Margot: A Novel (30 page)

BOOK: Margot: A Novel
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Pelts.
And all the while was he really kissing my sister by the
01
window? Did he make it to America only to marry a redhead?
02
“Ron does love and respect me,” she says, an edge of
03
annoyance to her voice.
04
“I’m sorry,” I say, because I did not mean to offend her. “I
05
just want you to be happy.”
06
She smiles at me. “I
am
happy. Have you ever seen me
07
happier?”
08
The truth of it is, sitting there, tapping her smoke into her
09
coffee cup, she looks a bit more nervous than I am used to
10
seeing her, as if she too is hiding. But I wonder in Shelby’s
11
case if she is hiding from herself. “Just ask him about the
12
hussy,” I whisper across the desks. “It will be better to know
13
the truth now than later.”
14
“Oh, for goodness’ sakes, Margie. You’re a fine one to talk.
15
Look at you, you’re such a prude, you’re sitting there in the
16
heat, in your sweater.”
17
I avert my eyes back to my typewriter, and Shelby and I
18
don’t say a word to each other for the rest of the day,
19
20
21
It is the end of May by the time Ezra is released from the
22
hospital, but even then, he does not come back to work.
23
“He’s recuperating in Margate,” Shelby tells me one morn
24
ing, on a day when the temperature is predicted to hit ninety
25
degrees, and I am dressed in my gray dress with the thinnest
26
black cotton sweater I own, which is already, even in the
27
morning, suffocating. Shelby and I have barely spoken since
S28
N29

01
the other day when I pressed her to talk to Ron, so at first I
02
am surprised she is talking to me.
03
“So Ezra is getting better, then?” I ask her.
04
She shrugs. “Joshua said recuperating, so yes, I think
05
he is.”
06
“Joshua told you?” I ask.
07
She nods. “He called me at home this morning to let me
08
know he was moving his father down to Margate. And that
09
he would be in for a full day of work tomorrow.”
10
“He called
you
at home?” I ask, wondering why her and not
11
me. And also, how silly I have been, to believe that his calling
12
me, at home, meant something. Something other than work.
13
“Oh, Margie,” Shelby says.
14
“What?” I ask her.
15
She looks at me for a moment, as if there is something
16
more she wants to say, but then she seems to think better of
17
it because she shakes her head. “Nothing,” she finally says.
18
“Just forget it.”
19
“You’re still angry with me?” I ask her.
20
“No, Margie. It’s just . . . You’re worried about me, that’s
21
why you want me to talk to Ron, right?” I nod. “Well, I worry
22
about you too. Joshua will never see you the way you see him.
23
He’s your boss, and besides that, he’s with Penny. And besides
24
that, he’s Jewish, and he’s a lawyer. And you’re . . . you.”
25
I feel my cheeks turning hot, and my brow is already
26
sweating from the heat, but I feel it turning hotter.
I cannot
27
work without you, Margie.
28S
You’re you,
Shelby said. And yet she has no idea, none in
29N
the slightest, what that even means.
The elevator dings open, and just then Joshua steps off.
01
He is dressed in his most handsome tailored black suit with
02
a green-and-white-striped tie. He clutches tightly to his black
03
leather attaché and walks, with a purpose, in my direction. It
04
was not so long ago, I think, that we were walking off together,
05
in the other direction. But, also, it feels like it has been for
06
ever.
You’re you,
Shelby said.
07
“Margie.” Joshua taps his hand on the side of my desk,
08
then removes his hat and places it atop the rack. “Can I see
09
you in my office?”
10
Shelby is most likely raising her eyebrows at me, but I do
11
not turn to turn to see. I stand and follow behind Joshua
12
inside his office without even giving her a second glance.
13
14
15
The air is cooler inside Joshua’s office, the room dark from
16
lack of use. Joshua turns on the light now and puts his attaché
17
down on his desk. “Shut the door, would you?” he asks me. I
18
do, and then he tells me to have a seat.
19
He sits in his chair, so we are across the desk from one
20
another. It is not a far distance, and yet, as his gray-green eyes
21
turn to meet mine for the first time in weeks, it feels like an
22
interminable space.
23
“Margie,” he says, his voice and his expression softening.
24
“I feel I owe you an explanation.”
25
“You don’t,” I say, though that is a lie. I ache for it, to get
26
that moment back, when Joshua and I stood in the lobby, by
27
the sandwich cart. When his hand tucked a stray hair behind
S28
my ear and traced the outline of my cheek. When Joshua
N29
01
looked at me, for a moment, as if I were more than just his
02
secretary, as if he was about to kiss me. When I almost told
03
him,
This is the truth. This is who I really am.
Shelby has no
04
idea.
05
“My father is very sick,” Joshua is saying now. “And I need
06
to do everything I can to make him happy.” He pauses, and I
07
think about everything he told me about his mother, about
08
how hard it was to watch her disappear.
09
“I’m so sorry,” I tell Joshua. “This must be very hard for
10
you.”
11
“Thank you,” he says, and he casts his eyes downward, as
12
if searching for something on his desk, in the papers that I
13
have piled up there in his absence. “Anyway,” he says, “all that
14
stuff I said about leaving . . .” His voice trails off, and he
15
shakes his head. His chestnut curls are still rumpled from his
16
hat, and I have the urge to reach across the desk and fix them.
17
“I was saying it in anger, and I shouldn’t have. And I certainly
18
shouldn’t have involved you.” He pauses. “While my father
19
recovers, I’m going to make sure I do what needs to get done
20
here on my cases and some of his too.”
21
“And your dream of starting your own firm?” I say.
22
“That was silly,” he says. “Stupid.”
23
I nod, but I am thinking that Joshua is lying again. Maybe
24
just to me, or maybe, also, to himself.
25
“As I said on the phone a few weeks ago, I want you to stay
26
on here, as my secretary, of course. We’ll be ceasing our
27
group litigation, but you can keep your raise. For your contin
28S
ued loyalty,” he adds.
29N
I am not sure how I feel, about Joshua saying we will cease
working on our secret case. On one hand, I’m relieved, but
01
I’m also, surprisingly, a bit annoyed. How can Joshua let
02
Bryda and the others go, just like that? What about that night,
03
when his eyes lit up, when he confessed to me his fear, that
04
if Jews are not seen as equals, something terrible could hap
05
pen again?
06
“You will stay on, won’t you, Margie?”
07
I cannot work without you, Margie.
I nod.
08
“Good.” He sighs, leans back in his chair, and runs his
09
fingers through his curls. I notice now his green tie looks too
10
tight, and his neck is red, as if he is being suffocated by it, or
11
it could be that he has already gotten too much sun in Mar
12
gate. “For now, we’ll be doing everything we can to make sure
13
Mr. Bakerfield does not get convicted of murder. His trial is
14
coming up in three weeks.”
15
“But you said he was guilty,” I say softly.
16
He leans forward his chair, but he does not look at me
17
now. He looks past me, toward the door, the glass window,
18
as if there is something out there, just beyond his reach. “It is
19
not our job to judge a client’s guilt or innocence,” he says,
20
his voice devoid of emotion, as if this is a rote phrase he has
21
practiced in his head, wanting it to take on meaning.
22
“I see,” I say, standing, not sure whether I am annoyed or
23
disappointed, but wanting suddenly to be back at my desk,
24
even if that will mean Shelby’s eyes staring at me just a little
25
too hard.
26
“Oh, and Margie,” Joshua says as I am about to open the
27
door.
S28
“Yes?” I turn back, and for a second our eyes do meet.
N29
01
Joshua’s eyes are melting, full of hurt and pain and tiredness,
02
and I feel the weight of all of that on my own sagging, sweat
03
ing shoulders. I want him to say something profound, some
04
thing that will make me feel the way I did that morning, not
05
so long ago, when he looked me in my eyes and spoke of the
06
truth as if it were something glimmering and full of light, like
07
Shelby’s diamond.
08
“Miss Greenberg will be stopping by for lunch. See to it
09
that you send her right back.”
10
“Of course,” I say again, and I drop my eyes before he
11
does, before I can see it there, what it is exactly Joshua is
12
thinking when he talks about Penny.
13
14
15
Five minutes before noon, Penny steps off the elevator,
16
dressed for summer in a sleeveless floral print that is tied at
17
her tiny waist with a pink ribbon. She clutches a wicker
18
handbag—or no, it is too big, it is not a handbag but a picnic
19
basket, and food overflows from its top.
20
“I have come to rescue Josh,” she announces, not to any
21
one in particular. Shelby rolls her eyes in my direction. And
22
then Penny stops in front of our desks and shoots me a tiny,
23
irascible smirk as she pulls her Marilyn sunglasses atop her
24
head. “Hello, Margie,” she says. “Josh is expecting me.” I nod,
25
and she leans in closer. “How’s he doing?” she whispers, as if
26
we are friends, confidantes. Only, it is not a real question, as
27
she does not wait for me to answer her. “This has been so
28S
tough on him.” She sighs. “I expect we’ll even move the
29N

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