American Housewife (5 page)

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Authors: Helen Ellis

BOOK: American Housewife
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Turns out, the sugar bowl has a story behind it. As the auctioneer drove up the price, he revealed that the reason it is mismatched is because it is the only piece from its set that Mrs. Giles Everett Preston III did not hurl at her husband when she found him under the dining room table “clotting the cream” of the then Earl of Sandwich.

As the auction continues, we discover that everything has a story. Lithgow is outbid for a Cole Porter Playbill because Cole Porter composed one of the musical’s numbers on Mrs. Giles Everett Preston III’s grand piano, and while he composed it she pretended not to hear her husband cry out from a maid’s room for his epilepsy pills. Mario loses a ceramic soup tureen shaped like a pumpkin because Mrs. Giles Everett Preston III used it to mask the lime green hue of the vichyssoise she poisoned when her husband gave her HPV for Thanksgiving. Suffocating needlepoint pillows, bludgeoning candelabras, and a fountain pen used to fake a suicide note are all lost (along with three-fourths of the lots) because bidders with more money to bid with than us want to own something that belonged to an eccentric.

F’in Tiny demands the producers give us bigger allowances. He says, “I’ll dub over the intro in post. You know: ‘
UNLIMITED TIME
and
FOUR THOUSAND
dollars.’ Give it to them.”

The producers agree.

Four grand opens up more of the small remainder of the catalog. We flip through the back quarter-inch of stiff high-quality gloss pages we hadn’t dog-eared. We sneak peeks at what other contestants are pausing to look at. The auctioneer never stops auctioning. The rest of the audience never stops raising their paddles. We are awash in the anxiety of new possibilities. But these possibilities grow fewer and farther between and with every passing moment they are going, going, gone!

We squirm in our seats. F’in Tiny paces behind us. A potbellied cameraman tries to keep up with him. Other cameramen circle the room. Producers grip and gripe into iPhones. Their finale is more frenzied than they’d expected. Only Mitzy is as motionless as she’s been since the start.

I slide my catalog onto her lap. I flip and lift photos of jewelry. See? Here’s a ladybug ring that can hold a teaspoon of cyanide. See? Here’s a charm bracelet of lab test subjects, or as the lady of the house called them, her babies (gigantic cats). It kills me that Mitzy doesn’t respond. There are so many things that should make her say, “Cooooot!”

F’in Tiny leans over her and lifts her paddle from her lap. He says, “Your arms don’t work, Mitzy? There’s nothing you want of Mrs. the Third’s?”

John Lithgow says, “Let the poor girl alone. So what if she doesn’t bid?”

F’in Tiny says, “This is a game, John. Mitzy signed a contract for the love of the thrift. She needs to participate. She needs to be
active.
The game’s almost over. She plays, and
then
she gets to go home.”

John Lithgow says, “And what exactly will she find when she gets home, sir? Will she find everything as she left it?”

“Her room at the mansion is waiting for her.”

“And will
everyone
be there waiting for her?”

“What do you think, John? It’s a twenty-room mansion with a hundred birds on the property.”

I say, “Birds aren’t family.”

“That’s right,” says John Lithgow. “What’s important is
family.

F’in Tiny says, “Mitzy’s
family
needs her to win.”

A teardrop appears in the corner of Mitzy’s eye, and that teardrop is shinier than any sequin she’s ever affixed to her body.

F’in Tiny offers her a handkerchief, pulled out of his pocket like a magician’s bottomless supply.

Mitzy won’t take it. She doesn’t want anything more to do with him or this show. She shakes her head and her teardrop plummets.

F’in Tiny presses in. The velvet knot of his smoking jacket rubs against the back of her head.

I cringe because I can feel his fingers sinking into her shoulders. I want his hands off of her. And so my hand, gripping my paddle, shoots up and sideswipes his ear.

The auctioneer says, “One thousand dollars from the lady in the cardigan!”

I have no idea what I’m bidding for, but it must be good because F’in Tiny ignores the blood pulsing out of his ear.

He says, “Mitzy, you’re going to let her get away with it? The
writer
?” He says the word with such venom that he draws everyone’s attention.

I say, “I’m a Dumpster diver. And I’m on to you. You only want Mitzy to win so Bitzy’s surgery will sell your show. If Mitzy wins, people will watch
until
she wins because they’ll want to see her poor, sweet face when she finds out what you’ve been keeping from her because whatever it is, it must be god-awful.
Cardinal Reality Rule #6: Tug heartstrings.
The best person to root for is a contestant with a sob story.”

F’in Tiny says, “
Cardinal reality rule?
What are you talking about? Why are you talking
like that
?”

Oh, look what I found. I say, “I’m writing.”

“Well, do it on your own time. This is TV.”

Mitzy asks, “Is it true what she said? Is Bitzy bad off?”

F’in Tiny says, “I can assure you that your sister is in the very best hands.”

John Lithgow says, “Shameful.”

The tennis player says, “That’s messed up.”

It is, but it doesn’t stop me from foreseeing that when the opening credits roll each week, the tennis player’s audio clip will be run over a loop of Mario Batali eating a corn dog.

Verbena frowns. We all know
Nightcrawlers
would never pull something as manipulative as this.

“One-thousand-one-hundred, ladies and gentlemen?” The auctioneer is going on with his show. “Do I have one-thousand-one-hundred for this lovely fishplate by Lewis Straus and Sons?”

He does not. Wait, fishplate?

“One-thousand-one-hundred? It has a lovely painting of a fish on it.”

That’s the best story he can come up with?

F’in Tiny says, “Mitzy, bid, I beg of you. None of you have won anything of this crazy old bag’s. The auction’s almost over. If the writer wins the plate, she’ll win the whole show. We can’t have that. Nobody knows who she is. She’s never been in
Playboy.
She’s never been in—what’s
Playboy
for writers?”

Mario Batali says,
“The New Yorker.”

“Does she show her tits in
The New Yorker
?”

The auctioneer holds his gavel extra high for the cameras. “One-thousand-one-hundred going once.”

F’in Tiny shouts, “Come on!” He’s on his tiny feet in tiny shoes with tiny lifts, wriggling his way between two un-tiny cameramen. He charges the auctioneer, who won’t give up his gavel despite the fight he’s being given.

“Going twice.”

F’in Tiny shouts, “I
knew
bringing a writer on was a mistake! She’s like those Telenovela Mexicans they keep bringing on
Dancing with the Stars
—but without the abs. This writer has no abs! Mitzy! Somebody! Anybody! One of you Dumpster divers bid!”

No one bids. John Lithgow holds Mitzy, who sobs into his chest. Mario Batali and the tennis player cross their arms in disgust. Verbena tilts her head down so that her hair shields her face. In solidarity with Mitzy, the other contestants will concede, let me win, and punish F’in Tiny and his f’in tiny show.

F’in Tiny screams at the Scientologist, “Bid, dammit! Here’s your chance! You win this and you win the unconditional love of every red-blooded
AMERICAN HOUSEWIFE
!”

Always camera ready, the Scientologist says, “Sorry, Smalls, no can do. I have my sights set on that secretarial desk.”

His wife chuckles.

“Wait, that’s not right?”

She says, “It’s fine, baby.”

And it is fine. It’s all going to work out fine. The Scientologists’ marriage, the tennis player’s rep, Verbena’s return to hill country, Batali’s and Lithgow’s continued success, Mitzy’s life after
Playboy,
and my new novel that will begin:
Cardinal Reality Rule #7: Forge unlikely friendships.

I keep my paddle raised until I hear “Sold.”

SOUTHERN LADY CODE

“I
s this too dressy?” is Southern Lady code for: I look fabulous and it would be in your best interest to tell me so.

“I’m not crazy about it” is code for: I hate that more than sugar-free punch.

“What do you think about her?” is code for: I don’t like her.

“She’s always been lovely to me” is code for: I don’t like her either.

“She has a big personality” means she’s loud as a T. rex.

“She’s the nicest person” means she’s boring as pound cake.

“She has beautiful skin” means she’s white as a tampon.

“She’s old” means she’s racist as Sandy Duncan in
Roots.

“You are so bad!” is Southern Lady code for: That is the tackiest thing I’ve ever heard and I am delighted that you shared it with me.

“No, you’re so bad!” is code for: Let’s snitch and bitch.

“She’s a character” means drunk.

“She has a good time” means slut.

“She’s sweet” means Asperger’s.

“She’s outdoorsy” means lesbian.

“Hmm” is Southern Lady code for: I don’t agree with you but am polite enough not to rub your nose in your ignorance.

“Nice talking with you” is code for: Party’s over, now scoot.

HELLO!
WELCOME TO BOOK CLUB

H
ello! Welcome to Book Club. I’m your hostess. My Book Club name is Mary Beth. We all have Book Club names at Book Club.

Why, dear? Well, really, why not?

The girl who brought you here goes by Delores. The ladies on the red sofa named themselves after TV judges. The ladies on the gray sofa named themselves after the Supremes. The ladies at the buffet table chose Bethany, Marjorie, and Aretha. The elderly lady dozing off in the egg chair calls herself Jane.

If you decide to join us, you can give yourself a Book Club name. We’ll laminate a bookmark with your new name on it. We’ll hole-punch a tassel. You can keep your bookmark in whatever book you’re reading. It doesn’t have to be a Book Club book. But your Book Club name will be a secret name that only we call you. Trust me, you’ll like it. It feels like a dollar bill in your bra.

That’s right, Jane, I’m talking about bras at Book Club again! Look who’s awake!

Jane’s our grande dame. She’s ninety years young. She’s what you call a “real New Yorker.” Meaning: she’s loaded. When it comes to Jane’s money, think of a crazy amount of money,
lottery money
that you’d like as a windfall. Imagine hundred-dollar bills funneling around you like a tornado of financial freedom. Now double that money. Honestly, triple it. Then add a billion.

It sounds better than handing out towels at Flywheel, doesn’t it, dear?

Yes, I bet it does.

I met Jane at a library lecture by Stephen King. Can you believe this sweet-looking lady who has Chanel suits like some girls have days-of-the-week underpants loves horror novels? She sure does. And that means, from time to time, Book Club loves them too. Personally, I think her love of blood and guts and things that go mwah-ha-ha in the night has to do with her want to invest time and money into things more horrible than what’s happened to her in real life. Jane’s survived two husbands (one had a stroke, and one’s mistress shot him dead in a sex swing) and three children (car accident, ski accident, and one “fell” off the roof of her house).

My dear, please don’t concern yourself, Jane’s fine. They all died years ago. And here’s what nobody tells you: losing a child isn’t the end of the world. Life goes on—and more often than not, goes on quite nicely. Just look at Jane with her feet up on my coffee table. Have you ever seen a woman look more relaxed?

Delores, would you refill Jane’s Scotch and soda, please and thank you!

See there: look at Delores scurry away from the cheese plate. At Book Club, Jane’s waited on hand and foot because Jane is Book Club’s patron of the arts. Jane buys everyone’s Book Club book in hardback, and tickets for us to attend literary events. If you join Book Club, Jane will take on your Book Club expenses too. All you have to do is pick your preferred theater seating.

The ladies on the red sofa like to sit center orchestra for the acoustics. The ladies on the gray sofa migrate to mezzanines so they can whisper. The ladies at the buffet table are claustrophobic, so they ride an aisle like a bobsled. Delores never stops texting, so she sits at the back. It takes a certain kind of woman to sit in the front. Jane and I are that kind of woman: a front-row woman.

A front-row woman is a participant. She never breaks eye contact with the speaker. She laughs when he says something funny, and she makes a funny face when he describes something gross. That day in the front row of Stephen King, Jane and I had so many facial tics the librarians must have thought that strokes were contagious.

How many strokes have you had, Jane?

That many! My God, it’s going to take a bolt of lightning to take you out.

Two bolts and a frying pan to the back of the head? Oh, Jane, you kill me.

She still can’t smile right.

I know it’s not your fault, Bethany! I didn’t say it was your fault!

Bethany is the woman at the buffet table without a plate, to the right of the Caesar salad, rearranging my napkins. She’s Jane’s neurologist. She joined Book Club because Jane invited her to join. She’s forty-something like the rest of us—except for Delores, who’s just out of college—and should have known better than to choose a Book Club name so close to mine. Bethany, Mary
Beth.
Honestly, the nerve. But tolerating such indiscretions makes me a good hostess.

A good hostess is gracious and doesn’t make a big deal about things like a guest showing up in the same Tory Burch tunic. But a same-tunic disaster is only going to happen once in a blue moon, especially now that I will call you a week before Book Club to make note of your outfit. Book Club names are forever.

Yes, I know you can hear me, Bethany! Would you like to take my husband’s last name as well? Just kidding!

Bethany works sixteen-hour days and is on call all the time and thus has never married. She wants a baby and for whatever reason wants to personally give birth to that baby, and she refuses to have one-night stands or steal hospital sperm samples, so her biological clock is deafening.

Not like yours, dear. At your age, your fertility is like a pocket watch swaddled in cotton, drawn up in a velvet pouch and tucked inside a Pringles can.

But Bethany’s! Sometimes I walk past the Fifth Avenue Synagogue and am frightened a bomb is about to go off. I imagine my upper torso landing in a gyro cart and the contents of my purse laid out for all to see. Then, I realize it’s not anxiety hounding me; it’s Bethany’s biological clock. It ticks so loud, I’m amazed Mount Sinai isn’t evacuated on a daily basis.

Oh, Bethany, don’t make that face! You know it’s true!

Bethany likes Book Club to read romances and I am talking straight-to-mass-market-paperback Harlequin romance romances. She likes her heroines overpowered.

These days, we’d call what Bethany likes Book Club to read “rape.” But in Bethany’s bodice-rippers, throwing twelve layers of underskirts up over a heroine’s face and plowing her like a cotton field is known as the main character getting her “just deserts.” Honestly, it’s like rape is no worse than having a banana cream pie shoved in your face. At first you’re startled, probably hurt, but then you get a taste of your assaulter’s meringue and realize you want to eat it every damned day.

Book Club is potluck. The ladies on the red sofa don’t eat curry. The ladies on the gray sofa don’t eat shellfish. I hate shredded coconut. Jane’s diabetic, but will eat anything she darned well pleases.

Won’t you, Jane?

Yes ma’am, open-heart surgery, your foot!

Then there’s Bethany, who is lactose intolerant, gluten intolerant, vegan, and has irritable bowel syndrome, which is all code for anorexic. She’s a garnish girl. So, throw a radish rose on the edge of whatever you bring and she’ll feast on that. Honestly, watch her tonight. She’ll suck that celery stick like a Whistle Pop.

I am always in charge of the menu. So I’ll call you before our next meeting and help you decide what to bring. I have a chart. So, for example, next to my name this month it says: Tory Burch hedgehog tunic and bacon-wrapped water chestnuts.

No, it’s not a spreadsheet. It’s something more akin to our mothers’ PTA phone trees. You’re too young to remember phone trees.

Oh, you’ve heard of them? Well, aren’t you an elephant-never-forgets.

Not elephant as in fat, dear—I’ll bet you’ve never been on a diet. You can probably have as many bacon-wrapped water chestnuts as you want and never gain weight. What I meant was elephant as being good at remembering. Come to think of it, dear, along with a lack of fat cells, were you blessed with a lack of Alzheimer’s in your family history?

You were! How nice. And how old are you exactly, twenty-seven?

Twenty-six. Even better. Not like Delores over there with her arm elbow deep in the onion dip. She’s twenty-two and would guess a phone tree is something Matthew Barney glued together for MOMA.

Oh hush, Delores, you know you don’t know what a phone tree is! You don’t know the landline number to this apartment. Don’t you dare scroll, Delores. Use your mem-or-ree. It’s in your head, where you keep your will to live.

Honestly, I swear, I let that girl into Book Club as a favor to her dear departed mother—who along with me was a founding member of Book Club—and I regret it every month. Delores always nominates books that are the first in a trilogy.

Delores’s Book Club choices are YA. YA stands for young adult. Young adult is meant for teenagers the way
Seventeen
is meant for twelve-year-olds, meaning Delores is too old for it, but she and her Smith sisters cannot get enough. YA is about angst. Will I get that boy to like me? Will I lose the weight? Will I turn into a vampire if he just gives me a hickey? I’m an orphan! I’m a mind reader! I’m biracial! I’m gay! When I get out of high school, I’ll move to New York City, where I’ll find others like me, and then I’ll be happy and I will have it all: a career, a family, good teeth, and takeout Chinese.

Delores has a twisted uterus, is unemployed, and lives in my guest room. She has a fashion blog, which means she posts Instagrams on her Tumblr page of what she wears every day. She used to have a book blog, but gave it up because joining Book Club shuts that sort of public opinionating down.

But you can talk about your feelings here, isn’t that right, Delores?

Yes, you have so very many feelings.

What Delores frets over on a regular basis, dear, is that having “it all” is harder than she thought it would be. At every Book Club, the rest of us old marrieds try to save Delores years of aggravation by explaining to her that she cannot have it all. It all is overrated.

Am I right, ladies?

Nodding, nodding, nodding. It’s like we’re listening to rap!

Except for Bethany, over there. She refuses to be swayed. Bethany’s an overachiever and doesn’t understand why she can’t rope a man into marrying and impregnating her.

Because men aren’t bulls and the Upper East Side is not a rodeo, Bethany!

Marriage wasn’t the best choice for you, was it, dear? You’re divorced, am I correct?

Yes, and your ex-husband left you with a mountain of debt because his idea of having it all was maxing out your joint credit cards on Internet poker. I’m sure everyone’s already said to you: Thank God you don’t have children. Well, there’s a reason for that. Children cost money and a great deal of your attention. Every night, I tell Delores before she turns in for bed that she should thank her lucky stars for her twisted uterus. It’s one less choice she has to make.

Well, it is, Delores! Not everyone’s meant to experience childbirth.

Except for you, my dear. You look positively born for it. You’ll bounce back from your divorce. And you know what helps?

That’s right! Book Club.

Oh Delores, buck up. Grab a tissue from Jane’s sweater sleeve. And I implore you, take Marjorie up on her offer of that paying job at Talbots.

Marjorie is the lady with a thermometer in her mouth.

You thought it was a swizzle stick, dear?

Honestly, so did I years ago when I brought my catalog returns into the Seventy-Second Street Talbots. Marjorie is the manager and was working the register.

Just look at her, she is the epitome of taste: so much plaid and cashmere; and only one piece of jewelry in addition to her wedding set. She has a stunning brooch collection. It rivals Madeleine Albright’s. She’s wearing my favorite brooch today: a ceramic bunny with tiny onyx eyes.

That’s right, dear, we’re all wearing that brooch. You’re very observant. What an excellent quality to have in your gene pool.

And guess what: as a member of Book Club, you’ll get Marjorie’s 40 percent employee discount. That goes for sale items too. Can you believe it?

I know!

Lucky for us, pleats are back. Lucky for Marjorie, her health benefits are stellar. Talbots has paid for Marjorie and her husband to have in vitro six times. They have zero children. But there are pickling jars in their pantry that we don’t discuss.

I’m not discussing them, Marjorie!

Marjorie loves celebrity memoirs. She likes to have Book Club read about beautiful people who remain beautiful people despite life’s little challenges such as bankruptcy, infidelity, alcoholism, and infertility.

You’ve had three out of four of these challenges, haven’t you, dear?

Yes, that worthless cheating drunk of an ex-husband of yours left you feeling lower than dirt. But, let me assure you, you are a treasure. And Book Club is going to dig you out!

Men. Famous men are the worst. Did you know Frank Langella had an affair with Dinah Shore? He seduced her by sending her Joan Baez’s
Diamonds and Rust,
and then she invited him to her house, where they lay in front of her fireplace and listened to that album over and over.

That means, Delores, that every time they wanted to listen to the record again, one of them had to get up off the floor and walk over to the record player and pick up the needle—or flip the record and
then
pick up the needle—and place it ever so gently onto the spinning LP.

It’s old-school birth control? Oh, Delores, you should tweet that. Not now, for heaven’s sake!

If we were at Jane’s, she’d put Delores’s iPhone in her blender. It’s the horror reader in her. Jane loves to provoke a blood-curdling scream.

Book Club rotates apartments and house rules apply. So, that means no cell phones at Jane’s and no gum chewing here. There’s no red wine at Bethany’s. At Marjorie’s, don’t pretend to hunt for an extra box of Cheese Nips so you can search out her jars. The ladies on the red sofa make you take off your shoes. The ladies on the gray sofa make you keep your shoes on. Delores lives with me, so it’s in her best interest that you do what I say.

Honestly, for Delores to remain a member of Book Club, dear, it’s imperative that you become a member.

And you want to stay in Book Club, don’t you, Delores?

Yes, Delores knows: as long as you take care of Book Club, Book Club takes care of you.

When Delores found herself in a transitional period, like the one you’re in now, dear, she was eighteen, orphaned and penniless because her dead mother hadn’t worked for a generous company like Talbots. So, I took her in. And because Delores’s mother was a member of Book Club, Book Club sent Delores to Smith. We visit Jane at Mount Sinai when she has her strokes. We set Bethany up on blind dates. We ignore Marjorie’s hormonal mood swings. The ladies on the red sofa babysit for Aretha. As a matter of fact, so do the ladies on the gray sofa because Aretha can’t find paid professionals willing to cope with all of her kids.

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