Malice [067-011-066-5.0]
By: Danielle Steel
Synopsis:
From an Illinois prison to a modeling agency to a challenging
career in
New York, Grace Adams carries the pain and betrayal of her past,
until
she finds happiness in the arms of New York attorney Charles
Mackenzie,
but her new life is threatened by an old enemy who will do
anything to
destroy her.
Dell Books;
ISBN: 0440223237
Copyright 1997
Chapter 1.
the sounds of the organ music drifted up to the Wedgwood blue sky.
Birds sang in the trees, and in the distance, a child called out
to a
friend on a lazy summer morning. The voices inside the church rose
in
powerful unison, as they sang the familiar hymns that Grace had
sung
with her family since childhood. But this morning, she couldn't
sing
anything. She could barely move, as she stood, staring straight
ahead at
her mother's casket.
Everyone knew Ellen Adams had been a good mother, a good wife, a
respected citizen until she died. She had taught school before
Grace was
born, and she would have liked to have had more children, but it
just
hadn't happened. Her health had always been frail, and at
thirty-eight
she had gotten cancer. The cancer started in her uterus, and after
a
hysterectomy, she'd had both chemotherapy and radiation.
But the cancer spread to her lungs anyway, and her lymph nodes,
and
eventually her bones. It had been a four-and-a-half-year battle.
And
now, at forty-two, she was gone.
She had died at home, and Grace had taken care of her single-handedly
until the last two months when her father had finally had to hire
two
nurses to help her. But Grace still sat next to her bedside for
hours
when she came home from school. And at night, it was Grace who
went to
her when she called out in pain, helped her turn, carried her to
the
bathroom, or gave her medication. The nurses only worked in the
daytime.
Her father didn't want them there at night, and everyone realized
he had
a hard time accepting just how sick his wife was. And now he stood
in
the pew next to Grace and cried like a baby.
John Adams was a handsome man. He was forty-six, and one of the
best
attorneys in Watseka, and surely the most loved. He had studied at
the
University of Illinois after serving in the Second World War, and
then
came home to Watseka, a hundred miles south of Chicago. It was a
small,
immaculately kept town, filled with profoundly decent people.
And he handled all their legal needs, and listened to all their
problems.
He went through their divorces with them, or battles over
property,
bringing peace to warring members of families. He was always fair,
and
everyone liked him for it. He handled personal injury, and claims
against the State, he wrote wills, and helped with adoptions.
Other than
the town's most popular medical practitioner, who was a friend of
his
too, John Adams was one of the most loved and respected men in
Watseka.
John Adams had been the town's football star as a young man, and
he had
gone on to play in college. Even as a boy, people had been crazy
about
him. His parents had died in a car accident when he was sixteen,
and his
grandparents had all died years before that, and families
literally
argued over who was going to invite him to live with them until he
finished high school. He was always such a nice guy and so
helpful.
In the end, he had stayed with two different families, and both of
them
loved him dearly.
He knew practically everyone in town by name, and there were more
than a
few divorcees and young widows who had had an eye on him ever
since
Ellen had been so sick in the last few years. But he never gave
them the
time of day, except to be friendly, or ask about their kids. He
had
never had a roving eye, which was another nice thing people always
said
about him. "And Lord knows he has a right to," one of
the older men who
knew him well always said, "with Ellen so sick and all, you'd
think he
would start to look around ... but not John ... he's a right
decent
husband." He was decent and kind, and fair, and successful.
The cases he handled were small, but he had an amazing number of
clients. And even his law partner, Frank Wills, teased him
occasionally,
wanting to know why everyone asked for John, before they'd ask for
Frank. He was everyone's favorite.
"What do you do, offer them free groceries for a year behind
my back?"
Frank always teased. He wasn't the lawyer John was, but he was a
good
researcher, and good with contracts, with minute attention to
detail.
It was Frank who went over all the contracts with a fine-tooth
comb.
But it was always John who got all the glory, whom they asked for
when
they called, whom clients had heard about from miles away in other
towns.
Frank was an unimpressive little man, without John's charm or good
looks, but they worked well together and had known each other
since
college. Frank stood several rows back in the church now, feeling
sorry
for John, and his daughter.
John would be all right, Frank knew, he'd land on his feet, just
like he
always did, and although he insisted now that he wasn't
interested,
Frank was betting that his partner would be remarried in a year.
But it was Grace who looked absolutely distraught, and shattered,
as she
stared straight ahead at the banks of flowers at the altar. She
was a
pretty girl, or she would have been, if she'd allowed herself to
be. At
seventeen, she was lean and tall, with graceful shoulders and long
thin
arms, beautiful long legs, and a tiny waist and full bust.
But she always hid her figure in baggy clothes, and long loose
sweaters
she bought at the Salvation Army. John Adams was by no means a
rich man,
but he could have bought her better than that, if she'd wanted.
But unlike other girls her age, Grace had no interest in clothes,
or
boys, and if anything, she seemed to diminish her looks, rather
than
enhance them.
She wore no makeup at all, and she wore her long coppery auburn
hair
straight down her back, with long bangs that hid her big corn
flower-blue eyes. She never seemed to look straight at anyone, or
be
inclined to engage them in conversation. Most people were
surprised by
how pretty she was, if they really looked at her, but if you
didn't look
twice, you never noticed her at all. Even today, she was wearing
an old
dreary black dress of her mother's. It hung like a sack on her,
and she
looked thirty years old, with her hair tied back in a tight bun,
and her
face deathly pale as she stood beside her father.
"Poor kid," Frank's secretary whispered, as Grace walked
slowly back
down the aisle, next to her father, behind her mother's casket.
Poor John ... poor Ellen ... poor people. They'd been through so
much.
People commented from time to time on how shy Grace was, and how
uncommunicative. There had been a rumor a few years back that she
might
even be retarded, but anyone who had ever gone to school with her
knew
that that was a lie. She was brighter than most of them, she just
didn't
say much. She was a solitary soul, and it was only once in a while
that
someone in school would see her talking to someone, or laughing in
a
corridor, but then she would hurry away again, as though she was
frightened to come out and be among them. She wasn't crazy, her
classmates knew, but she wasn't friendly either. It was odd too,
considering how sociable her parents were. But Grace never had
been.
Even as a small child, she had always been solitary, and somewhat
lonely. And more than once as a child, she had had to go home from
school with a bad attack of asthma.
John and Grace stood out in the noon sun for a little while,
shaking
hands with friends, thanking them for being there, embracing them,
and
more than ever, Grace looked wooden and removed as she greeted
them.
It was as though her body was there, but her mind and soul were
elsewhere.
And in her dreary too-big dress, she looked more pathetic than
ever.
Her father commented on the way she looked on the way to the
cemetery.
Even her shoes looked worn. She had taken a pair of her mother's
black
high heels, but they were out of style, and they looked as though
her
mother had gotten plenty of use from them before she got sick. It
was
almost as though Grace wanted to be closer to her now, by wearing
her
mother's clothes, it was like camouflage, or protective coloring,
but it
wasn't flattering on a girl her age, and her father said so. She
looked
a lot like her mother, actually, people always commented on it,
except
that her mother had been more robust before she'd been taken ill,
and
her dress was at least three sizes too big for Grace's lithe
figure.
"Couldn't you have worn something decent for a change?"
her father asked
with a look of irritation as they drove to St. Mary's Cemetery on
the
outskirts of town, with three-dozen cars behind them. He was a
respected
man, and he had a reputation to uphold. It looked strange for a
man like
him to have an only child who dressed like an orphan.
"Mama never let me wear black. And I thought ... I thought I
should.
..." She looked at him defenselessly, sitting miserably in
the corner of
the old limousine the funeral home had provided for the occasion.
It was
a Cadillac, and some of the kids had rented it for the senior prom
two
months before, but Grace hadn't wanted to go, and no one had asked
her.
With her mother so sick, she had barely even wanted to go to
graduation.
But she had, of course, and she had shown her mother the diploma
as soon
as she got home. She had been accepted at the University of
Illinois,
but had deferred it for a year, so she could continue taking care
of her
mother. Her father wanted it that way too, he felt that Ellen
preferred
Grace's loving touch to that of her nurses, and he had pretty much
told
Grace that he expected her to stay, and not leave for school in
September. She hadn't argued with him. She knew there was no
point.
There was never any point arguing with him. He always got what he
wanted. He was used to it. He had been too good-looking and too
successful for too long, it had always worked for him, and he
expected
things to stay that way. Always.
Particularly with his own family.
Grace understood that. And so had Ellen.
"Is everything ready at the house?" he asked, glancing
at her, and
she nodded. For all her shyness and reticence, she ran a home
beautifully, and had since she was thirteen. In the past four
years, she
had done everything for her mother.
"It's fine," she said quietly. She had set everything
out on the buffet
before they left for church. And the rest was covered, on big platters
in the refrigerator. People had been bringing them food for days.
And Grace had cooked a turkey and a roast the night before. Mrs.
Johnson
had brought them a ham, and there were salads, and casseroles,
some
sausages, two plates of hors d'oeuvres, and lots of fresh
vegetables,
and every imaginable kind of cake and pastry. Their kitchen looked
like
a bake sale at the state fair, there was plenty for everyone. She
was
sure that they were going to be seeing well over a hundred people,
maybe
even twice that many, out of respect for John and what he meant to
the
people of Watseka.
People's kindness had been staggering. The sheer number of floral
arrangements alone had surpassed anything they'd ever seen at the
funeral home. "It's like royalty," old Mr. Peabody had
said when he
handed the guest book full of signatures to her father.
"She was a rare woman," John said quietly, and now,
thinking of her, he
glanced over at his daughter. She was such a beautiful girl, and
so
determined not to show it. That was just the way she was, he
accepted
it, and it was easier not to argue about it. She was good about
other
things, and she had been a godsend for him during all the years of
her
mother's illness. It was going to be strange for both of them now,
but
in a way, he had to admit, it was going to be easier now too.
Ellen had
been so sick for so long, and in so much pain, it was inhuman.
He looked out the window as they drove along, and then back at his
only
daughter. "I was just thinking about how odd it's going to be
now
without your mama ... but maybe ..." He wasn't sure how to
say it
without upsetting her more than he meant to, " ... maybe
easier for both
of us. She suffered so much, poor thing," he sighed, and
Grace said
nothing. She knew her mother's suffering better than anyone,
better even
than he did.
The ceremony at the cemetery was brief, their minister said a few
words
about Ellen and her family, and read from Proverbs and Psalms at
the
graveside, and then they all drove back to the Adamses' home. A
crowd of
a hundred and fifty friends squeezed into the small neat house. It
was
painted white, with dark green shutters and a picket fence. There
were
daisy bushes in the front yard, and a small rose garden her mother
had
loved just outside her kitchen windows.
The babble of their friends sounded almost like a cocktail party,
and
Frank Wills held court in the living room, while John stood
outside with
friends in the hot July sunshine. Grace served lemonade and iced
tea,
and her father had brought out some wine, and even the huge crowd
scarcely made a dent in all the food she served. It was four
o'clock
when the last guests finally left, and Grace walked around the
house
with a tray, picking up all their dishes.
"We've got good friends," her father said with a warm
smile. He was
proud of the people who cared about them. He had done a lot for
many of
them over the years, and now they were there, in their hour of
need, for
him, and his daughter. He watched Grace moving quietly around the
living
room, and he realized how alone they were now. Ellen was gone, the
nurses were gone, there was no one left except just the two of
them. Yet
he was not a man to dwell on his misfortunes.
"I'll go outside and see if there are any glasses out
there," he said
helpfully, and he came back half an hour later with a trayful of
plates
and glasses, his jacket over his arm, and his tie loosened. If
she'd
been aware of such things, she would have seen that her father
looked
more handsome than ever. Others had noticed it. He had lost some
weight
in the last few weeks, understandably, and he looked as trim as a
young
man, and in the sunlight it was difficult to see if his hair was
gray or
sandy. In fact, it was both, and his eyes were the same bright
blue as
his daughter's.
"You must be tired," he said to her, and she shrugged as
she loaded
glasses and plates into the dishwasher. There was a lump in her
throat
and she was trying not to cry. It had been an awful day for her.
... an awful year ... an awful four years .... Sometimes she wished she
could disappear into a little puddle of water. But she knew she
couldn't.
There was always another day, another year, another duty to
perform.
She wished that they had buried her that day, instead of her
mother.
And as she stared unhappily at the dirty plates she was loading
mechanically into the racks, she felt her father standing beside
her.
"Want some help?"
"I'm okay," she said softly. "Do you want dinner,
Dad?"
"I don't think I could eat another thing. Why don't you just
forget it.
You've had a long day. Why don't you just relax for a while?"
She
nodded, and went back to loading the dishes. He disappeared into
the
back of the house, to his bedroom, and it was an hour later when
she had
finally finished. All the food was put away, and the kitchen
looked
impeccable. The dishes were in the machine, and the living room
looked
tidy and spotless. She was well organized and she bustled through
the
house straightening furniture and pictures. It was a way of
keeping her
mind off everything that had happened.
When she went to her room, her father's door was closed, and she
thought
she could hear him talking on the phone. She wondered if he was
going
out, as she closed her own door, and lay on her bed with all her
clothes
on. She'd gotten food on the black dress by then, and she'd
splashed it
with soap and water when she did the dishes. Her hair felt like
string,
her mouth like cotton, her heart like lead. She closed her eyes,
as she
lay there miserably, and two little rivers of tears flowed from
the
outer corners of her eyes to her ears.
"Why, Mama? Why ... why did you leave me..." It was the
final betrayal,
the final abandonment. What would she do now? Who would help her?
The
only good thing was that she could leave and go to college in
September.
Maybe. If they'd still take her. And if her father would let her.
But
there was no reason to stay here now. There was every reason to
leave,
which was all she wanted.
She heard her father open his door and go out into the hall. He
called
her name, and she didn't answer him. She was too tired to speak to
anyone, even him, as she lay on her bed, crying for her mother.
Then she heard his bedroom door close again, and it was a long
time
before she finally got up, and walked into her bathroom. It was
her only
luxury, having her own bathroom. Her mother had let her paint it
pink,
in the little three-bedroom house her mother had been so proud of.
They
had wanted the third bedroom for the son they'd planned to have,
but the
baby had never come, and her mother had used it as a sewing room
for as
long as Grace could remember.
She ran a hot bath almost to the edge of the tub, and she went to
lock
her bedroom door, before she took off her mother's tired black
dress,
and let it fall to the floor around her feet, after she kicked her
mother's shoes off.
She let herself slowly into the tub, and closed her eyes as she
lay
there. She was totally unaware of how beautiful she was, how long
and
slender her legs, how graceful her hips, or how appealing her
breasts
were. She saw none of it, and wouldn't have cared. She just lay
there
with her eyes closed and let her mind drift. It was as though her
head
were filled with sand. There were no images, no people she wanted
to see
in her mind's eye, nothing she wanted to do, or be. She just
wanted to
hang in space and think of absolutely nothing.
She knew she'd been there for a long time when the water had grown
cold,
and she heard her father knocking on the door to her bedroom.
"What are you doing in there, Gracie? Are you okay?"
"I'm fine," she shouted from the tub, roused from her
trancelike state.
It was growing dark outside, and she hadn't bothered to turn the
lights
on.
"Come on out. You'll be lonely."
"I'm fine." Her voice was a monotone, her eyes distant,
keeping everyone
far from the place where she really lived, deep in her own soul,
where
no one could find her or hurt her.
She could hear him still standing outside her door, urging her to
come
out and talk to him, and she told him she'd be out in a few
minutes.
She dried herself off, and put on a pair of jeans and a T-shirt.
And
over that, she put on one of her baggy sweaters, in spite of the
heat.
And when she was all dressed again, she unlocked the door, and
went back
to unload the dishwasher in the kitchen. He was standing there,
looking
out at her mother's roses, and he turned when Grace came into the
room,
and smiled at her.
"Want to go outside and sit for a while? It's a nice night.
You could do
this later."
"It's okay. I might as well get it done." He shrugged
and helped himself
to a beer, and then he walked outside and sat down on the kitchen
steps
and watched the fireflies in the distance. She knew it was pretty
outside, but she didn't want to look at it, didn't want to
remember this
night, or anything about it. Just like she didn't want to remember
the
day her mother died or the pitiful way she'd begged Grace to be
good to
her father. That was all she'd cared about ... .
him ... . all that ever mattered to her was making him happy.
When the dishes were put away, Grace went back to her room again,
and
lay down on the bed, without turning on the light. She still
couldn't
get used to the silence. She kept waiting to hear her voice, for
the
past two days she kept listening for her, as though she'd been
sleeping,
but would wake up in pain at any moment. But there was no pain for
Ellen
Adams now, there never would be again. She was at peace at last.
And all they had left was the silence.
Grace put her nightgown on at ten o'clock, and left her jeans in a
pile
on the floor, with her sweater and T-shirt. She locked her door,
and
went to bed. There was nothing else to do. She didn't want to read
or
watch TV, the- chores were done, there was no one she had to take
care
of. She just wanted to go to sleep and forget everything that had
happened ... . the funeral ... the things people had said ... the
smell of the
flowers ... the words of their minister at the graveside. No one
knew
her mother anyway, no one knew any of them, just as they didn't
know
her, and didn't really care. All they wanted and knew were their
own
illusions.
"Gracie ..." She heard her father knock softly on the
door.
"Gracie ... honey, are you awake?" She heard him, but
she didn't answer.
What was there to say? How much they missed her? How much she had
meant
to them? Why bother? It wouldn't bring her back anyway.
Nothing would.
Grace just lay in bed in the dark, in her old pink nylon
nightgown.
She heard him try the doorknob then, and she didn't stir. She had
locked
the door. She always did. At school the other girls made fun of
her for
being so modest. She locked the doors everywhere. Then she could
be sure
of being alone, and not being bothered. "Gracie?" He was
still standing
there, determined not to let her grieve alone, his voice sounded
gentle
and warm, as she stared at the door, and refused to answer.
"Come on,
baby ... Let me in, and we'll talk ...
e're both hurting right now ... come on, honey ... Let me help
you."
She didn't stir, and this time he rattled the doorknob.
"Honey, don't
make me force the door, you know I can. Now come on, let me
in."
"I can't. I'm sick," she lied. She looked beautiful and
pale in the
moonlight, her white face and arms like marble, but he couldn't
see
them.
"You're not sick." He knew her better than that. As he
talked to her, he
was unbuttoning his shirt. He was tired too, but he didn't want
her
locked up alone in her room, with her grief. That's what he was
there
for. "Gracie!" His tone was growing firm, and she sat up
in bed and
stared at the door, almost as though she could see him beyond it,
and
this time she looked frightened.
"Don't come in, Dad." There was a tremor in her voice,
as she looked at
the door. It was as though she knew he was all powerful, and she
feared
him. "Dad, don't." She could hear him forcing the door,
as she put her
feet on the floor, and sat on the edge of the bed, waiting to see
if he
could force it. But she heard him walk away then, and she sat
shaking on
the edge of the bed. She knew him too well.
He never gave up on anything that easily, and she knew he wouldn't
now.
A moment later, he was back, and she heard an implement of some
kind
jimmy the lock, and an instant later, he was standing in her room,
bare-chested and barefoot, with only his trousers on, and a look
of
annoyance.
"You don't need to do that. It's just the two of us now. You
know I'm
not going to hurt you."
"I know ... I ... I couldn't help it ... I'm sorry, Dad ...
."
"That's better." He walked to where she sat, and looked
down at her
sternly. "There's no point in your being miserable in here.
Why don't
you come on into my room and we'll talk for a while." He
looked
fatherly, and disappointed by her constant reticence, and as she
looked
up at him, he could see that she was shaking.
"I can't ... I ... I have a headache."
"Come on." He leaned down and grabbed her by the arm,
and pulled her
from where she sat. "We'll talk in my room."
"I don't want to ... I ... no!" she snapped at him, and
pulled her arm
out of his hand. "I can't!" she shouted at him, and this
time he looked
angry. He wasn't going to play these games with her anymore.
Not now. And not tonight. There was no point, and no need. She
knew what
her mother had said to her. His eyes burned into hers as he looked
down
at her, and grabbed her harder.
"Yes, you can, and you're going to, dammit. I told you to
come into my
room."
"Dad, please ..." Her voice was a thin whine, as he
dragged her from the
bed, and she followed him unwillingly into his bedroom.
"Please, Mom ..." She could feel her chest tighten and
hear the
beginnings of a wheeze as she begged him.
"You heard what your mother said when she died," he spat
the words
angrily at her. "You know what she told you ..."
"I don't care." It was the first time in her entire life
that she had
defied him. In the past, she had whimpered and cried, but she had
never
fought him as she did now, she had begged, but never argued.
This was new for her, and he didn't like it. "Mom isn't here
now," she
said, shaking from head to foot, as she stared at him, trying to
dredge
something from her very soul that had never been there before, the
courage to fight her father.
"No, she isn't, is she?" He smiled. "That's the
point, Grace. We don't
have to hide anymore, you and. We can do whatever we want.
It's our life now ... our time ... and no one ever has to know it
..."
He advanced toward her with eyes that glittered at her, as she
took a
step backwards, and he grabbed both her arms, and then an instant
later,
with a single gesture, he tore the pink nylon nightgown in half,
right
off her shoulders. "There ... that's better ... isn't it ....
we don't
need this anymore ... we don't need anything ...
all I need is you, little Gracie ... all I need is my baby who
loves me
so much, and whom I love ..." With a single hand, he dropped
his
trousers and stepped out of them, along with his shorts, and he
stood
naked and erect before her.
"Dad ... please ..." It was a long, sad gasp of grief
and shame, as she
hung her head, and looked away from him, at the sight of him that
was
all too familiar. "Dad, I can't ..." Tears slid down her
cheeks.
He didn't understand. She had done it for her, because her mother
had
begged her. She had done it for years, since she was thirteen ...
.
since just after her mother got sick, and had the first operation.
Before that, he had beaten her, and Grace had listened to it,
night
after night, in her bedroom, sobbing, and listening to them, and
in the
morning, her mother would try to explain the bruises, talking
about how
she had fallen, or walked right into the bathroom door, or
slipped, but
it was no secret. They all knew. No one would have believed John
Adams
capable of it, but he was, and a great deal more. He would have
beaten
Grace, too, except that Ellen never let him. Instead, she had
offered
herself up, time after time, for his beatings, and told Grace to
lock
the door to her room.
Twice, Ellen had miscarried because of the beatings, the last time
at
six months, and after that, there had been no more children. The
beatings had been brutal and terrifying, but subtle enough that
the
bruises could always be hidden or explained, as long as Ellen was
willing to do it, and she was. She had loved him ever since high
school,
he was the best-looking boy in town, and she knew she was lucky to
have
him. Her parents had been dirt-poor, and she hadn't even finished
high
school. She was a beautiful girl, but she knew that without John,
she
didn't have a chance in the world. That was what he told her, and
she
believed him. Her own father had beaten her too, and at first what
John
did, didn't seem so unusual or so awful. But it got worse over the
years, and at times he threatened to leave her because she was so
worthless. He made her do anything he wanted just so he wouldn't
leave
her. And as Grace grew up and grew more beautiful each day, it was
easy
to see what he wanted, what would be required of her, if she
really
wanted to keep him. And once Ellen got sick, and the radiation and
chemotherapy changed her so dramatically, deep penetration was no
longer
possible. He told her bluntly then that if she expected to stay
married
to him something would have to be worked out to keep him happy. It
was
obvious that she couldn't keep him happy anymore, couldn't give
him what
he wanted. But Grace could. She was thirteen, and so very lovely.
Her mother had explained it to her, so she wouldn't be frightened.
It was something she could do for them, like a gift, she could
help her
dad be happy, and help her mom, it would be as though she was even
more
a part of them, and her dad would love her more than he ever had
before.
At first, Grace didn't understand, and then she cried ... what
would her
friends think if they ever knew? How could she do that with her
father?
But her mother kept telling her how she had to help them, how she
owed
it to them, how her mother would die if someone didn't help her,
and
maybe he would leave them, and then they'd be alone, with no one
to take
care of them.
She painted a terrifying picture, and put the leaden mantle of
responsibility on Grace's shoulders. The girl sagged at the weight
of
it, and the horror of what was expected of her. But they didn't
wait to
hear her answer. That night, they came into her room, and her
mother
helped him. She held her down, and crooned to her, and told her
what a
good girl she was, and how much they loved her. And afterwards,
when
they went back to their room, John held Ellen in his arms and
thanked
her.
It was a lonely life for Grace after that. He didn't come to her
every
night, but almost. Sometimes she thought she would die of shame,
and
sometimes he really hurt her. She never told anyone, and
eventually her
mother stopped coming into the room with him. Grace knew what was
expected of her, and that she had no choice except to do it. And
when
she argued with him, he'd hit her hard, and eventually she knew
there
was no way out, no choice. She did it for her, not for him. She
submitted so he wouldn't beat her mother anymore, or leave them.
But anytime Grace didn't cooperate with him, or do everything he
asked,
he went back to his own room and beat up her mother, no matter how
sick
she was, or how much pain she was in. It was a message that Grace
always
understood, and she would run shrieking into their room, and swear
that
she'd do anything he wanted. And over and over and over again, he
made
her prove it. For over four years now, he had done everything he
could
dream of with her, she was his very own love slave, his daughter.
And the only thing her mother had done to protect Grace from him
was get
birth control pills for her so she wouldn't get pregnant.
She had no friends at all once he started sleeping with her.
She had had few enough before, because she was always afraid that
someone would find out he was beating her mother, and Grace knew
she had
to protect them. But once she started sleeping with him, it was
impossible to talk to any of the kids in school, or even the
teachers.
She was always sure they'd know, that they'd see something on her
face,
or her body, like a sign, like a malignancy that, unlike her
mother, she
wore on the outside. The malignancy was his, but she never really
understood that. Until now. Now she knew that with her mother
gone, she
didn't have to do this. It had to stop. She just couldn't now.
Not even for her mother. It was too much ... and especially in
this
room.
He had always come to Grace's room, and forced her to let him in.
He had
never dared take her in his own room. But now it was as though he
expected her to step right into her mother's shoes, and fill them
in
ways that even her mother never could. It was as though he
expected her
to be his bride now. Even the way he talked to her was different.
It was all out in the open. He expected her to be his woman.
And as he looked at her body shimmering enticingly at him, her
frantic
pleas and arguments only served to arouse him further. He looked
hard
and ominous as he stood holding her in his powerful grip, and with
a
single gesture he threw her onto his bed, precisely where his
invalid
wife had lain until only two days before, and for all the empty
years of
their marriage.
But this time, Grace struggled with him, she had already decided
that
she wasn't going to submit again, and as she fought with him, she
realized that she had been crazy to think she could stay under the
same
roof with him, and not have the same nightmare continue. She would
have
to run away, but first she had to resist, and survive what he was
doing
to her. She knew she couldn't let him do it to her again ... .
she couldn't. Even if her mother had wanted her to be good to him,
she
had been good enough. She couldn't do it anymore ... never again
... .
never ... but as she flailed her arms helplessly, he pinned her
down
with his powerful arms, and the weight of his body. Her legs were
swiftly parted by his own, and the familiarity of him forced his
way
through her with more pain than she had ever known or imagined.
For a
moment, she almost thought he might kill her. It had never been
this way
before, he had never hurt her as much as he did now.
It was as though he were beating her with a fist from inside this
time,
and wanted to prove to her that he owned her and could do anything
he
wanted. It was almost beyond bearing and for an instant she
thought she
might faint, as the room swirled around her, and he hammered at
her
again and again, tearing at her breasts, chewing at her lips,
forcing
himself into her again and again, until she seemed to drift in a
half
state near death, wishing that finally, mercifully, he would kill
her.
But even as he ravished her, she knew she couldn't do this again.
He couldn't do it to her, she couldn't survive it, for him, or
anyone.
She knew that she was within an inch of falling off the edge of a
dangerous ledge, and suddenly as she fought and clawed at him, she
knew
through the blur that she was fighting for her survival. And then,
without even knowing how she had remembered it, she knew that they
had
rolled closer to her mother's night table. For years now, there
had been
neat rows of pills there and a glass and a pitcher of water. She
could
have poured the water over him, or hit him with the pitcher, but
it was
gone.
There were no more pills, no water, no glass, and no one to take
them.
But without thinking, Grace groped her hand along the table, as he
continued to pound at her, shouting and grunting. He had slapped
her
hard several times across the face, but now he was only interested
in
punishing her with his sexual force and not his hands. He was
squeezing
her breasts, and pressing her into the bed. He had almost knocked
the
wind out of her, and her vision was still blurred from when he had
hit
her, but she felt the drawer of the night table open as she pulled
at
it, and then she felt the sleek cool steel of the gun her mother
had
hidden there against intruders. Ellen would never have dared to
use it
on her husband, or even to threaten him. No matter what he had
done to
her, or Grace, Ellen had truly loved him.
Grace felt her fingers go around its smooth surfaces, and she got
a grip
on it, and brandished it above him, for an instant wanting to hit
him
with it, just to stop him. He was almost finished with her, but
she
couldn't let him do this to her again. She had to stop him, no
matter
what or how, she knew she had to stop him before it went any
further.
She couldn't survive this again. And tonight only told her that he
intended this to be her fate for a lifetime. He wouldn't let her
go
anywhere, he would never let her leave or go to college, or do
anything
else. She would have no life except to service him, and she knew
that
whatever it took, she had to stop him. And as she held the gun in
her
shaking, flailing hand, he came with a huge shuddering shout that
made
her wince with pain and anguish and revulsion. Just hearing that
again
made her hate him. And as she pointed the gun at him, he looked up
and
saw it.
"You little bitch!" he shouted at her, still shaken by
the strength of
his orgasm. No one had ever aroused him as Grace did. He wanted to
take
her and turn her inside out, tear her limb from limb, and devour
her.
Nothing excited him more than his own flesh, it was deeply
primeval.
And he was outraged now that she was still going to fight him. He
moved
to grab the gun from her, and she could see what he was going to
do to
her.
He was going to beat her again and beating her always aroused him
further. She couldn't let him do it, couldn't let him take her
ever
again. She had to save herself from him. He was still inside her,
as he
reached over to grab the gun from her, and in panic she squeezed
the
trigger as he tried to take it. He looked stunned for just an
instant as
the gun went off with a sound that terrified her, his eyes bulged,
and
then he fell down on her with a crushing weight. She had shot him
through the throat, and he was bleeding profusely, but he wasn't
moving.
She tried to fight her way out from under him, and free herself
from
him, but she couldn't do it. He was too heavy, and she couldn't
breathe,
and there was blood in her eyes and her mouth now. She was gasping
for
air, and then with all the strength she had, she forced him from
her. He
rolled over on his back on the bed, and made a terrifying gurgling
sound
as he looked at her, but nothing moved and his eyes were open.
"Oh my God ... oh my God ..." she said, still gasping
for air, and
clutching her own throat now as she stared at him. She could still
taste
his blood on her tongue, and she didn't want to touch him. There
was
blood all over her and the bed, and all she could think of were
her
mother's words ..."Be good to Daddy, Grace ... be good to him
.... take
care of him ... always take care of your father ..." And she
had. She
had shot him. His eyes moved around the room, but he seemed to be
paralyzed, nothing moved, as he stared at her in terror.
She backed into the corner then, and looked at him, and as she
did, her
whole body shook violently and she threw up on the carpet. When
she
stopped, she forced herself to go to the phone, and dial the
operator.
"I need ... an ambulance ... ambulance ... my father's been
shot ... I
shot my father ..." She was gasping for air, and she gave
them the
address, and then she stood staring at him. He hadn't moved since
he'd
fallen back on the bed, and his organ was limp now. The thing that
had
so terrified her, that had tortured her for so long, looked
suddenly so
small and harmless, as did he. He looked terrifying and pathetic,
blood
was bubbling from his throat, and he moaned from time to time. She
knew
she had done a terrible thing, but she couldn't help it. The gun
was
still in her hand, and she was cowering naked in the corner when
the
police came. And she was gasping from her asthma.
"My God ..." the first officer into the room said
softly, and then he
saw her and took the gun from her as the others walked into the
room
behind him. The youngest of them thought to wrap her in a blanket,
but
he had seen the marks on her, the blood smeared everywhere, and
the look
in her eyes. She seemed crazy. She had been to hell and only
halfway
back.
Her father was still alive when the ambulance and the paramedics
came,
but barely. She had severed his spinal cord and the paramedics
suspected
that the bullet had gone into his lung after that. He was
completely
paralyzed, and couldn't speak to them. But he didn't even see
Grace as
he left. His eyes were closed, and they were giving him oxygen. He
was
barely breathing.
"Is he gonna make it?" the senior policeman asked the
paramedics as they
put him into the ambulance and turned the siren on in a hurry.
"Hard to say," they answered, and then in an undertone,
"Not likely."
They left the scene then, and the older officer shook his head. He
had
known John Adams since he was in high school. John had handled his
divorce for him. Hell of a guy, and why in God's name had the kid
shot
him? He'd seen the scene when they'd arrived, and he'd noticed
that
neither of them was dressed, but that could mean anything.
Obviously, it had happened after they went to bed in their own
rooms,
and John probably didn't sleep in pajamas. Why the girl was naked
was
another thing. She was obviously unbalanced, and maybe her mom's
death
had been too much for her. Maybe she blamed her father for the
mother's
death.
Whatever it was, they'd find it out in the investigation.
"How is she?" he asked one of his junior officers. There
were a dozen
officers on the scene by then. It was the biggest thing that had
happened in Watseka since the minister's son had taken LSD and
committed
suicide ten years before. That had been a tragedy, but this was
going to
be a scandal. For a man like John Adams to be shot by his own kid,
that
was a real crime, and a loss for the whole town. No one was going
to
believe it. "Is she on drugs?" he asked as a
photographer took pictures
of the bedroom. The gun was already in a plastic bag in the squad
car.
"She doesn't look like it," the young cop said.
"Not obviously, at
least. She looks kind of out of it, and very scared. She has
asthma, and
she's having a hard time breathing."
"I'm sorry to hear it," the senior officer said
sarcastically as he
glanced around the neat living room. He had been there only hours
before, after the funeral. It was hard to believe why he was back
now.
Maybe the kid was just plain crazy. "Her father's got a lot
worse than
asthma."
"What did they say?" The junior officer looked
concerned. "Is he gonna
make it?"
"It doesn't look great. Seems like our little shooter here
did quite a
job on her old man. Spinal cord, maybe a lung, God only knows what
else,
or why."
"Think he was doing her?" the younger man asked,
intrigued by
the situation, but the older man looked outraged.
"John Adams? Are you nuts? Do you know who he is? He's the
best lawyer
in town. And the most decent guy you'd ever want to meet. You
think a
guy like him would do his own kid? You're as crazy as she is and
not
much of a cop if you can come to a conclusion like that."
"I don't know ... it kind of looked like it, they were both
naked ....
and she looks so scared ... there's a bruise coming up on her arm
...
and ..." He hesitated, given the senior man's reaction, but
he couldn't
conceal evidence, no matter who the guy was. Evidence was
evidence.
"There was come on the sheets, it looked like ..."
There had been a lot of blood, but there were other spots too. And
the
young cop had seen them.
"I don't give a damn what it looked like, O"Byrne.
There's more than one
way for come to get on a man's sheets. The guy's wife just died,
maybe
he was lonely, maybe he was playing with himself when she came in
with
the gun, maybe she didn't know what he was doing and it scared
her.
But there's no way in hell you're gonna come in here and tell me
that
John Adams was doing it to his kid. Forget it."
"Sorry, sir." The other officers were already rolling up
the sheets as
evidence anyway and putting them in plastic bags too, they youl
and
another officer was talking to Grace in her bedroom. She was
sitting on
the bed, still wearing the blanket they had given her when they
got
there. She had found her inhaler and she was breathing more easily
now,
but she looked deathly pale, and the officer questioning her
wondered
how clear she was on what had happened. She seemed so dazed that
he
almost wondered if she understood him. She said she didn't
remember
finding the gun, it was suddenly just in her hand, and it went
off.
She remembered the noise, and then her father bleeding all over
her.
And that was all she remembered.
"How was he bleeding on you? Where were you?" He had the
same impression
of the scene as O"Byrne, though it seemed hard to believe of
John Adams.
"I don't remember," she said blankly. She sounded like
an automaton, her
breath was still coming in little short gasps, and she seemed a
little
shaky from the medication.
"You don't remember where you were when you shot your
father?"
"I don't know." She looked at him as though she didn't
see him sitting
there on her bed with her. "In the doorway," she lied.
She knew what she
had to do. She owed it to her mother to protect him.
"You shot him from the doorway?" It was impossible, and
were getting
nowhere. "Do you think someone else shot r father?" He
wondered if that
was where she was going with her story. An intruder. But that was
even
less believable than the story about the doorway.
"No. I shot him. From the doorway."
The officer knew without a doubt that her father had been shot at
close
range, maybe no more than an inch or two, by a person right in
front of
him, obviously his daughter. But where were they?
"Were you in bed with him?" he asked her pointedly, and
she didn't
answer. She stared straight ahead, as though he weren't even
there, and
gave a little sigh. "Were you in bed with him?" he asked
again, and she
hesitated for a long time before she answered.
"I'm not sure. I don't think so."
"How's it going in here?" the senior officer inquired,
as he poked his
head in the door. It was three o'clock in the morning by then, and
they
had done everything they needed to do at the crime scene.
The officer questioning Grace gave a hopeless shrug. It was not
going
well. She was not making a lot of sense, she was shaking
violently, and
she was so dazed that at times he really wondered if she even knew
what
had happened. "We're going to take you in, Grace. You're
going to be in
custody for a few days. We need to talk to you some more about
what
happened." She nodded, and said nothing to him. She just sat
there, with
bloodstains all over her, in the blanket. "Maybe you'd like
to clean up
a little bit, and put your clothes on." He nodded at the
officer who'd
been talking to her, but Grace didn't move, she just sat there.
"We're taking you in, Grace. For questioning," he
explained again,
wondering if she really was crazy. John had never mentioned it,
but it
wasn't the kind of thing one said to clients.
"We're going to hold you for seventy-two hours, pending an
investigation
of the shooting." Had it been premeditated? Had she meant to
shoot him?
Had it been an accident? What was the deal here?
He wondered too if she was on drugs, and he wanted her tested.
She didn't ask if they were arresting her. She didn't ask
anything.
And she didn't get dressed either. She seemed completely
disoriented,
which was what suggested to the officer in charge more and more
clearly
that she was crazy. In the end, they called for a female officer
to come
out and help them, and she dressed Grace like a small child, but
not
without noticing assorted marks and bruises on her body. She told
her to
wash the bloodstains off, and Grace was surprisingly obliging.
She did whatever she was told, but she offered no information.
"Did you and your dad have a fight?" the woman officer
inquired as Grace
stepped into her old jeans and T-shirt. She was still shaking as
though
she were standing naked in the Arctic. But Grace never answered
her
question. "Were you mad at him?" Nothing. Silence. She
wasn't hostile.
She wasn't anything. She looked as though she were in a trance, as
they
walked her through the living room, and she never once asked about
her
father. She didn't want to know where he'd gone, where they'd
taken him,
or what had happened once he got there. She stopped only for an
instant
as they crossed the living room, and looked at a photograph of her
mother. It was in a silver frame, and Grace was standing next to
her in
the picture. She had been two or three years old, and both of them
were
smiling. Grace looked at it for a long time, remembering what her
mother
had looked like, how pretty she had been, and how much she wanted
of
Grace. Too much. She wanted to tell her she was sorry now. She
just
couldn't do it. She had let her mother down. She hadn't taken care
of
him. She couldn't anymore. And now he was gone. She couldn't
remember
where he had gone. But he was gone. And she wasn't going to take
care of
him anymore.
"She's really out of it," the woman officer said right
within earshot,
as Grace stared at her mother's picture. She wanted to remember
it.
She had a feeling she might not be seeing it again, but she wasn't
sure
why.
She only knew that they were leaving. "You going to call in a
shrink?"
the officer asked.
"Yeah, maybe," the senior officer said. More than ever,
he was beginning
to think she was retarded. Or maybe not. Maybe it was all an act.
Maybe
there was more to it than met the eye. It was hard to say.
God only knew what she'd really been up to.
When Grace stepped outside in the night air, the front lawn was
swarming
with policemen. There were seven squad cars parked outside, most
of them
had come just to see what had happened, some were responsible for
checking out the crime scene. There were lights flashing and men
in
uniform everywhere, and the young cop named O"Byrne helped
her into the
back of a squad car. The female officer got in beside her.
She wasn't particularly sympathetic to her. She'd seen girls like
her
before, druggies, or fakes who pretended to be out of it so they
wouldn't get blamed for what they'd done. She'd seen a
fifteen-year-old
who'd killed her entire family, and then claimed that voices on
television had made her do it. For all she knew, Grace was a smart
little bitch pretending she was crazy. But something about her
told the
officer that this one might be for real, maybe not crazy, but
something
was wrong with her. And she kept gulping air, as though she
couldn't
catch her breath. Something was definitely odd about the girl. But
then
again, she had shot and almost killed her old man, that was enough
to
push most people over the edge. Anyway, it wasn't their job to
figure
out if she was sane. The shrinks could work out that one.
The ride to Central Station downtown was a short one, particularly
at
that hour, but Grace looked worse than ever when she got there.
The
lights were fluorescent and bright, and she looked almost green as
they
put her in a holding cell where she waited until a burly male
officer
walked into the room and looked her over.
"Are you Grace Adams?" he asked curtly, and she only
nodded. She felt as
though she was going to faint or throw up again. Maybe she would
die.
That was all she had wanted anyway. Dying would be fine. Her life
was a
nightmare. "Yes or no?" he asked, shouting at her.
"Yes, I am."
"Your father just died at the hospital. We're arresting you
for murder."
He read her her rights, dropped some papers into the hands of a
female
officer who had walked in just behind him. And then, without
another
word, he left the room, with a heavy clang of the metal door that
sealed
them into the cell where she had been waiting. There was a
moment's
silence, and then the female officer told her to strip all her
clothes
off. To Grace, it was all like a very bad movie.
"Why?" Grace said hoarsely.
"Strip search," the officer explained, as Grace slowly
began undressing,
with shaking fingers. The entire process was utterly humiliating.
And
after that, they took fingerprints, and did mug shots.
"Heavy rap," another female officer said coldly as she
handed Grace a
paper towel to wipe the ink off her fingers. "How old are
you?" she
asked casually, as Grace looked at her. She was still trying to
absorb
what they had told her. She had killed him. He was dead. It was
over.
"Seventeen."
"Bad luck for you. You can be tried as an adult for murder in
Illinois
if you're over thirteen. If they find you guilty, you pull down at
least
fourteen, fifteen years. Death penalty too.
You're in the big leagues now, baby." Nothing seemed real to
Grace as
her hands were cuffed behind her back and she was led from the
room.
And five minutes later, she was in a cell with four other women,
and an
open toilet that reeked of urine and human waste. The place was
noisy
and filthy, and all of the women in her cell were lying on bare
mattresses and covered with blankets.
Two were awake, but no one was talking. No one said a word as she
was
uncuffed, handed a blanket, and went to sit on the only unoccupied
bunk
in the small cell.
She looked around her in disbelief. It had come to this. But there
had
been no other way out. She couldn't take it anymore. She'd had to
do it
... she hadn't meant to ... hadn't planned it ... but now that she
had,
she wasn't even sorry. It was her life or his. She would have just
as
soon died, but it hadn't happened that way. It had just happened,
without intent or plan. She had had no choice. She had killed him.
Chapter 2.
Grace lay on the thin mattress all night, barely feeling the sharp
metal
coils beneath her. She didn't feel anything. She wasn't shaking
anymore.
She just lay there. Thinking. She had no family anymore.
No one. No parents. No friends. She wondered what would happen to
her,
would she be found guilty of murder? Would she get the death
penalty?
She couldn't forget what the booking officer had told her. She was
being
charged as an adult, and accused of murder. Maybe the death
penalty was
the price she had to pay. And if it was, she'd pay it. At least he
could
never touch her again, he couldn't hurt her anymore.
Her four years of hell at his hands were over.
"Grace Adams?" a voice called out her name just after
seven o'clock in
the morning. She'd been there for three hours by then, and she
hadn't
slept all night, but she didn't feel as disembodied as she had the
night
before. She knew what was happening. She remembered shooting her
father.
And she knew he had died, and why. She knew that better than
anything
else. And she wasn't sorry.
She was escorted to a small dingy room with heavy locked doors at
either
end. They put her in it without explanation. There was a table,
four
chairs, and a bright light overhead. She stood there, and five
minutes
later, the door at the other end of the room opened. A tall blond
woman
walked in. She looked cool as she glanced at Grace, and waited for
a
moment as she watched her. She didn't smile, she didn't say
anything,
she just observed Grace for a long moment. And Grace said nothing
to
her, she stayed at the far end of the room, looking like a young
doe
about to bolt from the room, except she couldn't. She was in a
cage. She
was quiet, but afraid. And even in her jeans and T-shirt, there
was a
quiet dignity about her. There was an unmistakable quality about
her, as
though she had suffered and come far, paid a high price for her
freedom,
and felt it was worth it. It wasn't anger one sensed about her, it
was a
long-suffering kind of patience.
She had seen too much in her short years, life and death, and
betrayal,
and it showed in her eyes. Molly York saw it the moment she looked
at
Grace, and she was touched by the raw pain she saw there.
"I'm Molly York," she explained quietly. "I'm a
psychiatrist. Do you
know why I'm here?"
Grace shook her head, and didn't move an inch closer, as the two
women
stood at opposite sides of the room.
"Do you remember what happened last night?"
Grace nodded slowly.
"Why don't you sit down?" She pointed to the chairs, and
they each took
a seat on opposite sides of the table. Grace wasn't sure if the
woman
was sympathetic to her or not, but she was clearly not her friend,
and
she was obviously part of the police investigation, which meant
that she
was potentially someone who wanted to hurt her. But she wasn't
going to
lie to her. She would tell her the truth in answer to anything she
asked, as long as she didn't ask too much about her father. That
was
nobody's business. She owed it to him not to expose him, and to
her
mother, not to embarrass them. What difference did it make now
anyway?
He was gone. It never occurred to her for an instant to ask for an
attorney, or try to save herself. That just didn't matter.
"What do you remember about last night?" the
psychiatrist asked
carefully, watching her every move and expression ...
"I shot my father."
"Do you remember why?" Grace hesitated before replying,
and then said
nothing.
"Were you angry at him? Had you been thinking about shooting
him for a
while?"
Grace shook her head very quickly. "I never thought about
shooting him.
I just found the gun in my hand. I don't even know how it got
there.
My mom used to keep it in her night table. She was sick for a long
time,
and she'd get scared sometimes if we were out, so she liked to
have it.
But she never used it." She seemed very young and innocent as
she
explained it to the psychiatrist, but at first glance, she seemed
neither insane, nor retarded, as the arresting officers had
suggested.
Nor did she seem dangerous. She seemed very polite and well
brought up,
and oddly self-possessed for someone who'd been through a shocking
experience, had had no sleep at all, and was in a great deal of
trouble.
"Was your father holding the gun? Did you fight over it? Did
you try and
take it from him?"
"No. I was holding it on him. I remember feeling it in my
hand.
And. ..." She didn't want to tell her that he had hit her.
"Then I shot him."
She looked down at her hands then.
"Do you know why? Were you angry at him? Did he do something
to you that
made you angry? Did you have a fight?"
"No ... well ... sort of ..." It was a fight ... it was
a fight for
survival ..."I ... it wasn't important."
"It must have been very
important," the psychiatrist said pointedly.
"Important enough to shoot him over it, Grace. Important
enough to kill
him. Let's be honest here. Had you ever shot a gun before?"
She shook her head, looking sad and tired. Maybe she should have
done it
years before, but then her mother would have been heartbroken.
In her own sad way, she had loved him. "No. I never shot a
gun before."
"Why was last night different?"
"My mom died two days ago ... three days ago now, I guess.
Her funeral
was yesterday." She'd obviously been overwrought. But what
were they
fighting about? Molly York was intrigued by Grace as she watched
her.
She was hiding something, but she wasn't sure what.
She wasn't sure if it was something damaging to herself, or her
father.
And it wasn't the psychiatrist's job to unearth the answers as to
her
innocence or guilt. But it was up to her to determine if the girl
was
sane or not, and knew what she was doing. But what had she been
doing?
And what was he doing that caused her to shoot him?
"Did you have a fight about your mom? Did she leave him some
money, or
something you wanted?"
Grace smiled at the question, looking too wise for her years, and
not at
all retarded. "I don't think she had anything to leave
anyone.
She never worked, and she didn't have anything. My dad made all
the
money.
He's a lawyer ... or ... was ..." she said calmly.
"Is he going to leave you something?"
"I don't know ... maybe ... I guess so ..." She didn't
know yet that if
you commit murder, you cannot inherit from your victim. If she
were to
be found guilty, she would not inherit anything from her father.
But that had never been her motive.
"So what did you two fight about?" Molly York was
persistent, and Grace
didn't trust her. She was much too pushy. There was a
relentlessness
about her questions, and a look of intelligence in her eyes that
worried
Grace. She would see too much, understand too much.
And she had no right to know. It was no one's business what her
father
had done to her all these years, she didn't want anyone to know.
Not
even if saying it saved her. She didn't want the whole town to know
what
he had done to her.
What would they think of them then, and of her, or her mother? It
didn't
bear thinking.
"We didn't fight."
"Yes, you did," Molly York said quietly. "You must
have. You didn't just walk into the room and shoot him ... or did
you?"
Grace shook her head in answer. "You shot him from less than
two inches
away.
What were you thinking when you shot him?"
"I don't know. I wasn't thinking anything. I was just trying
to .... it
doesn't matter."
"Yes, it does." Molly York leaned toward her seriously
from across the
table. "Grace, you're being charged with murder. If he did
something to
you, or hurt you in any way, it's selfdefense, or manslaughter,
not
murder. No matter how great a betrayal you think it is, you have
to tell
me."
"Why? Why do I have to tell anyone anything? Why should
I?" She sounded
like a child as she said it. But she was a child who had killed
her
father.
"Because if you don't tell someone, Grace, you could end up
in prison
for a lot of years, and that's wrong if you were trying to defend
yourself. What did he do to you, Grace, to make you shoot
him?"
"I don't know. Maybe I was just upset about my mother."
She was
squirming in her seat, and looked away as she said it.
"Did he rape you?" Grace's eyes opened wide and she
looked at her at the
question. And her breath seemed short when she answered.
"No. Never."
"Did he ever have intercourse with you? Have you ever had
intercourse
with your father?" Grace looked horrified. She was coming too
close,
much too close. She hated this woman. What was she trying to do?
Make everything worse? Make more trouble? Disgrace all of them? It
was
nobody's business.
"No. Of course not!" she almost shouted, but she looked
"Are you sure?" The two women's eyes met for a long
time, and Grace
finally shook her head.
"No. Never."
"Were you having intercourse with him last night when you
shot him?"
She looked at Grace pointedly, and Grace shook her head again, but
she
looked agitated, and Molly saw it.
"Why are you asking me these questions?" she asked
unhappily, and you
could hear the wheeze of her asthma as she said it.
"Because I want to know the truth. I want to know if he hurt
you, if you
had reason to shoot him." Grace only shook her head again.
"Were you and your father lovers, Grace? Did you like
sleeping with
him?" But this time when she raised her eyes to Molly's
again, her
answer was totally honest.
"No." I hated it. But she couldn't say those words to Molly.
"Do you have a boyfriend?" Grace shook her head again.
"Have you ever
had intercourse with a boy?"
Grace sighed, knowing she never would. How could she?
"No."
"You're a
virgin?" There was silence. "I asked if you were a
virgin."
She was pressing her again, and Grace didn't like it.
"I don't know. I guess so."
"What does that mean? Have you fooled around, is that what
you mean by
you guess so'?"
"Maybe." She looked very young again, and Molly smiled.
You couldn't
lose your virginity from petting.
"Have you ever had a boyfriend? At seventeen you must
have." She smiled
again, but Grace shook her head in answer.
"Is there anything you want to say to me about last night,
Grace?
Do you remember how you felt before you shot him? What made you
shoot
him?"
Grace shook her head dumbly.
"I don't know."
Molly York knew that Grace wasn't being honest with her. As shaken
as
she may have been at the time of the shooting, she wasn't dazed
now.
She was fully alert, and determined not to tell Molly what had
happened.
The tall attractive blonde looked at the girl for a long time, and
then
slowly closed her notebook and uncrossed her legs.
"I wish you'd be honest with me. I can help you, Grace.
Honest."
If she felt that Grace had been defending herself, or that there
had
been extenuating circumstances it would be a lot easier for her.
But
Grace wasn't giving her anything to go on. And the funny thing was
that,
in spite of her circumstances and the fact that she wasn't
cooperating
at all, Molly York liked her.
Grace was a beautiful girl, and she had big, honest, open eyes.
Molly saw so much sorrow and pain there, and yet she didn't know
how to
help her. It would come. But for the moment, Grace was too busy
hiding
from everyone to let anyone near her.
"I've told you everything I remember."
"No, you haven't," Molly said
quietly. "But maybe you will later."
She handed the girl her card. "If you want to see me, call
me. And if
you don't, I'll be back to see you again anyway. You and I are
going to
have to spend some time together so I can write a report."
"About what?" Grace looked worried. Dr. York scared her.
She was too
smart, and she asked too many questions.
"About your state of mind. About the circumstances of the
shooting, such
as I understand them. You're not giving me much to work with for
the
moment."
"That's all there is. I found the gun in my hand, and I shot
him."
"Just like that." She didn't believe it for a moment.
"That's right." She looked like she was trying to
convince herself but
she had not fooled Molly.
"I don't believe you, Grace." She looked her right in
the eye as she
said it.
"Well, that's what happened, whether you believe it or
not."
"And what about now? How do you feel about losing your
father?"
Within three days she had lost both of her parents and become an
orphan,
that was a heavy blow for anyone, particularly if she had killed
one of
her parents.
" ... I'm sad about my dad ... and my mom. But my mom was so
sick and in
so much pain, maybe now it's better for her."
But what about Grace? How much pain had she been in? That was the
question that was gnawing at Molly. This was not some bad kid who
had
just blown away her old man. This was a bright girl, with a sharp
mind,
who was pretending that she had no idea why she had shot him.
It was so aggravating to listen to her say it again that Molly
would
have liked to kick the table.
"What about your dad? Is it better like this for him?"
"My dad?" Grace looked surprised at the question.
"No ... he. ... he wasn't suffering ... I guess this isn't better for
him," Grace
said without looking up at Molly. She was hiding something, and
Molly
knew it.
"What about you? Is it better for you like this? Would you
rather be
alone?"
"Maybe." She was honest again for a moment.
"Why? Why would you rather be alone?"
"It's just simpler." She looked and felt a thousand
years old as she
said it.
"I don't think so, Grace. It's a complicated world out there.
It's not
easy for anyone to be alone. Especially not a seventeen year-old
girl.
Home must have been a pretty difficult place if you'd rather be
alone
now. What was home' like? How was it?"
"It was fine." She was as closed as an oyster.
"Did your parents get along? Before your mom got sick I
mean."
"They were fine."
Molly didn't believe her again but she didn't say it. "Were
they happy?"
"Sure." As long as she took care of her father, the way
her mother
wanted.
"Were you?"
"Sure." But in spite of herself, tears glistened in her
eyes as she said
it. The wise psychiatrist was asking far too many painful
questions. "I
was very happy. I loved my parents."
"Enough to lie for them? To protect them? Enough not to tell
us why you
shot your father?"
"There's nothing to tell."
"Okay." Molly backed off from her, and stood up at her
side of the
table. "I'm going to send you to the hospital today, by the
way."
"What for?" Grace looked instantly terrified, which
interested Molly
greatly. "Why are you doing that?"
"Just part of the routine. Make sure you're healthy. It's no
big deal."
"I don't want to do that." Grace looked panicked and
Molly watched her.
"Why not?"
"Why do I have to?"
"You don't have much choice right now, Grace. You're in a
pretty tight
spot. And the authorities are in control. Have you called a lawyer
yet?"
Grace looked blank at the question. Someone had told her she
could, but
she didn't have one to call, unless she called Frank Wills, her
father's
law partner, but she wasn't even sure she wanted to. What could
she say
to him? It was easier not to.
"I don't have a lawyer."
"Did your father have any associates?"
"Yes ... but ... it's kind of awkward to call them ... Or
him, he had a
partner."
"I think you should, Grace," she said firmly. "You
need an
attorney.
You can ask for a public defender. But you're better off with
someone
who knows you." It was good advice.
"I guess so." She nodded, looking overwhelmed. There was
so much
happening. It was all so complicated. Why didn't they just shoot
her, or
hang her, or do whatever they were going to, without drawing it
out, or
forcing her to go to the hospital. She was terrified of what they
would
find there.
"I'll see you later, or tomorrow," Molly said gently.
She liked the
girl, and she felt sorry for her. She had been through so much,
and what
she had done certainly wasn't right, but Molly was convinced that
something terrible had caused her to do it. And she intended to do
everything she could to find out what had really happened.
She left Grace in the holding cell, and went out to talk to Stan
Dooley,
the officer in charge of the investigation. He was a veteran
detective,
and very little surprised him anymore, though this had.
He'd met John Adams a number of times over the years, and he
couldn't
imagine a nicer guy. Hearing he had been shot by his own kid had
really
stunned him.
"Is she nuts, or a druggie?" Detective Dooley asked
Molly as she
appeared at his desk at eight o'clock in the morning. She had
spent an
hour with Grace, and in her mind, had gotten nowhere. Grace was
determined not to open up to her. But there were some things that
she
wanted to know, that they could find out whether or not Grace
wanted.
"Neither one. She's scared and shaken up, but she's lucid.
Very much so.
I want her to go to the hospital today, for an exam, now in
fact."
She didn't want too many hours to elapse before they did it.
"What for? Drug screen?"
"If you like. I don't think that's the issue here. I want a
pelvic."
"Why?" He looked surprised. "What are you
after?" He knew Dr. York and
she was usually pretty sensible, though every now and then she
went off
the deep end, when she got carried away over one of her patients.
"I've got a couple of theories here. I want to know if she
was defending
herself. Seventeen-year-old girls don't usually go around shooting
their
fathers. Not from homes like this one."
"That's bullshit, and you know
it, York," he said cynically. "What about the
fourteen-year-old shooter
we had last year who took out her whole family, including grandma
and
four younger sisters? You gonna tell me that was self-defense
too?"
"That was different, Stan. I read the reports. John Adams was
naked and
so was she, and there was come all over the sheets. You can't deny
it
was a possibility."
"Yes, I can, with this guy. I knew him. Straight-arrow as
they come, and
the nicest guy you'll ever meet. You'd have liked him." He
gave her a
look, which she ignored ... He loved to tease her. She was very
good-looking, and she came from a pretty fancy family in Chicago.
He
loved to accuse her of "slumming."
But she never fooled around on the job, and he also knew that she
had a
regular guy who was a doctor. But it didn't hurt to razz her a
little.
She was always good-humored and pleasant to work with. She was
smart
too, and Dooley respected her for it. "Let me tell you
something,
Doctor, this guy would not have been fucking his kid. He just
wouldn't.
Trust me. Maybe he was jacking off. What do I know?"
"That's not why she
shot him," Molly York said coolly.
"Maybe he told her she couldn't have the keys to the car. My
own kids
get nuts when I tell them that. Maybe he hated her boyfriend.
Trust me,
it's not what you think here. This is not self-defense. She killed
him."
"We'll see, Stan. We'll see. Just do me a favor, get her over
to Mercy
General in the next hour. I'm writing an order."
"You're terrific. And we'll get her there. Okay? Happy?"
"Thrilled. You're a great guy." She smiled at him.
"Tell that to the chief," he grinned at her. He liked
her, but he didn't
believe a word of her self-defense theory. She was clutching at
straws.
John Adams just wasn't that kind of guy. No one in Watseka would
have
believed it, no matter what Molly York thought, or the hospital
told
her.
Two women officers came to pick Grace up in her cell half an hour
later,
handcuffed her again, and drove her to Mercy General in a small
van with
grills on the windows. They didn't even talk to her. They just
chatted
to each other about the prisoners they'd transferred the day
before, and
the movie they were going to see that night, and the vacation one
of
them was saving up for in Colorado. And Grace was just as glad.
She
didn't have anything to say to them anyway. She was just wondering
what
they were going to do to her at the hospital. They had a locked
ward
they took her to in an elevator that went up directly from the
garage,
and when they got there, they uncuffed her and left her with a
resident
and an attendant. And they let Grace know in no uncertain terms
that if
she didn't behave herself they would handcuff her again and call a
guard
to control her.
"You got that?" the attendant asked her bluntly, and
Grace nodded.
They didn't bother explaining anything to her. They just went down
a
list of tests that Dr. York had ordered. They took her temperature
first, and her blood pressure, checked her eyes and ears and
throat, and
then listened to her heart.
They did a urine test, and an extensive blood test, checking for
illnesses as well as drug screens, and then they told her-to
undress and
stand naked in front of them, and they checked her over carefully
for
bruises. She had a number of them that caught their interest,
there were
two on her breasts, several on her arms, and one on her buttocks,
and
then in spite of her efforts to conceal them from them, they
discovered
a bad one on her inner thigh where her father had grabbed her and
squeezed her. It was high up, and led to another that surprised
them
further. They took photographs of all of them, despite her
protests, and
wrote extensive notes about them. She was crying by then, and objecting
to everything they were doing.
"Why are you doing this? You don't have to. I admitted I shot
him, why
do you have to take pictures?" They had taken several graphic
ones of
her crotch, but there were two bad bruises hidden there and some
lesions, and they told her that if she didn't cooperate they would
tie
her down and take the pictures. It was humiliating beyond words,
but
there was nothing she could do to stop them.
And then, as they put the camera down, the resident told her to
hop on
the table. Until then, he had scarcely spoken to her. Most of the
directions had been from the attendant, who was a very
disagreeable
woman. Both of them ignored Grace totally, and referred to various
parts
of her as though they were looking at them in a butcher shop, and
she
weren't even a human being.
The resident was putting on rubber gloves by then, and covering
his
fingers with sterile jelly. He pointed at the stirrups and offered
Grace
a paper drape to cover herself with. She grabbed it gratefully,
but she
didn't get on the table.
"What are you doing?" she asked in a terrified voice.
"Haven't you ever had a pelvic?" He looked surprised.
She was seventeen
after all, and a good-looking girl, it was hard to believe she was
a
virgin. But if she was, he'd know in a minute.
"No, I ..." Her mother had gotten her birth control
pills four years
before, and she'd never been to a doctor for an examination. No
one knew
for certain that she wasn't a virgin, and she didn't see what
difference
it made now. Her father was dead, and she had admitted that she
had shot
him. So why put her through this? What right did they have to do
this?
She felt like an animal, and she started to cry again as she
clutched
the paper drape and stared at them, as the female attendant
threatened
to tie her down. There was no choice except to agree to do it. She
got
up on the table, with shaking legs, and she pressed her knees
tightly
together, as she lay back and put her feet in the stirrups.
But given everything that had happened to her, it wasn't the worst
thing
that she'd ever been through.
He made a lot of notes, and put fingers into her at least four or
five
times, shining a light so close to her that she could feel it warm
her
bottom. Then he inserted an instrument into her, and did all the
same
things again. This time he took a smear and made a slide, which he
set
carefully on a tray on the table. But he said nothing to Grace
about his
findings.
"Okay," he said indifferently to her, "you can get
dressed now."
"Thank
you," she said hoarsely. She had no idea what they'd found,
or what he'd
written, but he had made no comment on whether or not she was a
virgin,
and she was still naive enough not to be entirely sure if he could
really see the difference.
She was dressed and ready to go five minutes later, and this time
two
men ferried her back to her cell at Central Station, and she was
left
alone with the women in her cell until after dinner. Two of them
had
been released on bail, they had been there for drug sales and
prostitution and their pimp had come to get them, and of the other
two
one was in for grand theft auto, and the other for possession of a
large
amount of cocaine. Grace was the only one being held for murder,
and
everyone seemed to leave her alone, as though they knew that she
didn't
want to be bothered.
She had just eaten a barely edible, very small, overcooked
hamburger,
sitting on a sea of wet spinach, while trying not to notice that
the
cell reeked of urine, when a guard came to the cell, opened it and
pointed at her, and led her back to the room where she had met
with
Molly York that morning.
The young doctor was back, still wearing jeans, after a long day
at the
hospital where she worked, and then in her office. It was fully
twelve
hours later.
"Hello," Grace said cautiously. It was nice to see a
familiar face, but
she still felt as though the young psychiatrist represented
danger.
"How was your day?" Grace shrugged with a small smile.
How could it have
been? "Did you call your father's partner?"
"Not yet," she said almost
inaudibly. "I'm not sure what to say to him.
He and my father were really good friends."
"Don't you think he'll want to help you?"
"I don't know." But she didn't think so.
Molly was looking at her pointedly as she asked the next question.
"Do you have any friends at all, Grace? Anyone you could turn
to?"
She suspected long before Grace spoke that she didn't. If she had,
maybe
none of this would have happened. Molly knew without asking her
that she
was isolated. She had no one in her life except her parents.
And they had done enough to ruin anyone's life, or at least her
father
had.
At least that was what she suspected. "Did your parents have
any friends
you were close to?"
"No," Grace said thoughtfully. They really didn't
have any close friends, they didn't want anyone to get too close
to
their dark secret.
"My father knew everyone. And my mom was kind of shy
..." And she had
never wanted anyone to know that she was being beaten.
"Everyone loved
my dad, but he wasn't really close to anyone."
That in itself made Molly wonder about him.
"And what about you? Any real close friends at school?"
Grace only shook
her head in answer. "Why not?"
"I don't know. No time, I guess. I had to go home and take
care of my
mom every day," Grace said, still not looking at her.
"Is that really why, Grace? Or did you have a secret?"
"Of course not."
But Molly wouldn't let go of her. Her voice reached out to Grace
and
pulled her toward her. "He raped you that night, didn't
he?"
Grace's eyes flew open wide, and she looked at Molly, and hoped
the
young doctor didn't see her tremble.
"No ... of course not ..." But her breath caught, and
she found herself
praying she wouldn't have an asthma attack. This woman already
knew too
much without that. "How can you say such a thing?" She
tried to look
shocked but she was only terrified. What if she knew? Then what?
Everyone else would know their ugly secret. Even after their
deaths, she
still felt an obligation to hide it. It was her fault too. What
would
people think of her if they knew it?
"You have bruises and tears all through your vagina,"
Molly said
quietly, "that doesn't happen with normal intercourse. The
doctor who
examined you said it looked like you had been raped by half a
dozen men,
or one very brutal man. He did an awful lot of damage. That's why
you
shot him, isn't it?" She didn't answer. "Was that the
first time, after
your mother's funeral?" She looked pointedly at Grace as
though she
expected an answer, and the teenager's eyes filled with tears that
spilled down her cheeks in spite of all of her best efforts to
stop
them.
"I didn't ... no ... he wouldn't do a thing like that ...
veryone loved my dad ..."
She had killed him, and all she could do now was defend his memory
so no
one would ever know what he had really been like.
"Did your father love you, Grace? Or did he just use
you?"
"Of course he
loved me," she said woodenly, furious at herself for crying.
"He raped you that night, didn't he?" But this time,
Grace didn't
answer. She didn't even deny it. "How often had he done that
before?
You have to tell me." Her life depended on it now, but Molly
didn't want
to say that.
"No, I don't. I'm not going to tell you anything, and you
can't prove
it," Grace said angrily.
"Why are you defending him?" Molly asked in total
frustration.
"Don't you understand what's happening? You've been charged
with
murdering him, they could even decide to charge you with murder in
the
first degree, if they can get away with it, and they think you
have a
motive. You have to do everything you can to save yourself. I'm
not
telling you to lie, I'm telling you to tell the truth, Grace. If
he
raped you, if he hurt you, if you were abused, then there were
extenuating circumstances. It could reduce the charges to
manslaughter
or even self-defense, and it changes everything. Do you really
want to
go to prison for the next twenty years in order to preserve the
reputation of a man who did that to you?
Grace, think about it, you have to listen to me ... you have to
hear
me." But Grace knew that her mother would never have forgiven
her for
sullying her father's memory. It was her father whom Ellen had
loved so
blindly, and needed desperately. It was he she had always wanted
to
protect, even if it meant holding her thirteen-year-old daughter
down
for him.
She wanted to make him love her at any price, even if the price
was her
own daughter.
"I can't tell you anything," Grace said woodenly.
"Why? He's dead. You can't hurt him by telling the truth. You
can only
hurt yourself by not telling it. I want you to think about that.
You can't be loyal to a dead man, or to someone who hurt you very
badly.
Grace ..." She reached out and touched her hand across the
table from
where she sat. She had to make her understand, she had to pull her
out
from the place where she was hiding. "I want you to think about
this
tonight. And I'm going to come back and see you tomorrow.
Whatever you tell me, I'll promise not to tell anyone else. But I
want
you to be honest with me about what happened. Will you think about
that?" Grace didn't move for a long time, and then she
nodded. She'd
think about it, but she wasn't going to tell her.
Molly left her that night with a heavy heart. She knew exactly
what was
going on, and she couldn't seem to bridge the gap with Grace. She
had
worked with abused children and wives for years, and all their
loyalty
was always to their abusers. It took everything she had to break
that
bond, but usually she was successful. But so far, Grace wasn't
giving an
inch. Molly was getting nowhere.
She stopped in the detective's office to look at the hospital
report and
the Polaroids again, and it made her feel sick when she saw them.
Stan Dooley came in while she was reading the report, and he was
surprised to see her still at work, fourteen hours after she had
started.
"Don't you have anything else to do at night?" he said
amiably. "A girl
like you ought to be out with some guy, or hanging out in bars,
looking
for her future."
"Yeah," she laughed at him, her long blond hair hanging
invitingly over
her shoulder. "Just like you, huh, Stan? You were here the
same time I
was this morning."
"I have to. You don't. I want to retire in ten years. You can
be a
shrink until you're a hundred."
"Thanks for the vote of confidence." She closed the file
and put it on
his desk with a sigh. She was getting nowhere. "Did you see
the hospital
report on the Adams girl?"
"Yeah. So?" He looked unmoved.
"Oh come on, don't tell me you can't figure it out." She
looked angry at
the casual shrug of his shoulders.
"What's to figure? So she got laid, nobody says she got
raped. And
who says it was her father?"
"Bullshit. Who do you think laid her? Six gorillas from the
zoo?
Did you see the bruises, and read what he found internally?"
"So she likes it lively. Look, she's not complaining. She
isn't saying
that she was raped. What do you want from me?"
"Some sense for chrissake," she blazed at him.
"She's a
seventeen-year-old kid, and he was her father. She's protecting
him, or
some misguided illusion about saving his reputation. But I can
tell you
one thing, that girl was defending herself, and you know it."
""Protecting him." She blew the guy away. What kind
of protection is
that? I think your theory is real nice, Doctor, but it won't hold
water.
All we know is that she may have had a little rough sex. There is
nothing to prove that she had it with her father, or that he was
roughing her up. And even if, God help me, she did fuck her old
man,
that's still no reason to shoot him. That still doesn't make it
self-defense, and you know that too. There's nothing to prove that
her
father hurt her. She's not even saying that. You are."
"How the hell do you know what he did?" she shouted at
him, but he
looked unmoved. He didn't believe a word of what she was saying.
"Is this what she told you, or are you just guessing? I'm
looking at the
evidence, and a seventeen-year-old girl who is isolated and so
removed
she's practically on another planet."
"Let me tell you a little secret, Dr. York. This is not a
Martian. She's
a shooter. Simple as that. And you want to know what I think, with
all
your exams, and fancy theories? I think probably she went out and
got
laid that night after her mother's funeral, and her old man
thought it
wasn't right. So she came home and he gave her hell, and she
didn't like
it, got pissed off, and killed him. And the fact that he was
jacking off
in bed is pure coincidence. You can't take a guy that the whole
community knows as a good guy and convince anyone that he raped
his
daughter and she shot him in self-defense. As a matter of fact, I
talked
to his partner today, and he said pretty much the same thing I
did. I
didn't share the evidence with him, but I asked him what he
thought must
have happened. The idea that John Adams would do anything to harm
his
child, and I didn't even say what you thought it might have been,
horrified him. He said the guy adored his wife, and his kid. He
said he
lived for them, never cheated on his wife, spent every night with
them,
and was devoted to his wife till the day she died.
He said that the kid was always a little strange, very unfriendly
and
withdrawn, didn't have many friends. And wasn't that keen on her
father."
"There goes your theory that she was out with her
boyfriend."
"She doesn't have to have a regular to go out and give it
away for half
an hour, does she?"
"You just don't see it, do you?" Molly said angrily.
How could he be so blind and stubborn? He was buying the guy's
reputation, without even looking to see what was behind it.
"What am I supposed to see, Molly? We've got a seventeen
year-old girl
who shot and killed her father. Maybe she was odd, maybe she was
crazy.
Maybe she was scared of him, what the hell do I know? But the fact
is
she shot him. She isn't saying he raped her, she isn't saying
anything.
You are."
"She's too scared, she's too afraid that someone is going to
find out
their secret." She had seen it a hundred times. She just knew
it.
"Did it ever occur to you that maybe she doesn't have a
secret?
Maybe this is all your invention because you feel sorry for her
and want
to get her off, what do I know?"
"Not much, from the sound of it," she answered him
tartly. "I didn't
invent that report, or the photographs of the bruises on her
thighs and
buttocks."
"Maybe she fell down the stairs. All I know is that you're
the only one
yelling rape, and that's not good enough, not with a guy like him.
You're just not going to sell it."
"What about her father's partner? Is he going to defend
her?"
"I doubt
it. He asked about bail, and I said it's not likely in a murder
case,
unless they reduce it to manslaughter, but I doubt that.
He said it was probably just as well, because she had nowhere to
go now
anyway. She has no other relatives. And he doesn't want to take
responsibility for her. He's a bachelor, and he's not prepared to
take
her in. He said he didn't feel right defending her. Said he just
couldn't and we should get a public defender for her. I can't say
that I
blame him. He was obviously pretty upset about losing his
partner."
"Why can't he use the father's funds to pay for a private
attorney?"
She didn't like the sound of it, but Grace had guessed that Frank
Wills
wouldn't help her. And she'd been right, much to Molly's
disappointment.
She wanted him to help her. Molly wanted Grace to get a top-notch
attorney.
"He didn't volunteer to get an attorney for her," Stan
Dooley explained.
"He said that John Adams was his closest friend, but
apparently he owed
him a bunch of money. The wife's long illness pretty much wiped
them
out. All he has left is his share of the law practice and their
house,
and it's mortgaged to the hilt. Wills doesn't think there'll be
much
left of Adams's estate, and he certainly wasn't volunteering
attorney
fees out of his own pocket. I'll call the P.D. office tomorrow
morning."
Molly nodded, shocked again by how alone Grace was. It wasn't
unusual
among young people accused of crimes, but with a girl like her, it
should have been different. She came from a nice middle-class
family,
her father was a respected citizen, they had a nice home, and they
were
well known in the community. It seemed extraordinary to the young
doctor
that Grace should find herself completely abandoned. And although
it was
unusual, she decided to call Frank Wills herself that night and
jotted
down his number.
"What's Dr. Kildare up to these days," Dooley teased her
again as she
started to leave, referring to her boyfriend. "He's busy saving
lives.
He works even longer hours than I do."
She smiled at Dooley in spite of herself. He drove her buggy
sometimes,
but most of the time he had a good heart and she liked him.
"Too bad, he'd keep you out of a lot of trouble if he'd take
a little
time off now and then."
"Yeah, I know." She smiled, and left him, tossing a
tweed jacket over
her shoulder. She was a pretty girl, but more importantly, she was
good
at what she did. Even the cops she knew admitted that she was
smart, and
a pretty good shrink, even if she did come up with some pretty
wild
theories.
Later, when Molly called Frank Wills from home that night, she was
shocked by his callousness. As far as he was concerned, Grace
Adams
deserved to hang for killing her father.
"Nicest guy in the world," Wills said, sounding deeply
moved, and Molly
wasn't sure why, but she didn't believe him. "Ask anyone.
There isn't a
person in this town who didn't love him ... except her ... I still
can't
believe she shot him." He had spent the morning arranging a
memorial for
him. The whole town would be there undoubtedly, except Grace. But
this
time, there would be no gathering at the house, no family there
for
John. All he had was his wife and daughter. Wills's voice broke
when he
said as much to Molly.
"Do you think there's any reason why she would have shot him,
Mr.
Wills?" Molly asked politely when he'd regained his
composure. She
didn't want to get him more upset than he was, but maybe he would
have
some insight.
"Money, probably. She probably thought he was leaving
everything to her,
and even if he didn't have a will, it would all go to her as his
only
survivor. What she didn't figure, naturally, was that legally she
couldn't inherit from him if she killed him. I guess she didn't
know
that."
"Was there much to leave?" Molly asked innocently, not
referring to what
she had heard from Detective Dooley. "I imagine his share of
the law
practice must be quite valuable. You're both such respected
attorneys."
She knew that he would like that, and he did, he warmed
considerably to
the subject after that and told her more than he should have.
"There's enough. But he owes most of it to me anyway. He
always told me
he'd leave his share of the practice to me when he died, not that
he
planned to check out as early as this, poor devil."
"Did he leave that in writing?"
"I don't know. But it was an agreement between us, and I lent
him some
money from time to time, to help with expenses for Ellen."
"What about the house?"
"He's got a mortgage on it, it's a nice place. But not nice
enough to
get shot for."
"Do you really think a girl her age would shoot her father
for a house,
Mr. Wills? That sounds a little far-fetched, doesn't it?"
"Maybe not. Maybe she figured it was enough to pay for some
fancy
eastern college."
"Is that what she wanted to do?" Molly sounded
surprised. Somehow Grace
didn't seem that ambitious, she seemed far more homebound, almost
too
much so.
"I don't know what she wanted to do, Doctor. I just know that
she killed
her father and she ought to pay for it. She sure as hell shouldn't
profit from it, the law is right on that score. She won't get a
dime of
his money now, not the practice, not the house, nothing."
Molly was startled by his venom, and she wondered if his motives
were
entirely pure, or if in fact he had his own reasons for being
pleased
that Grace was out of the way now.
"And who will get it, if she doesn't? Are there other
relatives?
Did he have other family somewhere?"
"No, just the girl. But he owed me a lot. I told you, I
helped him out
whenever I could, and we practiced together for twenty years. You
can't
just pass over that like it was nothing."
"Of course not. I understand completely," she said soothingly.
She
understood a lot better than he thought, or wanted her to, and she
didn't like it. She thanked him for his time after that, and spent
a
long time thinking about Grace that night, and when her boyfriend
came
in from work at the hospital she told him all about it.
He was exhausted from a twenty-hour day in the emergency room,
which had
been an endless parade of gunshot wounds and car accidents, but he
listened anyway. Molly was all wound up about the case.
She and Richard Haverson had lived together for two years, and
talked
from time to time about getting married, but somehow they never
did.
But they got on well, and were familiar with each other's work.
For both
of them, it was the perfect arrangement. And he was as tall and lanky
and blond and good-looking as she was.
"Sounds like the kid is screwed, if you ask me, there's no
one to take
her part in this, and it sounds like the father's partner wants
her out
of the way anyway, so he can get whatever money is left. Not a great
situation from the sound of it. And if she won't admit that the
old man
was raping her, then what more can you say?" he said, looking
tired, and
she sipped coffee and stared at him in frustration.
"I'm not sure yet. But I'm trying to think of something. I
wish I could
get her to tell me what really happened. I mean, hell, she didn't
just
wake up in the middle of the night, find a gun in her hand and
decide to
shoot him. They found her nightgown torn in half on the floor, but
she
wouldn't explain that either. All the evidence is there, for God's
sake.
She just won't help us use it."
"You'll get to her eventually," he said confidently, but
this time Molly
looked worried. She had never had such a hard time reaching
anyone. The
girl was completely fossilized into a state of self-destruction.
Her
parents had all but destroyed her, and she still wouldn't give
them up.
It was amazing. "I've never seen you lose one yet." He
smiled at her and
touched the long blond hair as he went out to the kitchen for a
beer.
They both worked like demons, but it was a good relationship for
both of
them, and they were happy with each other.
And at six o'clock the next morning when they got up, Grace was
already
on her mind again. On her way to work, Molly glanced at her watch
and
thought about going back to see her. But there was something else
she
wanted to do first.
She went to her office and made some notes for the file, and then
she
went to the public defenders' office at eight-thirty.
"Is David Glass in yet?" she asked the receptionist. He
was the junior
attorney on the team, but Molly had worked on two cases with him
recently, and she thought he was terrific. He was unorthodox and
tough
and smart. He was a street kid from New York who had clawed his
way out
of the ghettos of the South Bronx, and he wasn't going to give in
to
anyone. But at the same time, he had a heart of gold, and he
fought like
a lion for his clients. He was exactly what Grace Adams needed.
"I think he's in the back somewhere," the receptionist
said.
She recognized Molly from other cases she'd been on and she waved
her
back into the inner sanctum.
Molly wandered the hallways looking for him for a few minutes, and
then
she found him in the office library, sitting next to a stack of
books,
sipping a cup of coffee. He looked up as she walked next to him,
and
smiled when he saw her.
"Hi, Doc. How's biz?"
"The usual. How's by you?"
"I'm still working on getting the latest ax murderers off.
You know,
same ol' same ol'."
"Want a case?"
"Are you assigning them now?" He looked amused. He was
shorter than she
was, and he had dark brown eyes and curly black hair, and in his
own
way, he was nice-looking. What he had most of all was personality,
which
overcame any shortcomings he might have had in terms of looking
like
Clark Gable.
He had sex appeal too. And from the way his eyes danced when he
talked
to her, it was obvious that he liked Molly.
"When did they let you start dishing out cases?"
"Okay, okay. I just wanted to know if you were up for
one.that.
I'm working on it, and they're going to assign a P.D. today. I'd
really
like to work on it with you."
"I'm flattered. How bad is it?"
"Bad enough. Possibly murder one. Could even be the death
penalty.
A seventeen-year-old girl shot her father."
"Nice. I always love cases like that. What did she do? Take
his head off
with a shotgun, or have her boyfriend do it for her?" He had
seen plenty
of ugliness in New York, out here, though, things were a lot
tamer.
"Nothing quite so picturesque." She looked at him with a
worried frown,
thinking of Grace. "It's complicated. Can we go talk
somewhere?"
"Sure." He looked intrigued. "If you're willing to
stand on my
shoulders, we can go talk in my office." His cubicle was
barely bigger
than his desk, but at least it had a door and some privacy, and
she
followed him there, as he juggled his books and his coffee.
"So what's
the story?" he asked as she sat in the room's only extra chair
and
sighed. She really wanted him to take it. And for the moment,
Grace was
doing absolutely nothing to help herself. She really needed
someone as
good as David.
"She shot him at slightly less than two-inch range with a
handgun that
she says she found in her hand," and then it went off, and
she shot him.
According to her, for no reason in the world. They were just one
happy
family, except for the fact that they'd buried her mother that
day.
Other than that, no problems."
"Is she sane?" He looked interested, but only mildly.
Most of all, he
loved a challenge. And he liked kids in particular. All of which
was why
Molly wanted him to take the case. He was the only chance Grace
had.
Without him, she was lost, if she even cared. But Molly cared, a
lot,
she wasn't sure why, but she did. Maybe because Grace seemed so
beaten
and so helpless. She had already given up everything, all hope,
even her
own life seemed unimportant to her. And Molly wanted to change it.
"She's sane," Molly confirmed to him, "deeply
depressed and not without
neurosis, but I think for good reason. I think he was abusing her,
sexually and otherwise." She described the kind of internal
damage and
bruises they had found, and her state of mind when Molly saw her.
"She swears he never touched her. I don't believe her. I
think he raped
her that night, and I think he'd done it before, maybe even for a
long
time, and maybe without her mother there, she'd lost her only
protection
and she panicked. He did it again, and this time she lost it and
shot
him.
He had to be right on top of her for her to shoot him at that
range.
Think of it, if he'd been lying on top of her, raping her, and she
had
the gun, it would have been just that kind of range when she shot
him."
"Has anyone else thought of that?" He was intrigued now.
"What do the
cops think?"
"That's the problem. They don't want to hear it. Her father
was Mr.
Perfect Community Loved by Everyone Attorney. No one wants to
believe
that the guy might have been sleeping with his own daughter, or
worse,
forcing her. Maybe he held the gun on her, for all we know, and
she got
it away from him. But something has gone on in that girl's life,
and she
just won't tell me. She has no friends, no life outside of school.
No one seems to know much of anything about her. She went to
school, and
she went home, and took care of her dying mother. The mother died
a few
days ago, and now the father's gone, and that's it. No relatives,
no
friends, just an entire town who swears the guy is the most decent
man
they ever knew and couldn't possibly have hurt his daughter."
"And you don't believe them? Why not?" After working two
cases with her,
he had learned to trust her instincts.
"Because she won't tell me anything, and I know she's lying.
She's
terrified. And she's still defending him, as though he's going to
come
back from the dead and get her."
"She won't say anything?"
"Not really. She is frozen in pain, it's written all over her
...
Something terrible has happened to that girl, and she won't give
it up."
"Not yet," he smiled at her, "but she will. I know
you better than that.
It's early days yet."
"Thanks for the vote of confidence, but we don't have much
time.
The arraignment is today, and they're going to assign a P.D. to
her case
this morning."
"No family attorney, or associate of her old man to take care
of it for
her? I would think someone would turn up." He looked
surprised as the
young doctor shook her head.
"His law partner claims that he was just too close to her
father to want
to defend her, since she's the killer. He also says there's no
money
left, because of the mother's illness. Just the house, and the law
practice. And he might just inherit all of it, now that she can't,
and
he claims her father owed him quite a bit of money. He's not
offering
ten cents to help in her defense, which is why I came to see you.
I
don't like the guy, and I don't trust him. He portrays the
deceased as a
saint, and claims he will never forgive the daughter for what she
did.
He thinks she ought to get the death penalty for it."
"At seventeen? Nice guy." He looked seriously intrigued
now.
"And what does our girl say to all this? Does she know this
guy won't
help her, and may even take everything her father had, against his
supposed debts?"
"Not really. But she seems ready to go down in flames for the
cause, as
long as she keeps her mouth shut. I think she is deluding herself
that
she owes that to her parents."
"Sounds like she needs a shrink as much as an attorney."
He smiled at
Molly. He liked the idea of working on another case with her. She
was
great to work with, and now and then he cherished a small hope
that a
romance would spring up between them, but it never had, and a part
of
him knew it never would. But it was fun to imagine sometimes. And
his
hopes never got in the way of their work together.
"What do you think?" Molly asked him with a worried
look.
"I think she's in big trouble. What are they actually
charging her
with?"
"I'm not sure yet. They were talking about murder one, but I
think
they're having a hard time proving it. There's no real
inheritance'
there to provide her with a motive for premeditation, just a house
and a
pretty good-sized mortgage on it, and the law practice which the
partner
claims was promised to him anyway."
"Yeah, but she didn't necessarily know that. And she didn't
necessarily
know that she couldn't inherit from her father if she killed him.
They could try for murder one, if they really want to."
"If she denies any intent to kill him, they might give her a
break, and
charge her with second-degree," Molly said hopefully.
"It would carry a
sentence of fifteen years to life in prison. She could be forty or
more
by the time she was free again, if she was convicted. But at least
it's
not the death penalty. They've already said they're going to
prosecute
her as an adult, and there was some talk about the death penalty.
If she'd just tell us what happened, you might even be able to
reduce it
to manslaughter."
"Shit. You really did bring me a peach, didn't you?"
"Can you get assigned to it?"
"Maybe. They probably figure it's a loser anyway, with her
father so
prominent in the community she'll never get a fair trial here.
You'd almost have to ask for a change of venue. Actually, I'd like
to
try it."
"Do you want to meet her first?"
"Are you kidding?" He laughed. "Have you seen what
I defend here?
I don't need an introduction. I'd just like to know I have a
chance.
It would be nice if she'd talk to us, and tell us what really
happened.
If she doesn't, she could be facing a life sentence, or worse.
She's got
to tell us what happened," he said earnestly, and Molly
nodded.
"Maybe she will, if she trusts you," Molly said
hopefully. "I was going
to go back and see her this afternoon. I still have to finish my
evaluation for the department, as to whether or not she's
competent to
stand trial. But there's really no question of it. I was just
dragging
my feet a little bit because I wanted to keep seeing her.
I think she needs some real live human contact." Molly looked
genuinely
worried about her.
"I'll go over there with you today, if they give me the case.
Let me see
what I can do first. Call me at lunchtime." He jotted down
Grace's name
and the case number, and Molly thanked him before she left.
She was immensely relieved to think that he might be Grace's
attorney.
It was the best thing that could possibly happen to her. If there
was
any chance of saving her at all, David Glass would find a way to
do it.
Molly didn't have time to call him back until after two o'clock
and when
she did, he was out of the office. And it was four before she had
time
to try again, but she was worried about what had happened. She had
had a
hellish day doing rounds, making evaluations for the courts, and
working
with a fifteen-year-old who had tried to commit suicide and
failed, but
left himself a quadriplegic. He had jumped off a bridge into
concrete,
and in this case the stamina of youth had betrayed him.
Even she had to wonder if he wouldn't have been better off dead
than
spending the next sixty years able only to wiggle his nose and his
ears.
Even his speech had been affected. She called David again at the
end of
the day, and apologized for the delay.
"I just got back myself," David explained.
"What did they say?"
"Good luck. They claim it's open-and-shut. She wanted his
money, what
little he had, according to them, but she didn't know how badly
her
mother's illness had eaten up their savings or that she'd never
inherit
if she killed him. They're holding to the theory that it was
premeditated, or at the very least that they had a fight, she got
mad,
had a tantrum and killed him. According to them, it's all very
simple.
Murder one, at worst. Murder two, at best. Anywhere from twenty to
life,
or the death penalty if they get really crazy."
"She's just a kid ... she's a girl ..." Molly had tears
in her eyes as
she thought of it, and then reproached herself for getting too
involved,
but she just couldn't help it. There was something so wrong here.
"What about the defense?"
"I just don't know. There's no evidence that he attacked her
or
endangered her life, unless your rape theories turn out to be
correct.
Give me a chance, kid. They only assigned me the case two hours
ago, and
I haven't even met her yet. They postponed the arraignment till I
could
see her at least. It's at nine o'clock tomorrow morning. I thought
I'd
go over there at five if I can get out of here by then.
Want to come? It might speed things up and break the ice, since
she
knows you."
"I'm not sure she likes me though. I keep pushing her about
her father
and she doesn't like it."
"She's going to like the death penalty even less. I suggest
you meet me
there at five-thirty. Can you make it?"
"I'll be there. And David?"
"Yes?"
"Thanks for taking it."
"We'll do our best. See you at five-thirty at Central."
And Molly knew as they hung up that they were not only going to
have to
do their best, but pray for a miracle, if they were going to help
her.
Chapter 3.
Molly York and David Glass met outside the jail / \/ promptly at
five-thirty, and went upstairs to Seee Grace. David had gotten all
the
reports from the police by then, and Molly had brought her notes
and the
ones from the hospital to show him. He glanced at them as they
rode
upstairs, and raised an eyebrow when he saw the pictures.
"It looks like someone hit her with a baseball bat," he
said as he
looked at them, and glanced at Molly.
"She says nothing happened." Molly shook her head, and
hoped
that Grace was willing to open up to David. Her life literally
depended
on it, and she still wasn't sure that Grace understood that.
They were led into the attorneys' room, with the two separate
doors, and
the table and four chairs. It was where Molly had met Grace before
and
at least it would be familiar to her.
They sat down for a few minutes and waited for her. David lit a
cigarette and offered one to Molly but she declined it. It was a
full
five minutes before the guard appeared at the window in the door
to the
jail, as the heavy door was unlocked, and Grace stood looking at
them
hesitantly. She was wearing the same jeans and T-shirt. There was
no one
to bring her clothes, and she had nothing else with her. All she
had was
what she had worn the night she had killed her father and been
arrested.
He watched her carefully as she entered the room, she was tall and
thin
and graceful, and in some ways she looked young and shy, but when
she
turned to look at him, he saw that her eyes were a dozen years
older.
There was something so sad and defeated there, and she moved like
a doe
about to dash away into the forest. She stood staring at them, not
sure
what to make of their visit. She had spent four hours with the
police
that day, answering questions, and she was exhausted. They had
advised
her that she had the right to have an attorney present at the
questioning but she had already admitted to shooting her father,
and
didn't think there was any harm in answering their questions.
She had gotten the message that David Glass was going to be her
attorney, and he would be over to see her later. She had heard
nothing
from Frank Wills, and she still hadn't called him. There was no
one to
call, no one she could have turned to. She had read the papers
that day,
the front page and several articles were devoted to stories about
the
murder, about her father's admirable life, his law practice, and
what he
had meant to so many. It said relatively little about her, except
that
she was seventeen, went to Jefferson High, and had killed him.
Several theories had been offered as to what must have occurred,
but no
one ever came close to what had really happened.
"Grace, this is David Glass." Molly broke the silence by
introducing
them. "He's from the public defenders' office, and he's going
to
represent you."
"Hello, Grace," he said quietly. He was watching her
face, he hadn't taken his eyes off hers since she'd entered the
room,
and it was easy to see that she was desperately frightened. But in
spite
of it, she was polite and gracious when she shook his hand. He
could
feel her hand shaking in his own as soon as he touched her
fingers. And
when she spoke, he could see that she was a little breathless, and
he
remembered Molly's comment about her asthma. "We've got some
work to do
here." She only nodded in answer. "I read your files this
afternoon.
It's not looking so good for the moment. And mostly what I'm going
to
need from you is information. What happened and why, whatever you
can
remember.
Afterwards, we'll get an investigator to check things out. We'll
do
whatever we have to." He tried to sound encouraging, and
hoped she
wasn't too frightened to listen.
"There's nothing to check out," she said quietly,
sitting very straight
in one of the four chairs. "I killed my father." She
looked him right in
the eye as she said it.
"I know you did," he said, seeming unimpressed by the
admission, and
watching her intently. He knew what Molly had seen in her. She
looked
like a nice girl, and she looked as though someone had beaten the
life
out of her. She was so remote, one almost wondered if one could
touch
her. She was more like an apparition than a real person. There was
nothing ordinary about her. Nothing to suggest that she was a
seventeen-year-old girl, a teenager, none of the life or
ebullience one
would have expected. "Do you remember what happened?" he
asked her
quietly.
"Most of it," she admitted. There were parts of it that
were still
vague, like exactly when she had taken the gun out of her mother's
night
table. But she remembered feeling it in her hand, and then
squeezing the
trigger. "I shot him."
"Where did you get the gun?" His questions seemed very
matter-of-fact,
and oddly unthreatening as they sat there. He had an easy style,
and
Molly thanked her lucky stars again that he had gotten the case
assigned
to him. She just hoped he could help her.
"It was in my mother's nightstand."
"How did you get it? Did you just reach over and take
it?"
"Sort of. I just kind of took it out."
"Was your father surprised when you did that?" He made
it sound like the
most mundane question, and she nodded.
"He didn't see it at first, but he was surprised when he did
...
and then he tried to grab it and it went off." Her eyes
glazed as she
remembered, and then she closed them.
"You must have been standing pretty close to him, huh? About
like this?"
He indicated the three feet between them. He knew she had been
closer
than that, but he wanted to hear her answer.
"No ... uh ... kind of ... closer ..." He nodded, as
though her answer
were ordinary too, and Molly tried to feign disinterest, but she
was
fascinated by how quickly Grace had started talking to him, and
how much
she seemed to trust him. It was as though she knew that she could.
She was much less defensive than she had been with Molly.
"How close do you think? Like a foot maybe? Maybe
closer?"
"Pretty close
... closer ..." she said softly, and then looked away from
him, knowing
what he must be thinking. Molly must have told him her suspicions.
"Very
close."
"How come? What were you doing?"
"We were talking," she said hoarsely,
sounding breathless again, and he knew she was lying.
"What were you talking about?"
His question and the ease of it caught her off guard and she
stammered
as she answered. "I ... uh ... I guess, my mother." He
nodded as though
that were the most natural thing, and then leaned back in his
chair
pensively and looked at the ceiling. He spoke to her then, without
looking at her, and he could feel his heart pound in his ears as
he
addressed her.
"Did your mom know what he'd been doing to you, Grace?"
He said it so
gently, it brought tears to Molly's eyes, and then slowly he
looked at
Grace, and there were tears in her eyes too. "It's okay to
tell me,
Grace. No one's ever going to know, except us, but I have to know
the
truth if I'm going to help you. Did she know?"
Grace stared at him, wanting to deny it again, wanting to hide
from
them, but she couldn't anymore, she just couldn't.
She nodded, and the tears spilled from her eyes, and ran slowly
down her
cheeks. As he watched her, he took her hand and squeezed it.
"It's okay, Grace. It's okay. You couldn't do anything to
stop it."
And then she nodded again, and an anguished sob escaped her. She
wanted
to have the courage not to tell them anything, but they were all
hounding her, the doctor, the police, now him, and they asked so
many
questions. And for some reason she herself didn't know, she
trusted
David. She liked Molly too, but it was David whom she wanted to
turn to.
"She knew." They were the saddest words he had ever
heard, and without
knowing John Adams, he wanted to kill him.
"Was she very angry at him? Was she angry at you?"
But Grace stunned both of them when she shook her head again.
"She
wanted me to ... she said I had to ..." she choked on the
words and had
to battle her asthma, " ... had to take care of him, and be
nice to him
... and ... she wanted me to," she said again, her eyes
brimming with
tears, and pleading with them to believe her. They both did, and
their
hearts went out to her as they watched her.
"How long did it go on?" he said softly.
"A long time." She looked drained as she glanced back at
him. She looked
so tired and frail, he almost wondered if she would survive it.
"Four years ... she made me do it the first time."
"What was different that night?"
"I don't know ... I just couldn't anymore ... she was gone. I
didn't
have to do it for her anymore ... he wanted me to do it in her bed
...
I'd never done that before ... and ... he ...
e hit me ... and did other things." She didn't want to tell
them all
that he'd done to her, but they knew it anyway from the exam and
the
photos.
"I remembered the gun ... I just wanted him to stop ... to
get off of me
... I didn't really mean to shoot him ... I don't know.
I just wanted to stop him." And she had. Forever. "I
didn't really know
I'd kill him." But she had told them what had happened at
least.
And in a way, she felt relieved. And exhausted. It was different
from
telling the police. She knew that Molly and David wouldn't tell
anyone,
and they believed her. She knew that the police never would.
They thought her father was perfect. They all knew him
professionally
and some even played golf with him at his club. It seemed like
everyone
in town knew him and loved him.
"You're a brave girl," David said quietly, "and I'm
glad you told me."
It all added up exactly the way Molly had said, only it was even
worse,
the mother had made her do it. At thirteen, when it started. It
made him
feel sick to think of it. The guy was a real sick bastard. He
deserved
to be shot. But now the big question was if he could convince a
jury
that Molly had been defending herself after four years of hell at
her
father's hands. Molly hadn't been able to convince the police,
they were
too sold on John Adams's public image. He couldn't help wondering
if a
jury would suffer from the same delusions.
"Would you tell the police what you told me?" David
asked her calmly,
but she was quick to shake her head that she wouldn't.
"Why not?"
"They won't believe me anyway, and ... I can't do that to my
parents."
"Your parents are dead, Grace," he said firmly, and she
would be too if
she didn't help herself and tell the truth. Selfdefense was her
only
chance. They had to prove now that she had felt her life was in
danger.
And even if they didn't believe that, the worst they could make of
it
was manslaughter, not murder. "We're going to have to talk
about this.
You're going to have to tell someone, other than me, or the doctor
here,
what really happened."
"I can't. What'll they think of me? It's so awful." She
started to cry
again, and Molly got up and put her arms around her.
"It makes them look awful, not you, Grace. It shows you as
you are, a
victim. You can't pay for their sins by staying silent.
You have to speak up, David's right." They talked about it
for a long
time, and she said she'd think about it, but she still didn't look
convinced that telling the whole truth was the best solution. And
when
they finally left her at the jail, Molly was still amazed that
David had
gotten her to open up so quickly.
"Maybe we should switch jobs, except that I can't do what you
do
either," Molly had said glumly. She felt like a failure for
not getting
Grace to trust her.
"Don't be so hard on yourself. The only reason she talked to
me is
because you had softened her up first. She needed to get it off
her
chest. It's been festering for four years. It has to be a relief
now."
Molly nodded in agreement, and then David shook his head ruefully.
"Of course, killing him had to be a relief too. Damn shame
she didn't do
it sooner. What a sick sonofabitch he was, while the whole town
thinks
he's a saint, the perfect husband and father. Makes you retch,
doesn't
it?
It's a wonder she's as sane as she is." She was damaged and
scarred, but
she was still there, and she hadn't lost her grip yet. He didn't
want to
think though of what it would be like for her for twenty years in
prison. But the next morning, when David saw her before the
arraignment,
Grace still refused to tell the police what had happened.
The best he could do was convince her to plead not guilty at the
arraignment.
The charges were murder, with intent to kill, which would carry
the
maximum sentence, possibly even the death penalty if the jury
imposed
it.
The judge refused to set bail, which was irrelevant anyway,
because
there would have been no one to pay it. And David became the
attorney of
record.
And for the next several days, David did everything he could to
try to
convince her to tell the police that her father had raped her, had
been
for years. But she just wouldn't. And after two incredibly
frustrating
weeks, he threatened to throw in the towel. Molly was still
visiting her
frequently, on her own time now. Her report for the court had
already
been completed.
She had judged Grace to be sane, and fully competent to stand
trial,
in her opinion.
David took her through the preliminary hearing, and he had his one
lone
investigator talking to everyone in town, hoping that someone,
anyone,
had suspected what John Adams was doing to his daughter. People's
reactions ranged from mild surprise to total outrage at the
suggestion,
and absolutely no one thought him capable of it, and they said so.
Instead they thought it was a crazy theory invented by the defense
to
justify what many of them referred to as Grace's cold-blooded
killing of
her father.
David himself went to talk to teachers at her school, to see if
they had
suspected anything, but they had seen nothing either. They
described
Grace as awkward and shy, very withdrawn, even as a young child,
to the
point of being antisocial, and she had virtually had no friends at
all.
Ever since her father had started having sex with her, she had
been
afraid that everyone would know, so she shunned them all. It was
obvious
that teachers thought she was a little strange, but she was polite
and a
good student. Most of them had been aware of how ill her mother
was and
thought that had affected her too, which it had, but not as much
as her
father's sexual demands on her. Several of them had mentioned the
severe
asthma that had only begun to affect her at the onset of her mother's
illness.
Oddly enough, it didn't surprise any of them that she had done
something
so outrageous. They thought she was strange, and she had obviously
"snapped," as they put it, when her mom died.
It was easy to construct it that way, and to think what the police
did,
that she had been after an inheritance, or that she had some kind
of a
temper tantrum, or a fight with him. It was difficult for anyone
to
believe that John Adams had led a life of utter perversion for
four
years, at the expense of his wife and daughter. And even more
impossible
for anyone to believe that he had beaten his wife for years before
that.
But no matter how little corroborating evidence there was, David
never
doubted her for a moment. Her story had the ring of truth, and
throughout the summer he worked with her, trying to find evidence,
and
build a case to defend her. She had finally agreed to tell her
story to
the police, but they had refused to believe her. They thought it
was a
clever defense fashioned by her attorney and attempts to plea
bargain
with the prosecution on her behalf had gotten him nowhere.
Like the police, the prosecution wouldn't buy it. In a moment of
desperation, David had gone to the D.A fearing a life sentence or
the
death penalty for her, but the D.A. wouldn't budge. He didn't
believe
her story either. There was nothing left to do now except take the
same
story to the jury. The trial was set for the first week in
September.
She turned eighteen in jail.
She was in a cell by herself by then, and the newspapers had been
hounding her all summer. They would show up at the jail, and ask
for
interviews. And now and then the guards would let them in to take
her
picture. The reporters would slip them a crisp bill or two and the
next
thing she knew they were outside her cell, with their flashbulbs.
Once they even got a picture of her on the toilet. And the whole
story
she'd told the police had long since come out in the papers. It
was
everything she hadn't wanted. She felt she had betrayed herself,
and her
parents, but David had convinced her it was her only hope to stay
out of
prison or worse, the death penalty. And even that hadn't worked.
She was
resigning herself to a life in prison by then, and she still
wondered if
she would get the death sentence in the end. It was possible, even
David
admitted, though he didn't like to. It would be up to the jury. He
was
still sure he could convince jury that she killed her father to
stop him
from raping her, or even killing her.
She was young, she was beautiful, she was vulnerable, and she was
telling the truth, which had an undeniable ring to it. To David
and
Molly, there was absolutely no doubt about her story.
But the first real blow came when they were denied a change of
venue.
David had petitioned on the basis that there was no way she could
get a
fair trial in Watseka, people were just too prejudiced in favor of
her
father. The papers had been hanging her for months, embellishing
the
story wherever possible, and enhancing each new twist they could
invent.
By September, she sounded like a sex-crazed teenage monster who
had
spent months plotting her father's death, so she could get his
money.
The fact that there seemed to be almost no money there seemed to
have
escaped everyone's notice. They also referred to her as
promiscuous, and
implied that she had had sexual designs on her father, and killed
him in
a jealous fit. The story had been told a thousand ways, but none
of them
true, and all of them damaging to Grace.
David couldn't imagine how they would ever get a fair shake from a
jury,
certainly in this town, or maybe in any other.
The selection of the jurors took a full week, and because of the
seriousness of the case, and based on an impassioned petition from
David, the judge agreed to sequester the jury. The judge himself
was a
crusty old man, who shouted at everyone from the bench, and had
frequently played golf with her father. But he refused to
disqualify
himself on the grounds that they hadn't been close friends, and he
felt
he could be impartial. The only thing that encouraged David was
that if
they didn't get a fair trial, or a favorable verdict, he could try
to
get a mistrial. Or it might help them on appeal. He was already
planning
ahead, and he was seriously worried.
The prosecution presented their case, and it was powerfully
damning.
According to them, she had planned to kill her father the night of
her
mother's funeral, to inherit what little they had left before he
could
spend it, or remarry. She had had no idea that she could never
inherit
from him if she killed him. Photographs presented as evidence
showed her
father to be an attractive man, and the prosecution implied
repeatedly
that Grace was in love with him, her very own father. So much so
that
she had not only tried to seduce him that night, by tearing her
nightgown in half and exposing herself to him, now that her mother
was
gone, but she had also gone so far as to accuse him of rape after
she
killed him. There was evidence that she had had intercourse that
night,
they explained, but nothing supported the theory that it had been
with
her father. And what they suspected was that she had snuck off to
meet
someone that night, and when her father scolded her, she had tried
to
seduce him, and when he turned her down, Grace then killed him.
The prosecution was asking for a verdict of murder with intent to
kill,
which required an indeterminate sentence in prison, or even the
death
penalty. Hers was a heinous crime, the prosecutor told the jury
and the
people in the courtroom, which included an army of reporters from
all
over the country, and she had to pay for it to the ultimate
degree.
There would be no mercy for a girl who would wantonly kill her own
father, and afterwards besmirch his reputation in an attempt to
save
herself from prison.
It was agonizing listening to what they said about her, it was
like
listening to them talk about someone else, as scores of people
paraded
to the witness stand to praise her father. Most of them said she
was
either shy, or strange. And her father's law partner gave the
worst
testimony of all. He claimed that she had asked him repeatedly the
day
of the funeral about her father's financial state, and what was
left,
after her mother's long illness.
"I didn't want to frighten her by telling her how much he'd
spent on
medical bills, or how much he owed me. So I just told her he had
plenty
of money." He looked unhappily at the jury then. "I
guess I never should
have said that. Maybe if I hadn't, he'd be alive today," he
said,
looking at Grace with reproach that was palpable in the courtroom,
as
she stared at him in horrified amazement.
"I never said anything to him," she whispered to David,
as they sat at
the defendant's table. She couldn't believe Frank had said that.
She had never asked him anything about her father or his money ...
"I'm sure you didn't," David said unhappily. Molly had
been
right.
The guy was a snake, and he was trying to get rid of Grace. David
knew
by then that John Adams had left everything to Frank in the event
of
Grace's death, or should she become incapacitated in any way, the
house,
the practice, and any cash he had. There wasn't much, but David
suspected that there was more than Frank wanted anyone to know.
And all
he wanted now was to ensure that Grace would never inherit. If she
was
acquitted, she might still be able to appeal and maybe inherit a
portion
of the estate. Frank Wills wanted to be certain that didn't happen.
"I believe you," David reassured Grace again, but the
problem was that
no one else would. Why should they? She had killed her father,
admittedly.
And Frank Wills was a convincing witness.
The prosecution eventually rested their case, and then it was
David's
turn to bring witnesses forward to testify about her character and
her
behavior. But there were so few people who knew her, a few
teachers,
some old friends. Most people said she was shy and withdrawn, and
David
explained exactly why that was, she was hiding a dark secret at
home,
and living a life of terror. And then he put the resident who had
examined her at Mercy General on the stand. He explained in
graphic
detail the extent of the damage when he'd seen her.
"Could you say for certain that Miss Adams had been
raped?" the
prosecutor asked on cross-examination.
"Not with absolute certainty, one never can. One has to rely
to some
extent on the reports of the victim. But one could definitely say
that
there had been abusive sex over a long period of time. There were
old
scars of tears and damage that had been caused, and of course
extensive
new ones."
"Could that kind of abuse' occur in normal sex, or sex of an
unduly
energetic, or even somewhat degenerate nature? In other words, if
Miss
Adams was masochistic in any way, or liked to be punished' by any
of her
supposedly various boyfriends, would it lead to the same kind of
results?" he asked pointedly, with flagrant disregard for the
fact that
everyone who knew her said she had never gone out with anyone, or
had a
boyfriend.
"Yes, I guess if she liked it rough, you could say that the
same damage
might occur ... it would have to be very rough though," the
resident
said thoughtfully, and the prosecutor smiled evilly at the jury.
"I guess that's how some people like it."
David objected constantly, and he did a heroic job, but it was an
uphill
struggle to battle their claim of premeditation. He put Molly on
the
witness stand, and finally, Grace herself, and she was deeply
moving. In
any other town, she would have convinced anyone made of stone, but
not
in this one. The people of Watseka loved John Adams, and they
didn't
want to believe her. People were talking about it everywhere. In
stores,
in restaurants. It was constantly all over the papers. Even the
local TV
news carried daily reports of the trial, and flashed photographs
of
Grace on the screen at every opportunity. It was endless.
The jury deliberated for three days, and David and Grace and Molly
sat
waiting in the courtroom. And when they got tired of it, they
walked the
halls for hours, with a guard walking quietly behind them. Grace
was so
used to handcuffs now, she hardly noticed when they put them on,
except
when they put them on too tightly on purpose. That usually
happened with
deputies who had known and liked her father. And it was stranger
than
ever to realize that if the jury acquitted her, she would suddenly
be
free again. She would walk away from all of this, as though it had
never
happened. But as the days droned on, it seemed less than likely
that she
would win her freedom. David tormented himself over the obstacles
he'd
been unable to overcome. And Molly sat and held Grace's hand. The
three
of them had become very close in the past two months. They were
the only
friends Grace had ever had, and she had slowly come not only to
trust
them, but to love them.
The judge had instructed the jury that they had four choices for
their
verdict. Murder, with premeditated intent to kill, which could
call for
the death penalty, if they believed that she had plotted in
advance to
kill her father, and knew that her acts would result in his death.
Voluntary manslaughter, if she had indeed wanted to kill him, but
not
planned it, but believed falsely that she was justified in killing
him,
because she felt he was harming her at the time. Voluntary
manslaughter
would require a sentence of up to twenty years.
Involuntary manslaughter if he had been harming her, and she had
intended to hurt or resist him or cause him great bodily harm, but
not
kill him, but her "reckless" behavior had caused his
death.
Involuntary manslaughter would put her in prison for anywhere from
one
to ten years.
And justifiable force if they believed her story that he had raped
her
that night and over the previous four years, and she was defending
herself against his potentially life-threatening attack on her
person.
David had addressed them powerfully, and demanded justice in the
form of
a verdict of "defense with the use of justifiable force"
for this
innocent young girl who had suffered so much and lived a life of
torture
at the hands of her parents. He had made her tell all of it to the
jury.
That was her only hope now.
It was a late September afternoon when the jury finally came in,
and
Grace almost fainted when she heard the verdict.
The foreman rose solemnly, and announced that they had reached a
verdict. She had been found guilty of voluntary manslaughter. They
believed that John Adams had done something to her, though they
were not
quite sure what, and they did not believe that he had raped her,
then or
ever. But he had hurt her possibly, and two of the women on the
jury had
been insistent that even good men sometimes had dark secrets.
There had been enough doubt in their minds for them to shy away
from
murder one and the death penalty. But the next step down from
there was
voluntary manslaughter, and that was how they had charged her.
They believed, as the judge had explained in his instructions to
them,
that Grace had believed falsely, and therein lay the key, that she
was
justified in killing her father. Because of his glowing reputation
in
the community, they had been unable to accept that her father had
been
truly harming her, but they did believe that Grace had believed
that,
though incorrectly. Voluntary manslaughter carried a sentence of
up to
twenty years, at the judge's discretion.
And in the end, because of her extreme youth, and the fact that
Grace
herself had believed it to be both a crime of passion and of
justifiable
defense, the judge gave her two years in prison, and two years
probation. Considering the possibilities, it was something of a
gift,
but it sounded like a lifetime to Grace as she listened to the
words,
and tried to force herself to understand it. In some ways, she
thought
death might have been easier. The judge had agreed to seal her
records
too, because of her age, and in the hope of not damaging her life
any
further when she got out of prison.
But Grace couldn't help wondering what would happen to her now.
What would they do to her in prison? In jail, she had had the
occasional
scare, of other women threatening her, or taking her magazines or
her
toothpaste. Molly had been bringing things like that to her, and
Frank
Wills had reluctantly agreed to give her a few hundred dollars of
her
father's money, when David asked him.
But in jail, the women came and went in a few days, and she never
felt
truly in danger. She was there the longest by far, and on the
worst
charges. But prison would be filled with women who really had
committed
murder. She looked up at the judge with dry eyes and a look of
sorrow.
She was a person whose life had long since been lost, and she knew
it.
She had never had a chance from the first. For Grace, it was
already
over. Molly saw that look too, and she squeezed her hand as she
stood
beside her. Grace left the courtroom in handcuffs and leg irons
this
time. She was no longer merely the accused, she was a convicted
felon.
That night, Molly went to see her in jail, before they transferred
her
to Dwight Correctional Center the next morning. There was so
little she
could say to her, but she didn't want Grace to give up hope.
One day, there would be a new life for her.
If she could just hold on till she got there. David had been to
see her
too, and he was beside himself over the verdict. He blamed himself
for
failing her, but Grace didn't blame him. It was just the way her life
worked. He promised her an appeal, and he had already called Frank
Wills, and he had negotiated a very unusual arrangement. With a
great
deal of prodding from David, Wills had agreed to let her have
fifty
thousand dollars of her father's money, in exchange for which she
would
agree never to return to Watseka, or interfere with him in any
way, or
anything he had inherited from her father. He was already making
plans
to move into their home in the coming weeks, and he told David he
didn't
want her to know that. As far as he was concerned, it was none of
her
business. He wanted no trouble from her, and he was planning to
keep all
of their possessions, and all of the house's furniture and
contents. He
had already thrown most of Grace's things away, and all he was
offering
her was the fifty thousand in exchange for staying away forever.
He
didn't want any hassles or arguments with her later.
David had agreed on her behalf, knowing that one day, when she was
free
again, she'd have good use for the money. It was all she had now.
Molly tried desperately to encourage her that night when she saw
her.
"You can't give up, Grace. You just can't. You've made it
this far.
Now you've got to go the rest of the way. Two years isn't forever.
You'll be twenty years old when you come out. It'll be time enough
to
start a whole new life, and put all this behind you." David
had told her
the same thing. If she could just hang on, and stay as safe as
possible
in prison. But they all knew that wouldn't be easy.
She had to be strong. She had no choice now. But she had been
strong for
so long, and at times she wished she hadn't survived it. Being
dead had
to be easier than what she'd been through, and going to prison.
She said as much that night to Molly, that she wished she had shot
herself, instead of her father. It would have been so much
simpler.
"What the hell does that mean?" The young psychiatrist
looked outraged.
She strode across the room nervously, with her eyes blazing.
"Are you
going to lie down and give up now? Okay, so you've got two years
of
this. But two years is not a lifetime. It could have been a lot
worse.
It's finite. You know exactly how long it will last, and when it
will be
over. You never knew that with your father."
"What's it going to be
like?" Grace asked with a look of terror, as the tears filled
her eyes
and then ran down her cheeks in two lonely rivers.
Molly would have given anything to change things for her, but
there just
wasn't any more she could do now. All she could do was offer her
love
and support and friendship. She and David had both grown extremely
fond
of Grace. They talked about her for hours sometimes, and the
injustice
of all she'd been through. And now there was going to be more. She
was
going to have to be very strong. Molly held her in her arms that
night
as she cried, and prayed that somewhere she would find the
strength to
survive whatever she had to. Just the thought of it made Molly
tremble
for her.
"Will you visit me?" Grace asked in a small voice, as
Molly sat next to
her with an arm around her shoulders. Lately, she had talked about
her
constantly. Even Richard was tired of hearing about Grace, and so
were
all of Molly's friends and fellow doctors. Like David, she was
obsessed
with her, and only he seemed to understand what she was feeling.
But the injustices she'd suffered for so long, the pain, and now
the
danger she would be in night and day were a constant worry to both
David
and Molly.
They felt like her parents.
Molly cried when she left her too, and promised to drive to Dwight
the
following weekend. David was already planning to take a day off to
see
her, to discuss her appeal, and make sure she was as comfortable
as
possible in her surroundings. It didn't sound like a pleasant
place,
from all he'd heard, and like Molly, he would have done anything
he
could to change it. But their efforts hadn't been enough for her,
no
matter how hard they had tried or how much they cared about her.
No
matter what they had done for her, and they had done all they
could with
whatever resources had been available to them, it hadn't been
enough to
save her, or win her an acquittal. In all fairness to David, the
cards
had been stacked against her.
"Thanks for everything," she said quietly to David the
next morning when
he came to say goodbye to her at seven in the morning. "You
did
everything you could. Thank you," she whispered, and kissed
him on the
cheek, as he hugged her, willing her to survive and remain as
whole as
possible during her two years in prison. He knew that, if she
chose to,
she could do it. There was a great deal of inner strength in her.
It had kept her going, and sane, during the nightmarish years with
her
parents.
"I wish we could have done better," David said sadly.
But at least it
hadn't been murder one. He couldn't have stood it if she'd gotten
the
death penalty. And as he looked at her, he realized something he
had
never let himself think before, that if she'd been older than
eighteen
he'd have been in love with her. She was that kind of person,
there was
something beautiful and strong hidden deep inside her, and it drew
him
toward her like a magnet. But knowing all she'd been through, and
how
young she was, he couldn't allow his feelings to run wild, and he
had to
force himself to think of her as a little sister.
"Don't worry about it, David. I'll be fine," she said
with a quiet
smile, wanting to make him feel better. She knew that a part of
her had
long since died, and the rest of her would just have to hang on
until a
higher force decided that her life was over. Dying would have been
so
easy for her, because she had so little to lose, so little to live
for.
Except, somewhere, deep inside of her, she felt that she owed it
to him
to survive, and to Molly. They had done so much for her, they were
the
first people in her whole life who had really been there. She
couldn't
let them down now. She couldn't let go of life yet, if only for
their
sakes.
Just before they led her away, she gently touched his arm, and for
an
odd instant, as he looked at her, he thought there was something
almost
saintly about her. She had accepted her fate, and her destiny. And
she
looked dignified beyond her years, and strangely beautiful as they
led
her away in handcuffs. She turned once to wave to him, and he
watched
her with eyes blurred by tears that ran slowly down his cheeks as
soon
as she left him.
Chapter 4.
At eight o'clock they put her on the bus to Dwight in leg irons
and
chains and handcuffs. It was just routine to transfer prisoners
that
way, and no particular reflection on her. And oddly, she found
that once
she was all trussed up in chains, the guards no longer spoke to
her. To
them, she had ceased to be a real person. There was no one to say
goodbye to her, to wish her well. Molly had come the night before,
and
David that morning before she left, and the guards watched her
leave
without a word. She'd been no trouble for them, but she was just
another
convict to them, a face they would soon forget, in a daily lineup
of
felons.
The only thing memorable about her, as far as the guards were
concerned,
was that her case had been written about a lot in the papers.
But essentially, it was nothing special to them. She'd killed her
father, so had a lot of other convicts before her. And she hadn't
gotten
away with it. They thought she'd been lucky to get convicted of
manslaughter instead of murder. But luck wasn't something Grace
had seen
a lot of.
The ride to Dwight took an hour and a half from Watseka, and the
bus
bounced along, as her chains rattled and her ankles and wrists
ached.
It was an uncomfortable trip to a fearsome destination. Grace sat
alone
for most of the trip, and then an hour before Dwight, they picked
up
four more women at a local jail, and one of them was chained to
the seat
beside her. She was a tough-looking girl about five years older
than
Grace, and she looked her over with interest.
"You ever been to Dwight before?" Grace shook her head,
and was less
than anxious to start a conversation. She had already figured out
that
the more she kept to herself, the better off she'd be once she got
to
prison. "What are you in for?" The girl got straight to
the point, as
she sized Grace up. She knew her for a fish the minute she saw
her.
It was obvious to her that Grace had never been to prison before,
and it
was unlikely that she'd survive it. "How old are you,
kid?"
"Nineteen," Grace lied, adding on a year, hoping to
convince her
inquisitor that she was a grown-up. To her, nineteen sounded
really old.
"Playing with the big girls, huh? What'd you do? Steal some
candy?"
Grace just shrugged and for a short while they rode on in silence.
But there was nothing to see or do. The windows of the bus were
covered
so they couldn't see out, and no one could look in, and it was
stifling.
"You read about the big drug bust in Kankakee?" the girl
asked Grace
after a while, sizing her up. But there was no mystery to Grace.
She was almost what she appeared to be, a very young girl who
didn't
belong here. What the other girl couldn't see was how much she had
suffered to get there. But nothing showed on Grace's face as she
looked
at her, it was as though the last of her soul had been boarded up
when
she left David and Molly. And no one could see inside now.
She intended to keep it that way, and with luck, they would leave
her
alone once she got to prison.
She had heard hideous stories about rape and stabbings while she
was in
jail, but she forced herself not to think of that now. If she had
lived
through the last four years, she could make it through the next
two.
Somehow, some tiny shred of what Molly and David had said to her
had
given her hope, and in spite of all the miseries in her life, if
only
for their sakes, she was determined to make it. It was different
now.
Someone cared about her. She had two friends, the first she'd ever
had.
They were allies.
"No, I didn't read about the drug bust," Grace said
quietly, and the
other girl shrugged in annoyance. She had bleached blond hair that
looked as though it had been sawed off at her shoulders with a
butcher
knife and hadn't seen a comb in decades. Her eyes were cold and
hard,
and Grace noticed when she glanced at her arms that she had
powerful
muscles.
"They tried to get me to turn state's evidence against all
the big guys,
but I'm no snitch. I got integrity, ya know? Besides, I ain't
lookin' to
have them come lookin' for me at Dwight and fry my ass.
Know what I mean? You work out?" Her accent said she was from
New York,
and she was exactly who Grace expected to meet in prison. She
looked
angry and tough and as though she could take care of herself.
She seemed anxious to talk, and she started to tell Grace about
the gym
she'd helped build and her job in the laundry the last time she'd
been
in prison. She told her about two escapes that had taken place
while she
was there, but they had caught all the women who'd gotten out
within a
day. "It ain't worth it, they stick on another five years
every time you
do it. How long you got? I'm in for a dime this time, I should be
out in
a nickel." Five years ... ten ... it seemed like a lifetime
to Grace as
she listened. "What about you?"
"Two years," Grace said, not
volunteering anything more than that.
It seemed long enough to her, although it was certainly better
than ten
years, or what she might have gotten with another verdict.
"That's nothin', kid, you'll do that in a minute. So,"
she grinned, and
Grace could see that all her teeth along the sides were missing.
"So, you're a virgin, huh?" Grace glanced at her
nervously at the
question.
"I mean this is your first time, right?" She really was
a fish, and the
idea amused the older girl. This was her third time at Dwight, and
she
was twenty-three years old. She'd been very busy.
"Yes," Grace answered softly.
"What'd you do? Burglary, grand theft auto, dealin' drugs?
That's me.
I been doin' cocaine since I was nine. I started dealin' in New
York
when I was eleven. I spent some time in a youth facility there,
what a
shit place that was. I been there four times. Then I moved out
here."
She had spent a lifetime in institutions. "Dwight's not
bad." She talked
about it like a hotel she was going back to. "They got some
good girls
there, some gangs too, all that Aryan Sisterhood shit. You gotta
watch
out for them, and some pissed-off black girls who hate 'em.
You stay out of their hair and you won't have no problem."
"What about you?" Grace looked at her cautiously, but
with interest.
She was a phenomenon that three months ago Grace would never even
have
dreamed of. "What do you do when you're there?" Five
years was an
eternity to spend in prison. There had to be something to do
there.
Grace wanted to go to school. She'd already heard that there were
courses you could take, other than beauty school and learning to
make
brooms and license plates, which was somewhat less useful. If
there was
any chance at all, Grace wanted to take correspondence courses
from a
local college.
"I don't know what I'll do," the other girl said.
"Just hang out, I
guess. I ain't got nothin' to do. I got a girlfriend who's been
there
since June. We were pretty tight before I got busted."
"That's nice for you." It would be nice to have a friend
there.
"Yeah, ain't it just." The other girl laughed, and
finally introduced
herself and said her name was Angela Fontino. Introductions were
rare in
prison. "It sure makes the time roll along when you got a
cute little
piece of ass in your cell, waiting for you to come home from your
job in
the laundry." Those were the stories that Grace had heard,
and which she
dreaded. She nodded at the other girl, and didn't pursue the
conversation further, but Angela was clearly amused by Grace's
shyness.
She loved teasing the little baby fishes. She'd been in and out of
enough correctional facilities over the years that she had become
very
versatile about her sex life. There were even times when she
actually
preferred it this way.
"Sounds pretty raw to you, hey kid?" Angela grinned,
showing her missing
teeth in all their glory. "You get used to anything. Wait a
while, by
the end of two years you may even figure you like girls
better." There
was nothing Grace could say to her, she didn't want to encourage
her, or
insult her. And then Angela laughed out loud, as she tried to rub
her
wrists where they were deeply chafed by her handcuffs.
"Oh my God, maybe you really are a virgin, huh, baby? You
ever even had
a guy? If not, you may never even have to shake your little ass at
one,
maybe you just stick to this for good. It ain't bad at all,"
she smiled,
and Grace felt her stomach turn over. It reminded her of the
afternoons
when she'd come home and knew what was in store for her that
night.
She would have done anything not to come home, but she knew she
had to
take care of her mother, and then she knew what would happen. It
was as
inevitable as the setting sun. There had been no escaping it. She
felt
the same way now. Would she be raped by them? Or just used, as she
had
been by her father? And how would she ever fight them? If there
were ten
or twelve of them, or even two, what chance would she have? Her
heart
quailed as she thought of it, and the promises she had made to
Molly and
David that she would be strong and survive it. She'd do everything
she
could, but what if it was just too unbearable ...
hat if ...
he stared hopelessly at the floor as they left the highway and
drove up
to the gates of Dwight Correctional Center. The other inmates were
hooting and jeering and stamping their feet, and Grace just sat
there,
staring straight ahead, trying not to think of what Angela had
told her.
"Okay, baby. We're home." Angela grinned at her. "I
don't know where
they're gonna put you, but I'll catch up with you after a while.
I'll introduce you to some of the girls. They're gonna love
you."
She winked at Grace, and Grace could feel her skin crawl.
But two minutes later, they were all being shepherded from the
bus, and
Grace could hardly walk when she stood up, her legs were so stiff
from
sitting there and being shackled.
What she saw in front of her, as they got out of the bus, was a
dismal-looking building, a watchtower, and a seemingly endless
barbed-wire fence, behind which was a sea of faceless women in
what
looked like blue cotton pajamas. It was some kind of a uniform,
Grace
knew, but she didn't have time to look any further, they were
immediately shoved inside, down a long hallway, and through
endless
gates and heavy doors, clanking their chains, and hobbling in
their leg
irons, their wrists still burning from the handcuffs.
"Welcome back to Paradise," one of the women said
sarcastically as three
huge black female guards growled at them, as they shoved them
toward the
next gate without further greeting. "Thank you, I'm thrilled
to be back,
nice to see you ..." she went on, and a few of the women
laughed.
"It's always like this when you get here," a black woman
said to Grace
under her breath, "they treat you like shit for the first
couple of
days, but then they leave you alone most of the time. They just
want you
to know who's boss."
"Yeah. Me," a huge black girl said, "they touch my
big black ass, and I'm callin' the NAACP, the National Guard, and
the
President. I know my rights. I don't give a shit if I'm no convict
or
not, they ain't layin' a hand on me." She was over six feet,
and
probably close to two hundred pounds, and Grace couldn't imagine
anyone
pushing her around, but she smiled anyway at the look on the
girl's face
as she said it.
"Don't pay no attention to her, girl," the other black
girl said.
It surprised Grace that many of them seemed so friendly. Yet there
was
still an aura of menace. The guards were armed, there were signs
everywhere warning of danger or penalties or punishments, for
escaping,
or assaulting a guard, or breaking the rules. And the prisoners
coming
in with her looked like a rough group, particularly in what was
left of
their street clothes.
Grace was wearing a clean pair of jeans and a pale blue sweater
Molly
had bought her as a gift. She just hoped the authorities would let
her
keep it.
"Okay, girls." A shrill whistle blew, and six female
guards in uniform,
wearing guns, lined up at the front of the room, looking like
coaches on
a ladies' wrestling team. "Strip. Everything you have on in a
pile on
the floor at your feet. Down to bare-ass nothing, please."
The whistle
blew again to stop them from talking, and the woman with the
whistle
introduced herself as Sergeant Freeman. Half of the guards were
black,
the others white, which was fairly representative of the mix of
the ...
prison population.
Grace carefully took her sweater off, and folded it on the floor
at her
feet. One of the officers had uncuffed them, and now she was going
around removing the circlet of steel around their waists that the
chains
were attached to, and the leg irons so they could remove their jeans.
It
was a great relief to have the leg irons off, and Grace slipped
out of
her shoes. She was surprised when the whistle blew again, and they
told
them all to take everything out of their hair, any rubber bands or
bobby
pins. They were to let their hair loose, and as she slipped the
rubber
band off her long ponytail, her dark auburn hair fell in a silken
sheet
well past her shoulders.
"Nice hair," a woman behind her murmured, and Grace did
not turn around
to see her. It made her uncomfortable knowing the woman was
watching her
as she took the rest of her clothes off. And in a few minutes, all
their
clothes were in little piles on the floor, along with their
jewelry,
their glasses, their hair accessories. They were stripped entirely
naked, as six guards walked among them, examining them, telling
them to
stand with their legs apart, their arms high, and their mouths
open.
Hands riffled through her hair to see if there was anything hidden
there, and their hands were rough as they tugged at the long hair
and
moved her head from side to side. They shoved a stick in her mouth
and
moved it around, gagging her, and they had her cough and jump up
and
down, to see if anything fell out of anywhere. And then one by
one, they
had them stand in line, and get on a table with stirrups.
Sterile instruments were used, and a huge flashlight to see if
anything
had been concealed in their vaginas. And as Grace stood in line,
she
couldn't believe that she had to do that. But there was no arguing
with
them, no discussion about what they would or wouldn't do. One
scared
girl tried to refuse and they told her that if she didn't
cooperate,
they'd tie her down, it was all the same to them, and then they'd
throw
her in the hole for thirty days, in the dark, buck naked.
"Welcome to Fairyland," one of the familiars said.
"Nice here, huh?"
"Ah, stop bitching, Valentine, you'll get your turn."
"Shove it, Hartman." The two were old friends.
"I'd love to. Wanna look when it's my turn?"
Grace's heart was pounding as she got on the table, but the exam
was
medical, and no worse than most of what she'd been through, it was
just
humiliating going through it with an audience, and half a dozen of
the
other women seemed to be eyeing her with interest.
"Pretty cute ... here, little fishie, swim to Mama ... let's
play doctor
... can I take a look too?" She seemed not to hear them at
all as she
followed the rest of the line to the other side of the room and
stood
waiting for further instruction.
They led them to a shower room then, and literally hosed them down
with
near boiling water. They used insecticides on any area with hair,
and
sprayed lice shampoo on them, and then hosed them down again. At
the end
of it, they reeked of chemicals and Grace felt as though she'd
been
boiled in disinfectants.
Their belongings were placed in plastic bags with their names,
anything
forbidden had to be sent back at their own expense, or disposed of
on
the spot, like Grace's jeans, but she was pleased that she was
allowed
to keep her sweater. They were issued uniforms then, a set of
rough
sheets, many of which had blood and urine stains on them, and
given a
slip of paper with their B numbers and their cells, and then they
were
led away for a brief orientation as to the rules, and they were
told
that they would each be given job assignments the following
morning.
Depending on their jobs, they would be paid between two and four
dollars
a month for working, failure to show up for work would result in an
immediate trip to the hole for a week. Failure to appear a second
time
would result in a month in the hole. Failure to cooperate
generally
would wind them up in solitary for six months with nothing to do
and no
one to talk to.
"Make it easy on yourselves, girls," the guard in charge
of orienting
them said in no uncertain terms, "play it our way. It's the
only way to
go at Dwight."
"Yeah, bullshit," a voice whispered to Grace's right,
but it was
impossible to tell who it was. It had been a disembodied whisper.
In a way, they made it sound easy. All you had to do was play
their
game, go to work, go to chow, stay out of trouble, go back to your
cell
on time, and you'd do easy time and get out right on schedule.
Fight with anyone, join a gang, threaten a guard, break the rules,
and
you'd be there forever. Try to escape and you were "dead meat
hanging on
the fence," or so they said. They certainly made themselves
clear, but
there was more to it than just pleasing them, you had to live with
the
other inmates too, and they looked as tough as the guards, or
worse, and
they had a whole other agenda.
"What about school?" a girl in the back asked, and
everyone jeered.
"How old are you?" the inmate standing next to her asked
derisively.
"Fifteen." She was another minor, like Grace, who had
been tried as an
adult, but they were rare here. Dwight was almost entirely for
grown-ups. And surely for grown-up crimes. Like Grace, the other
girl
had been accused of murder, she had plea-bargained it down to
manslaughter and saved herself from the death penalty. She had
killed
her brother, after he'd raped her.
But now she wanted to go to school and get out of the ghetto.
"You've had enough school," the woman standing next to
her said.
"What do you need school for?"
"You can apply after you've been here ninety days," the
guard said, and
then moved on to explain what would happen to them if they ever
had the
bad judgment to participate in a riot. Just the thought of it made
Grace's blood run cold, as the guard explained that in the last
riot,
they had killed forty-two inmates. But what if she got caught in
the
middle? What if she was taken hostage? What if she was killed by
an
inmate or a guard while she was just minding her own business? How
was
she ever going to survive this?
Her head was reeling as they finally walked her to her cell. They
went
in a single line, watched by half a dozen guards and hooted and
jeered
at by most of the inmates, standing on the tiers, looking down at
them
and squealing and laughing. "Hey, look at the little fishies
...
um yum!" They blew kisses, they shrieked, the girl in front
of Grace in
the line was even hit with a flying Tampax, and Grace almost
retched
when she saw it. It was a place like nothing Grace had ever
dreamed.
It was your worst nightmare come to life. A trip to hell from
which
Grace could no longer imagine returning. She could still smell the
insecticide on her face and hair, and as they stopped at the cell
she'd
been assigned to, she could feel her asthma starting to choke her.
"Adams, Grace. B-214." The guard unlocked the door,
signaled for her to
step in, and the moment Grace had, she heard the door clang shut,
and
the key turn. She was standing in a space roughly eight feet
square,
there was a double bunk, and the walls were covered with pictures
of
naked women. There were cutouts from Playboy and Hustler and
magazines
Grace couldn't imagine that women would read, but they did here.
Or at
least, her roommate did. The lower bunk was neatly made, and with
shaking hands, she set about making the top bunk, and put her
toothbrush
on a little ledge with a paper cup they'd given her.
She'd been told that she had to buy her own cigarettes and
toothpaste.
But she didn't smoke anyway, she couldn't with her asthma.
When the bed was made, she climbed up and sat on it, and she just
sat
there, staring at the door, wondering what would happen next, or
how bad
it would be when she met her roommate. It was obvious what her
preferences were from the photographs on the walls, and Grace was
braced
for the worst, but she was surprised when a sour-looking woman in
her
late forties was let into the cell two hours later. She glanced up
at
Grace, and said not a word. She paused for one long instant,
looking at
her, and there was no denying that Grace was beautiful, but her
cellmate
didn't look impressed, and it was fully half an hour later before
she
said hello and that her name was Sally.
"I don't want no shit in here," she said tersely to
Grace, "no funny
stuff, no visitors from the gangs, no porno, no drugs. I been here
seven
years. I got my friends and I keep my nose clean. You do the same
and
we'll be fine, you give me a pain and I'll kick your ass from here
to D
Block. Got that nice and clear?"
"Yes," Grace nodded breathlessly. Her chest had been
getting tighter and
tighter since that morning, and by dinnertime, she could hardly
breathe.
She was wheezing badly and they had taken her inhaler away from her
when
she arrived.
"You need help, you call a guard," she'd been told, but
she didn't want
to do that unless she really had to. She would die first before
calling
attention to herself, but as they blew the whistle for chow, and
she got
off her bunk, Sally saw that Grace was in trouble.
"Oh Christ ... looks like I got me a baby. Look, I hate kids.
I never
had any. I never wanted any. And I don't now. You gotta take care
of
yourself here." Grace noticed as she looked down at her as
Sally put on
a clean shirt that her back, chest, and arms were covered with
tattoos,
but in some ways she was a relief to Grace. She was fully prepared
to
mind her own business.
"I'm fine ... really ..." she wheezed, but she could
barely breathe by
then, and Sally watched her as she fought for air. She needed her
inhaler desperately, and she didn't have it.
"Sure you are. Just sit down. I'll take care of it ... this
time ... ." She looked vastly annoyed as she buttoned her shirt and kept
her eye
on Grace, who was deathly pale as the guard unlocked the door for
dinner. Sally signaled to him before he could move on, and waved
vaguely
at Grace, standing in the corner. "My fish is having a little
problem,"
she said quietly, "looks like asthma or something, can I run
her to sick
bay?"
"Sure, if you want, Sally. You think she's fakin' it?"
But when they
looked at her again, Grace looked more gray than pale by then, and
it
was obvious that her distress was real. Even her lips were faintly
blue.
"Nice of you to play nursemaid, Sal," the guard teased.
Sally was known
to be one of the hardest women in the prison. She didn't take shit
from
anyone, and she was in for two counts of murder. She had murdered
her
girlfriend on the outside, and the woman she'd been cheating with.
"It lets people know how I think," she always explained
to the women she
was involved with. But she had had the same lover in C Block for
the
past three years. Everyone in the place knew they were as good as
married, and no one ever crossed Sally.
"Come on," she said to Grace over her shoulder, and then
shoved her out
of the cell with a look of annoyance. "I'll take you to the
nurse, but
don't pull this shit on me again. You got a problem, you handle
it.
I ain't gonna wipe your ass for you, kid, just because you're my
cellmate." "I'm sorry," Grace said, her eyes
brimming with tears. It was
not a great beginning, and the woman was clearly pissed at her. At
least
that was what Grace thought. She didn't know that the older woman
felt
sorry for her. It was obvious even to her that Grace didn't belong
there.
Five minutes later, she left Grace with the nurse, as she
continued to
gasp for air. The nurse gave her oxygen, and finally relented and
decided to let her have, and keep, her inhaler. She wasn't going
to be
worth the trouble she caused if they didn't. But this time, they
had to
give her some other medication as well, because the attack had
gotten
too far out of hand in the past half hour. Grace knew only too
well that
without her medicine, she could die from suffocation. But at this
point,
she wasn't totally convinced that that wouldn't be a blessing.
She arrived at dinner half an hour later, shaken and pale, and
most of
the edible food was gone, the rest was all grit and grease and
bone, and
the stuff no one had wanted. She wasn't hungry anyway, the asthma
attack
had made her feel sick, and the medicine always made her feel
shaky. She
was too upset to eat anyway. She wanted to thank Sally for taking
her to
the nurse, but she didn't dare speak to her when she saw her with
a
group of tough older women, covered with tattoos, and Sally gave
no sign
of recognition.
"What'll it be? Filet mignon, or roast duck?" a pretty
black girl asked
from behind the counter, and then she smiled at Grace.
"Actually, I've got a couple of slices of pizza left in the
back. Any
interest?"
"Yeah, thanks," Grace smiled, looking exhausted.
"Thanks a lot."
The young black girl produced them for her, and watched as Grace made
her way to a table.
She sat down at an empty place at a table with three other girls,
no one
said hello or seemed to notice her. And across the room, she could
see
Angela, from the bus, with a group of women, engaged in lively
conversation. But this group seemed to want nothing to do with
her, and
she was grateful to keep to herself, and eat her slice of pizza.
She was still having trouble breathing.
"My, my, what a pretty little fish you have at your table to
day,
girls," a voice said from behind her as she sipped her
coffee.
Grace didn't move when she heard the words, but she felt herself
jostled
by someone standing directly behind her. She tried to pretend she
didn't
know what was happening, and she stared straight ahead, but she could
see that the other young women at her table were looking nervous.
"Doesn't anyone talk around here? Christ, what a bunch of
rude bitches."
"Sorry," one of them muttered, and then hurried away,
and Grace suddenly
felt a warm body pressed against the back of her head.
There was no avoiding it now, she leaned forward and then turned
around,
and found herself looking up at an enormously tall blonde with a
spectacular figure. She looked like a Hollywood version of a bad
girl.
She was wearing plenty of makeup, and a tight men's T-shirt that
you
could see through. She looked like one of Sally's pinups. She was
almost
a caricature of a sexy inmate.
"What a pretty girl," the tall blonde said, looking down
at her.
"You lonely, baby?" her voice was a sensual purr, as she
seemed to press
her pelvis toward Grace as she stood there, and Grace could see
now that
her T-shirt was damp, which allowed everyone a clear view of her
breasts
and nipples. It was as though she were wearing nothing.
"Why don't you come and see me sometime? My name's Brenda.
Everyone
knows where I live," she said, grinning.
"Thanks." Grace still sounded breathy from her asthma
attack, and the
big blonde smiled at her.
"What's your name? Marilyn Monroe?" She made fun of the
way Grace had
sounded.
"Sorry ... asthma ..."
"Oh poor baby ... you take anything for it?" She sounded
concerned and
Grace didn't want to be rude and get her angry. The big blonde was
tough
and sure of herself, and she looked to be about thirty.
"Yeah ... I've got an inhaler." She pulled it out of her
pocket and
showed her.
"Take good care of it." She laughed then, and tweaked
the tip of
Grace's breast before sauntering off to her buddies.
Grace was shaking as the other girl walked away, and she stared
down
into her coffee, thinking about all of them. It was truly a
jungle.
"Watch out for her," one of the girls at her table
whispered, and then
walked away. Brenda was a tough one.
Grace went straight back to her cell after that. They were showing
a
movie that night, but she had no interest in going. She just
wanted to
go back to her cell, and stay there until morning. She lay on her
bunk,
and heaved a sigh of relief. She had to use her inhaler two more
times
that night before she relaxed and felt like she could breathe
again. And
she was still awake at ten o'clock when Sally got back from the
movies.
Sally didn't say a word to her, but Grace turned on her bunk and
thanked
her for taking her to the nurse for her asthma.
"She gave me my inhaler back." "Don't show it to
anyone," Sally said
wisely. "They play with people here for things like that.
Just keep it
to yourself, and use it in private." That wasn't always
possible, but
Grace sensed that it was good advice, and nodded. And then, as
they
turned off the lights, and Sally got into her lower bunk, she
spoke to
Grace again in the darkness.
"I saw Brenda Evans talking to you at chow. Watch out for
her. She's
dangerous. You're going to have to learn to swim here real quick,
little
fish. And watch your back till you do. This place ain't no
playground."
"Thank you," Grace whispered in the dark, and she lay
there for a long
time, as silent tears slid down her cheeks onto the mattress. She
lay
there for what seemed like hours, listening to the clattering and
banging outside, the shouts, and occasional screams, and through
it all
she listened to the comfortable purr of Sally's snoring.
Chapter 5.
After two weeks, Grace knew her way around 4
Dwight, and she had a job in the supply room, handing out towels
and
combs, and counting out toothbrushes for the new arrivals. Sally
got her
the job, although she pretended not to have any interest in
helping
Grace. But she seemed to keep an eye on her from a distance.
Molly had been to see her once by then, and she was devastated by
what
she heard and saw there. But Grace insisted that she was all
right.
And much to her own surprise, no one had really bothered her. They
called her a fish whenever they got the chance, and Brenda had
stopped
to talk to her again once or twice at chow, but it never went
beyond
that.
She hadn't even tweaked Grace's breast again. So far, she felt
pretty
lucky.
She was safe, she had a decent job. Her roommate was taciturn, but
basically kind. No one had threatened her, or invited her to join
a
gang. It looked like what they called "easy time." At
this rate, she
would survive the two years. And she was in pretty good spirits
when
David saw her, which reassured him. He hated her being there, and
he
felt more than ever that she didn't belong there, but at least
nothing
untoward had happened to her, and she insisted that she wasn't in
any
danger. It was something to be cheered about at least. And they
spent
their time together talking about her future ... he had already
made up
her mind that after she did her time at
Dwight, she was going to Chicago. She had to stay in the state for
two
years of probation, but Chicago would suit her perfectly. And the
fifty
thousand dollars of her father's that Frank Wills had given her
would
give her a nest egg. She wanted to get a job when she got out, but
before that, she wanted to learn to type, and take her college
courses,
as soon as she could start them.
David told her about the appeal, and he was encouraging, but it
was hard
to say what would happen.
"Don't worry about it. I'm okay here," she said gently,
and as he
watched her leave the visiting room that afternoon, he marveled at
the
quiet dignity of her carriage. She held herself straight, and she
was
thinner than she had ever been. She looked beautiful and neat and
clean,
and it was hard to believe, looking at her, that she was an inmate
in a
prison. She looked like a college girl, or a cheerleader.
She looked like someone's really good-looking wholesome little
sister.
It was impossible to see her history as one looked at her, except
if you
saw her eyes. The pain one saw there told a different story. And
all
that he knew of her made him ache for her. It was never easy for
him to
forget her.
He waved sadly as he drove away, and she stood outside watching
his car
disappear in the distance. It was even harder for her than it was
for
him. For her it was like being deserted in the jungle.
"Who's that?" a voice behind her asked, and when Grace
turned to look at
her, she saw Brenda. "Your boyfriend?" "No,"
Grace said, with quiet
dignity, "my attorney."
Brenda laughed openly at her. "Don't waste your time. They're
all
pricks. They tell you what they're gonna do, and how they're gonna
save
your ass, and they don't do shit except fuck you, literally if you
let
them, and every other way too. I never met one worth a damn.
Actually," she laughed again, "I never met a guy worth a
damn either.
What about you?" She looked pointedly at Grace. She was
wearing one of
her wet T-shirts again, and Grace noticed that she had a tattoo on
one
arm, of a large red rose with a snake under it, and next to her
eyes she
had tattoos of tiny teardrops. "You got a boyfriend?"
Grace knew that
here it was a dangerous question, whatever you said, you were in a
precarious position. She just shrugged noncommittally. She was
learning.
And she started to walk slowly back inside after her visit.
"You in a hurry to go somewhere?"
"No, I ... I thought I'd write some letters."
"Oh how cute," Brenda laughed. "Just like camp. You
got a mommy and
daddy at home to write to? You still didn't answer me about the
boyfriend."
"Just a friend." She had wanted to write to Molly, about
David's visit.
"Hang around. It can be a lot of fun around here. If you want
it to be.
Or it can be a real drag. It's up to you, babe." "I'm
okay," she said,
looking for a way to exit without enraging Brenda. But Brenda
wasn't
making it easy.
"Your cellie's a real creep, and so's her girlfriend. You met
her yet?"
Grace shook her head. Sally was very discreet about her private
life.
She had never said anything to Grace, nor did she seek her out
when they
were out of their cell. She minded her own business. "Big
black bitch.
They're a real drag. What about you? You like to party? Little
magic
dust, little weed?" Brenda's eyes sparkled at the thought of
it, and
Grace tried to look vague and then shook her head.
"Not really. I've got pretty bad asthma." And no
interest in drugs.
But she didn't say that. The last thing she wanted was to offend
Brenda.
She had already gathered from others that Brenda was considered
bad
news.
She was involved with one of the gangs, and the rumor was that she
not
only did drugs, but sold them, and one of these days, she was
going to
get in a whole lot of trouble.
"What's asthma got to do with it? I had a roommate in Chicago
who only
had one lung, and she used to freebase."
"I don't know ..." Grace said vaguely, "I'm not
into that."
"I'll bet there's a lot of things you haven't tried yet, baby
girl."
Brenda laughed again, and Grace walked away with a friendly wave,
and
then she hurried back to her cell, feeling breathless. She touched
the
inhaler in her pocket and was reassured to know it was close at
hand.
Sometimes just knowing that it was there made her breathing
easier.
There were movies again that night, and Sally went out again. Her
one
weakness in life, other than pinups, seemed to be movies. The more
violent the better. But Grace hadn't been to one yet, and she was
grateful for time alone in her cell after dinner. The room was so
small
and claustrophobic, but there were times when she was so relieved
to be
there, and away from everyone, that it actually seemed cozy.
After dinner, their cells were left unlocked unless one requested
they
be locked up. It allowed for some visiting time for inmates to
stop by
and see each other, or play games. They played a lot of cards, and
a few
of them played chess, or Scrabble. It was just understood that
from six
to nine the cells would be open, and inmates could come and go to
various approved locations.
Grace was lying on her bed writing to Molly after dinner that
night, and
she heard the door open, but didn't bother to look up. She assumed
it
was Sally, back from the movie, and the other woman didn't say
anything
when she came in. She rarely did, so Grace thought nothing of the
silence, until she sensed a presence next to her, and looked up to
find
herself staring into Brenda's face. She had uncovered one breast
and it
was resting on Grace's bunk, and just behind her was another
woman.
"Hi, babycakes," she purred with a smile, caressing her
nipple casually,
as Grace sat up. The other girl was not quite as tall, but she
looked a
lot tougher than Brenda. "This is Jane. She wanted to come by
and meet
you." But Jane said nothing. She just stared at Grace, as
Brenda reached
out and stroked Grace's breast this time.
Grace tried to move away, and Brenda grabbed her arm and held her
firm.
It reminded her, for just an instant, of her father, and she could
feel
her chest tighten. "Want to come out and play?" It was
not an
invitation, but a command, and she looked like an Amazon as she
stood
there in all her blond splendor.
"Not really, I ... I'm kind of tired." Grace didn't know
what to say to
her, and she wasn't old enough or tough enough or savvy enough to
prison
ways, to know how to ward off Brenda.
"Why don't you come rest at my place for a while? We got
another hour
till lock down." "I don't think so," Grace said
nervously, feeling her
chest get even tighter. "I'd rather not."
"How polite." Brenda laughed out loud, and squeezed
Grace's breast hard,
and then pinched her nipple. "Want to know something,
sweetheart?
I don't give a shit what you want. You're coming with us."
"I ... I don't think so ... I ... please ..." She didn't
want to whine,
but it sounded that way even to her own ears, and as she looked at
Brenda she suddenly heard a grating sound, and Jane moved closer
to
them. Grace saw instantly that she had a switchblade concealed in
the
palm of her hand, and she flashed it at Grace with a menacing
expression.
"Ain't that nice?" Brenda smiled. "An engraved
invitation from Jane.
In fact, she's done a lot of that kind of work. She does some real
nice
engraving." This time they both laughed, and Brenda pulled
open Grace's
shirt and licked her nipple. "Nice, huh? You know, I'd hate
to have Jane
get excited and want to start doing some engraving right there ...
. you
know ... sometimes she makes little mistakes, and it could get
kind of
messy. Okay? So why not hop down off your bunk and come with us? I
really think you're gonna like it." This was what she had
feared.
This was it. A gang rape using God knows what, and maybe carving
her
face off with a knife. Nothing in her life had prepared her for
this,
not even her father.
She was breathless as she hopped off her bunk, still clutching her
pen
and her letter in her hand. And then, with a smooth gesture, she
turned,
as though to set it down, and as she did, and left the paper on
Sally's
bunk, she wrote one small word. Brenda. Maybe it would be too
late.
And maybe Sally couldn't help her, or wouldn't even want to. But
it was
all she could do, as she left the cell between Brenda and Jane.
She was
about as tall as they were, but she looked like a child next to
them,
and in many ways she was. She knew nothing of women like them.
She was surprised when they didn't take her to their cell, but
walked
past the gym instead, and then outdoors, as though they wanted to
get
some air. The guards were watching them, but the guards saw
nothing
untoward about three women going for a walk outside before lock
down. A
lot of the women did that to get some air, or have a smoke, or
just
relax before they went to bed. And Brenda joked with the guards as
they
walked by them. Jane stayed close to Grace. The knife in her hand
out of
sight, but held close to Grace's neck, as she draped an arm
casually
over her shoulder. They looked like they were friends, and no one
seemed
to notice Grace's terror.
And once outside, Brenda wandered over to a small shed that Grace
had
never even noticed. The guards in the tower weren't watching them.
There was no danger there, it was just an old shed with no windows
they
used to store maintenance equipment. Brenda had a key to it, and
the
moment she opened the door, the threesome disappeared inside.
There were
four more women in there, leaning against the machinery that was
stored,
smoking cigarettes, and holding a single flashlight. It was the
perfect
place for anything they wanted to do to her, even kill her.
"Welcome to our little clubhouse," Brenda said, laughing
at her.
"She really wanted to come and play," Brenda said to the
others.
"Didn't you, Gracie ... oh pretty girl ... pretty, pretty
girl ..." she
purred, carefully unbuttoning Grace's shirt, as Grace tried to
stop her.
If at all possible, they didn't l want to leave any signs of
damage,
like torn clothing, unless of course they really had to. If she
forced
them to, they could do a lot of damage, and if she was smart,
she'd be
too afraid to tell anyone who had done it.
Grace felt Jane's knife pressed against her flesh, and her shirt
stayed
unbuttoned, as Brenda pulled her bra down. "Nice fresh meat,
huh,
girls?" Everyone laughed and one of the others who'd been
waiting there
said to hurry the hell up. Lockdown was in less than an hour.
They didn't have all night for chrissake.
"God, I hate to rush when I eat," Brenda said, and
everyone in the shed
laughed. And then Grace saw two of them come forward with lengths
of
rope, and a rag. They were going to tie her down and gag her.
"Come on,
kid. Let's get this show on the road," one of the older women
said.
She grabbed an arm, and another woman grabbed another, and Grace
was
dragged backwards and thrown to the ground so hard it left her
breathless.
They moved as a single team then. Two women tied her arms to the
heavy
machines, then they yanked off her pants and her underwear and
threw
them aside as two more tied her legs, as the last two sat on them,
and
Jane managed to sit on one leg to keep her knife pressed into
Grace's
stomach. There was no point in fighting or screaming, and she knew
it.
They would have killed her. But she could hardly breathe, and as
she
glanced anxiously toward the inhaler in the pocket of her
discarded
shirt, Brenda remembered it too. She reached for it, found it, and
held
it out to Grace tauntingly, but Grace's hands were tied, and
Brenda
dropped it on the ground next to her, as one of Jane's big boots
came
forward and stomped it into splinters.
"Sorry, kid." Brenda smiled mockingly. "Okay? You
know the rules of this
game?" Brenda asked, tossing her blond hair back over her
shoulder, and
then standing up to slip off her own pants. "First we do you,
and then
you do us ... one by one ... we'll tell you how. ... and when and
where,
and just how we like it. And after this," Brenda growled at
her, and bit
hard on her nipple, as she rubbed her crotch, "you belong to
us. You
understand? You come out here whenever we want, as often as we
want,
with whoever we want, and you do exactly what we tell you to do.
You got that? And if you squeal, you little bitch, we cut out your
tongue and cut your tits off. You get it? You know, kind of like a
mastectomy."
Everyone laughed at her wit, except Grace, who was shaking and
wheezing,
lying on the cold floor, terrified of what they were going to do
to her.
"Why? Why do you have to do this? ... you don't need me ...
lease ..."
She was begging, and they thought it was funny. She was so new, so
fresh, so young, and they knew that if they didn't get her,
someone else
would. It was first come, first served in prison.
"You're gonna be our sweetie, aren't you, Grace?" Brenda
said, leaning
down slowly to the place where Grace's legs met, as she knelt on
the
ground in front of her. Grace was naked by then, and Brenda slowly
began
to lick her. She loved that part, breaking them in, having someone
no
one else had ever had, turning them on, scaring them, using them,
showing them how helpless they were, making them do anything she
wanted.
She stopped for a minute, and pulled a tiny tube out of the pocket
of
her jacket. She opened it, and quickly inhaled the white powder,
and
then ran a tiny bit of it around her gums, and with a single
finger she
put a little bit on Grace, and licked it off with vigor.
"Nice ... ."
Brenda moaned, loving it, feeling Grace with her fingers as the
others
told her to hurry up. She was shoving her whole hand in then and
Grace
winced in pain. But the others were complaining. They wanted a
turn too.
They didn't have all night. This wasn't Brenda's honeymoon.
"Maybe it
is, you cunt," she said to one of the girls grumbling at her,
"maybe
I'll keep her for myself if she's any good." But Grace was
squirming and
trying to move away from her, and the relentless prodding of her
fist,
although she couldn't go far with her legs tied. She wanted to
scream,
but didn't dare, for fear of Jane's knife. But they hadn't gagged
her.
They needed her mouth to please them, when they were through with
her.
Grace closed her eyes then, trying to pretend she wasn't there,
that it
wasn't happening, and then suddenly she heard a noise and a bang,
like a
door slamming. She heard Brenda gasp and felt her pull her hand
out and
jump aside, and when Grace opened her eyes, she saw a tall,
graceful
black girl standing in the doorway. She didn't know if the girl
was one
of them or not, but the others didn't seem happy to see her.
"Okay, you fools, untie her." The black girl was very
tall and very
cool, and strangely good-looking. And the whites of her eyes
looked
enormous in the light of the flashlight. "You've got five
seconds to get
her out of here, or Sally's going to the Man. If I'm not outta
here in
three minutes, she's gone. And I guess maybe you babes are in the
hole
until Christmas."
"Bullshit, Luna. Get your black ass outta here before we kill
you."
Jane was addressing her and flashing the switchblade at her and
Brenda
looked furious, but she seemed somewhat distracted. The cocaine
had
taken hold and she wanted to proceed with Grace, without their
damn
interruptions.
"Why don't you cunts go fight someplace else?" Brenda
said with a small
groan as she moved away from Grace for a moment.
"You got two minutes left," Luna said icily. "I
said untie her."
Luna looked terrifying as she stood staring at them in the light
of the
flashlight. She had muscles almost like a man's and the long
sinewy legs
of an Olympic runner. She was the prison's female karate and
boxing
champ, and she was someone that no one wanted to mess with.
Jane always swore she wasn't afraid of her, and she'd said more
than
once that she would have liked to carve her face off. But the rest
of
them knew it was more talk than action. Luna had powerful
connections.
There was a long moment of hesitation, and then one of the other
women
untied Grace's hands and arms, and another began to untie her
legs, as
Brenda whined in unfulfilled passion.
"You bitch. You want her for yourself, don't you?"
"I've got what I want. Since when do you have to fuck with
babies?"
But Luna knew as well as they did that Grace was a beauty. Lying
there,
all sprawled out, she had almost made them drool with
anticipation.
"She's old enough," Brenda spat at the black girl in
frustrated fury.
"What are you now, the Lone Ranger? Go fuck yourself,
Luna."
"Thanks. ", Grace was on her feet, and struggling into
her clothes, and
trying to button her shirt with trembling hands again a moment
later.
She didn't even dare look at them, for fear that they would kill
her.
"Party's over, girls," Luna announced with a smile.
"You touch her
again, and I'll kill you."
"What the fuck does that mean?" Brenda said with a tone
of complete
annoyance.
"She's mine. You heard me?"
"Yours?" For once, Brenda looked stunned. No one had
told her that.
That might have made things a little different.
"What about Sally?" Brenda asked suspiciously.
"We don't owe you any explanations," Luna said coldly,
as she shoved
Grace toward the door. She was wheezing and shaking, and Luna
pushed her
so hard she almost fell. This was not a woman to mess with.
None of them was. Grace was way out of her league, and she
realized now
that she'd been crazy to think she could be safe here. All the
stories
were true. They had just been waiting.
"Christ, you guys are into threesomes now?" Brenda
whined at her.
"You heard me. She's mine. Stay away from her. Or there's
gonna be
trouble. You got that?" No one answered her, but the message
was clear,
and Luna was too important in the political scheme of things to be
worth
annoying. With a single word from her, a riot could come down. Two
of
her brothers were the most powerful Black Muslims in the state,
and the
two others had staged the biggest riots in the history of Attica,
and
San Quentin.
Having warned them to stay away from Grace, Lualia quickly opened
the
door, and shoved Grace outside. She grabbed her arm, and growled
at her
to stroll along, chatting with her as though nothing had happened.
Five minutes later, they were in the gym, and Grace was deathly
pale and
wheezing, and she no longer had her inhaler. Sally was waiting for
them
there, with a look of concern. And when she saw Grace, she looked
really
angry.
"What the hell were you doing with Brenda?" she asked in
an irate
undertone, as Luna watched them.
"She came into our cell. I thought it was you at first, I
didn't even
look up until she was nose to nose with me, and Jane was flashing
a
knife right behind her."
"You've got a lot to learn." But she'd been impressed
that she'd been
smart enough to leave a message on her bunk, with the single
scrawled
word Brenda. "Are you okay?" She wondered how far it had
gone, and she
glanced at Luna for an answer.
"She's okay. Stupid, but okay. They didn't get too far.
Brenda was too
busy getting coked up to do a whole lot of damage." Over the
years they
had all seen girls raped and ruined for life by baseball bats and
broomsticks. But Luna was still annoyed that this kid had almost
dragged
Sally into it. It was Luna who had insisted on going herself, and
leaving Sally to tell the guards, if she had to. Luna took good
care of
her. They had been together for years and no one dared to bother
either
of them, because of Luna's brothers who came to see her when they
could.
Two lived in Illinois, one in New York, and the other in
California. All
four were on parole, but everyone knew who they were, and what
they
could do, if they ever got angry. Even Brenda and her friends
wouldn't
dare mess with them, or with Luna or Sally.
Now Grace was going to be under their protection.
"What did you tell them?" Sally asked Luna
conversationally as they
walked back to the cell she shared with Grace.
"That she was ours now," Luna said quietly, looking at
Grace with
annoyance. She had told Sally to watch out for her The kid was so
green
she was liable to bring the house down And Luna didn't pull any
punches
with her when they got back to the cell and Grace started crying.
She also knew she didn't dare ask for another inhaler till the
next day,
and she was wheezing badly.
"I don't give a shit how scared and sick you are," Luna
said, looking
murderous. "If you ever put Sally's ass on the line again,
I'll kill
you. You don't leave her any notes, don't tell her who kidnapped
you.
Don't go whining to her about your medicine or who pinched your
ass on
the chow line. You got a problem, you come to me. I don't know
what the
hell you did to get sent here, and I don't want to know. But I can
tell
you one thing, you weren't sent here for having brains, and if you
don't
get them quick, you're gonna die, simple as that. So get smart
real
fast. Ya hear? And in the meantime, you do every goddamn thing Sally
tells you. She tells you to lick the floor, or clean her latrine
with
your eyebrows, you do it. You got that, kid?"
"Yes, yes, I do ... and thank you ..." She knew that she
was safe with
them. Sally had already proven that to her. And from now on, if
she was
faithful to them, they would protect her. They wanted nothing from
her,
not sex, not money, they felt sorry for her, and they both knew
she
didn't belong there.
But from that day on, things changed. People stayed away from
Grace, and
treated her with respect. No one hassled her, no one whistled or
jeered.
It was as though she didn't exist She led a sort of charmed life,
going
her own way in the jungle, amidst the lions and the snakes and the
alligators. And her only friends were Sally and Luna.
She had gotten religious while she was there. And her asthma was
troubling her less than it had in years. She had started her
correspondence course from the local junior college. She could
finish in
two years, and go to school at night to get her B.A. once she got
out.
She was taking secretarial classes too, to help her find a job
when she
got out and went to Chicago.
Even David saw a change in her in time. When he visited her, he
saw that
there was a quiet confidence, and an odd peace about her. It
allowed her
to accept the news philosophically when he told her that they had
lost
the appeal, and she would have to serve her full two-year
sentence. It
had been exactly a year since her conviction, and David could
barely
bring himself to believe that they had lost again, but she took it
very
calmly. It was Grace who consoled him, when he told her how badly
he
felt to have failed her yet again, but she reminded him that it
wasn't
his fault. He had done his best. And all she had to do now was
survive
another year there. It wasn't easy, but all she could do now was
look
forward. It touched him more than ever as he listened to her, but
it
pained him too. He found that he came to see her less often
because
seeing her always reminded him of all that he hadn't been able to
accomplish for her. He still had an odd kind of obsession with
her.
She was so beautiful, so young, so pure, and she had had such
rotten
luck in her short life, and yet, despite all he felt for her, he
had
been able to do nothing to change it. It made him feel helpless
and
angry and inadequate. Sometimes, he wondered if he had won the
appeal
for her, would things have been different? If, maybe then, he
would have
had the guts to tell her he loved her. But as things stood, he had
never
said it, and Grace never suspected his feelings for her.
Molly had been aware of his feelings for Grace for a while, but
she had
never said anything to him about it. But the young lawyer David
had been
taking out recently had said plenty. She had sensed long since how
obsessed he was with Grace. He talked about her constantly. His
new
friend had called him on
it more than once, and told him it wasn't healthy. She told him he
had
..."hero complex" and was trying to save her. She told
him a lot of
things, some of which were truly painful. But the simple fact was,
in
his own mind, he had failed Grace. Knowing that made him feel
worse each
time he saw her. And in her second year at Dwight, he came to see
Grace
less and less often. He had less reason to now. There was no
appeal.
There was nothing he could do for her anymore, except be her
friend.
And his girlfriend kept telling him he had to get on with his own
life.
Grace missed seeing him, but she also understood that there was
nothing
he could do. And she knew that he was seeing someone who meant lot
to
him. He had said something to Grace about it the last few times
he'd
seen her, and Grace had sensed that somehow he felt guilty now
when he
came to see her. She wondered if maybe his girlfriend was jealous.
Molly still came, not as often as she would have liked, but as
often as
her busy life allowed, and it always cheered Grace when she saw
her.
And other than that, Grace was comfortable with her only other two
friends, Luna and Sally. She spent her second Christmas at Dwight
with
them, in their cell, sharing the chocolates and cookies that Molly
had
sent her.
"You ever been to France?" Luna asked as Grace shook her
head and
smiled. They asked her funny things sometimes, as though she came
from
another planet. And in some ways she did. Luna was from the
ghettos of
Detroit, and Sally was from Arkansas. Luna loved teasing her and
calling
her "the Okie."
"Nope, I've never been to France," Grace smiled at them.
They were an
odd trio, but they were good friends. In a strange way, they were
like
the parents she had never had. They protected her, they watched
over
her, they scolded her, and taught her the things she needed to
know to
survive there. And in a funny way, they loved her. She was just a
kid to
them, but there was hope for her. She could have a life someday.
They were proud of her when she got good grades. And Luna told her
all
the time that one day she'd be someone important.
I don't think so," Grace laughed at them.
"What are you gonna do when you get outta here?" Luna
always asked her,
and she always said the same thing.
"Go to Chicago, and look for a job."
"Doin' what?" Luna loved hearing about it, she was in
for life, and
Sally had three more years to do. Grace would be out in a year,
and then
she had a life ahead of her, a future. "You should be one of
those
models, like on TV. Or maybe on a game show?" Grace always
laughed at
their ideas, but there were things she wanted to do. She loved
psychology, and sometimes she thought about helping girls who'd
been
through what she had, or women like her mother. It was hard to
know. She
was only nineteen, and she had another year to do in prison.
Then right after the first of the year, David Glass came to see
her.
He hadn't been to see her in three months, and he apologized for
not
sending her anything for Christmas. He seemed to feel
uncomfortable with
her, and it was one of those visits that felt awkward right from
the
beginning. At first, she wondered if something was wrong, if
something
had changed for the worse about her release date. But when she
asked, he
was quick to reassure her.
"That's not going to change," he said gently,
"unless you start a riot,
or hit a guard. And that's not likely. No, it's nothing like
that."
But he knew he had to tell her. He hesitated for a long moment,
fantasizing again, and then, as he looked at her, he knew that his
fiancee was right. His obsession with Grace was crazy. She was
just a
kid, she had been his client, and she was in prison. "I'm
getting
married," he said, almost as though he owed her an apology,
and then he
felt foolish for his unspoken feelings.
Grace looked pleased for him. She had suspected, from little
things he'd
said, that he was pretty serious about his current girlfriend.
"When?"
"Not till June." But there was more, and as she looked
at him, she knew
it. "Her father has asked us both to join his law firm in
California.
I'm going to be leaving next month. I want to get settled in L.A.
I have
to pass the California bar, we want to buy a house, and I have a
lot to
do before we get married."
"Oh." It was a small sound, as she realized that she
probably wouldn't
see him again, or at least not for a very long time. Even after
her two
years of probation when she could leave the state, she couldn't
imagine
going to California. "I guess it'll be nice for you out
there." She
looked suddenly wistful at the thought of losing a good friend.
She had
so few, and he had been so important to her.
As he looked at her, he took one of her hands in his own.
"I'll always
be there if you need me, Grace. I'll give you my number before I
go.
You'll be fine." She nodded, but they sat there in silence
for a long
time, holding hands, thinking of her past and his future, and
suddenly
for that brief moment in time, the girl from California seemed a
lot
less important to David.
"I'm going to miss you," she said so openly that it tore
at his heart.
He wanted to tell her that he would always remember her, just the
way
she was now, so young and beautiful, her eyes were huge and her
skin was
so perfect it was almost transparent.
"I'm going to miss you too. I can't even imagine what life is
going to
be like in California. Tracy seems to think I'll love it."
But he
sounded a little less sure now.
"She must be pretty terrific to make you want to move."
Grace's eyes met
his, and he had to steel himself against her.
He laughed then, thinking that leaving Illinois was not exactly a
heartbreak, but leaving Grace was. As little as he saw her now, he
liked
knowing that he was still near enough to help her if she needed
him.
"You call me in L.A. if you need anything. And Molly will
still be
coming to see you." He had spoken to her only that morning.
"I know. She thinks she might be getting married too."
He had heard that
too. It was time for all of them to settle down. And in another
eight
months it would be time for Grace to start her life.
They were already on their way. They had careers, they had
histories,
they had mates. For Grace, it would all be a fresh beginning when
she
got out of prison.
He stayed with her longer than usual that afternoon, and he
promised
he'd come back again before he left town, but when he said goodbye
to
her, Grace somehow knew that he wouldn't. She heard from him again
a
couple of times, and then he was gone, apologizing profusely in a
letter
from L.A. that he hadn't had time to visit her again before he
left. But
they both knew that he hadn't had the courage. It would have just
been
too painful, and it was time to leave her. His fiancee wanted it
that
way too. She had been very definite with him about it.
But Grace couldn't know that. She wrote him a few letters that
spring,
and then she stopped. She knew instinctively that her relationship
with
David Glass was behind her.
She talked to Molly about it once or twice, about how sad she felt
sometimes when she thought of him. She had so few friends that it
really
hurt to lose one. And he had been so important to her too. But it
seemed
as though he had another life now.
"Sometimes you have to let people move on," Molly said
quietly. "I know
how much he. cared about you, Grace, and I think he felt pretty
bad
about not being able to get you off, or win the appeal for
you."
"He did a good job," Grace said loyally. Unlike most of
the inmates at
Dwight, she didn't blame her lawyer for her winding up in prison.
"I just miss him, that's all. Did you ever meet his
girlfriend?"
"Once or twice." Molly smiled. She knew that Grace still
had no idea of
the feelings David had had for her after the trial. In some ways,
she
had been like a little sister to him, in others like a dream he
knew he
could never have, but still wanted. But his fiancee had been
smart.
She had sensed it too, and Molly didn't think it was a complete
accident
that she had asked him to move to California. "She's a very
bright young
woman, " the young doctor said diplomatically. She didn't
want to tell
Grace that she hadn't really liked her. But she was probably good
for
him. She was smart and tough and ambitious, and according to
people who
knew her, a damn good lawyer.
"What about you? When are you and Richard getting
married?" Grace teased
her.
"Soon." And then finally in April, she and Richard set
the date.
They were getting married on July first, and going to Hawaii for
their
honeymoon. She and Richard had spent six months trying to coordinate
their vacations. And two and a half months after that, Grace would
be
free. It was hard to believe almost two years had passed. In some
ways,
it seemed like moments, in others an entire lifetime.
The day before her wedding, Molly went to visit Grace, and she had
asked
her to come and stay with them for a few days when she got out of
prison, and before she went to Chicago. Grace had already promised
to
spend Thanksgiving with them, and maybe even Christmas. And on
their
wedding day, Grace sat in her cell most of the day, thinking about
them,
wishing them well, and knowing all their plans, all the details.
She had seen photographs of the dress, she knew who would be
there.
She even knew the time of their flight to Hawaii. They were
leaving at
four o'clock, and flying from Chicago to Honolulu, arriving at ten
o'clock, local time. And they were staying at the Outrigger
Waikiki.
Grace could envision all of it, and she felt as though she had
actually
been to the wedding herself, by the time she sat down and watched
the
news with the other inmates at nine o'clock, just before lock
down.
She was talking to Luna about working out with her the next
afternoon,
when she saw something about a plane crash out of the corner of
her eye.
They were talking about a TWA plane that had exploded and blown up
an
hour before, over the Rockies. The details were still unknown, but
the
airline feared a bomb, and there had been no survivors.
"What was that?" Grace asked, turning to the woman next
to her.
"Where were they?"
"It was over Denver, I think. They think it was terrorists
blew it up.
It was a flight from Chicago to Honolulu, via San Francisco."
Grace felt
her skin grow cold and her heart ache. But it couldn't be. That
wasn't
it. It didn't work like that ... not after all these years.
Not both of them ... on their honeymoon ... her only friend. ...
the
only person she could rely on and go home to. She was looking
deathly
pale and she started to wheeze, and Sally saw it as she took out
her
inhaler.
And she understood immediately what Grace was afraid of.
"It's probably not them, you know. There are a dozen flights
a day to
Honolulu." Sally knew about Molly's honeymoon. She had been
bored to
death hearing about the wedding for weeks, but now she was worried
for
them, and wanted to reassure Grace. It really was unlikely that
that was
their plane. But a week later, after seven sleepless nights, and
endless
days, she knew it. She had written to the hospital, inquiring if
Molly
was okay, and had received a sad letter explaining to her that Dr.
York
and Dr. Haverson had died in the crash she'd heard about, on their
honeymoon. The letter said that the whole hospital was in
mourning.
Grace went to bed that day, and three days later she hadn't gotten
up
yet. Sally had covered for her as best she could, and so had Lu.
They claimed it was her asthma again, and that she'd had a
terrible time
getting any relief, even from her pills and her inhaler. Her
inhaler was
familiar to everyone by now, and she no longer worried about using
it.
With Lu watching over her, no one was liable to take it from her,
or
steal it. But the nurse knew this time when she came to their cell
that
it wasn't asthma that was bothering her. Grace wouldn't even
answer her.
She just lay there, staring at the wall, and refusing to get up,
or even
answer.
Molly had been her only friend, and with David so far away, now
she
really had no one to turn to. Grace was alone again, except for
her two
friends in prison.
The nurse had told her she had to go back to work the next day,
and
she was lucky they hadn't already sent her to the hole for not
showing
up at work for two days. But she was pushing her luck now. And the
next
day, she made no effort to get up, in spite of all of Sally and
Luna's
threats and pleas. She just lay there, wishing herself dead, like
Molly.
They took her to the hole that day, and left her there in the
dark, with
no clothes, and only one meal a day. And when she came back, she
looked
rail thin and very pale, but Sally could see from her eyes that
she was
alive again, deeply hurt, but she had turned the corner.
She never mentioned Molly again after that day. She never spoke of
anyone in the past, not David, or Molly, or her parents. She lived
only
in the here and now, and now and then she would talk about moving
to
Chicago.
The day finally came, and she wasn't sure she was ready for it.
She had no plans, no clothes, no friends, and a little money to
last her
for a lifetime. She had the AA degree she'd gotten from her
correspondence course, and she had grown wise and patient and
strong in
prison.
She was tall and thin and beautiful and stronger than she'd ever
been.
Luna had made her lift small weights and run, and she had really
toned
her figure. She was very beautiful, with her dark auburn hair
pulled
back in a ponytail, and she was wearing a white shirt and jeans
when
they released her. She looked like any other college girl, so
fresh and
young, just twenty, but there was a lifetime of experience there,
lodged
in her soul, a handful of people in her heart she would never
forget,
like Molly, and Luna and Sally.
"Take care," she said hoarsely when she left. She had
hugged each of
them, and held them tight. And Luna had kissed her on the cheek
like a
little girl they were sending out to play.
"Be careful, Grace. Be smart. Look around, trust your gut ...
go
someplace, girl. Be someone. You can do it."
"I love you," she whispered to her. "I love you
both so much. I couldn't
have made it without you." And she meant it. They had saved
her.
She kissed Sally on the cheek too, and Sally was embarrassed by
it.
"Just don't do anything stupid."
"I'll write to you," she promised, but Sally shook her
head. She knew
better. She had seen a lot of friends come and go. When you left,
it was
over, until next time.
"Don't," Luna said brutally. "We don't want to hear
from you. And you
don't want to know us. Forget us. Go have a life. Grace, put all
this
behind you. Start fresh and new ... go out there and don't ever
look
back. You don't have to take any of this with you."
"You're my friends," she said, with tears in her eyes,
but Luna shook
her head again.
"No, we're not, girl. We're ghosts. All we are is memories.
Take us out
once in a while, and then be glad you're not here. And don't you
come
back again, ya hear!" She wagged a finger at her, and Grace
laughed
through her tears. Some of what Luna had said was good advice, but
she
couldn't just leave them there, and forget them. Or was that what
you
had to do? Did she have to leave them all behind in order to move
forward? She wished she could have asked Molly. "Now get
lost!" Luna had
given her a little shove forward, and a few minutes later she was
going
through the gate in a van on the way to the bus station in town.
They were standing at the fence waving at her, and she turned and
waved
from the window until she couldn't see them any longer.
Chapter 6.
the bus trip from Dwight to Chicago took just | under two hours.
They had given her a hundred dollars cash when she left the
correctional center. And David had set up a small checking account
for
her before he moved west. It had five thousand dollars in it, and
the
rest was in a savings account she had vowed not to touch.
In Chicago, she had no idea where to stay, or where to go. She had
to
tell the authorities where she was going and they had given her
the name
of a parole officer in Chicago. She had to check in with him
within two
days. She had his name and address and phone number. Louis
Marquez.
And one of the girls at Dwight had told her where to go for a
cheap
hotel.
The bus station in Chicago was on Randolph and Dearborn. The
hotels
they'd told her about were only a few blocks away from it. But
when she
saw the kinds of people on the street by the hotels, she hated to
go
inside them. There were prostitutes hanging around, people renting
rooms
by the hour, and there were even two cockroaches on the desk in
one
hotel when she rang the bell for the desk clerk.
"Day, night, or hour?" he asked, shooing the cockroaches
aside.
Even Dwight hadn't been as bad as that. It was a lot cleaner.
"Do you have prices by the week?" "Sure. Sixty-five
bucks a week," he
said without batting an eye, and it sounded expensive to her, but
she
didn't know where else to try.
She took a single room with private bath on the fourth floor for
seven
days, and then she went out to find a restaurant to get something
to
eat.
Two bums stopped her and asked her for change, and a hooker on the
corner looked her over, wondering what a kid like her was doing in
this
neighborhood. Little did they know that ..."kid like
her" had just been
at Dwight. And no matter how seedy the neighborhood was, she was
glad to
be free. It meant everything to walk the streets again, to look up
at
the sky, to walk into a restaurant, a store, to buy a newspaper, a
magazine, to ride a bus. She even took a tour of Chicago that night,
and
was stunned by how beautiful it was. And feeling extravagant, she
took a
cab back to her hotel.
The prostitutes were still there, and the johns, but she paid no
attention to them. She just took her key, and went upstairs. She
locked
her door, and read the papers she'd bought, looking for employment
agencies. And the next day, with the newspaper in hand, she hit
the
streets and started looking.
She went to three agencies, and they wanted to know how much
experience
she had, where she'd worked before, where she'd been. She told
them she
was from Watseka, had graduated from junior college there, and had
taken
secretarial courses in shorthand and typing. She admitted that she
had
no experience at all, hence no references, and they told her that
they
couldn't help her find work as a secretary without them.
Maybe as a receptionist, or as a waitress, or salesgirl. At twenty
with
no experience and no references, she didn't have much to offer and
they
weren't embarrassed to say so.
"Have you thought of modeling?" they asked her in the
second agency.
And just to be nice, the woman jotted down two names.
"They're modeling
agencies. Maybe you should talk to them. You've got the look they
want."
She smiled at Grace, and promised to call her at the hotel if any
jobs
opened!
that didn't require experience, but she didn't hold out much hope
to her.
Grace went to see her probation officer after that, and just
seeing him
was like a trip back to Dwight, or worse. It was incredibly
depressing,
and this time she didn't have Luna and Sally to protect her.
Louis Marquez was a small, greasy man, with beady little eyes, a
severely receding hairline, and a mustache. And when he saw Grace
walk
in, he stopped what he was doing and looked at her in amazement.
He had
never seen anyone who looked like that in his office. Most of his
time
was spent with drug addicts, and prostitutes, and the occasional
dealer.
It was rare for him to handle juveniles, and rarer still to see
someone
with charges as major as hers, who looked like Grace, and seemed
as
young and wholesome.
She had bought herself a couple of skirts by then, a dark blue
dress to
go job-hunting in, and a black suit with a pink satin collar.
She was wearing the dark blue dress when she visited him, because
she'd
been out looking for work all day, and her feet were killing her
from
the high heels she was wearing.
"Can I help you?" he asked, looking puzzled, but
intrigued. He was sure
that she had come to the wrong office. But he was glad she had.
He was happy for the distraction.
"Mr. Marquez?"
"Yes?" He gazed hungrily at her, unable to believe his
good fortune.
And his eyes grew wide, as she reached into her handbag and pulled
out
the familiar forms for probation. He glanced at them summarily,
and then
stared at her, unable to believe what he was reading. "You
were at
Dwight?" She nodded, looking calm. "That's a pretty
heavy place," he
looked really startled. "How did you manage that for two
years?"
"Very quietly." She smiled at him. She looked very wise
for her years.
In fact, looking at her now in the dark blue dress, it was hard to
believe she was only twenty. She looked more like twenty-five.
And then he looked even more surprised when he read the file notes
on
her conviction.
"Voluntary manslaughter, eh? You have a fight with your
boyfriend?" She
didn't like the way he asked her that, but she answered him very
coolly.
"No. My father."
"I see." He was enjoying this. "You must be no one
to mess with."
She didn't answer him, and he was taking her measure with his
beady
little eyes. He was wondering just exactly how much he could get
away
with.
"You have a boyfriend now?"
She wasn't sure what to say, or why he was asking. "I have
friends."
She was thinking of Luna and Sally. They were her only friends in
the
world now. And of course David, far away in California. She still
felt
Molly's loss terribly. They were all her only friends. And she
didn't
want him to think she had no one.
"You have family here?"
But this time she shook her head. "No, I don't."
"Where are you living?" He had the right to ask her
those questions, and
she knew that. She told him the name of the hotel, and he nodded
and
jotted it down. "Not much of a neighborhood for a girl like
you.
Plenty of hookers. Maybe you noticed." And then with an evil
glint in
his eye, "If you get busted, you're back to Dwight for
another two
years. I wouldn't get any ideas about picking up some extra money."
She wanted to slap him, but prison had taught her not to react,
and to
be patient. She said nothing. "Are you looking for
work?"
"I've been to three agencies, and I'm checking the papers. I
have some
more ideas. I'm going to check them out tomorrow, but I wanted to
come
here first." She didn't want to be late reporting in, or he
could make
trouble for her. And she had no intention of going back to Dwight.
Not for two years, or two minutes.
"I could give you some work here," he said thoughtfully.
He'd love
having someone like her around, and he was in an ideal situation.
She'd be scared to death of him, and she'd have to do anything he
wanted. The more he thought about it, the more he liked it. But
Grace
was too smart for that now. She wasn't falling for the Louis
Marquezes
of the world. Those days were over.
"Thank you, Mr. Marquez," she said quietly. "If
some of my opportunities
don't pan out, I'll call you."
"If you don't find work, I could send you back," he said
nastily, and
she forced herself not to answer. "I can violate you anytime
I want, and
don't you forget it. Failure to find work, failure to support
yourself,
failure to stay clean, failure to follow conditions of parole.
There are plenty of grounds to ship you back there." Someone
was always
threatening her, trying to spoil things for her, wanting to
blackmail
her into doing what they wanted. And as she stared at him
unhappily,
thinking of what a pig he was, he reached into a drawer in his
desk, and
handed her a plastic cup with a lid. "Give me a specimen.
There's a
ladies' room across the hall from my office."
"Now?"
"Sure. Why not? You been getting loaded??" He looked
evil and hopeful.
"No," she said angrily. "But why the specimen? I've
never been in
trouble for drugs."
"You been in trouble for murder. You been in the joint. And
you're on
probation. I got a right to ask you for anything I think is called
for.
I'm calling for a urinalysis. Okay with you, or you gonna refuse?
I can send you back to the joint for that too, you know."
"All right, all right." She stood up, holding the cup,
and headed for
the door to the hallway, thinking what a bastard he was.
"Normally, my secretary would have to watch, but she left
early today.
Next time, I'll have it observed. But I'll give you a break this
time."
"Thanks." She looked at him with barely hidden fury. But
he had her by
the throat, just the way everyone had for years, her parents,
Frank
Wills, the police in Watseka, the guards at Dwight, even bitches
like
Brenda and her friends, until Luna and Sally had rescued her.
But there would be no rescuers now. She had to rescue herself, and
hold
her own against vermin like Louis Marquez.
She came back five minutes later with a full cup, and balanced it
precariously on his desk, with the lid barely closed. She was
hoping he
would spill it all over his papers.
"Come back in a week," he said casually, eyeing her
again with obvious
interest. "And let me know if you move, or find a job. Don't
leave the
state. Don't go anywhere unless you tell me."
"Fine. Thanks." She stood up to leave, and with a leer,
he watched her
slim hips and long legs disappear out of his office. And a minute
later,
he stood up and poured her urine out in his sink. He wasn't
interested
in doing a drug test. All he wanted to do was humiliate her and
let her
know that he could make her do anything he wanted.
Grace was steaming when she took the bus back to her hotel. Louis
Marquez represented everything she had been fighting all her life,
and
she wasn't going to give in to it now. She wasn't going to let him
send
her anywhere. She would die first.
She checked the Yellow Pages that night for all the modeling
agencies in
town. She had liked the woman's suggestion to try them, but not
for
modeling. She thought maybe she could work as a receptionist, or
someone
in the office. She had a long list of places to try, and wished
that she
knew which one was the best one. But she had no way of knowing.
All she
could do was try them.
She got up at seven the next day, and she was still in her
nightgown and
brushing her teeth when she heard someone pounding on her door,
and
wondered who it could be. It had to be a hooker, or a john, maybe
someone who had the wrong room. She put a towel around her
nightgown and
opened the door, with her toothbrush still in her hand, and her
dark
coppery hair cascading past her shoulders. It was Louis Marquez.
"Yes?" For an instant, she almost didn't recognize him,
and then she
remembered.
"I came to see where you live. A probation officer is
supposed to do
that."
- "How nice. I see you got an early start too," she
said, looking angry.
What did he think he was pulling? It was her father all over
again, and
just thinking about that made her tremble.
"You don't mind my coming by, do you?" he said smoothly.
"I wanted to be
sure you really lived here." "I do," she said
coldly, holding the door
wide. She was not going to invite him in, or close the door behind
him.
"And whether or not I mind depends on what you have in mind
to do here."
She looked at him without flinching for an instant.
"What do you mean?"
"You know what I mean. Why did you come here? To see where I
live?
Fine. You've seen it. Now what? I'm not planning to serve
breakfast."
"Don't get smart with me, you little bitch. I can do anything
I want
with you. And don't you forget it." But the way he said it
made
something snap deep inside her, and she took a step closer to him,
and
put her face close to his with a look of fury. "I shot the
last man who
said that to me, and tried to act on it.
And don't you forget that, Mr. Marquez. Are we clear now?" He
was
fuming, but he was also out of line, and he knew it. He had come
here to
see just how much he could get away with, and how scared she was
of him.
But Luna had taught her well, and she wasn't buying.
"You'd better watch what you say to me," he said in a
malevolent tone as
he hesitated in the doorway. "I'm not going to take any shit
from some
little punk kid who shot her old man. You may think you're tough,
but
you won't know what tough is till I send your skinny little ass
back to
Dwight for another two years, and don't think I won't do it."
"You'd better have a reason before you try, Marquez, or I'm
not going
anywhere, just because you show up at my hotel at seven o'clock in
the
morning." She knew exactly why he was there, and so did he.
And she had
just called his bluff, and he knew it.
Actually, she had surprised him. He had thought she would scare
more
easily, and he was more than a little disappointed. But it had
been
worth a try, and if she ever looked like she was weakening, he was
going
to pounce on her just like a little cockroach. "Anything else
I can do
for you? Want me to pee in a glass for you? Happy to oblige."
She looked at him pointedly, and without saying another word, he
turned
and hurried down the stairs of her hotel. It wasn't over yet. She
was
stuck with him for two years, and he had plenty of time to torment
her.
After he left, she put on the black suit with the pink collar and
she
was particularly careful when she did her hair and dressed. She
wanted
to look just right for the modeling agencies. She wanted to look
cool
and sure and well dressed, but not so flashy she competed with the
models.
The first two agencies told her they had no openings, and they
hardly
seemed to notice her at all, and her third stop was Swanson's on
Lake
Shore Drive. They had a luxurious-looking waiting room and big
blown-up
photographs of their models everywhere. The place had been
designed by
an important decorator, and Grace was more than a little nervous
when
they called her in to one of the offices for Cheryl Swanson to
meet her.
She met all their potential employees personally, and so did her
husband, Bob. There was a definite look to the Swanson employee.
Their models were the best in town, for runway and photography, as
well
as commercial. And everything about the agency suggested success
and
high style and beauty. Looking around the office where she waited
for
Cheryl, Grace was particularly glad she had worn the little Chanel
knockoff.
And a moment later, a tall, dark-haired woman walked into the room
with
a long stride, and a neat bun at the back of her neck. She wore
huge
glasses and a sleek black dress. She wasn't pretty, but she was
very
striking.
She was young, and scared, but she looked bright, and she had a
good look to her. "I'm Cheryl Swanson."
"Hello. Thank you for seeing me." Grace shook her hand
across the desk,
and sat down again, feeling her asthma start to fill her chest,
and she
prayed she wouldn't have an attack now. It was so terrifying
walking in
cold, asking for interviews, and then trying to talk them into
hiring
her. She'd been at it for almost a week, and so far there was no
hope
yet. And she knew that if she didn't get a job by the following
week,
her probation officer really would give her trouble.
"I hear you're interested in a job as a receptionist,"
Cheryl said,
glancing at a note her secretary had given her. "That's an
important job
here. You're the first face they see, the first voice. Their very
first
contact with Swanson's. It's important that everything you do
represents
who and what we are, and what we stand for. Do you know the
agency?"
Cheryl Swanson asked, taking off her glasses and scrutinizing
Grace more
closely. She had good skin, great eyes, beautiful hair. It made
her
wonder as she looked at her. Maybe she was just trying to get in
the
back door. Maybe she didn't even have to. "Are you interested
in
modeling, Miss Adams?" Maybe that's what this was all about,
and it was
all a ploy, but Grace was quick to shake her head in answer to the
question. That was the last thing she wanted, guys pawing all over
her,
thinking she was easy because she was a model, or photographers
chasing
her around in a bathing suit, or less. No, thank you.
"No, I'm not. Not at all. I want a job in the office."
"Maybe you should look beyond that," she glanced at her
note again,
"Grace ... maybe you should think about modeling. Stand
up."
Grace did, reluctantly, and Cheryl was very pleased to see how
tall she
was.
But Grace looked like she was about to cry, or run screaming from
the
office.
"I don't want to model, Mrs. Swanson. I just want to answer
the phone,
or type, or run errands for you, or do whatever I can ... nything
but
model."
"Why? Most girls are dying for a modeling career." But
Grace wasn't. She
wanted a real life, a real job, a real family.
She didn't want to start her new life chasing rainbows.
"It's not what I want. I want something ... more ... more ...
."
she groped for the right word and then found it, " ...
solid."
"Well," Cheryl said regretfully, "we do have a job
open here, but I
think it's a terrible waste. How old are you, by the way?"
Grace thought about lying to her, and then decided not to.
"Twenty. I have an AA degree, I can type, but not very fast.
And I'll be
good, and work hard, I swear it." She was begging for the
job, and
Cheryl couldn't help smiling at her. She was a sensational girl,
it was
just such a waste to have her answering phones behind a desk. But
on the
other hand, she certainly set the right tone for what Swanson had
to
offer. She looked like one of their models.
"When can you start?" Cheryl looked at her with a
motherly smile.
She liked her.
"Today. Now. Whenever you like. I just came to Chicago."
"From where?" she asked with interest, but Grace didn't
want to tell her
that she was from Watseka in case she had heard of her father's
murder
two years before, nor did she want to say she'd just come from
Dwight,
in case she knew about the prison.
"From Taylorville," she lied. It was a small town two
hundred miles from
Chicago.
"Are your parents there?"
"My parents both died when I was in high school." It was
close enough to
the truth, and vague enough not to get her in any trouble.
"Do you have any family here at all?" Cheryl Swanson
asked, looking
worried about her. But Grace only shook her head.
"No one."
"Normally, I'd ask you for references, but with no prior
experience,
there really isn't much point, is there? All I'd get I l is a nice
letter from your high school gym teacher and I can see what you're
made
of. Welcome to the family, Grace."
Her new boss stood up and patted her arm in warm welcome.
"I hope you'll be happy here for a long, long time, at least
until you
decide to start modeling," she laughed. They had offered her
the
receptionist's job at a hundred a week, which was all she wanted.
Cheryl took her out into the hall, and introduced her to everyone.
There were six agents, and three secretaries, two bookkeepers, and
a
couple of people Grace wasn't quite sure who they were, and at the
end
of the hall, Cheryl walked into a sumptuous office done in gray
leather
and suede, and introduced her to her husband. They both looked as
though
they were in their mid-forties, and Cheryl had already explained
that
they had been married for twenty years, but had no children. The
models
are our kids, she had said. They're our babies.
Bob Swanson sized Grace up from behind his desk, and looked at her
with
a warm smile that really did make her feel part of the family, and
then
he got up and walked around his desk to shake her hand. He was
about six
feet four, very rugged-looking with dark hair and blue eyes and
movie
star handsome. He had been a child actor in Hollywood as a kid,
and a
model, of course, as Cheryl had been, in New York. And eventually,
they
had moved to Chicago, and opened the business.
"Did you say receptionist," " he asked his wife,
"or new model?" He
beamed down at her, and Grace felt as though she was home at last.
They were really nice people.
"That's what I said." Cheryl smiled at him, and it was
obvious
immediately that they liked each other, and worked well together.
"But she's a stubborn one. She says she wants a desk
job."
"What makes you so smart?" he laughed as he looked at
Grace. She was
really a pretty girl, and his wife was right. She could have done
well
as a model. "It took us years to figure that out.
We learned the hard way."
"I just know I'd never be good at it. I'm happy behind the
scenes,
making things work." Just like she'd run her mother's house,
and made
the supply room hum at Dwight. She had a knack for organizing
things,
and she was willing to work long hours and do anything she had to,
to
get the job done.
"Well, welcome aboard, Grace. Get to work." He sat back
down at his desk
again, waved at them both as they left, and sat staring at them
going
down the hall for a few minutes. There was something interesting
about
the girl, he decided as he looked at her, but he wasn't sure what it
was
yet. He prided himself on having a sixth sense about people.
Cheryl asked two of the secretaries to take Grace under their
wings, and
show her how the phone system worked, and the office machines.
And by noon, it seemed as though she had always been there. Their
last
receptionist had quit the week before, and they'd been making do
with
temps in the meantime. It was a relief for everyone to have
someone
efficient on hand, to take calls, make appointments, and register
their
bookings. It was a complicated job, and required a lot of juggling
at
times, but by the end of the first week, she knew she loved it.
The job
was perfect.
When Grace reported to Louis Marquez at the end of the week there
was
nothing for him to complain about. She had a good job, a decent
salary.
She was leading a respectable life, and she was planning to move
as soon
as she could find a small apartment. She would have loved to live
closer
to work, but the apartments around Lake Shore Drive were
unbelievably
expensive. She was scouring the paper, looking for one, when four
of the
models were hanging around one afternoon, waiting to hear about a
go-see. Grace was always overwhelmed by how beautiful they were,
and how
exquisitely put together. They had fabulous hair, perfect nails,
their
makeup always looked like it had been done by professionals, and
their
clothes made her stare at them with envy. But she still had no
desire to
do the kind of work they did. She didn't want to trade on her
looks, or
her sex appeal, or draw that kind of attention to herself. It was
too
much for her, emotionally. She couldn't handle it, and she knew
it.
After everything she'd been through in her life, her survival had
depended on her ability not to attract attention. And even at
twenty, it
was too late for her to change that now. She liked nothing better
than
not being the center of attention. But the models always included
her in
their conversations.
This time they were talking about renting a town house they'd
seen. It
sounded fabulous to her, but also way out of reach, they were
talking
about a thousand dollars. It had five bedrooms, though, and they
only
needed four. Maybe even fewer since one of them was thinking about
getting married.
"We need someone else to come in with us," a girl called
Divina said,
sounding disappointed. She was spectacular-looking, and she was
Brazilian. "Any interest?" she asked Grace casually, but
she couldn't
imagine living with them, or being able to afford sharing a rent
they
could manage.
"I'm looking for a place," she said honestly, "but
I don't think I can
afford the kind of rents you'd want to pay," she said glumly.
"If we cut this one five ways, it's only two hundred
apiece," the
twenty-two-year-old German model, Brigitte, said matter of-factly.
"Could you afford that, Graze?" Grace loved her accent.
"Yeah, if I stop eating." It meant giving up half her
salary, which
wouldn't leave her much for food or fun, or any other needs she
might
have. And she hated to dip into her savings, but she knew she
could if
she had to. And maybe living in a nice place, in a good
neighborhood,
with decent people, would be worth it. "Let me think about
it."
One of the two American girls laughed and looked at her watch.
"Great.
You have till four o'clock to make up your mind. We have to go
look at
it again, and tell them by four-thirty. Want to come?"
"I'd love to, if I can leave by then. I have to ask
Cheryl." But when
Grace asked, Cheryl was thrilled. She'd been horrified to hear
that
Grace was living in a fleabag hotel while looking for an
apartment.
She had even invited her to stay in her apartment, with her and
Bob, on
Lake Shore Drive, until she found something, but Grace hadn't
accepted.
"Thank God!" Cheryl exclaimed, and practically shoved
Grace out the door
with the others. They were nice girls, and she also thought that
maybe
if Grace lived with them, she might decide to become a model.
Cheryl hadn't given up on that yet, but on the other hand, she had
discovered that Grace's unfailing sense of organization was a
godsend.
The town house turned out to be spectacular. It had five
good-sized
bedrooms, and three baths, a decent-sized kitchen, a patio, and a
sunken
living room with a view of the lake. It had everything that each
of them
wanted, and they signed the lease that afternoon. For a long time,
Grace
stood there and stared at it, unable to believe that this was her
home
now. It was partially furnished with a couch and some chairs, and
a
dining room set, and the other girls all claimed that they had
enough
stuff to fill it. All Grace had to do was buy a bed, and some
furniture
for her own bedroom. It was incredible. She had a job, she had a
home,
she had friends. As she stood and looked at the lake, tears filled
her
eyes, and she turned away and pretended to check out the patio so
they
wouldn't see them.
Marjorie, one of her new roommates, had followed her outside. She
had
seen the emotional look on Grace's face, and she was worried.
Marjorie was the mother hen of the group, and the others always
teased
her that she fussed over them too much. She was only twenty-one,
but she
was the oldest of seven children. "You okay?" she asked.
Grace turned to
look at her as Marjorie walked up to her with a look of concern,
and
Grace sighed and smiled through her tears. It was impossible to
conceal
them.
"I just ... it's like a dream ... this is everything I ever
wanted. And a lot more." She only wished she could have shown
it to
Molly. She would never have believed it. The poor, beaten,
miserable
creature she had been had flowered, even in the dismal barrenness
of
Dwight Correctional Center over the past two years. And now she
had a
new life, a new world, it was like a dream. David and Molly had
been
right. If she hung on long enough, the ugliness of the past would
be
behind her forever. And now, finally, she was past it.
She had sent Luna and Sally postcards only a few days before,
telling
them that she was okay and Chicago was great. But she knew them
both
well, and she suspected they'd never write her. But she still
wanted to
let them know that she was safe and well, and had reached a safe
harbor.
And that they weren't forgotten.
"You looked so upset a few minutes ago," Marjorie
pursued it, but Grace
was smiling now.
"I'm just happy. This is like a dream come true for me."
Marjorie would
never know how much so. The one thing she didn't want anyone to
know
here was that she had killed her father and served time in prison.
She wanted to leave that behind her.
"It's like a dream for me, too," Marjorie confessed.
"My parents were so
poor I had to share my only good pair of shoes with two of my
sisters.
And they had feet two sizes smaller, and Mom always bought them in
their
size. I never lived in a place like this, till I came here. And
now I
can afford it, thanks to the Swansons." It was thanks to her
own good
looks, and she knew that. She was planning to move on to New York
when
her contract was up, and do some modeling there, or even Paris.
"It's fun, isn't it?"
"It's terrific."
The two girls chatted for a while, and eventually Grace went back
to her
hotel and packed. She didn't care if she had to sleep on the floor
until
her furniture arrived. But she was not going to spend one more
night in
that cheap hotel, killing cockroaches, and listening to old men
spit and
flush toilets.
She moved out the next day, and dropped her bags off on her way to
work.
And at lunchtime, she went to buy a bed and some furniture at John
M.
Smythe on Michigan Avenue. She even bought herself two little
paintings.
They promised to deliver it all on Saturday, and in the meantime,
Grace
had every intention of sleeping on the carpet.
She had never been happier in her life, and the job was going
splendidly. But on Friday, when she reported to Marquez, she found
she
was in trouble, and he loved it.
"You moved," he accused her, pointing a finger at her,
almost as soon as
she walked into his office. He'd been waiting for her for days.
And the only reason he knew was that he dropped by at the hotel
again,
and they told him she'd checked out for good on Tuesday.
"Yeah? So? What's the problem?"
"You didn't notify me."
"The probation papers say I don't have to notify you for five
days. I
moved three days ago, and I'm notifying you right now. Does this
take
care of it, Mr. Marquez?" He was out to get her, and she knew
it.
But there was nothing he could say to her, she was right. She had
five
days to notify him that she had moved, and she had only moved on
Tuesday.
"So what's the address?" he snarled at her, prepared to
write it down,
but as she looked at him, she realized what was going to happen.
"Does this mean you'll be dropping by on me from time to
time?" she
asked, looking worried, and he loved it. He liked making her
uncomfortable, catching her off guard, frightening her, if
possible.
She brought out all his basest sexual instincts.
"It might. I have a right to drop by, you know. Do you have
something to
hide?"
"Yes. You." She looked right at him and he flushed all
the way to his
receding hairline.
"What's that supposed to mean?" He dropped his pen and
stared at her in
irritation.
"It means that I have four roommates who don't need to know
where I've
been for the past two years. That's what."
"You mean incarcerated for murder?" He glowed. Now he
had a wedge he
could use on her. He could threaten to expose her to her
roommates.
"I guess that's what I mean. You make it sound so
charming."
"It is pretty charming, I'm sure they'd be fascinated to know
your
history. And by the way, what do you mean four roommates. Sounds
like a
bunch of call girls."
"You wish." She wasn't afraid of him, but he worried her
a little bit,
and she disliked him intensely. "They're models."
"That's what they all say."
"They're registered at the agency where I work."
"Too bad. I need the address anyway ... unless you want me to
violate
you, of course." He looked ever hopeful.
"Oh for chrissake, Marquez." She told him the address
then, and he
raised one nasty little eyebrow.
"Lake Shore Drive? How are you going to pay for that?"
"Split five ways it's costing me exactly two hundred
dollars." She had
no intention of telling him about the money she'd gotten in her
settlement with Frank Wills. Louis Marquez had absolutely no
reason to
know that. And the truth was, with the salary she earned, if she
was
willing to economize a little bit, she could afford the new town
house.
"I'm going to have to look at this place," Marquez
growled at her, and
she shrugged.
"I figured you'd say that. Want to make an appointment?"
she asked
hopefully. But he wasn't inclined to be that accommodating.
"I'll just drop by."
"Great. Just do me a favor," she looked at him
unhappily, "don't tell
them who you are."
"What am I supposed to say?"
"I don't care. Tell them you're selling me a car. Tell them
anything.
But don't tell them I'm on probation."
"You'd better behave yourself, Grace," he looked
pointedly at her, and
his meaning was not lost on her, "or I might have to."
And as she looked
at him, for reasons she couldn't quite sort out, the ugly little
man
reminded her of Brenda in prison. He had her legs tied. And this
time
there was no Luna to save her.
Chapter 7.
the group at the apartment got along splendidly. | They never
fought
over bills, everyone paid their share of the rent, they were each
nice
to the other girls. They bought each other small gifts, and were
generous with groceries. It was really the perfect arrangement.
And
Grace had never been happier in her life. Every day she wondered
if it
was real, or if she was dreaming.
The girls even tried to fix her up with their friends, but she
drew the
line at that. Groceries were one thing, but gifts of men were of
no
interest. She had no desire to go out with anyone, or complicate
her
life. At twenty, she was perfectly content to stay home and read a
book,
or watch TV at night. Every little freedom she had was a gift to
her,
and she wanted nothing more from life. Certainly not romance.
Just the thought of it terrified her. She had no desire to go out
with
anyone, possibly ever.
Her roommates teased her about it at first, and then eventually,
they
decided she had a secret life. Two of them were sure she was
seeing a
married man, particularly when she started going out regularly,
three
times a week, on Monday and Thursday nights, and all day Sunday.
During the week she would leave directly from work, and change
there,
and more often than not, she was home after midnight.
She had thought of telling them the truth, but eventually the
fantasy that she was seeing someone worked a lot better for her.
It made
them leave her alone and stop trying to fix her up with their
friends.
In fact, in terms of how she wanted to live, it was perfect.
And the truth was that her three-times-a-week trysts were the
heart and
soul of her existence. Once she'd gotten settled in the town house
with
the girls, she had started looking for a place to work three times
a
week. Not for pay, but to give back some of what she had gotten
out of
life. She felt too fortunate not to do something to help others.
It was something she had always promised herself, as she lay on
her bunk
at night, chatting with Sally, or while she worked out with Luna.
It had taken her a month to find the right place to volunteer.
There had been no one she could ask, but she had read a number of
articles, and there had been a special on TV about St. Mary's. It
was a
crisis center for women and children in an old brownstone, and
when
she'd first gone there, she was shocked at the condition it was
in.
Paint was chipping off the walls, there were bare bulbs hanging
from
sockets.
There were kids shouting and running around everywhere, and dozens
of
women. Most of them looked poor, some were pregnant, all were
desperate.
And the one thing they had in common was that they had all been
abused,
some to within an inch of their lives. Many of them were scarred,
some
no longer functioned normally, or had been in institutions.
The place was run by Dr. Paul Weinberg, a young psychologist who
reminded her of David Glass, and after the first time she'd been
there,
Grace found herself aching for Molly. She would have loved to talk
to
her, and tell her all about it. It had been a deeply moving
experience
just being there. The place was mostly staffed by volunteers, and
there
was only a handful of paid employees, most of them doing
internships for
psych degrees, some of them registered nurses. The women and
children
living in the crisis center needed medical care, psychological
help,
they needed a place to live, they needed clothes, they needed
tender loving care, they needed a hand to get out of the abyss
they were
in. Even for Grace, going to St. Mary's every week was like a
light
shining in the darkness. It was a place where souls were restored,
and
people were made whole again, as whole as they ever would be.
Just helping them helped her. It made her whole life worth
something
just to go there. She had volunteered for three shifts a week of
seven
hours each, which was a tremendous commitment. But it was a place
where
Grace felt at peace herself, and where she could bring peace to
others.
The women there had experienced many of the same things she had,
and so
had the children. There were pregnant fourteen-year-olds who had
been
raped by their fathers or brothers or uncles, seven-year-olds with
glazed eyes, and women who didn't believe they would ever be free
again.
They were the victims of violence, and most of the time of abusive
husbands. Many of them had been abused as children, too, and they
were
continuing to perpetuate the cycle for their own children, but
they had
no idea how to break it. That was what the loving staff at St.
Mary's
tried to teach them.
Grace was tireless when she was at St. Mary's. She worked with the
women
sometimes, and most of all, she loved the children. She'd gather
them
close to her, hold them on her lap, and tell them stories she made
up,
or read to them by the hour. She took them to clinics at night, to
see
the doctor for injuries they'd had, or just to get exams or shots.
It gave her life so much more meaning. And at times it hurt too.
It hurt
terribly, because it was all so familiar.
"It breaks your heart, doesn't it?" one of the nurses
commented a week
before Christmas. Grace had been putting a two-year-old to bed.
She had
been brain-damaged by her father, who was in jail now. It was odd
to
think that he was in jail, and her father, who had done things
that were
almost as bad, had died a hero.
"Yes, it does. They all do. But they're lucky." Grace
smiled at her.
She knew this story well. Too well. "They're here. They could
still be
out there getting battered. At least, for now, it's over."
The real heartbreak was that some of them went back. Some of the
women
just couldn't stay away from the men who beat them, and when they
went
back, they took the children with them. Some were hurt, some were
killed, some never recovered in ways that couldn't be seen. But
some got
it, some learned, some moved on to new lives and came to
understand how
to be healthy. Grace spent hours talking to them, about the
options they
had, the freedom that was theirs, just for the taking.
They were all so frightened, so blinded by their own pain, so
disoriented by everything they'd been through. It made her think
of the
condition she had been in herself nearly three years before, when
she'd
been in jail and Molly tried to reach her. In a way, Grace was
doing
this for her, to give back some of the love that Molly had shared
with
her.
"How's it going?" Paul Weinberg, their chief
psychologist, and the head
of the program, stopped to chat with her late one night. He had
been
working shoulder to shoulder with the volunteers and employees,
doing
intakes. Most of them came in at night. They came in hurt, they
came in
frightened, they came in injured in body and mind, and they needed
everything the team had to give them.
"Not bad." Grace smiled at him. She didn't know him
well, but she liked
what she'd seen. And she respected the fact that he worked hard.
They had sent two women to the hospital that night, and he had
driven
them there himself, while she cared for the children. Each of them
had
had four kids, and they were all in bed now. "It's a busy
night."
"It always is right before Christmas. Everyone goes nuts over
the
holidays. If they're going to beat their kids and wives, this is
the
time to do it."
"What do they do? Run ads? Beat your wife now, only six more
days to do
it before Christmas."
" She was tired but still in good humor. She liked what she
was doing.
"Something like that." He smiled at her, and poured her
a cup of
coffee. "Ever think of doing this for real? I mean, on a paid
basis?"
"Not really," she said honestly, but she was flattered
by the question,
as she sipped the steaming coffee. Paul had the same woolly hair
as
David Glass, and the same kind eyes, but he was taller, and
better-looking. "I used to think about getting a psych
degree. I'm not
sure I'm that good at this. But I like what I do here. I love the
people, and the idea that we might make a difference. I think
doing it
as a volunteer is good enough for now. I don't need to get paid
for it.
I love it." She smiled again, and he seemed to be studying
her
carefully. She intrigued him.
"You're good at what you do, Grace. That's why I asked. You
should think
about that psych degree some more, when you have time." He
was impressed
by her, and he liked her.
She had worked until two o'clock that night. Half a dozen new
women had
come in, and there was just too much going on for her to leave
them.
When everyone was settled, Paul Weinberg had offered to drive her
home,
and she was grateful for the ride, she was exhausted.
"You were great tonight," he praised her warmly, and she
thanked him.
And he was surprised to see where she lived. Most people on Lake
Shore
didn't bother to volunteer three days a week at St. Mary's.
"What's the
deal?" he asked her, as they pulled up outside her house.
"This is a
pretty fancy place, Grace. Are you an heiress?" She laughed
at the
question, and she knew he was teasing her, but he was curious too.
She was a very interesting young woman.
"I share a town house with four other girls." She would
have invited him
in but it was late. It was after two-thirty. "You'll have to
come by
sometime, if you can get away from St. Mary's." She was
friendly, but he
sensed that she wasn't flirting with him. She treated him like a
brother, but his interest in her was definitely not platonic.
"I get away once in a while," he smiled. "What
about you? What do you do
when you're not helping women and kids in crisis?" He wanted
to know
more about her, even though it was late, and they were both tired.
"I work at a modeling agency," she said quietly. She
liked her job, and
she was proud of it, and he raised an eyebrow.
"You're a model?" He wasn't surprised, but he thought it
was unusual
that someone who'd have to spend so much time on themselves would
give
so much to others. Because she did give a lot, to the women, and
the
kids. He had watched her.
"I work in the office," she smiled at him, "but my
roommates are all
models, all four of them. You're welcome to come back and meet
them."
She was trying to tell him she had no interest in him. Not as a
man, at
least. It made him wonder if she had a boyfriend, but he didn't
want to
ask her.
"I'd like to come back and see you," he said pointedly.
But he didn't
have to do that. She was at St. Mary's three times a week, and he
was
always there when she was.
She volunteered for extra duty on Christmas Eve and couldn't
believe how
many women came in that night. She worked tirelessly, and she
didn't get
home till four a.m. And she managed to go to the Swansons' the
next day
for their annual Christmas party for all their photographers and
models.
It was fun, and much to her own surprise, Grace actually enjoyed
it,
when she went with the others. The only thing that bothered her
was that
Bob had danced with her several times, and she thought he held her
a
little too close, and once she couldn't have sworn to it, but she
felt
him brush her breast with his fingers as he reached for an hors
d'oeuvre. She was sure it had been an accident and he hadn't even
noticed. But one of her roommates made a comment later that night
which
made her worry. It was Marjorie who had noticed it, mother hen
that she
was. She was always checking on all of them, and she knew his
tricks
from her own experiences with him.
"Was Uncle Bobby warming up tonight?" she asked Grace,
who looked
startled.
"What's that supposed to mean? He was just being friendly.
It's
Christmas."
"Oh God, sweet innocence," she groaned, "tell me
you don't believe what
you're saying."
"Don't be a jerk." Grace was defending him. She didn't
want to believe
that Bob cheated on Cheryl. But he was certainly surrounded
constantly
by temptation.
"Don't be naive. You don't think he's faithful to her, do
you?"
Divina added to their conversation. "Last year he chased me
around his
office for an hour. I almost broke my knee on that damn coffee
table of
his, getting away from him. Oh yes, Uncle Bob is a busy boy, and
it
looks like you're his next target."
"Oh shit." Grace looked at them with dismay. "I
thought maybe something
was going on, and then I figured I'd imagined it. Maybe I
did."
"In that case, so did I." Marjorie laughed at her.
"I thought he was
going to tear your clothes off."
"Does Cheryl know he does that stuff?" Grace asked
unhappily. The last
thing she wanted was to get caught in the middle, and she had no
intention of inviting his advances, or of having an affair with
Bob
Swanson. She didn't want to have an affair with anyone. Not now
anyway,
and maybe never. It just wasn't what she wanted.
Paul Weinberg had called her several times to invite her to dinner,
but
she had declined. But on New Year's Eve, when she was working at
St.
Mary's again, he insisted that she at least sit down with him for
ten
minutes, and share a turkey sandwich.
"Why are you avoiding me?" he accused her as she sat
there with her
mouth full of turkey. It took her a minute before she could
answer.
"I'm not avoiding you," she said honestly. She just
wasn't returning his
phone calls. But she was perfectly happy eating a sandwich with
him at
St. Mary's.
"Sure you are," he objected. "Are you
involved?" "Yup," she said
happily, and his face fell, "with St. Mary's, and my job, and
my
roommates. That's about it, but it's enough. More than enough. I
hardly
get time to read a newspaper or a book, or go to a movie. But I
like
it."
"Maybe you need to take some time off from here." He
smiled at her,
relieved that she hadn't mentioned a boyfriend. She was a great
girl,
and he really wanted to know her better. He was thirty-two years
old,
and he had never met anyone like her. She was bright, she was fun,
she
was deeply caring, and yet she was so shy and so distant. In some
ways,
she seemed very old-fashioned and he liked that. "You ought
to at least
get to a movie." But he hadn't been to one in months either.
He had dated one of the nurses for a while, but it hadn't worked
out.
And he had had an eye on Grace since she'd started coming to St.
Mary's.
"I don't want to take time off. I love it." She smiled
at him, as she
finished her sandwich.
"What are you doing here on New Year's Eve?" he
questioned her, and she
smiled at him again.
"I could ask you the same question, couldn't I?" "I
work here," he said
smugly.
"So do I. You just don't pay me."
"I still think you should think about becoming a professional,"
but
before he could say any more to her, they were both called away in
separate directions. It was another late night for her, and she
didn't
see him until the following Thursday. And that night he offered to
drive
her home again, but she took a cab. She didn't want to encourage
him.
But he finally cornered her on Sunday at St. Mary's.
"Will you have lunch with me?"
"Now?" she looked startled. They had four new families
to talk to.
"Not now. Next week. Whenever you want. I'd like to see
you." He looked
boyish and embarrassed when he asked her.
"Why?" The word just slipped out, and he laughed at the
question.
"Are you kidding? Have you looked in the mirror this week?
Besides which, you're intelligent and you're fun, and I'd like to
get to
know you."
"There's not much to know. I'm actually pretty dull,"
she said, and he
laughed again.
"Are you brushing me off?" "Maybe," she said
honestly. "Actually, I
don't date."
"You just work?" He looked amused, and she nodded in
answer to his
question. "Perfect. We ought to get along fine. All I do is
work too,
but I figure one of us has to break the cycle."
"Why? It suits us." She suddenly seemed very distant and
a little
frightened, which made him wonder about her.
"Will you just have lunch with me once for heaven's sake?
Just try it.
You have to eat. I'll come uptown if you want, during the week.
Whatever you like." But she didn't like. She liked him, but
she didn't
want to date any man, and she didn't know how to tell him.
Eventually, she agreed to have lunch with him the following
Saturday.
It was a freezing cold day and they went to La Scala for pasta.
"All right, now tell the truth. What brought you to St.
Mary's?"
"The bus." She grinned at him, and she looked very young
and playful.
"Very cute," and then suddenly he wondered. "How
old are you anyway?"
He figured her for twenty-five or -six, because she was so mature
in
handling the battered women and children.
"I'm twenty," she said proudly, as though it was a major
accomplishment,
and he almost groaned as she said it. That explained a lot of
things, or
at least he thought so. "I'll be twenty-one next
summer."
"Great. You make me feel like I'm robbing the cradle. I'll be
thirty-three in August."
"You remind me a lot of someone I once knew, a friend of
mine.
He's an attorney in California."
"And you're in love with him?" Paul Weinberg asked
unhappily. He knew
that somewhere in her life there was an explanation for why she
remained
so distant. Her extreme youth was possibly part of it, but he knew
there
had to be more to it.
But she was laughing at him, explaining about David Glass.
"No, he's married, and he's having a baby."
"So who's the lucky guy?"
"What guy?" she looked puzzled. "I told you,
there's no one."
"Do you like guys?" It was an odd question, he knew, but
these days, it
was worth asking. "I don't know," she said honestly,
looking up at him,
and for an instant his heart fell, and then he saw something else
as he
watched her. "I've never dated."
"Not at all?" He didn't believe her.
"Nope. Not at all."
"That's quite a record at twenty." It was also quite a
challenge.
"Any particular reason why not?" They had ordered pasta
and were
enjoying lunch by then as he asked her questions.
"Oh, a few reasons, I guess. I guess mostly I don't want
to."
"Grace, that's crazy." "Is it?" she said
cautiously. "Maybe not. Maybe
it's how I need to live my life. No one else can judge what's
right for
me." And then as he watched her, he knew it, and he realized
what a fool
he'd been.
That was why she'd come to St. Mary's.
To help others like her.
"Did you have a bad experience?" he asked gently, and
she trusted him,
but only to a point. She wasn't going to tell him all her secrets.
"You could say that. Pretty bad. But no worse than what you
see every
day at St. Mary's. It takes a toll, I guess."
"It doesn't have to. You can get over it. Are you seeing
anyone?
Professionally, I mean."
"I was. We were good friends. She died in an accident last
summer.
He was sorry for her, as she said it, she looked so lonely.
"What about your family? Have they been any help?"
She smiled, she knew he wanted to help her, but only time could do
that.
And she knew she had to help herself now. "I don't have any
family. But
it's not as bad as it sounds. I have friends, and a great job. And
all
the nice people at St. Mary's."
"I'd like to help, if you think I can."." But the
kind of therapy he had
in mind frightened her too much. Although she knew that he would
have
seen her as a therapist too, if she'd wanted. But what he really
wanted
was to date her. And she knew she wasn't ready, and maybe never
would
be.
"I'll call if I need help." She smiled at him, and they
both ordered
coffee. They spent a lovely afternoon, walking around the lake,
and
talking about many things. But he knew now that he couldn't pursue
her.
It was too dangerous for her. Just knowing how he felt had already
made
her step back and put some distance between them.
"Grace," he said when he dropped her off at her place
again, "I don't
ever want to hurt you. I just want to be there, if you want a
friend,"
and then he smiled boyishly, and he looked almost handsome.
"I wouldn't
mind more than that too, but I don't want to push you." And
she was so
young. That was part of it. He didn't dare press her if she wasn't
ready.
"Thanks. I had a great time." She had, and they had
lunch a few more
times after that. He wasn't ready to give up completely, and she
enjoyed
his company, but it never grew to be more than a warm friendship.
In some ways he had taken David's place in her life, if not
Molly's.
Between work, her roommates, and her volunteer work, things rolled
along
smoothly until the spring. And then Lou Marquez started giving
Grace
trouble again. She didn't know it, but he had just broken up with
his
girlfriend and he was looking for trouble. He started showing up
at
Grace's apartment. The others always teased her about him. He
never
explained who he was, nor did Grace, she just said he was a friend
of
her father's. But whenever he came around, he asked all the girls
a lot
of questions. Did they do drugs? Did they like modeling?
Did they meet a lot of guys that way? He even asked Brigitte for a
date
once, and Grace had raised hell with him when she reported to him
at his
office.
"You have no right to do that to me. You have no right to
show up and
harass my friends."
"I can harass anyone I want. And besides, she'd been giving
me the eye
for half an hour. I know what girls like that want. Don't kid
yourself,
sweetheart. She ain't no virgin."
"No, but she's not blind either," Grace flung at him,
and he was madder
than ever. She was getting braver with him mostly because he was
so
outrageous.
"Just be grateful I haven't told them that I'm your probation
officer,
and about your time in prison."
"You do that, and I'll report you. I'll sue you for
embarrassing me and
causing me to lose face in my own home, and with business
associates."
"Bullshit. You're not gonna sue anyone."
She knew she wouldn't, but she had to stand up to him. Like most
bullies, she knew, he'd back off if she really pressed him. He
stopped
coming around as often after that, and she continued to report to
him
weekly in his office.
When Brigitte took a three month modeling job in Tokyo in May,
they
found another girl to take her place. This time it was Mireille, a
French girl. She was from the South of France, from Nice, and she
was
nineteen. And everyone really liked her. She had a passion for all
things American, particularly popcorn and hot dogs. And she loved
American boys, but not as much as they loved her. She was out
every
night from the moment she got there. Which left Divina, Marjorie,
Allyson, and Grace to hang out with each other whenever they
weren't
busy.
The Swansons gave a party on the Fourth of July at their country
house
in Barrington Hills, and all the models drove out there for the
day and
evening. Grace invited Paul, and he had a field day ogling the
models.
Her roommates thought he was very nice, and wanted to know if he
was the
guy she spent all her time with.
"More or less," she said coyly. And they loved it.
And the girls gave her a birthday party after that. It was a big
surprise, and they invited everyone from the agency, and Paul of
course.
It was Grace's twenty-first birthday. And afterwards, they and
Paul sat
in the patio, and she couldn't help thinking how far her life had
come
in the past year. He didn't know it, of course, but she had spent
her
last two birthdays in prison. And now she was here, with him,
living
with a bunch of beautiful girls, and working for a modeling
agency.
It was staggering when she thought about it sometimes. It made her
think
of Luna and Sally, and Molly and David. And it made her sad when
she
realized that she was doing just what Luna had said she should.
She was taking them out, like memories, touching them with her
heart
from time to time, but only for a fleeting moment. And then she'd
go
back to her own life, and remember them briefly. But they were
gone, all
of them.
Forever. She hadn't heard from David since his son was born in
March,
and she had finally stopped writing to Luna and Sally. They'd
never
answered her letters.
She looked up and saw a falling star, and without waiting, she
closed
her eyes, and thought about them, and then she made a wish that
one day,
it really all would be behind her. For the moment, Lou Marquez was
still
there, threatening to reveal her secrets to her friends.
There was still someone with a leash on her. And she just hoped
that one
day she'd be free at last, for the first time in her life, with no
one
to be afraid of.
"What did you wish for just then?" Paul asked, watching
her. He had
never forced her to move ahead to a relationship she didn't want.
But he still hoped that one day she'd be ready for him. He knew
what he
would have wished on a falling star. He would have wished for her
to
want him.
"I was just thinking about some old friends," she smiled
sadly at him,
"and hoping that one day all the bad times will be a distant
memory."
His heart went out to her as she said- it.
"Aren't they by now?" He didn't know how far behind her
the bad times
were, or how close. She had never told him, and he hadn't pressed
her.
"Aren't they gone?" he asked gently.
"Almost," she smiled at him, glad that he was her
friend, " ... lmost
... Maybe next year."
Chapter 8.
the Swansons continued to try to talk Grace into modeling for
them,
but instead she got a fat raise and became Cheryl's secretary, and
both Swansons claimed that it was really Grace who ran the agency
for
them. She was efficient, she was fast, she was organized, and
bright and
quiet. She knew all of the girls who worked for them, and most of
the
men, and everyone liked her. Things were lively at the apartment
too.
Brigitte was back from Tokyo by then, but she had moved in with a
photographer, instead of the girls at the town house. Allyson had
gone
to L.A. for a part in a movie. And Divina was modeling in Paris.
Only Marjorie and Grace were left, and Mireille, who was
threatening to
move in with her latest boyfriend. Two new girls moved in as fast
as the
first two left. And at Christmas, Marjorie announced her
engagement. But
it was never a problem for Grace to find new roommates. Girls
arrived in
Chicago constantly, to find modeling work, and they always needed
an
apartment.
Louis Marquez, her probation officer, came to check her out
regularly.
And at least once a month, he forced Grace to take a drug test.
But she
was always clean, which was a disappointment to him. Out of sheer
meanness, he would have liked to bust her.
"What a little shit he is," Marjorie said, when he
showed up again after
Christmas, to check out their new roommates. "Your father
sure had some
sleazy friends," she said, annoyed that he had put a hand on
her behind
again, while pretending to reach for an ashtray. He reeked of
cigarettes
and sweat, and every single piece of clothing he had was
polyester. "Why
don't you just tell him to get lost?" she said, shuddering,
after he
left. He made you want to take a bath every time you saw him.
Grace
would have liked nothing better than to tell him not to come to
the
house anymore. But she had no choice. She had another nine months
of
probation, and then the nightmare would be over.
In March, the Swansons invited her to go to New York with them,
and she
had to tell them that she couldn't. She asked her probation
officer for
permission to go with them, and he absolutely refused to let her
do it.
And she had to tell them that she had another commitment. She was
disappointed not to go, but she managed to keep busy anyway. She
still
spent two nights a week and Sundays at St. Mary's. She saw Paul
Weinberg
whenever she went, and she was very fond of him, but she also knew
that
he had given up waiting for her and was seriously involved with
one of
the nurses.
Cheryl Swanson tried to fix her up with dates from time to time,
but
Grace continued to have no interest in that direction. She was too
afraid, and too deeply scarred by everything that had happened.
Going out with anyone always reminded her of the horrors she had
experienced with her father.
Until June. When Marcus Anders walked into the agency to see
Cheryl.
He was one of the best-looking men Grace had ever seen, with thick
blond
hair and a boyish smile, and freckles. He looked half man, half
boy, and
at first Grace thought he was one of their models.
He had just arrived from Detroit, and his portfolio was very
impressive.
He had done a lot of commercial work, and he was heading for the
big
time. He had thought about going to L.A. Or New York, but he
wanted to
make it to the top in stages, which was smart of him. He was very
cool,
and very sure of himself, and he had a great sense of humor. He
teased
Grace a little bit, after his interview, and chatted with her
about
where to look for an apartment. She recommended some rental
agencies,
and introduced him to some of the models as they came in. But he
didn't
seem particularly interested in them. He saw models constantly. It
was
Grace who really caught his eye, and before he left, he asked
about
photographing her, just for fun, but she laughed and shook her
head. She
had had similar offers before, and she had no interest in them.
"No, thanks. I keep well away from cameras."
"What's that all about? Wanted by the cops? Hiding
something?"
"Absolutely. I'm wanted by the FBI," she grinned easily.
He was fun to
talk to, but she didn't want to be snowed by him, or anyone. A lot
of
the photographers used their cameras to lure women. "I'm just
not hung
up on having my picture taken."
"Smart girl." He admired her, and he sat across her desk
from her,
looking breathtakingly young and healthy and handsome. "But
you'd
photograph incredibly. You have fabulous bones, and wonderful
eyes," and
as he looked at her, he could see there was more there than he had
first
suspected. There was sorrow in her eyes, an old deep pain that she
hid
from the world, but not from him. Marcus could see it plainly, and
she
turned away with a laugh and a shrug, sensing that he was coming
too
close to her, and she didn't want that. "Why don't we just
play
sometime, and see what we come up with? You might put the rest of
these
girls out of business." It was the only thing he understood,
the only
thing he truly loved. He had had a lifelong love affair with his
camera.
"I wouldn't want to frighten them," Grace teased,
turning to look at him
again. She was wearing a tight black skirt and a black sweater.
She had learned to dress with a certain amount of big city
sophistication, after nearly two years of being with the Swansons.
"Give it a thought." Marcus smiled at her, and unreeled
his long legs
from the black leather chair in her office. "I'll be back on
Monday."
But he called her again the next day, just to chat and tell her
about
the studios he'd looked at. According to him, they were all
terrible,
and he was really lonely. Grace laughed at him, and pretended to
be
sympathetic, and then he asked her out to dinner.
"Sorry. Can't," she said curtly, she was used to fending
off men.
It was never a problem. "I'm busy tonight." She always
made it sound as
though there were men in her life, but of course all there were
were
battered women and children.
"Tomorrow then."
"I've got to work late. We're shooting a big commercial with
nine girls,
and Cheryl wants me to be there."
"No prob. I'll come too. Come on." He sounded like a kid
again, and it
touched her a little bit, in spite of her resolve not to let it.
"I'm a new boy in town, I don't know anyone. I'm
lonely."
"Oh come on ... Marcus ... don't be a spoiled brat."
"But I am," he said
proudly, and they both laughed. In the end, in spite of herself,
she let
him go to the commercial with them, and he was very helpful. There
were
so many people there that no one even noticed an extra body on the
set.
All the models seemed to like him a lot.
He was bright, he was fun, and he wasn't as arrogant as a lot of
the
photographers were. He seemed like a terrific guy, and after he
had
shown up at the agency every day for a week, Grace finally
relented and
let him take her out to dinner. It was the first date she had had
since
Paul Weinberg.
Marcus couldn't believe she was only twenty-one when she told him,
she
was so mature for her age, and she had a sophisticated look to her
that
made her seem older. She still wore her thick auburn hair pulled
straight back, but she often wore it in a chignon now, and she
wore the
kind of clothes she saw the models wear, whenever she could afford
them.
But Marcus was used to young girls who looked older than they
were.
Once or twice, he'd even been foolish enough to go out with
fifteen-year-old models, thinking they were older.
"So what do you do yourself when you're not working?" he
asked with
interest over dinner at Gordon. He had just found a studio, it was
a
sensational loft, he'd explained, with living quarters and
everything he
needed.
"I keep busy enough." She had started bicycling, and one
of her new
roommates was teaching her to play tennis. They were pastimes
she'd
never had time for before. The only sports she'd ever done were a
little
weight lifting and some jogging in prison, but she wasn't about to
tell
him about her two years at Dwight. She never intended to tell
anyone
that, for the rest of her life. She had taken Luna's advice to
heart,
and left it firmly behind her.
"Do you have a lot of friends?" he asked, intrigued by
her, she was very
closed and very private, and yet he sensed that there was a wealth
of
woman within her.
"Enough," she smiled, but the truth was, she didn't, and
he had already
heard that. He had asked a lot of people about her. He already
knew that
she never went out with men, that she kept to herself, that she
was very
shy, and she did some kind of volunteer work. He asked her about
it over
coffee, and she told him a little about St. Mary's.
"Why that? What's so intriguing to you about battered
women?"
"They need help desperately," she said in a serious
tone, "women in that
situation think they have no way out, no options. They stand on
the edge
of a burning building and you have to pull them out of it, they
won't
just jump to freedom." She knew better than anyone. She had
never
thought there was any way to get free of her own situation.
She had had to kill to save herself, and then at what cost. She
wanted
others to have to go to less extreme measures than she did.
"What makes you care about them so much, Grace?" He was
so curious about
her, and she gave away so little. He had been conscious all
through
dinner how cautious she was, how outwardly friendly, but inwardly
guarded.
"It's just something I want to do. It means a lot to me
especially
working with the kids. They're so helpless, and so damaged by
everything
they've been through," just as she was, and she knew it.
She knew fully how scarred she was, and she didn't want them to be
too.
It was her gift to them, and it made her life worth living,
knowing that
her pain would serve someone else, and keep them from traveling
the same
agonizing road she had. "I don't know, I guess I have a knack
for it. I
think about going back to school, and getting a psych degree
sometimes,
but I never seem to have time, with work and everything. ... maybe
someday."
"You don't need a psych degree," he grinned, and she
felt something for
him she'd never felt before, and it frightened her more than a
little.
He was very appealing. "You need a man," he concluded.
"What makes you so sure?" She smiled at him. He was like
a big beautiful
kid, as he reached out and took her hand in his own.
"Because you're lonely as hell, in spite of everything you
say, and all
the bravado about how great your life is. My guess is you've never
had a
real man at all, in fact," he narrowed his eyes and looked at
her
appraisingly, as she laughed, "I'd bet my last ten cents
you're a
virgin." She made no comment and took her hand away gently.
"I'm right,
aren't I, Grace?" There was so much he didn't know, and she
shrugged
noncommittally. "I am," he said, with confidence, sure
of exactly what
she needed. Tutored by the right man, he sensed that she could be
an
extraordinary woman.
"Standard solutions are not the answer for everyone,
Marcus," she said,
sounding a lot older than twenty-one again. "Some people are
a little
more complicated than that." But Marcus thought he knew her
and she was
just scared, and shy, and very young, and she probably came from a
very
straitlaced background.
"Tell me about your family. What are your parents like?"
"Dead," she said coolly. "They died when I was in
high school."
That explained some of it to him, she had had a major loss, and
had been
alone for several years. That was some of the loneliness, he
suspected.
"Any brothers or sisters?"
"Nope. Just me. No relatives at all, in fact." No wonder
she seemed so
grown up, she had obviously been on her own for years, he
surmised.
He had painted a portrait of her, entirely of his own invention.
"I'm surprised you didn't run out and marry your high school
sweetheart," he said with new respect in his voice.
"Most people would
do something like that, if they found themselves all alone at your
age."
She was a strong girl, in fact she wasn't a girl at all, she was a
woman. And he liked that.
"I didn't have a high school sweetheart to marry me,"
she said
matter-of-factly.
"What did you do? Live with friends?"
"More or less. I lived with a bunch of people." In
prison and jail ... .
she wondered what he would say if she told him the truth. She
couldn't
even begin to imagine his reaction. He would surely be horrified
if she
told him she'd killed her father. And somehow the irony of it made
her
laugh. He really had no idea who she was, or what she was about.
No one
did. The people who knew her were all gone now, like Molly, or
David,
and Luna and Sally. She had stopped sending postcards to them and
she
didn't hear from David anymore. There was no point writing to him
anyway. Her life was her own now. All she could do for the people
she
had cared for, and all the others, was the kind of work she was
doing at
St. Mary's. It was her way of paying back all the people who'd
been kind
to her over the years. There were so few, but in their memory, she
wanted to help others.
"It must be rough for you on holidays," he said
sympathetically.
"Like Christmas."
"Not anymore," she smiled. Not after Dwight. Christmas
could never be as
bad as that again, no matter where she was. "You get used to
it."
"You're a brave girl, Grace." Braver than he knew. Much,
much braver.
They went out for drinks after dinner that night, to a place he'd
discovered that had an old jukebox and fifties music. And on
Sunday they
went bicycling around the lake. It was a beautiful warm June
afternoon
and everything was blossoming. And in spite of all her warnings to
herself, she loved being with him. He was very patient with her,
and
didn't try to rush anything. He seemed to understand that she
needed
time, and a lot of tender loving care before moving forward. But
he was
willing to spend the time with her, and he didn't do anything more
than
kiss her. He was the first man she had ever even been kissed by,
other
than her father. And even that was frightening at first, but she
had to
admit, she liked it.
But as usual, Marjorie was full of warnings when Grace came home
after
spending a Saturday afternoon with him three weeks after he'd come
to
town. They had been out buying secondhand equipment for his
studio.
The agency had already started assigning work to Marcus, and the
Swansons were very pleased. He had a lot of talent. "Enjoy
him while you
can," Cheryl had said with a smile, "he won't be here
long. I'll bet
he's in New York within a year, or Paris. He's too good to last
here."
But Marjorie had other things to say about him. She had a network
of
friends all over the world, who were all models. And a friend of
hers in
Detroit had had some ominous things to report about Marcus.
"She told me he raped some girl a few years ago, Grace. Watch
it.
I don't trust him."
"That's nonsense. He told me all about that. She was sixteen
and she
looked twenty-five. And according to Marcus, she practically raped
him."
Marcus had told her she had practically torn his clothes off: It
had
been four years earlier and he had been naive and foolish. And he
had
seemed genuinely embarrassed when he told her.
"She was thirteen, and her father tried to have him put in
jail,"
Marjorie said sternly. She didn't like stories like that. There
were
lots of stories of abuse of young models. "Supposedly, Marcus
bought his
way out of it. And there was some other story like that, maybe
that was
your sixteen-year-old. And Eloise said he did a lot of porno work
to pay
the rent. He doesn't sound like such a nice guy to me."
"That's bullshit," Grace said, defending him tartly. He
wasn't that kind
of guy. She could tell. If there was one thing she had learned
from her
experiences, and working at the agency, it was people.
"People always say stuff like that when they're jealous. She
probably
had the hots for him, and he didn't go for her so she's pissed
off,"
Grace said matter-of factly, annoyed that Marjorie was being so
unfair
to him.
He didn't deserve that. She was so hard on people sometimes, and
so
uptight. She was like a real house mother. But Grace knew she
didn't
need one.
"Eloise isn't like that," Marjorie said, defending her
friend in
Detroit. "And you'd better watch yourself. You're not as
smart as you
think you are. You don't go out with enough guys to be able to
smell out
the bad ones."
"You don't know what you're talking about." It was the
first time she
had gotten really furious at Marjorie, and her eyes were blazing.
"He's a really decent guy, and he's never done more than kiss
me."
"Great. I'm glad for you. I'm just telling you, the guy has a
lousy
reputation. Listen to that, Grace. Don't be stupid."
"Thank you for the warning," she said, with a tone of
irritation.
And five minutes later she went to her room and slammed the door
behind
her.
What rotten things to say about poor Marcus. But their business
was like
that sometimes. People who didn't get jobs blamed photographers,
and
photographers who wanted to score and didn't said terrible things
about
models, claiming that they were drug addicts, or had come on to
them.
Models claimed they'd been raped. There were a lot of stories like
that
in the business, and Grace knew it. But so did Marjorie. She knew
better
than to listen to that kind of gossip.
And shooting porno was really a lot of nonsense. He had told Grace
that
he had even waited on tables at times in order to pay the rent on
his
studio in Detroit. He had never said a word about porno, and even
as
unattractive as that was, Grace knew instinctively that he would
have.
He was a very open, straightforward person, and he was very honest
about
confessing his faults and past sins to her. She had never trusted
anyone
in recent years as much as she trusted Marcus.
They went to the Swansons' Fourth of July party together in
Barrington
Hills, and Cheryl begged him openly to get Grace to let him take
some
shots of her. She was growing prettier by the day, and she thought
that
Marcus was just the right man to break the ice and get Grace to do
it.
But Grace laughed at them both, and shook her head, as she always
did.
She had absolutely no interest in being a model.
Marcus talked to a lot of the models at the party that afternoon,
and he
seemed to get along with everyone, and that night Marjorie told
her
pointedly that he had made dates with two of them, and she thought
Grace
should know it.
"He's not married to me," she said, defending him again.
They weren't
sleeping with each other after all. He had asked her to, and she
had
said she wasn't ready to make that kind of commitment. But she was
close
to it. She just needed more time with him, although she trusted
him
already. She thought she might be falling in love with him. In a
way,
Marjorie's telling her about the other girls pushed her a little
further
in that direction. But she didn't dare ask him about it when she
saw him
the next day, and he asked about taking her pictures.
"Come on, Grace ... it's not going to hurt anything ... just
for us ...
for me ... you're so beautiful ... let me take some shots of you.
I
won't show them to anyone if you don't like them. I promise.
Cheryl is right. You'd be fabulous as a model."
"But I don't want to be a model," she said, and really
meant it.
"Why not, for heaven's sake? You've got everything it takes.
Height, looks, style, you're thin enough, young enough ... most
girls
would give anything to have what you've got, and have a chance.
Grace, be sensible ... or at least just try it. What could be
easier
than to do it with me? Besides, I want to have some pictures of
you.
I've been seeing you for a month, and I miss you when you're not
around." He teased, and nuzzled her neck, and much to her own
amazement,
by the end of the afternoon, she relented, just for him.
And she made him promise not to show anyone the pictures. They
made a
date for a shoot the following Saturday, and he warned her that
she'd
better not cancel.
"I don't know what you're so shy about." He laughed as
they made
spaghetti in his kitchen in the loft. And that night they came
closer to
making love than ever before, but in the end, she said she needed
to
wait. It was the wrong time of the month for her, and that wasn't
the
way she wanted to start their relationship. Besides, she wanted to
buy a
little more time, and a week wouldn't hurt anything. The way she
felt
about him, it would only make it better.
She worried about their photo session all week, she hated the idea
of
being the center of attention like that, and of being a sex
object.
She hated everything it stood for. She liked working with the
models at
the agency, but she had never wanted to be one of them. It was
really
only for Marcus that she was doing it, and for fun. He made
everything
fun to do, as long as she did it with him. And the next Saturday
she
turned up promptly at ten o'clock, at the studio, as she'd
promised.
She'd been at St. Mary's the night before, she'd worked late, and
she
was tired.
He made her some coffee when she arrived, and he had already set
up.
There was a huge white leather chair, and a white fox throw
covering
part of it, and all he wanted was for her to sprawl on it in her
jeans,
and a white T-shirt. He made her untie her hair, and it fell over
her
shoulders lavishly, and then he exchanged the T-shirt for his own
starched white shirt, and little by little he got her to unbutton
it,
but the shots were all very chaste and modest. And she was
surprised by
how much fun it was. He took her in a thousand poses, he had great
music
on, and each shot was almost like a caress as he danced around
her.
They were still taking photographs at noon, and he handed her a
glass of
wine, and promised her a huge lunch of homemade pasta when she was
finished.
"You know the way to a girl's heart at least," she
laughed, and he
stopped inches from her and peered around the camera sadly.
"I wish I did ... I've been working awfully hard at it,"
he confessed,
and she blushed and looked demure as he took a shot of her that he
was
thrilled with. Cheryl was going to love these. "Am I getting
any closer,
Grace? ... to your heart, I mean," he whispered sensually,
and she felt
a hot flush shoot through her. The wine had made her feel woozy,
and she
remembered that she hadn't bothered to eat breakfast. It had been
stupid
to drink wine on an empty stomach, and he'd already poured her a
second
one, and she was halfway through it.
She didn't usually drink wine in the daytime, and she was
surprised at
how strong this was, when he asked her shyly to take off her
jeans,
pointing out that the shirt was long enough to cover her
completely.
In fact it was halfway to her knees, but she balked at taking her
jeans
off. But finally, when he promised her again that he wouldn't even
show
Cheryl the shots, she slipped them off, and lay back against the
fur
again with bare legs and feet and only his shirt covering her,
unbuttoned to the waist, but not revealing anything. Her breasts
were
covered. She felt herself drift off to sleep slowly then, as she
lay on
the chair, and when she woke up he was kissing her, and she felt
his
hands caressing her all over. She felt his lips and hands, and she
kept
hearing clicks, and seeing flashes, but she couldn't tell what was
happening, everything was swirling l around her, and she kept
drifting
off and waking up. She felt sick, but she couldn't move, or stop,
or get
up, or open her eyes and he kept kissing her, and then she felt
him
touching her, and for a minute she thought she felt an old
familiar
feeling of terror, but when she opened her eyes again, she knew
she had
been dreaming. Marcus was standing there, looking down at her, and
smiling at her. Her mouth felt dry, and she felt strangely
nauseous.
"What's happening?" She felt frightened and sick, and
there were spots
in front of her eyes now, and he was just standing there,
laughing.
"I think the wine got the best of you."
"I'm really sorry." She was mortified, but then he knelt
down next to
her and kissed her so hard it made her dizzy again. But she liked
it.
There was a heady feeling to what was happening, she wanted it to
stop,
and yet she didn't.
"I'm not sorry at all," he whispered from between her
breasts.
"You're gorgeous when you're drunk." She lay back and
closed her eyes
then, and his tongue trailed tantalizingly down her stomach to her
underwear, and then forced its way inside it, licking lower and
lower,
until suddenly her eyes flew open, and she jumped. She couldn't.
"Come on, baby. ... Please ..." How long did she expect
him to wait?
"Please ... Grace ... I need you ..."
"I can't," she whispered hoarsely, wanting him, but too
afraid to let
him take her. All she could think of now was the night her father
had
died, as the room spun around, and she felt sick again. The wine
had
really done her in, and suddenly she felt like throwing up and she
was
afraid to say it. Marcus was touching her then, and feeling places
where
no one had been in years, no one had ever been except her father.
"I can't ..." she said again. But she couldn't muster
the strength to
stop him.
"Oh for chrissake, why not?" For the first time since
he'd known her,
Marcus lost his temper, but as he did, she felt the wine take over
again, and with no warning, she swooned and fainted. And when she
woke
up, he was lying beside her on the huge white leather chair
covered in
the white fur, and he had all his clothes off.
She was still wearing his shirt and her underwear, and he was
smiling at
her. And all she could feel was a sudden wave of terror. She
couldn't
remember anything except passing out. She didn't know how long
she'd
been out, or what they'd done, but it was obvious that something
had
happened.
"Marcus, what happened?" she asked him in a terrified
voice, feeling
very sick now, as she pulled his shirt tight around her.
"Wouldn't you like to know." He looked amused, he was
laughing at her.
She had been completely unconscious. "You were great, babe.
Unforgettable." He sounded cold and hard and angry.
"How can you say that?" She started to cry. "How
could you do that with
me passed out?" She felt her stomach rise to her throat
again, and her
chest tightened with asthma, but she felt too sick to look for her
inhaler. She couldn't even sit up and look around her.
"How do you know what I did?" he said evilly, as he
walked across the
room, his splendid body exposed for her to see it. "Maybe I
always work
like this. It's so much cooler." He turned to face her then,
so she
could see all of him, and she looked away, trying not to see it.
This was not how she had wanted their first time to be, and she
didn't
know if she was more hurt than angry. It was what it had always
been for
her.
Rape. It was what he had wanted. "Actually," he went on,
as he strolled
slowly back toward her, "nothing happened, Grace. I'm not a
necrophiliac. I don't go around fucking corpses. And that's what
you
are, isn't it? You're dead. You go around pretending you're alive,
and
teasing men, but when it gets down to the big time, you just roll
over
and play dead, and dish out a lot of excuses."
"They're not excuses," she said, sitting up awkwardly.
She had found her
jeans on the floor, and she pulled them on and then stood up
unsteadily.
She felt awful. And she turned away a moment later to take his
shirt off
and put her own on. She didn't even waste time putting her bra on.
She
felt too sick to worry about it. Her head was both pounding and
reeling.
"I can't explain it, that's all," she said in answer to
his accusations.
She was too sick to discuss it, and she kept having the feeling
that
something terrible had happened.
She remembered kissing him, and his saying things to her, and for
some
reason she remembered lying there with him, but she couldn't
remember
anything else. She kept hoping it was all a nightmare induced by
too
much wine on an empty stomach. She kept having flashes of him
tantalizing her with his body. But she had no memory of his raping
her.
And she was almost certain that he hadn't.
"Even virgins fuck eventually. What makes you think you're so
special?"
Marcus was still furious at her. She was a tease and he was bored
with
it. There were plenty of other girls he could have had, and he had
every
intention of having all of them. He had had it with Grace Adams.
"I'm just scared, that's all. It's hard to explain." Why
was he so angry
at her? And why did she keep remembering him naked above her?
"You're not scared," he said, picking up his camera and
making no effort
whatsoever to put his clothes on. "You're psychotic. You
looked like you
were going to kill someone when I put a hand on you.
What is it with you anyway? Are you gay?"
"No, I'm not." But he wasn't far from the truth about
her killing
someone, and she knew it. Maybe she would always be that way.
Maybe she
would never be able to have sex with anyone. But she wanted to
know more
than anything now, for sure, if anything had happened while she
was
unconscious. She wasn't sure at all what he had done while she was
passed out. And she didn't like the feeling of the flashes she was
having.
"Tell me the truth. What did you do to me? Did you make love
to
me?" she said with tears in her eyes.
"What difference does it make? I told you I didn't do
anything.
Don't you trust me?" After what had just happened, not
really. He had
taken advantage of her while she was out cold. He had gotten her
to
undress, almost nude, but not entirely, and had taken his own
clothes
off.
It certainly didn't look like a wholesome scene when she woke up,
but
nor did she feel as though she'd been raped. She knew that would
have
been a familiar feeling. Remembering that comforted her. Maybe he
had
done nothing more than she remembered. A lot of fondling and
kissing and
touching. And she had liked most of it, but she knew that it had
scared
her. She had the feeling that he'd been close to making love to
her, but
then he hadn't. Maybe that was why he was so angry. It was plain
old
frustration.
"How can I trust you after what you just did?" she said
softly, fighting
a fresh wave of nausea.
"What did I do? Try to make love to you? It's not against the
law, you
know. People do it every day ... some people even want to. ... and
you're
twenty-one, aren't you? So what are you going to do? Call the cops
because I kissed you and took my pants off?" But she felt
raped anyway.
He had taken photographs she hadn't wanted him to take, and
seduced her
into exposing more of herself than she wanted, and he had tried to
take
advantage of her sexually when she was drunk. The odd thing was
that she
had never gotten drunk on a glass and a half of wine before. And
even
now, she felt ghastly. "I'm sick of playing games with you,
Grace. I've
invested a lot of time, and patience, and Saturday afternoons and
pasta
dinners. We should have been in bed two weeks ago.
I'm not fourteen. I don't do shit like this. There are lots of
other
girls out there who are normal." It was a mean thing to say
to her, but
as she watched him now, in his natural habitat, so full of
himself, as
he finally put his pants on, she realized that he wasn't the man
she'd
thought he was. He had a real mean streak, and it was obvious he
didn't
love her. He had only been nice to her in order to get what he
wanted.
"I'm sorry I wasted so much of your time," she said
coldly.
"So am I," he said nonchalantly. "I'll send the
contact sheets to the
agency. You can pick the shots you like."
"I don't want to see them. You can burn them when you get
them."
"Believe me, I will," he said acidly. "And you're
right, by the way.
You'd make a lousy model." "Thanks," she said
unhappily, as she put on
her sweater. In a single instant, he had become a stranger. And
then,
she picked up her bag and walked to the door, and looked back over
her
shoulder at him. He was standing at a table taking film out of his
camera, and she wondered how she could have been so wrong. But
then,
standing there, looking at him, the room spun around again and she
almost fainted. She wondered if she was coming down with the flu,
or
just upset over everything that had happened. "I'm sorry,
Marcus," she
said sadly. He just shrugged, and turned away from her, acting as
though
he were the injured party.
He had had fun with her for a while, but it was time to move on.
Pretty girls, in his life, were a dime a dozen.
He never said a word to her as she left, and she practically
crawled
downstairs from his loft, hailed a cab, and gave the driver the
address
of the town house. And when they got there, the driver had to
shake her
to wake her up and tell her what the fare was.
"I'm sorry," she said thickly, feeling sick again. She
was feeling
really awful.
"You okay, miss?" He looked concerned as she handed him
the fare and a
good tip, and he watched her go inside. She was weaving.
And as she closed the door behind her, once she got in, Marjorie
looked
up from the couch. She'd been doing her nails, and she was
horrified
when she saw Grace. She was so pale she was green, and she looked
as
though she was going to pass out before she got to her bedroom.
"Hey! ... are you okay?" Marjorie asked, jumping up and
going to her, as
Grace started to collapse in her arms. Marjorie helped her to her
bed,
and Grace lay there, feeling like she was dying.
"I think I have the flu," she said, slurring her words
again.
"Maybe I've been poisoned." "I thought you were
with Marcus," she said
with a frown. "Weren't you going to shoot with him
today?" Marjorie
vaguely remembered.
Grace only nodded. She felt too sick to tell her the details, and
she
wasn't sure she wanted to anyway. But as she lay on her bed, she
started
to drift off again, just the way she had in the white chair, and
then
when she'd woken up and found him naked beside her. Maybe when she
opened her eyes again, Marjorie would be naked, too. She laughed
out
loud, with her eyes closed, and Marjorie stared at her and went to
get a
flashlight and a damp cloth. She was back two minutes later, and
put the
cold cloth on Grace's forehead. Grace opened an eye but only
briefly.
"What happened?" Marjorie asked firmly.
"I'm not sure," Grace said honestly with closed eyes,
and then she
started to cry softly. "It was awful."
"I'll bet it was," Marjorie said angrily. She could
figure it out for
herself, even if Grace couldn't. She turned the flashlight on, and
told
Grace to open her eyes.
"I can't," she said miserably. "My head hurts too
much. I'm dying."
"Open them anyway. I want to see something."
"Nothing's wrong with my eyes ... s'my stomach ... head
..."
"Come on, open them ... just for a second."
Grace fought to open her eyes, and Marjorie shone the flashlight
in
them, which felt like daggers in her head to Grace, but Marjorie
had
seen what she wanted.
"Where were you today?"
"I told you ... with Marcus ..." Her eyes were closed
again, and the
room was spinning.
"Did you eat or drink anything?" There was silence.
"Grace, tell me the
truth, did you do any drugs?"
"Of course not!" She opened her eyes long enough to look
insulted, and
then fought to prop herself up on her elbows. "I've never
done drugs in
my life." "You have now," Marjorie said angrily.
"You're loaded to the
gills."
"With what?" Grace looked frightened.
"I don't know ... coke ... Spanish fly ... downers ... LSD
... . some
weird mixture. God only knows ... what did he give you?"
All I had was two glasses of wine ... I didn't even finish the
second
one." She laid her head back on the pillow again. It made her
feel too
sick to sit up. She felt even worse than she had at the loft.
It was as though the effect of whatever he had given her had
heightened.
"He must have spiked it. Did you feel weird while you were
there?"
"Oh did I ..." Grace moaned. "It was so
strange." She looked up at her
friend and started to cry. "I couldn't tell what was a dream
....
and what was real ... he was kissing me and doing things ...
and then I was asleep, and when I woke up he was naked ... but he
said
nothing happened."
"Sonofabitch, he raped you!" Marjorie wanted to kill
him, on behalf of
Grace, and their entire sex. She had never liked him. She hated
bastards
like that, particularly the ones who took advantage of kids or
greenhorns. It was such easy sport, and so damn vicious. But Grace
just
looked confused as she went on.
"I don't even know if he did ... I don't think so ... I don't
remember."
"Why did he have his clothes off then?" Marjorie said
suspiciously.
"Did you have sex with him before you passed out?"
"No. I just kissed him ... I didn't want to ... I was scared
... . I did
want to ... but then I tried to stop him. And he was really mad at
me.
He said I was psychotic, and a tease ... he said he wouldn't make
love
to me because it would be like ... like doing it to a dead body
..."
"But he let you think he did, is that it? What a nice
guy."
Marjorie was dripping venom for Marcus. "Did he take pictures
of you
with your clothes off?"
"I was wearing underpants and his shirt when I passed
out," or at least
that was what she remembered and she'd been wearing the same when
she
woke up. She couldn't remember her clothes ever coming off, even
when
he'd touched her.
"You'd better ask him to give you the negatives. Tell him
you'll call
the cops if he doesn't. If you want, I'll call and tell him."
"No, I'll call." She was too mortified to have anyone
else involved.
It was bad enough telling Marjorie what had happened. But it was
comforting too to have her there. She brought Grace another damp
cloth
and a cup of hot tea, and half an hour later, she felt a little
better,
as Marjorie sat on the floor next to her bed and watched her.
"I had a guy do that to me once, when I first started
working. He
slipped me a Mickey in a drink, and the next thing I knew, he
wanted me
to do porno shots with some other girl who was as drugged out as I
was."
"What did you do?"
"My father called the cops on him, and threatened to beat the
crap out
of him. We never posed for the shots anyway, but plenty of girls
do.
Some of them don't even have to be drugged. They're too scared not
to.
The guys tell them they'll never work again, or God knows what,
and they
do it."
listening to her made Grace's blood run cold. She'd been falling
in love
with him. She'd trusted him. And what if he had taken photographs
of her
with her clothes off while she was passed out?
"Do you think he did something like that?" she asked in
a terrified
voice, remembering what Marjorie's friend from Detroit had said,
and she
hadn't believed, that Marcus had shot porno.
"Was there anyone else in the studio with you?" Marjorie
asked
worriedly.
"No, just the two of us. I'm sure of it. I think I was only
out for a
few minutes."
"Long enough for him to get his pants off anyway,"
Marjorie said, angry
all over again. "No, I don't suppose he did. At worst, he got
a couple
of nude shots. And there's not much he can do with them without a
release from you, if you're recognizable. He can't show your face
in
shots like that, without having you sign a release. The only use
they'd
be to him would be to blackmail you, and that's not worth much.
What's he going to get out of you?" She smiled at her friend.
"Two
hundred dollars? Besides, it takes time and some cooperation to
set up
those pornos. They usually use a couple of girls, some guys, or at
least
one guy. Even if they drug you out, you've got to be alive enough
to
play the game. Sounds like you weren't a lot of fun after he hit
you
with his magic potion," Marjorie laughed, and Grace smiled
for the first
time in hours, "sounds like he overestimated his victim, you
must have
gone over like a tree in the forest."
They both laughed out loud, and it was a relief to laugh about it.
It had been such an awful scene, and a brutal disappointment, but
she
couldn't help wondering if he hadn't drugged her or tried to force
it,
would she have been able to do it? Maybe she never would. But she
certainly had no desire to try again, and certainly not with Marcus.
"I don't drink very much, and I've never done drugs. It just
made me
feel really sick."
"So I noticed," Marjorie smiled sympathetically,
"you were the color of
St. Patrick's Day when you got in." And then she decided to
make a
suggestion. "I think the photographs are pretty much under
control, or
they will be when you ask him for the negatives. But maybe you'd
like to
check out some thing else. You want to make a quick trip to my
doctor?
She's real nice, and I'll take you, Grace. I think you ought to
know if
he did anything.
They can tell. It's kind of embarrassing, but you ought to know.
Maybe he just played around a little bit, or he could have done a
lot
worse while you were out cold. At least you should know it."
"I think I'd remember ... I remember being scared and telling
him not
to."
"So does every rape victim in the world. It doesn't stop
anyone if they
don't want to stop. Wouldn't you feel better knowing for sure?
And if he did rape you, you could press charges." And then
what?
Start the nightmare all over again? She dreaded that, dreaded the
attention, the stories in the news. Secretary accuses fashion
photographer of rape ... . he says she wanted it, posed for nude
photographs ... the very thought of it made her skin crawl. But
Marjorie
was right. It would be better to know at least ... and what if she
got
pregnant ... it wasn't impossible, and the thought terrified her.
She
resisted at first and then finally she let Marjorie call the
doctor for
her, and at five o'clock they went to her office. Grace was a
little
more clearheaded by then, and the doctor confirmed that she'd been
drugged with something.
"Nice guy," she commented, and Grace flinched at the
exam. It reminded
her of the police exams after she killed her father. But the
doctor
looked surprised at what she saw. There was no evidence of recent
intercourse, but there was a lot of old scarring. She suspected
what it
meant, and she was very gentle when she asked Grace some
questions.
She reassured her that however great a cad the guy had been in
drugging
her, there was no sign of penetration or ejaculation.
"That's something at least." So all she had to worry
about was the
pictures. And what Marjorie had said was reassuring. Even if he
had
taken pictures of her that were compromising, if she was
recognizable,
he couldn't use them without a release, and if she wasn't, who
cared.
And with any luck at all, he'd give back the pictures. It was
still
disgusting to think he'd taken them if he had, but she was
beginning to
think he had just staged the whole thing to punish her for balking
at
sleeping with him. But the drugs hadn't helped, they had only made
her
more frightened ..."Grace, have you ever been raped?"
the doctor asked,
but she already knew the answer when Grace nodded. "How old
were you?"
"Thirteen ... fourteen ... fifteen ... sixteen ... eventeen
..." The
doctor wasn't sure what she meant at first.
"You were raped four times?" That was certainly unusual.
Maybe she'd had psychological problems that had led her to put
herself
at risk repeatedly, but Grace shook her head with a woeful
expression.
"No. I was raped pretty much every day for four years ... by
my father
..."
There was a long moment of silence as the doctor absorbed it.
"I'm
sorry," she said quietly. She saw cases like that sometimes
and they
broke her heart, particularly with young girls like Grace had
been.
"Did he get help? Did someone intervene?" Yes, she said
to herself, I
did. She had intervened. She had saved herself. No one else would
have
helped her.
"He died. That stopped it." The doctor nodded.
"Have you ever had intercourse ... uh ... normally ... with a
man, since
then?" Grace shook her head in answer.
"I think that's what happened today. I think maybe he got
overanxious,
and wanted to make sure I'd play, so he put something in my drink.
...
we'd been going out for a month, and nothing had happened ... I
was ...
I wanted to be sure ... I was scared ... he said I. ... he said I
got
really scared when he tried ..."
"I'm sure you did. Drugging you is not the answer. You need
time, and
therapy, and the right man. This one certainly doesn't sound like
he
is," she said calmly.
"I figured that out," Grace sighed, but she was relieved
to know that he
hadn't raped her. That would have been adding insult to injury.
The doctor offered her the name of a therapist, and Grace took it
from
her, but she didn't intend to call him. She didn't want to talk
about
her past anymore, her father, her four years of hell, and two
years at
Dwight. She had talked to Molly about all of it, and then Molly
had
died. She didn't want to open it up to anyone again. All she
wanted was
what she had. A few friends like Marjorie, and her roommates, her
job,
and the women and kids at St. Mary's to give her heart to. It was
enough
for her, even if no one else understood it.
She thanked the doctor and went home with Marjorie, and slept off
the
drugs. She went to bed at eight o'clock and woke up at two the
next
afternoon, much to Marjorie's amazement.
"What did he give you? An elephant tranquilizer?"
"Maybe." Grace grinned. She felt better. It had been a
horrible
experience, but she'd been through worse. And fortunately, she was
resilient. She went to work at St. Mary's that afternoon, and that
night, she called Marcus. She half expected to get his machine,
but she
was relieved when he picked up the phone himself. He sounded
surprised
to hear her.
"Feeling better?" he asked sarcastically.
"That was a lousy thing to do," she said simply. "I
got really sick from
whatever you gave me."
"Sorry. All it was was a few Valiums and some magic dust for
chrissake.
I figured you needed some help loosening up."
She wanted to ask him just how loose she'd gotten, but instead she
said,
"You didn't need to do that."
"So I noticed. It was a wasted effort. Thanks a lot for
stringing me
along for the past five weeks. I really enjoyed it."
"I wasn't stringing you along." She sounded hurt.
"It's hard for me.
It's difficult to explain, but ..."
"Don't bother, Grace. I get it. I don't know what your story
is, but it
obviously doesn't include guys, or at least not guys like me. I
get it."
"No, you don't," she said, getting angry. How the hell
could he know?
"Well, maybe I don't want to. Nobody needs this shit. I
thought you'd
knock my head off when I laid a hand on you." She didn't
remember that
at all, but it was certainly possible. Obviously, she'd panicked.
"What you need is a good shrink, not a boyfriend."
"Thanks for the advice. And the other thing I need are the
negatives of
the pictures you took. I want them back on Monday."
"Really now? And who says I took any pictures?"
"Let's not play that
game," she said quietly. "You took plenty of pictures
while I was awake,
and I heard the camera clicking and flashing while I was woozy. I
want
the negatives, Marcus."
"I'll have to see if I can find them," he said coolly,
"I have an awful
lot of stuff here."
"Listen, I can call the police and say you raped me."
"The hell I did. I don't think anyone's been in that concrete
box of
yours in years, if ever, so you're going to have a hell of a time
selling that one. I didn't do shit to you except kiss you a few
times
and take my own clothes off. Big fucking deal, Miss
Virginal-don't-lay-a-hand-on-me. You can't go to jail for taking
your
clothes off in your own apartment. You never even had your pants
off."
She wasn't sure why, but she believed him, and she was relieved to
hear
it.
"And what about the pictures?"
"What about them? All they are is a bunch of pictures of you
in a man's
shirt with your eyes closed. Big fucking deal. You weren't naked
for
chrissake. You never even opened the shirt. And half the time you
were
snoring." "I have asthma," she said primly.
"And I don't give a damn how
chaste the pictures are. I want them. You can't do anything with
them
without a release anyway, so they're no good to you." She was
grateful
for Marjorie's advice as she attacked him.
"What makes you think you didn't sign one?" he teased
her as her
heart sank. "Besides, maybe I want them for my
scrapbook."
"You have no right to them. And are you telling me I signed a
release
while I was drugged?" She was beginning to panic.
"I'm not telling you a damn thing. And for all the hoops you
put me
through, I have a right to anything I want. You're nothing but a
prick
tease, you little bitch. And you keep your hands off my fucking
pictures. I don't owe you anything. Get lost, you got that?"
He already
had a date that night with one of the other girls from the agency,
and
Grace heard all about it on Monday morning.
Cheryl asked her how the shoot with Marcus had gone on Saturday,
and
Grace was vague and said she'd had the flu and couldn't do it.
But on her birthday a few weeks after that, when she turned
twenty-two,
Bob Swanson took her to lunch to celebrate. Cheryl was in New York
on
business for the agency, and Bob had taken her to Nick's Fishmarket.
He had just poured her a glass of champagne, when he turned to her
with
a smile and an appreciative look. Grace had always appealed to
him, and
he agreed with his wife, she was a godsend.
"I saw Marcus Anders the other day, by the way." She
tried to look
unconcerned and sip her champagne while he chatted. It was Dom
Perignon
and the first alcohol she had touched since Marcus had drugged
her.
And even now, the excellent French champagne made her feel faintly
queasy.
Bob lowered his voice and looked at her, as he slipped a hand over
hers
and squeezed it. "He showed me some pretty sensational
pictures of you,
Grace. You've been hiding from us ... I think you've got a real
future.
They were the hottest shots I've seen in years ... there aren't a
lot of
models who can heat it up like that. You're going to have guys
panting."
She felt sick as she looked at him, and tried to pretend she
didn't know
what he meant. But it was useless.
What a bastard Marcus was to have shown him. He had never sent her
either the photographs or the negatives, and he wouldn't return
her
calls now.
He had never really answered her either about the release, but she
was
sure she had never signed one. She had been in no state to sign
anything, and she didn't remember anything like that. He was just
trying
to scare her.
"I don't know what you mean, Bob," she said icily,
sipping her
champagne, and trying not to look embarrassed or worried. "We
only took
a few, and then I got sick. I had the flu that day."
"If that's how you look with the flu, you should get sick
more often."
And then she couldn't stand it any longer, and looked her boss
squarely
in the eye. It was like facing a hungry lion. He was a big man,
and he
had a big appetite, she knew from a number of the models.
"What exactly did he show you?"
"I'm sure you remember the shots he took. Looked like you
were wearing a
man's shirt, it was open all the way down, and your head was
thrown back
... looked pretty passionate to me, like you'd just had sex with
him, or
were about to."
"I was dressed, wasn't I?"
"Yeah, pretty much. You had the shirt on anyway, for what
that was
worth. You couldn't see anything you shouldn't have, but that look
on
your face told the whole story." At least Marcus hadn't taken
her shirt
off. She was grateful for small favors.
"I was probably asleep. He drugged me."
"You didn't look drugged to me. You looked sensual as hell.
Grace, I
mean it. You really should be modeling, or in movies."
"Pornos maybe?" she said angrily.
"Sure," he said happily, "if that turns you on. You
like pornos?" he
said with interest. "You know, Gracie, I have an idea."
In fact, he had
had the idea well before lunch. He had called to rent a suite
upstairs
in the hotel before they arrived, and it was waiting for them with
more
champagne at that very moment. Marcus had pretty much let him know
that
she looked prim, but she was easy. Bob lowered his voice when he
talked
to her, and squeezed her hand again. "I've got a suite
waiting for us
upstairs, the biggest one in the place. I even requested satin
sheets.
... and they've got a video channel that offers every porno movie
you
could ever want to see. Maybe you should see a few before you go
into
the business." She wanted to throw up listening to him, and
she felt
tears rise in her throat as she restrained a desire to slap him.
"I'm not going upstairs with you, Bob. Now or ever. And if
that means
you're going to fire me, then I quit. But I'm not a hooker, or a
porno
queen, or a piece of ass on the menu for you to grab like an hors
d'oeuvre any time you want to."
"What's that supposed to mean?" He looked annoyed.
"Marcus said you were
the hottest babe in town, and I thought maybe you'd like to have
some
fun ... I saw those pictures," he looked at her angrily.
"You looked like you were about to come all over his lens, so
what's the
Virgin Mary routine? You afraid of Cheryl? She'll never know.
She never does." No, but everyone else in town did. She
wanted to scream
looking at him, and what a rotten thing for Marcus to tell him.
"I like Cheryl. I like you. I'm not going to sleep with you,
and I never
slept with Marcus. I don't know why he told you that, except maybe
to
get even with me. And I told you, he drugged me. I was asleep when
he
took most of those pictures." "In his bed
apparently," Bob said with a
look of vast annoyance.
He hadn't thought she'd be so difficult with him, after what
Marcus had
said about her. He'd always thought she was pretty straight, and
he had
left her alone, but Marcus had told him she did a lot of drugs and
loved
kinky sex, and Bob had believed him.
"I was in a chair in his studio."
"With your legs three feet apart, I'd say." He got
excited again
thinking about it.
"With my clothes off?" She looked horrified at what he'd
just said, and
he laughed.
"I couldn't tell, the shirttails were hanging between your
legs, but the
message was pretty clear. So what about it? How about a little
birthday
present upstairs between you and Uncle Bob? Just our little
secret."
"I'm sorry." The tears welled up in her eyes, and
spilled over. At
twenty-two, she still felt like a child sometimes, and why did
this keep
happening to her? Why did men hate her so much that all they
wanted to
do was use her? "I just can't, Bob," she said, crying at
the table,
which seemed to annoy him more because it attracted attention.
"Stop that," he said brusquely, and then narrowed his
eyes as he leaned
closer to her. "Let me put it to you this way, Grace. We go
upstairs for
an hour or two, and celebrate your birthday, or you're out of a
job as
of this minute. Now is it Happy Birthday," or Happy Trails to
You,"
which is it?" If it hadn't been so awful, she would have laughed,
but
Grace wasn't laughing, she just cried harder, as she looked him in
the
eye and told him.
"I guess I'm out of a job then. I'll pick my paycheck up
tomorrow."
She left the table without saying another word and went back to
her
apartment in tears. And the next day she went back to the agency
to pick
up her things, and her last paycheck.
Cheryl returned from New York the next day, and she smiled broadly
when
she saw Grace come in that morning. Grace couldn't help wondering
what
Bob had told her. But it didn't matter anymore. She had made her
mind
up. She only had a little over two months left until her probation
ended
anyway, and then she could do anything she wanted.
"Feeling better?" Cheryl asked sunnily. She'd had a ball
in New York.
She always did. Sometimes she was sorry they didn't live there.
"Yeah, I'm fine," Grace said quietly. After twenty-one
months of working
for them, she was actually sorry to leave them, but she knew she
had no
choice now.
"Bob said you got a terrible case of food poisoning yesterday
at lunch,
and had to go home. Poor baby." Cheryl patted her arm, and
hurried back
to her office. She seemed to have no idea that Grace had been
fired, or
was quitting. And at that moment, Bob came out, and looked at her
blankly.
"Feeling better, Grace?" he asked as though nothing had
happened between
them. And she spoke quietly, so no one else could hear her.
"I came to pick up my check, and pack my things."
"You don't need to do
that," he said with no expression whatsoever. "I think
we can both
forget it, can't we?" He looked at her pointedly, and she
hesitated for
a long moment, and then nodded. There was no point creating a
scandal
over it, it had happened, and now she knew what she had to do. It
was
time.
She waited another six weeks till Labor Day, and then gave them a
month's notice. Cheryl was heartbroken, and Bob pretended to be
too, and
Marjorie cried when Grace told her. But in another three weeks
she'd be
free from probation, and she knew it was time to leave Chicago.
She was
pretty sure by then that the photographs Marcus had taken were not
obscene, even Bob Swanson had said she was completely covered by
the
man's shirt and nothing was exposed, but they were unpleasant
anyway,
and he had it in for her. And so did Bob. Marcus was prepared to
lie and
tell people she was a cheap trick. And God only knew what Bob
would say
to protect himself, maybe that she'd put the make on him, if it
ever
served his purpose. She was tired of people like them,
photographers who
thought they owned the world, and models who were all too willing
to be
exploited. And she felt as though she had done all she could at
St.
Mary's. It was time for her to move on. And she knew it.
They gave her a farewell party at the agency, and lots of
photographers
and models came. One of the girls had already agreed to take her
place
at the town house. The day after her last day of work, Grace went
to see
Louis Marquez. She was two days late checking out with him,
because
she'd been too busy packing up, and finishing at the agency, and
legally, she was already out of his jurisdiction when she went to
see
him.
"So where are you going now?" he asked conversationally.
He was really
going to miss her, and his occasional drop-in visits to her
apartment.
"New York."
He raised an eyebrow. "Got a job yet?" She laughed at
the question.
She no longer owed him any explanations. She owed nothing to
anyone.
She had fulfilled all her obligations, and Cheryl had given her a
fantastic reference, which Bob had cosigned.
"Not yet, Mr. Marquez. I'll get one after I get there. I
don't think
it'll be too hard." Now she had references and experience.
She had
everything she needed.
"You shouldda stayed here and been a model. You're as
good-looking as
the rest of those girls, and a whole lot smarter." He
actually said it
almost kindly.
"Thanks," she would have liked to feel at least civil to
him, but she
didn't. He had been rotten to her for the entire two years, and
she
never wanted to see him again. She signed all the necessary
papers, and
as she handed him his pen, he grabbed her hand, and she looked up
at him
in surprise, and then pulled her hand back.
"You wouldn't wanna ... you know ... knock off a quick one
for old
time's sake, huh, Grace?" He was sweating noticeably, and his
hand had
been wet and slimy.
"No, I wouldn't," she said calmly. He didn't frighten
her anymore.
He couldn't do anything to her. She had done everything she was
supposed
to. And he had just signed off on her papers, and she had them
firmly
clutched in her hand. She was just an ordinary citizen now. Her
past was
finally behind her. And this little bastard wasn't going to revive
it.
"Come on, Grace, be a sport." He came around the desk at
her, and before
she could move away, he grabbed her and tried to kiss her, and she
pushed him back so hard, that he hit his leg on the corner of the
desk
and shouted at her. "Still scared of guys, huh, Grace? What
are you
going to do? Kill the next one who tries to fuck you? Kill em
all?" But
as he said that to her, she moved toward him instead of away and
grabbed
him by his collar. He was probably stronger than she was, but she
was a
lot taller, and he was surprised when she grabbed him.
"Listen, you little shit, if you ever lay a hand on me again,
I'm going
to call the cops on you, and let them kill you. I wouldn't bother.
You touch me, and you'll be doing time for rape, and don't think I
wouldn't do it. Now don't ever come near me again." She flung
him away
from her, and he watched without a word, as she grabbed her bag
and
strode out of his office, banging the door hard behind her. It was
over.
It was all history. The moment Molly had promised her years ago
had
come. Her life was her own now.
Chapter 9.
Leaving Marjorie was hard for Grace, she was the | only friend
Grace
really had. And leaving the people at St. Mary's was sad too. Paul
Weinberg wished her luck, and told her that he was getting married
over
Christmas. She was happy for him. But for a lot of reasons, she
was glad
to leave Chicago. She was glad to leave Illinois, and the
nightmarish
memories she had there.
There had always been the fear that someone from Watseka would
turn up
and recognize her.
In New York, she knew that would never happen.
She took a plane to New York this time, not like when she had come
into
Chicago by bus from Dwight. And most of her savings were still
intact.
She had never spent much money, and she'd been paid well by the
Swansons. She'd even managed to save a little extra money, and her
nest
egg was back up to slightly over fifty thousand. She had already
wired
it ahead to a bank in New York. And she already knew where she
wanted to
stay, and she had a reservation. One of the models had told her
about
it, and thought it was a dumb place, because they didn't let you
bring
in guys, but it was exactly what Grace wanted.
She took a cab from the airport directly to the Barbizon for Women
on
Lexington and Sixty-third, and she loved the neighborhood the
moment she
saw it. There were shops and apartment houses, it was busy and
alive and
residential. It was only three blocks from Bloomingdale's, which
she had
heard about for years, some of the girls had modeled for them, and
it
was a block from Park Avenue, and three from Central Park.
She loved it.
She spent Sunday wandering lazily up Madison, and looking at the
shops,
and then she went to the zoo and bought a balloon. It was a
beautiful
October day, and in a funny way, she felt like she'd come home
finally.
She'd never been happier in her life, and on Monday she went to
three
employment agencies to look for work. The next morning they called
her
with half a dozen interviews. Two at modeling agencies, which she
declined. She'd had enough of that life, and the people who were
in it.
And the agencies were disappointed, since her reference from the
Swansons was so good, and she knew the business. The third
interview was
at a plastics firm, which seemed boring and which she turned down,
and
the last one was at a very important law firm, Mackenzie, Broad,
and
Steinway. She'd never heard of them before, but apparently
everyone in
business in New York had.
She wore a plain black dress that she'd bought the year before at
Carson
Pine Scott in Chicago, and a red coat she'd bought at Lord and
Taylor
that morning. And she looked terrific. She was interviewed by
personnel,
and then sent upstairs to see the office manager, and the senior
secretary, and meet two of the junior partners. Her office skills
had
improved over the years, but she still didn't take proper
dictation, but
they seemed willing to accommodate her, as long as she was able to
take
fast notes and type. She liked everyone she met, including both of
the
junior partners she would work for, Tom Short and Bill Martin.
They were both very serious and dry, one had gone to Princeton
undergraduate at then Harvard Law, the other had gone all the way
through Harvard.
Everything looked predictable and respectable, and even their
location
suited her perfectly. They were at Fifty-sixth and Park, only
eight
blocks from her hotel, although now she knew she'd | have to find
an
apartment.
The law firm took up ten floors, and there were over six hundred
employees. All she wanted was to be a face in the crowd, and
that's all
she was. It was the most impersonal place she'd ever seen, and it
suited
her to perfection. She wore her hair tied back, very little
makeup, and
the same clothes she'd worn at Swanson's in Chicago.
She had a little more style than necessary, but the office manager
figured she'd tone it down. She was a bright girl, and he really
liked
her.
She had been hired as the assistant joint secretary for two of the
junior partners. They shared two women, and Grace's counterpart
was
three times her age and twice her weight, and seemed relieved to
have
all the help she could get. She told Grace on her first day of
work that
Tom and Bill were nice guys and very reasonable to work for. Both
were
married, and had blond wives, one lived in Stamford, the other in
Darien, and each had three children. In some ways, they seemed
like
twins to Grace, but so did most of the men there. There seemed to
be a
sea of young men working there who basically looked the same to
her.
And all they ever talked about was their cases. Everyone commuted
to
Connecticut or Long Island, most of them played squash, some
belonged to
clubs, and all of the secretaries seemed equally faceless. It was
precisely the anonymous world that Grace had wanted. No one seemed
to
notice her at all as she started work. She fit in instantly, did
her
work, and no one asked her a single question about who she was,
where
she had worked, or where she'd come from. No one cared. This was
New
York. And she loved it.
And that weekend, she found an apartment. It was at Eighty-fourth
and
First. She could take the subway to work, or the bus, and she
could
afford the rent comfortably on her salary. She'd sold her bed and
furniture to the girl who took her place in Chicago, and she went
to
Macy's and bought a few things, but was worried to find them so
expensive. One of the girls at work told her about a discount
furniture
place in Brooklyn, and she went there one night on the subway
after
work, and smiled to herself as she rode alone. She had never felt
so
grown up and so free, so much the mistress of her own fate. For
the
first time in her life, no one was controlling her, or threatening
her,
or trying to hurt her. No one wanted anything from her at all. She
could
do anything she wanted.
She did a little shopping on Saturday afternoons, bought her
groceries
at the A&P nearby, and went to galleries on Madison Avenue and
the West
Side, and even made a few forays into SoHo. She loved New York,
and
everything about it. She ate dim sum on Mott Street, checked out
the
Italian neighborhood. And she was fascinated going to a couple of
auctions. And a month after she'd arrived she had a job, a life,
and an
apartment. She'd bought most of her furniture by then, and it
wasn't
exciting or elegant, but it was comfortable. Her building was old,
but
it was clean. They had given her curtains and the place had beige
wall-to-wall that went with everything she'd bought. The apartment
had a
living room, a tiny kitchen and dining nook, and a small bedroom
and
bath. It was everything she'd ever wanted, and it was her own. No
one
could take it away, or spoil it.
"How's New York treating you?" The personnel manager
asked her when she
saw him again one day at lunch in the firm's cafeteria. She only
ate
there in bad weather or when she was broke just before her next
paycheck. Otherwise, she liked wandering around Midtown at
lunchtime.
"I love it." She smiled at him. He was little and old
and bald, and he
had told her he had five children.
"I'm glad." He smiled. "I hear good reports about
you, Grace."
"Thank you." The best thing about him, as far as she was
concerned, was
that he loved his wife, and had absolutely no interest in Grace.
None of them did. She had never felt as comfortable in her life.
People went about their business, and sex seemed to be the last
thing on
their minds. No one seemed to notice her at all, especially not
Tom and
Bill, the two young partners that she worked for. She could have
been
five times her age, and she suspected they would never have
noticed.
They were nice to her, but they were all work. They worked as late
as
eight and nine o'clock sometimes, and she wondered if they ever
saw
their children.
They even came in on weekends when they had briefs to write for
the
senior partners.
"Do you have any plans for Thanksgiving?" the secretary
who worked with
her asked in mid-November. She was a nice older woman with a thick
waist
and heavy legs, but a kindly face framed by gray hair, and she had
never
been married. Her name was Winifred Apgard and everyone called her
Winnie.
"No, but I'll be fine," Grace said comfortably. Holidays
had never been
her forte.
"You're not going home?" Grace shook her head and didn't
mention that
she didn't have one. Her apartment was home, and she was very
self-sufficient.
"I'm going to Philadelphia to see my mother, or I'd have you
over,"
Winnie said apologetically. She looked like someone's maiden aunt,
and
she seemed to love her work, and the men she worked for. She
clucked
over them like a mother hen, and they teased her all the time. She
told
them to wear their galoshes when it snowed, and warned them of
impending
storms if they were driving home late.
It was a very different relationship from the one Tom and Bill had
with
Grace. It was almost as though they pretended not to see her. She
wondered sometimes if her youth was threatening to them, or if
their
wives would have been annoyed, or if Winnie was less of a threat
to
them, and more comfortable. But it didn't seem to matter. They
never
said anything of a personal nature to Grace, and while they made
jokes
with Winnie sometimes, they were always poker-faced with Grace, as
though they were being particularly careful not to get to know
her.
It was a far cry from Bob Swanson, but she liked that a lot about
her
job.
The week before Thanksgiving, she spent some time on her lunch
hour
making a few personal phone calls. She had meant to do it for a
while,
but she'd been busy settling into her apartment. But now it was
time to
start giving back again. It was something she intended to do for
the
rest of her life, something she felt she owed the people who had
helped
her. It was a debt she would never stop paying back. And it was
time to
begin again now.
She finally found what she was looking for.
The place was called St. Andrew's Shelter, and it was on the Lower
East
Side, on Delancey. There was a young priest in charge, and he had
invited her to come down and meet them the following Sunday
morning.
She took the subway down Lexington, changed trains, and got off at
Delancey, and walked the rest of the way. It was a rough walk, she
realized once she got there. There were bums wandering the streets
aimlessly, drunks hunched over in doorways, dozing, or lying
openly on
the sidewalks. There were warehouses and tenements, and
battered-looking
stores with heavy gates. There were abandoned cars here and there,
and
some tough-looking kids cruising for trouble. They glanced at
Grace as
she walked along, but no one bothered her. And finally, she got to
St.
Andrew's. It was an old brownstone that looked like it was in
pretty bad
shape, with paint peeling off the doors, and a sign that was
barely
hanging by a thread, but there were people coming in and out,
mostly
women with kids, and a few young girls. One of them looked about
fourteen, and Grace could see that she was hugely pregnant.
There were three young girls manning a reception desk when she got
inside. They were talking and chattering, and one of them was
doing her
nails. And there was more noise than Grace thought she'd heard
anywhere.
The building sounded like it was teeming with voices and kids,
there was
an argument going on somewhere, there were blacks and whites,
Chinese
and Puerto Ricans. It looked like a microcosm of New York, or as
though
someone had hijacked a subway.
She asked for the young priest by name, and she waited a long
time for him, watching the action, and when he appeared he was
wearing
jeans and an old battered oatmeal-colored sweater.
"Father Finnegan?" she asked curiously. He had a real
twinkle about him,
and he didn't look like a priest. He had bright red hair, and he
looked
like a kid. But crow's feet near his eyes, in a sea of freckles on
his
fair skin, said he was somewhat older than the kid he looked like.
"Father Tim," he corrected her with a grin. "Miss
Adams?"
"Grace." She smiled at him. You couldn't help but smile
at him. He had a
real look of joy about him.
"Let's go talk somewhere," he said calmly, weaving in
and out of half a
dozen children chasing each other around the main lobby. The
building
looked as though it might have been a tenement, and had been
opened up
to provide a home to those who needed it. He had told her on the
phone
that they had only been in existence for five years and needed a
lot of
help, especially from volunteers. He had been thrilled to hear
from her.
She was one of the many miracles he said they needed.
He led her to a kitchen with three old dishwashers that had been
donated
to them and a big old-fashioned sink. There were posters on the
walls, a
big round table and some chairs, and two huge pots of coffee.
He poured a cup for each of them, and led her to a small room with
a
desk and three chairs. It looked as though it had been a utility
room
and was now his office. The place was badly in need of paint and
some
decent furniture, but sitting there, talking to him, it was easy
to
forget anything but him. He had that kind of presence about him,
and he
was completely unaware of it, which was why everyone loved him.
"So what brings you here, Grace? Other than a good heart and
a foolish
nature?" He grinned at her again, and took a sip of steaming
coffee, as
his eyes danced with glee.
"I've done this kind of volunteer work before, in Chicago.
At a place called St. Mary's." She gave Paul Weinberg's name
as a
reference.
"I know it well. I'm from Chicago myself. Been here for
twenty years
now. And I know St. Mary's. In some ways, we've modeled ourselves
on
them. They run a very good operation."
She told him the number of people they serviced at St. Mary's each
year,
and that there were as many as a dozen families in residence at
any
given time. Not to mention the people who came and went constantly
in a
day's time, and returned frequently to avail themselves of the
comfort
offered at St. Mary's.
"We offer the same thing here," he said thoughtfully,
looking at her.
He wondered why someone like her wanted to do this kind of work.
But he had learned long since not to question God's gifts to him,
but to
use them well. He had every intention of putting Grace to work at
St.
Andrew's. "We see more people here. Maybe close to eighty or
a hundred a
day, give or take a dozen, mostly give." He grinned again.
"We've had over a hundred women staying here at one time,
sometimes
twice as many children. Generally, we keep it to a dull roar, and
we
have about sixty women and a hundred and fifty kids here most of
the
time. We don't turn anyone away at St. Andrew's. That's the only
rule
here. They come to our door, they stay, if that's what they want.
Most of them don't stay long.
They either go back, or they move on, and start new lives. I'd say
the
average stay is anywhere from a week to two months, maximum. Most
of
them are out in two weeks." It had been pretty much the same
at St.
Mary's.
"Can you house that many people here?" She was
surprised. The building
didn't look that big, and it wasn't.
"This used to be twenty apartments. We stack em as high as we
have to,
Grace. Our doors are open to everyone, not just to
Catholics," he
explained, "we don't even ask that question."
"Actually ..." She smiled at him, there was a warmth
that came from him
that touched her very soul. There was an innocence and purity
about
Father Tim that made him seem particularly holy, in a real sense.
He was
truly a man of God, and Grace felt instantly at ease with him and
blessed to be near him. "The doctor who ran St. Mary's was
Jewish," she
said conversationally, and he laughed.
"I haven't gone that far yet, but you never know."
"Is there a doctor in charge here?"
"Me, I guess. I'm "Jesuit, and I have a doctorate in
psychology.
But Dr. Tim sounds a little strange, doesn't it? Father Tim suits
me
better." They both laughed this time and he went to pour them
both
another cup of coffee from one of the two huge pots.
"We have half a dozen nuns, not in habit, of course, who work
here, and
about forty volunteers at various times. We need every one of them
to
keep the place running. We've got some psychiatric nurses who give
us
time, from NYU, and we get a lot of kids doing psych internships,
mostly
from Columbia. It's a good group, and they work like demons. ...
orry,
angels." She really loved him, with his freckles and his
laughing eyes.
"And what about you, Grace? What brings you to us?"
"I like this kind of work. It means a lot to me."
"Do you know much about it? I suppose you do after two years
at St.
Mary's."
"Enough, I guess, to be useful." It was all too familiar
to her, but she
wasn't quite sure whether or not to say it to him. She almost
wanted to.
She trusted him more than she had anyone in a long time.
"How many times a week or month did you volunteer at St.
Mary's?"
"Two nights a week, and every Sunday ... most holidays."
"Wow." He looked impressed, and surprised. Priest or no,
he could see
easily that she was young and beautiful, too young to be giving up
so
much of her life to a home like this one. And then he looked at
her
carefully. "Is this a special mission for you, Grace?"
It was as though
he knew. He sensed it. And she nodded.
"I think so. I ... understand about these things." She
wasn't
sure what else to say to him, but he nodded, and touched her hand
gently.
"It's all right. Healing comes in many ways. Blessing others
is the best
one." She nodded, and her eyes were blurred with tears. He
knew.
He understood. She felt as though she had come home, just being
here,
and being near him. "We need you, Grace. There's a place for
you here.
You can bring joy, and healing, to a lot of people, as well as
yourself."
"Thank you, Father," she whispered as she wiped her eyes
and he smiled
at her. He didn't pry any further. He knew all he needed to know.
No one knew better what these women were going through than one
who'd
been through it, battered and abused by husbands and fathers, or
mothers
or boyfriends.
"Now, let's get down to business." His eyes were
laughing again.
"How soon can you start? We're not going to let you get away
from here
that easily. You might come to your senses."
"Right now?" She had come prepared to work, if he wanted
her, and he
did. He led her back into the kitchen, where they left their empty
mugs
in one of the dishwashers, and then he walked her out to the
hallway and
started introducing her to people. The three girls at the desk had
been
replaced by a boy in his early twenties, who was a medical student
at
Columbia, and there were two women talking to a gaggle of little
girls,
whom Father Tim introduced as Sister Theresa, and Sister Eugene,
but
neither of them looked like nuns to Grace. They were
friendly-looking
women in their early thirties. One was wearing a sweat suit, and
the
other jeans and a threadbare sweater. And Sister Eugene
volunteered to
take Grace upstairs to show her around the rooms where the women
stayed,
and the nursery where they sometimes kept the children, if the
women
were too battered to deal with them for the time being themselves.
There was an infirmary staffed by a nurse who was a nun, and she
was
wearing a clean white smock over blue jeans. The lights were kept
dim,
and Sister Eugene walked Grace in on soundless feet, as she
signaled to
the nurse on duty. And as Grace looked around her at the women in
the
beds, her heart twisted as she recognized the signs she had lived
her
entire life with. Merciless beatings and heartrending bruises. Two
women
had arms in casts, one had cigarette burns all over her face, and
another was moaning as the nurse tried to bandage her broken ribs
again,
and put ice packs on her swollen eyes.
Her husband was in jail now.
"We send the worst cases to the hospital," Sister Eugene
explained
quietly as they left the room again. Without thinking, Grace had
stopped
to touch a hand, and the woman had looked at her in suspicion.
That was another thing Grace was familiar with too. These women
were
sometimes so far gone and so badly treated that they didn't trust
anyone
anymore not to hurt them. "But we keep whoever we can here,
it's less
upsetting for them. And sometimes it's only bruises. The really
ugly
stuff goes to the emergency room." Like the woman who'd come
in two
nights before whose husband had put a hot iron to her face, after
hitting her with a tire iron on the back of her head. He had
almost
killed her, but she was so terrified of him, she had refused to
bring
charges. The authorities had taken their children away from them,
and
they were in foster homes now.
But the woman had to be willing to save herself, and many of them
didn't
have the courage to do it. Being battered was the most isolating
thing
in the world. It made you hide from everyone, Grace knew only too
well,
even those who could help you.
Sister Eugene took her to see the children then, and in minutes
Grace
had her arms full of little girls and boys, she was telling them
stories, and tying bows on braids, and shoelaces, as children told
her
who they were, and some of them talked about what had happened and
why
they had come there. Some couldn't. Some of their siblings had
been
killed by their parents. Some of their mothers were upstairs, too
battered to move, too ashamed even to see them. It was a disease
that
destroyed families, and the people who lived through it. And Grace
knew
with a sinking heart how few of them would ever grow up to be
whole
people or be able to trust anyone again.
It was after eight o'clock before she left them that night. As she
did,
Father Tim was standing at the door, talking to a policeman. He
had just
brought a little girl in, she was two years old, and she had been
raped
by her father. Grace hated cases like that ... at least she had
been
thirteen ... but she had seen babies at St. Mary's who had been
raped
and sodomized by their fathers.
"Rough day?" Father Tim asked sympathetically, as the
policeman left.
"Good day." She smiled at him. She had spent most of it
with kids, and
then the last few hours, talking to some of the women, just being
there,
listening, trying to give them the courage to do what they had to.
No one could do it for them. The police could help. But it was up
to
them to save themselves. And maybe, if she talked to enough of
them, she
told herself, they wouldn't have to go to the same lengths she
had.
They wouldn't have to wind up in prison to be free. It was her way
of
repaying the debt, of atoning for a sin she knew her mother would
never
have forgiven her for. But she had had no choice, and she didn't
regret
it. She just didn't want anyone else to have to pay the same price
she
had.
"You run a great place here," she complimented him. She
liked it even
better than St. Mary's. It was livelier, and in some ways warmer.
"It's only as great as the people who work here. Can I
interest you in
coming back? Sister Eugene says you're terrific."
"So is she." The nun had been tireless working there all
day, as was
everyone Grace had seen. She liked everyone she had met there.
"I don't
think you'll be able to keep me away." She had already signed
up for two
nights that week and the following Sunday. "I can come in on
Thanksgiving too," she said easily.
"You're not going home?" He looked surprised. She was
awfully young to
be so unencumbered.
"No home to go to," she said without hesitation.
"It's not a big deal.
I'm used to it." He watched her eyes, and nodded. There was a
lot there
that she wasn't saying.
"We'd love to have you." The holidays were always rough
for people with
bad home situations, and the number of people they saw come in
often
doubled. "It's always a zoo here."
"That's just what I want. See you next week, Father,"
she said, as she
signed out on the logbook. She was going to be reporting to Sister
Eugene, and she was thrilled that she'd come here. It was exactly
what
she wanted.
"God bless you, Grace," Father Tim said as she left.
"You too, Father," she called, and closed the door
behind her.
It was a long, cold, somewhat scary walk back to the subway again,
threading her way through the bums and the drunks, and young hoods
looking for fun. But no one bothered her, and half an hour later,
she
was home, walking down First Avenue to her apartment. She was
tired from
her long day, but she felt renewed again, and as though at least
for
some, the horrors in her life had been useful. For Grace, knowing
that
always made the pain she carried seem worthwhile. At least it
wasn't
wasted.
Chapter 10.
Grace spent Thanksgiving at St. Andrew's Shelter, if as she'd
promised
them. She even helped to cook the turkey. And after that, she fell
into a familiar routine, of going down there on Tuesday and Friday
nights, and all day Sunday. Fridays were always busy for them,
because
it was the beginning of the weekend, and paychecks had come in.
Husbands who were prone to violence went out and got drunk and
then came
home and beat their women. She found that she never left the
shelter
before two a.m and sometimes later. And on Sundays, they were
trying to
deal with all the women and kids who had come in over the weekend.
It
seemed like it was only on Tuesday nights that she and Sister
Eugene had
a chance to chat. The two women had become good friends by
Christmas.
Sister Eugene had even asked her if she'd ever thought of herself
as
having a vocation.
"Oh my God, no! I can't even imagine it." Grace looked
stunned at the
idea.
"It's not very different from what you're doing now, you
know."
Sister Eugene smiled at her. "You give an awful lot of
yourself to
others ... . and to God ... no matter how you view it."
"I don't think it's quite as saintly as all that," Grace
smiled,
embarrassed at what the nun was saying. "I'm just repaying
some old
debts. People were good to me at one point, as much as I let them.
I'd like to think that I can pass it on to others now." Not
very many
people had been good to her. But a few had. And she wanted to be
one of
the few people in these people's anguished lives who made a
difference.
And she did. But not enough so to want to give her life to God,
only to
battered women and children.
"Do you have a boyfriend?" Sister Eugene had asked her
once, giggling
like a girl, and Grace had laughed at the question. Sister Eugene
was
curious about her life and Grace seldom offered any information.
She was very closed about herself, but she felt safer that way.
"I'm not much good with men," Grace said honestly.
"It's not my forte.
I'd rather come here and do something useful."
And she did. She spent Christmas and New Year's with them, and
sometimes
she had a kind of peaceful glow on her face after she'd been
there.
Winnie noticed it sometimes at work and always thought it was a
man in
her life. She seemed so happy and so at ease with herself.
But it came from giving to others, and sitting up all night with a
battered child in her arms, crooning to it, and holding it, as no
one
had ever done for her. She wanted more than anything to make a
difference in these children's lives, and she did.
Finally, after they'd worked together for nearly five months,
Winnie
asked her to lunch on a Sunday, and Grace was really touched but
she
explained to her that she had a standing obligation on Sundays.
She
would never have canceled. They met on a Saturday instead. They
met at
Schrafft's on Madison Avenue and then walked over to watch the
skaters
at Rockefeller Center.
"What do you do on Sundays?" Winnie asked her curiously,
still convinced
that Grace probably had a boyfriend. She was a pretty girl, and
she was
so young. There had to be someone.
"I work on Delancey Street, at a home for battered women and
kids," she
explained, as they watched women in short skirts swirl on the ice,
and
children fall and laugh as they chased their parents and friends.
They
looked like such happy children.
"You do?" Winnie looked surprised by Grace's admission.
"Why?" She
couldn't imagine a girl as young and beautiful as Grace doing
something
so difficult and so dismal.
"I do it because I think it's important. I work there three
times a
week. It's a great place. I love it," Grace said, smiling at
Winnie.
"Have you always done that?" Winnie asked her in
amazement, and Grace
nodded, still smiling.
"For a long time anyway. I did it in Chicago too, but
actually I like
the place here better. It's called St. Andrew's." And then
she laughed
and told her about Sister Eugene suggesting she become a nun.
"Oh my Lord," Winnie looked horrified, "you're not
going to do that, are
you?"
"No. But they seem pretty happy. It's not for me though. I'm
happy doing
what I can like this."
"Three days a week is an awful lot. You must not have a lot
of time to
do anything else."
"I don't. I don't want to. I enjoy my work, I enjoy working
at St.
Andrew's. I've got Saturdays if I need time to myself, and a
couple of
nights a week. I don't need more than that."
"That's not healthy," Winnie scolded her. "A girl
of your age ought to
be out having fun. You know, with boys," she scolded Grace in
a motherly
way, and Grace laughed at her. She liked her. She liked working
with
her. She was responsible and efficient and she really cared about
"her"
partners, and Grace. She acted almost like a mother to her.
"I'm all right. Honest. I'll have plenty of time for boys
when I grow
up," Grace teased, but Winnie shook her head at her, and
wagged a
finger.
"That comes a lot faster than you think. I took care of my
parents all
my life, and now my mother's in a home in Philadelphia, so she can
be
with my aunt, and I'm all alone here. My father's gone, and I
never got
married. By the time he died and Mama went to Philadelphia to be
with
Aunt Tina, I was too old."
She sounded so sad about it that Grace felt sorry for her. Grace
suspected that she was very lonely, which was why she'd met her
for
lunch.
"You'll regret it one day, Grace, if you don't get married,
and have a
life of your own before that."
"I'm not sure I will." She had come to think recently
that she really
didn't want to get married. She'd been burned enough, and even her
brief
encounters with men like Marcus, and Bob Swanson, and even her
probation
officer, had taught her something. She really didn't want any of
it. And
the nice ones like David and Paul still didn't make her feel any
different. They were both good men, but she really didn't want
one. She
was satisfied to be alone. She didn't make any effort to meet men,
or to
have any life other than her volunteer work at St. Andrew's.
Which was why she was utterly amazed when one of the other junior
partners, who worked in an office near hers, asked her out to
dinner one
day. She knew he was a friend of the tax men she worked for, and
he was
recently divorced and very good-looking. But she had no interest
at all
in going out with him, or anyone else at work.
He had stopped at her desk at lunch hour one day, and in an
embarrassed
under voice had asked her if she would like to have dinner with
him the
following Friday. She explained that she did volunteer work on
Friday
nights, and couldn't but she didn't look particularly pleased that
he
had asked her, and he retreated, looking awkward and feeling somewhat
embarrassed.
She was even more surprised when one of her bosses asked her the
next
afternoon why she had turned Hallam Ball down when he asked her
out to
dinner. "Hal's a really nice guy," he explained,
"and he likes you," as
though that were all he needed to qualify for a date. None of them
could
understand her refusal.
"I ... uh ... that's very nice of him, and I'm sure he it
is."
She was stammering. It was embarrassing having to explain why she
had
refused him. "I don't go out with people at work. It's never
a good
idea," she said firmly, and the young partner nodded.
"That's what I told him. I figured it was something like
that.
That's smart, actually, it's just too bad, because I think you'd
like
him, and he's been really down since the divorce last
summer."
"I'm sorry to hear it," she said coolly. And then Winnie
scolded her and
said that Hallam Ball was one of the most eligible men in the law
firm,
and she was a very foolish girl. She warned her that she'd be an
old
maid if she didn't watch "Good." Grace smiled at her.
"I can hardly
wait. Then no one will ask me out anymore, and I won't have to
think up
excuses."
"You're crazy!" Winnie scolded. "Silly fool,"
she clucked at her, and
grumbled, and when a legal assistant asked her out the following
month
and Grace turned him down too, and gave the same reason, Winnie
went
absolutely crazy. "You are the most foolish girl I've ever
known!" the
older woman railed at her. "I'm absolutely not going to let
you do this!
He's an adorable boy, and he's even as tall as you are!"
Grace only
laughed at her reasoning and refused to reconsider, and in a very
short
period of time, it became well known that Grace Adams did not date
men
from the office. Most of them figured that she had a boyfriend or
was
engaged, and a few decided to meet the challenge. But she never
changed
her mind, and she never gave anyone a different answer. No matter
how
attractive they were, or how seemingly interested, she never
accepted
their invitations. In fact, she seemed totally indifferent to all
men.
And a number of people wondered about her.
"And just how do you plan to get married?" Winnie almost
shouted at her
one afternoon as they were about to leave work.
"I don't plan to get married, Win. Simple as that."
Grace looked touched
but unmoved by the older woman's concern for her.
Winnie was livid.
"Then you should become a nun!" Winnie yelled at her.
"You practically
are one." "Yes, ma'am," Grace said with a
good-natured smile, and Bill,
one of "their" partners, raised an eyebrow as he left
his office and
overheard them. He agreed with Winnie and felt that Grace was
missing
opportunities. Youth and beauty couldn't last forever.
"Fighting in the aisles, ladies?" he teased, putting on
his coat and
grabbing his umbrella. It was March and it hadn't stopped raining
in
weeks. But at least it wasn't snowing.
"She's a damn fool!" Winnie exclaimed, huffing into her
own overcoat and
getting all tangled up in it as Grace helped her and the partner
laughed
at them.
"Grace? My goodness, Grace, what did you do to Winnie?"
"She won't go out with anyone, that's what!" She yanked
her coat away
from Grace, and buttoned it incorrectly, as the two watching her
tried
to keep straight faces. "She'll wind up an old maid like me,
and she's
much too young and pretty for that." But Grace saw then that
she was
almost crying, and she leaned over and kissed her cheek in genuine
affection. She was almost like a mother to her at times, and a
dear
friend at others.
"She probably has a boyfriend, you know," he said
soothingly to the
older of his two secretaries. In fact, recently, he had started
wondering if Grace was involved with someone married. Her constant
refusals of all the young men in the office sort of fit the
pattern.
"She's probably keeping it a secret." He no longer
believed that her
reticence was entirely caused by virtue and clear thinking, there
had to
be more to it than that, and several of the other junior partners
agreed
with him.
Winnie looked up at her and Grace smiled and said nothing, which
immediately convinced Winnie that he was right and that maybe
there was
a married man in her life after all.
The two women left each other in the lobby and said good night,
and
Grace went downtown to Delancey Street and spent the night caring
for
the needy.
And the next morning, she looked tired when she came to work,
which
convinced Winnie that their boss was right, and she had been up to
some
mischief the night before. Grace actually thought she was coming
down
with the flu. After her long walk down Delancey Street in the
pouring
rain, to get to St. Andrew's, she got soaking wet. And she was in
no
mood for the favor the personnel director asked her for at
lunchtime.
She got a call at eleven o'clock and was asked to come to his
office.
She was concerned, and Winnie was clearly worried. She couldn't
imagine
what he might be complaining about, unless one of the men she'd
turned
down had decided to make trouble for her. She had lived through
that
before, and it certainly wouldn't have surprised her.
"Now don't tell him anything you don't have to," Winnie
warned her as
she went upstairs. But he wasn't calling to complain, but to
praise her.
He told her she was doing a marvelous job, and everyone in her
department liked her, as did the two partners she worked for.
"In fact," he said hesitantly, "I have a little
favor to ask of you,
Grace. I know how disruptive it can be to have to leave one's work
for a
little while, and I know Tom and Bill won't be pleased. But Miss
Waterman had an accident last night, on the subway. She slipped on
the
stairs, and broke her hip. She's going to be out for two months,
maybe
even three. It sounds like it was pretty nasty. She's at Lenox
Hill, and
her sister called us. You do know her, don't you?" Grace was
racking her
memory and couldn't think of who she was. Obviously, one of the
secretaries in the law firm. She wondered if it would be a step up
or
down, and whom she worked for. She only hoped that it wasn't one
of the
men who had asked her out to dinner. That certainly would have
been
awkward.
"I don't think I do know her," Grace looked at him
blankly.
"She works for Mr. Mackenzie," the personnel director
said
solemnly, as though that said it all. And Grace looked confused as
she
faced him.
"Which Mr. Mackenzie?" she asked, continuing not to
understand him.
"Mr. Charles Mackenzie," he said, as though she were
very stupid.
Charles Mackenzie was one of the three senior partners of the law
firm.
"Are you kidding?" She almost shouted at him. "Why
me? I can't even take
dictation." Her voice was suddenly squeaky. She was
comfortable where
she was, and she didn't want to be under that kind of pressure.
"You take fast notes, and the partners you work for said your
skills are
excellent. And Mr. Mackenzie is very definite about what he
wants."
He looked uncomfortable because he wasn't supposed to admit it to
anyone, but Charles Mackenzie hated grumpy old secretaries who
complained about working late, and his constant demands. The job
needed
someone young to keep up with him, but the personnel man couldn't
say
that to her. As a rule, Mackenzie preferred his secretaries under
thirty. And even Grace had heard that. "He wants someone
fast, who's
doing an excellent job and won't get in his way, while Miss
Waterman is
gone. And of course as soon as she returns, you can go back where
you
are, Grace. It's just for a couple of months."
He probably wanted to get laid, she thought miserably. She knew
his
kind. And she didn't want to play. She loved her job, and working
with
Winnie. And the two partners she worked for were no trouble at
all.
They scarcely paid any attention to her, which was why she liked
them.
"Do I have a choice?" she asked with an unhappy frown.
"Not really," he said honestly. "We presented three
resumes to him this
morning, and he chose yours. It would be very difficult to explain
to
him that you didn't want it." He looked at her mournfully.
He hadn't expected her to resist him. It would look bad for him if
she
refused, and Charles Mackenzie was not used to being told he
couldn't
have what he wanted.
"Great." She leaned back in the chair unhappily.
"I'm sure we could arrange for a raise, commensurate with the
position
you're filling." But that didn't really sweeten it for her.
More than
anything she didn't want to work for some old guy who wanted to
chase a
twenty-two-year-old secretary around his desk. She really did not
want
to do that. And if he did, she would quit immediately. She'd have
to
start looking for another job. She'd try it for a few days, and if
the
guy was a jerk, she was going, but she didn't say that to the head
of
personnel. She just made up her own mind in silence.
"Fine," she said icily. "When do I start?"
"After lunch. Mr. Mackenzie had a very difficult morning with
no one to
help him."
"How old is Miss Waterman, by the way?" She had
understood the message.
"Twenty-five, I think. Maybe twenty-six. I'm not sure. She's
excellent.
She's been with him for three years now." Maybe they were
having an
affair, Grace decided, and they'd had a fight, and now she was out
looking for another job. Anything was possible. She'd see for
herself in
an hour. He told her to report to Mr. Mackenzie's office at one
o'clock.
And when she went back to pick up her things, she told Winnie.
"How wonderful!" Winnie exclaimed generously. "I'll
miss you, but what a
great break for you!" Grace didn't see it that way, and she
almost cried
when a girl from the typing pool came to replace her. She said
goodbye
to the two partners she'd worked for for almost six months, and
took a
bag of her things up to the twenty-ninth floor to Mr. Mackenzie's
office. Winnie had promised to call her that afternoon to see how
it was
going.
"He sounds like a jerk," Grace had said to her under her
breath, but
Winnie was quick to reassure her.
"He's not. Everyone who works for him loves him."
"I'll bet," she said
tartly, and kissed Winnie on the cheek before she left. It was
like
leaving home, and she was in a rotten mood when she got upstairs.
She
was annoyed over the high-handedness of it.
And she hadn't had time for lunch, and had a terrible headache.
Besides which, she really did feel like she was getting the flu
from her
long walk in the rain the night before. And even being shown to
her new
office, with a spectacular view up Park Avenue, didn't cheer her.
They treated her like royalty, and three of the secretaries who
worked
nearby made a point of coming out to meet her. It was like a
little club
up there, and had she been in a better mood, she would have
admitted
that everyone was very pleasant.
She looked through some papers that the personnel director had
left for
her, and a list of instructions from her new boss, about some
things he
needed done that afternoon. They were mostly research calls, and
some
personal calls too, an appointment with his tailor, and another
one for
a haircut, and a reservation at 2" the following night, for
two people.
How sexy, she complained to herself as she read the list. And then
started making the phone calls.
When he came back from lunch at two-fifteen, she had made all his
calls
for him, finished half the research, and taken several messages.
In each
case, she had handled what the caller wanted from him, and he had
no
need to return the calls, just to know about their resolution. He
was
immensely surprised by her efficiency, but not nearly as much as
she was
when she saw him. The "old guy" she'd expected him to be
was forty-two
years old, tall, had broad shoulders, deep green eyes, and jet
black
hair with salt and pepper at the temples. He had a rugged jaw that
made
him look like a movie star, and he was totally without pretension.
It was as though he had absolutely no idea he was even handsome.
He
walked in very quietly, he had had a working lunch downstairs with
some
of the other partners. And he was casual and friendly when he
greeted
her, and praised her for the work she'd done for him so quickly.
"You're as good as they said you were, Grace." He smiled
warmly at her,
and she vowed instantly to resist him. She was not going to fall
for his
looks, or for who he was, no matter what Miss Waterman had done
for him.
As far as Grace was concerned, she wasn't part of the service. She
was
extremely formal with him, and not particularly friendly.
For the next two weeks, she made every appointment for him, both
business and personal, handled all his calls, attended meetings
with him
and took accurate notes, and proved herself to be very near
perfect.
"She's good, isn't she?" Tom Short asked possessively
when he saw
Mackenzie alone for a few minutes before a meeting.
"Yes," the senior partner said cautiously, but without
much zeal, and
Tom noticed.
"Don't you like her?" Tom immediately sensed a
hesitation.
"Honestly? No. She's disagreeable as hell, and she walks
around with a
broomstick up her ass all day long. She's the most uptight human
being
I've ever met. She makes me want to throw a bucket of water on
her."
"(,race?" Her old boss looked stunned. "She's so
nice, and so
easygoing."
"Maybe she just doesn't like me. Christ, I can't wait to get
Waterman
back." But four weeks later, Elizabeth Waterman delivered
news that
upset them both deeply. She had thought about it a great deal, but
after
her accident and the way people had treated her as she lay in the
subway
with a broken hip and leg, she had decided to leave New York for
good
when she recuperated, and go back to Florida where she came from.
"I suspect this isn't good news for either of us,"
Charles Mackenzie
said to Grace honestly after he heard. For six weeks, Grace had
done an
impeccable job for him, and she'd barely said a civil word to him.
He had been nothing but friendly with her, and accommodating, but
each
time she saw him, and noticed again how good-looking he was, and
how at
ease he was with her and everyone, she hated him all the more. She
had
convinced herself that she knew his type, he was just waiting for
an
opportunity to pounce on her and ha lyrass her sexually, just like
Bob
Swanson had done, and she wasn't going to take it. Never again.
And
certainly not from him. Week after week she saw the women come
into St.
Andrew's and it reminded her again and again of how rotten men
were, how
dangerous, and how much damage it could do if you let yourself
trust
them.
"You're not happy here, are you, Grace?" Charles
Mackenzie asked her in
a kind tone finally, and she sat noticing how green his eyes were
again,
reminding herself of how many women he had probably had fall all
over
him in his life, including Elizabeth Waterman, and God alone knew
how
many others.
"I'm probably not the right secretary for you," she said
quietly.
"I don't have the experience you need. I've never worked in a
law firm
like this before, or for anyone as important." He smiled at
what she
said, but she looked as tense as ever.
"What did you do before this?" He had forgotten.
"I worked in a modeling agency for two years," she said,
wondering what
he was after. Maybe he was going to strike now. He would
eventually.
They all did.
"As a model?" he asked, not surprised, but she shook her
head in answer.
"No, as a secretary."
"It must have been a lot more interesting than a law firm. My
job isn't
exactly exciting." He smiled and looked surprisingly young.
She knew
he'd been married to a well-known actress and they'd never had
children.
He had been divorced for two years, and according to most reports,
he
dated a lot of women. She had certainly made plenty of dinner
reservations for him, but not all were with women. Some were with
his
partners and clients.
"Most jobs aren't very interesting," Grace said
sensibly, surprised that
he was willing to spend so much time talking to her. "Mine at
the agency
wasn't either. Actually," she said, thinking about it,
"I like this
better. The people here are a lot nicer." "It's just me,
then," he said
almost sadly, as though she had hurt his feelings.
"What do you mean?" She didn't understand him.
"Well, it's obvious you're not enjoying your work, and if you
like the
law firm, then it must be me. I get the feeling you hate working
for me,
to be honest with you, Grace. I feel like I make you miserable
every
time I walk into the office." She flushed in embarrassment as
he said
it.
"No ... I ... I'm really sorry ... I didn't mean to give you
that
impression ..."
"Then what is it?" He wanted to work it out with her.
She was the best
secretary he'd ever had. "Is there something I can do to
smooth things
out between us? With Elizabeth leaving permanently, we either have
to
make it work or give it up, don't we?" Grace nodded,
embarrassed now
that her dislike for him had been so blatant. It wasn't really
anything
he had done personally. It was just what she thought he
represented. The
truth was that he was a lot less of a womanizer than she thought.
Only his highly publicized marriage to his famous actress ex-wife
had
won him that reputation.
"I'm really sorry, Mr. Mackenzie. I'll try and make things a
little
easier for you from now on." "So will I," he said
kindly, and she felt
somewhat guilty toward him as she left her office. And even more
so when
Elizabeth Waterman came to say goodbye to him on her crutches. She
said
it was like leaving home again for her, and that he was the
kindest
person she had ever known.
She cried when she said goodbye to him and everyone in the office.
Grace didn't get the feeling that she was ending a love affair,
but felt
that she was genuinely heartbroken to leave a much loved employer.
"How's it going up there?" Winnie asked her one
afternoon.
"Okay." Grace was embarrassed to admit to her how
unpleasant she'd been,
but she hadn't made any friends on the twenty-ninth floor so far,
and
her old bosses had been told by several people how disagreeable
she was.
She knew the reputation she was getting, and that she deserved it.
And
it embarrassed her even more when Winnie said she'd heard from a
number
of people that Grace was being very hard on Mr. Mackenzie.
After he talked to her, she made an effort to be pleasant to him a
little bit, at least, and she actually started to enjoy the job.
She had resigned herself by then to the fact that she was probably
not
going back to work with Winnie, and her two junior partners. She
was no
longer fighting it and she had to admit that the job with him was
more
interesting, when suddenly, in May, Charles Mackenzie told her he
had to
fly to Los Angeles and he needed her to go with him. She almost
had
apoplexy over it, and she was shaking when she told Winnie that
she was
going to refuse to go with him.
"Why, for heaven's sake? Grace, what an opportunity!"
For what? To get
laid by her boss? No! She wasn't going to do it. In her mind, it
was all
a setup, and she would be walking into a trap. But when she went
in to
tell him the next day that she wouldn't go, he thanked her so
nicely for
being willing to give up her own time and come with him, that she
felt
awkward refusing to go with him. She even thought about quitting
over
it, and much to her own surprise, she found herself talking to
Father
Tim about it at St. Andrew's.
"What are you afraid of, Grace?" he asked gently. She
had fear stamped
all over her, and she knew it.
"I'm afraid ... I don't know," she was embarrassed to
tell him but she
knew she had to, for her own sake, "that he'll be like
everyone else in
my life and take advantage of me, or worse. I finally got away
from all
that when I came here, and now it's starting all over again with
this
stupid trip to California. , .
"Has he ever shown signs of wanting to take advantage of
you?" Father
Tim asked quietly, "or of sexual interest in you?" He
knew exactly what
they were talking about and what she was afraid of.
' ..."Not really," she conceded, still looking
miserable.
"Even a little bit? Be honest with yourself. You know the
truth here."
"All right, no, not even a little bit."
"Then what makes you think that's going to change now?"
"I don't know. People don't take their secretaries on trips
unless they
want to ... you know." He smiled at her discretion in talking
to him.
He had heard a lot worse in his life, and a lot more shocking
stories.
Even her own story wouldn't have shocked him.
"Some people do take their secretaries on trips without you
know."
Maybe he really does need help. And if he misbehaves, you're a big
girl,
get on a plane and come home. End of story."
"I guess I could do that." She thought about it and
nodded.
"You're in control, you know. That's what we teach people
here.
You know that better than anyone. You can walk away anytime you
want
to."
"Okay. Maybe I'll go with him." She sighed and looked at
him gratefully,
still not totally convinced though.
"Do whatever you think is right, Grace. But don't make
decisions out of
fear. They never get you anywhere you want to go. Just do what's
right
for you."
"Thank you, Father." The next morning she told Charles
Mackenzie that
she was definitely able to go to California with him. She still
had
misgivings about the trip, but she had told herself repeatedly
that if
he misbehaved, all she had to do was buy herself a ticket and come
home.
Simple as that, and she had a credit card with which to do it.
He picked her up in a limousine on the way to the airport, and she
came
out carrying a small bag and looking very nervous. He had a
briefcase
with him, and he made calls from the car, and jotted down some
notes for
her. And then he chatted with her for a few minutes and read the
paper.
He didn't seem particularly interested in her, and she could tell
that
one of his phone calls had been to a woman. She knew that there
was a
well-known socialite who called him frequently at the office, and
he
sounded as though he liked her. But Grace didn't get the feeling
that he
was madly in love with anyone at the moment.
They flew to Los Angeles in first class, and he worked most of the
way
there, while Grace watched the movie. He was going out to help put
together the financial end of a big movie deal for one of his
clients.
The client had an entertainment lawyer on the West Coast, but
Mackenzie
represented the big money in the deal, and it was interesting
watching
him put it together.
It was even more interesting once they got to L.A. They arrived at
noon,
local time, and went straight to the offices of the entertainment
lawyer, and Grace was fascinated by the meetings that took place
all
day. They were there till six o'clock, which was nine o'clock for
her
and Charles Mackenzie. He had a dinner date after that, and he
dropped
her off at the hotel, and told her to charge anything she wanted
to the
room. They were staying at the Beverly Hills Hotel, and she had to
admit
she was excited by four movie stars she saw just passing through
the
lobby.
She tried to get David Glass's number that night, but he wasn't
listed
in Beverly Hills or L.A. And she was disappointed. She hadn't
heard from
him in years, but she would have loved to try to see him. She had
a
feeling, though, that his wife had wanted him to break the
connection
with her. She'd divined that just from little things he'd said in
his
letters. And now she hadn't heard from him at all since the birth
of
their first baby. It would have been nice to tell him that she was
doing
well, had a good job, and was happy with her new life. She hoped
that
all was well with him and was sorry that she couldn't reach him.
She still thought of him sometimes, and now and then she missed
him.
She ordered room service and watched TV, and ordered a movie she
had
wanted to see for years but never had time to. It was a comedy,
and she
laughed out loud alone in her room, and then locked all the
windows and
doors and even put the chain on the door. She half expected him to
pound
on her door when he got back, and try to get in, but she slept
soundly
until seven the next morning.
He called and asked her to meet him in the dining room, and at
breakfast
he explained the meetings that would take place that day, and what
he
expected her to do. Like her, he was extremely organized, and he
enjoyed
his work, and always made hers easier by telling her exactly what
was
expected.
"You did a great job yesterday," he praised her, looking
very proper in
a gray suit and a starched white shirt. He looked more like New
York
than L.A. She had worn a pink silk dress and she had a matching
sweater
over her shoulders. It was a dress she had bought two years before
in
Chicago, and it was a little softer-looking than most of the
clothes she
wore to work at the law firm.
"You look very pretty today," he said casually, and she
stiffened
imperceptibly, but he didn't see it. "Did you see any movie
stars in the
lobby last night?" And then, forgetting his remark about how
she looked,
she told him excitedly about the four she'd seen, and the movie
that had
made her laugh so hard when she watched it. For a brief instant,
they
were almost friends, and he sensed it. She had relaxed a little
bit,
which made things easier for him. It was so difficult being with
her
when she was so uptight, he wondered why she was like that sometimes,
but he would never have dared to ask her.
"I love that movie," he laughed, thinking about it.
"I saw it three
times when it first came out. I hate depressing movies."
"So do I," she admitted as their breakfast came. He was
eating scrambled
eggs and bacon, and she had oatmeal.
"You don't eat enough," he said sounding fatherly,
watching her.
"You should watch your cholesterol," she chided,
although he was very
thin, but eggs and bacon were out of favor.
"Oh God, spare me. My wife was a vegetarian, and a Buddhist.
All of
Hollywood is. It was worth getting divorced just so I could eat
cheeseburgers in peace again." He smiled at Grace and she
laughed in
spite of herself.
"Were you married for a long time?"
"Long enough," he grinned. "Seven years." He
had been divorced for two.
It had cost him nearly a million dollars to get out of it, but at
the
time it had seemed worth it, in spite of the economic stress it
had
caused him. No one had snagged his heart seriously since, and the
only
thing he really regretted was never having children. "I was
thirty-three
when I married her, and at the time, I was sure that being married
to
Michelle Andrews was the answer to all my prayers. It turned out
that
being married to America's hottest movie star wasn't as easy as I
thought. Those people pay a high price for celebrity.
Higher than the rest of us know. The press is never kind to them,
the
public wants to own their souls ... there's no way to survive it,
except
religion or drugs, and either way is not an ideal solution, as far
as
I'm concerned.
Every time we turned around there was another headline, another
scandal.
It was tough to live with, and eventually it takes a toll. We're
good
friends now, but three years ago we weren't." Grace knew from
People
magazine that she had been married twice since, to a younger rock
star,
and her agent. "Besides, I was too square for her. Too stiff.
Too
boring." Grace suspected that he had offered his former wife
the only
stability she'd ever had, or would have. "What about you?
Married?
Engaged? Divorced seven times? How old are you anyway, I forget.
Twenty-three?"
"Almost," she blushed, "in July. And no, not
married or engaged.
I'm too smart for either one, thanks very much."
"Oh sure, Grandma, give me a lecture." He laughed and
she tried not to
think about how attractive he was when he did. She didn't really
want to
get to know him. "At twenty-two, you're too young to even go
out.
I hope you don't." He was teasing but she wasn't, and he
sensed that.
"I don't."
"You don't? You're not serious?"
"Maybe."
"Are you planning to become a nun when you grow up, after
your career in
a law firm?" He was amused by her now that she was opening up
a little
bit. She was an intriguing girl. Smart and bright, and funny when
she
let it show, which wasn't often.
"I have a friend who's trying to talk me into it
actually."
"Who is that? I'll have to have a talk with this friend. Nuns
are
completely out of style these days. Don't you know that?"
"I guess not," Grace laughed again, "she is one.
Sister Eugene.
She's terrific."
"Oh God, you're a religious fanatic. I knew it. Why am I
cursed with
people like you ... my wife wanted me to bring the Dalai Lama over
from
Tibet to stay with us ... you're all crazy!" He pretended to
brush her
away, as a waiter poured their coffee and Grace laughed at him.
"I'm not a religious fanatic, I swear. Sometimes it's
appealing though.
Their life is so simple."
"And so unreal. You can help the world without giving it
up," he said
solemnly. It was something he felt strongly about. He liked
helping
people without taking extreme positions. "Where do you know
this nun
from?" He was still curious and they didn't have to leave the
hotel for
another ten minutes.
"We work together at a place where I do volunteer work."
"And where's that?" She saw as he talked to her that he
was perfectly
shaved, and everything about him was immaculate, and she tried not
to
notice. This was business.
"It's called St. Andrew's, on the Lower East Side. It's a
home for
abused women and children."
"You work there?" He seemed surprised, there was more to
her than he had
suspected, even though she was young, and sometimes very crabby.
He was starting to like her better.
"I do. I work there three times a week. It's an amazing
place.
They take in hundreds of people."
"I never figured you for doing something like that," he
said honestly.
"Why not?" she was surprised.
"Because that's a big commitment, a lot of work. Most girls
your
age would rather go to the discos."
"I've never been to one in my life."
"I'd take you, but I'm too old, and your mother probably
wouldn't want
you to go with me," he said, implying no threat at all, and
for once
even Grace didn't react. But she also didn't tell him she had no
mother.
The limousine picked them up for their meetings a few minutes
after ten.
And the next day they concluded the deal, in time to fly back to
New
York on the nine p.m. flight, which got them back to New York at
six the
following morning. As they were landing he told her to take the
day off.
It had been a long two days, and they hadn't slept on the plane.
He had
worked, and she had helped him.
"Are you taking the day off?" she asked.
"I can't. I've got a meeting at ten with Arco, and I've got a
lot to do.
Besides, I have a partners' lunch and there's some complaining I
want to
do."
"Then I'm going to work too."
"Don't be silly. I'll make do with Mrs. Macpherson or someone
from the
typing pool."
"If you're working, so am I. I don't need a day off. I can
sleep
tonight." She was very definite about it.
"The joys of youth. Are you sure?" He eyed her
thoughtfully. She was
becoming just what the others had said she was, loyal,
hardworking, and
nice to be around. It had been a long time coming.
He dropped her off at her apartment on the way home, and told her
to
take her time coming in, and if she changed her mind, he'd
understand.
But she was there before he was. She had all his notes from the
plane
typed up, his memos for his ten o'clock meeting on his desk, and a
series of files she knew he'd want laid out. And his coffee
exactly the
way he liked it.
"Wow!" He smiled at her. "What did I do to deserve
all this?"
"You put up with me for the past three months. I was pretty
awful, and
I'm sorry." He had been a perfect gentleman in California,
and she was
prepared to be his friend now.
"No, you weren't. I guess I had to prove myself. We both
did." He seemed
to understand it perfectly, and he was really grateful for the
caliber
of her work, and the minute attention she paid to detail.
At three-thirty that afternoon, he forced her to go home, and said
he'd
fire her if she didn't. But something had changed between them,
and they
both knew it. They were allies now, not enemies, and she was there
to
help him.
Chapter 11.
June was incredible in New York that year. It was | warm and lush,
with
hot, breezy days, and balmy J nights. The kind of nights where
people
used to sit on their stoops and hang out the windows. The kind of
weather that made people fall in love or wish they had someone to
fall
in love with.
There were two new women in Charles Mackenzie's life that month,
and
Grace was aware of both of them, though she wasn't sure she liked
either
one of them.
One was someone he said he had grown up with, she was divorced and
had
two kids in college. The other was the producer of a hit Broadway
show.
He seemed to have a definite attraction to the theater. He had
even
given two tickets to the play to Grace, and she had taken Winnie
and
they'd loved it.
"What's he really like?" Winnie asked her afterwards
when they went to
Sardi's for cheesecake.
"Nice ... very, very nice ..." Grace admitted. "It
took me a long time
to say that. I kept thinking he was going to try and tear my
clothes
off, and I hated him for it before he even tried."
"Well, did he?" Winnie asked hopefully. She was desperate
for Grace to
fall in love with someone.
"Of course not. He's a perfect gentleman." She told her
about
California.
"That's too bad." Winnie sounded disappointed. Grace was
her vicarious
thrill in life, her only contact with youth, and the daughter
she'd
never had. She wanted great things for her. And especially a
handsome
husband.
"He's got a bunch of women running after him. But I don't
think he's
really crazy about anyone. I think his ex-wife really burned him.
He doesn't say much, and he's pretty decent about her, but I get
the
impression she took a chunk of him." Not only financially,
but a piece
of his heart that had never recovered.
"One of the girls on fourteen said it cost him close to a
million
dollars," Winnie said in a whisper.
"I meant emotionally," Grace said primly. "Anyway,
he's a nice man.
And he works like a dog. He stays there till all hours." He
always
called a cab for her, or a limousine when she worked late for him,
and
he was always careful to let her go on time the nights she worked
at St.
Andrew's. "He's very considerate." And he had been
complaining ever
since she'd told him about St. Andrew's. He thought the
neighborhood was
just too dangerous for her to be going there by subway at night.
He
didn't even like it on Sundays.
"At least take a cab," he growled. But it would have
cost her a fortune.
And she had been doing it for months now with no problem.
Winnie told her then that Tom's wife was having another baby. And
they
both laughed wondering how long it would take for Bill's wife to
start
another baby too. The two men were like clones of each other.
After they left the restaurant, they hailed a taxi and Grace
dropped
Winnie off and went home herself, thinking how much she liked her
job
now.
Charles went to California again "June, but he didn't take
her this
time. He only stayed for a day, and he said it wasn't worth it.
And the
weekend he came back, she worked with him on Saturday in the
office. They worked till six o'clock, and he apologized for not
taking
her to dinner afterwards. He had a date, but he felt terrible
working
her all day and then not doing anything to reward her.
"Next week you should take a friend to 21 and charge it to
me," he
suggested, looking pleased at the idea, "or tonight, if you
like."
Grace knew immediately that she'd take Winnie, and the older woman
would
be ecstatic about it.
"You don't have to do that for me," Grace said shyly.
"I want to. You have to get something out of this, you know.
There are
supposed to be perks for working for the boss. I'm not sure what
they're
supposed to be, but dinner at 2" should definitely be one of
them, so
make yourself a reservation." He never tried to take her out
and she
loved that about him. She was completely relaxed with him now.
And she thanked him again before they both left. She thought he
had a
date with someone new, and she somehow had the impression that she
was a
lawyer in a rival law firmN There had been a lot of messages
lately from
Spielberg and Stein.
She stayed home and watched television that night, but she called
Winnie
and told her about their dinner at "21," and Winnie was
so excited, she
said she wouldn't sleep in the meantime.
And the next day, Grace went down to St. Andrew's as usual. The
weather
was still warm, and there were lots of people in the streets now,
which,
in some ways, made it safer for her.
She had a long, hard day, working with the new intakes. The warm
weather
was bringing them in in droves. Somehow, there always seemed to be
new
excuses for their beatings.
She had dinner in the kitchen with Sister Eugene and Father Tim
and she
was telling them about the movie stars she'd seen in the lobby of
the
hotel when she went to California.
"All was well?" he asked. They hadn't had time to talk
about it in the
month since she'd been there and back, but he assumed so, or she
would
have told him.
"It was great." She beamed.
It was eleven o'clock when she left, which was later than she
usually left on a Sunday. She thought about taking a cab, but the
weather was so warm, she decided to take the subway after all. She
hadn't even gotten a block away when someone grabbed her arm and
yanked
her hard into a doorway. She saw instantly that he was a tall,
thin
black man, and she suspected that he was a drug addict or just a
petty
thief.
Something in her gut went tight, and she watched him as he shook
her
hard and then slammed her against the door where they were
standing.
"You think you're a smart bitch, don't you? You think you
know it all
..." He put his hands around her throat, and her eyes never
left his.
He didn't seem to want her money. All he wanted was to abuse her.
"I don't know anything," she said calmly, not wanting to
frighten him,
as he almost strangled her in a fury. "Let go, man ... you
don't want to
do this."
"Oh yes, I do," and then, in a single gesture, he
flicked out a long,
thin knife and pressed it to her throat with a single practiced
gesture.
Without moving an inch, she was instantly reminded of her time in
prison. But there was no one to save her now ... no Luna ... no
Sally
...
"Don't do it ... just take my bag. There's fifty dollars in
it, it's all
I've got ... and my watch." She held her arm out. It was the
farewell
gift Cheryl had given her in Chicago. A small price to pay for her
life
now.
"I don't want your fucking watch, bitch ... I want
Isella."
"Isella?" She had no idea what-he was talking about. He
reeked of cheap
Scotch and sweat as he held her against his chest with his
switchblade
at her throat.
"My wife ... you took my wife ... and now she won't come
back. ... she
says she's going' back to Cleveland ..."
It was about St. Andrew's, then, and one of the women she'd helped
there.
"I didn't take her ... I didn't do anything ... maybe you
should talk to
her ... maybe if you get help, she'll come back. ..."
"You took my kids ..." He was crying then, and his whole
body seemed to
be twitching, as she frantically searched her memory for a woman
named
Isella, but she couldn't remember her. She saw so many women
there. She
wondered if she'd ever seen this one. Usually, she remembered who
they
were. But not Isella.
"No one can take your kids away from you ... or your wife ...
you have to
talk to them ... you need help ... what's your name?"
Maybe if she called him by name he wouldn't kill her.
"Sam ... why do you care?"
"I care." And then she thought of what might have been
her only
salvation. "I'm a nun ... I gave my life to God for people
like you, Sam
... I've been in prisons ... I've been in a lot of places ... it's
not
going to do anyone any good if you hurt me."
"You a nun?" he practically shrieked at her. "Shit
... nobody told me
that ... shit ..." He kicked the door behind her hard, but no
one came.
No one saw. No one cared on Delancey. "Why you messin' with
my bizness?
Why you tell her to go home?"
"So you can't hurt her anymore. You don't want to hurt her,
Sam. ... you
don't want to hurt anyone ..."
"Shit." He started to cry in earnest. "Fucking
nun," he spat at her,
"think you can do anything you want, for God. Fuck God ...
and fuck you
... fuck all of you, bitch ..." He grabbed her by the throat
then, and
banged her head hard into the door, it felt like it was full of
sand and
everything went gray and blurry for an instant, and then as she
started
to fall, she felt him kick her hard in the stomach, and then
again, and
someone was pounding on her face and she couldn't stop him.
She couldn't call out to him. She couldn't say his name. It was a
hailstorm of fists pounding on her face, her head, her stomach,
her
back, and then it stopped. She heard him run, she heard him
shouting at
her again, and then he was gone, and she lay tasting her own blood
in
the doorway.
The police found her that night, on their late night rounds,
slumped
over in the doorway. They poked her with their nightsticks, like
they
did the drunks, and then one of them saw her blood on it, shining
in the
streetlights.
"Shit," he said, and called out to his partner,
"get an ambulance,
quick!" The officer knelt down next to Grace and felt for a
pulse.
It was barely there, but she still had one. And as he turned her
over
slowly on her back, he could see how badly she'd been beaten. Her
face
was covered with blood, and her hair was matted to her head. He
wasn't
sure if there were any broken bones or internal injuries, but she
was
gasping for air even in her unconscious state, and his partner
came up
to him a minute later.
"Whatcha got?"
"A bad one ... she's not dressed for this neighborhood. God
only knows
where she came from." He opened her handbag and looked in her
wallet as
they waited for the ambulance to come from Bellevue. "She
lives on
Eighty-fourth, she's a long way from home. She should know better
than
to walk around down here."
"There's a crisis center down the street," the policeman
who had called
the ambulance said as the other one checked her pulse again and
put her
handbag under her head as they laid her gently on the street.
"She might
work there. I'll check it out after you hop the ambulance, if you
want."
One of them had to ride with her to make the report, if she lived
that
long. She wasn't looking good to either of them, her pulse was
getting
weaker, and so was her breathing.
The ambulance came less than five minutes later, with shrieking
sirens,
and the paramedics were quick to put her on a backboard and give
her
oxygen as they slid the board into the ambulance.
"Any idea how bad it is?" one of the cops asked the
senior paramedic.
Grace was completely unconscious and had never stirred since they
found
her. All she'd done was gasp for air, and they were giving her
oxygen
with a bag and mask.
"It doesn't look good," the paramedic said honestly.
"She's got a head
injury. That could mean anything." From death to retardation
to a
permanent coma. There was no way for them to tell there. She
looked
terrible in the light as they raced uptown to Bellevue.
Her face was battered almost beyond recognition, her eyes were
swollen
shut, there was a knife wound on her neck, and when they pulled
open her
shirt and unzipped her jeans, they saw how bad the bruises were
there.
Her attacker had very nearly killed her. "It looks pretty
bad," the
paramedic said to the cop in a whisper. "There's not much
left of her.
I wonder if the guy knew her. What's her name?"
The policeman opened her wallet again and read it aloud to one of
the
paramedics, as he nodded. They had work to do here. They had to
try to
keep her going till they got to Bellevue.
"Come on, Grace ... open your eyes for us ... you're okay ...
.
we're not going to hurt you ... we're taking you to the hospital,
Grace
... Grace ... Grace ... shit ..." They had an IV going and a
blood
pressure cuff on her and it was dropping sharply.
"We're losing her," he said to his colleague. It was
going down, down,
down ... . and then it was gone, but the paramedics were quick to
respond and one of them grabbed a defibrillator and literally
yanked her
bra off and put it on her.
"Stand back," he told the cop as they pulled into the
driveway, "got
er," her body received a huge shock, and her heart started
again, just
as the driver yanked open the doors and two attendants from the
emergency room rushed forward.
"She was in cardiac arrest a second ago," the paramedic
who had shocked
her explained as he covered her bare chest with her jacket.
"I think
we're dealing with some internal bleeding ... head injury
..."
He told them everything he knew and had seen as all five of them
ran
into the emergency room, running beside the gurney. Her blood
pressure
plummeted again as soon as they got inside, but this time her
heart
didn't stop. She already had an IV in her, and the chief resident
came
in with three nurses and started issuing orders, as the paramedics
and
the policeman disappeared, and went to the front desk to fill out
papers.
"Christ, she's a mess," one of the paramedics who'd come
in with her
said to the policeman. "Do you know what happened to
her?"
"Just your average New York mugging," the policeman said
unhappily. He
could see from her driver's license that she was twenty-two years
old.
It was too young to give your life to a mugger. Any age was, but
especially a young kid like that. There was no way of telling if
she'd
been pretty, or ever would be, if she even lived, which seemed
doubtful.
"Looks like more than a mugging," the paramedic said,
"nobody can beat
up someone like that unless they've got a beef with them. Maybe it
was
her boyfriend."
"In a doorway on Delancey? Not likely. She's wearing designer
jeans, and
she's got an Upper East Side address. She was mugged." But
when his
partner went to St. Andrew's, Father Tim suspected that it was
more than
bad luck that had felled Grace Adams. He'd had a visit from the
police
only the day before to tell him that a woman called
Isell"Jones had been
murdered by her husband that day, he had killed both of his kids
as
well, and then disappeared. And the policeman had suggested that
Father
Tim warn his nurses and social workers that the man was violent
and on
the run. It was possible that he would never come to St. Andrew's
at
all. Or he might, if he blamed them for encouraging Isella to
leave him
and try to get home to Cleveland. But it never dawned on him to
say
anything to Grace. She had been in California when Isella had
shown up,
beaten and terrified, with her children.
Father Tim had warned the others and told them to spread the word
and
watch out for a man called Sam Jones. They had been going to put a
bulletin on the board to alert everyone, but they had had so much
to do
for the past two days that they never did it.
When Father Tim heard what had happened to Grace, he was sure that
the
incident was related, and they put out an APB on Sam Jones, with a
mug
shot and his description. He'd been in plenty of trouble before
and he
had a record an arm long, and a history of violence. If they ever
found
him, the murder of his wife and kids would put him away forever,
not to
mention what he had done to Grace in the doorway on Delancey.
Father Tim looked sick when he asked him, "How bad is
it?"
"It looked pretty bad when the ambulance left, Father. I'm
sorry."
"So am I." There were tears in his eyes, as he pulled
off a black
T-shirt, and grabbed a black shirt with a Roman collar. "Can
you give me
a ride to the hospital?"
"Sure, Father." Father Tim quickly told Sister Eugene
where he was
going, and hurried out to the patrol car with the officer. Four
minutes
later they were at Bellevue. Grace was still in the emergency room
and a
whole team of doctors and nurses was working on her. But so far,
none of
them was encouraged by the results. She was barely hanging on at
that
moment.
"How is she?" Father Tim asked the nurse at the desk.
"Critical. That's all I know." And then she looked at
him, he was a
priest after all, and she probably wasn't going to make it. That's
what
one of the interns had told her. She was so bashed up inside, it
was
almost hopeless. "Do you want to see her?" He nodded,
feeling
responsible for what had happened. Sam Jones had gone after Grace,
and
nearly killed her.
Father Tim followed the nurse into the room and he was shocked at
what
he saw there. Three nurses were hovering over her, two interns,
and the
resident. She was almost naked, swathed in sheets, and her whole
body
was black it was so bruised and swollen. Her face looked like a
deep
purple melon. She was covered in ice packs, swathed in bandages,
there
were screens and scans and IVs and instruments everywhere. It was
the
worst thing he'd ever seen, and at a nod from the resident, he
gave her
last rites. He didn't even know what religion she was, but it
didn't
matter.
She was a child of God, and He knew how much she had given Him.
Father Tim was crying as he stood in the corner and prayed for
her, and
it was hours before they stopped working on her, and looked up.
Her head
was wrapped in bandages by then, they had stitched up her face and
her
throat. He had only used the knife on her neck, he had lacerated
her
face with his fist. One arm was broken, and five ribs. And they
were
going to operate as soon as she was stable. They knew by then from
scans
that she had a ruptured spleen, and he had damaged her kidneys,
and her
pelvis was broken too.
"Is there anything he didn't get?" Father Tim asked
miserably.
"Not much." The resident was used to it, but this time
it looked bad
even to him. She had barely survived it. "Her feet look
pretty good."
The doctor smiled and the priest tried to.
She went to surgery at six o'clock and it was noon before they
were
through. Sister Eugene had joined him by then, and they were sitting
together quietly, praying for her, when the chief resident came to
find
them.
"Are you her next of kin?" he asked, confused by the
priest's collar.
At first he'd just thought he was the hospital priest, but now he
realized that he was there specifically for Grace, as was the
woman with
him.
"Yes, I am," Father Tim said without hesitation.
"How is she?"
"She made it through the surgery. We took out her spleen,
patched up her
kidneys, put a pin in her pelvis. She's a lucky girl, we managed
to get
all the important stuff put back together. And the house plastic
surgeon
sewed up her face and swears it'll never show. The big question
mark
right now is the head injury. Everything looks okay on the E.E.G
but you
can't l always tell. It could look fine and she might never wake
up
again, and just stay in a coma. We just don't know yet.
We'll know a lot more in the next few days, Father. I'm
sorry." He
touched his arm, and nodded at the young nun before he walked away
to
get some rest. She had been a tough case, but at least she'd made
it and
they hadn't lost her.
For a while there, it had been mighty close. Grace had been lucky.
Before the resident left, Father Tim had thanked him and asked
when they
could see her and he said that as soon as she was out of the
recovery
room in a few more hours, she would be taken to I.C.U upstairs.
He and Sister Eugene went to the cafeteria for something to eat
then,
and she told Father Tim that he should go home and get some rest,
but he
didn't want to leave yet.
"I was thinking that maybe we should call her office. No one
knows
what's happened to her, except us. They must be wondering why she
didn't
come in," which was exactly the case. Charles Mackenzie had
had one of
the secretaries call her half a dozen times at home, but there was
no
answer. She could have overstayed on a weekend romance, but he
kept
insisting that it wasn't like her. He had no idea who else to
call, but
for all he knew, she could have slipped and hit her head in the
bathtub.
He had even thought of trying to locate her superintendent but
decided
to let it wait till after lunch. As soon as he got back, there was
a
call from Father Timothy Finnegan, and the secretary who answered
said
it was about Grace.
"I'll take it," he said, and picked up the phone with a
sudden queasy
feeling. "Hello?"
"Mr. Mackenzie?"
"Yes, Father, what can I do for you?"
"Not a great deal, I'm afraid. It's about Grace."
Charles felt his blood
run cold. Without hearing more, he knew something terrible had
happened
to her.
"Is she all right?"
There was an endless silence.
"I'm afraid not. She had a terrible accident last night. She
was mugged
and badly beaten after leaving St. Andrew's, the crisis center
where she
does volunteer work. It was late, and ... we don't know all the
details
yet, but we're afraid it may have been the crazed husband of one
of our
clients. He killed his wife and children on Saturday. We're not
sure if
it was he that attacked Grace. But whoever did it, beat Grace
within a
hair of killing her."
"Where is she?" Charles's hand shook as he grabbed his
pen and a
notepad.
"She's at Bellevue. She's just come out of surgery."
"How bad is it?" It was so unfair, she was so young, and
so alive, and
so pretty.
"Pretty bad. She lost her spleen, though the doctor says she
can live
without it. Her kidneys are damaged, she has a broken pelvis and
half a
dozen broken ribs. Her face was pretty badly cut up, and he sliced
her
throat but only superficially. The worst of it is that she has a
head
injury. That's the main concern now. They said we'll just have to
wait
and see. I'm sorry to call with such bad news. I just thought
you'd want
to know," and then, he didn't know why he told him, but he
felt he had
to, "She thinks a lot of you, Mr. Mackenzie. She thinks
you're a great
person."
"I think the world of her too. Is there anything we can do
for her at
this point?"
"Pray."
"I will, Father, I will. And thank you. Let me know if there's
any
change, will you?"
"Of course."
The moment he hung up, Charles Mackenzie called the head of
Bellevue,
and a neurosurgeon he knew well, and asked him to have a look at
Grace
immediately. The head of the hospital had promised to put her in a
private room, and see that she had private nurses. But first she
was
going to intensive care, where they were experts at dealing with
trauma.
Charles couldn't believe what they'd told him when he called the
hospital. He remembered telling her how dangerous the neighborhood
was,
and that she should be taking cabs. And now look what had
happened. He
felt shaken for the rest of the afternoon, and he called at five
and
asked if there was any improvement. She was in intensive care by
then,
but they didn't have any news. She was listed as critical. And at
six
o'clock, he was still at the office when his neurosurgeon friend
called
him back.
"You wouldn't believe what that guy did to her, Charles. It's
inhuman."
"Will she be all right?" Charles asked him sadly. He
hated to see
something like that happen to her, or anyone. And he was surprised
to
realize how fond of her he had grown. She was so young, she could
have
been his daughter, he realized, feeling startled.
"She could be all right," the doctor answered.
"It's hard to say yet.
The other injuries should heal pretty well. The head is another
story.
She could be fine, or she couldn't. It all depends if she comes
out of
it in the next few days. She didn't need brain surgery, which is
fortunate, but there's going to be some swelling for a while. We
just
have to be patient. Is she a friend of yours?"
"My secretary."
"Damn shame. She's just a kid, from what I saw on the chart.
And there's
no family, is there?"
"I don't really know. She doesn't talk about it. She never
told me."
It made him wonder now what her situation was. She never talked
about
her personal life and family. He knew almost nothing about her.
"I spoke to a nun who was sitting with her. The priest who came
in
earlier had apparently gone home to rest. But the Sister says she
has no
one in the world. That's pretty rough for a young kid. The Sister
says
she's a nice-looking girl, though it's a little hard to tell at
the
moment. The plastic resident sewed her up so she should look okay.
It's just the head we have to worry about now." Charles felt
sick when
he hung up. It was too much to bear. And how could she not have
any
family? How could she be alone at twenty-two? That didn't
make sense to him. All she had was a nun and priest with her. It
was
hard to believe she had no one else, but maybe she didn't.
He sat at his desk for another hour, trying to work, and got
nowhere,
and finally he couldn't stand it any longer.
At seven o'clock he took a cab down to Bellevue, and went to the
I.C.U.
Sister Eugene had left by then too, though they were calling
regularly
from St. Andrew's for news, and Father Tim had said he'd be back
later
that night when things settled down at the shelter. But there were
only
nurses with her now, and for the moment nothing had changed since
that
morning.
Charles went and sat with her for a while, unable to believe what
she
looked like. She would have been completely unrecognizable, except
for
her long, graceful fingers. He held her hand in his own and gently
stroked it.
"Hi Grace, I came down to see you." He spoke quietly, so
he wouldn't
disturb anyone, but he wanted to say something to her, on the off
chance
that she could hear him, although it certainly seemed unlikely in
the
state she was in. "You're going to be fine, you know ... and
don't
forget that dinner at 21." I'll take you there myself if you
hurry up
and get well ... and you know, it would be nice if you would open
your
eyes for us ... it's not too exciting like this. ... open your
eyes ...
that's right, Grace ... open your eyes. ..." He went on
talking
soothingly to her, and just as he was thinking
about leaving her, he saw her eyelids flutter and signaled to the
nurses
at the desk. His heart was pounding at what he'd seen. Her
survival was
vital to him. He wanted her to live. He barely knew her, but he
didn't
want to lose her. "I think she moved her eyelids," he
explained.
"It's probably just a reflex," the nurse said with a
sympathetic smile.
But then she did it again, and the nurse stood and watched her.
"Move your eyes again, Grace," he said quietly.
"Come on, I know you can
do it. Yes, you can." And she did. And then she opened them
briefly,
moaned, and closed them. He wanted to shout with excitement.
"What does that mean?" he asked the nurse.
"That she's regaining consciousness." She smiled at him.
"I'll call the
doctor."
"That was great, Grace," he praised her, stroking her
fingers again,
willing her to live, just to prove she could do it, just so one
more
mugger wouldn't win a life he didn't deserve to take. "Come
on, Grace
.... you can't just lie there, sleeping ... we've got work to do.
...
hat about that letter you promised me you'd do ..." He was
saying
anything he could think of and then he almost cried when he saw
her
frown, the eyes opened again and she stared at him blankly.
" ... What ... letter..." she croaked through bruised
swollen lips as
her eyes closed again, and this time he did cry. The tears rolled
down
his cheeks as he looked at her. She had heard him.
And then the-doctor came, and Charles explained what had happened.
They did another E.E.G on her, and her brain waves were still
normal,
but now her reactions were slowly returning. She turned away when
they
tried to shine a light in her eyes, and she moaned and then cried
when
they touched her. She was in pain, which they thought was a great
sign.
Now she would have to move through various stages of misery in
order to
improve.
And at midnight, Charles was still there with her, he couldn't
bring
himself to leave her. But it appeared now that her brain was not
damaged. They would have to do more tests, and they had to be sure
that
there was no further, hidden trauma, but it looked as though she
would
in fact recover and be all right eventually.
Father Tim had come back by then, and he was in I.C.U too when the
doctor told Charles that the prognosis looked pretty good. And
then the
two men went out into the hall to talk while one of the nurses
attended
to Grace and gave her a shot for the pain. She was in agony from
all her
bruises and the operation, and the damage to her head and face.
"My God, she's going to make it," Father Tim said with a
look of joy
and excitement. He had prayed for her all day, and had two masses
said
for her. And all the nuns were praying for her that night.
"What a great
girl she is." They had also caught Sam Jones earlier that
night, and
charged him with the murder of his wife and two children, and the
attempted murder of Grace Adams. He had admitted mugging her,
because
she was the first one he saw come out of St. Andrew's, and he felt
that
that was where all his troubles began. "You don't know how
much she's
done for us, Mr. Mackenzie. The girl is a saint," Father Tim
said to
Charles in the hallway.
"Why does she do it?" Charles looked puzzled, as the two
men sat
drinking coffee. They suddenly felt like brothers, and they were
both
relieved that Grace was going to recover.
"I think there's a lot about Grace that none of us
know," Father Tim
said quietly. "I don't think the life of battered women and
children is
new to her. I think she's a girl who's suffered a great deal and
survived it, and now she wants to help others do the same. She'd
make a
great nun," he grinned, and Charles pointed a finger at him.
"Don't you dare! She should get married and have kids."
"I'm not sure she ever will," Father Tim said honestly.
"I don't think
that's what she wants, to be honest. Some of them heal, the way
she has,
but many of the children who suffer like the ones we see can never
cross
over into a life where they can trust enough to be whole people
again.
I think it's miraculous if they come as far as Grace has, and can
give
so much to others. Maybe wanting more than that is too much to
ask."
"If she can give to so many, why not to a husband?"
"That's a lot harder." Father Tim smiled philosophically
at him, and
then decided to admit something to him. It might give him an
insight.
"She was desperately afraid to go to California with you. And
eternally
grateful when you didn't hurt her, or use her."
" Use' her? What do you mean?"
"I think she's seen a lot of pain. A lot of men do
unspeakable things.
We see it every day. I think she fully expected you to do
something
unsuitable to her." Charles Mackenzie looked embarrassed at
the mere
idea of it, and he was horrified that she would think that of him,
and
even say it to another person.
"I guess that's why she was so upset when she first came to
my office.
She didn't trust me."
"Probably. She doesn't trust anyone a great deal. And I don't
suppose
this will help. But at least this wasn't personal. That's very
different. It's when someone you love really hurts you that it
destroys
the soul ... like a mother with a child, or a man and a
woman."
He was a wise man and Charles listened to him with interest,
wondering
how much of what he said applied to Grace. It sounded like he
wasn't
sure of her history either, and Charles wondered if he could be
wrong
about her. But he seemed to know Grace a lot better than Charles
did.
And the things he said about her tore at his heart. He wondered
what
terrible things had happened to her to leave her so badly scarred
as a
woman. He couldn't even begin to imagine what lay behind her cool
facade
and gentle manner.
"Do you know anything at all about her parents?" Charles
was curious
about her now.
"She never talks about them. I only know they're dead. She
has no family
at all. But I don't think that bothers her. She came here from
Chicago.
She never talks about relatives or friends. I think she's a very
lonely
girl, but she accepts it. Her only interest is working for you,
and
coming to St. Andrew's. She works twenty-five or thirty hours a
week
there."
"That doesn't leave much time for anything else except
sleeping.
She works forty-five or fifty for me."
"That's the whole of it, Mr. Mackenzie."
Charles was dying to talk to her now, to ask her questions about
her
life, to ask her why she really worked at St. Andrew's. Suddenly
she
wasn't just a girl he worked with every day, she was a great deal
more
interesting than that, and there were a thousand questions he
wanted to
ask her.
The nurse let them back in then. And Father Tim stood a little
apart to let Charles talk to her about trivial things. He sensed
that
there was more interest there than the man knew, or than Grace
suspected.
She was fuzzy again when Charles sat down at her bedside, the shot
had
made her woozy, but at least she wasn't in as much pain.
"Thank you ... for coming ..." She tried to smile but
her lips were
still too swollen.
"I'm so sorry this happened to you, Grace." He was going
to have a talk
with her about working at St. Andrew's, but that would come later,
if
she'd listen. "They caught the guy who did it."
"He was ... angry ... about his wife ... Isella." She
would remember the
woman's name forever.
"I hope they hang him," Charles said angrily, and she
opened her eyes
and looked at him again. And this time she did manage a small
smile,
looking very dizzy. "Why don't you sleep ... I'll come back
tomorrow."
She nodded, and Father Tim spent a few minutes with her too, and
then
both men left to let her sleep. Charles dropped him off at the
shelter
in a cab, and then drove uptown, after promising to stay in touch
with
the young priest. He liked him. And Charles had also promised to
come
and visit the center. He was going to, too, he wanted to know more
about
Grace, and that was one way to do it.
Charles went back to visit Grace for the next three days,
canceling his
lunches to be there, even one with his producer friend, but he
didn't
want to let Grace down. When they moved her to a private room,
Charles
brought Winnie to the hospital with him. She cried when she saw
Grace,
and wrung her hands, and kissed her on the only tiny patch of her
face
with no bandages or bruises. She looked slightly better by then. A
lot
of the swelling had gone down, but everything hurt, and she found
she
could hardly move, between her ribs and her head, and her pelvis.
Her kidneys were healing well, and the doctor said she wouldn't
miss her
spleen, but she was pretty miserable, every inch of her ached and
felt
as though it had been shattered.
On Saturday, almost a week after the accident, the nurse Charles
had
insisted on hiring for her coaxed her out of bed and made her walk
to the
bathroom. It hurt so much to do it that she almost fainted, but
she
celebrated her victory with a glass of fruit juice when she got
back to
bed. She was sheet white, but smiling, when Charles arrived with a
huge
bunch of spring flowers. He had been bringing flowers for her
daily, and
magazines, and candy, and books. He had wanted to cheer her up,
and he
wasn't sure how to do it.
"What are you doing here?" She looked embarrassed to see
him, and it
brought a little color back to her face when she blushed.
"Today's
Saturday, don't you have something better to do?" she scolded
him,
sounding more like herself than she had in days. She looked more
like
herself too. Her face looked like a rainbow of blues and greens
and
purples, but the swelling was almost all gone, and the stitches
were
healing so well you almost couldn't see them. The only thing
Charles
wondered about now was her spirit, after his conversation with
Father
Tim about what must have led her to St. Andrew's in the first
place.
But it was too soon to ask her how she felt about "Aren't you
supposed
to be going away for the weekend?" She remembered making
arrangements
for him to attend a regatta on Long Island. She had rented him a
small
house in Quogue, and now it was wasted if he stayed in New York.
"I canceled." He was matter-of-fact, and watched her
face carefully.
"You're looking pretty good." He smiled and handed her
some magazines he
had brought her. All week he had sent her little trinkets, a bed
jacket,
some slippers, a pillow for her neck, some cologne. It was
embarrassing,
but she had to admit, she liked it. She had mentioned it to Winnie
on
the phone, and the older woman tittered like an old mother hen.
Grace had laughed at her, and told her that she was out of hher
mind, she
never gave up on romance. "Of course not," Winnie
confessed proudly.
She had promised to come and visit Grace on Sunday.
"I want to go home," Grace said to Charles, looking
mournful.
"I don't think that's in the cards for a while," Charles
said with a
smile. They had said three weeks the day before, which didn't
appeal to
Grace at all, and meant she'd still be in the hospital on her
birthday.
"I want to go back to work." They had told her she'd be
on crutches for
a month or two, but she still wanted to go back to work as soon as
she
got out of the hospital. She had nothing else to do. And she also
wanted
to go back to St. Andrew's as soon as they'd let her.
"Don't push yourself, Grace. Why don't you take some time off
when you
get out, and go have some fun somewhere?"
But she only laughed at the idea. "Where? Like the
Riviera?" She
couldn't afford the time to go anywhere for very long. Maybe a
weekend
at Atlantic City. She didn't have any vacation coming. She hadn't
worked
at the firm long enough to qualify for a week off. She knew she
had to
work there a year before she could take two weeks off. It was
already
too much that he had told her the firm would pay for everything
her
insurance didn't. Her whole three weeks at Bellevue and everything
they
had to do for her would probably cost close to fifty thousand
dollars.
"Sure, why not go to the Riviera? Charter yourself a
yacht," Charles
teased her. "Do something fun for a change." She laughed
at him, and
they sat talking for a while. She was surprised by how easy it was
to
talk to him, and he didn't seem to want to go anywhere at all. He
was
still there when her nurse went to lunch, and he even helped her
hobble
to the chair clutching his arm, and gently propped a pillow behind
her
when she got there, victorious but pale and exhausted.
"How come you never had any children?" she asked
suddenly, as they sat
and chatted, and he fussed over her and poured her a glass of
ginger
ale. He would have made a great father, she thought, but didn't
say so.
"My wife hated kids," he smiled. "She wanted to be
a child herself.
Actresses are like that. And I indulged her," he said,
sounding a little
embarrassed.
"Are you sorry? That you didn't have kids, I mean?" She
made him sound
very old, as though it was too late now, and he laughed as he gave
it a
moment's careful thought.
"Sometimes. I used to think I'd remarry and have children
after Michelle
left me. But maybe not. I think I'm too comfortable like this to
do
anything dramatic now." In the last couple of years, he had
gotten lazy
about finding a serious involvement. He liked his temporaries, and
his
freedom and independence. It was tempting to stay that way
forever.
But the question she had asked him opened a door for him as well.
"What about you? Why don't you want a husband and
children?" He knew a
lot more about her now, but the question surprised her. It came
out of
nowhere.
"What makes you say that?" She looked away from him
uncomfortably,
afraid of his question. But when she looked back into his eyes,
she saw
someone she could trust there. "How did you know that's how I
felt?"
"A girl your age doesn't spend all her time doing volunteer
work, and
with sixty-year-old spinsters like Winnie, unless she's got very
little
interest in finding a husband. I assume that I'm correct?" he
questioned, looking at her pointedly with a smile.
"You are."
"Why?"
She waited a long time before she answered. She didn't want to lie
to
him, but she wasn't ready to tell him the truth either. "It's
a long
story."
"Does it have to do with your parents?" His eyes bore
into hers, but not
unkindly. He had already proven that she could trust him, and that
he
cared about her welfare.
"Yes."
"Was it very bad?" She nodded, and he felt a deep grief
for her. It hurt
him to think of anyone hurting her. "Did anyone help
you?"
"Not for a long time, and it was too late by then. It was all
over."
"It's never all over, and it's never too late. You don't have
to live
with that pain for the rest of your life, Grace. You have a right
to be
free of it, and have a future with a decent guy." He felt
proprietary
now and wanted her to have a good, solid future.
"I have a present, which means more to me. Used to be I
didn't even have
that. I don't ask too much of the future," Grace said quietly
with a
look of sorrow.
"But you should," he tried to urge her forward.
"You're so young, you're
practically half my age. Your life is just beginning."
But she shook her head, with a smile that was full of wisdom and
sadness. "Believe me, Charles," he had insisted she call
him that now
that she was in the hospital, "my life is not beginning. It's
half
over."
"It just feels that way. It won't be over for a long time,
which is why
you need more in it than just working for me, and at St.
Andrew's."
"You trying to fix me up with someone?" She laughed,
stretching her long
legs before her. He was a kind man, and she knew he meant well,
but he
didn't know what he was doing. She was not an ordinary
twenty-two-year-old girl with a few rocky memories and a rosy
future.
She felt more like a survivor of a death camp, and in some ways
she was.
Charles Mackenzie had never encountered anything like that, and he
wasn't sure what to do for her.
"I wish I knew someone worth fixing you up with," he
answered her with a
smile. All the men he knew were either too old, or too stupid.
They didn't deserve her.
They talked of other things then, sailing, which he loved, and
summers
on Martha's Vineyard when he was a boy, and places he'd been. He
still
had a house in Martha's Vineyard,.
though he rarely ever went there anymore. They didn't talk about
painful things again, and at the end of the afternoon, he left and
told
her to get some rest. He told her he was going to see friends in
Connecticut the next day. She was touched that he spent so much
time
with her.
Winnie came Sunday afternoon, and Father Tim, and Grace was just
settling down to watching television before she went to sleep that
night, when Charles strode in, in khaki pants and a starched blue
shirt,
looking like an ad in GQ, and smelling like the country.
"I was on my way back into town, and I thought I'd stop by
and see how
you were," he said, looking happy to see her. And in spite of
herself,
she beamed at him. She had actually missed him that afternoon, and
that
had worried her a little. He was only her boss after all, not a
lifelong
friend, and she had no right to expect to see him. She didn't, but
she
enjoyed him, more than she would ever have expected.
"Did you have fun in the country?" she asked, feeling
relieved that he
was there.
"No," he said honestly, "I thought of you all
afternoon. You're a lot
more fun than they were."
"Now I know you're crazy." He came to sit on the foot of
the bed and
told her funny stories about the afternoon, and in spite of
herself, she
was disappointed when he left. It was ten o'clock by then, and he
thought she should get some sleep, although he didn't want to
leave
either.
But that night, as she lay in bed and thought about him, she
started to
panic. What was she doing with him? What did she want from him? If
she
opened up to him like this, he would only hurt her. She forced
herself
to remember the anguish and embarrassment of Marcus, who had been
so
good to her at first, so patient, and then betrayed her. It
terrified
her just thinking about Charles. Maybe all she was to Charles
Mackenzie
was a conquest. She could feel her chest tighten as she thought
about
it, and as though he had read her mind, the phone rang next to her
bed.
She couldn't imagine who it was, but it was Charles, and he
sounded
worried.
"I want to say something to you ... and you may think I'm
crazy, but I'm
going to say it to you anyway ... I want to be your friend, Grace.
I won't hurt you, but I just got worried, trying to imagine what
you
were thinking. I don't know what's happening. I just know that I
think
about you all the time, and I worry about what's happened to you
in the
past, although I can't even imagine it ... but I don't want to
lose you
... I don't want to scare you away, or frighten you, or make you
worry
about your job. Let's just be two people for a little while, two
people
who care about each other, if we do, and go very slowly from
there." She
couldn't believe what she was hearing, but in a way, it was a
relief to
have him say it.
"What are we doing, Charles?" she said nervously.
"What about my job?
We can't pretend I don't work for you. What happens when I come
back?"
"You're not coming back for a while, Grace. We'll know a lot
more by
then. I think we're both feeling something we don't understand
right
now. Maybe we're just friends, maybe your accident scared us both.
Maybe it's more than that. Maybe it never can be. But you need to
know
who I am, and I want to know who you are ... I want to know your
pain
... want to know what makes you laugh. I want to be there for you
...
want to help you ..."
"And then what? You walk away from me? You find another
secretary who
amuses you for a few weeks and have her tell you all her
secrets?"
She was relieved that he called her but she was too afraid to let
herself trust him.
Charles remembered Father Tim's words, that some of the survivors
just
can't let go. But he wanted her to be one who could, no matter
what it
took to get there.
"That's not fair," Charles chided her. "I've never
been in a situation
like this before. I've never gone out with anyone at the law firm,
or
anyone who worked for me." And then he smiled in spite of
himself.
"And you can hardly say I'm going out with you. You can't go
anywhere
except from the bed to the chair, and even I wouldn't have the bad
taste
to attack you." She laughed at what he said, and her voice
sounded deep
and sexy as she lay in bed, and she wanted to let herself trust
him, but
she knew she couldn't ... or could she?
"I just don't know," Grace said, still sounding nervous.
"You don't have to know anything right now ... except if it's
okay with
you if I visit you. That's all you need to decide right now.
I was just afraid you'd panic and start to go crazy once you were
alone,
and got to thinking." "I was ... tonight ..." she
said honestly with a
little girl's smile. "I was starting to panic over what we're
doing."
"We're not doing anything, so just shut up and get better.
And one of
these days," he said so gently, it was almost a caress,
"when you feel
strong enough, I want you to tell me what happened to you in the
past.
You can't expect me to really understand till you do that. Have
you ever
told anyone?" He worried about that. How could she live with
all those
dark secrets?
"Two people," she admitted to him. "A wonderful
woman I knew, a
therapist ... she was killed in a plane crash on her honeymoon
almost
three years ago. And a man who was my lawyer, but I haven't talked
to
him in a long time either."
"You haven't had a lot of luck, have you, Grace?"
She shook her head sadly, and then shrugged. "I don't know
... lately I
have. I can't complain." She decided to take a huge leap
then.
"I was lucky when I met you." Saying those words to him
almost choked
her and he knew it.
"Not as lucky as I was. Now get some sleep, sweetheart
..." he said
softly into the phone, "I'll come by at lunch. And maybe I'll
even come
back for dinner. Maybe I can bring you something from 21."
"I was going to take Winnie there next week," she said
guiltily
"You'll have plenty of time for that when you're well. Now go
to sleep,"
he whispered to her, wishing he could put his arms around her and
protect her. She made him feel different than he had ever felt
with any
woman before. All he wanted to do was take care of her and keep
her safe
from harm. So many terrible things must have happened to her, even
as
recently as a week ago. But he wanted to change all that now.
They said good night and hung up, and she lay there thinking about
him
for a long time. He frightened her with the things he said to her,
and
his persistent attention, but oddly enough, as terrifying as it
was, she
liked it. And she felt a tingling sensation in her gut that she
had
never felt before for any man, until Charles Mackenzie.
Chapter 12.
Charles came to see her twice the next day, and either once or
twice a
day for the next three weeks, until she was finally released from
Bellevue. She could get around more easily on crutches by then,
and take
care of herself, but she still didn't have as much stamina as she
would
have liked. The doctor told her to wait another two weeks before
she
went back to work.
At the office, Charles was making do with temps, and Grace felt
terribly
guilty about it, but he was the first one to tell her not to rush
back
to work, not to come back in fact, until she was ready.
They spent hours together while she was in the hospital. She knew
he'd
had to cancel almost all his plans to be with her, but he
pretended not
to even notice. They laughed, and they talked, and played cards,
and he
joked with her. He didn't force any confidences from her, and he
helped
her walk down the hall, and promised her you couldn't see a single
scar,
and when she complained about how horrible the hospital gowns
were, he
brought her exquisite nightgowns from Pratesi. In a way, it was
all
embarrassing, and she was still terrified of where it would all
lead,
but she was no longer able to stop it. If he didn't come to lunch,
she
didn't eat, and if he had to miss an evening with her, she was so
lonely
she could barely stand it.
Every time she saw his face appear in the doorway of her hospital
room,
she looked like a child who had found its only friend, or its
teddy
bear, or even its mother. He took care of everything for her,
talked to
the doctors, called in consultants, filed her insurance. No one at
the
office knew how involved he was with her, and even Winnie had no
idea
how much time he was spending with her. Grace had had a lifetime
of
practice at keeping secrets.
But once she went home, she was frightened again that everything
would
change. For about two hours, until he appeared at her apartment
with
champagne and balloons, and a picnic lunch. It was only two hours
after
he had brought her back from the hospital in a rented limo and
left her
briefly to do some errands.
"What are people going to think?" she said, as he drove
her from the
hospital, back to Eighty-fourth street. She imagined that everyone
knew
her boss was hanging out with her day and night, and they were
going to
put it up on billboards.
"I don't think anyone really cares, to tell you the truth.
Except us.
Everyone is busy screwing up their own lives. And frankly, I don't
think
we're screwing up ours. You're the best thing that ever happened
to me."
He repeated that to her when he arrived on her doorstep with a
picnic.
More importantly, he had a small blue box with him, and in it was
a
narrow gold bracelet.
"What's this for?" she said, awed by his generosity. It
was from
Tiffany, and it fit her perfectly, but she wasn't sure if she
should
accept it.
But he was laughing at her. "Do you know what day this
is?" She shook
her head. She had lost track of dates while she was in the
hospital.
She had spent the Fourth of July there, but she hadn't paid much
attention after that. "It's your birthday, silly girl. That's
why I had
them let you out today instead of Monday. You can't stay in the
hospital
on your birthday!" Tears filled her eyes as she realized what
he'd done,
and he'd even brought a small birthday cake for her from
Greenberg's.
It was all chocolate, and very rich, and incredibly gooey and
delicious.
"How can you do all this for me?" She felt shy with him
suddenly, but so
pleased. He had done nothing but spoil her since the mugging.
Spoil her and be kind to her, and spend time with her. No one had
ever
been as kind to her as he was.
"Easy, I guess," he answered, "I don't have kids.
Maybe I should adopt
you. Now there's a thought. That certainly simplifies things for
you,
doesn't it?" She laughed at the suggestion. It would
certainly have been
easier than dealing with her feelings and fears of getting
involved with
him.
Their relationship changed subtly once she was back in her
apartment.
It was instantly more intimate, closer, and more difficult to
pretend
that they were just friends. They were suddenly all alone without
nurses
and attendants to chaperon and interrupt them. It made Grace feel
shy
with him at first, and he pretended not to notice. He had brought
a
funny nurse's hat with him with her birthday cake and gift and
picnic
lunch, and he put it on, and forced her to-go to bed and rest. He
watched TV with her, and made dinner for her in her tiny kitchen.
She hobbled out to help, and he made her sit in a chair and watch,
while
she protested.
"I'm not helpless, you know," she objected vociferously.
"Yes, you are. Don't forget, I'm the boss here," he
overruled her, and
she laughed. It was so easy being with him, and so comfortable.
They lay on her bed after dinner, and talked, and he held her
hand, but
he was desperately afraid to go any further, or of what would
happen if
he did.
And finally, unable to stand it any longer, he turned and asked
her one
of the things he had wanted to know for weeks now.
"Are you afraid of me, Grace? I mean physically ... I don't
want to do
anything that will frighten or hurt you." She was touched
that he had
asked her. He had been lying next to her on her bed for two hours,
and
holding her hand. They were like old friends, but there was also
an
undeniable electricity between them. And now it was Charles who
was
frightened.
He didn't want to do anything that would jeopardize their
relationship,
or make him lose her.
"Sometimes, I'm afraid of men," she said honestly.
"Someone did some awful stuff to you, didn't they?" She
nodded in
answer. "A stranger?" She shook her head and there was a
long pause.
"My father." But there were other things, and she knew
she needed to
explain those too. She sighed, and picked up his hand again and
kissed
his fingers. "All my life, people tried to hurt me, or take
advantage of
me. After ... after he was gone ... my first boss tried to seduce
me. He
was married, I don't know ... it was just so sleazy.
He just assumed that he had a right to use me. And another man I
had
business dealings with did the same thing." She was talking
about Louis
Marquez and didn't want to explain him to Charles just yet,
although she
knew that eventually, if this got serious, she'd have to.
"This other man kept threatening, threatened that I'd lose my
job if I
didn't sleep with him. He used to show up at my apartment. It was
disgusting ... and then there was someone I went out with. He did
pretty
much the same thing, used me, made a fool of me, never gave a
damn. He
put something in my drink and I got horribly sick. But he didn't
rape me
at least. At first I was afraid that maybe he had after he'd
drugged me,
but he hadn't. He just made me look like a fool afterwards. He was
a
real bastard."
Charles looked horrified. He couldn't imagine people doing things
like
that. Especially to someone he knew. It was appalling. "How
did you know
he hadn't raped you?" he asked in an agonized voice, thinking
of what
she must have been through.
"My roommate took me to a doctor she knew. Nothing had
happened.
But he pretended that it had, and told everyone that. He told my
boss,
which was why he went after me, and I guess why he expected to
sleep
with me.
That was why I quit my job and left Chicago."
..."Good luck for me." He smiled, putting an arm around
her shoulders
and pulling her closer.
"Those were the only men I really had any dealings with. I
only went out
with that one guy in Chicago, and he made a real ass of me. I
never went
out with anyone in high school ... because of my father ...
."
"Where did you go to college?" he asked, and she smiled
at the memory.
"In Dwight, Illinois," she said honestly.
"And who did you go out with there?" This time she
laughed, remembering
what would have been her choices.
"Not a soul. It was an all-girls school, so to speak."
But she knew then
that she'd have to tell him soon. She just didn't want to tell him
all
of it on her birthday. It was too hard to go through, and they'd
had
such a nice time. It was the best birthday she'd ever had, even
with her
broken bones and her stitches and her crutches. He had made up for
everything and a lot of years with his dinner, and his present,
and his
kindness.
He didn't want to push her much further than he already had, but
he
wanted to understand something more clearly. "Am I correct in
believing
that you're not a virgin?"
"That's right," she glanced up at him, looking
breathtakingly beautiful
in a blue satin bathrobe he'd bought her.
"I just wondered ... but there hasn't been anyone in a long
time, has
there?"
She nodded. "I promise we'll talk about it sometime ... just
not tonight
..." He didn't want to talk about it on her birthday either.
He suspected correctly that it was going to be hard for her, and
he
didn't want to spoil their evening.
"Whenever you're ready ... I just wanted to know ... I don't
ever want
to do anything that scares you." But as he said the words,
and she had
her face turned up to his, listening to him, he found himself
melting
toward her and he couldn't help it. He gently took her face in his
hands, and ever so carefully kissed her. She seemed cautious at
first,
and then he felt her responding to him. He lay down next to her,
and
held her close to him, and kissed her again, wanting her
desperately,
but he never allowed his hands to wander toward her body.
"Thank you," she whispered, and kissed him this time.
"For being so good
to me, and so patient."
"Don't press your luck," he almost groaned after he'd
kissed her again.
This was not going to be easy. But he was determined to bring her
back
across the bridge eventually. He knew that whatever it took, and
however
long, he was going to save her. He left her apartment late that
night,
after he'd tucked her into bed, and she was almost sleeping. He
kissed
her again, and let himself out.
He had borrowed a key from her, so she didn't have to get up, and
he
could lock the door behind him. And the next morning, as she
hobbled to
the bathroom and brushed her hair, she looked startled as she
heard him
let himself into the apartment. He had brought orange juice and
bagels
with cream cheese, and the New York Times, and he made her
scrambled
eggs and bacon.
"High cholesterol, it's good for you, trust me." She
laughed at him.
And he told her to get dressed. He took her for a short walk down
First
Avenue, and then brought her back when she was tired. And he
watched the
baseball game while she slept in his arms that afternoon.
She looked so beautiful and so peaceful. And when she woke up, she
looked up at him, wondering how she'd been so lucky.
"What are you doing here, Mr. Mackenzie?" She smiled
sleepily at him,
and he leaned down to kiss her.
"I came over so you could work on your dictation."
"No kidding."
They ordered pizza that night, and he had brought some work with
him,
but he absolutely refused to let her help him. And after he'd
finished,
she looked at him, feeling guilty. It seemed late in the day to be
keeping secrets from him, although she knew that he would never
press
her.
"I think I ought to tell you some things, Charles," she
said quietly
after a few minutes. "You have a right to know. And you may
feel
differently about me after you hear them." But it was time,
before they
went any further. Not everyone wanted a woman who had committed
murder.
In fact, she suspected that most wouldn't. And maybe Charles
wouldn't
either.
He took her hands in both of his, before she started and looked
her in
the eye squarely. "I want you to know that whatever happened,
whatever
they did to you, whatever you did, I love you. I want you to hear
that
now ... and later." It was the first time he had told her
that he loved
her, and it made her cry before she'd even started. But now she
wanted
him to listen and see how he felt after she had told him all of
it.
Maybe everything would change then.
"I love you too, Charles," she said, holding him, with
her eyes closed,
and tears rolling down her cheeks. "But there's a lot you
don't know
about me." She took a deep breath, felt for the inhaler in
her pocket,
and started at the beginning. "When I was a little girl, my
father beat
my mother all the time ... I mean all the time ... every night ...
. as
hard as he could ... I used to hear her screams, and the sound of
his
fists on her ... and in the morning I'd see the bruises. ... she
always
lied and pretended it was nothing. But every night he'd come home,
he'd
yell and she'd cry and he'd beat her again. After a while, you
stop
having any kind of life when those things happen. You can't have
friends, because they might find out. You can't tell anyone,
because
they might do something to your daddy," she said sadly.
"My mother used to beg me not to tell, so you lie, and cover
up, and
pretend you don't know, and act like nothing's wrong, and little
by
little you become a zombie. That's all that I remember of my
childhood."
She sighed again. It was hard telling him, but she knew she had
to. And
he squeezed her hand more tightly.
"Then my mother got cancer," Grace continued. "I
was thirteen. She had
cancer of the uterus, and they had to do some kind of radiation,
and.
..." She hesitated, looking for the right words, she didn't
know him
that well yet. "I guess that changed her ... so ..." Her
eyes began to
swim with tears, and she felt the asthma closing her throat, but
she
wouldn't let it. She knew she had to tell him. Her survival
depended on
it now just as it had on opening her eyes at Bellevue. "My
mother came
to me then, and told me I had to take care' of my father, to be
good to
him," to be his special little girl," and he would love
me more than
ever." Charles was looking seriously worried as she told the
story. "I
didn't understand what she meant at first, and then she and Daddy
came
into my room one night, and she held me down for him."
"Oh my God." Tears filled his eyes as he listened.
"She held me down every night, until I knew I had no choice.
I had to do
it. If I didn't, no matter how sick she was, he would beat her.
I had no friends, I couldn't tell anyone. I hated myself, I hated
my
body. I wore baggy old clothes because I didn't want anyone to see
me.
I felt dirty and ashamed, and I knew that what I was doing was
wrong,
but if I didn't do it, he would beat her, and me. Sometimes he
beat me
anyway, and then raped me. It was always rape. He loved violence.
He
loved hurting me, and my mother. Once when I didn't do it,
because. ..."
she blushed, feeling fourteen again, "because I had ... my
period. ...
he beat her so bad, she cried for a week. She already had bone
cancer by
then, and she almost died of the pain. I did it anytime he wanted
after
that, no matter how much he hurt me." She took a deep breath.
It was
almost over now. He'd heard the worst, or almost, and he couldn't
stop
crying. She gently wiped the tears from Charles's cheeks and
kissed him.
"Oh Grace, I'm so sorry." He wanted to take the pain
away from her, to
erase her past, and change her future.
"It's all right ... it's all right now ..." And then she
went on.
"My mother died after four years. We went to the funeral, and
lots of
people came over afterwards. Hundreds of them. Everybody loved my
father. He was a lawyer, and every one's friend. He played golf
with
them, went to Rotary dinners with them, and Kiwanis. He was the
nicest
guy in town, people said. He was the man everyone loved and
trusted.
And no one knew what he really was.
He was a sick, sick man, and a real bastard.
"The day of the funeral, everyone spent the afternoon eating
and talking
and drinking, and trying to make him feel better. But he didn't
care. He
still had me. I don't know why, but somehow in my mind, it was all
tied
up with my mother. I was doing it for her, so he wouldn't hurt
her. But
I figured when she was gone, he'd find someone else. But of course
he
didn't want that. He had me. Why did he need anyone else?
Not right off anyway. So when everyone left, I cleaned up, washed
the
dishes, put everything away, and locked the door to my room. He
came
after me, he threatened to knock the door down, and he got a knife
and
sprung the lock. He dragged me into her room, and he'd never done
that
before. He always came to my room. But going to her room was like
becoming her, it was like knowing that it was forever and it would
never
stop, never, until he died or I did. And suddenly, I just couldn't
do
it." She was choking again, and Charles had stopped crying,
horrified by
everything she'd told him. "I don't know what happened after
that.
He really hurt me that night, he pounded at me, he hit me, he'd
won, I
was his to beat and rape and torture forever. And then I
remembered the
gun my mother kept in her nightstand. I don't know what I was
going to
do with it, hit him, or scare him, or shoot him. I don't really
know
anything except that he was hurting me so much and I was so scared
and
half crazy with misery and pain and fear. He saw the gun, and he
tried
to grab it from me, and then the next thing I knew, it went off,
and he
was bleeding all over me. I shot him through the throat, and it
severed
his spinal cord and punctured his lung. He fell on top of me and
bled
horribly, and after that I don't remember anything until the
police
came. I'm not sure what I did. I called the police, I guess, and
the
next thing I remember was talking to them, wrapped in a
blanket."
"Did you tell them what he'd done to you?" Charles asked
anxiously,
wanting to change the course of history, and agonized that he
couldn't.
"Of course not. I couldn't do that to my mother. Or to him. I
thought I
owed him total silence. In my own way, I guess, I was as crazy as
he
was. But that's what happens to children, and women too, in
situations
like that. They never tell. They'll die first. They called in a
psychiatrist to talk to me, when they took me to jail that night,
and
she sent me to the hospital, and they found out that he'd raped
me, or
someone had had intercourse' with me, according to the D.A."
"Did you ever tell them the truth?"
"Not for a while. Molly, the psychiatrist, hounded me to tell
her.
She knew. But I lied to her. He was still my daddy. But finally,
my
lawyer wore me down, and I told them."
"And then what? I assume they let you off after that."
"Not exactly. The prosecution concocted a theory that I was
after my
father's money, that if I killed him, I'd get everything.
Everything being one small but highly mortgaged house, and half of
his
law practice, which was a lot smaller than yours. I couldn't
inherit any
of it anyway, because I killed him. I had no friends. I had never
told
anyone. My teachers said that I was withdrawn and strange, kids
said
they never knew me. It was easy to believe I'd just flipped out
and
killed him. His law partner lied and claimed I'd asked about Dad's
money
after the funeral. I'd never said a word to him, but he claimed
that Dad
owed him a lot of money. And in the end, he grabbed everything,
and gave
me fifty thousand dollars to stay out of town and leave him to
take it
all. I did, and I still have the money by the way. Somehow, I
can't
bring myself to spend it.
"But the D.A. decided that I had killed my father for his
money, and
that I'd probably been out screwing around, and when I came home,
Dad
got mad and yelled at me, so I killed him." She smiled
bitterly,
remembering every detail. "They even said that I'd probably
tried to
seduce my father too. They'd found my nightgown on the floor where
he
threw it after he tore it in half, and they claimed I had probably
exposed myself to him, and when he didn't want me, I shot him.
They
charged me with murder one, which would have required the death
penalty.
I was seventeen, but they tried me as an adult. And aside from
Molly,
and David, my attorney, no one ever believed me. He was too good,
too
perfect, too-loved by the community.
Everyone hated me for killing him. Even telling the truth didn't
save
me. By then it was too late. Everybody loved him.
"They found me guilty of voluntary manslaughter, and I got
two and two.
Two years of prison, two years of probation. I served two years
almost
to the day in Dwight Correctional Center, where," she smiled
sadly at
him, "I did a correspondence course and got an AA degree from
a junior
college. Actually, it was quite an education. And if it weren't
for two
women there, Luna and Sally, who were lovers, I'd probably be dead
now.
I was kidnapped by a gang one night, and they were going to
gang-bang me
and use me as a slave, and Sally, who was my cellmate, and Luna,
her
friend, stopped them. They were the two toughest but kindest women
you
could ever meet, and they saved me. No one ever touched me after
that,
nor did they. I don't even know where they are now. Luna is
probably
still there, but Sally's time would be up, unless she did
something dumb
so she could stay with Luna. But when I left, they told me to
forget
them, and put it all behind me.
"I never went home again, and that was when I went to
Chicago, where my
probation officer kept threatening to send me back if I didn't
sleep
with him. But somehow I managed not to. And you pretty much know
the
rest. I told you that last night. I worked in Chicago for two
years
while I was on probation. No one ever knew where I'd been, or
where I
came from. They didn't know I'd been in prison, or had killed my
father.
They didn't know anything. You're the first person I've ever told
since
David and Molly." She felt drained but a thousand pounds
lighter when
she finished. It had been a relief to tell him.
"What about Father Tim? Does he know?"
"He's just guessed, but I've never said anything to him. I
didn't think
I had to. But I worked at St. Mary's in Chicago, and now St.
Andrew's,
because it's my way of paying back for what I did. And maybe I can
stop
some other poor kid from going through what I did."
"My God, my God ... Grace ... how did you survive it?"
He held her close
to him, cradling her head against his chest, unable to even begin
to
fathom the kind of pain and misery she'd been through. All he
wanted to
do now was hold her in his arms forever.
"I just survived, I guess," she answered him, "and
in some ways, I
didn't. I've only been out with one man. I've never had sex with
anyone
but my father. And I'm not sure I could. The man who drugged me
said I
almost killed him when he tried to lay a hand on me, and maybe I
would
have. I don't think that can ever be part of my life again."
And yet.
... she had kissed him, and he hadn't frightened her at all. In
some
ways, she wondered if she could learn to trust him. If he ever
wanted
her now, after all he'd heard. She searched his eyes looking for
some
sign of condemnation, but there was only sorrow and compassion.
"I wish I could have killed him for you. How could they send
you to
prison for that? How could they be so blind and so rotten?"
"It happens that way sometimes." She wasn't bitter. She
had long since
come to accept it. But she realized that if he betrayed her now,
and
told people about her past, her life in New York would be ruined.
She'd have to move on again, and she didn't want to. Telling him
had
required a great deal of trust from her, but it was worth it.
"What makes you think that you could never deal with intimacy
again?
Have you ever tried to?" "I ..."No. But I just
can't imagine doing that,
without reliving the nightmare."
"You've left the rest of it, and moved on. Why not that too?
You owe it
to yourself, Grace, and to anyone who loves you. In this case,
me," he
smiled, and then he asked her another question.
"Would you go to a therapist if you needed to?" he asked
gently, but she
wasn't sure. In a funny way, it would seem like a betrayal of
Molly.
"Maybe," she said uncertainly, maybe even therapy would
be too hard to
handle.
"I have a feeling you're sounder than you think. I don't know
why, but I
don't think you could come through all you did, if you weren't.
I think you're just scared, and who wouldn't be. And you're not
exactly
a hundred years old, you know." "I'm twenty-three,"
she said, as though
it were a major achievement, and he laughed at her and kissed her.
"I'm not impressed, kiddo. I'm almost twenty years older than
you are."
He would be forty-three in the fall, and she knew that.
But she was looking at him very seriously then. "Tell me
honestly.
Isn't that history more than you want to deal with?"
"I don't see why. It's not your fault, any more than being
mugged on
Delancey Street was your fault. You were a victim, Grace, of two
very
sick people who used you. You didn't do anything. Even when you
had sex
with him, you had no choice. Anyone would have done the same, any
kid
would have been terrorized into thinking they were helping their
dying
mother. How could you possibly resist them? You couldn't.
You've been a victim all along. It sounds like you stayed a victim
right
up until you left Chicago and came to New York last October.
Don't you think it's time you changed that? It's been ten years
since
the nightmare began.
That's almost half your life. Don't you think you have a right to
a good
life now? I think you've earned it," he said, and then kissed
her hard,
and with every thing he felt for her. There was no mistaking what
he was
feeling.
He was deeply in love with her, and willing to accept her past, in
exchange for her future. "I love you. I'm in love with you. I
don't care
what you did, or what happened to you I'm just sorry as hell that
you
had to suffer so much pain, and so much misery. I wish I could
wash it
all away, and change your memory of it, but I can't. I accept you
exactly as you are, I love you exactly as you are, and all I want
is
what we can give each other now. I want to thank my lucky stars
for the
day you walked into my office. I can't believe how blessed I was
to have
found you."
"I'm the lucky one," she said, in awe of his reaction.
She could hardly
believe what he was saying. "Why are you saying all this to
me?" she
asked, near tears again. It was impossible to fathom.
"I'm saying it because I mean it. Why don't you just relax
and stop
worrying for a while, and enjoy it? You've had a lot of worrying
to do
for a long time. Now it's my turn. I'll worry for both of us.
Okay?" he asked, moving toward her again with a smile and
wiping the
tears from beneath her eyes. "Okay?"
"Okay, Charles ... I love you." "Not as much as I
love you," he said,
taking her in his arms again and holding her tight as he kissed
her. And
then after a while, he laughed softly.
"What's funny?" she whispered, touching his lips with
her fingertips,
which only aroused him further. He was dying for her, but he knew
it
would be a while before anything happened between them.
He smiled at her as he answered, "I was just thinking that,
never mind
your delicate psychology, I think the only thing that's saving you
from
being ravaged by me, is the pin they just put in your pelvis.
Frankly, I think that's the only thing that stopped me."
"Shame on you," she teased, suddenly wondering if she
wanted to be saved
from him. It was an interesting question.
Charles took care of her for the next two weeks, coming to the
apartment
constantly, whenever he could, and sleeping next to her in the bed
on
weekends. It was a cozy feeling lying next to him, and waking up
in his
arms in the morning. He told her stories about his childhood, and
his
parents, who were no longer alive, but whom he had loved very much
and
had been very good to him. He was an only child, and he'd had a
good
life, and he knew it. And she told him funny things about Luna and
Sally. It was an odd assortment of memories and exchanges. And
after the
first week, he hired a limousine and took her for a drive in
Connecticut
on the weekend. They stopped and had lunch at Cobbs Mill Inn in
Weston,
which was wonderful, and came back to New York relaxed and
exhausted.
Her doctors said that she was doing well, and after another week
they
told her she could go back to work, but Charles convinced her to
take
one more week off. And she asked the doctors one other important
question, and was satisfied with the answer. She went to visit her
friends at St. Andrew's too, arriving by cab, in the daytime, and
they
were all thrilled to see her. She promised them that she would
come back
to work soon, but probably not until September, when she would be
off
crutches.
And the following weekend Charles took her to the Hamptons for the
weekend. They stayed in a cozy little inn, and the smell of the
sea was
delicious. They arrived late Friday night, and she made him take
her for
a walk on the beach, even with her crutches. She lay down on the
sand,
listening to the sound of the ocean, and he sat down next to her.
"You don't know how great this is. You know, before I came to
New York,
I'd never seen the ocean."
"Wait till you see Martha's Vineyard." He promised to
take her there
over Labor Day, but she was still worried about their future. And
what
were they going to do in another week when she went back to the
office?
They'd have to keep their relationship a secret. It was odd to
think of
it. It wasn't an affair yet, but it was much, much more than a
friendship.
"What were you thinking then?" he asked comfortably, as
they sat on
the beach in the dark.
"About you," she teased him a little bit, and he loved
it.
"What about me?"
"I was wondering when we were going to sleep with each
other," she said
casually, and he stared at her in confusion.
"What does that mean? Besides," he grinned, "I
thought we already had.
You even snore sometimes."
"You know what I mean." She pushed him gently, and he
laughed at her.
She was so lovely.
"You mean ..." He raised an eyebrow and pretended to
look surprised.
"Are you suggesting ..."
"I think so." She blushed. "I saw the orthopedic
surgeon yesterday and
he says I'm okay ... now all we have to worry about is my head and
not
my pelvis." As she said it, he laughed, and he was grateful
they had had
all these weeks to get to know each other without the complications
of
her history and their sex life. It had been well over a month now,
and
it was as though they had always been together. They were
completely at
ease with each other.
"Is this an invitation?" he said with a grin that would
have melted any
heart, hers had melted long since, but it dissolved yet again as
she
watched him. "Or are you just toying with me?"
"Possibly both." But she had been thinking about it for
days now, and
she wanted to try it. She had to know what would happen and if there
was
any chance at all for a future.
"Is this my cue to jump up off the warm sand and drag you
back to our
room by the hair, leaving your crutches behind us?"
"That sounds pretty good." She made him feel so young,
and in spite of
her serious history, she made him laugh all the time, and he loved
it.
It was so different from his time with his first wife. She'd been
so
intense, so self-involved, and so nervous. Life with Grace was
completely different. She was relaxed, intelligent, giving, caring.
She had been through so much, and yet she was still so kind and so
gentle. And she still had a sense of humor.
"Come on, you, let's go back to the hotel." He pulled
her up off the
sand, and they made their way slowly back, and then stopped for
ice
cream.
"Do you like banana splits?" she asked him casually, as
she licked her
ice-cream cone, and he smiled. She was like a kid sometimes, and a
woman
of the world at others. He loved the contrast and the combination.
It was the advantage of her youth, and with it came endless
possibilities, and a most appealing future. He wanted to have
children
with her, a life with her, make love with her ... but first, she
had to
eat her ice cream.
"Yes, I like banana splits," he said, with a grin.
"Why?"
"Me too. Let's have one tomorrow."
"Okay. Can we go back now?" It had taken them four hours
to get to the
Hamptons in the traffic from New York, and it was almost midnight.
"Yes, we can go back to the hotel now." She smiled at
him, mysterious
and womanly again. It was like watching different creatures appear
from
behind clouds. He loved her playfulness and the fact that she
wasn't
quite grown up yet.
Their room at the inn was done in rose-patterned chintzes and
Victorian
furniture. There was a sweet marble sink in the room, and the bed
was
canopied and very pretty. Charles had asked for champagne to be
left
cooling in the room, and there was a huge bouquet of lilac and
roses,
her favorites.
"You think of everything." She kissed him as they closed
the door to
their room.
"Yes," he said, proud of himself, "and I can't even
ask my secretary to
do it."
"You'd better not." She eyed him happily as he poured
the champagne and
handed her a glass, but she only took a small sip and then set it
down.
She was too excited to drink it. This was like a honeymoon, and
the
expectation was terrifying for them both, particularly since they
didn't
know what ghosts would join them.
"Scared?" he whispered as they slid into bed, he in his
shorts, and she
in a nightgown, and she nodded. "Me too," he confessed,
and she nuzzled
her face into his neck and held him. He had turned off the lights.
And there was a single candle burning at the far end of the room.
It was
unforgettably romantic.
"What'll we do now?" she whispered in his ear after a
minute. "Let's go
to sleep," he whispered back.
"You mean it?" she asked, looked startled, and he
laughed.
"No ... not really ..." He kissed her then, almost
wanting to get it
over with, but not daring to yet, not sure which way to turn or
what to
do, and he didn't want to hurt her various injuries either. It was
all a
little more difficult than he'd expected. But as they kissed, he
forgot
about her broken bones, and the ugliness of her past slipped
slowly from
her. There was no memory, no time, no other person, there was only
Charles and his incredible gentleness, his endless passion and
love for
her, as he moved ever so gently toward her, and they moved closer
and
closer, until suddenly they became one and she could feel herself
melt
into him and she could bear it no longer. It was all so exquisite,
and
then suddenly they both exploded in unison, and Grace lay in his
arms in
complete amazement. She had never known anything even remotely
like
that. There was no similarity at all with what had happened to her
before, no memory, no pain, there was nothing but Charles now and
the
love they shared, and a little while later, it was Grace who
wanted him,
who teased him and played with him, until he could bear it no
longer.
"Oh God," he said afterwards, "you're too young for
me, you're going to
kill me ... but what a way to die." And then suddenly he
wondered if he
had committed an awful faux ps, and looked at her in horror, but she
only laughed. It was all all right now, much to their joint
amazement.
She forced him to buy her a banana split the next day, and they
had a
lovely weekend. They spent much of it in their room, discovering
each
other, and the rest on the beach, in the sun, and when they got
back to
New York on Sunday night, they lay in her bed and made love again,
just
to make sure it had the same magic in her apartment. And Charles
decided
it was even better.
"By the way," he rolled over sleepily afterwards and
whispered to her,
"you're fired, Grace." He was half asleep but she sat
bolt upright.
What was he saying to her? What was this all about? She looked
frightened.
"What?" She almost shouted the word in the darkness, and
he opened an
eye in surprise. "What do you mean?" She was staring at
him.
"You heard me. You're fired." He smiled happily.
"Why?" She was near tears. She loved working for him,
especially now,
and she was due to go back that week. This wasn't fair. What was
he
doing?
"I don't sleep with my secretaries," he explained, and
then he grinned
as he lay there. "Don't look so worried. I have a new job in
mind for
you. It's a step up, or it could be, depending on how you see it.
How would you like to be my wife?" He was wide-awake now, and
she looked
stunned. She was shaking when she answered.
"Are you serious?"
"No. I'm just kidding. What do you think? Of course I'm
serious.
Will you?"
"Really?" She still couldn't believe it as she sat
looking at him in
disbelief and he laughed at her.
"Of course really!"
"Wow..."Well?"
"I'd love to." And with that, she leaned down and kissed
him, and he
grabbed her.
Chapter 13.
Grace never went back to work, and they were ( married six weeks
later,
in judge's chambers, in September. They flew to Saint Bart's for
two
weeks for a honeymoon, and she moved her few belongings to his
apartment. He lived on East Sixty-ninth Street in a small, but
extremely
elegant little town house. They'd been home for exactly a week
when they
had their first real fight, and it was a lulu. She wanted to go
back to
do volunteer work at St. Andrew's, and she was horrified that he
wanted
to stop her.
"Are you crazy? Do you remember what happened the last time
you went
there? Absolutely not!" He was adamant. She could do anything
she
wanted, but not that. And he wasn't budging.
"That was a fluke," she kept insisting, but Charles was
even more
stubborn than she was.
"That was no fluke. Every one of those women has a dangerous
husband.
And you're down there advising them to bail out, and the guys are
just
as liable to come after you as Sam Jones was." He had
plea-bargained
himself into a lighter sentence with parole by then, for his
attack on
Grace, and the murders of his wife and children. And as far as
they knew
he was already in Sing Sing. "You're not going. I'll talk to
Father Tim
if I have to, Grace, I forbid it."
"Well, what am I supposed to do with myself?" she said,
near tears. She
was twenty-three years old and she had absolutely nothing to do
until he
came home at six o'clock. He wouldn't let her work at the law firm
either. She could have lunch with Winnie once in a while, but that
was
hardly enough to keep her busy. And Winnie was talking about
moving to
Philadelphia to be close to her mother.
"Go shopping. Go to school. Find a charity you like and sit
on a
committee. Go to the movies. Eat banana splits," Charles said
firmly.
He was trying to come home to her every day for lunch, but
sometimes he
couldn't and when Grace turned to Father Tim for support he turned
her
down too. In spite of himself, and how good she was at the work,
Father
Tim supported Charles in that decision. She had already paid too
high a
price for working there, and it was time for her to stop paying
for
other people's sins. She had her own life to live now.
"Enjoy your husband, be good to yourself, Grace. You've
earned it," the
priest said wisely, but Grace still fumed and was looking for a
project.
She was thinking of applying to school, but in November it became
a moot
point, six weeks to the day after they were married.
"What are you looking so smug about? You look like the cat
that
swallowed the canary." Charles had just dashed home to have
lunch with
her. He was becoming famous in the office for his long lunches,
and his
partners were teasing him about how much work it was to have a
young
wife. But he knew that they were all jealous, and would have given
anything to be in his shoes ... or his boxers. "What have you
been up
to?" he questioned, wondering if she had found something to
do with
herself. She'd been unhappy for weeks over his edict about St.
Andrew's.
"Where'd you go today?"
"The doctor." She grinned.
"How's the pelvis?"
"Fine. It's healed beautifully." She was grinning from
ear to ear by
then, and he was laughing at her. She looked so cute when she had
a
secret. "There's something else though."
Charles's face grew serious. "Something wrong?"
"No." She grinned and kissed him on the lips as she
unzipped his
trousers. Considering how cautiously they had begun, they had
certainly
made up for it since their engagement. "We're having a
baby," she
whispered as he grew passionate and was about to lay her down on
their
bed, and he looked at her with complete amazement.
"We are? Now?"
"Not now, silly. In June. I think I got pregnant in Saint
Bart's."
"Wow!" He was going to be a father for the first time,
at forty-three,
and it completely bowled him over. He had never been as happy in
his
life, and he could hardly wait to tell the entire world. "Is
it still
all right if we make love?"
"Are you kidding?" she laughed at him. "We can make
love till June."
"Are you sure we won't hurt anything?"
"Promise." They made love, as they always did, instead
of lunch, and
then he grabbed a hot dog from a stand on the street, and dashed
back to
his office. It was the best life had ever been for him, far better
than
being married to a movie star, far better than any romance he'd
had as a
kid. She was perfect for him, and he adored her.
They spent Christmas in St. Moritz, and at Easter he wanted to
take her
to Hawaii, but took her to Palm Beach instead because it was
closer, and
she was almost seven months pregnant.
She had an easy pregnancy, and everything had gone smoothly. The
doctor
was only mildly concerned about what would happen to her pelvis
when she
delivered. And if there was any sign of strain at all, he had
warned her
that he would do a cesarean section. But failing that, Charles had
promised to be there, and in May they went to their Lamaze class
at
Lenox Hill. She had already decorated the nursery by then, and
they went
for long walks at night, up Madison Avenue, or down Park, and
talked
about their life, their good fortune, and their baby. It still
startled
them both, and they were both still amazed that, in bed at least,
her
past had never come back to haunt them.
He had asked her once how she would feel if the story ever came
out,
about her father, and going to prison, and she had said honestly
that
she would hate it.
"Why?" She wondered why he had even asked her.
"Because those things come out sometimes," he said
philosophically. He
had learned that with his last wife, and her constant exposure in
the
tabloids. Their divorce had made a huge stink and they had said
everything from the rumor that she was on drugs, to the one that
she was
gay, to the one that he was. And finally, they had just left them
alone,
and they had gone their separate ways. But Grace's would
undoubtedly be
a much bigger story if it ever came out. But fortunately, for both
of
them, they were not in the public eye, and not important. He was
just an
ordinary citizen now, since he was no longer married to a star,
and
Grace was just his wife. It was perfect.
She went into labor one night as they walked home. They had been
window
shopping on Madison Avenue, and she scarcely noticed the first
pains. It
was only after a while that she realized what had happened.
They called the doctor and he told them to take their time, first
babies
were usually in no hurry.
"Are you okay?" he asked her a thousand times, and she
lay on their bed,
watching TV, and eating Jell-O. "Are you sure that's what
you're
supposed to do?" he asked nervously. He felt a thousand years
old as he
watched her, fearing that she might have a hard time, or have the
baby
before they left the house. Lately, her belly had looked enormous.
But she seemed unconcerned as she watched her favorite shows,
drank
ginger ale and ate ice cream. It was almost midnight when she
finally
started to look seriously uncomfortable and could no longer talk
through
the pains, which he knew was his sign to take her to the hospital
and
call the doctor.
He called him again, and the doctor told them to come in.
And as Charles helped her down the stairs, she snapped at him
several
times, and he smiled at her. This was the real thing. Pretty soon,
they'd have a baby. It was the most exciting thing that had ever
happened to him, and to her. And by the time they settled her in a
labor
room, she had calmed down again, but Grace was surprised by how
much the
contractions hurt, and how strong they were. Finally, by two a.m.
she
was panting and said she couldn't stand them any longer.
Charles was doing everything he'd been taught to do, but none of
it was
helping, and he was starting to worry that they'd have to do a
cesarean
section. But as the pains got worse, she started to scream, and
clutch
at him, and he would have done anything to make it end. He kept
asking
the nurses to give her some medication.
"Everything is fine, Mr. Mackenzie. Your wife is doing
beautifully."
His wife looked like she was ready to die as she screamed again,
and
then finally they took her to the delivery room, and she started
pushing. Charles thought he had never seen anything so painful,
and he
was sorry they'd ever done it. All he wanted to do was take her in
his
arms again, and make the pain stop for her. But nothing helped her
now,
and the doctor didn't want to give her medication. He said he
really
preferred natural childbirth, for mother and child. Charles wanted
to
kill him, as he watched what Grace was going through.
She pushed for an hour, and it was five in the morning by then,
Grace
was beside herself with pain, and incoherent with the agony of
each
contraction. And as he watched her, he vowed they'd never do this
again.
He wanted to apologize to Grace for putting her through it. And he
swore
to himself that if she and the baby both came out of it alive,
he'd
never let this happen again. And just as he was about to promise
never
to lay a hand on her again, there was a terrifying scream from
her, and
a long, thin howl, and suddenly he found himself looking into the
face
of the son they had decided to call Andrew Charles Mackenzie.
He had huge blue eyes like Grace, and dark red hair, but
everything else
about him was Charles, right down to his tiny fingers. For his
father,
it was exactly like looking into the mirror. He laughed and cried
all at
once as he looked at him.
"Oh my God ... he's so beautiful," Charles said in awe
of the baby, and
bent to kiss his wife. She was lying flat now, after so much hard
work,
and looking suddenly ecstatic as she laughed and smiled at her
husband.
"Is the baby all right?" she asked over and over again,
and as soon as
they had cleaned him off and checked his lungs again, they handed
him to
his mother, and he lay at her breast, and immediately nuzzled
close to
her, while Charles watched them.
"Grace ... how can I ever thank you?" Charles said,
wondering how he had
managed to live so long without this baby. And how brave she was
to go
through all that for him. He had never been as touched or as much
in
love with anyone as he was with Grace at that moment.
They went back to her room after that, and little Andrew lay by
her
side, and much to Charles's astonishment, they all went home the
next
morning. She was healthy and young, the baby was fine, and weighed
just
under nine pounds. They had had natural childbirth. There was no
reason
for them not to go home, her obstetrician explained. And Charles
realized that he had a whole new world to discover. It was
terrifying
taking a baby home so soon, but Grace acted as though it was
completely
natural, and seemed totally at ease with her son from the very
first
moment he was born. It took Charles a few days, but within a week,
he
seemed like a practiced hand, and he bragged to everyone constantly
about the baby. The only thing his friends didn't envy him was the
sleepless nights he was having to live with. He left for the
office
every day feeling as though he'd been running on the wheel of a
hamster
cage all night. Master Andrew was waking up every two hours to be
nursed, and it took him roughly an hour to go back to sleep again,
and
Charles only slightly longer. He figured out that he was sleeping
in
fifteen-minute increments, and getting approximately two and a
half
hours sleep a night, which was roughly five and a half less than
he
needed. But it was fun anyway, and he was crazy about his wife and
the
baby.
They rented a house in East Hampton for the month of July, and
spent
Grace's birthday there. Charles commuted two or three times a
week, and
she came back and forth with the baby to be with him. And in
August he
took two weeks off and they went to Martha's Vineyard to his old
house.
Grace thought she'd never been happier, and in October she found
out she
was pregnant again, and Charles was as delighted as she was.
"Why don't we just have twins this time, and get it over
with?" he said
good-naturedly. He was really enjoying their son. And he was only
getting four or five hours sleep a night which seemed like a lot
now. It
amused him that life could change so quickly.
Their second baby took longer to come, and once again Charles
found
himself ready to promise to the gods that he would never touch his
wife
again, but this time the doctor finally gave in, and gave her some
medication. It didn't help much, but it was something. And
nineteen
hours after labor began, Abigail Mackenzie pushed her way into the
world
and looked up at her father with an expression of amazement. He
melted
on the spot when he saw her. She was a miniature version of her
mother,
only with her father's dark hair. She was a real beauty. And she
managed
to make a complete spectacle of herself by arriving on her
mother's
twenty-fifth birthday. Charles was almost forty-five, and those
were the
happy years.
Grace was constantly busy with her children. She went to
playgrounds and
play groups and kindergyms, and music classes for toddlers. She
was
totally involved in doing everything with them. She worried a lot
about
being boring to Charles, but he seemed to love their life. It was
all so
new to him, and he was the envy of all who knew him, with a young,
beautiful wife and a young family, he seemed to have the world by
the
tail.
Grace had never gotten back to her charity work again, although
she
still talked about it. But just after Andrew was born, she gave a
gift,
in his name, to St. Andrew's Shelter. She gave them every penny
she had
left from Frank Wills. It seemed the best use for it she could
think of.
In some ways, it was blood money to her, and a relic of a life
that had
brought her nothing but grief. She was sure that Father Tim would
find a
happier use for it. And they gave another, smaller gift, when
Abigail
was born. But she hadn't been there to visit for a long time.
She was too involved with her husband and children.
For three years after Abigail was born, Grace spent every daytime
moment
with them, and her evenings with Charles, going to partners'
dinners and
dinner parties. They went to the theater, and he introduced her to
the
opera, and she found that she liked it. Her entire life was
opening up,
and at times she felt guilty, knowing that in other places, other
lives,
people were less fortunate, and were suffering as she once had.
She was
so lucky and so free now.
She wondered what had happened to Luna and Sally sometimes, and
the
women she had tried to help at St. Andrew's. But there didn't seem
to be
time for things like that anymore. She thought about David in
California
sometimes too, and wondered where he was now. Her life seemed so
far
removed from those troubled years. Sometimes even she had a hard
time
remembering that she had had any other life before marrying
Charles. It
was as though she had been born again the day she met him.
She wanted to have another baby once Abigail started nursery
school, but
this time it didn't seem to happen. She was only twenty-eight by
then,
and her doctor said it was hard to know why sometimes it was
easier to
get pregnant than others. But she also knew that with all she'd
been
through before, she'd been lucky to get pregnant at all, and she
was
grateful to have the two children she had. She would stand there
and
just smile at them sometimes, watching them. And then she and
Andrew
would go to the kitchen and make cupcakes, or she and Abigail
would cut
out paper dolls, or string beads, or make pictures with spaghetti.
She
loved being with them, and she never got bored, or tired of them.
And then one morning, as she was waiting to pick them up from
nursery
school, she sat in her kitchen reading the paper and having a cup
of
coffee. And as she read the headline of the New York Times, she
felt her
stomach turn over. A New psychiatrist had killed his adopted
child, a
six-year-old girl, and his battered, hysterical wife had stood by
helplessly and watched him do it. It brought tears to her eyes as
she
read about it. It was inconceivable, he was an educated man, with
an
important practice, and a teaching position with a major medical
school.
And still he had killed their little girl. They had had her since
birth,
and their natural child had died in an accident two years before,
which
was now considered suspect. Grace started to cry as she read about
it,
wanting to comfort the little girl, imagining her cries as her
father
beat her. It was so vivid that even after she left for school, she
was
still crying. And she was quiet as she and the children walked
home for
lunch. Andrew asked his mother what was the matter.
"Nothing," she started to say, and then thought better
of it. She wanted
to be honest with him. "I'm sad."
"Why, Mommy?" He was four years old and the cutest
little boy she'd ever
seen. He looked just like Charles except for his dark red hair and
blue
eyes, but all his features and expressions were his father's.
It always made her smile just looking at him, but today, even
seeing her
own children made her grieve for the little girl who had been
killed.
"Why are you sad?" Andrew persisted, and her eyes filled
with tears as
she tried to answer.
"Somebody hurt a little girl, and it made me sad when I heard
about it."
"Did she go to the hospital?" he asked solemnly. He
loved ambulances and
police cars and sirens, even though they scared him a little too.
But mostly they fascinated him. He was a lively child.
Grace wasn't sure what to say to him then, whether or not to tell
him
that she was dead. But that was just too much to tell a
four-year-old
child. "I think so, Andrew. I think she's very sick."
"Let's make her a picture." Grace nodded, and turned her
head away so he
wouldn't see her cry. There would be no more pictures for that
little
girl ... no loving hands ... no one to save her.
There was a huge outcry in New York over the next few days. People
were
shocked and outraged. Teachers at the private school where she had
been
in first grade defended themselves, claiming that they had
suspected
nothing. She had been a frail child and bruised easily, and she
had
never said anything about what was happening at home. But hearing
that
infuriated Grace. Children never told of abuse at home, they
always
defended their abusers. And teachers knew that, and had to be
especially
alert these days.
For days people left flowers and bouquets outside the Park Avenue
building where she'd lived, and when Grace and Charles drove by it
the
next day, on their way to dinner with friends, Grace felt a sob
catch in
her throat as she caught sight of a big pink heart, made of tiny
roses,
with the little girl's name written on a pink ribbon across it.
"I can't bear it," she cried into a handkerchief he
handed her. "I know
what it's like," she whispered ... why don't people
understand?
Why don't they see? Why can't they stop it? Why did no one suspect
what
went on behind closed doors when atrocities were happening there?
The real tragedy was that sometimes people did know and did
nothing
about it. It was that indifference that she wanted to stop. She
wanted
to shake people to wake them.
Charles put an arm around her shoulders then. It hurt him to think
of
what she must have gone through, it made him want to be good to
her
every day, to make up for all of it, and he had been.
"I want to go back to work," she said as they drove
along in the cab,
and he looked at her, startled.
"In an office?" He couldn't imagine why she would want
to do that again.
She was so happy at home with their children.
But she smiled at him as she shook her head and blew her nose
again.
"Of course not ... unless you need a new secretary," she
teased, and he
grinned.
"Not that I know of. So what did you have in mind?"
"I was thinking of that little girl ... I'd like to go back
to working
with battered women and kids again." Her death had reminded
Grace again
of her debt, to help those who were living the same hell that she
had.
She had escaped, and she had come to a better place in her life,
but she
could not forget them. She knew that, in some way, she would
always have
a need to reach a hand back to them, to offer to help them.
"Not at St. Andrew's," he said firmly. He had never let
her go back
there to work again, only to visit, once they were married. And
Father
Tim had been transferred to Boston the year before, to start a
similar
shelter there. They had had a Christmas card from him. But Grace
had
something else in mind.
Something more complicated, and far-reaching.
"What about starting some kind of organization," she had
been thinking
about it for two days, trying to figure out how she could help,
and
really make a difference, "that would reach out to people,
not only in
ghettos but middle-class neighborhoods, where the abuse is more of
a
surprise and better hidden. What about reaching out toward
education, to
teach educators and parents and clergymen and day-care workers,
and
everyone who works with kids, what to look for and how to deal
with it
when they see it ... and reaching out to the public, people like
you and
me, and our neighbors and all the people who see abused kids every
day
and don't know it." "That sounds like a big bite,"
he said gently, "but
it's a great idea. Isn't there some existing program you could
latch on
to?"
"There might be." But five years ago there hadn't been,
there was only
the occasional shelter like St. Andrew's. And the various
committees set
up to help victims of abuse she heard of seemed to be badly run
and
ineffective. "I don't really know where to start. Maybe I
need to do
some research."
"Maybe you need to stop worrying so much," he said,
smiling at her in
the cab, as he leaned over and kissed her. "The last time you
let your
big heart run away with you, you got pretty badly beaten up. Maybe
it's
time for you to let other people take care of it. I don't want you
getting hurt again."
"If I hadn't, you'd never have married me," she said
smugly, and he
laughed.
"Don't be so sure. I'd had my eye on you for a while. I just
couldn't
figure out why you hated me so much."
"I didn't hate you. I was scared of you. That's different."
They both
smiled, remembering the days when they had met and fallen in love.
Things hadn't changed at all since, they were more in love than
ever.
And when they came back from dinner that night, Grace started
talking
about her idea again. She talked about it for weeks, and finally
Charles
couldn't stand it.
"Okay, okay ... I understand. You want to help. Now where do
we start?
Let's do something about it."
In the end, he talked to a few friends, and some of his partners
at the
law firm, some of their wives were interested, and others had
useful
references and suggestions. At the end of two months, Grace had a
wealth
of research and material, and she knew exactly what she wanted to
do.
She had talked to a psychologist she had met, and the head of the
children's school, and she decided that she had what she needed.
She even tracked down Sister Eugene from St. Andrew's, and she
gave her
some names of people who would be willing to work hands-on and
wouldn't
expect a lot of money for it. She needed volunteers,
psychologists,
teachers, some businessmen, women, and even victims.
She was going to put together a team of people who were willing to
go
out into the community and tell people what they needed to know
about
abuse of all kinds against children.
She set up an organization and gave it a simple name. "Help
Kids!" was
what she called it, and at first she ran it out of her home, and
after
six months she rented an office on Lexington Avenue two blocks
from
their house. By then, she had a team of twenty-one people who were
talking to schools, parents' groups, teachers' associations,
people who
ran extracurricular activities like ballet and baseball.
She was amazed at how many bookings they got. And she shook like a
leaf
the first time she gave a talk herself. She told a group of people
she
had never met how she had been abused as a child, how no one had
seen
it, and no one had wanted to, and how everyone had thought her
father
was the greatest guy in town. "Maybe he was," she said,
her voice
shaking as she fought back tears, "but not to me, or my
mother."
She didn't tell them that she had killed him to save herself. But
what
she did tell them moved them deeply. All of their speakers had
stories
like that, some of them firsthand, and some of them about students
or
patients. But the people she organized to speak were all powerful
in
their message. It was a message that came straight from the heart.
Help kids! And they meant it.
The next thing she did was set up a hot line for people who knew
about
abusive friends or neighbors, or parents who wanted help, or kids
in bad
situations. She did everything she could to raise funds to place
ads and
buy billboards with the hot line number on it, and she managed to
keep
it manned twenty-four hours a day, which was no small feat. It was
almost a relief when a year and a half later Abigail went to
kindergarten, because it gave her more time for "Help
Kids!" although
she missed having her at home at eleven-thirty. She managed to
keep all
her work down to a dull roar so that she could spend her
afternoons with
her children. But "Help Kids!" had grown to a full-scale
office by then,
and it was funded by five foundations. And they were currently in
the
process of raising money and free creative help for commercials.
She
wanted to organize a TV campaign to reach even deeper into the
community. Again and again she tried to touch the kids who were
being
abused, and the people who knew it.
She was less interested in reaching the abusive parents. Most of
them
were too sick even to want help, and it was rare that they
themselves
would step forward and ask for it. It was easier to get the point
across
to observers.
It was hard to judge what kind of results they were getting,
except that
their hot line was jammed night and day with desperate callers.
They were usually neighbors, friends, teachers who weren't sure
whether
or not to come forward, and more and more lately they had been
getting
calls from kids telling horrifying stories. Grace and Charles
answered
phones themselves for two long shifts a week, and more often than
not,
Charles came home and ached over the things he heard. It was
impossible
not to care about those children. The only people who didn't were
their
parents.
Grace was so busy she hardly noticed the days fly by anymore, and
she
was happier than ever. She was particularly surprised when she got
a
letter, praising what she'd done, from the First Lady. She said
that
people like Grace made a real difference in the world, like Mother
Teresa.
"Is she kidding?" Grace laughed in embarrassment as she
showed the
letter to Charles when it arrived. It was embarrassing, but
exciting.
What meant more than anything to her was helping those kids, but
it was
nice to be recognized for it too. And Charles was generous with
his
praise. He was pleased for her, and genuinely excited when they
got
invited to the White House for dinner. It had been declared the
Year of
the Child, and they wanted to give Grace an award for her
contribution
with "Help Kids!" "I can't accept that," she
said uncomfortably, "think
of all the people it took to put Help Kids!" together, think
of all the
people who work with us now in one capacity or another." Almost
none of
them was paid, and all of them gave of their hearts and souls,
some gave
generously from their pockets. "Why should I get all the
recognition?"
It didn't seem right to her, and she didn't want to go to the
dinner.
She thought the award should be given to "Help Kids!" as
an
organization, not to her as an individual person.
"Think of who started it," Charles said, smiling at her.
She had no idea
what a difference she was making in the world, and he loved that
about
her. She had turned a lifetime of pain into a blessing for so
many. And
every moment of happiness he could give her was a joy to him.
Charles had never been happier, and he loved her deeply. She was a
good
wife, a good woman, and someone he respected deeply. "I think
we should
go to Washington. I, for one, would certainly enjoy it. Tell you
what,
I'll collect the award and tell them it was all my idea to start
Help
Kids!"
" He was teasing her and she laughed about it. She argued
with him for
two weeks, but he had already accepted the invitation on her
behalf, and
finally, grumbling, they hired a sitter they knew to help their
housekeeper, and flew to Washington on a snowy afternoon in
December.
She swore it was an omen of doom, but as soon as they reached
Pennsylvania Avenue, she knew that she had been foolish. The White
House
Christmas tree sparkled cheerily in front of them and the entire
scene
looked like a Norman Rockwell painting.
They were led inside by Marines, and Grace almost felt her knees
shake
as she shook hands with the President and then the First Lady.
There were several people at the reception Charles knew, and he
kept
Grace's hand tucked into his arm to give her courage, and
introduced her
to a number of attorneys and some congressmen who were old
friends.
An old friend from New York teased Charles about when he was going
to
get brave and get into the political waters himself. He had once
been a
partner in Charles's law firm.
"I don't think that's for me. I'm too busy taking kids to
school and
answering phones for Grace," Charles said with a smile, but
he had a
good time, and even chatted for a few moments with the President,
who
said he was familiar with Charles's law firm, and complimented him
on
his handling of a difficult matter the year before that involved
some
government contracts.
After dinner, they danced, and there was a wonderful children's
chorus
to sing carols. They were the cutest kids Grace had ever seen, and
for a
minute they made her homesick for their children.
The congressman sought Charles out again before they left and told
him
to think about it again. "The political arena needs you,
Charles.
I'd be happy to talk to you about it anytime you like." But
Charles was
insistent that he was happy at his law firm. "It's a big
world out
there, a lot bigger than Park Avenue and Wall Street. One forgets
that
in one's ivory tower at times. You could do a lot of good, there
are
some important issues at hand. I'll call you," he said, and
moved on,
and Charles and Grace went back to the Willard at midnight. It had
been
a wonderful evening, and she'd been given a handsome plaque to
commend
her for her unselfish gifts to children.
"I'll have to show this to the kids the next time they tell
me how mean
I am," she smiled, and set it down on a table in their hotel
suite.
She was glad they had come after all. She had really enjoyed it,
and
then as they lay in bed, talking about the people they'd met, and
how
impressive it was to be in the company of the President and the
First
Lady, she asked Charles about his congressman friend.
"Roger?" he asked casually. "He used to be a
partner in the firm.
He's a good man, I always liked him." "What about what
he said?" She was
curious about Charles's reaction.
"About going into politics?" He looked amused. "I
don't think so."
"Why not? You'd be great at it."
"Maybe I'll run for president one day. You'd make a beautiful
first
lady," he teased, and then he turned to her with love on his
mind, and
kissed her hungrily, and as always she was quick to return his
passion.
They were back in New York by two o'clock the next afternoon.
Charles was in a festive mood, and decided not to go back to his
office.
He went home with Grace instead, and the children were delighted
to see
them.
They jumped all over them and wanted to know what their parents
had
brought them from the trip.
"Absolutely nothing," Charles lied with a blank stare,
and they squealed
in disbelief. Their children knew them better. They had bought
some toys
and souvenirs for them at the airport. Whenever Charles went away
on
business, which was rare, he never came back empty-handed.
And Grace told them what the White House had been like, and about
the
children who sang there, and the Christmas tree all lit up on the
White
House lawn.
"What did they sing?" Andrew wanted to know, but like
the little lady
she was, Abigail wanted to know what they were wearing. The
children
were five and six then.
Christmas was the following week, and that weekend they put up the
tree,
and it looked beautiful when they finished it. She and Charles put
the
ornaments up high, and the children decorated everything within
reach
below that, and strung popcorn and cranberries, which was a
tradition
they loved.
Grace took them ice-skating at Rockefeller Plaza, and to see Santa
Claus
at Saks, and all the beautifully decorated windows on Fifth Avenue
once
school was out, and they even dropped in on Daddy at work, and
took him
out to lunch. They went to Serendipity on Sixtieth Street between
Second
and Third Avenues, and had huge hot dogs and giant ice-cream
sodas.
Grace ordered a banana split and Charles laughed, remembering the
banana
split he'd bought her the first time they went away for the
weekend.
This time she finished all of it, and he complimented her for
being a
member of the clean plate club.
"Are you making fun of me?" she grinned at him, with a
spot of whipped
cream on her nose. Abigail chuckled looking at her, and even
Andrew
loved it.
"Certainly not. I think it's wonderful that you didn't waste
a bit of
it." Charles smiled, feeling happy and young.
"Be nice, or I'll order another one." But she was as
thin as she'd ever
been, until after the New Year, when she explained that she
couldn't get
into any of her clothes. She had been answering the hot line
several
times a week over the holidays, she knew what an important time it
was
for troubled families and helpless kids, and she wanted to do it
herself
as much as she could. And as they all did, while she was answering
phones at all hours, she sat around and ate cookies and popcorn,
particularly at Christmas.
"I feel huge," she said miserably, zipping up her jeans
to go for a walk
in the park with him at the end of a lazy weekend.
"Most women would love to be as huge' as you are." In
spite of two
children, and the fact that she had turned thirty that year, she
still
looked like a model. And he had just turned fifty and was as
handsome as
ever.
They were a good-looking couple as they strolled along. She was
wearing
a big cozy fox hat, and a fox jacket he had given her for
Christmas. It
was perfect for the frigid New York winter.
There was snow on the ground in the park, and they had left the
kids at
home with a sitter for a few hours because the housekeeper was
away.
They liked to go for long walks sometimes on Sundays, or take a
cab down
to SoHo and go to a coffeehouse, or have lunch and browse through
galleries looking at paintings or sculpture.
But this afternoon, they were content to stroll, and eventually
wound up
at the Plaza Hotel. They decided to go in and have some hot
chocolate in
the Palm Court. And they walked into the elegant old hotel hand in
hand,
talking softly.
"The kids will never forgive us if they find out," Grace
said guiltily.
They loved the Palm Court. But it was romantic being alone with
him.
She was talking about some plans she had to ..."Help
Kids!" for the next
year, to expand it further. She was always trying to broaden their
outreach. And as she chatted with him, she devoured an entire
plate of
cookies and two hot chocolates with whipped cream. And as soon as
she
finished them, she felt sick, and was sorry she'd eaten.
"You're as bad as Andrew," Charles laughed. He loved
being with her, she
was like a girl to him, and at the same time very much a woman.
When they left the Plaza, he hailed a hansom cab, and had it drive
them
home, as they snuggled in the back, kissing and whispering and
giggling
under heavy blankets, just like teenagers, or honeymooners. And
when
they got to the house, he ran in to get the kids, and let them pet
the
horse. And then the driver agreed to take them around the block
for an
additional fee, and the four of them rode around the block to the
house
again. And then they went inside, and the sitter left, and Grace
made
pasta for dinner.
She was busy for the next few weeks, with new plans, and keeping
up with
the children. But she was surprised to find that she was exhausted
all
the time, so much so that she even skipped two shifts on the hot
line,
which was rare for her. And when Charles noticed it, he was
worried, and
asked about it.
"Are you all right?" He worried sometimes that her past
life, and the
beating outside St. Andrew's, would take a toll on her one day,
and
whenever she was sick, it really scared him.
"Of course I am," she said, but the circles under her
eyes, and her
pallor, didn't convince him. She hardly ever suffered from asthma
anymore, but she was starting to look the way she had when he
first met
her. A little too drawn and a little too serious, and not entirely
healthy.
"I want you to go to the doctor," he insisted.
"I'm fine," she said stubbornly.
"I mean it," he said sternly.
"Okay. Okay." But she didn't do anything about it, and
insisted that she
was busy. Finally, he made an appointment himself and told her
he'd take
her there if she didn't go the following morning. It was a month
after
Christmas by then, and she was in the midst of a big fund drive
for
"Help Kids!"
She had a thousand calls to make, and a million people to visit.
"For
heaven's sake," she said irritably when he reminded her again
the next
morning. "I'm just tired, that's all. It's no big deal. What
are you so
upset about?" she snapped at him, but he took her by the
shoulders and
turned her to face him.
"Do you have any idea how important you are to me, and this
family? I
love you, Grace. Don't screw around with your health. I need
you."
"Okay," she said quietly. "I'll go." But she
always hated going to the
doctor. Doctors still reminded her of bad experiences, of being
raped,
and her mother dying, and the night she killed her father, and
even when
she'd been in Bellevue after the attack at St. Andrew's. To Grace,
except for the babies she'd had, doctors never meant anything
pleasant.|
"Any idea what might be wrong? How do you feel?" Their
family doctor
asked her pleasantly. He was a middle-aged man1 with an
intelligent face
and an easy disposition. He knew nothing of Grace's past, or her
dislike
for doctors.
"I feel fine. I'm just tired, and Charles is
hysterical." She smiled.
"He's right to be concerned. Anything else except
fatigue?"
She thought about it and shrugged.
"Nothing much. A little dizziness, some headaches." She
made light of
it, but the truth was she had been very dizzy more than once
lately, and
several times she had been sick to her stomach. She thought it was
nervous tension over their fund drive. "I've been pretty
busy."
"Maybe you need some time off." He smiled. He gave her
some vitamins,
checked her blood count and it was fine. He didn't want to run any
serious tests. She was obviously young and healthy, and her blood
pressure was low, which accounted for the dizziness and headaches.
"Eat lots of red meat," he advised, "and eat your
spinach." He said to
say hello to Charles, and she called from the phone outside to
tell
Charles she was fine. And then feeling better than she had in a
while,
she walked home in the brisk January air. It was cold and crisp
and
sunny, and she felt wonderful and strong as she walked along,
feeling
stupid for even having gone to see the doctor. She smiled thinking
of
what good care Charles took of her and how lucky she was, as she
turned
the corner and walked toward their town house. She felt a little
light-headed as she did, but it was no worse than it had been
before,
until she reached their front door, and she suddenly found she was
so
dizzy, she could hardly stand. She reached out to steady herself,
and
found herself clutching an elderly man who stared at her
strangely.
She looked at him as though she didn't see him at all, and then
she took
two steps toward her house, said something unintelligible, and
collapsed, unconscious, to the sidewalk.
Chapter 14.
When Grace came to on the street outside their |/|/ house, there
were
three people standing over her, and two policemen. The old man she
had almost pulled down with her had gone to a phone booth and
dialed
911, but she was conscious again by the time they came, and she
was
sitting on the sidewalk. She was embarrassed more than hurt, and
still
too dizzy to get up.
"What happened here?" the first policeman asked amiably.
He was a big
friendly man, and he had keen eyes as he took in the situation.
She
wasn't drunk or on drugs, from what he could see, and she was very
pretty and well dressed. "Would you like us to call an
ambulance for
you? Or your doctor?" "No, really, I'm fine," she
said, getting up. "I
don't know what happened. I just got light-headed." She had
skipped
breakfast that day, but she'd been feeling fine.
"You really should go to a doctor, ma'am. We'll be happy to
take you to
New York Hospital. It's straight down the street here," he
said kindly.
"Really. I'm fine. I live right here." She pointed at
the town house
only a few feet away from them. She had almost made it. And she
thanked
the old man and apologized for almost knocking him down. He patted
her
hand and told her to have a nap and eat a good lunch, and then the
policemen escorted her into her house, and looked around at the
attractive surroundings.
"Do you want us to call anyone? Your husband? A friend? A
neighbor?"
"No ... I ..." The phone interrupted them, and she
picked it up as they
stood in the hallway. It was Charles.
"What did he say?" "I'm fine," she said
sheepishly, except for the fact
that she had just keeled over on the sidewalk.
"Do you want us to stay for a few minutes?" the
policeman in charge
asked and she shook her head.
"Who was that? Is someone there?" She was afraid to tell
him what had
happened.
"It's nothing, I just ... the doctor said I'm in great shape.
And. ..."
"Who was that talking to you?" He had a sixth sense
about her, and he
knew something was wrong as he listened.
"It's a policeman, Charles," she sighed, feeling
foolish, but also
feeling sick again, and the policeman watched her turn green and
then
swoon again as he caught her with one arm. She had no idea what
was
happening, but she felt awful. She actually felt too sick to talk
to
him, as she set down the phone, and sat down on the floor and put
her
head down between her knees. One of the policemen went to get a
glass of
water for her, and the other picked up the phone where she'd left
it on
the floor beside her.
"Hello? Hello? What's going on there?" Charles was
frantic.
"This is Officer Mason. Who is this?" he said calmly, as
Grace looked up
at him in helpless mortification.
"My name is Charles Mackenzie and that's my wife there with
you.
What's wrong?"
"She's fine, sir. She had a little problem ... she passed out
just
outside your house. We brought her inside, and I think she's
feeling a
little woozy again. Probably stomach flu, there's a lot of it
going
around."
"Is she all right?" Charles looked ghastly, as he stood
up and grabbed
his coat while he was still talking to the officer at his house.
"I think she's fine. She didn't want to go to the hospital.
We asked
her."
"Never mind that. Can you take her to Lenox Hill?"
"We'd be glad to."
"I'll meet you there in ten minutes."
The policeman looked down at her with a smile after he hung up.
"Your husband wants us to take you to Lenox Hill, Mrs.
-Mackenzie. "
"I don't want to go." She sounded like a child and he
smiled at her.
"He was pretty definite about it. He's going to meet you
there. "
"I'm okay. Really."
"I'm sure you are. But it doesn't hurt to get it checked out.
There's a lot of nasty bugs around. A woman passed out at
Bloomingdale's
yesterday with that Hong Kong flu. You been sick long?" he
asked while
he helped her toward the door as they chatted, and his
partner joined them.
"Really, I'm fine," she said, as the police locked her
door and put her
in the squad car. And then suddenly she realized what it must have
looked like, as though she were being arrested. It would have
seemed
funny to her except that suddenly it reminded her of the night she
had
killed her father, and by the time they got to Lenox Hill, she was
having an asthma attack, the first she'd had in two years. And she
wasn't even carrying her inhaler. She had gotten so confident, she
left
it home most of the time now.
They took her inside, and she explained to the nurse in the
emergency
room about her asthma, and they were quick to bring her an
inhaler.
But by the time Charles arrived, she was still deathly pale from
the
asthma and the medication, and her hands were shaking.
"What happened?" He looked horrified, and she spoke in
an undertone.
"The police car made me nervous."
"That's why you fainted?" He looked confused by what was
happening, and
she shook her head.
"That's why I have asthma."
"But why did you faint?"
"I don't know that."
The policemen left them then, and it was another hour before they
could
be seen by one of the emergency room doctors. And she was much
better by
then, her breathing was almost normal, and she was no longer
dizzy.
He had brought her some chicken soup from a machine, and some
candy and
a sandwich. Her appetite was good, she explained to the doctor who
examined her.
"Excellent," Charles confirmed.
The doctor checked her over carefully, and then asked a pointed
question. He said it was probably the flu, but he had one other
idea.
"Could you be pregnant?"
"I don't think so." She hadn't used birth control since
Abby was born,
and she was going to be six in July. And Grace had never gotten
pregnant
again. "I doubt it."
"Are you on the pill?" She shook her head. "Then
why not? Any reason?"
He glanced at Charles.
"I just don't think so," Grace said firmly. She would
have loved another
child, but she just didn't think she could get pregnant.
After six years, why would she?
"I think you are," Charles smiled slowly at her. He'd
never even thought
of it, but she had all the symptoms. "Could you check?"
he asked the
resident.
"You can buy a kit at the drugstore on the corner. My bet is
you're
right, and she isn't." He smiled at Grace. "I think
maybe you have
denial. You've got pretty much all the symptoms. Nausea,
dizziness,
increased appetite, fatigue, sleepiness, you feel bloated, and you
missed your last period, which you think was from nerves.
Professionally speaking, I don't. My guess is you're having a
baby. I
can call our o.b./gyn to check.
it out if you want, but it's just as easy to buy the kit and call
your
own doctor." "Thank you," she said, looking
stunned. She hadn't even
thought of it.
She had hoped for another baby for so long, and then finally given
it
up, and convinced herself it would never happen.
They went to the corner and bought the kit, and took a cab home,
and
Charles held her close to him, grateful that nothing terrible had
happened. When the policeman had answered his phone, he had
panicked,
and feared the worst.
She did all the steps in the kit, and they waited precisely five
minutes, using Charles's stopwatch, and she was smiling as they
waited
for it. They were both convinced now that she was pregnant, and
she was.
"When do you suppose it happened?" she asked, looking
stunned. She still
couldn't believe it.
"I'll bet right after we had dinner at the White House,"
Charles
laughed, and kissed her.
And he was right. She went to her obstetrician the next day, and
the
baby was due in late September. Charles made a few noises about
being an
old man when it was born. He would be fifty-one, but Grace
wouldn't
listen to his complaints about being "old."
"You're just a kid," she grinned. They were both excited
and happy.
And when the baby came, he was a beautiful little boy who looked
like
both of them, except he had pale blond hair, which they insisted
was
nowhere in their families. He was an exquisite child, and he
looked
almost Swedish. They named him Matthew, and the children fell in
love
with him the moment they saw him. Abby walked around holding him
all the
time and called him "her baby."
But with three children, their town house on Sixty-ninth began to
burst
at the seams, and that winter they sold it and bought a house in
Greenwich. It was a pretty white house with a picket fence, and a
huge
backyard. And Charles bought a big chocolate Labrador for the
children.
It was the perfect life.
"Help Kids!" continued to thrive, and Grace went into
town twice a
week to check on things, but she had hired someone else to run the
office, and she opened a smaller office in Connecticut, where she
spent
her mornings. Most of the time she took the baby with her in his
stroller.
It was a comfortable life for them in Connecticut. The kids loved
their
new school. Abigail and Andrew were in first and second grades.
And it was the following summer when Charles heard from Roger
Marshall,
his old partner who was now in Congress.
Roger wanted Charles to think about getting into politics, there
was a
very interesting seat in Connecticut coming up the following year,
when
a senior congressman finally retired. Charles couldn't imagine pursuing
it, he was so busy at the firm, and he enjoyed his work.
Running for Congress, if he won, would mean moving to Washington,
at
least some of the time, and that would be hard on Grace and the
children. And political campaigns were costly and exhausting. They
had
lunch and talked about it, and Charles turned him down. But when
the
junior congressman from his district had a heart attack and died
later
that year, Roger called again, and this time Grace surprised
Charles by
pressing him to think about it.
"You're not serious," Charles looked at her cautiously,
"you don't want
that life, do you?" He had been in the public eye once, when
he was
married to his first wife, and he didn't really enjoy it. But he
had to
admit that government had always been something that intrigued
him,
particularly Washington.
In the end, he told Roger he'd think about it. And he did. He
decided
against it finally, but Grace argued with him about what a
difference he
could make, and how much he might enjoy it. She thought it would
mean a
great deal to him and, more than once recently, he had admitted to
her
that he wasn't feeling as challenged at the law firm. He was
feeling old
in the face of his fifty-third birthday. The only things that
really
mattered to him anymore were the children and her.
"You need something new in your life, Charles," she said
quietly.
"Something that excites you."
"I have you," he smiled, "that's exciting enough
for any man. A young
wife and three children ought to keep me busy for the next fifty
years.
Besides, you don't really want all that craziness in our life, do
you?
It'll be hard on you and the children. It's like living in a
fishbowl."
"If it's what you want, we'll manage it. Washington's not on
the moon.
It's not that far. We can keep this house, and spend time here.
You can
even commute part of the week when Congress is in session."
He laughed at all the plans she was making. "I'm not sure
we'll need to
worry about it. There's a good possibility I won't win. I'm a dark
horse, and no one knows me."
"You're a respected man in this community, with good ideas, a
lot of
integrity, and a real interest in your country."
"Do I get your vote?" he asked as he kissed her.
"Always."
He told Roger he would run, and he began gathering people to help
him
campaign. They started in earnest "June, and Grace did
everything she
could from licking stamps to shaking hands to going from door to
door
handing out leaflets. They ran a real "common man's" campaign,
and
although they never made any secret of the fact that Charles was
wellborn and well-heeled, it was equally obvious that he was also
caring
and sincere and well-meaning. He was an honest man with the
country's
well-being at heart. The public trusted him, and much to Charles's
own
surprise, the media loved him. They covered everything he did, and
reported fairly.
"Why shouldn't they?" Grace was surprised that Charles
was so amazed by
his good press, but he knew them better than she did.
"Because they're not always that fair. Wait. They'll get me
sooner or
later."
"Don't be such a cynic."
She stayed pretty much out of the campaign, except to stand by him
when
he needed her with him, and to do as much legwork as she could,
even if
she had to take the children with her. But she had no desire to
push
herself forward. Charles was the candidate and what he stood for
was
important. She never lost sight of that.
She hardly had time for her own projects anymore, and "Help
Kids!" had
to struggle without her most of the time during the campaign. She
still
took shifts on the hot line whenever she could, but she worked for
Charles more than she did anything else, and she could see that he
loved
what he was doing. He was excited about it, and they went to
picnics
and barbecues and state fairs, he spoke to political groups and
farmers
and businessmen. And it was obvious that he really wanted to help
them.
They believed him, and they liked everything he stood for. They
liked
Grace too. Her work with "Help Kids!" was well known,
yet it was clear
that her husband and children were her first priorities, and they
liked
that about her.
In November he won by a landslide. He put his partnership in the
firm in
trust, and they gave a huge party for him at the Pierre before he
left.
And then he and Grace and the children went to Washington to find
a
house. They were going to be moving there after Christmas. The
children
were going to change schools, and they were scared, but excited.
It was
a big change for them. And they found an adorable house in
Georgetown,
on R Street.
Grace enrolled the children in Sitwell Friends. And "January,
Abigail
and Andrew entered third and fourth grades, and Grace found a play
group
to join with Matthew. He was just two then.
They went back to Connecticut on holidays and for vacations, and
whenever Congress wasn't in session and the children were out of
school.
Charles stayed close to his constituents and in touch with old
friends,
and he enjoyed every moment in Congress. He helped pass new
legislation
whenever he could, and found the endless committees he was on
fascinating and fruitful. And during their second year there,
Grace
started an inner city "Help Kids!" in Washington modeled
on the two in
Connecticut and New York. She manned the phones a lot of the time,
and
made several appearances on television and radio shows. As the
wife of a
congressman she had more influence than she'd had before, and she
enjoyed using it for worthwhile causes.
They also entertained a great deal, and went to political events.
They were invited to the White House regularly. For them, the
quiet
years were over. And yet they were still able to lead a quiet life
in
Connecticut. And although he was an elected official, their life
remained remarkably private. They weren't showy people. He was a
hardworking congressman who stayed in close touch with his roots
at
home, and Grace was discreet and hardworking in her own arena, and
with
her children.
They had been in Washington for nearly three terms, five years,
when
Charles was approached again, and this time with an offer that
interested him greatly. Being congressman had meant a lot to him
and it
had been a valuable experience, but he had also come to understand
that
there was more power and more influence on the country's destiny
in
other quarters. The Senate held a great lure to him, and he had
many
friends there. And this time he was approached by sources close to
the
President, anxious to know if he was willing to run for the
Senate.
He told Grace about it immediately, and they talked about it
endlessly.
He wanted it, but he was also afraid to pursue it. There was more
pressure, greater demands, tougher responsibilities, and far greater
exposure. As a congressman, he had been well liked, and in many
ways,
one of the people. As a senator he could be viewed as a source of
envy
and a threat to many. All those anxious for the presidency would
be
looking at him, and anxious to throw him out of his traces.
"It can be a vicious job," he explained candidly, and he
worried about
her too. They had left her alone so far. She was known for her
good
works, her solid marriage, and her sense of family, but she was
rarely
in the public eye. As the wife of a senator, she would be much
more in
the spotlight, and who knew what that would bring.
"I don't ever want to do anything to hurt you," Charles
said, looking
worried. She, and their family, were always his first concern, and
she
loved him all the more for it.
"Don't be ridiculous. I'm not afraid. I don't have anything
to hide,"
she said, without thinking, and he smiled, and then she
understood.
"All right, I do. But no one's said anything yet. No one's
ever come
forward to talk about my past. And I paid my dues. What could they
say
now?"
It was all so long ago. She was thirty-eight years old. Her
troubles
were all so far behind her ... twenty-one years ... it was all
over, and
in many ways, to Grace, it seemed like a distant dream.
"A lot of people probably don't realize who you are, you have
a
different namer you've grown up. But as the wife of a senator,
they
could start delving into your past, Grace. Do you really want
that?"
"No, but are you going to let it stop you? Is this what you
want?" she
asked him, as they sat in their bedroom talking late into the
night, and
slowly he nodded. "Then don't let anything stop you. You have
a right to
this. You're good at what you do. Don't let fear take over our
lives,"
she said powerfully. "We have nothing to be afraid of."
They believed it too, and two weeks later he announced that in
November
he would be running for the Senate.
It was a tight race, and he would be fighting a tough incumbent.
But the man had been in the Senate for a long time, and people
thought
it was time for a change. And Charles Mackenzie was very
appealing.
He had a great track record, a clean reputation, and a lot of
friends.
He was also very good-looking, and had a family people liked,
which
never hurt in an election.
The campaign began with a press conference, and right from the
beginning, Grace saw the difference. They asked him questions
about
his history, his law firm, his personal worth, his income, his
taxes,
his employees, his children. And then they asked about Grace, and
her
involvement in "Help Kids!" and St. Andrew's before
that.
Mysteriously, they knew about the donations she'd made. But in
spite of
their probing, they seemed inclined to like her. Magazines called
her up
to do interviews, and photograph her, and at first she refused
them. She
didn't want to be in the forefront of the campaign.
She wanted to do what she had done for him before, work hard, and
stand
just behind him. But that wasn't what they wanted. They had a
fifty-eight-year-old candidate for senator with movie star good
looks,
and a pretty wife who was twenty years younger. And by spring they
wanted to know everything about her, and the children.
"But I don't want to do interviews," she complained to
him one morning
over breakfast. "You're the candidate, I'm not. What do they
want with
me for heaven's sake?" she said, pouring him a second cup of
coffee.
They had a housekeeper who came in halfway through the day, but
Grace
still liked being alone with Charles and the children and cooking
breakfast for them herself every morning.
"I told you it would be this way," Charles said calmly
about the press.
Nothing seemed to ruffle him, even when the stories about him were
unflattering, which they often were now. It was the nature of the
political beast, and he knew that. Once you entered the ring, you
belonged to them, and they could do anything they wanted. Gone the
peaceful congressional days when he only had to worry about the
constituents he represented, and the local press. Now he was
dealing
with the national press, and all their demands and quirks, love
affairs
and hatreds. "Besides," he smiled at her and finished
his coffee, "if
you were ugly, they wouldn't want you. Maybe you should stop
looking
like that," he said as he leaned over and kissed her.
He took the kids to school as he always did. Matthew, their baby,
was in
second grade now. And Andrew had just started high school. They
still
all went to the same school, and they had gotten to the point
where most
of their friends were in Washington and not Connecticut, but they
were
at home in both places.
Things rolled along smoothly until June, the campaign was going
well,
and Charles was pleased with it. And they were just about to go
back to
Greenwich for the summer, when Charles appeared at the house
unexpectedly in the afternoon, looking pale. For a sick moment
Grace
thought something had happened to one of the children. She heard
him
come in, and hurried down the stairs to the front hall just as he
put
down his briefcase.
"What's wrong?" she asked without pausing for breath.
Maybe they had
called him first ... which one was it ... Andy, Abigail, or Matt?
"I've got bad news," he said, looking at her unhappily
and then taking
two quick steps toward her.
"Oh God, what is it?" She squeezed his hand without
thinking, and when
she took it away again she'd left a mark from the pressure of her
fingers.
"I just got a call from a source we have at Associated Press
... ."
then it wasn't the children, "Grace ... they know about your
father and
your time at Dwight." He looked devastated to have to tell
her, but he
wanted to prepare her. He was only desperately sorry to have put
her in
a position where she could have gotten so badly hurt. And he
realized
now that he never should have done it. He had been foolish and
selfish
and naive to think they could survive the campaign unscathed. And
now
the press were going to devour her.
"Oh," was all she said, staring at him. "I ...
okay." And then she
looked at him worriedly, "How badly is this going to hurt
you?"
"I don't know. That's not the point. I didn't want you to
have to go
through this." He led her slowly into their living room with
an arm
around her shoulder. "They're going to break the story at six
o'clock,
on the news, and they want a press conference before, if we'll do
it."
"Do I have to?" she looked gray.
"No, you don't. Why don't we wait and see how bad it is, and
then deal
with it afterwards?"
"What about the kids? What should I say to them?" Grace
looked calm, but
very pale, and her hands were shaking badly.
"We'd better tell them."
They picked them up from school together that afternoon, and took
them
home, and sat them down in the dining room around the table.
"Your mom and I have something to say," he said quietly.
"You're getting divorced?" Matt looked terrified, all of
his friends'
parents had been getting divorced lately.
"No, of course not," his father said with a smile in his
direction.
"But this isn't good either. This is something very hard for
your mom.
But we thought that we should tell you." Charles looked very
serious, as
he held Grace's hand firmly.
"Are you sick?" Andrew asked nervously, his best
friend's mom had just
died of cancer.
"No, I'm fine." Grace took a breath and felt the first
tightening of her
chest she'd felt in a long time. She didn't even know when she'd
last
seen her inhaler. "This is about something that happened a
long time
ago, and it's very hard to explain, and understand. It's very hard
unless you've been there, or seen it happen." She was
fighting back
tears, and Charles squeezed her hand.
"When I was a little girl, like Marty's age, my dad used to
be very mean
to my mom, he used to beat her," she said calmly but sadly.
"You mean like hit her?" Matthew said in astonishment
with wide eyes,
and Grace nodded solemnly.
"Yes. He hit her a lot, and he really hurt her. He beat her
for a long
time, and then she got very, very sick."
"Because he beat her up?" Matthew asked again.
"Probably not. She just did. She got cancer, like Zack's
mom."
They all knew Andrew's friend. "She was very sick for a long
time, four
years. And while she was sick, sometimes he'd beat me ... he did a
lot
of terrible things ... and sometimes he still beat my mom.
But I thought that if I let him hurt me ..." Her eyes filled
with tears
and she choked as Charles squeezed her hand still harder to give
her
courage. "I thought that if I let him hurt me, then he
wouldn't hurt her
as much ... so I let him do anything he wanted ... it was pretty
terrible ... and then she died. I was seventeen, and the night of
her
funeral," she closed her eyes and then opened them again,
determined to
finish the story that she had never wanted her children to know.
But now she knew she had to tell them, before someone else did.
"The
night of the funeral, he beat me again ... a lot ... very badly
.... he
hurt me terribly, and I was very scared ... and I remembered a gun
my
mom had next to her bed, and I grabbed it ... I think I just
wanted to
scare him," she was sobbing now and her children stared at
her in
stupefied silence, "I don't know what I thought ... I was
just so scared
and I didn't want him to hurt me anymore ... we fought over the
gun ...
it went off accidentally, and I shot him.
He died that night."
She took a big gulp of air, and Andrew stared at her, stunned.
"You shot your dad? You killed him?" Andrew asked, and
she nodded.
They had a right to know. She just didn't want to tell them about
the
rapes, if she didn't have to.
"Did you go to jail?" Matthew asked, intrigued by the
story. It was
sort of like cops and robbers, or something on TV. It sounded
interesting to him, except for the part where he beat her.
"Yes, I did," she said quietly, looking at her daughter,
who so far, had
said nothing at all. "I went to prison for two years, and I
was on
probation in Chicago for two years after that. And then it was all
over.
I moved to New York and met your dad, we got married and had you,
and
everything's been happy ever since then." It had all been so
simple for
the past fifteen years and now it was going to get difficult
again.
But it couldn't be helped now. They had taken the chance of
exposure
along with Charles's political career, and now they had to pay the
price
for it.
"I can't believe this," Abigail said, staring at her.
"You've been in
jail? Why didn't you ever tell us?"
"I didn't think I had to, Abby. It wasn't a story I was proud
of.
It was very painful for me." "You said your parents were
dead, you never
said you killed them," Abigail reproached her.
"I didn't kill them both. I killed him," Grace
explained.
"You make it sound like you were defending yourself,"
she argued with
her mother.
"I was."
"Isn't that self-defense? Then how come you went to
jail?"
Grace nodded miserably. "It is, but they didn't believe
me."
"I can't believe you've been in prison." All she could
think of were her
friends and what they would say now, when they heard the story.
It was worse than anything she could imagine.
"Did you kill Dad's parents too?" Matt asked, intrigued.
"Of course not." Grace smiled at him. He was really too
young to
understand it.
"Why are you telling us this now?" Andrew asked
unhappily. Abigail was
right. It wasn't a pretty story. And it wouldn't sit well with
their
friends.
"Because the press has found out," Charles answered for
her. He hadn't
said anything till then, he wanted to let Grace tell them in her
own
way, and she had done well. But it wasn't easy to absorb, for
anyone,
least of all for children to hear about their mother. "It's
going to be
on the news tonight, and we wanted to tell you first."
"Gee, thanks a lot. Ten minutes before it goes on. And you
expect me to
go to school tomorrow? I'm not going," Abigail stormed.
"Neither am I," Matt said, just for good measure, and
then he turned to
his mother with a curious expression. "Did he bleed a lot?
Your dad, I
mean." Grace laughed in spite of herself, and so did Charles.
To him, it was all like a TV show.
"Never mind, Matt," his father scolded.
"Did he make a lot of noise?"
"Matthew..."I can't believe this," Abigail said,
and burst into tears.
"I can't believe you never told us all this, and now it's
going to be
all over the news. You're a murderer, a jailbird."
"Abigail, you don't understand the circumstances,"
Charles said.
"You don't have any idea what your mother went through. Why
do you think
she's always been so interested in abused children?"
"To show off," Abby said angrily. "Besides, what do
you know? You
weren't there either, were you? And besides, this is all because
of you,
and your stupid campaign! If we weren't here in Washington, none
of this
would have happened!" There was a certain truth to that, and
Charles
felt guilty enough without having Abby rub it in, but before he
could
answer her, she ran upstairs and slammed the door to her bedroom.
Grace stood up to go, but Charles pulled her into her seat again.
"Let her calm down," he said wisely, and Andrew looked
at them and
rolled his eyes.
"She's such a little bitch, why do you put up with her?"
"Because we love her, and all of you," Charles said.
"This isn't easy
for any of us. We have to work it out in our own ways, and support
each
other. This is going to be very hard once the press start tearing
your
mom apart." "We'll be there for you, Mom," Andrew
said kindly, and got
up to give her a hug, but Matthew was thinking about what she'd
said. He
kind of liked the story.
"Maybe Abby will shoot you, Dad," he said hopefully, and
Charles could
only laugh at him again.
"I hope not, Matt. No one is going to shoot anyone."
"Mom might." Grace smiled ruefully as she looked at her
youngest son.
"Remember that the next time I tell you to clean up your room
or finish
your dinner." "Yeah," he said with a broad grin,
showing that his two
top front teeth were missing. Surprisingly, unlike his siblings,
he
wasn't upset.
But he was too young to really absorb the implications of what had
happened.
Eventually, Grace went upstairs and tried to talk to Abigail, but
she
wouldn't let her mother into her room, and at six o'clock they all
gathered downstairs to watch the television in the den. Abby came
down
silently and joined them, and sat in the back of the room without
talking to her parents.
The telephone had been ringing off the hook for two hours by then,
but
Grace had put it on the machine. There wasn't a soul alive they
wanted
to talk to. And there was an unlisted emergency line where
Charles's
aides called him. They called several times, and warned that they
had
been advised again that the story was ugly.
It was presented as a special bulletin, with a full screen
photograph of
her mug shot from prison. What startled Grace above all was how
young
she looked. She was barely more than a baby, only three years
older than
Andrew, and she looked younger than Abigail in the picture.
"Wow, Mom! Is that you?"
"Shhh, Matthew!" they all said at once, and watched in
horror as the
story unraveled.
The story was definitely not pretty. It opened with the news that
Grace
Mackenzie, wife of Congressman Charles Mackenzie, candidate for a
Senate
seat in the next election, had shot her father in a sex scandal at
seventeen, and had been sentenced to two years in prison. There
were
photographs of her going into the trial, in handcuffs, and of her
father
looking very handsome. They said he had been a pillar of the
community,
and his daughter had accused him of rape, and shot him. She had
claimed
self-defense and a jury had not believed her. A two-year sentence
for
voluntary manslaughter was the result, followed by two years'
probation.
There were more photographs of her then, leaving the trial, again
in
handcuffs, and as she left for Dwight, in leg irons and chains,
then
another photograph of her at Dwight. She sounded like a gang moll
by the
time they were finished. They went on to say that she had been at
Dwight
Correctional Center in Dwight, Illinois, for two years, and was
released
in 1973 for two years of probation in Chicago. There had been no
further
problems with the law subsequently, to the best of their
knowledge, but
that possibility was currently under investigation.
"Under investigation? What the hell do they mean?" Grace
asked, and
Charles silenced her with a gesture, he wanted to hear what they
were
saying.
They explained that people in the community had not believed the
sex
scandal story at all. And then they followed it with a brief
interview
with the chief of police who had charged her. Twenty-one years
later, he
was there, and he claimed to have total recall of the night she
was
arrested.
"The prosecutor felt she'd been trying to ..." he smiled
wickedly and
Grace wanted to throw up as she listened, " ... I'd say,
tantalize her
father, and she got angry when he didn't take the bait. She was a
pretty
sick girl, back then, I don't know anything about her now of
course, but
a leopard don't change his spots much, does he?" She couldn't
believe
what she was hearing, or what they'd encouraged him to say.
They explained again, for all who hadn't caught it the first time,
that
she was a convicted felon, convicted of murder. They showed her
mug shot
yet again. And then a photograph of her looking like a moron, with
Charles, as she stood next to him when he was sworn into Congress.
And they explained that Charles was now running for the Senate.
And then
it was over, and they moved on to something else, as Grace fell
back in
her seat in horrified amazement. She felt completely drained of
all
emotion.
It was all there, the mug shots, the story, the attitude of the
community as expressed by the chief of Dolice.
"They practically said I raped him! Did you hear what that
bastard
said?" Grace was outraged by what the chief of police had
said about
her, he had called her "pretty sick" and said she had
"tantalized" her
father. "Can't we sue them?" "Maybe," Charles
said, trying to sound
calm, for hers and the children's sake. "First we have to see
what
happens. There's going to be a lot of noise over this. We have to
be
ready for it."
"How much worse can it get?" she asked angrily.
"A lot," he said knowingly. His aides had warned him,
and he knew that
from his experience with the press years before.
By seven o'clock there were television cameras outside their
house.
One channel even used a bullhorn to address her, and urge her to
come
out and talk to them. Charles called the police, but the best they
could
do for them was get the reporters off their property, and force
them to
stand across the street, which they did. They put two camera crews
in
the trees so they could shoot into their bedroom windows.
And Charles went upstairs and closed the shades. They were under
siege.
"How long is this going to last?" Grace asked miserably
after the
children went to bed. They were still out there ..."A while
probably.
Maybe a long while." And then as they sat in the kitchen,
looking at
each other in exhaustion, he asked her if she wanted to talk to
them at
some point and tell them her side of the story.
"Should I? Can't we sue them for what they said?"
"I don't know any of the answers." He had already put in
calls to two
major libel lawyers, but he also realized that their phones could
be
tapped by the press, and he didn't want to talk to the attorneys
from
the house, or even from his office. For the moment, at least, it
was a
genuine disaster.
The next morning, the press were still there, and Charles and
Grace were
tipped off again about new coverage on local and national talk
shows.
She was the hot news of the hour all over the country.
Two guards were interviewed at Dwight, who claimed they knew her
really well. Both were young and Grace knew for certain she'd
never seen
them.
"I've never laid eyes on them," she said to Charles,
feeling sick again.
He had stayed home with her, to lend her support, as she was stuck
in
the house, and Abby had refused to get out of bed. But a friend
had
offered to take Andrew and Matt to school, and Grace was relieved
they'd
gone. It was hard enough dealing with Abby, and herself.
The two prison guards said that Grace had been a member of a real
tough
gang, and they implied, but didn't actually say, that she'd used
drugs
in prison.
"What are they doing to me?" She burst into tears and
put her face in
her hands. She didn't understand it. Why were these people lying
about
her?
"Grace, they want a piece of the action. A moment of glory.
That's all
it is. They want to be on television, they want to be a star just
like
you are." "I'm not a star. I'm a housewife," she
said naively.
"To them, you're a star." He was a lot wiser than she
was.
On another channel, they were interviewing the chief of police
again.
And in Watseka, a girl who claimed to have been Grace's best
friend in
school, and whom Grace had also never seen before, said that Grace
had
always talked to her a lot about how much she loved her father and
how
jealous she was of her mother. The impression being created there
was
that she had killed her father in a jealous rage.
"Are these people crazy, or am I? That woman looks twice my
age, and I
don't even know who she is." Even her name was unfamiliar.
They interviewed one of the arresting officers from that night,
who
looked like an old man now, and he admitted that Grace had looked
really
scared and she was shaking really badly when they found her.
"Did she look like she'd been raped?" the interviewer
said without
hesitation.
"It was hard to tell, you know, I'm no doctor," he said
shyly, "but she
didn't have any clothes on."
"She was naked?" The interviewer looked straight into
the camera,
shocked, and the policeman nodded.
"Yeah, but I don't think the doctors at the hospital said
she'd been
raped. They just said she'd had sex with her boyfriend or
something.
Maybe her father walked in on them."
"Thank you, Sergeant Johnson."
And then came the piece de resistance on yet another channel. A
moment
with Frank Wills, who looked even worse and sleazier than he had
twenty
years before, if that was possible, and he said bluntly that Grace
had
always been a strange kid and had always been after her father's
money.
"What? He got everything there was, and God knows it wasn't
much," she
shouted at Charles, and then laid her head back in despair again.
"Grace, you have to stop going crazy over everything they
say. You know
they're not going to tell the truth. Why should they?" Where
were David
Glass and Molly? Why wasn't someone saying anything decent about
her?
Why didn't anybody love her? Why hadn't they? Why had Molly died,
and
David disappeared? Where the hell were they now?
"I can't stand this," she said hysterically. There was
no getting away
from it, and it was unbearable. There was no relief and in this
case,
there was no reward for this kind of pain and torture.
"You have to stand it," Charles said matter-of-factly.
"It's not going
to disappear overnight." Charles knew better than anyone that
it could
take a long time to die down once the flames had grown to such
major
proportions.
"Why do I have to stand this?" she asked, crying again.
"Because people love this garbage. They eat it up. When I was
married to
Michelle, the tabloids crawled all over her constantly, they told
lies,
they snuck stories, they did everything they could to torture her.
You just have to accept that. That's the way it is."
"I can't.
She was a movie star, she wanted the attention. She must have
wanted
what went with it." Grace was refusing to see the similarity
in their
lives.
"And the presumption is that I do too, because I'm a
politician."
She sat in the den with him for an hour and cried, and then she
went
upstairs and tried to talk to Abby. But Abby didn't want to hear
any of
it from her. She had been flipping the dial, and hearing all the
same
things in her mother's bedroom.
"How could you do those things?" Abby sobbed as Grace
looked at her in
anguish.
"I didn't," Grace said through tears. "I was
miserable, I was alone, I
was scared. I was terrified of him ... he beat me ... he raped me
for
four years ... and I couldn't help it. I don't even know if I
meant to
kill him. I just did. I was like a wounded animal. I struck out
any way
I could to save myself from him. I had no choice, Abby."
She was sobbing as Abby watched her, crying too. "But most of
the other
things they said on TV aren't true." Grace hated them for
what they were
doing to her daughter. "None of those things was true. I
don't even know
those people, except the man who was my father's partner, and what
he
said wasn't true either. He tooka loss of income as a result, or
the
impahing, and what I got I gave to charity. I've spent my life
trying to
give back to people like me, to help them survive too. I never
forgot
what I went through. And oh God, Abby," she put her arms
around her, "I
love you so much, I don't ever want you to suffer because of me.
It
breaks my heart to see you so unhappy.
Abby, I had a miserable life as a kid. No one was ever decent to
me
until I met your father. He gave me a life, he gave me love and
all of
you. He's one of the few human beings who's ever been kind to me.
...
Abby," she was sobbing uncontrollably, and her daughter was
hugging her,
"I'm so sorry, and I love you so much ... please forgive me.
..."
"I'm sorry I was so mean to you ... I'm sorry, Mommy
..."
"It's okay, it's okay ... I love you ..."
Charles was watching them from the doorway with tears running down
his
face, and he tiptoed away to call the lawyers again. But when one
of
them came to see them that afternoon, he didn't have good news.
Public figures, like politicians and movie stars, had no rights of
privacy whatsoever.-People could say anything they wanted to about
them
without having the burden of proving whether it was true. And if
celebrities wanted to sue, they had to prove that what was being
said
about them were lies, which was often impossible to do, and they
also
had to prove that they'd suffered a loss of income as a result, or
the
impaired ability to make a living, and they had to prove yet again
that
what had been said had been said in actual malice. And the wives
or
husbands of politicians, particularly if they had either
campaigned, or
appeared in public with them, as she obviously had, had the same
lack of
rights as the politicians. In fact, Grace had no rights at all
now.
"What that means," the attorney who'd come to see them
explained, "is
that you can't do anything against most of what people are saying.
If they claim that you killed your father and you didn't, that's a
different story, although they have a right to say you were
convicted of
it, but if they say you were in a gang in prison, you have to
prove that
you were not, and how are you going to do that, Mrs. Mackenzie?
Get affidavits from the inmates who were there at the time? You
have to
prove that these things have been said intentionally to hurt you,
and
that they have affected negatively your ability to make a
living."
"In other words, they can do anything they want to me, and
unless I can
prove they're lying, and everything else you mentioned, I can't do
a
damn thing about it. Is that it?"
"Exactly. It's not a happy situation. But everyone in the
public eye is
in the same boat you are. And unfortunately these are tabloid
times we
live in. The common belief of the media is that the public wants
not
only dirt, but blood. They want to make people and destroy people,
they
want to tear people apart, and feed them to the public bit by bit.
It's not personal, it's economic. They make money off your corpse.
They're vultures.
They pay up to a hundred and fifty thousand dollars for a story,
and
then treat it as news. And unreliable sources who're being paid
that
kind of money will say anything to keep the spotlight on them, and
the
money coming. They'll say you danced naked on your father's grave
and
they saw you do it, if it gets them on TV, and makes them a buck.
That's reality.
And the so called legitimate press behave the same way these days.
There's no such thing anymore. It's disgusting. And they take
innocent
people like you, and your family, and trash them, for the hell of
it.
It's the most malicious game there is, and yet actual malice' is
the
hardest thing of all to prove. It isn't even malice anymore, it's
greed,
and indifference to the human condition.
"You paid a price for what you did. You suffered enough. You
were
seventeen. You shouldn't have to go through all this, nor should
your
husband and your children. But there's very little I can do to
help you.
We'll keep an eye on it, and if anything turns up we can sue for,
we
will. But you have to be prepared for the fallout from that too.
Lawsuits only encourage the feeding frenzy more. The sharks love
blood
in the water."
"You're not very encouraging, Mr. Goldsmith," Charles
said, looking
depressed.
"No, I'm not," he smiled ruefully. He liked Charles, and
he felt sorry
for Grace. But the laws were not made to protect people like them.
The laws had been made to turn them into victims.
The feeding frenzy, as he had called it, went on for weeks. The
children
went back to school, reluctantly. Fortunately, they got out for
summer
vacation after a week, and the family moved to Connecticut for the
summer. But it was more of the same there. More tabloids, more
press,
more photographers. More interviews on television with people who
claimed to be her best friends, but whom she had never heard of.
The only good thing that came of it, was that David Glass emerged
from
the mists. He had called, and was living in Van Nuys, and had four
children. He was desperately sorry to see what was happening to
her.
It broke his heart, knowing how much pain it caused her to go
through
it.
But no one could do anything to stop the press, or the lies, or the
gossip. And he knew as well as she did that even if he talked to
the
press on her behalf, everything he said would be distorted. He was
happy
to know that other than the current uproar in the press, she was
happily
married, and had children. He apologized for staying out of touch
for so
long. He was now the senior partner of his late father-in-law's
law
firm. And then he admitted sheepishly that Tracy, his wife, had
been
fiercely jealous of Grace when they first moved to California. It
was
why he had eventually stopped writing. But he was happy to hear
her now,
he had felt compelled to call, and Grace was happy he'd called
her.
They both agreed that the press didn't want the facts. They wanted
scandal and filth. They wanted to hear that she'd been giving blow
jobs
to guards, or sleeping with women in chains in prison. They didn't
want
to know how vulnerable she'd been, how terrorized, how
traumatized, how
scared, how young, how decent. They only wanted the ugly stuff.
Both David and Charles agreed that the best thing was to step back
and
let them wear themselves out, and offer no comment.
But even after a month of it, the furor hadn't died down. And all
the
principal tabloids were still running stories about her on their
covers.
The tabloid TV shows had interviewed everyone except the janitor
in
jail, and Grace felt it was time to come forward and say
something.
Grace and Charles spent an entire day talking to Charles's
campaign
manager, and they finally agreed to let her do a press conference.
Maybe that would stop it.
"It won't, you know," Charles said. But maybe if it was
handled well, it
wouldn't do any harm either.
The conference was set for the week before her birthday on an
important
interview show, on a major network. It was heavily advertised, and
television news cameras started appearing outside their house the
day
before. It was agony for their children.
They hated having anyone over now, or going anywhere, or even
talking to
friends. Grace understood it only too well. Every time she went to
the
grocery store, someone came over to her and started a seemingly
innocuous conversation that would end up in Q8cA about her life in
prison. It didn't matter if they opened with melons or cars,
somehow
they always wound up in the same place, asking if her father had
really
raped her, or how traumatic had it been to kill him, and were
there
really a lot of lesbians in prison.
"Are you kidding?" Charles said in disbelief. It
happened to her the
most when she was alone or with the children. Grace complained to
Charles about it constantly. A woman had walked up to her that day
at
the gas station, and out of the blue shouted "Bang, ya got
him, didn't
you, Grace?"
"I feel like Bonnie and Clyde." She had to laugh at it
sometimes. It
really was absurd, and although people mentioned it to him
sometimes
too, they never seemed to ask as much or as viciously as they did
of
Grace. It was as though they wanted to torment her. She had even
gotten
a highly irritated letter from Cheryl Swanson in Chicago, saying
that
she was retired now, and she and Bob were divorced, no surprise to
Grace, but she couldn't understand why Grace had never told her
she'd
been in prison.
"Because she wouldn't have hired me," she said to
Charles as she tossed
the letter at him to show him. There were lots of letters like
that now,
and crank calls, and one blank page smeared with blood spelling
out the
word "Murderess," which they'd turned over to the
police. But she'd had
a nice letter from Winnie, in Philadelphia, offering her love and
support, and another from Father Tim, who was in Florida, as the
chaplain of a retirement community. He sent her his love and
prayers,
and reminded her that she was God's child, and He loved her.
She reminded herself of it constantly the day of the interview. It
had
all been carefully staged, and Charles's P.R. people had reviewed
the
questions, or so they thought. Mysteriously, the questions they'd
approved for the interview had disappeared, and Grace found
herself
asked, first off, what it had meant to her to have sex with her
father.
"Meant to me?" She looked at her interviewer in
amazement. "Meant to me?
Have you ever worked with victims of abuse? Have you ever seen
what
child abusers do to children? They rape them, they mutilate them
....
they kill them ... they torture them, they put cigarettes out on
their
little arms and faces ... they fry them on radiators ... they do a
lot
of very ugly things ... have you ever asked any of them what it
meant to
them to have boiling water poured on their face, or their arm
nearly
ripped out of its socket? It means a lot to children when people
do
things like that to them. It means that no one loves them, that
they're
in constant danger ... it means living with terror every moment of
the
day. That's what it means ... that's what it meant to me." It
was a
powerful statement, and the interviewer looked taken aback as
Grace fell
silent.
"Actually I ... we ... I'm sure that all your supporters have
been
wondering how you feel about your prison record being revealed to
the
public."
"Sad ... sorry ... I was the victim of some terrible crimes,
committed
within the sanctity of the family. And I in turn did a terrible
thing,
killing my father. But I had paid for it before, and I paid for it
after. I think revealing it, in this way, scandalizing it,
sensationalizing the agony that our family went through, and
tormenting
my children and my husband now, serves no purpose. It's done in
such a
way as to embarrass us, and not to inform the public." She
talked then
about the people giving interviews, claiming to know her, whom she
had
never even seen before, and the lies they told to make themselves
important. She didn't mention the tabloid by name, but she said
that one
of them had told shocking lies in all of their headlines. And the
interviewer smiled at that.
"You can't expect people to believe what they read in
tabloids, Mrs.
Mackenzie."
"Then why print it?" Grace said firmly.
The interviewer asked a thousand unfortunate questions, but
eventually
she asked Grace to tell them about "Help Kids!" and her
work with the
victims of child abuse. She told them about St. Mary's and Saint
Andrew's, and "Help Kids!" She made a plea for children
everywhere that
they never had to go through what she had gone through. Despite
their
probing and the lack of sympathy with which they had handled much
of it,
and the spuriousness, she had turned it into a deeply moving and
very
sympathetic interview, and everyone congratulated her afterwards.
Charles was particularly proud of her, and they spent a quiet
evening
after the cameras had left, and talked about all that had
happened.
It had been a terrible time for Grace, but at least she had said
her
piece now.
They spent her birthday at home, and Abigail had friends over that
night. But only because her parents had insisted. It was her
birthday
too. And Grace was very quiet as she sat at the pool with Charles.
She was still feeling shaken and withdrawn, and she hated going
anywhere.
People were still harassing her, even in bank lines and public
rest
rooms. She was happier at home, behind her walls, and she dreaded
going
out, even with Charles. In spite of his campaign, it was a very
quiet
summer.
But by August, finally, everything seemed to be back to normal.
There were no more photographers camped outside, and she hadn't
been on
the cover of the tabloids in weeks.
"I guess you're just not popular anymore," Charles
teased. He actually
managed to take a week off to be with her, and he was glad he had.
Her asthma had gotten bad again, for the first time in years, and
she
was feeling ill. He was sure it was stress, but this time she
suspected
what it was before he did. She was pregnant.
"In the middle of all this furor? How did you manage
that?" He was
shocked at first, but he was happy too. Their children were what
brought
them the most joy in all their years together He worried about her
during the campaign though. The baby was due in March, and she was
two
months pregnant, which meant that she'd be campaigning all through
the
early months. She'd be five months pregnant at the election. He
wanted
her to take it easy, and try not to wear herself out too much, or
get
too upset over the press when they went back to Washington. And
then he
groaned as he thought of it. "I'll be fifty-nine years old
when this
baby is born. I'll be eighty when he or she graduates from
college. Oh
my God, Grace." He smiled ruefully, and she scolded him.
"Oh shut up. I'm starting to look like the older woman in
your life, so
don't complain to me. You look like you're thirty." He nearly
did too.
Not thirty, but forty easily. He had barely been touched by the
hands of
time, but at thirty-nine she didn't look bad either.
In September, they moved back to Washington. In spite of his
campaign,
they had had a quiet summer. They had only gone out with close
friends
in Greenwich, and because of the furor she'd caused in June, and
her
early pregnancy, he had done all of his campaigning without her.
Abigail started high school that year. Andrew went into his second
year,
and he had a new girl friend, her father was the French
ambassador. And
Matt started third grade with all the usual commotion of new
backpacks,
school supplies, whether to have hot lunch or bring his own. For
Matt,
every day was still a big adventure.
They hadn't told them about the baby yet, Grace thought it was too
soon.
She was just three months pregnant, and they had decided to wait
until
after Matt's birthday in September. Grace had planned a party for
him.
And little by little, she started going out with Charles again. It
was
hard being seen again, knowing that her ugly past had become part
of
everyone's dinner conversation. But there hadn't been anything
written
about her in weeks, and she was feeling guilty about not
campaigning
with her husband.
It was a hot September Saturday afternoon, the day before
Matthew's
party, and Grace was buying some things they needed at Sutton
Place
Gourmet, like ice cream and plastic knives and forks and sodas.
And as she stood at the checkout stand, waiting to pay, she almost
fainted when she saw it. The latest edition of the tabloid Thrill
had
just been set out, and Charles hadn't been warned this time. There
was a
photograph of her nude, with her head thrown back and her eyes
closed,
right on the cover. There were two black boxes covering her
breasts and
her pubic area, and other than that, the photograph left nothing
to the
imagination. Her legs were spread wide, and she looked like she
was in
the throes of passion. The headline read "Senator's Wife Did
Porno in
Chicago." She thought she was going to throw up as she
gathered them up,
and held a hundred-dollar bill out with a trembling hand. For a
moment
she didn't know what she was doing.
"You want all of them?" The young clerk looked surprised
as she nodded.
She was almost breathless. But her inhaler was her constant friend
now.
"Do you have more?" she said hoarsely to him. And he
nodded.
"Sure. In the back. You want them too?"
"Yes." She bought fifty copies of Thrill, and the
groceries she needed
for Matt, and ran to her car, as though she had just bought the
only
copies in existence and she was going to hide them. And as she
drove
home, crying behind the wheel, she realized how stupid she had
been.
You couldn't buy them all up. It was like emptying the ocean with
a
teacup.
She ran into the house as soon as she stopped the car, but Charles
was
sitting in the kitchen looking stunned, holding a copy of the
tabloid in
his hands. His chief aide had just seen it and brought it to him.
They had never warned them. The aide saw the look on Grace's face,
and
left immediately, and Charles looked at her with real shock for
the
first time. She had never seen him look as betrayed or as weary,
and
seeing him that way almost killed her.
"What is this, Grace?"
I "I don't know." She was crying as she sat down next to
him, shaking.
"I don't know ..."
"It can't be you." But it looked like her. You could see
her face.
Even though her eyes were closed, she was completely recognizable.
And
then suddenly, she knew ... he must have taken off her clothes.
... he
must have taken them all off .... The only thing she was wearing
was a
black ribbon around her neck. He must have put it on her, for sex
appeal, while she was sleeping. The credit for the photograph said
Marcus Anders. She went even paler than she was when she first saw
it.
And Charles had seen her look. He knew there was something to it.
"Do you know who took this?"
She nodded, wishing that she could die for him. Wishing, for his
sake,
that she had never met him, or borne his children.
"What is this, Grace?" For the first time in sixteen
years, his tone was
icy. "When did you do this?"
"I don't know for sure that I did," she said, choking on
her own words
as she sat down slowly at the kitchen table. "I ... I went
out with a
photographer a few times in Chicago. I told you about him. He said
he
wanted to take pictures of me, and they wanted me to at the agency
...
." She faltered and he looked shocked.
"They wanted you to do porno? What kind of agency was
this?"
"It was a modeling agency," the life was going out of
her. She couldn't
fight this anymore, she couldn't defend herself forever. She would
leave
him if he wanted her to. She would do anything he wanted.
"They wanted me to model, and he said he'd take some shots,
like for a
portfolio. We were friends. I trusted him, I liked him. He was the
first
man I'd ever gone out with. I was twenty-one years old. I had no
experience. My roommates hated him, they were a lot smarter than I
was.
He took me to his studio, he played a lot of music, he poured me
some
wine ... nd he drugged me. I told you about it a long time
ago." But he
no longer remembered. "I guess I must have passed out. I was
completely
out of it, and I think he took pictures of me when I was asleep,
but I
was wearing a man's shirt, it was no worse than that. I never took
my
clothes off."
"How do you know that for sure?"
She looked at him honestly. She had never lied to him, and she
didn't
intend to start now. "I don't. I don't know anything. I
thought he had
raped me, but he hadn't. My roommate took me to a doctor and she
said
nothing had happened. I tried to get the negatives from him, and
he
wouldn't give them to me. My roommates finally said I should just
forget
it. He needed a release to use them, if I was recognizable, and if
I
wasn't, who cared anyway. I would have liked to get them back, but
I
knew I couldn't. At one point, he tried to make it sound like I'd
signed
a release, but then he gave me the impression that I hadn't.
I don't see how I could have anyway. I was so stoned from what he
gave
me, I could barely see when I left.
"He showed the pictures to the head of the agency afterwards,
and the
head of the agency made a pass at me. He said the shots were
pretty hot,
but he said that I had a shirt on, so I figured nothing really
terrible
had happened. I never saw the pictures. I never saw him again. I
never
thought we'd be in this position, that I'd be married to someone
important and we'd be vulnerable." Now he could do anything
he wanted.
And they looked terrible. They looked like real porno. All she was
wearing was a black ribbon she'd never seen before tied at her
throat.
And as she stared at the photograph, she saw that she looked
drugged.
She looked completely out of it, to her own eyes. But to a
stranger,
intent on seeing something lewd, it was everything they could have
wanted. She couldn't believe anyone could do something like that.
He had destroyed her life with a single picture. She just sat
there,
looking at Charles, her whole body sagging with grief as she saw
the
pain on his face.Killing her father in self-defense was bad
enough, but
how was he going to explain this to his constituents, the media,
and
their children?
"I don't know what to say. I can't believe you'd do such a
thing."
He was overwhelmed, and his chin was quivering with unshed tears.
He
couldn't even look at her as he turned away and cried.
Nothing he could have done to her could have been worse. She would
have
preferred it if he had hit her.
"I didn't do it, Charles," she said weakly, crying too.
She knew for a
certainty that their marriage had just ended over Marcus's
pictures.
"I was drugged."
"What a fool you were ... what a fool ..." She couldn't
deny that.
"And what a bastard he must have been to make you do
that." She nodded
through her tears, unable to say anything in her own defense. And
a
moment later, Charles took the paper and went upstairs alone to
their
bedroom. She didn't follow him. She was beside herself, but she
knew
that on Monday, the day after Matt's party, she would have to
leave him.
She had to leave all of them. She couldn't keep putting them
through
this.
The photograph itself was on the news that night, and the story
broke so
big that every network and wire service in the country were
calling.
His aides were frantically trying to explain that it was probably
all a
mistake, the girl only looked like her, and no, Mrs. Mackenzie was
not
available for comment. But even worse, there was an interview with
Marcus the next day. He had white hair, and he looked seedy in the
interview, but he said with a lascivious smile that the
photographs were
indeed of Grace Mackenzie, and he had a signed release to prove
it.
He held it up for all to see and explained that she had posed for
him in
Chicago eighteen years before. "She was a real hot
mama," he said,
smiling. And from the photographic evidence, she certainly looked
it.
"Was she in great financial need at the time?" the interviewer
asked,
pretending to look for a sympathetic reason why she had done it.
"Not at all. She loved doing it," he said, smiling.
"Some women do."
"Did she give you the release to use the photographs
commercially?"
"Of course." He looked insulted even to be asked. They
flashed the
photograph again, and then moved on to another topic, as Grace
stared at
the screen in unconcealed hatred. She had never given a release to
him,
and when Goldsmith the libel attorney called back at noon, she
told him
point-blank that she had signed no release to Marcus Anders.
"We'll see what we can do, Grace. But if you posed for that
photograph,
and gave him a release, there isn't a damn thing we can do."
"I did not sign a release to him. I didn't sign anything."
"Maybe he forged it. I'll do my best. But you can't unring a
bell,
Grace. They've seen it. It's out there. You can't take it back, or
undo
it. If you posed for it eighteen years ago, you've got to know
it's out
there, and it'll come back to haunt you." And then, in a
worried tone,
"Are there any others? Do you know how many he took?"
"I have no idea." She almost groaned as she said it.
"If the paper bought them from him in good faith, and he
represented to
them that he had a release, and presented one to them, then
they're
protected."
"Why is everyone protected except me? Why am I always the
guilty party?"
It was like getting beaten again, and raped. She was a victim
again. It
was no different from getting raped night after night by her
father.
Only her father wasn't doing it anymore, everyone else was.
And it wasn't fair. It wasn't fair that just because Charles was
in
politics they had a right to destroy her and their family. They
had had
sixteen wonderful years, and now it had all turned into a
nightmare. It
was like coming back full circle, and being put back in prison.
She was
helpless against the lies. The truth meant nothing.
Everything she'd done, everything she'd lived, everything she'd
built
had been wasted.
And by that afternoon she'd seen a copy of the release, and there
was no
denying that she had signed it. The handwriting was shaky, and the
forms
a little loose, but even to her own eyes, she recognized the
signature.
She couldn't believe it. He had obviously made her do it when she
was
barely conscious.
Matthew's party was subdued, everyone had either heard about or
seen the
tabloids. All the parents who dropped their children off gave
Grace
strange looks, or at least she thought so. Charles was on hand to
greet
them too, but the two of them had barely spoken since the night
before,
and he had spent the night in their guest room. He needed time to
think,
and to absorb what had happened.
They had talked to the children about the photographs that
morning.
Matthew didn't really understand what they were about, but Abigail
and
Andrew did. Andrew looked agonized, and Abigail had burst into
tears
again. She couldn't believe all that her mother had put them
through.
How could she do it?
"How can you lecture us about the way we behave, about
morality, and not
sleeping with boys, when you did things like that? I suppose you
were
forced to do it, just like your father forced you? Who forced you
this
time, Mom?" Grace had lost control this time, and she had
slapped
Abigail across the face, and then apologized profusely. But she
just
couldn't take it anymore. She was tired of the lies, and the price
they
all had paid.
"I never did that, Abigail. Not knowingly, at least. I was
drugged and
tricked by a photographer in Chicago when I was very young and
stupid.
But to the best of my knowledge, I never posed for that
picture."
"Yeah, sure." But it was all more than Grace could take.
She didn't
discuss it with them any further. And half an hour later, Abigail
left
to spend the evening with a friend, and Andrew went out with his
new
girlfriend.
Matthew enjoyed his party anyway, and Grace cooked dinner for him
afterwards. Abby called to say she was spending the night with her
friend, and Grace didn't argue with her. And Andrew came in at
nine, but
didn't disturb them.
Charles was in the library working again, and Grace knew what she
had to
do. When Charles came into their bedroom to get some papers, he
pretended not to be concerned, but he was startled to see her
packing a
suitcase.
"What's that all about?" Charles asked casually.
"I figure you've been through enough, and rightfully
so," she said
quietly, with her back to him. She was packing two big suitcases
and he
was suddenly worried. He had been hard on her, but he had a right
to be
upset. Anyone would have been shocked. But he was willing to let
her
past die quietly behind them. He hadn't told her that yet, but he
was
slowly coming around. Some things were harder than others. He just
needed some time to himself to absorb it. He thought that she'd
understand that, but apparently, she didn't.
"Where is it you're going?" he asked quietly.
"I don't know. New York, I think."
"To look for a job?" He smiled, but she didn't see him.
"Yeah, as a porno queen. I've got a great portfolio
now."
"Come on, Grace," he moved closer to her, "don't be
silly."
"Silly?" She turned on him. "You think that's what
this is? You think
having stuff like that out is silly? You think it's silly to
destroy
your husband's career and get to the point that your children hate
you?"
"They don't hate you. They don't understand. None of us does.
It's hard
to understand why anyone wants to hurt you."
"They just do. They've done it all my life. I should be used
to it by
now. It's no big deal. And don't worry, without me, you should win
the
election." She sounded hurt and angry and defeated.
"That's not as important to me as you are," he said
gently.
"Bullshit," she said, sounding hard. But at that moment
she hated
herself for everything she'd done to him, for ever loving him, or
thinking that she could leave the past behind her. She couldn't
leave
anything behind. It had all come with her, like clankling tin cans
tied
to her tail, and they reeked of all that was rotten.
Charles went back downstairs again, thinking that she needed to be
alone, and they both spent a lonely night in their separate
quarters.
She made breakfast for him and Andrew and Matt the next day, and
Charles
made a point of telling her again not to go anywhere. He was
referring
to the night before and the suitcase, but she pretended not to
understand, in front of the boys. And then they all left. Charles
had a
lot of important meetings, and press fires to put out, and he
never had
time to call her till noon, and when he did there was no answer.
Grace was long gone by then. She had written to each of them the
night
before, sitting up in bed, crying over the words until her tears
blurred
her eyes and she had to start again and again, just to tell them
how
much she loved them and how sorry she was for all the pain that
she had
caused them. She told them each to take care of Dad, and be good
to him.
The hardest one to write was to Matt. He was still too young. He
probably wouldn't understand why she had left him. She was doing
it for
them. She was the bait that had brought the sharks, now she had to
get
as far away from them as possible, so no one would hurt them. She
was
going to New York for a few days, just to catch her breath, and
she left
the letters for Charles to give them.
And after New York, she thought she'd go to L.A. She could find a
job,
until the baby came. She would give it to Charles then ... or
maybe he'd
let her keep it. She was upset and confused and sobbing when she
left.
The housekeeper saw her go, and heard her wrenching sobs in the
garage,
but she was afraid to go to her and intrude. She knew what she was
crying about, or so she thought. She'd cried herself when she'd
seen the
tabloids.
But Grace didn't take the car. She had called a cab, and waited
for it
outside the house with her bags. The housekeeper saw the cab pull
away,
but she wasn't sure who was inside. She thought Grace was still in
the
garage, getting ready to do some errands before she picked up
Matthew.
In fact, she had called a friend to pick him up, and she had left
a
long, agonizing letter for Charles in their bedroom, with the ones
for
her children.
The cabdriver drove as fast as he could. to Dulles Airport,
chatting all
the while. He was from Iran, and he told her how happy he was in
the
United States, and that his wife was having a baby. He talked
incessantly and Grace didn't bother to listen to him. She felt
sick when
she saw that he had the picture of her on the cover of Thrill on
the
front seat of the cab, and he was looking over his shoulder to
talk to
her, when he ran right into another cab, and then was rear-ended
hard,
by two cars behind him. It took them more than half an hour to get
unsnarled. The highway patrol came, no one appeared to be hurt, so
all
they had to do was exchange all their numbers, driver's licenses,
and
the names of their insurance carriers. To Grace, it seemed
endless.
But she had nowhere to go anyway. She was taking a commuter
flight, and
she could always catch the next one.
"You all right?" The driver looked worried. He was
terrified that
somebody would complain to his boss, but she promised she
wouldn't.
"Hey," he said, pointing to Thrill as she felt panic
rise in her throat,
"you look like her!" He meant it as a compliment, but
Grace didn't look
pleased. "She's a pretty girl, huh? Pretty woman!" He
gazed admiringly
at the photograph that was supposed to be Grace but somehow didn't
seem
right whenever she looked at it, "she's married to a
congressman," he
continued. "Lucky guy!" Was that how people looked at
it, she wondered.
Lucky guy? Too bad Charles didn't think so, but who could blame
him?
He dropped her off at the airport, and she felt a little twinge in
her
neck from when they'd been hit, and she felt a little stiff, but
it was
nothing major. She didn't want to make any trouble for him. And
she just
managed to catch her flight. It wasn't until after they landed in
New
York that she realized she was bleeding. But it wasn't too bad.
If she could just get to the hotel and rest, she'd be fine. She'd
had a
few incidents like that with Matt and Andrew when she was
pregnant, the
doctor had told her to rest, and the bleeding had always stopped
quickly.
She gave the cabdriver the address of the Carlyle Hotel on East
Seventy-sixth Street and Madison. She had made the reservation
from the
plane. It was only half a dozen blocks from where she used to
live, and
she liked it. She had stayed there once with Charles, and she had
happy
memories there. She had happy memories everywhere with him. Until
June,
their life had been idyllic.
She checked in at the desk. They were expecting her, and she had
registered under the name of Grace Adams. They gave her a small
room
filled with rose-covered chintz, and the bellboy put down her two
bags.
She tipped him, and he left, and no one had said how remarkable
her
resemblance was to the porno queen in the tabloids.
She wondered as she lay down on the bed if Charles had come home
by then
and found her letter. She knew she wouldn't call. It was better to
leave
like this, if she called and talked to them at all, especially
Charles,
or Matt, she knew she couldn't do it.
She was exhausted as she lay on the bed thinking of them, she felt
drained and utterly worn out, and her neck still hurt, and she had
little nagging cramps low in her abdomen and in her back. She knew
it
was nothing. She didn't have the strength to go to the bathroom.
She just lay there, feeling weak and sad, and slowly the room
began to
spin around, and eventually she drifted off into the blackness.
She woke again at four a.m and by this time the cramps she'd felt
earlier were really bad. She rolled over, and moaned in pain. She
could
hardly stand them. She lay there curled up for a long time, and
then she
looked down at the bed underneath her. It was soaked with blood
and so
were her slacks. She knew she had to do something soon, before she
passed out again. But standing up was so painful, she almost
fainted.
She grabbed her handbag, and crawled to the door, pulling the
raincoat
she'd brought tight around her. She staggered out into the hall,
and
rang for the elevator. She rode downstairs huddled over, but the
elevator operators said nothing.
She knew the hospital was only half a block away? and all she had
to do
was get there in a hurry. She saw the bellmen watching her, and
the
clerk at the desk, and when she got outside into the warm
September air,
she felt a little better.
"Cab, miss?" the doorman asked, but she shook her head
and tried to
straighten up, but she couldn't. A flash of pain made her gasp,
and
suddenly a cramp of unbelievable strength buckled her knees, as he
reached out and caught her. "Are you all right?"
"I'm fine ... I just have ... a little problem ..." At
first he thought
she was drunk, but when he saw her face, he could see that she was
in
pain. And she looked vaguely familiar. They had so many regulars
and
movie stars, sometimes it was hard to know who you knew and who
you
didn't. "I was just going ... to the hospital ..."
"Why don't you take a cab? There's one right here. He'll take
you right
across Park Avenue and drop you off. I'd take you myself, but I
can't
leave the door," he apologized, and she agreed to take the
cab.
She could hardly walk now. The doorman told him Lenox Hill, and
she
handed the doorman and the driver each five dollars.
"Thanks, I'll be fine," she reassured everyone, but she
didn't look it.
After they'd crossed Park Avenue, and pulled into the space for
the
emergency room, the driver turned to look at her, and at first he
didn't
see her. She had slipped off the seat, and she was lying on the
floor of
his cab, unconscious.
Chapter 15.
As they wheeled Grace into the emergency room, she saw lights
spinning
by overhead, and heard noises. There were metallic sounds, and
someone
called her by her first name. They kept saying it over and over,
and
then they were doing something terrible to her, and there was
awful
pain. She tried to sit up and stop them. What were they doing ....
they
were killing her. ... it was terrible ... why didn't they stop ...
she
had never felt so much pain in her life. She screamed, and then
everything went black, and there was silence.
The phone rang in the house in Washington. It was five-thirty in
the
morning. But Charles wasn't asleep. He had been awake all night,
praying
that she would call him. He'd been such a fool. He had been wrong
to
react the way he had, but they were all worn down by the constant
attack
of the tabloids. And it had been a shock. But the last thing he
had
wanted to do was lose her. He had told the kids she'd gone to New
York
for a conference for "Help Kids!" and would be back in a
few days, which
would give him a little time to find her. He wasn't sure where she
was.
He had tried calling the house in Connecticut all night and she
wasn't
there. He'd called the Carlyle in New York and there was no one
registered by the name of lyMackenzie. He wondered if she was at a
hotel
in Washington somewhere, hiding. And when the phone rang, he hoped
it
would be her, but it wasn't.
"Mr. Mackenzie?" The voice was unfamiliar. His name was
on an I.D.
card in her wallet, simply as Charles Mackenzie. And her driver's
license read Grace Adams Mackenzie.
"Yes?" He wondered if it was going to be a crank call,
and was sorry he
had answered. The letters and calls had started again in full force
after her photos.
"We have a Grace Mackenzie here." The voice seemed
totally without
interest.
"Who are you?" Had she been kidnapped? Was she dead? ...
Oh God ... .
"I'm calling from Lenox Hill Hospital in New York. Mrs.
Mackenzie just
came out of surgery." ... oh God ... no ... there had been an
accident
..."She was brought in by a cabdriver, hemorrhaging very
badly." Oh no
... the baby ... he felt a hand clutch his heart, but all he could
think
about was Grace now.
"Is she all right?" He sounded hoarse and frightened,
but the nurse was
slightly reassuring.
"She's lost a lot of blood. But we'd rather not give her a
transfusion."
They did everything they could now to avoid it.
"She's stabilized, and her condition is listed as fair."
And then for a
moment, the voice became almost human. "She lost the baby.
I'm sorry."
"Thank you." He had to catch his breath and figure out
what to do.
"Is she conscious? Can I talk to her?"
"She's in the recovery room. I'd say she'll be there till
eight-thirty
or nine. They want to get her blood pressure up before they send
her to
a room, and it's still pretty low right now. I don't think she's
going
anywhere till later this morning."
"She can't check out, can she?"
"I don't think so." The nurse sounded surprised at the
question.
"I don't think she'll feel up to it. There's a key in her bag
from the
Carlyle Hotel. I called there. But they said no one was with
her."
"Thank you. Thank you very much for calling me. I'll be there
as soon as
I can." He jumped out of bed as soon as he hung up, and
scrawled a note
to the kids about an early meeting. He dressed in five minutes,
without
shaving, and drove to the airport. He was there by six-thirty, and
caught a seven o'clock flight. A number of the flight attendants
recognized him, but no one said anything. They just brought him
the
newspaper, juice, a Danish, and a cup of coffee, like they did for
everyone else, and left him alone. For most of the flight, he sat
staring out the window.
They landed at eight-fifteen, and he got to Lenox Hill just after
nine
o'clock. They were just wheeling Grace into her room when he got
there.
He followed the gurney into the room, and she looked surprised to
see
him, and very groggy.
"How did you get here?" She looked confused, and her
eyes kept drifting
shut, as the nurse and the orderly left the room. Grace looked
gray and
utterly exhausted.
"I flew," he smiled, standing next to her, and gently
took her hand in
his. He had no idea if she knew yet about the baby.
"I think I fell," she said vaguely.
"Where?"
"I don't remember ... I was in a cab in Washington and
someone hit us
..." She wasn't sure now if it was a dream or not
..."And then, I had
terrible pains ..." She looked up at him, suddenly worried.
"Where am I?"
"You're at Lenox Hill. In New York," he said soothingly,
sitting down in the chair next to her, but never letting go of her
hand.
He was frightened by how bad she looked and was anxious to speak
to the
doctor.
"How did I get here?"
"I think a cabdriver brought you in. You passed out in his
cab.
Drunk again, I guess." He smiled, but without saying
anything, she
started to cry then. She had touched her belly and it felt flat.
At
three months there had been a little hill growing there and it was
suddenly gone. And then she remembered the terrible pain the night
before, and the bleeding. No one had told her anything yet about
the
baby. "Grace? ... sweetheart, I love you ... I love you more
than
anything. I want you to know that. I don't want to lose you."
She was crying harder then, for him, for the baby they'd lost, and
their
children. Everything was so difficult, and so sad now.
"I lost the baby ... didn't I?" She looked at him for confirmation
and
he nodded. They both cried then, and he held her.
"I'm so sorry. I should have been smart enough to know you'd
really go.
I thought you were bluffing and needed some space that night. I
almost
died when I read your letter."
"Did you give my letters to the children?"
"No," he said honestly. "I
kept them. I wanted to find you and bring you back. But if I'd
been
smart enough to keep you from going in the first place, you
wouldn't
have had the accident, and ..." He was convinced it was all
his fault.
"Shhh ... maybe it was just from all the stress we've been
through ....
I guess it wasn't the right time anyway, with everything that's
happened."
"It's always the right time ... I want to have another baby
with you,"
he said lovingly. He didn't care how old they both were, they both
loved
their children. "I want our life back."
"So do I," she whispered. They talked for a little
while, and he stroked
her hair and kissed her face, and eventually she fell asleep and
he went
to locate the doctor. But he wasn't encouraging. She had lost a
dramatic
amount of blood, and the doctor didn't think she'd be feeling well
for a
while, and he said that while she was certainly able to conceive
again,
he didn't recommend it. She had a startling amount of scarring,
and he
was actually surprised she'd gotten pregnant as often as she had.
Charles did not volunteer an explanation for the scarring.
The doctor suggested that she go to the hotel and rest for a
couple of
days, and then go home to Washington and stay in bed for at least
another week, maybe two. A miscarriage at three months with the
kind of
hemorrhaging she'd experienced was nothing to take lightly.
They went from the hospital to the hotel that afternoon, and Grace
was
stunned by how weak she was. She could hardly walk and Charles
carried
her into the hotel, and to her room, and put her right to bed, and
ordered room service for her. She was sad, but they were happy to
be
together, and the room was very cozy. He called his aides in
Washington
and told them that he wouldn't be back for a couple of days, and
then he
called the housekeeper and told her to explain to the children
that he
was with their mother in New York, and would be back in two days.
She promised to stay with them until he returned, and drive Matt
to
school.
Everything was in order.
"Nice and simple. Now all you have to do is get well, and try
to forget
what happened."
But after they left the hospital, the nurse at the front desk had
commented to the doctor, "Do you know who that was?" He
had no idea.
The name had meant nothing to him. "That was Congressman
Mackenzie from
Connecticut and his porno queen wife. Don't you read the
tabloids?"
"No, I don't," he said, barely amused. Porno queen or
not, the woman had
been very lucky not to bleed to death. And he wondered if her
"porno"
activities had anything to do with the scarring. But he didn't
have time
to worry about it, he had surgery all afternoon. She wasn't his
problem.
At the hotel, Charles made her sleep as much as she could, and the
next
morning, Grace was feeling better. She ate breakfast and sat up in
a
chair, and she wanted to go out for a walk with him, but she
didn't
have the strength to do it. She couldn't believe how rotten she
felt.
He called her former obstetrician in New York, and he was nice
enough to
come to see her. He gave her some pills and some vitamins, and
told her
she'd just have to be patient. And when they went out in the hall,
Charles asked him about what the doctor at Lenox Hill had said
about the
scarring. But her own doctor wasn't impressed. She'd had it for
years
and it had never given her any trouble.
"She's got to take it easy now though, Charles. She looks
like she's
lost a lot of blood. She's probably very anemic."
"I know. She's had a rough time lately."
"I know. I've seen. Neither of you deserves that. I'm
sorry."
He thanked him and the doctor left, and they curled up on the
couch and
watched old movies and ordered room service, and the next day, he
bundled her up in a limousine, and took her to the airport, and
put her
in a wheelchair. He had thought about driving her back to
Washington,
but that seemed too tiring too. Flying was quicker. They flew
first
class, and he got another wheelchair for her when they arrived,
and he
wheeled her quickly through the airport. But she waved frantically
for
him to stop as they passed a newspaper stand. And they both stood
there,
dumbfounded by what they saw.
A new edition of the tabloid had come out with a raging headline.
"Senator's Wife Sneaks off to New York for Abortion."
Grace burst into
tears the minute she saw it, and he didn't even bother to buy one
for
them to read. There was a huge picture of her on the front from a
congressional party months before. He just wheeled her through the
airport at full speed and took her to where he had left his car
two days
before. She was still crying when he opened the door for her with
a
strained expression. Were they never going to give her a break and
leave
them alone? Apparently not.
He helped her into the car, and walked around and got in himself,
and
then he turned to her with a look that touched her very soul.
"I love
you. You can't let them destroy us ... or you ... we have to get
through
this."
"I know," she said, but she couldn't stop crying.
At least this time, the six o'clock news did not dignify the story
with
a comment. This was strictly tabloid material. And they told the
children about it that night but said it wasn't true. They said
that
Grace had gone to New York and been in an accident in a cab, which
was
almost true. She had, but it had been in Washington, and she had
lost a
baby. But Grace didn't think they should know that, so they didn't
tell
them about the miscarriage.
She was still feeling very weak the next day, but the children
were
being very good to her, even Abby brought breakfast to her room,
and at
lunchtime Grace went downstairs for a cup of tea, and happened to
look
out the window. There were pickets lined up outside carrying signs
of
"Murderess!"
"Baby Killer!"
"Abortion Monger." There were photographs of aborted
fetuses, and Grace
had an asthma attack the moment she saw them.
She had Charles paged, and when he called her he was horrified,
and told
her he'd call the police immediately. They came half an hour
later, but
the pickets only moved across the street, in peaceful
demonstration.
And by then, a camera crew had arrived, and it became a circus.
Charles came home shortly after that, and he was beginning to
wonder if
they would ever have a normal life again. He refused to comment to
the
camera crew, and said that his wife had been in a car accident and
was
ill and he would really appreciate their leaving, after which
there was
a lot of hooting and jeering.
But that afternoon, when the children came home, the pickets were
gone,
and only the camera crew remained, and Grace, looking deathly
pale, was
fixing dinner.
Charles tried to force her to go upstairs, but she flatly refused.
"I've had enough. I'm not going to let them ruin our lives
anymore.
We're going back to normal." She was determined, although she
was
visibly shaky, but he had to admire her, as he pushed a chair
under her
and suggested she sit down while he made dinner.
"Could you maybe wait a week before this show of
strength?" he
suggested.
"No, I can't," she said firmly. And much to everyone's
surprise, they
had a very pleasant dinner. Abby seemed to have calmed down again
while
Grace was gone, and if anything, she seemed helpful and
sympathetic. It
was hard to know what, but something had turned her around. Maybe
there
had just been so much grief, that she had figured out they all
needed
each other. And Andrew commented on the ghouls outside, and said
he was
tempted to moon them from his bedroom window, which made everyone
laugh,
even Grace, although she told him not to.
"I don't think we need to see any more Mackenzie flesh in the
tabloids,"
she said ruefully.
And afterwards, while she straightened up, Abby asked her quietly.
"That wasn't true about the abortion, was it, Mom?" She
looked a little
worried.
"No, sweetheart, it wasn't."
"I didn't think so."
"I would never have an abortion. I love your father very
much, and I
would love to have another baby."
"Do you think you will?"
"Maybe. I don't know. There's an awful lot going on right
now.
Poor Dad is under a lot of pressure."
"So are you," she said,
sympathetic for the first time. "I was talking to Nicole's
mom about it,
and she said she felt really sorry for you, that most of the time,
they
tell lies and ruin people's lives. It made me realize how awful
for you
all this must be. I didn't mean to make it worse." There were
tears in
her eyes as she said it.
"You didn't." Grace leaned over and kissed her.
"I'm sorry, Mom." They hugged for a long time, and had a
quiet moment,
and then they walked upstairs arm in arm, and Charles smiled as he
watched them.
Life was peaceful again, for the next few days, with the exception
of
hate letters about her alleged abortion. But by the weekend,
another of
Marcus's photographs had been printed in Thrill again. She wore
the
same. black velvet ribbon around her neck, and the same lack of
clothes.
It was essentially the same photograph they'd seen before, just a
slightly different position, and only slightly more suggestive. It
didn't shock her anymore, it just made her angry. And, of course,
his
supposed "release" from her allegedly covered this one
also.
"What are we supposed to wait for here? An entire
album?" Grace said in
fury. But Goldsmith told them again that they had no legal
recourse, all
the same conditions existed as before. There was supposedly a
signed
"release" with her signature, and the fact that Marcus
owned the
pictures and she was a so-called celebrity because of whom she was
married to allowed him to publish whatever he wanted. As
celebrities,
they had no right to privacy anyway, so they could not be
"invaded," and
they couldn't prove loss of income, or actual malice.
"Do you suppose we should call that bastard Marcus and try to
buy the
rest of what he has?" she asked Charles, but he shook his
head.
"You can't. That would be like paying blackmail, and he might
not sell
them to you anyway. He might keep some of them back, there's no
way of
knowing. Thrill is probably paying him a pretty penny for this.
Pictures like that of someone like you are worth a lot of
money."
"Nice for him, maybe we should get a commission."
She was so angry, but there was nothing she could do. And the
following
week she went to some campaign events with Charles. It was hard to
determine how much damage the tabloids had done, people still
greeted
her warmly. But it was certainly unsettling for all of them, and
very
distracting.
A third photograph was released two weeks later, and this time
when Matt
came home from school, he was crying. And when Grace asked what
had
happened, he said that one of his friends had called her a bad
name. She
felt as though she'd been slapped when he said it.
"What kind of a name?" She tried to sound calm, but she
wasn't.
"You know," he said miserably. "The H' one."
She smiled sadly at him. "It doesn't start with an H."
Unless you mean
harlot."
"It wasn't that one," he said miserably. He didn't want
to tell
her.
"Darling, I'm so sorry." She put her arms around him,
and wanted to run
away again. But she knew she couldn't run away anymore. She had to
face
it with them.
It happened again at his school, and again the day after. And
Charles
and Grace got into a fight over it that night. She wanted to take
the
children back to Connecticut, and he told her she couldn't run
away.
They had to stand and fight, and she told him she refused to
destroy her
family over his "damn campaign." But that wasn't what it
was about, and
they both knew it. They were just frustrated at their own
helplessness,
and needed to scream at someone, since they couldn't do anything
to stop
what was happening.
But Matthew didn't understand that, and when Grace went to tuck
him in,
she couldn't find him. She asked Abby where he'd gone, and she
shrugged
and pointed to his room. She was on the phone with Nicole and she
hadn't
seen him. And Andrew hadn't seen him either. She went downstairs
to
Charles in the den, still annoyed at him, and asked if he'd seen
Matthew.
"Isn't he upstairs?" They exchanged a look and he
suddenly caught
Grace's concern, and they started looking for him in earnest. He
was
nowhere. "He couldn't have gone out," Charles said,
looking worried.
"We'd have seen him."
"No, we wouldn't necessarily." And then in an undertone,
"Do you think
he heard us fighting?"
"Maybe." Charles looked even more upset than she did. He
was worried
about kidnapping if Matt was wandering the streets somewhere.
Washington was a dangerous city after dark. And when they went
upstairs
again, they found the note he had left in his room. Don't fight
over me
anymore. I'm leaving. Love, Matt. Mom and Dad, I lorve you. Say
bye to
Kisses for me.
Kisses was their chocolate Lab, because when they'd gotten her
Grace had
said she looked like a little pile of Hershey Kisses.
"Where do you think he went?" Grace looked panicked as
she asked him.
"I don't know. I'm calling the police." Charles's whole
face was tense,
and his jaw was working.
"It'll wind up in the tabloids," she said nervously.
"I don't care. I want to find him tonight, before anything
happens."
They were both frantic and the police reassured them that they
would
find him as soon as possible. They said that kids his age wandered
off
all the time, and usually stayed pretty close to home. They asked
for a
list of his best friends and a picture of him, and they set out in
the
squad car. Charles and Grace stayed home to wait for him, in case
he
came back. But the policemen were back with him half an hour
later.
He had been buying Hostess Twinkies at a convenience store two
blocks
away and feeling very sorry for himself. They had spotted him at
once,
and he didn't resist coming home. He was ready.
"Why did you do that?" Grace asked, still shaken by what
he'd done.
She just couldn't believe it. None of their children had ever run
away.
But they'd also never been under that kind of pressure.
"I didn't want you and Dad fighting over me," Matt said
sadly. But it
had been scary outside, and he was glad to be back now.
"We weren't fighting over you, we were just talking."
"No you weren't, you were fighting."
"Everybody fights sometimes," Charles explained, and
pulled him down on
his knee as he sat down. The police had just left and they had
promised
Charles not to tell the papers. There had to be something private
in
their lives, even if it was only their eight-year-old running away
for
half an hour. Nothing else was sacred.
"Mommy and I love each other, you know that."
"Yeah, I know ... it's just that everything has been so yucky
lately.
People keep saying stuff in school, and Mom cries all the
time." She
looked guilty as she thought about it. She did cry a lot these
days, but
who wouldn't?
"Remember what I told you the other day," Charles
explained. "We have to
be strong. All of us. For each other. We can't run away. We can't
give
up. We just have to stick together."
"Yeah, okay," he said, only half
convinced, but happy to be home again.
It had been a dumb idea to run away and he knew it.
His mother walked him upstairs and tucked him in and they all went
to
bed early that night. Grace and Charles were exhausted and Matthew
was
asleep almost the moment his head hit the pillow. Kisses was lying
at
the foot of the bed, and snoring softly.
But the following week, another photograph was released and this
one
showed Grace full face, staring into the camera, with glazed eyes
and a
look of surprise on her face, with her eyes wide-open as though
someone
had just done something really shocking and deliciously sensual to
her.
They were the most erotic series of photographs she had ever seen,
and
little by little, bit by bit they were driving her crazy.
She called information then, and wondered why she had taken so
long to
do it. He wasn't in Chicago. Or in New York. He was in Washington,
they
told her finally at Three It was perfect. Why hadn't she thought
of it
sooner? She knew she had absolutely no choice. It didn't matter
what
happened to her anymore. She had to.
She opened the safe and took Charles's gun out, and then she got
in her
car and drove to the address she'd jotted down on a piece of
paper.
The kids were at school, and Charles was at work. No one knew
where she
was going, or what she intended to do. But she knew. She had it
planned,
and it was going to be worth whatever it cost her.
She rang the bell at his studio on F Street, and she was surprised
when
someone buzzed her in without asking who she was. It meant either
that
they were very big and busy, or extremely sloppy. Because with a
lot of
valuable equipment around, they should have been more careful, but
fortunately, they weren't.
It was all so easy, she couldn't imagine why she had never thought
of it
before. The door was open, and there was no one there, except
Marcus.
He didn't even have an assistant. He had his back to her, and he
was
bending over a camera, shooting a bowl of fruit on a table. He was
all
alone, and he didn't even see her.
"Hello, Marcus." Her voice was unfamiliar to him after
all these years.
It was sensual and slow and she sounded happy to see him.
"Who's that?" He turned and looked at her with a
surprised little smile,
not recognizing her at first, wondering who she was, he liked her
looks,
and ... then suddenly he realized who she was and he stopped dead
in his
tracks. She was pointing a gun at him and she was smiling.
"I should have done this weeks ago," she said simply.
"I don't know why
I didn't think of it sooner. Now put down the camera, and don't
touch
the shutter or I'll shoot you and it, and I'd hate to hurt your
camera.
Put it down. Now." Her voice was sharp and no longer sensual
and he put
the camera down carefully on the table behind him.
"Come on, Grace ... don't be a bad sport ... I'm just making
a living."
"I don't like the way you do it," she said flatly.
"You look beautiful in the photographs, you have to give me
that."
"I don't give you shit. You're a piece of slime. You told me
you never
took my clothes off."
"I lied."
"And you must have had me sign the release when I was practically
unconscious." She was icy cold with fury, but she was in
complete
control now. It was entirely premeditated. This time it really
would be
murder one. She was going to kill him, and looking at her, he knew
it.
He had driven her too far, and she had snapped. She didn't care
what
they did to her this time.
She'd survived it before. And it was worth it.
"Come on, Grace, be a sport. They're great pictures. Look,
what's the
difference. It's done. I'll give you the rest of the
negatives."
"I don't give a damn. I'm going to shoot your balls off. And
after that,
I'm going to kill you. I don't need a release for that. Just a
gun."
"For chrissake, Grace. Give it up. They're just
pictures."
"That's my life you've been fucking with ... my children ...
y husband
... my marriage ..."
"He looks like a jerk anyway. He must be to put up with you
... Christ, I
remember all that prudey bullshit nineteen years ago.
Even on drugs, you weren't any fun. You were a drag, Grace, a real
drag."
He was vicious, and if she'd been less wound up she'd have seen
that he
was coked up to the gills. He'd been using the money from The711
to
support his habit. "You were a real lousy piece of ass even
then," he
went on, but at least she knew the truth about that.
"You never slept with me," she said coolly.
"Sure, I did. I've got pictures to prove it."
"You're sick." He started sniveling then, whining about
how she had no
right to come in here like that and try and interfere with how he
made
his living.
"You're a rotten little creep," she said as she cocked
the trigger, and
the sound of it startled both of them.
"You're not going to do it, are you, Grace?" he whined.
"Yes, I am. You deserve it."
"You'll go back to prison," he said in a
wheedling tone, as his nose ran pathetically. The past nineteen
years
had not been good to him.
He had stooped to a lot of things in the meantime, few of them
legal.
"I don't care if I go back," she said coldly.
"You'll be dead.
It's worth it." He sank to his knees then.
"Come on ... don't do it ... I'll give you all the pictures.
... hey
were only going to run two more anyway ... 've got one of you with
a
guy, it's a real beauty ... you can have it for free ..." He
was crying.
"Who has the photographs?" What guy? There had been no
one else in the
studio, or had there been while she was sleeping? It was
disgusting to
think of.
"I have them. In the safe. I'll get them."
"The hell you will. You probably have a gun in there. I don't
need
them."
"Don't you want to see them, they're gorgeous."
"All I want to see is you dead on the floor, and
bleeding," she said,
feeling her hand shake. And as she looked at him, she didn't know
why,
but she suddenly thought of Charles, and then Matthew ... if she
shot
Marcus, she would never be with them again, except in prison
visiting
rooms, probably forever .... It took her breath away, thinking
about it,
and all she suddenly wanted to do was hold them, and feel them
next to
her ... and Abby and Andrew ..."Get up!" she said
viciously to Marcus.
He did, crying at her again. "And stop whining. You're a
miserable piece
of shit."
"Grace, please don't shoot me."
She backed slowly toward the door, and he knew she was going to
shoot
him from there, and all he could do was cry and beg her not to.
"What do you want to live for?" she asked angrily. She
was furious at
him now. He wasn't worth her time. Or her life. How could she have
even
thought he was? "What does a miserable piece of slime like
you want to
live for? Just for money? To ruin other people's lives?
You're not even worth shooting." And with that, she turned
around, and
hurried down the stairs, before he could even think of following
her.
She was out the door and back in her car, before he could even
cross the
room. All he did was sit down on the floor and cry, unable to
believe
she hadn't shot him. He had been absolutely certain she was going
to
kill him, and he'd been right, until the last five minutes.
Just seeing him again, standing there, sniveling, coked out to the
gills, had brought her to her senses.
She drove home and put the gun away, and then she called Charles.
"I have to see you," she said urgently. She didn't want
to tell him on
the phone, in case someone was listening, but she wanted him to
know
what she'd almost done. She had almost gone crazy. She had, for a
while,
but thank God, she had come to her senses.
"Can it wait till lunch?"
"Okay." She was still shaking from what had happened.
She could have
been in jail by then and on her way back to prison for life. She
couldn't believe she had almost been that stupid. But that's what
it had
driven her to, all the lies, and the agony, the humiliation, and
the
exposure.
"Are you all right?" he sounded worried.
"I'm fine. Better than I've been for a while."
"What did you do?" he teased, "Kill someone?"
"No, I didn't, as a matter of fact." She sounded vaguely
amused.
"I'll meet you at Le Rivage at one o'clock."
"I'll be there. I love you."
They hadn't had a lunch date in a while, and she was happy to see
him
when he walked in. She was already waiting. He ordered a glass of
wine,
she never drank at lunch, and rarely at dinner. And then they
ordered
lunch. And when they had, she told him in an undertone what had
happened. He literally grew pale when she told him. He was
stunned.
She knew how wrong it was, but for a moment, just a moment, it had
seemed worth it.
"Maybe Matt's right, and I'd better behave myself, or you'll
shoot me,"
he said in a whisper, and she laughed at him.
"And don't you forget it." But she knew she would never
do anything like
that again. It had been one moment of blind madness, but even in
the
height of her fury, she hadn't done it, and she was glad.
Marcus Anders wasn't worth it.
"I guess that kind of takes the wind out of what I was going
to tell
you." It had been quite a day for both of them. He couldn't
even begin
to imagine the horror it would have been if she had shot Marcus
Anders.
It didn't even bear thinking, though he could understand the
provocation. He wasn't sure what he'd have done himself if he'd
ever
seen him. But thank God she had come to her senses.
It was just one more confirmation to him that he was doing the
right
thing. It wasn't even a tough decision. "I'm withdrawing from
the
campaign, Grace. It's not worth it. It's not right for us. We've
been
through enough. We don't need to do this anymore. It's what I said
to
you in New York. I want our life back. I've been thinking about it
ever
since then. How much more are we supposed to pay for all this? At
what
price glory?"
"Are you sure?" She felt terrible to have caused him to
withdraw from
politics. He wasn't running for his congressional seat again, and
if he
didn't persist in the senatorial race he'd be out of politics, for
a
while at least, or possibly forever. "What'll you do with
yourself?"
"I'll find something to do," he smiled. "Six years
in Washington is a
long time. I think it's enough now."
"Will you come back?" she asked
sadly. "Will we come back?"
"Maybe. I doubt it. The price is too high for some of us.
Some people
get away with it quietly forever. But we didn't. There was too
much in
your past, too many people were jealous of us. I think just the
relationship we have and the kids get plenty of people riled.
There are a lot of miserably envious, unhappy people in the world.
You
can't worry about it all the time. But you can't fight it forever
either. I'm fifty-nine years old, and I'm tired, Grace. It's time
to
fold up our tents and go home." He had already called a press
conference
for the next day, while she was threatening to kill Marcus Anders.
The
irony of it was amazing.
They told the children that night, and they were all disappointed.
They were used to his being in politics, and they didn't want to
go back
to Connecticut full time. They all said it was boring, except in
summer.
"Actually," he admitted for the first time, "I've
been thinking that
a change of scene might do us all good for a while. Like maybe
Europe.
London, or France, or maybe even Switzerland for a year or
two."
Abby looked horrified and Matthew looked cautious. "What do
they have in
Switzerland, Dad?"
"Cows," Abby said in disgust. "And chocolate."
"That's good. I like cows and chocolate. Can we take
Kisses?"
"Yes, except if we go to England."
"Then we can't go to London," Matthew
said matter-of-factly.
They all knew Andrew's vote would have been France since his
girlfriend
was going back to Paris for two years. Her father was being
transferred
to their home office on the Quai d"Orsay, and she had told
him all about
it.
"I can work in the Paris branch of our law firm, or our
London branch,
if I go back to the firm, or we can live cheaply and grow our own
vegetables in a farmhouse somewhere. We have a lot of
options." He
smiled at them. He'd been thinking about making a change ever
since the
attacks by the tabloids. But whatever they did after that, it was
time
for them to leave Washington, and they all knew it. It was just
too high
a price to pay for any man, or any family that stood behind him.
He had called Roger Marshall and apologized, and Roger said he
understood completely. He thought there might be some other
interesting
opportunities in the near future, but it was too soon for Charles
even
to want to hear them.
The next morning, Charles was gracious and honorable and he looked
relieved when he told the gathered members of the press that he
was
retiring from the senatorial race for personal reasons.
"Does this have to do with the photographs your wife posed
for years
ago, Congressman? Or is it because of her prison record coming out
last
June?" They were all such bastards. A new era had come to
journalism,
and it was not a pretty one. There had been a time when none of
this
would have happened. It was all muckraking and lies and
maliciousness,
actual or otherwise, provable or not. They went for the gut every
time
with a stiletto, and they didn't even care whose gut it was, as
long as
the stiletto came back with blood and guts on it. They had the
mistaken
impression that that was what their readers wanted.
"To the best of my knowledge," Charles looked them in
the eye, "my wife
never posed for any photographs, sir."
"What about the abortion? Was that true? ... Will you be
going back to
Congress in two years? ... Do you have any other political goals
in
mind? ... What about a cabinet post? Has the President said anything
if
he gets reelected? ... Is it true that she was in porno films in
Chicago..."
"Thank you, ladies and gentlemen, for all your kindness and
courtesy
over the past six years. Goodbye, and thank you." He ended
like the
perfect gentleman he had always been, and he left the room without
ever
looking back. And in two more months, at the end of his
congressional
term, he would be gone, and it would be all over.
Chapter 16.
The last photograph was released in Thrill two weeks after Charles
resigned, and it was an anticlimax then, even to Grace.
Marcus had sold it to them a month before, and he couldn't
withdraw it,
even with all his whining. A deal was a deal, and he had sold it
and
spent the money. But he was terrified that Grace would come back
with
the gun again, and this time maybe she'd get him. He was afraid to
leave
the studio, and he decided to leave town. He decided not to sell
them
the photograph of her with the guy that he'd spoken of. It was a
great
shot too, and they really looked like they were doing it. But
she'd
shoot him for sure over that one, and Thrill didn't really care
anymore.
Mackenzie had resigned and he was old news. Who cared about his
old
lady?
But three days after the picture came out, the wire services got a
call.
It was from a man in New York, he ran a photo lab, and Marcus
Anders had
burned him for a lot of money. Anders had made half a million
bucks
thanks to him, and he'd put it all up his nose and cheated the man
who
was calling. And besides, the lab man knew there was something
rotten
about what Anders was doing. At first, it had seemed all right,
but then
the photographs had just kept on coming.
They had beaten her to death, and then the poor guy quit. It
wasn't
right, for a lot of reasons. So he blew the whistle.
His name was Jose Cervantes, and he was the best trick man in New
York,
probably in the business. He did beautiful retouching for
respectable
photographers, and some funny stuff when he was paid enough by
guys like
Marcus Anders. He could take Margaret Thatcher's head and put her
on
Arnold Schwarzenegger's body. All he needed was one single tiny
seam,
and you had it. Presto! Magic! All he'd needed for Grace's photos,
he
explained, was the tiny black ribbon he'd added at her neck and he
could
join her head to any body. He had chosen some really luscious
ones, in
some fairly exotic positions, but at first Marcus had told him it
was
for fun. It was only when he'd seen them printed in Thrill that he
really knew what the photographer was doing. He could have come
forward
then, but he didn't want to get involved. He could have been
charged
with fraud, but there was nothing illegal about tricking
photographs. It
was done constantly for ads, for jokes, for greeting cards, for
layouts.
It was only when you did what Marcus had done that it became
illegal.
Therein lay the malicious intent, the actual malice everyone
looked for
and never found. But they had it this time.
Marcus Anders had set out to ruin her. He had had nothing to do
with
exposing her prison record, he hadn't even known about it, and he
had
forgotten his pictures of her completely. But once he saw the
pieces on
her in Thrill, about killing her father and going to jail, he
unearthed
his old pictures of her and set Jose working on them. Jose hadn't
even
recognized her till he read the first article in Thrill, and
realized
what Marcus was doing. But Marcus had all his work by then. And
they
were entirely faked. The original photographs were as she had
remembered
them, in Marcus's white shirt, many of them even in blue jeans.
What had worked so well for their purposes was the expression on
her
face, as she lay back against the fur drugged and only
semiconscious.
It made her look as though she were having sex at the time they
were
taken.
The story made a lot of news, and there was wide-open for a major
lawsuit. Mr. Goldsmith, the attorney, was delighted, and charges
of
fraud and malicious mischief were brought against Marcus, but he
had
disappeared by then, and word was he'd gone to Europe.
Marcus and Them had done it for fun, and for profit, and just to
prove
they could, each one not really caring, not taking responsibility,
the
artist, the photographer, the forger, the editor, and in the end,
the
Mackenzies were the victims.
But they all looked whole in body and soul again, as they packed
their
house in Washington, and went to spend Christmas in Connecticut.
And then they went back to close the house on R Street. It had
sold
immediately to a brand-new congressman from Alabama.
"Will you miss Washington?" Grace asked, as they lay in
bed on their
last night in the house in Georgetown. He wasn't sure if she was
sorry
to leave or not. In some ways, she wasn't. In others she would
miss it.
She worried that Charles would always feel that he had left
unfinished
business. But he said he wouldn't. He had accomplished a lot in
Congress
in six years, and learned innumerable important lessons. The most
important one he'd learned was that his family meant a lot more to
him
than his job. He knew he had made the right decision. They'd been
through enough pain to last a lifetime. It had made the children
stronger too, and brought them all closer together.
He had had other offers too, from corporations in the private
sector, an
important foundation or two, and of course they wanted him back at
the
law firm, but he hadn't made up his mind yet. And they were going
to do
exactly what he'd said. They were going to spend six or eight
months in
Europe. They were going to Switzerland, France, and England.
He had already made arrangements with two schools while they were
there,
in Geneva and Paris. And Kisses was going to stay with friends in
Greenwich until they came home for the summer. He'd have made his
mind
up by then about their future. And maybe, if she was up to it,
Grace
might have another baby. And if not, they were happy as they were.
For
Charles, all the doors were open.
The next day Grace was already in the car with the kids when the
phone
rang. Charles was making a last check of the house to make sure
they
hadn't left anything behind, but he had only found Matt's
football, and
a pair of old sneakers under the back porch, otherwise everything
was
gone. The house was empty.
The call was from the Department of State, from a man Charles knew
only
vaguely. Charles knew he was close to the President, but he had
had few
dealings with him, and he knew mainly that he was a good friend of
Roger
Marshall's.
"The President would like to see you sometime today, if you
have time,"
he said, and Charles smiled and shook his head. It never failed.
Maybe he just wanted to say goodbye and thank him for a job well
done,
but it seemed less than likely.
"We were just about to drive to Connecticut. We're out of
here.
The kids are already in the car."
"Would you all like to come over for a few minutes? I'm sure
we could
find something for them to do. He has fifteen minutes at ten
forty-five,
if that suits you." Charles wanted to say "Why?"
but he knew that wasn't
done, and he didn't want to slam any doors behind him, surely not
the
one to the Oval Office.
"I suppose we could do that, if you can stand three noisy
kids and a
dog."
"I've got five," he laughed, "and a pig my wife
bought me for
Christmas."
"We'll be right over."
The kids were vastly impressed that they were stopping off at the
White
House to say goodbye.
"I'll bet he doesn't do that for everyone," Matt said
proudly, wishing
he could tell someone.
"What's that all about?" Grace asked, as he drove the
station wagon to
Pennsylvania Avenue.
Theirs was the least distinguished vehicle to drive up to the
White
House in quite a while, he was sure, and he had told Grace
honestly that
he had absolutely no idea what they wanted.
"They want you to run for president in four years," she
grinned at him.
"Tell him you don't have time."
"Yeah. Sure." He laughed at her as he left them in the
car, and an aide
came to invite them inside. They were going to give the kids a
mini-tour, and a young Marine volunteered to walk Kisses. There
was a
nice friendly atmosphere that was typical of the current
administration.
They liked kids and dogs and people. And Charles.
In the Oval Office, the President told Charles that he was sorry
he had
withdrawn from the Senate race, but he understood it. There were
times
when one had to make decisions for one's own life, and not the
country.
And Charles told him that he appreciated the support, but would
miss
Washington, and hoped they'd meet again.
"I was hoping that too." The President smiled at him,
and asked him what
his plans were, and Charles told him. They were leaving for
Switzerland
that week, for two weeks of skiing.
"How do you feel about France?" the President inquired
conversationally,
and Charles explained that they were going to Normandy and
Brittany, and
they had made arrangements to put the kids in school in Paris.
"When do
you plan to arrive?" He was looking pensive.
"By February or March probably. We're going to stay till
school lets out
in June. Then travel around England for a month, and come home.
I figure we'll be ready by then, and I'd better go back to work
one of
these days."
"How about in April?"
"Sir?" Charles didn't quite understand and the President
smiled.
"I was asking how you felt about going back to work in
April."
"I'll
still be in Paris then," he said discreetly. He had no
intention of
coming back to Washington before a year, or even two, and not back
to
the States till that summer.
"That's not a problem," the President continued.
"The current ambassador
to France would like to come home by April to retire. He hasn't
been
well this year. How would you feel about a post as ambassador to
France
for two or three years? And then we can talk about the next
election.
We'll need some good men in four years, Charles.
I'd like to see you among them."
"Ambassador to France?" He looked blank. He couldn't
even imagine it,
but it sounded like the chance of a lifetime. "May I discuss
this with
my wife?"
"Of course."
"I'll call you, sir."
"Take your time. It's a good post, Charles. I think you'd
like it."
"I think we all would." Charles was bowled over. And the
back door to
Washington was open for him whenever he wanted.
He promised to let the President know in a few days. The two men
shook
hands, and Charles went downstairs looking excited. Grace could
see that
something had happened upstairs, and she was dying to know what it
was.
It took them forever to get the kids and the dog back into the
car, and
finally they did and everyone asked at once what the President had
said
to him.
"Not much," he teased them all and strung it out, as
they drove away
from the White House. "The usual stuff, you know, so long,
have a great
trip, don't forget to write."
"Dad!" Abby complained, and Grace gave him a friendly
shove.
"Are you going to tell us?"
"Maybe. What am I bid?"
"I'm going to push you out of the car, if you don't tell us
soon!" she
threatened.
"You'd better listen to her, Dad," Matt warned, and the
dog started to
bark furiously as though she wanted to know too.
"Okay, okay. He said we're the worst-behaved people he's ever
met and he
doesn't want us back here." He grinned and they all shouted
at him in
unison and told him he wasn't funny. "So bad, in fact, that
he thinks we
should stay in Europe." In truth it had been hard enough to
say goodbye
to their friends in Washington after six years, but they were
excited
about their adventure abroad and Andrew could hardly wait to see
his
friend in Paris.
Charles was looking at Grace then, with a curious glance. "He
offered me
the ambassadorship to Paris," he told her quietly as the kids
continued
to make a ruckus behind them.
"He did?" She looked stunned. "Now?"
"In April."
"What did you say?"
"I said I had to ask you, all of you, and he said to
let him know.
What do you think?" He was looking at her as he drove through
Washington, and headed north to Greenwich.
"I think we're the luckiest people alive," she said, and
meant it.
They had come out nearly unscathed from the fires of hell, and
they were
still together. "You know what else I think?" she asked,
leaning close
to him as she whispered.
"What?" She said it so the kids wouldn't hear. "I
think I'm pregnant."
He looked at her with a grin, and answered back in a whisper just
loud
enough to be heard despite the din in the backseat.
"I'm going to be eighty-two when this one graduates from
college, maybe
I should stop counting. I suppose we'll have to name him
Francois."
"FrancQoise," she corrected, and he laughed.
"Twins. Does that mean we're going?" he asked politely.
"Sounds like it, doesn't it?" The kids in the backseat
were singing
French songs at the top of their lungs and Andy was beaming.
"Do you mind having a baby over there?" he asked her
quietly
again.
It worried him a little.
"Nope," she grinned. "I can't think of anyplace I'd
rather be than
Paris."
"Does that mean yes?"
he nodded. "I think so." He said he'd like me back here
in two or three
years to talk about the next elections. But I don't know, I'm not
sure
I'd ever want to go through all this again."
"Maybe we wouldn't next time. Maybe they wore themselves out.
"
"After the stunt that jerk pulled with his photographs, we
may end up
owning Thrill by then," he smiled ruefully. Goldsmith was
going to be
busy.
"We could burn it to the ground. What a nice idea." She
smiled evilly.
"I'd love to." He smiled and leaned over and kissed her.
In some ways,
listening to their children laugh and sing in the backseat, and
looking
at her, made it seem as though the nightmare of the past months
had
never happened.
"Au revoir, Washington!" the kids shouted as they drove
across the
Potomac.
Charles looked at the place where so many dreams were born, and so
many
died, and shrugged his shoulders. "See ya." Grace moved
closer to him,
and smiled as she looked out the window.
the end.