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Authors: Robin Schwarz

BOOK: Night Swimming
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“Oh, my God.” And he started to laugh, but immediately felt terrible for doing so. He covered his mouth and tried to stop. And he did. For a second. And then he started all over again. Blossom could have sat there, mad. But the truth was, it was sort of funny. Not hysterical—after all, she had to live with those eyebrows. But funny enough to make her laugh, too.

“I’m sorry, Blossom.”

“Hey, what can you do? Mrs. Feingold had this big idea that I’d enjoy a makeover. For the next couple of months it’s going to look like I’m leaning forward in a strong wind or about to start a race.”

“You just look so...”

“Surprised?”

“Yeah.”

“Angry?”

“Kinda.”

“Amazed?”

“That, too.”

“I know, I can’t seem to get that expression off my face.”

“I’ll ask Jeannie who she goes to. I’m sure she knows someone who can help you.”

No, not Jeannie. I’d rather go through life looking like this.
“Thanks, Skip.”

“She’ll be over later.”

Oh, joy. Why?
“She’s coming here?”

“No. Over to the house. It’s my birthday on Thursday, and she says she bought me something two months ago and she wants to give it to me.”

“Hey, happy birthday!”

“Thanks.”

“How old will you be?”

“Thirty-five, Blossom—an old man.”

Blossom laughed. “What are you doing to celebrate?”

“Nothing. Jeannie’s giving me the present and taking off. She says she has plans. Should have figured. I might take off Thursday and go to the beach. No plans past that, though.”

“Well, if you’ll allow me, I would love to make you dinner. No one should have nothing to do on their birthday.”

“You don’t have to trouble yourself, Blossom.”

“Trouble? It’s no trouble at all. It’ll be fun. Pick a night. If you’re really not doing anything on your birthday night, then we can do it on Thursday.”

“Okay. Thursday’s great. What can I bring?”

“Yourself.”

“Good, then.”

“Yes. Good.”

Skip took Thursday off. Blossom imagined him at the beach.
Mmmm.
Her first order of business that morning was buying him a birthday present. She wanted to make sure it was appropriate this time—something that he would be glad to have and not feel he had to return because of its price or its meaning.

There was a store on Brighton Way she had passed numerous times and always wanted an excuse to go in. This was the perfect excuse. Roth & Co. had a fine selection of art and antiques, mostly from the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Blossom had never seen such beautiful things. It was as if she were walking through a museum, only here you got to buy the pieces. She made several turns around the shop, but nothing jumped out at her. Except Gene Hackman. There he was again, buying something and waiting to have it wrapped. How could Gene Hackman appear again? In fact, she’d never seen any other actor in Hollywood. She contemplated going over to him. Would he remember her?
Hello, Gene, it’s so nice to see you again. I see we shop at all the same stores. Per
haps we could have coffee some time and compare purchases...Oh, Blossom, I don’t think so.

While she was lost in thought, he left. Oh, well. At last, a fine mahogany box with the initials
S. L.
inlaid in twenty-four-carat gold caught her eye. Now, what were the odds of that? Coming across a box with Skip’s initials on them.

The salesperson walked over when he saw her interest. “This box,” he began, “dates back to the 1850s. We surmise it was someone’s personal cache. It has a secret drawer that slides out right here at the bottom.” The man held up the box and pulled out the drawer. Blossom was delighted.

“What was that used for?” she asked.

“We’re not sure, exactly. However, the secret compartment is quite large, so we guessed it might have been used to hide several secret love letters or perhaps some ill-gotten gains. It’s always more fun to imagine the most wicked possibilities. It is quite curious, isn’t it?”

“I love it. It’s going to be a present. How much is it?”

“The price is...is...” The clerk looked for it on the back and inside but didn’t see one. He opened the secret compartment to its full length. “Oh, here it is, hidden in the back. How appropriate.” He laughed. “Two thousand dollars.”

“Fine,” Blossom said, “perfect.” Skip would have no idea what she paid.

“Would you like me to wrap it?”

“No, thank you.”

The secret drawer gave her a thought. She would hide a love note in there. Something that revealed her truest feelings for him. Then one day, when he was fumbling around, he would simply come upon it. She was sure she’d be long gone by then anyway. Perfect.

Next, she went to the market and bought all manner of goodies for the evening’s festivities. In her downtime at the pool, she had learned recipes recommended by famous actresses who had served them only on special occasions. Recipes fit for a king...or an Oscar winner.
Maybe even Tom Selleck.

To begin, she would make miniature chévre tarts, which called for mild chévre cheese, sweet butter, whipping-cream, eggs, cayenne to taste, and scallions, none of which she had in the house. Next she would serve cream of watercress soup, so she would need potatoes and nutmeg and heavy cream and, of course, watercress. She was pretty sure she had the shallots and chicken stock.

She was, however undecided about what to do for the main course. Fruit-stuffed Cornish game hens or pheasant with leek-and-pecan stuffing? Meryl Streep had great success with the hen, while Marisa Tomei swore by the pheasant. Finally, after sifting through six cookbooks, she decided: veal chops with sherry and lemon marmalade. There were no small bones involved, so no one would have to know the Heimlich maneuver.

She would make a simple salad with a raspberry vinaigrette dressing and ginger candied carrots. For dessert she would have birthday cake, of course. And champagne. What was a birthday without a birthday cake and a champagne toast?

Blossom spent the whole day preparing for this gastronomic delight. She set the table with fine linen, flowers, and candles. She put on Tony Bennett, the CD that had “Fly Me to the Moon” and “Falling in Love with Love.” Then, thinking the candles were too much, too romantic, she opted to remove them.

Blossom put on a pretty dark-blue-and-yellow kimono and just a drop of vanilla perfume behind her ears. Then she wiped it off, deciding she’d smell too much like a cookie. Seven-thirty—that was the time they’d agreed upon. The clock clicked into place like the tumbler on a lock. She felt nervous.

Now, don’t go getting the jitters, Blossom. This is just a friendly birthday dinner for a friend. Nothing more.

At 7:45 Blossom was peeking out the window. It was not unlike Skip to be late. Sometimes he’d show up a half hour late for work. Blossom contented herself by remembering that and by putting on some more music.

At eight o’clock she was rearranging the table setting, refolding napkins, refilling water glasses.

At 8:15 she was back in the kitchen, trying to reestimate the cook time on the various dishes.

By eight-thirty she was worried. He hadn’t even called to say he’d be late. She paced back and forth from the living room to the kitchen, trying to keep things warm without ruining them.

At nine o’clock she was sitting by herself at the table, looking at the beautiful bouquet of flowers she had bought for the occasion. She got up and slowly began to remove the place settings. It was clear: He wasn’t coming. He just wasn’t coming.

She put the food away and threw out the cake. It was too hard to look at.

She waited until eleven before getting into her bathing suit and going down to the pool. The night was as black as the ace of spades. She was glad to be able to submerge her entire body in the water. That way she wouldn’t feel the tears running down her cheeks. What was she thinking anyway? Her attraction was too great. She would only be hurt by continually setting herself up. This was the truth. This was how things were.

It was painfully clear that she would not find that special kind of love before she died, and that was that. Perhaps this awful fact would make the dying okay. What was life without love anyway? Just a series of meaningless events that filled the space of our lives with noise and distraction. It was time to face it. Time to face living alone and dying alone.

A sadness too great to hold spilled over Blossom, and it would not wash away when she dove beneath the black waters, nor did it dissipate into the night air when she resurfaced. It stayed there, like an anchor attached to her heart, pulling her down, ever downward into darkness.

CHAPTER 33

S
KIP KNOCKED ON
B
LOSSOM’S DOOR
in the morning. She did not answer. He knocked again. When there was still no answer, he just assumed she had gone out. He had no idea she was inside, sitting quietly.

“You see Blossom, Mrs. Feingold?” Skip asked. Mrs. Feingold walked toward the pool as if she were dodging land mines and hot coals. She didn’t swim; she just got wet from time to time, tapping water on her arms and chest. She told Blossom this was her way of doing laps and called it “the Jewish crawl.” Tap, tap, tap, and that was it. She would dry off the same way and go back inside.

“Not yet. But I will later. I have some tickets for her.” Tap, tap, tap. “I double-booked for Saturday and thought Blossom would like them. By the way, did you see her new look?”

“Her new look?”

“It was my idea to do that with her eyebrows. She looks like Greta Garbo now, don’t you think?”

“Oh, yeah... the eyebrows... very nice, Mrs. Feingold. Well, if you see her, can you tell her I’m looking for her?”

“Oh, yes, Skip. I’m dropping off the tickets before she takes Vinny to the groomer.”

Takes Vinny to the groomer?
This thoroughly confused Skip. He had no idea Mrs. Feingold was still laboring under the notion that Vinny was Blossom’s dog. Oh, well, he’d ask Blossom what she meant later, when he saw her.

When Mrs. Feingold knocked, Blossom peeked through the peephole, then opened the door. Her shades were still drawn, which was not like her at all. The shafts of light that usually streamed through the rooms, warming the corners and the rugs, dusting the flowers, making them look as if they were wearing halos, were not there. Today the apartment was sealed as tight as an envelope.

“What’s going on, Blossom?”

“What do you mean?”

“It’s a beautiful day, and you’ve got this place closed up like a fallout shelter.”

“Do I?”

“Yes, you do. Let’s open some of these curtains.” She walked over toward the window.

“Don’t.”

Mrs. Feingold stopped. “Okay.” She came back into the living room. She could see sorrow in Blossom’s eyes. An awkward silence passed between them until Mrs. Feingold broke the quiet. “Want to talk about it?”

“I’ve done something unbelievably stupid.”

“My dear, I’m older than you. I’ve had many more opportunities to do unbelievably stupid things in my life. What could you have possibly done that I haven’t done already?”

“It’s not important.”

“Well, important or not, I’m here if you want to talk about it with me.”

“I don’t even know you that well, Mrs. Feingold. Hell, I’m still calling you Mrs. Feingold. I don’t even know your first name.”

“Deneichia, darling.”

“Deneni... Deneichi... think I’ll stick with Mrs. Feingold.”

“People call me Dolly, honey, to get around it.”

“Dolly.”

“Yes. So call me Dolly and tell me what’s going on.”

Tears were forming ever so slightly in the corners of Blossom’s eyes. She could barely get her mouth around the words. She wasn’t even sure of what she wanted to say. No one had ever asked her to express feelings like this.

“Everything’s a mess, Mrs. Feingold—Dolly.” She took another breath as if getting ready to take a deep plunge underwater. “The thing is...well... I’m in love with someone.”

“So? That doesn’t sound stupid.”

“Someone who doesn’t share the same feelings I have for him. He’s in love, too, with his wife.”

“Oh, Blossom, dear.”

“They’re separated. But he wants her back. He loves her and wants everything to be the way it used to be. I, of course, being the horrible person that I am, want it to fail miserably so that I can have a chance. But you know what the irony is, Mrs. Fein—Dolly? Even if that happened, I wouldn’t have a chance with him. Even if he weren’t married, even if I were the only woman within a three-thousand-mile radius, he still wouldn’t be interested in me.”

“How do you know this?”

“I just do. And what’s worse, this was my last chance for love.”

“Why do you say that?”

“It just is.”

“That’s ridiculous, Blossom. We always have opportunities to invite love into our lives. You have everything you need to have love; you just don’t know it, honey. Now, I’m not sure about your friend who is married. It sounds like he has other things to work out that have nothing to do with you. But that doesn’t mean you have to be tied up in knots, hoping, waiting. That’s just disappointment preparing for its big entrance. You have to do something else.”

“Like what?”

“Sometimes when a situation is at its worst, it can bring out the best in us. When Mr. Feingold died, my life stopped. My happiness had always been tied up with him, with everything that was outside myself. His death forced me to look in another direction. It forced me to look inside myself. And you know what I found?”

Blossom was trying to close down the sadness. Her throat hurt from suppressing the tears. “What?”

“Love, dear. Underneath the fear, the loneliness, the betrayal of being left behind, the insecurity of facing life on my own, I found love.”

“How?”

“Through understanding. At my very lowest, just when I believed unhappiness would eat me alive, I surrendered. I didn’t suddenly become happy all at once; it took time. But I grew through the pain, grew to a place where I finally found understanding, and through understanding I found peace.”

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