on every front. When I had looked at the girls across the cotillion tables, girls my mother would have chosen over me a thousand times, my heart had ached to be one of them. And, to becompletely honest, it still did. If you had told me I had three wishes, I would have spent them all turning into the woman my mother wanted me to be. The woman Phillip had thought he was marrying. Maybe then we would all be happier.
Upstairs, I flipped through everything I had brought, wondering what I had been thinking when I was packing. Finally I settled on a light wool dress in soft rose pink. I had a gray cardigan to cover the cap sleeves, and a pair of pearl earrings, and though the outfit was a little warm for the day, I thought I looked appropriately costumed, as though I might actually belong.
My mother drove us to the genteelly aging hotel where the Ladies Association met, and I chewed another batch of antacids before summoning up the strength to go inside. Despite the stream of women heading into the ballroom, Ashley Hathaway spotted me immediately. âMadeleine,â she said in a breathy voice as she approached, as though my presence had literally knocked the wind out of her. âWhy, I havenât seen you for ages. Donât you look just the same?â
âYou look exactly the same too,â I said, unsure whether either of us meant it as a compliment. Ashley was wearing a twinset and little pearl earrings to match her pearly white teeth, and her hair was a perfect pale bob, exactly like my motherâs. She leaned forward and slipped her arm around me as she brushed an air kiss toward each of my cheeks. I awkwardly returned the gesture. I wasnât a good hugger. Graduating from college had been a relief for all sorts of reasons, including not having to endure the frequent hugging all my sorority sisters seemed to do on a whim, as though they had magnets implanted in their bellies and couldnât keep away from each other. Those hugs always made me feel uncomfortably large and self-aware, my hand on the back of someone like Ashley, delicate as a bird.
âWhere have you been? I donât think Iâve seen you since your wedding! Howâs that handsome husband of yours?â
The mention of Phillip made me feel queasy, and I clenched my left hand with its bare fingers, sliding it behind my back. âOh, you know,â I said, which didnât really answer anything. âHow are you?â
âAbsolutely run off my feet. Grayson and Hunter are in fourth grade, if you can believe that! And Grahamâs practice is just exploding.â She made a face of pretend exhaustion that made me feel exhausted for real.
âThatâs great!â I said, wondering why I was congratulating her on her schedule.
âSo youâre in town visiting your mother? Arenât you the sweetest?â I narrowed my eyes at her. What was this? Was this an act? She looked at me with those wide blue eyes, as if her entire happiness hinged on my answer.
âSheâs getting ready to sell the house. I thought Iâd help her get it ready.â I had thought no such thing until right that moment, but it made me sound altruistic, and I found I rather liked the idea. It made me feel like I had a purpose other than avoiding my own life.
âShe did mention it,â Ashley said, putting her hand over her heart as though the news had wounded her. Ashley had known about my motherâs selling the house before I did? âPoor Simone, and sheâs already so busy. Well, bless your heart for coming to help. Come in and say hello! There are so many Country Day girls here!â
Following Ashley into the ballroom, I endured a series of air kisses and half hugs from women I did indeed remember from school. Of course all of them were here. Our mothers had been in the Ladies Association together, and now they were in the Ladies Association together. Their children were going to the schools we had gone to,
Elaine Macko
David Fleming
Kathryn Ross
Wayne Simmons
Kaz Lefave
Jasper Fforde
Seth Greenland
Jenny Pattrick
Ella Price
Jane Haddam