The Light of Paris

The Light of Paris by Eleanor Brown Page A

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Authors: Eleanor Brown
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windows winking back at me in the sun.
    It had always been my destiny to have a big house like this, filled with antiques and enough furniture for dinner parties and enough lawn space to host a fundraiser. It was what everyone I had gone to school with was doing; my mother sent me casually remonstrative pages from the
Magnolia Providence-Journal
and
Magnolia Style
, in which the girls I had once known, now women, were photographed hosting luncheons at their home with distinguished guests.
    But I didn’t want a house like this. I felt lost in our condo, which was not even a quarter as big, and still more than we required. I dreaded the day Phillip would announce we were going to move to the suburbs and I would have to hire a housekeeper and a gardener, a pool service. I far preferred a life I didn’t need assistance to maintain.
    I finished eating the strawberries and tossed the hulls in an oversized planter by the French doors leading into the living room. Inside, the house was still. “Mother?” I called.
    â€œGood, you’re awake.” My mother came bustling into the kitchen, carrying her purse and a stack of papers. Of course, I was still in my pajamas with sleep in my eyes and my hair standing on end, while my mother, who had probably been up since five, had her hair and makeup perfectly done and was armored in a pair of charcoal-gray slacks, a lavender cardigan, and a scarf knotted neatly around her neck like an air hostess.
    â€œSentient, even.”
    Unlike Henry, my mother was practiced at ignoring my wit. “You should get dressed. I’ve got to run some errands and drop these papers off before lunch.”
    I braced slightly. “What lunch? I haven’t even eaten breakfast.”
    â€œWell, you’ll be eating lunch soon, so don’t worry about it.”
    â€œNo, I mean, where are we eating lunch?”
    â€œThere’s a speaker at the Ladies Association. You can see all your old friends—Ashley Hathaway is introducing—I don’t know why you never make the effort to see those girls when you’re in town.”
    Ashley and I had gone to Country Day together every year since pre-kindergarten, and for every single one of those years, she had been both my friend and my nemesis. She was the daughter my mother would have preferred, and the girl I would rather have been. She was delicate and petite, with smooth blond hair as perfect in humid July as in damp December. At our debut, she’d been escorted by a third cousin of some sort, who happened to be a supporting actor on a television drama. While I can’t recall her ever being mean to me, exactly, there was something about being around her that felt like sucking on a copper penny.
    â€œWhat if I don’t want to go?” I asked.
    â€œThat’s not an option,” she said.
    I pictured the luncheon at the Ladies Association. I pictured the clothing I didn’t want to wear and the people I didn’t want to say hello to. They would ask how I had been and wonder where my handsome husband was, and I’d spend yet another meal wishing I were eating a hamburger instead of pretending I was too full for a salad.
    But my mother’s expression made it clear I was going. “Fine,” I said. What I really wanted to do was eat strawberry jam straight out of the jar without even closing the refrigerator door, and then get back into bed and read some more of my grandmother’s journals, but clearly that was not going to happen.
    â€œIt starts at eleven. You should get your skates on.”
    â€œSure.” I took the card and headed upstairs.
    â€œAnd don’t forget to comb your hair,” my mother called after me. I rolled my eyes.
    Yes, my mother was hypercritical, but I was an endless disappointment to her. She had wanted a specific kind of daughter, pretty and petite and soft-spoken, someone to shop with, to show off at Ladies Association meetings. And I had failed her

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