Authors: Sara Paretsky
“They weren’t her papers,” Mara tried to tell her sister. “She had a letter about Grannie from somebody in France. It was written to Mother. And a photograph of a man who looks just like you.”
Harriet stared at her. “Mara, I can’t believe with Mephers in the hospital, seriously ill, you can have the temerity to make up more stories about Beatrix. You are old enough to stop this kind of playacting.”
“It’s not—I’m not!” Mara’s muddy skin turned mahogany in fury, “Mephers always said we didn’t have any pictures or documents or anything about Mother. Well, there was a letter to Mother from someone in France. And that picture, I’m telling you, that picture looked like you in drag!”
“Mephers is really ill, Mara. Don’t go bothering me with stuff about Beatrix. Mephers is the only mother I ever had, or you, for that matter. You should be worrying about whether she’s going to get well, not making up stories about Beatrix and France. If
Mephers hadn’t been worrying about you she wouldn’t have been vulnerable to an attack.”
Mara gasped at the injustice of Harriet’s accusation. “Worrying about me? She never worried about me a day in her life. When I came home on Wednesday I found her in my room, reading my journal.”
Harriet gave her most tight-lipped, Mrs. Ephers-imitation smile. “You came home drunk after being fired. I heard about it from the president of the Pleiades Hotel. Mephers says she was trying to make some order out of the scrap heap you leave in your room—your desk, I might point out, looks like an ill-run recycling center—when you came in and started screaming at her. You may well have fancied Mephers was reading your journal as a drunken hallucination. The less said on the subject the better.”
Grandfather said Hilda couldn’t rest comfortably until she knew her privacy would be inviolate during her absence. The building super brought a locksmith up to the apartment and supervised the installation of a new dead bolt in the fat oak door to Mrs. Ephers’s room. The super gave duplicate keys to Grandfather and Harriet, shook his head sadly at Mara, with whom he used to share Snickers bars in his basement apartment while they watched the Cubs, and left.
No one wanted to hear Mara’s version of events. Yes, she had been fired. Yes, she was drinking at lunch. She hated the job, hated the stupid way they had to answer the phone: “Hotel Pleiades, soaring to new heights, how may I help you?” hated clients who screamed because centerpieces held daisies instead of chrysanthemums, hated having to say “I’m sorry you’re disappointed, ma’am: the daisies are so bright and fresh, and the florist tells me the only mums we could get now would be wilted,” when she wanted to pick up the centerpiece and brain the carp-faced woman. She hated above all the pointlessness of her own life, and often persuaded one of the waiters to bring her a double bourbon to brace her for the afternoon.
It was two-thirty when Mara had her termination interview.
Two-hour lunches were not part of the job description for junior assistants in the Special Events office. You’ve been warned twice, as a courtesy to Ms. Stonds, the personnel director said, we have no choice now but to let you go. Turn in your pass, collect a week’s pay in lieu of notice.
Home, because she didn’t know where else to go. Entering stealthily, hoping to avoid Mrs. Ephers, still able at eighty to hear the cleaning woman break a cup in the kitchen while lying down for her afternoon nap.
The housekeeper was in Mara’s room, making use of Mara’s absence at work to hunt out her journal and read it. When Mara crept in the two stared at each other in shock. Mara gasped and backed away. She left the apartment and didn’t reappear until three the next morning, when the household was asleep.
Mrs. Ephers took especial pleasure in rousing her at seven that day. “You’re going to be late for work, miss, if you don’t getgoing-”
“Mind your own damned business for a change,” Mara said, turning over.
“None of that from you, young lady.” The housekeeper marched to the bed and shook Mara. “Do you want me to bring in your grandfather?”
Mara pictured the doctor as a battering ram, wielded by Mephers to shove her out of bed. “I’ve been fired. I have no job to go to. Why don’t you race into the dining room and share the news with him? Then the two of you can exclaim how I’m just like Beatrix, you knew it all along, you should have put me in foster care instead of lavishing all your warmth and sweetness on such an unpromising specimen.”
The doctor summoned Mara to his study after breakfast. I’m going to overlook your shocking language to Hilda. I’m most disappointed in you, young lady, for getting fired. What do you propose to do with yourself? You know I’m not going to support you forever. I learned my lesson with your mother. No, young lady, I don’t want to hear anything about Harriet: she was an orphan just
like you, but she’s made the most of her opportunities. If you want to go back to college, just say the word: I’m sure we can find a school, a good school, that will let you start over again. After all, you don’t lack for intelligence. But otherwise you must find another job by the end of the month.
Or what, Mara wondered? Or Grandfather would throw her out? Would she join the woman at the wall on Underground Wacker?
Mara dressed and went to the coffee shop across the street from the apartment. She had the seasick feeling that comes from too much wine and too little sleep. Her hands shook as she carried the large bowl of coffee to a stool by the window.
At nine she watched Grandfather walk down the street toward the city. It was his pride to walk the two miles to the hospital every morning, even in the bitterest snow. Although seventy-seven, he still put in a full week on surgical consulting and teaching. He’d stopped heading surgical teams when he turned seventy-two, not because he was any less confident, but because he wanted to stop while he still knew his hand was sure.
Mara thought he would die if they made him leave the hospital, even though many of the younger doctors were tired of his heavy authority on their cases. She imagined the funeral, Mrs. Ephers flinging herself into the grave in hysteria, and Beatrix and Selena suddenly appearing, having read about the doctor’s demise in the paper. They shared a bottle of champagne with Mara to celebrate and the three went off to live in the south of France.
Darling, we’re so sorry we left you with those two gargoyles all these years, Grannie said. Mara couldn’t come up with a compelling reason for why her mother and grandmother, happily living together in this scenario, hadn’t come for her sooner. Or how to overcome the published reports of Selena’s death, although maybe Grandfather had forced the papers to print them—he had a lot of influence in Chicago.
Mara was on her third coffee, shaking now from the combination of caffeine and sleep deprivation, when Mrs. Ephers left the
apartment, heading for the market at the hour when fish and produce would be freshest. Mara waited five minutes, in case Mrs. Ephers had forgotten something, not that the perfectly organized iron maiden ever did, and crossed the street again to the apartment.
Raymond, the doorman, who had known her since she was three, smiled and held the lobby door open in a grand gesture. “Not working today, Mara?”
Mara only smiled in return and hurried to the elevator. If Mrs. Ephers thought Mara’s journal worth hunting out, maybe it was because she had desperate secrets of her own that she was trying to conceal. That inspiration came to Mara when she was drinking at Corona’s, a jazz club on Kinzie, around midnight. What if the housekeeper really was Harriet’s mother, for instance? Grandfather and Mephers having a fling in the master bedroom, Harriet conceived when the housekeeper was forty-eight—stranger things have happened.
The elevator opened onto the Stonds’s private vestibule. Most people in the eight-story building left their front doors open during the day, figuring that Raymond and the locked elevator were sufficient deterrents even in these difficult times, but Mrs. Ephers believed that was an invitation to theft. Mara undid the locks and stopped in the entry hall to listen. Barbara, the cleaning woman, was busy in the kitchen.
Mara took off her shoes and slipped into the housekeeper’s room. This was sacrilege, like jumping rope in the Garden of Gethsemane, for no one was ever allowed into Mrs. Ephers’s private room, not even Harriet, unless especially invited. Mara’s shiver of excited fear dispelled her seasickness.
Harriet’s face stared at Mara, from the wall by the bed where she stood larger than life in her law school robes, from the dresser where she was ice-skating, dancing as the fairy queen in fourth grade, graduating from high school, riding her pony. The doctor joined his granddaughter and Mrs. Ephers on the nightstand at her Smith graduation. Mara wasted precious time searching for herself. Two cabinet photos, one at her own high school graduation, one
formally groomed for her fourth birthday, grinning at the camera, wearing a blue velvet dress that she could still remember, the color of Harriet’s eyes. Her own longing for blue eyes and cornsilk hair washed over her as if she were four again and fingering the fabric.
“You stupid fool,” she whispered to her four-year-old face. “Why were you laughing while you waited to be slapped down, made a fool of?”
She picked up the silver frame, one of her own Christmas gifts to Mrs. Ephers, and put it on the floor where she was going to stomp on it, forgetting for a moment her stocking feet. Fear of Mrs. Ephers, the feeling that the housekeeper would know if she made the slightest mark in the room, let alone removed a picture, made her pick it up and replace it, next to the one of Harriet’s tenth birthday party, a crowd of white-clad girls with balloons on the yacht of one of Dr. Stonds’s important patients.
A dark-red secretary stood in one corner, its writing surface empty. Mrs. Ephers was no reader—a Bible, an old edition of Edna St. Vincent Millay, and a library biography of Queen Victoria stood rigidly to attention on the windowed shelves.
Mara glanced briefly in the drawers, where Harriet’s school reports were neatly laid, next to old books of household accounts. She looked for her own report cards but couldn’t find them. Her mouth puckered in hurt. She slammed the drawer shut, took a pin from the cushion on Mrs. Ephers’s dressing table and dug a deep scratch along the secretary’s glossy writing surface. Take that, you horrid old bag.
Mara slid open the dresser drawers, patted the underwear—white or beige, cotton briefs, formidable brassieres like breastplates—the neat stacks of cardigans, nightgowns—cotton for summer, flannel for winter—hard to imagine her seducing Grandfather Stonds in those.
The image of Mephers as Harriet’s mother receded along with Mara’s excitement. Her headache began to return and she started to feel ashamed. She heard Barbara slipslopping down the hall in her mules, and the door closing. Barbara left for the day at two. Had
Mara been in here three hours? No, Barbara, must be on her way to the cleaners, or some such errand, Mara went to rub spit into the scratch she’d dug on the secretary. Now she’d really catch hell. She started to sniffle, unloved orphan, fired from her job, and now in deeper trouble for ruining a valuable piece of furniture.
As she rubbed she must have pressed a recessed catch; a drawer suddenly opened in the middle of the writing surface. Her self-pity vanished. Just like Nancy Drew:
The Secret of the Housekeeper’s Secretary.
The girl detective doesn’t hesitate but dives headfirst into the cache and pulls out a small bundle of papers.
On top was an old manila envelope addressed to
Mademoiselle, la Fille de Mme Selena Vatick Stonds
, in ink that had turned brown with age. Blue and gold stamps glowed brilliantly against the paper, Mara took it to the window: France. The postmark was blurred, so she couldn’t read the date or town.
She sat down at the secretary and pulled out the contents, nervous about what she might find. There was a letter in French, in the same browning ink, addressed, like the envelope, to the daughter of Selena. Mara had neglected French in high school. Now she cursed herself for ignoring Grandfather’s strictures: French the only language of a truly civilized person, speak it at mealtime until you show mastery. Mara had chosen instead to study Japanese, but much good that did her now.
She stumbled through the first few sentences.
Dear Mademoiselle Stonds, I am a woman very old and very something else, and the time for something is long past.
Selena Vatick Stonds and Nippur figured in the next paragraph, but Mara couldn’t tell what they were up to. Frustrated, she wondered if she dare take the letter away to photocopy, but what if Mephers checked her cache every night? Said her prayers: Lord deliver me from Mara and deliver the doctor into my bed, and then fondled this letter to Beatrix?
Maybe Mara could copy the gist of it, to worry over later with a dictionary. She took it to the desk and turned on a light. That was when the picture slipped from between the pages, a black-and-white
photo of a blond, with the kind of ironic smile women sold their souls for. He was wearing a tweedy double-breasted jacket cut in the style of the fifties.
What struck Mara more than the smile and the probable age of the picture was his resemblance to Harriet. She held the picture next to Harriet in her law school robes. The man’s cheeks were broader, but around the eyes and nose the likeness was startling.
Mara jumped as Mephers dropped her purse in the doorway. “Just what are you doing in here, young lady?”
“Who is this man? How come you have this letter, when it was written to Mother?” Mara screamed. “What happened to Mother? You know where she is, don’t you?”
The housekeeper snatched the picture from Mara, stuffed it into her bosom. When Mara lunged for it, Mrs. Ephers grabbed her and yanked her to her feet, slapped her hard enough to give the girl a black eye, then fell against the bed, clutching her own left arm. Her face turned a waxy gray and her breath came in shallow bursts.
“Get out of here,” she whispered hoarsely. “Get out of here and call the doctor.”
Jacqui and Nanette waiting for me at the Orleans St. Church clinic this afternoon, troubled about Madeleine. Not because of visions or voices, but harassment. Seems her Wall is part of the foundation for the Pleiades Hotel, one of those ultramodern, pricey places that’ve cropped up east of Michigan near the river. I’ve
never
noticed it, but apparently hotel garage is close by M’s vision, Management doesn’t want homeless women ranting about the Virgin—or anything else—to disturb the slumber of any incumbent. Jacqui says last night hotel hosed down the Wall during the evening when M was sitting there.
So much wanted just to go home, go to bed for an hour before starting weekend on-call shift. Read once that you sleep in bits and pieces when you’re overtired, even standing up or while talking to people. Wonder if that’s what I’m doing with patients these days—often seem to get only fragments of their complaints.
I like Jacqui, but worry, too, she’ll turn on me the way Mom used to: look at me when I’m talking to you, Hector—we named you for the bravest
of
all the Trojans, well, your father is always off
on
some engineering junket to the Middle East, it’s time you acted up to your name and behaved like the man around the house. So I did her bidding. Jacqui’s, that is, although almost always Lily’s as well.