登陆注册
10828100000004

第4章

Grace deliberately took a seat up front, behind the first row of mourners, where she could observe the scene clearly. The coffin was open, with only the upper part of the body exposed for viewing. The synagogue was packed, and judging by outward appearances, everything about this funeral said money and upper class. It fit in very well with Grace's fantasy.

The organ music boomed out its solemn dirge. She was sitting a few feet away from the grieving Sam. Sam! She only thought of him as "Sam" now, having fantasized about their future. Occasionally he looked back at the assemblage and smiled thinly at various people. On either side of him were his children.

The music trailed off and a man in a black robe and yarmulke—by then she had learned the names of the various ritual trappings of the Jewish people—entered. Grace knew the man was Rabbi Seltzer, and he made the usual remarks about the late Anne Goodwin. Anne, Grace thought. A classy name.

Apparently Anne Goodwin had been very charitable, loving, and compassionate. This was not just lip service. The rabbi, Rabbi Seltzer, was specific about the organizations she had supported; Grace made a mental note of their names. His eulogy was appropriate in length and to the point. Then he said a prayer in Hebrew. Some of the words she had come to recognize.

At the end of the prayer, Rabbi Seltzer announced that there would be one speaker, and he introduced Sam Goodwin, who rose solemnly. He patted the yarmulke on his head. Sam pulled himself up to his full height and smoothed the creases from his jacket, which fell beautifully on his slim frame. His children touched him as he moved past them, walking ramrod straight to the lectern. He stood behind it, scanning the room, gathering the strength to speak.

"Friends," he began, his voice deep, mellow, wonderfully resonant. Grace felt thrilled by its sound. Her heart fluttered in her chest.

"Anne would have been delighted by your presence." He stopped abruptly, and Grace knew he was reaching for control with all his might. "She had this uncanny ability to relate to people. It was a phenomenon I observed from the moment I met her at a sorority dance at Wellesley College. She was a magnet for people. They clustered around her, sought her out, just like me. I remember how I, too, sought her out. I basked in the light of her lovely face, her beautiful eyes that radiated wonder—they beckoned me, a rather shy, stumbling and bumbling young man. I was captivated by her, charmed, and passionately committed to this rare human being for forty years of sheer joy and happiness. We enjoyed every moment we were together. She was my pillar of strength, my best friend, my confidant, my lover. She was beautiful, vivacious, giving."

He paused and studied the assemblage. Grace could not hold back her tears. Sobs echoed through the auditorium, and she suspected that there wasn't a dry eye in the house. It was not just the words he spoke. It was the way he said them, the wonderful baritone of his voice, its somber lilt, the sincerity of his meaning.

"Good-bye, sweet Anne, my love. You are too soon gone. I should have preceded you."

The sounds of crying continued as Sam left the lectern and returned slowly to his seat. Grace felt the urge to embrace him.

After the ceremony, she asked one of the men organizing the ride to the cemetery if he might find her room in one of the cars in the procession. The man arranged for her to ride with two couples in a Lincoln Town Car. In the front seat were Sally and Mike McDermott—they were in their sixties—and in the rear were Bob and Clara Hale. They were slightly younger.

"Did you know Anne long?" Clara Hale asked as the car fell in line with the procession. She had thin papery skin and the pale, mottled look of a woman who received most of her calories from alcohol. Bob Hale had a complementary appearance, and Grace had the impression that drinking was their principal common bond and had become the basis of their marriage.

"About five years. I was involved with one of her charities."

"She was a helluva lady," Mike McDermott said as he drove.

"A little imperious," Sally McDermott said. She realized that the remark seemed inappropriate under the circumstances. "But giving. Very giving."

"How did you know her?" Grace asked.

"Mike was the contractor for their house," Bob said. "Have you seen it?"

"Yes," Grace said.

"She was one tough lady, that Anne. Jewed us down to rock bottom."

"Be careful about your remarks, Mike," Sally said, looking around reflexively.

"I'm among friends, aren't I?"

Grace felt him eyeing her through the rearview mirror.

"She ran the roost," Sally said. "Never met a man so pussy-whipped in my life."

"Except me," Mike chuckled.

"Not me," Bob Hale interjected. "I'm the master of my home and hearth."

"Bullshit," Clara Hale said, poking Grace in the ribs.

"I would think," Grace said, "from the way he spoke about her… it was so beautiful how he must have adored her."

"Yes, he did," Sally said. "He gave her anything she wanted."

"He was scared shitless of her," Mike said.

"Scared," Sally said. "No way. Sam Goodwin is not afraid of anything. People who are scared don't get that rich."

"He respected her," Clara said. "That's a lot more than I can say for the way you two treat us. Right, Sally?"

"I'll take this bastard. Warts and all, although these bozos could sure learn a lot from Sam about how to treat a wife," Sally said. "Say what you want, but I don't think he ever fooled around."

"How the hell would you know?" Mike asked.

"Women know," Sally said, as if she was determined for her own reasons to have the last word. There was a sudden tension between husband and wife.

"If he did," Clara said, "Anne never knew about it. But then again, you never know what goes on behind the bedroom door."

"Nothing goes on behind ours," Mike said, lifting his hands in mock self-protection.

"Your definition of nothing is misguided," Sally said. She turned to those in the backseat. "To him, 'nothing' means 'never enough.'"

They were all silent for a long time while. Grace assumed that each couple was contemplating their own relationship. She wished she had one to contemplate.

"Poor Anne," Bob said to Grace. "I'll say this for Sam: He stood by her to the end. She suffered like hell."

Mike nodded his head. "Once I got past my anger, I liked her. I think she knew just how far she could go. Sam was a good soldier."

"He seems to have a lot of class," Grace interjected. "And he's quite distinguished-looking."

"And available. Are you married, Grace?" Sally asked.

"Divorced."

"Well, there's your big chance," Mike chuckled.

When they arrived at the cemetery, the mourners gathered under a green-and-white-striped tent in front of a freshly dug gravesite. Off to the side was Anne Goodwin's coffin, on a casket lowering device. Grace took a seat next to the couples who had brought her.

There were about a hundred seats, all of which were quickly filled. The overflowing crowd clustered in a semicircle around the seats. The coffin was lowered into the grave as the rabbi read from a Hebrew prayer book. Grace never took her eyes off Sam Goodwin, all her thoughts concentrated on how she could possibly begin a dialogue with him.

She watched Sam stand up, then reach down into the mound of earth. He picked up a handful of dirt and threw it on top of the coffin. It made a hollow sound as it landed on the wood, triggering in Sam an uncontrollable sobbing. Grace could feel his pain, and she also began to sob. Again, she wished she could take him in her arms and comfort him.

Sam recovered and returned to the tent. At one point he looked up, and his eyes seemed to meet hers and lock onto them for a brief moment. She wondered if it had been her imagination or merely an unconscious response to her own intense staring. She could not deny the thrill it had given her.

"I'm starving," Sally said.

"I could use a drink," Bob said.

"Likewise," Clara said. "These events tend to make one thirsty." She turned to Grace. "What about you, Grace?"

"Maybe a drink would do me good," she said, surprised at her candor. To approach Sam she would need a drink, maybe more than one. She felt this moment of opportunity swiftly approaching, and it inspired fear. She had problems thinking of an opening line.

"You suppose he'll keep the house?" Sally asked.

"No way of knowing," Mike said. "He certainly doesn't need it. One person thrashing around in all that space."

"He won't be one person for long," Clara said.

"Were the two people beside him his children?" Grace asked, attempting to glean more personal information.

"The son is a fancy lawyer in San Francisco, a real tight-ass. The daughter lives in New York with some weirdo. Sam has been very good to his kids."

"Lucky bastards," Clara said.

"Chose the right pop," Mike chuckled.

"I need a drink," Clara said.

They had to park a good distance from the Goodwin residence. It looked like the entire funeral procession had arrived.

The house was large but deceptively cozy. It was as if one entered a colonial home in Virginia. The walls were rich, dark, polished panels, the floors heavy oak. American antiques were everywhere, accentuated by oil paintings depicting early Americana. There were a few oil paintings of Anne at various ages, one in the den showing Anne as a young woman beside a horse; a smaller one in the dining room showing her as a younger woman, pensive and serene against a woodsy background; and one large vertical in the living room above the fireplace, Anne as a middle-aged woman of means, her demeanor regal and elegant, dressed in a gorgeous blue gown, wearing a magnificent diamond necklace. Grace was stunned by the beauty of her.

Crowds clustered around the dining-room table, which was burdened with food. A bartender dispensed drinks behind a dark-paneled bar. It seemed more like a cocktail party than anything.

Sam Goodwin sat on a straight-backed chair in the living room, receiving the condolences of his company. He wore slippers and had removed his jacket and tie. She watched him greet his guests, chat briefly, thank them for their condolences, and urge them to partake in the food and drink.

Grace hung back, not knowing what to say. She was too nervous to eat. When she wasn't stealing glances at Sam, she observed the house, its richness of detail and the scale of its rooms. She roamed into the kitchen, with its gleaming center island and ultramodern appliances. She had never been in a kitchen so beautiful.

She went through the bathrooms, each one different, wallpapered with varied colonial scenes. Other guests were touring the house as if they were inspecting it prior to a purchase. She went up the back stairs to the bedrooms, which looked eerily similar to the way she had pictured them in her fantasy, including the master bedroom with its canopied king-size bed and high mattress, which was accessed with a wooden step sitting beside the bed. The bedroom was huge, taking up the entire rear of the house.

Across from the bed was a nest of photographs in silver frames, depicting past generations, and Anne: Anne with two children, Anne in a tennis outfit, Anne and Sam in Venice, Anne with the Pyramids in the background, Anne at the railing of a ship, Anne everywhere.

Grace was struck by the images of Anne throughout the house, as if it were a kind of shrine to the woman. It filled her with envy to contemplate someone so worshipped and adored by her husband, and emphasized the daunting task ahead for anyone who would attempt to fill the void in Sam's life.

There was a telescope facing out to sea, and beyond the picture windows, a terrace with a table shaded by a colorful umbrella. There were two chairs; this was the place in her fantasies where they had breakfast and nightcaps, just as she had pictured it. The accuracy was unnerving.

Along one wall of the bedroom was a closet with floor-to-ceiling sliding doors. Opening one door, she took a peek inside. It was a walk-in with racks of women's clothes, all products from famous designers. They hung in two rows circling around the carpeted space. Above them on a shelf were endless pairs of shoes. She had never seen or even imagined a closet this big. It looked like a dry-cleaning store.

Grace heard footsteps approaching, so she closed the door and passed into the upper hallway. Moving through guest rooms that opened off the corridor, she saw that each room and bath was individually designed. Wherever she looked, oil paintings hung on the walls and the furniture seemed to be genuine antiques. In her mind she chose one of the rooms for Jackie.

Yes, I can be the chatelaine of this house.

She moved quickly down the stairs and headed for the living room, where Sam Goodwin was sitting. She stopped only briefly to take a glass of champagne off a silver tray, which she swallowed in one gulp. Then she took another. Ready for action, she inspected the area. Men shook Sam's hand and women bent to kiss him on the cheek. His son and daughter sat on the other side of the room, guests around them in clusters.

Grace moved forward, and suddenly she was in front of him, her eyes gazing into his. Sam's were bright blue and teary. He smiled and took her hand and held it between both of his. His touch was electric.

"I haven't had the pleasure, Mr. Goodwin. I'm Grace Sorentino. I was a friend of Anne's. She was wonderful. A truly great woman."

"Thank you so much," Sam said, his voice slightly hoarse. "I'll miss her."

"We worked together… on various charities. The homeless especially."

"That was her mission," Sam Goodwin said, still holding her hand. "To help others."

"I don't know if this is the appropriate moment…," Grace began. She felt her voice waver, cleared her throat, then managed to speak again. He must have taken this action as the beginning of a good cry, because he patted her hand in a comforting gesture.

"I know how you feel, Grace."

He remembered my name, she thought joyfully.

"Everyone loved Anne," he said.

"She mentioned something, Mr. Goodwin."

"Please. Call me Sam."

"Sam."

"What did she mention?"

"It was about her clothes. Your wife said that she wanted to donate her clothes to charity. I don't know if she put it in writing, but…."

"Of course," he said. "What use do I have for her clothes? My children will go through them and take what they want. Frankly, Grace, I don't think I could bear to look at them ever again. Yes, by all means, keep her promise."

"I assure you that we'll take care of it with the least amount of pain to you."

"I suppose time will take care of the memories." Sam sighed. "We had great times together."

"She was the best there was," Grace said.

Sam finally released her hand. "You're so sweet to come," he said.

"Thank you so much, Sam. Anne would be overjoyed. I'll… I'll stop by in a few days."

"The sooner the better."

Grace immediately decided she would wait two days. Satisfied and elated, she roamed through the house again. A new sense of proprietary interest seemed to bring subtle changes in her attitude toward the house. It bothered her suddenly to see some of the guests being careless with Sam's possessions. Someone had knocked over a Waterford crystal glass, cracking it, while someone else had leaned against a framed Catlin print, moving it awry. She quickly straightened it. In the dining room, a slice of cake had fallen to the oak floor. There was red sauce on an Oriental rug.

Despite the solemnity of the occasion the din of conversation naturally reached a crescendo. She threaded her way through the crowd to the patio that led to the beachside pool. At the far end was an ornate fountain, which directed its waters into a spill that fed into the turquoise pool.

She surveyed the house from the rear, taking in the details of the stonework and how it complemented the dark timbers of the Tudor styling.

How could anyone want anything more than this? she thought. What an unfair stroke of fate for Anne to have left all this behind.

Grace moved back into the house, heading for the living room to steal another look at Sam Goodwin. Perhaps they would make eye contact. He might nod, mime her name from a distance.

She saw him sitting in the same chair as before, his legs crossed, his head tilted upward to meet the gaze of the people still coming forward to pay their condolences. She willed him to turn his eyes toward her.

Notice me! she cried silently. Notice me!

Then, miraculously, he did. She sensed a moment of connection, as if they were physically touching. Fate is doing its mysterious work, she told herself, feeling a trill of excitement jump up her spine.

"Grace," a voice said from behind her. It was Mike McDermott, holding a plate piled high with food in one hand and a beer in the other. "Thought we had lost you."

"Here I am," she answered lightly, almost gaily.

He bent over her and whispered in her ear. "Party like this makes you kind of wish for more dead Jews."

She felt the anger rise from the depths of her, as if the insulting remark was directed at her personally. "You are a bigot," she snapped, conscious of the heat of her response.

"Hey, calm down," Mike said, blushing scarlet. "It's a joke."

"Not to me." She felt an overwhelming sense of kinship with the occupant of this house.

Grace looked toward Sam again, and felt like she had passed some test and put herself squarely in a new and once-alien place.

同类推荐
  • Could You Succeed as a Business Leader?

    Could You Succeed as a Business Leader?

    Have you ever thought about moving from an individual contributor role or management role into a business leadership role? Maybe it sounds like fun, but are you ready to take the plunge? Find out in this fun yet informative ebook that explores the ups and downs of business management. It also includes a short personality quiz to see if you have what it takes.
  • Before he Kills (A Mackenzie White Mystery—Book 1)

    Before he Kills (A Mackenzie White Mystery—Book 1)

    From #1 bestselling author Blake Pierce comes a heart-pounding new mystery series.In the cornfields of Nebraska a woman is found murdered, strung up on a pole, the victim of a deranged killer. It doesn't take long for the police to realize a serial killer is on the loose—and that his spree has just begun.Detective Mackenzie White, young, tough, smarter than the aging, chauvinistic men on her local force, finds herself called in grudgingly to help solve it. As much as the other officers hate to admit it, they need her young, brilliant mind, which has already helped crack cold cases that had left them stumped. Yet even for Mackenzie this new case proves an impossible riddle, something the likes of which she—and the local force—have ever seen.
  • Inspiration
  • The Caddie Was a Reindeer
  • Human Chain
热门推荐
  • 你比繁星更耀眼

    你比繁星更耀眼

    因一杯红酒,一代流行音乐天夭折于乐坛江湖...再次醒来却发现,一直引以为傲的天籁之音变成了破锣嗓,30岁的身体却回到了颜值的巅峰期!而没有娱乐事业的陌生世界,让江笙玖只能紧抱某总裁的大腿,开辟属于她自己的娱乐帝国!但这大腿似乎也不是白抱的...“小玖,我喜欢你很久了。”“临总,您等一下,我今年才19....”--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 黑袍剑仙

    黑袍剑仙

    林云在联盟最火热的虚拟游戏《三界》中渡劫失败,却意外穿越到和《三界》一模一样的仙侠世界。本为剑宗弟子的他,却被迫潜伏在万魔宗,成为一个光荣而伟大的卧底。“三年又三年,三年又三年!孙长老,我都快一统魔道了,什么时候才能回去?”林云无奈问道。这是一个正道卧底,一步步成长为魔道巨擘的故事。书友群:782588471
  • 梦之国:化魔渡灵

    梦之国:化魔渡灵

    几百年来,人界改朝换代无数次,到了现代,人们已经忘记了除了人族之外,还有别的族类的存在。而另一些族类也各自忙着提升实力,无暇顾及人类世界。但不久后,发生了一件事,打破了四界的平衡。梦灵族族长逝世,被另外两族所知晓,他们开始不甘寂寞,心中隐藏的称霸的种子开始发芽。自此,世界开始不太平起来......
  • 纨绔少爷之妖虐

    纨绔少爷之妖虐

    他日若遂凌云志,敢笑黄巢不丈夫。绝世少年化身纨绔少爷,解家族之密,战强敌,寻梦中神秘人,追大道。喜欢的朋友欢迎加群交流938044940
  • 孟婆汤无毒

    孟婆汤无毒

    我与他相知数十年,彼此守望相助,患难与共,人生路上的风风雨雨,由于两人同心协力,总能抵御过去,可是最后与病魔死神一搏,我们全力以赴,却一败涂地。白先勇【树犹如此】
  • 最强之军火商人

    最强之军火商人

    我若静下心来,世界都要俯首称臣!!每一个人都是他赚钱的工具。战争之王是人们对他的称呼。但他更愿意人家称呼他为商人,一个引领特种生意攀上巅峰的旗手!“我这辈子做过最有意义的事情就是,将洛克.马丁拉下神坛!”—《世界人物周刊》。
  • 惊世俏巫医

    惊世俏巫医

    她是弃婴,废材,一个历经劫难的小女生。他是全球最顶尖的霸主,真容绝美,传承神秘,多变的身份和面孔让人无法捕捉他迷样的行踪和内心。当她的清澈对上他的深邃,便注定了黑暗和玄异世界从此风急浪涌!一朝激发潜藏血脉,她变身都市女巫,异宠来附,灵器来投,挥袖横扫全球玄异学界,谈笑传承黑道神医衣钵,在俗世和玄异界一步步走上世界的巅峰!从此,全球第一神医是她,修真教母是她,商业霸主、影视巨星的背后掌舵人还是她!阴魂、妖物、蛊毒、邪魔…管你是什么,是龙你给我盘着,是虎你给我卧着!西方玄异大佬敢来挑衅?先打过我家门童再说!——————————————————某日,小两口闹别扭……手下急匆匆来报:“老大,蓝小姐跟A国际集团少董结伴同游!”某男不为所动:“无妨。10分钟后A的股票会大跌,他们立刻回来。”又某日,手下又急报:“老大,蓝小姐跟肖少正在情侣岛共进烛光晚餐!”某男淡定自若:“知道了,5分钟后他的特种训练基地会被轰炸,他吃不下。”又某日,手下又急报:“老大,某国际红牌偶像男星向蓝小姐求爱!”某男爱理不理:“你见过世上有比你老大我更美更强的男人么?”再某日,一份报告直接铺陈在桌案上,某男的脸黑得要杀人:“安排下去,我暂时离开一个月,让兄弟们各自守好本分。”“老大,你去哪里?”“废话!当然是去管教那个小巫婆!”某男冷厉邪魅地一顿,“传令下去,以后没有蓝小姐,全体叫大嫂!”——————————————————本文一对一,男女主身心干净,亲们放心入坑!
  • 神偷毒后之嫁个皇帝是傻子

    神偷毒后之嫁个皇帝是傻子

    21世纪美女神偷,冷清锁本来想着完成最后一笔交易后就金盆洗手,可是她不过是睡了一觉,醒来后竟到了一个陌生的地方。冷清锁与某只美男大眼瞪小眼的对视着。突然美男捏着她的小脸大笑起来:“太好了,朕的皇后又活过来了!”冷清锁看着眼前的美男,心中一万只草泥马奔腾而过,丫的,她穿越了?而且还成了皇后?不过这皇帝的脑子好像有问题啊!从此冷清锁走上了一条漫漫逃跑路,可是也就怪了,为什么她每次逃跑都能被这傻子给抓住?“皇后,你偷了东西还想逃跑?”“胡说,老娘早就金盆洗手了。”“那你偷了朕的心要怎么算?”殊不知,在她想着逃跑的时候,他却在一步步算计着该如何把她绑在身边……(男强女强,宠文,1v1)
  • 陈万水名单

    陈万水名单

    姐姐凤玉的身后是弟弟映冰。两人一前一后,都在爬。后半夜那场雨,只是淋湿了地皮,路面恰好软滑,适宜爬行。但是,只爬了五六米,映冰就埋下头,没动静了。凤玉也停下来,把脸歪在手背上喘着气。几分钟后,凤玉想起自己是姐姐,就咬咬牙再度爬起来。她用脚尖敲敲地,映冰却毫无反应。她想,坏了,映冰的丝断了,先是爸爸的丝断了,再是弟弟的丝断了,看样子男人的丝才是丝,说断就断。她打算先回家给妈妈说一声,然后再出来。这时映冰抬起头对她一笑,笑容里沾了几片泥巴。两人重新向前爬,显得颇有信心。他们知道苜蓿地并不远,爬出巷道,向北一拐就到了。
  • 幸福就在人生的后花园

    幸福就在人生的后花园

    忙碌的都市人,抱怨生活,抱怨工作。怀念过去的美好,希冀未来的自在,唯独忘了活在当下。每个人都在追求幸福,渴望快乐,但却陷入烦恼的泥沼、欲望的深渊,舍不得、放不开。其实快乐就在你的内心,就在当下。本书从舍得、宽心两方面,交给你修炼快乐心灵的秘诀,指引你活在幸福的当下。