- Home
- Howard Fast
Greenwich
Greenwich Read online
Greenwich
Howard Fast
One
At seven o’clock in the morning, the June sun, fighting its way through the curtains of Muffy’s bedroom, awakened her, as it did every other summer morning. She had long resolved that she would replace the curtains with impenetrable drapes, but as with so many other resolutions, it remained undone. How she envied women who could curl up under the covers until eleven and even noon! The dark mornings of winter made no difference. At 7:00 A.M. she was awake, and if she tried to remain in bed, she paid the price of aching limbs.
Mornings were the worst; each morning she faced a long and boring day. Unlike so many of her female friends, she played neither tennis nor golf. She disliked both, after having made a feeble try at both. When her children were young, they were at least a distraction if not entirely a blessing. The long hours she had spent at hockey and soccer games had bored her to tears. Her husband—her second marriage—was an investment banker employed by a Swiss bank, and if he was not in Brazil or Taiwan, he was in Switzerland. Her three children came by her first husband, and they were all in college now, spending their summers with her first husband in San Franciso.
In her thoughts, her husband, Martin—or Matt as everyone called him—was a disaster, visited upon her and to be endured. She had run out of affairs, except for an occasional assignation with a neighbor, one Richard Castle, who also lived in the Back Country of Greenwich, an area north of the Merritt Parkway inhabited by the great houses of Greenwich. She could easily get two million for her own house in today’s market and Muffy dreamed about selling it and moving to the East Side of New York, but Matt would have no part of that, even though one of her friends—one of a number who were real-estate agents—had assured her that in another few months the price would go to three million.
Most of her neighbors were involved in charity work of one sort or another, but with Matt’s constant anger at the taxes he paid, she felt that the government could afford to take care of charity and that to work for nothing was meaningless. Thus, this beautiful Friday morning offered nothing better than boredom. She could take in a midday movie, but while she did this occasionally, she always confronted the fear that one of her acquaintances might see her sitting alone, a confession of how lonely she was. She might drive into New York, but there were no matinees she desired to see on Friday, and her morning languor resisted the thought of a long drive through traffic.
Another empty hour drifted by when her thoughts were interrupted by the telephone. She didn’t rush to pick it up, thinking that it was probably Matt calling from one of the godforsaken places he did his business in. But it was not Matt, but Sally Castle, who lived on the next road.
“I know I shouldn’t be calling you now,” Sally said apologetically, “but I know you rise early, don’t you?”
“I was awake,” Muffy said evenly, waiting to sharpen or lighten her tone until she found out what this was all about.
“I mean,” Sally went on, still apologetic, “that it’s terrible to call you on the same day and invite you to a dinner party, but I know Mart’s away on business …” Sally’s voice trailed off. Sally knew she should have mentioned that she was sure Muffy had another offer or date for this evening, but she didn’t know exactly how to put it.
“Did you say a dinner party?” Muffy asked.
“Yes. And I hired Abel Hunt to cook. You know what a wonderful cook he is.”
Of course, Muffy thought. You’re a dumb bitch who can’t boil an egg properly, from what Richard says; but she said, “Abel Hunt! How delightful! Will Richard be there?”
“Oh, yes.”
“I do have another date,” Muffy said regretfully.
“Oh, no. I’m so sorry.”
“But I’m sure I can get out of it—you know, a sick headache and all that sort of thing. What time?”
“I’m so glad, Muffy. Will seven-thirty be all right?”
“Perfect.”
Muffy put down the telephone and said aloud, “Well, what do you know! How dumb can a dumb broad be?”
She stripped off her nightgown and stood naked in front of her full-length mirror. Not too bad, she thought. Her breast augmentation of two years past had given her the profile of a twenty-year-old. She was a tall woman, and with a tummy tuck and a lift or two, her forty-five years did not show. She was a good-looking woman, and she decided she would spend the afternoon getting her hair roots done. She was not as pretty as Sally Castle; who was five years younger, but neither had she been bought and paid for.
Sister Patricia Brody was plump. A heartless person might well refer to her as being fat. But most people who met her for the first time were taken by her round, pretty face and her open smile. Sister Brody was a missionary nun who had been transferred from Central America to Greenwich, Connecticut, and St. Matthew’s Parish some three months before, as it was put to Monsignor Donovan, for rest and recuperation—both of which she badly needed. Since then, she had gained twelve pounds and prayed daily for forgiveness for dereliction of duty and enjoyment of the peace in a quiet and lovely Connecticut town.
When she spoke of her guilt to her new boss, Father Donovan, a tall, gaunt, and fleshless man, he said sternly, “Guilt, my dear Sister, for something you have not done is totally wasteful. Even though there are no bullet holes in our church and you can walk down the street with no danger of being chopped in two with a machete, there is still useful work to be done. So I suggest that you stop asking for forgiveness, because there is nothing to forgive.”
She recalled that conversation today, on this Friday morning in June, as she tapped on Monsignor Donovan’s office door. His door was never locked, but she had never felt privileged to open a door, any door, and walk in.
“Come in, please,” the priest said.
She entered the small, simple room, furnished with a desk, a filing cabinet, and some chairs.
“Sit down, please, Sister.”
She seated herself and folded her hands in her lap, trying to recall whatever she might have done wrong.
“I need a favor from you.”
“Of course,” she said with relief.
“I have an invitation to dinner tonight, a rather unusual invitation. I would like you to accompany me.”
Sister Brody nodded.
“I trust you are in good health and enjoying your work here?”
“Very good health. I’ve gained—” She was going to add the burden of the dismal twelve pounds, but she thought better of it.
“People love you. I think that’s the highest mark of achievement.”
“Thank you, Father.”
“I’ll be driving there—it’s in what they call the Back Country here in Greenwich. So if you meet me at the front entrance at, say, six forty-five, we’ll be there at the proper time, more or less. We can talk about the problem while we drive. It concerns a young woman, and I don’t feel I’m equipped to deal with it.”
It was not that Sister Brody was in awe of the monsignor, whom she had come to know rather well, but the situation here was very new to her. Since she saw Father Donovan every day, she considered it somewhat odd that he should ask about her health. She knew that she had a sharp tongue, so his remark about people loving her was obviously meant to say something about the coming evening.
“I’ll try to be very diplomatic, whatever it is,” the nun said.
“Pat, that is not what I meant.”
She smiled, and the monsignor shook his head.
“What shall I wear?” she asked.
“Good heavens, I don’t know. What you’re wearing now. You look fine just as you are.”
“I’ll find something.”
“Six forty-five, at the church entrance.”
It had finally stopped raining.
Between five and seven inches of rain had fallen in the past six days, depending on which corner of Fairfield County did the measuring; and Herb Greene, sitting in his favorite porch chair—by tacit agreement with his wife, Mary, he did not smoke cigars indoors—lit his first cigar of the day and prepared to assault the New York Times crossword puzzle.
Mary came out to the old-fashioned porch, sniffed, grimaced, and asked why he hadn’t saved the cigar for after dinner.
“We agreed on two a day. This is my first. I suggest you look at the cane. You can almost watch it grow. It must grow inches every day. I meant to put a stick in and measure it, but I never got around to that. It’s odd that each year there are more and more things that I never get around to. Thank God it’s stopped raining. If this were a northeaster, every ten-million-dollar home on the shore would be awash. What’s a seven-letter word for complaisant?”
Mary, listening patiently and without irritation, did not bother to point out that he was a professor of linguistics; instead she said shortly, “Willing.”
“I tried that. It doesn’t work.”
Mary Greene was a tall, handsome woman. In Herb’s mind, it was handsome rather than good-looking or beautiful. Her features were strong and sharp; her mouth wide, full; her hair cropped close; her eyes deep set and brown. She had just turned fifty, her hair beginning to streak gray. She wore jeans and a cotton shirt.
“I’m going to get dressed,” she said. “It’s almost six. Do you intend to arrive in blue jeans?”
“Arrive? Arrive where?”
“At the Castles’—for dinner. Herb, what on earth are you doing? You don’t have memory lapses.”
“I thought we discussed that,” he protested. “I said I did not want to socialize with the Castles or have dinner with another damned investment banker or hear anything about bond spreads or IPOs or the price of sowbellies—”
“Yes, you said all that. And I said we had to go because I accepted this invitation two weeks ago; and out of love and sympathy for your wife and for the enormous mortgage on the town’s new library, you retreated.”
“I retreated. I always do, because I’m a mild and unaggressive man—”
“What! Please say that again.” She shook her head. “No, don’t say that again.”
“Now you’re pissed off.”
Herbert Greene sighed and placed his cigar carefully in the ashtray next to the chair. “This is still number one, the first cigar today. If I light it when we come home, remember that. Anyway, Castle’s an anti-Semite.”
“Oh, Herb, come on. Sally says she invited Harold Sellig, the writer. He’s dying to meet you.”
“Two of us. So it’s Jew night.”
“Yes, and since I’m going to be there, that makes it Catholic night. You don’t change.”
“What would you like me to change into?”
“I picked up both of your lightweight flannels at the cleaners today. You have a choice.”
“Bless you.” He rose and kissed her. She was five nine. He was six feet and two inches, a skinny, gangly man, with thinning carrot hair and a reddish beard turning white.
“I’ll shower,” he said. It was the ultimate surrender, and after he had gone into the house, Mary stood on the porch for a few minutes, looking at the smoking cigar he had left behind and thinking that she’d give a great deal for a cigarette at this moment. Well, she had not smoked for seven years, and she was never going to go through kicking the habit again. When he surrendered an argument, she always felt compassion for him. This month, their marriage would be thirty years old; and all things considered, she decided, it had been good as marriages go. She still loved him, or perhaps she nurtured him; and what was the difference anyway? she wondered.
Her son, David, camé onto the porch as she stood there, tall and gangly like his father, with the same orange hair and blue eyes. He had sported a beard in his junior year in college, which he had shaved off a month ago. Now he kissed her perfunctorily and stared at the cigar.
“Talked him out of it? Can I take it and finish it? It’s a shame to waste it.”
“No, you cannot.”
“OK, OK, just asking.”
“Do you want dinner? The fridge is full.”
“You’re not eating at home?”
“No, we’re dining with the Castles.”
“Oh?”
“What does that mean?”
“Nothing, nothing at all. You’re touchy.”
“Am I?” Then she realized that he was quite right. “Well, perhaps. We had a few words about the Castles.”
David nodded.
“And you’re not to add to it. Do you have a date tonight?”
“I’m taking Nellie to dinner. I have seven dollars left out of my week’s pay, which creates a problem. Now, if you’re in the mood to negotiate a small loan?”
“I’m not.”
“Heart of stone,” he muttered. “Who’s going to be at the Castles’?”
“Harold Sellig, among others. That’s how I got your dad to agree.”
“Mom, work me in, please. I’ll bring Nellie. I’ve been looking for Sellig’s new book, The Assassin, ever since I first read the early draft he sent Dad. I’ve called Diane’s Books and I’ve driven the old gentleman at Just Books half crazy. Two bookstores in a town of this size, and both of them small—can you imagine? Now, if I can talk to Sellig—”
“It’s not my dinner party, and from what I hear the book hasn’t been published yet.”
“I wonder why? Anyway, how about tonight?”
“No way. Forget it,” she said firmly.
Mary kissed him, and then she went into the house and upstairs to change. Herb was tucking the tails of a blue striped shirt into his gray flannels.
Searching through her closet for a dress to wear that evening, she told Herb of her conversation with David. “What shall I wear?” she wondered.
“Anything you can cover with a sweater. They keep that stupid house of theirs cold as an igloo. So he’s going out with Nellie Kadinsky. She’s something.”
“She’s a decent, hardworking young woman. And what’s ‘something’?”
“Blond hair, real; blue eyes, cute.”
“I hate that word. Oh, never mind, forgive me. I have nothing to wear. You know, Herb, I’ve gone through life being a ‘non-cute,’ to coin a word.”
“Have I ever complained?”
“Teachers don’t wear dresses.” She held up a pink dress. “Do you like this? He tried to touch me for a loan, claims he has only seven dollars for his date tonight. The boy’s a senior at Harvard, almost top of his class; and they pay him six dollars an hour to scrape barnacles and paint boats.”
“That’s good pay,” Herb said. “More than I ever got at his age.”
He studied his wife as she slipped into the pink dress. It was loose and very simple, hanging from her shoulders, gathered with a sash at the waist. He enjoyed watching her, seeing her, being around her—never entirely used to the fact that she had put up with him for thirty years, good years most of them, put up with his cigars, his cantankerous nature, his bitter wit, his unwillingness to have more than two children, his refusal at the very beginning to be married by a priest, his agnosticism—and for all of that, he had agreed, with almost no argument that she could raise both their children as Catholics, though David now chose to be a Jew. He bridled when someone compared her to the Kennedy women; he had no love for the Kennedys, but she did have the same high-bridged, strong nose and jaw, the same almost-ebony eyes and hair and long-boned frame; and he believed firmly that she and all the other black Irish were descended from the Spanish sailors stranded on their shore when the Armada was destroyed. He had corresponded with a noted Spanish historian, who held that there was no one in Spain who did not have a cupful of Jewish blood, even though as a linguist he was an enemy of that kind of thinking and as a Jew he was lackadaisical at best and immune to all of Mary’s arguments that a man could not live properly with no religion at
all. When he first met her, at an undergraduate mixer at Harvard, she had said, “I’m Mary O’Brien,” to which he responded, “I’m Herb Greene, and I’m Jewish,” to which she said, “Thank God, and I’m glad you got that off your chest.”
“That dress is wonderful,” he said, now in Greenwich thirty years later. “Absolutely wonderful.”
“I have a cashmere sweater that goes with it. You’re right. The Castles do live in an igloo.”
Two
Frank Manelli drove his truck along the Castle driveway and parked in front of the Castle’s four-car garage at exactly 5:30. The Castle estate, as Richard Castle liked to call it, consisted of only five acres, but the very large house that dominated that five acres was commonly known as The Castle in the Back Country. The Back Country in Greenwich is that part of the township which lies to the north of the Merritt Parkway. While there are several other enclaves in Greenwich where the very wealthy live, none are as large or as consistently wealthy as the Back Country area.
Manelli was headed for the servants’ entrance when Sally Castle emerged from the kitchen door, exclaiming, “Thank God, thank God! Oh, Frank, I was ready to put my head in the oven and end it all. I called you at ten, I called you at twelve.” She was bereaved, but not angry. Sally Castle was Richard Castle’s second wife, his trophy wife, as it was put around town; but if someone had called her that to her face, she would have smiled and nodded; she had once told Mary Greene she did not mind the appellation, although in truth, she resented it.
Sally was good-natured to a fault, and gentle. At nearly forty, she was still lovely to look at, slender and long-legged with strawberry blond hair that fell to her shoulders and fine blue eyes. Herb had once remarked to Mary that Sally had been gifted with everything but brains, and she was proof that one could survive very well in our society with an IQ of 90 or so. She had once whispered to Mary that she had never stayed in school long enough to take an IQ test and Mary had asked her not to mention it to anyone else.
Richard Castle had a son, Dickie, by his first wife, who had left him and the child for an adequate sum of money and a house in California. She told him to keep his money or shove it up his ass, yet she took it, spending most of it on liquor and dope. The marriage to Sally was now seven years old, and Sally still appeared to adore Richard and still basked in his approval. Sally was a Valley Girl, born and beach-trained in California, married and divorced in turn by a director and then by an actor. When she faced un-solvable problems or the minor disasters that on occasion daunted her, she fell into a pleading, beseeching manner that some men found irresistible.