelby Johnson affair will go down very badly with the Democrats, and his employers, Coldharbor Bank, are known to be extremely cautious with their image in the community . . .’

He wanted to switch it off, but he couldn’t. They were talking about him, and he was rubbernecking at his own car crash.

‘Don’t blame me, Pop. I’m not married.’

Shelby grimaced. Penelope was out of control, screeching at him. She wouldn’t let him home and he didn’t even want to go back. Facing the world seemed impossible. The Democrats wanted him to give a press conference. A press conference!

The thought of those pictures – him, tied down on the bed, legs spread, humbled, into bondage . . . Oh, God. He thought he would kill himself, except he was too cowardly for that.

‘But you provoked her, didn’t you?’

‘I couldn’t tell that she was a bunny boiler.’ Edward loosened his collar. ‘It’s your fault; you gave her something to work with; you gave her the photos. The first piece of skirt to throw herself at you and you’re off . . . You’ve humiliated Momma . . .’

‘Please don’t try to play the moralist with me.’ Anger suffused him – at the girl, Edward, his screaming, drunken wife, himself. What the hell? Other men did it, even powerful men –
especially
powerful men, so they said – letting hookers tie them up. But they were
careful
. He hadn’t been. It was all over. ‘I’ve lost all the work I put in.’ He mopped a tissue over his brow, sweating. The photos loomed in his mind again, as though they were already splashed over page one of the
Post
. ‘You’re such a self-righteous little jerk, Edward. You’ve never done a stroke of work in your life. It’s my fault; I gave you too much. You should have been working a job this summer, not chasing pussy at some fucking coffee shop. Your grades were dire before this, anyway.’

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