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Authors: Zoey Dean

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BOOK: Heart of Glass
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“So, how is this Monday night thing working out?” “So far, so good.” He sat down next to her. Not too close, Cammie noted, but close enough. “I’m psyched about it. I have all these ideas for sort of a modern version of a salon, you know? With poets and rappers and playwrights. But not that experimental shit that no one can stand, like you’d find in Santa Monica or at UCLA. Very Hollywood. Which means quality.” “So open your own place,” she suggested, crossing her left leg over her right, toward him.

“Princeton first, my own place second, third, and fourth. But yeah, I’d be lying if I didn’t say I’m thinking about it. So, how’s the fashion show prep going?” Cammie tensed slightly. She and Ben had been an item for many months back when he was a senior in high school and she was a junior. She knew every tiny nuance of Ben’s voice, and she’d felt the shift in his tone, minute as it might have been.

This was his way of asking about Anna. She was sure of it.

“We did Modeling 101 today. Oddly enough, it was fun.” “How’d Anna do? How’s Anna doing?” As if the lack of eye contact wasn’t a dead giveaway.

There was so much she could tell him. Like how Anna had found out that Tattoo Guy was a money manager by day and a bare-chested fireman-style faux-stripper waiter by night. But that would only fuel his hopes of a Ben-and-Anna reunion.

“How do you think, Ben?” she asked lazily. “She was great.”

“She was great,” Cammie agreed, thinking about the Ben /Anna liplock she’d seen outside of Raymond’s salon. “What is up with the two of you anyway?” “What could possibly be up? She’s with this Caine guy.” “That much I know.” He nodded and sipped some of his champagne. “I’d like to be able to just walk, you know? But . . . damn, I just can’t.” “Gee, you found it easy enough to walk away from me.” “I was younger, dumber—who the hell knows. It was high school. If it bothers you to have me talk about her—” “No, it’s fine,” Cammie lied.

“Because you’re so into Adam. Yeah, I get that.” “Right.” That she and Adam were currently less than tight and that he seemed to be opting for blackflies and lake trout guts over her was another thing she didn’t plan to share.

Ben stood up and paced the small office. “I never expected to fall so hard for her. But . . . it happened. And I’ve made so many dumb-ass mistakes.” He shook his head. “If I could go back and undo them, I would.” “God, you sound like me.” Cammie leaned her head back against the forgiving leather. “Do you think it’s possible for two people to be in love and stay in love? Or does that only happen in bad movies that no one likes but people who own hundreds of teddy bears?” “You’re asking the wrong guy. My parents? I don’t think they’ve really been in love for a long time. Plus, my dad’s always either gambling and chasing tail, or at a twelve-step meeting undoubtedly chasing tail. I’m a little short on role models.” “I’m not,” Cammie replied thoughtfully.

Ben returned to the couch. “I
know
you don’t mean your stepmother, Patrice.” She laughed. “Not hardly.” Then she hesitated, wanting to tell him about the letter her mother had left for her, but at the same time not wanting to open up that much. It wasn’t like Ben loved her the way he loved Anna. And she really did still love Adam. At least she thought she did.

“I remember so many things about my mom. Her perfume—Rive Gauche. When I catch a whiff of it—it doesn’t matter where—I get this visceral memory of her.” She twirled the stem of her champagne flute thoughtfully between her fingers. “And her smile—how her eyes would take in my face as if seeing me was the most important and beautiful thing in the whole world. I remember how she used to draw pictures for me, and sing me to sleep, and really listen to me, in a way that maybe no one else ever has. And I mean, I know that isn’t romantic love. But it was real. I had it. And I remember it.”

“It sounds great, that’s what it sounds like.”

“I know. Maybe we need to call that something else besides love. Because it’s crazy to think you can fall in love with someone and have that and toe-curling good sex, too.”

Ben grinned widely. “There is no one else on the planet like you, Cammie.”

“I’ll take that as a compliment.”

“You should.” He hand brushed against her cheek and he looked deeply into her eyes. “It sucks that you lost her, Cam. It really sucks.”

“But it would suck worse if I’d never had her at all.”

Slowly, she watched Ben’s face come toward hers; she remembered exactly what it felt like to kiss him, the texture of his lips, the way he would sigh from the back of his throat, his hand tangled in her hair. And she wanted it, she really, really, really—

Just before his lips brushed against hers, she pulled back. So did he.

“Bad idea.” His voice was husky with desire.

“Yeah.”

He picked up his champagne again. “Don’t take this the wrong way. But you are not the shallow, self-involved chick you used to be.”

“What, you’re allowed to grow up and I’m not? Besides, you were with me mostly for the hours between 10 P.M. and 6 A.M. So what does that say about you?”

Ben nodded. “I deserved that. But the thing is . . .”

“What?” She drained her glass, not wanting to admit how shaky she felt from their near kiss.

“If things were different and we got together again . . .” His eyes met hers; Cammie felt as if they were piercing her heart. “It would be
so
much more.”

The Smell of Rive Gauche

“S
o anyway, I really love Jack, but I think I’m starting to love Aaron, too. Does that make any sense?” Dee asked.

She was curled up on the oak daybed, wrapped in an aquamarine cashmere throw, while Cammie dug around in the five-hundred-square-foot closet. They were in one of the guest rooms at Clark’s estate. It was done in cool blues and greens, wallpapered in the palest of blues the same shade as the carpet. Though she had a huge walk-in closet in her own bedroom, Cammie’s wardrobe was so extensive that she’d kept the overflow in here. She and Dee were here because she’d been unable to find what to wear to the fashion show in her own walk-in. The decision was especially important, because now there was going to be that face-to-face with Lizbette Demetrius beforehand. Anna had forwarded the email from Lizbette—Cammie had been so psyched—but they’d decided not to say anything to Champagne. Why make the younger girl nervous?

“Does that make any sense?” Dee repeated.

“Yeah. It makes sense.”

Cammie had no idea what she was talking about. Not because Dee was incoherent again, but because she had too many other things on her mind.

There was Lizbette’s arrival tomorrow for the fashion show.

There was Adam. This morning, she’d broken down and tried to call him, but she hadn’t been able to get through.

There was her almost-moment with Ben the night before at Trieste.

“Do you think it’s possible to love two boys at the same time?” Dee went on. She smoothed the fabric of the belted silk Rebecca Taylor day dress she was wearing. It was sheer enough that Cammie could see Dee’s tiny silver nipple rings.

Cammie didn’t answer. Instead she held up a hanger with an emerald green Albert Nipon suit with a shrunken jacket and short, pleated skirt. No. Too matchy-matchy. Maybe the Nicole Miller lavender sheath? Too short. Barely thong-protecting.

“Like, suddenly Jack is getting all clingy,” Dee continued. “Usually I’m the one who does that. And Aaron—well, he needs me in a way that Jack doesn’t. I’m usually the needy one. My whole life is changing.” “Hurrah for great meds,” Cammie observed absent-mindedly, as she considered an Akris Punto hounds-tooth skirt. Nope. Too day-at-the-races.

“Totally. I just wish could talk to my mom about stuff like this.” Dee took a sip of the iced mocha she’d brought with her from the Coffee Bean.

That comment actually got Cammie’s attention. “I feel that way all the time.” Dee looked surprised. “You do?” “What’s so shocking about that?” She shut the closet door and stood with her hands on her hips, feeling dissatisfied.

“Well, you never talk about her,” Dee pointed out. “What’s to talk about? It’s not like it would change anything.” “Yeah,” Dee responded gently. “My mother is a ditz. But at least I have her.” Cammie went over to her window, which overlooked a decent swath of her backyard. Near the guesthouse was a cluster of clementine trees. Her mother had loved that fruit. She recalled a day when she and her mom had sat together at the modest butcher-block kitchen table of their old house in Santa Monica. She’d been how old? Eight, maybe? There’d been a huge black ceramic bowl on that table that had been filled with clementines. They’d eaten and eaten the sweet fruit, until they both had stomachaches. She even remembered what her mom had been wearing—a raw silk shirt with oversize buttons in a pink that was so pale it was almost white, and a floral skirt with inverted pleats. Where had that memory come from?

When they’d moved to this whale of a mansion—when Cammie had insisted on taking the partially finished
Charlotte’s Web
mural with them—they’d also brought her mother’s clothes. Those clothes were boxed in storage up in the attic. Or at least they were supposed to be, unless her father or the stepmother from hell, Patrice, had tossed them away.

For all this time, Cammie had never gone up there to look at them. The idea of doing it was too sad. But now, for some reason Cammie couldn’t quite put her finger on, it seemed right.

She was halfway to the door before she called to Dee. “Come on!”

The attic space was lit by harsh bare lightbulbs, and the air smelled musty, like old newspapers. There was furniture that Cammie remembered from her childhood—an ornately carved armoire, an oval-shaped full-length antique mirror, and the gilded brown rocking horse she’d named Alex, after
The Secret World of Alex Mack,
her favorite TV show when she was a girl. There were the boxes. Scores of them. Identical and white, obviously packed by professionals, stacked against the far wall.

Dee wandered over to a large support beam and squinted at a sheet of paper taped to it. “Wow, whoever moved you guys in here was really organized. There’s a master list here. All the boxes are numbered.” Cammie hustled to join her. She ran a finger down the list of a hundred and fifty-six packing boxes. It didn’t take long to find what she was looking for—three consecutively numbered boxes labeled JEANNE’S

CLOTHES.

“You want your mother’s clothes?” Dee asked, as Cammie’s finger stopped on those numbers.

“It’s a sentimental blip.” Cammie didn’t want to admit the clutch in her stomach. “What my father would call ‘a nonrecurring phenomenon.’ Just go with it.” “You didn’t see your mom’s ghost, did you? Because that would be way cool. Especially if it was at the Roosevelt in Hollywood.” “Dee?” “Yes?” “Help me find the damn boxes.” As it turned out, finding the right boxes was a snap. Whoever had put together the master list had also been wise enough to secure a box cutter to the pillar, so Cammie could even break the packing tape seals with ease.

Her heart pounding, she opened the first one. It was full of sweaters, mostly polyester or cashmere blend—they hadn’t had enough money back then for her mother to wear really good cashmere. Cammie found a red one with a boat neckline she remembered and held it to her nose. It still smelled just ever so slightly like Rive Gauche perfume. She closed her eyes and inhaled deeply. Amazing.

The second box held a variety of things—shoes, costume jewelry, the silver filigreed brush and comb set her mother had kept on her vanity. Cammie replaced it all with care; maybe she would use them herself one day.

The third box held more clothes. Some she didn’t remember, but some she did. She examined each piece with care. And then, halfway through, she found exactly what she’d been looking for. The pale pink shirt with the oversize buttons. The full skirt with the inverted pleats.

She took them out carefully, as if the fragile memories they held could shatter if a single wrinkle was undone or a single thread came loose.

“My mom wrote me a letter,” she said as she fingered the clothing like it was precious gold. There was no sadness. She just felt giddy. And excited. As if her mother had come home after a long trip, and she was so excited to see her.

“But she’s—”

Dee didn’t need to say the word for Cammie to know what she meant. “She wrote it when I was a baby, and I wasn’t supposed to get it until my wedding day. My father gave it to me. A couple of weeks ago.” “What did it say?” “Basically that I should be more than the selfish bitch I’ve been all my life,” she confessed with a bitter laugh. “You think she knew how I was going to turn out ahead of time?” “Probably she was just telling you what was important to her. Don’t you think?” “Maybe she was just worried that I’d be way too much like my father.” Cammie raised her gaze to her friend. “My mother was clinically depressed, and I

never even knew it. Just so you don’t feel alone in your iffy mental health.” Dee shrugged and pushed the shaggy bangs out of her eyes. “You can’t imagine how many people tell me now that they take something for depression or anxiety or whatever. I’m like the new mental health confessional. So, did your mom get help?” “Not enough. Not nearly enough. I only wish I’d been old enough to help her.” Cammie pulled off her Michael Stars shirt and pulled down the royal blue Juicy Couture shorts she kept meaning to throw out, except that they were just so comfortable she couldn’t bear to part with them. She slipped into her mother’s pale pink shirt and buttoned it, then stepped into the skirt and zipped it up.

“How’s it look?”

Dee smiled and pointed to the other side of the attic where the old furniture had been stored. “I could say great, but you’ll want to see for yourself. There’s a mirror over there, I think.” The antique mirror was covered in a fine sheen of dust. Cammie used her other shirt to wipe it clean, then took in her reflection. The ensemble fit perfectly. In fact, as she looked at herself wearing her mother’s clothes, she saw how much she looked like the mother she remembered.

“I miss her,” she said simply.

“When I was my sickest, I couldn’t see what was real and what wasn’t, couldn’t make enough sense out of things to get help. Maybe that’s how she felt, Cammie. Maybe she just couldn’t help it. But she loved you so much from the time you were really little, when she wrote you that letter. And no one can ever take that love away from you.” She would never have expected to get wise counsel from Dee. Cammie had always called the shots in their friendship. But here she was, giving Cammie exactly what she needed.

BOOK: Heart of Glass
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