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Authors: Beth Gutcheon

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So Grace had her way about the Assemblies. When the curtseys had been made and the orchestra struck up the fathers' waltz, Grace was in the arms of her uncle Walter. His cutaway looked to me as if he'd had it since Princeton, the pants were too short and the vest and coat barely buttoned, but it was kind of him to come on from Cleveland to do the honors, and he danced very well.

Harrison was to have come so he at least could watch the great moment from the balcony. I was to sit with him, but he never made it out of the den. Catherine and Hilary tried a few more times to talk him into treatment, but Grace was disgusted and everyone else left him to it. There were several more trips to the hospital, but he always resumed drinking as soon as he got home, and early in the morning one Monday in April when Grace was nineteen he was found dead in his chair. Grace happened to be home from Sarah Lawrence for the weekend. No authorities were called until after she had left for the train back to school; Avis told me she didn't think that was a sight a daughter needed to see. Nobody even told Grace her father was dead until she finished her classes that afternoon. Perhaps you can imagine her feelings.

Chapter 7

G
race must have been about three when, in some fit of misguided hope, I invited Avis and Dinah to lunch together. It was auction season and a particularly busy day for Avis, as I now know, but she had graciously accepted, realizing that I wanted to repay her in some small measure for her generosity to me. I'd spoken of Dinah to Avis, but she didn't seem to remember much about her; the older girls at school rarely do remember the younger ones if they hadn't had a special relationship. It was all the more flattering that Avis had remembered
me
when it was Dinah who was so vivid. I reasoned that we were all New Yorkers now, and both Dinah and Avis were so accomplished in their different ways, and we had shared that boarding school experience that seemed more and more anachronistic with every passing year. Dinah said it was as if we'd all gone to sleep one night in the world of Edith Wharton and awakened the next morning at Woodstock. Surely
that
was the basis for a bond. How wrong could it go?

Dinah and I were already seated when Avis arrived, out of breath, at the brasserie near Beekman Place that I had chosen. I noted with a slightly sinking heart that Avis was wearing a pleated plastic rain hat of a kind that my grandmother kept folded in every purse and raincoat pocket. Dressing like your WASP grandmother was not a thing Dinah was likely to miss or to be kind about. Avis signaled her apologies to us where we sat with our big glasses of beautiful straw-colored wine, looking forward to a long relaxed natter. She wrestled out of her wet coat and rubber rain boots and handed them to the coat check girl.

“I'm incredibly sorry,” Avis said when she reached the table. She kissed me and shook the hand Dinah held out to her. “One of those phone calls where you say, ‘I really have to go,' and the person says, ‘Just one more thing,' and then pins you there for another twenty minutes. And then of course there were no cabs.”

“We just got here,” I said.

“It's so nice to see you, Dinah. It's been eons.”

“Nice to see you too,” said Dinah.

“Will Madame have a glass of wine?” said the waiter at her elbow.

“Just water, please. Thank you so much.”

I wished she'd ordered wine. There was a brief silence, during which I did not allow Dinah to catch my eye. I began to recall the things I knew about both these women, Dinah's satirical nature and Avis's reserve, to name two, that might have suggested to me in advance that this lunch might not work out the way I had pictured it.

“So,” said Dinah. “You're an art dealer.”

“Yes. I was at Sotheby's, or Southby's, as people kept telling me. Park Bern-ay.” It was pronounced BerNETT: short
e
, hard
t
. It was Avis's attempt at a humorous sally, but Dinah didn't respond. “Now I'm with the Gordon Hall Gallery.”

“And what's that like?”

I recognized Dinah going into interview mode, a way of controlling a conversation that gave her complete cover.

“Busy.”

“But fun?”

Avis looked for a moment as if she'd never considered whether her work was fun. Dinah got tired of waiting.

“You had an independent study with Mrs. Maffet your senior year,” she said.

After a surprised pause, Avis said, “Yes. We did Spanish paintings. How on earth did you know that?”

“You told me.”

“I did?”

“Yes. You told me that when you went to the Prado and saw Philip the Fourth you burst into tears.”

A pause. I knew Avis
had
burst into tears in one of the Velázquez galleries, but she'd told me it wasn't so much at the paintings as at the thought that she might never get back to the Prado. I could see her wondering why on earth would she have told that to Dinah Kittredge? And when?

“Dinah remembers everything people say,” I offered. “It's terrifying.”

“Tools of the trade,” said Dinah.

“You're a journalist,” said Avis, enthusiastically trying to change the subject.

“I write drivel for the occasional shelter rag,” said Dinah. Another silence. Is there anything quite as off-putting as insincere self-deprecation?

Gamely, Avis said, “Well, I envy you your memory, mine is terrible.”

I protested. “You have an incredible memory for images. And music.”

“But words are
so
important,” said Avis. Even to me she seemed stiff, as if she couldn't stop being what Dinah expected her to be.

Unexpectedly, Dinah gave a snort of laughter.

“You ladies ready to order?” was a welcome interruption. I ordered steak frites because it was the most expensive dish on the menu, so they would have whatever they wanted. Dinah ordered steak frites as well, and Avis ordered a lettuce salad.

Avis said, “I read about a woman who died and came back. One of those near-death things? She was looking down at her own body on the operating table.”

“And she saw a long white tunnel?” asked Dinah. I could hear the sardonic undertone, meaning, Please, lady, don't be completely predictable.

“Not at all,” said Avis. “What she saw were the words people used as they yelled orders at each other. She saw the words themselves as if they had lives of their own, or weight or size. She said that if people understood how powerful words are, they would use them much more carefully.”

“I thought sticks and stones would break my bones but names would never hurt me.”

“Apparently that's wrong.”

“My god, what's next?” said Dinah. “A stitch in time doesn't save nine?”

Dinah the Mean. I'd forgotten that that Dinah might appear. Avis looked down at her silverware. She is incapable of being deliberately rude, and there was no polite way to respond. Three is such an unstable number, I thought unhappily. Why had I thought this would be comfortable for anyone except me?

The food arrived, and I decided, not quite hopeless yet, to launch a change of subject.

“Doesn't it seem a century ago that we were all locked up at Miss Pratt's? To me it seemed like something out of
Jane Eyre
.”

“Oh,” said Avis gratefully, “that's just what I thought! I was so homesick I wanted to weep, most of the time.”

“My home wasn't much to long for, but I certainly badly wanted something else. To be grown up, probably, but I blamed the school.”

Avis and I were warming to our topic. She said, “I was used to having the city as my backyard. I missed the Met, I missed the symphony, I missed the art house cinema on weekends.”

“I thought the whole thing was kind of a hoot,” said Dinah.

I knew perfectly well she had hated every minute of it. Avis, caught up short, didn't seem to know what to do.

“You did not,” I said.

“I did. I decided to see if I could break every rule in their pompous little book without getting kicked out, and except for never having a boy in my room, I think I did it.”

Avis looked bewildered. “You smoked?”

“Practically every weekend.”

“Where?”
She seemed actually shocked.

“In the woods, up on the skater's loop.”

“You didn't drink,” I said.

“Yes, I did. A friend from Yale sent me a cough syrup bottle full of gin. Lollie Ford and I drank it in the bathroom one Sunday while you were all at hymns.”

There was a pause.

“Well,” I said, “the world has changed so much, it all seems quaint now. Think of life before the Pill, or
Our Bodies, Ourselves
, or
Ms
. magazine. Before women could be doctors and lawyers—”

Avis broke in, “Isn't it true? And it's not just
women
in professions . . . in our parents' world, the professions themselves weren't really acceptable, were they? Somehow gentlemen lawyers were all right, but when you were growing up, did your parents know doctors or schoolteachers socially?”

My heart had sunk into my shoes. I was saying to myself,
Dinah, don't say it, please don't say it
, when Dinah said, “My father is a schoolteacher.”

As soon as the dishes were cleared, Avis left us, with apologies.

“Probably late for her Colonial Dames meeting,” Dinah said as we watched her leave the restaurant in her wet raincoat and pleated bonnet.

I said, “That's not fair.”

There was another stiff silence until the waiter came with our coffees and a crème brûlée for Dinah.

As she dug in, Dinah said, “I'm sorry, but to tell a gossip writer that words are
weapons
? Bombs or something?”

“She was trying to pay you a compliment. You're a writer. She just meant to say she admires what you do.”

“My god, if doctors and teachers are ‘the help' in her scheme of things, what does that make writers?”

“You know that's not what she meant. She meant that was her parents' world and she's glad that it's dead and gone.”

“I doubt it.” Dinah laughed her big rattling laugh, but it wasn't warm. “Jeez, I'm sorry I never met her parents. They must have been a treat and a half. Why does she always look as if she just smelled something on your shoe?”

“She doesn't. She's just a little more formal than we are.”

“Form follows function.”

“Dinah, this woman is a friend of mine,” I said, finally showing an annoyance that Dinah rarely saw, since we both knew that I relied on Dinah far more than the other way around. I added, “Besides, I agree with her. Words
are
weapons.”

“Okay, I'm sorry. And lunch was delicious, thank you. The rain's stopped. I'll walk you back to work.”

A
vis had to work quite late that night, I learned the next day, as she had to bid on two different lots for her most important client. There was a Rembrandt portrait in the sale, one that had been lost for centuries, given away to satisfy debts when the artist declared bankruptcy. It had been rediscovered in 1910 when a British dealer spotted it in a bedroom at a country inn near Amsterdam. Since then it had come up for public sale once, and would after that night most likely go to a public collection; there were very few late Rembrandts still in private hands.

With virtually no comparables, it had been tricky to predict what it would fetch, Avis explained when she called to thank me for lunch. If Greenwood hadn't gotten it, there was a Goya he was interested in, and she was also bidding on an altarpiece for a client in Europe. What she didn't say, but I realized with regret, was that the time she had taken for lunch probably meant she hadn't been able to get home to see Grace before the auction began. I hoped she'd at least been able to call to kiss her good night over the phone.

Chapter 8

N
aturally, Dinah and Avis crossed paths from time to time, as we all did in the village that is the Upper East Side of Manhattan. There was the odd cocktail party or book fair sponsored by Miss Pratt's, and the Brick Church Christmas carol party that filled its whole block of Park Avenue, or the members' evenings at the Met Museum. There was a period when the only place to get the French sunblock our dermatologists made us wear was at Clyde's Chemist on Madison. But Dinah developed a painfully accurate imitation of Avis's speech patterns after my ill-starred attempt to bring them together, so I stopped mentioning Avis to Dinah.

Sometimes Dinah would ask after my friend Mrs. Gotrocks, although I explained that Avis earned her own keep; Harrison's money was all in trust for his children and grandchildren; he just got an allowance. Avis continued to ask kindly after Dinah and she often praised Dinah's work to me if she'd read a piece of hers in some magazine. Once she even made an introduction for her to a society friend whose apartment Dinah wanted to write up. It wasn't done through me; Dinah called Avis herself and asked her for the favor.

Magazine writing was Dinah's solution to how to work but not make enough money that Richard might petition the court to reduce her alimony. She liked best writing about food, both cooking and eating, and had a biweekly restaurant column in
New York
magazine. She wrote about exotic cuisines and dining out on a budget. Three or four of us would go to deepest Queens or Brooklyn to eat Thai food, or Vietnamese, or Ethiopian, all still quite exotic to New Yorkers in the early 1980s, and order everything on the menu. For years my refrigerator was perpetually crammed with third-world leftovers.

Some people think it's a dream job, but I could never have done what Dinah did. Could you? Eat tripe and brains and big fried ants? Dinah would try anything. And I hate having to eat when I'm not hungry. Dinah is always hungry, it was one of the things that made her so much fun. She did, of course, put on weight. Even after the column was canceled she still worked the beat; she liked to try foods she'd never tasted before and then duplicate them at home. I remember a Chinese sauce she worked on for years before she was sure she'd gotten it right. She claimed that the secret ingredient was mayonnaise.

Dinah enjoyed being the go-to girl when you wanted to know the hottest little undiscovered bistro, but the writing that paid her best was for the house-and-garden crowd. Her apprenticeship in the women's pages ghetto served her well. Dinah is shrewd about knowing what makes a design really sing, finding new words for things that have been described a hundred times before. It's thankless work; you're trying to do with words what is being done better by pictures right there on the same page in living color. Watch women under the dryers at hair salons and try to find someone reading the copy in those magazines. You'll wait a long time. Maybe that's why the magazines have to pay the writers so much.

Few do it as well as Dinah, but she was far more interested in writing a cookbook and even had a contract for a while, though it was canceled when she took too long and the market changed. She was doing too many things at once. Next she was going to write a life of one of Andy Warhol's Factory Girls, but the woman got annoyed with Dinah's disorganization and withdrew permission for Dinah to use her diaries, and the diaries were pretty much the whole point for the publisher.

Dinah had recovered her balance, however. She had a new beau named Fred, one of the rotating band who went to the restaurants with her. He was an architect doing mostly interiors whom she met when she wrote up a house he designed. He was a bit of a fusspot but devoted to her. They'd been together something like five years when she showed up without him at a new Mexican fusion place we were trying. She was defiant.

“Is Fred coming later?”

“No,” said Dinah and ordered enough food for six people.

“Are you two all right?”

“No. I mean yes, we're both fine, but we're not together at the moment.”

“Oh Dinah! I'm so sorry!”

“Don't be. He'll be back.”

The room was bright, a sunburnt yellow, with loud mariachi music issuing from a speaker right above our heads to convey the impression that the room was full of life, though fairly empty of customers. The waiter brought us enormous margaritas, one pink and one blue.

Dinah looked dubious. “What did we order?”

“One has cassis.”

“What's the other one? Antifreeze?”

I tasted it. “Grapefruit.”

“Really?” She switched glasses with me and sipped. She stooped over and rummaged in her bag on the floor. When she had made her surreptitious notes, she sat up again and applied fresh scarlet lipstick.

“I think we should order one of each flavor,” she said. There had been about seven on the menu.

“No.”

“Wasn't one made with chocolate?”

“Dinah, what happened with Fred?”

“He wants to get married.”

“To you.”

“Of course to me.”

She said it as if it were simply tedious of him. How did people get people to propose to them all the time?

“Why isn't that good?”

A raft of appetizers arrived, and Dinah fell upon them, full of clinical interest. Avoidance patrol.

“Hey. Honey?”

She finished her margarita and started on mine.

“He's never had children. He doesn't relate to the boys.”

“Does he
want
children?”

“He says he does.”

“And you don't?”

“I have children.”

“Lucky you.”

She looked at me sharply. I was sorry I'd said it.

She said, “I'm not saying never again. But not right now. And I don't see Fred as a father, frankly.”

“That's an awfully big decision to make for somebody else.”

“Well, he agrees with you. But he'll be back.”

We chewed in silence for a minute; then Dinah disappeared into her purse again. When she resurfaced, she said, “So how are your friends, the Gotrocks?” and I let the subject of Fred drop.

W
eeks later I ran into Fred at MoMA. It was an evening preview of an Anselm Kiefer show, and I was waiting for my friend, when I saw a familiar ursine figure planted before a painting with his feet apart and hands clasped behind his back. He was alone. When he turned from the post-Apocalypse landscape he'd been contemplating and saw me perched on a bench in the middle of the room, what interest he'd had in the art evaporated. He took a seat beside me and began talking about Dinah. He was furious. I had to keep reminding him to lower his voice, as all around us artistic women in black costumes of their own devising involving knits and netting and deep black smudges around their eyes, turned to look askance as his torrent of words interrupted the reverent hum of culture being consumed.

“What did she tell you? You were with her that night at the restaurant? I was supposed to go with you, I was at the apartment, we were going together. What did she say?”

“Not very much. She seemed upset.”

“Upset? She
should
be upset! You think
she
was upset? What did she tell you, why did she say I wasn't there?”

With my eyes I indicated the art lovers turning to stare, and he said, “Sorry,” in a lower tone. “She didn't tell you what happened?”

I shook my head. He plunged onward.

“I got there early. I had a ring in my pocket. A ring! In my pocket! We were going to tell you at dinner!”

“That—you were getting married? You planned that together?”

“No! Not together, I mean that was
my
plan. I'd propose, we'd tell you at dinner, we'd have chiles rellenos and millions of margaritas . . .”

“And?” This really wasn't my business. And yet one wants to know.

“You know,” he announced aggressively, as if I were denying it, “Dinah isn't getting any younger. Or thinner. She thinks she can do a lot better than me, she thinks there's always something better around the corner. But I think she was bloody lucky to meet me. It's not every man who wants to take on a fat woman with children.”

I said something soothing. It was beginning to be hard to tell if he wanted to marry Dinah or kill her.

“What did she
say
?” he demanded. “I just want to know what words she used.”

I thought about it, then said, “She seemed sad, and she said she hoped you'd be back.”

“Back! That's a laugh. Why would I come back?”

“Because you had fun together. Because you care for each other.”

He stood up suddenly, as if he was going to blow up if he didn't get moving. He put his hands on his hips, looked around the room without seeing it, and sat down again.

“How about because I love her? How about that?”

He now seemed to be arguing for the other side.

I said, “I know you did. I know you do. She's very lovable.”

“She is! She's bright, she's funny, she's always interesting. Always. We make a great team! She understands my work, I understand hers . . .” He seemed to realize that he was making Dinah's points, not his own. “We had a great thing. Really great. I thought this is it, this is the rest of my life. But what was I to her? Some sort of hors d'oeuvre? Some sort of dessert? I wanted to be the main course!”

The volume was rising again. I said I understood, and I did. Better than he could possibly know. But he roared on.

“Just tell me, how does she explain turning down a . . . a . . . Me! Turning me down, because she's too pigheaded and angry to let that poor schmuck Richard Wainwright off the hook.”

I said, “What?” There we go again. I had heard him all right, but where did that come from?

Finally he'd gotten a reaction he'd been trying for.

“She didn't tell you that, did she? She didn't tell you the reason. What did she tell you?”

“She mentioned your wanting children . . .”

“Children? Me? I don't care if I have children.”

I was bewildered.

“She said there was nothing wrong with going on the way we were. But there was for me. I didn't want to be twenty years down the road, with nothing of my own, introducing her as ‘the woman I sleep with.' But she's more interested in fucking over Richard Wainwright than in being with me. She says that's the deal breaker. Getting married.”

I have to say, I was shocked. She really did care for Fred. They did have a great time together. She
wasn't
getting any younger. And neither was I.

Ten months later, he sought me out at work to introduce me to his fiancée, a small, smiling olive-skinned girl named Elena with curly dark hair and big yellowish cat's eyes. We had coffee together, and she flattered me by finding the behind-the-scenes workings of the store exciting and glamorous. Together we double-teamed Fred into buying her a beautiful Thai silk suit to be married in. He sat in a spindly chair in the dressing room watching her try things on, and looked like a thoroughly happy man.

T
hings at work had grown gradually more uncomfortable in these years. Marylin undercut me with clients more than once, but when I went to the manager, he had no patience. You could practically see the word
catfight
forming in the thought bubble above his head. Dismissing me, he said, “I'm sure you girls can work it out.”

I came in early from lunch one day soon after and found one of my best customers in a dressing room with Marylin.

I said, “Mrs. Rawson, I'm so sorry—did we have an appointment?”

She looked embarrassed, and her eyes met Marylin's in the mirror. Who said snippily, “She just happened to pop in, Loviah, and you weren't here, so of course I offered to help.”

I thanked her and withdrew. I went to check my book immediately to be sure I hadn't forgotten a date with her. Then I went to check Marylin's book, and saw
C. C. Rawson
in ink for the hour I usually take lunch.

I was furious. I did something I never do: called my friend at his office. He wasn't in and I didn't leave a message, but I was pretty sure his assistant knew my voice, and I was embarrassed I'd done it. One of my appeals for my friend was that I was “always a lady,” and a lady does not make her beloved a subject for gossip among his staff. I called Dinah and said I was mad enough to spit hot nails and she said, “Come right over.”

She took me to her gym and we swam laps. It was marvelously therapeutic. Then we sat in the steam room like oriental pashas. I kept my towel daintily wrapped around my waist, but Dinah had hers around her beautiful strong dark hair, magnificently at ease with her gleaming naked body in spite of its increasing heft. Where does a person get that kind of confidence?

The steam room was empty except for us, and I fumed about Marylin, her oppressive perfume, her underhandedness, and her smutty jokes, which her ladies seemed to love. “I hope she tells Mrs. Rawson the one about why dogs lick themselves,” I said darkly, and Dinah hooted and said, “Why don't we ask her for a sleepover and get her bra wet and put it in the freezer?” One way or another she got me laughing. Then we got giddy and couldn't stop, especially when we discovered what the steam had done to the hair spray in my helmet hair. I might as well have slept in chewing gum.

It was Dinah's idea that I should go out on my own. “You have friends who will back you,” she said. “Frankly,
I
have friends who will back you.”

“You do? Why would they?”

“Because you're very good at what you do, you stupid nit. And because not everyone wants to shop at Saks Fifth Avenue. Some people want more privacy. And they don't want to wear all the same labels their friends wear. At a department store you'll always be only as good as the buyer. Why not be your own buyer?”

BOOK: Gossip
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