Tags:
Fiction,
Literary,
General,
Fiction - General,
Family Life,
Domestic Fiction,
Love Stories,
Modern & contemporary fiction (post c 1945),
Contemporary Women,
Single Women,
General & Literary Fiction,
Sisters,
Mothers and daughters,
Westport (Conn.),
Westport (N.Y.)
less. This mood lasted for weeks. Then Frederick Barrow joined the library and began to use it for his research, which led to more lunches, more dinners, and considerably more quotation. Indeed, on the day that Annie and Miranda left their stepfather in tears and retreated to a cafe to drink tea, Annie was planning to have dinner with Frederick.
"He's so handsome in his author photos," Miranda said.
"They're not terribly recent. His hair is almost white now. I think writers should keep their photos up-to-date. When he does finally use a new one, it will be a terrible shock to his readers. They'll think he's been ill."
"Good God, Annie."
Miranda's cell phone gave a plaintive cry, and she checked a text message, frowned, and swore beneath her breath. "Where does he live, anyway?" she said as she typed into the cell phone. "These fuckers." She put the phone away. "So? Where?" It was important to Miranda that Frederick Barrow be a New Yorker. It would not do anyone any good if he lived in San Francisco or taught at the University of Iowa.
"He's been in Berlin for the past year--that's where I first got in touch with him."
"Oh, Berlin!" Miranda, in her enthusiasm for a city she found endlessly fascinating, forgot for a moment that she wanted Frederick to live nearby. "Wonderful."
"But I think he actually lives in Massachusetts. Cape Cod? He's been staying with his kids in the city."
Massachusetts was not bad. Miranda nodded in approval. She'd had a boyfriend in college who went to Harvard while she went to Barnard. There was a good train, and Miranda liked trains. A train felt fast, faster than a car, faster even than a plane, and the illusion of speed was almost as important to Miranda as was speed itself. She became bored and impatient easily, but had found that anything framed by a train window could hold her attention, as if the undersides and back ends and rusty corners of dying cities were episodes of a rough, rousing life flashing by. She had ended up detesting the Harvard boyfriend, Scarsdale Nick, as she used to call him, but the train had never disappointed her. No, Frederick Barrow in Massachusetts was not bad at all.
"He is still pretty good-looking," Annie said. "He wears nice old tweed jackets."
Annie's tone was serious and full of warmth. Miranda gave a snort.
"What?" Annie said.
"Ha!"
"You're crazy."
"I know what I know," Miranda said.
As the weeks wore on, the marriage mediation sessions began. Betty and Joseph went to an office oddly situated in Chelsea.
"Where did you find out about this woman?" Betty asked.
"Referral."
"This is a very dumpy office," Betty whispered. They had walked down the narrow stairs of a decrepit brownstone to what was the basement level. "This was called the English basement when they first started doing them in New York. Nineteenth century. Very Upstairs, Downstairs , don't you think? Do you remember when Annie hired a carpenter she found in the Village Voice classifieds? Did you find this woman in the Village Voice classifieds, honey? Those bookcases tilted terribly."
A small dumpy woman appeared at the door to an inner dumpy office. She had full, poorly cut salt-and-pepper hair. She was, Betty noticed, wearing space shoes.
"Are those back?" she asked the woman. "They were very popular in the fifties. Our dentist wore them."
The mediator did not smile. But she did hold out her hand and introduce herself. Her name was Nina Britsky. A matzoh-punim , Betty thought, feeling sad for her.
The office was small and crowded with piles of bulging folders. It resembled a closet, really--the bulging file closet. The mediator sat on a complicated ergonomic chair and placed her feet on a small stool that was on rockers. So much specialized equipment, Betty thought, just to listen to Joseph and me disagree.
Nina Britsky opened her laptop and began to type and speak.
Betty did not hear much of what she said. The initial barrage of New Age pop-psychological platitudes delivered in