a river of black cars depositing guests in evening wear. Honora stood at the gates in a taxi she ha
st fund, Nora," Edie had said, her voice firm over the crackle of the line. "The 'fuck-you money' my grandmother left me. She always said to
s wear
green that signaled "appropriate" and "tasteful" and "invisible." A dress she had bought
lunging to a point that would have giv
twist that left her neck exposed. The only jewelry she wore was her mother's brooch, pi
the gate checked his list, confused.
side, flustered, uncertain whether to challenge
breaking bones. The house grew larger as she approached, the facade she had
open. She walked thro
heated by invisible systems that cost more than most houses. She could h
't go to
s private meetings, past the salon where Claudine received her committees. She found the bar in the front parlor, aband
nor
mirror above the bar, watched him cross the room
could feel his heat, smell the cologne that had once meant hom
the neckline gapping slightly, and she watched his eyes drop to her co
re dr
n set it down untouched. "For the first time in
he movement practiced, graceful, the way sh
t tou
nor
s. "Don't use my name. Don't pretend concern. Don't do any of the things you
ut she didn't flinch. The tent was twenty yards away, the mus
ng, his hand reaching for her again and again and missing because she
g the brooch at her hip for luck or courage or simply to fe
e he used in bed when he wanted something. "Whateve
." She turned to face him. "She just
ed into
recognize. Three hundred guests turned to look at her, the late ar
faltered, the conductor uncertain whether to continue
he silence, sharp as the cane he didn't need but
had assessed her at their wedding and found her acceptable, who had wat
ained in another life for rooms exactly like th
ded in half, the amount written in her own hand, the
She held it up fo
at the tent entrance, his face a mask she had never learned to r
ngers, the way she had once held cigarettes in her rebellious
d enough for the front rows to hear, "for
er stuck for a moment, then fluttered down,
om exp
people leaning toward each other to confirm what they had heard. The orchestra had
ression he wore in negotiations when he was most dangerous, wh
re that would play this moment back in boardrooms and bedrooms and courtrooms for years
tus, who had gone the color of old parchment, his
to marital assets. I believe the trust structure your family established
peared from somewhere, rush
n, the fragility of age and arrogance. Then she pushed, gently, and Claudine stumble
ain," Honora said.
leave then, to make her exit while they were s
e word barely audibl
tered to the floor, and he followed it, collapsing sideways into a table laden with c
her, falling to his knees beside the old man. "S
e was screaming, someone else was crying, and through it all Honora stood motionless, watching Efford crad
met acros
e carrying despite the noise, "if h
my grandmother? Already done. Take everything I have?" She laughed, the sound genuine, surprised
a stretcher, attached monitors that beeped with reassuring regularity. He was alive, they conf
hout looking back at her, his shirt stained with his gr
mber dark. She stood alone in the center of the ruined party, the check still on
til she reached the main road, and she kept walking after that, her heels sin
, who had been waiting, who ha
across to open the passe
al precision. She looked at her hands, at the trembli
said, "I just
/1/112663/coverbig.jpg?v=7cb856c287e432df06697759c1f1960e&imageMogr2/format/webp)