Bright, Precious Days

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Bright, Precious Days Page 36

by Jay McInerney


  “It does have what the realtor called a ‘state-of-the art kitchen,’ complete with a cappuccino machine and a wine cooler. Could I offer you a glass of champagne?”

  “Yes, please.” It was something to do, a way of postponing serious conversation or action. She didn’t really know what she wanted and yet felt drawn to him, if only, perhaps, out of a long-standing habit, a Pavlovian reflex, whereby opportunity, rarely as it came, was inevitably seized. Given so little time together, they could hardly afford to waste any.

  She followed him into the kitchen area and watched him unwrap the foil and untwist the wire.

  “Don’t you have a friend who works at Lehman Brothers?” he asked, grabbing the bottle with one hand and the cork with the other.

  “Veronica Lee.”

  “Has she said anything? You know they’re on the verge of going under.” The pop of the cork seemed inappropriately festive.

  “Oh God, I heard something about that, but I haven’t had a chance to talk to her lately.”

  “The stock’s cratering and they can’t find a buyer. Unless they get a bailout, I’d say she’s about to be unemployed—along with thousands of other people.” He poured two glasses of bubbly and carried them over to a nearly invisible coffee table in front of one of the sofas, motioning for her to sit. “Do you own any stock?”

  “Not Lehman, but I own some others.”

  She did have a secret little portfolio, a rainy day fund she’d never told Russell about, at first because it didn’t seem worth mentioning, and, later, because it had grown just enough that she felt guilty about it, though not quite substantial enough for the down payment on the house in Harlem.

  “I’m liquidating a lot of my portfolio, and you should, too. Financials especially. This will be the biggest man-made disaster since 9/11.”

  “That sounds alarmist.”

  “Let’s hope.” He sat down beside her on the couch.

  She felt her pulse picking up, a flush rising on her face. “So what’s happened with the foundation?” she asked. “Will you keep it going?”

  “I’ve hired a new exec director. And I’ll stay involved.”

  As he was pouring her another glass of champagne, he leaned over and kissed her, catching her by surprise, hooking his arm behind her on the couch and pulling her shoulder toward him, kissing her gently as she gradually eased into the kiss. She wasn’t quite prepared for this and yet her body was responding without reference to her scruples, reacting to his familiar earthy scent as much as to the pressure of his hands and his lips. As he parted her lips with his tongue, she felt herself surrendering, leaning into him and pressing her breast into his hand, kissing him back, her body moving heedlessly forward along the rails of habit, unbuckling his belt and undoing the little clip in the front of his chinos, unzipping him without breaking her lock on his lips, while he, in turn, undressed her.

  —

  “That was amazing,” Luke said, afterward.

  “It was. I keep hoping it will go away.”

  “What?”

  “This…desire bordering on compulsion.”

  “Why would you want it to go away?”

  “Because it’s complicating my life.”

  “So uncomplicate it. Move in with me.”

  “Yeah, that would simplify everything. But where, exactly, would I put the kids?”

  He looked around. “It’s only a sublet. I don’t plan to stay here long.”

  “That would be a real aphrodisiac—you and me and my two children.”

  “You’ve got to make a choice sooner or later.”

  “Why? Isn’t this enough?”

  “You were the one who said it was complicated.”

  She sat up and started to gather her clothing. “If you’d stayed married, it would’ve been much simpler.”

  “Let’s go back to the Berkshires next weekend,” he said.

  “We just got back from the Hamptons,” she said, pulling on her dress.

  “Then the weekend after.”

  She kissed his forehead. Suddenly, she realized, she couldn’t wait to get home to her husband and children.

  —

  She hoofed it down Mercer Street, regretting her choice of heels, dodging her way through the drunken Friday night malingerers, pausing for breath at Kate Spade and setting off again before landing a clueless cabbie, who took her east on Canal toward Broadway, as opposed to West Broadway.

  She half-expected to be greeted at home by an accusatory daughter and husband, but in fact, the household was asleep: Storey in her bed, wheezing softly; Jeremy silent in the boy-funky dark of his own room; and Russell snoring in bed, manuscript pages splayed on his chest—a sight that struck her as almost unbearably poignant and blessedly familiar.

  39

  A THREE-BOOK CONTRACT DESERVED to be celebrated with a three-night bender—that was Jack’s feeling. Whether he’d ever complete three more books was a mystery he chose not to plumb too deeply. Highly unlikely at this rate. For the third night running, he found himself at the Beatrice Inn, sitting at the bar drinking vodka and watching the pretty club kids dance and snort and smoke. Cara had brought him here a few months ago and it had become a habit. Crazy fucking Cara, who found him any kind of drug he wanted and let him fuck her any way he wanted. Just last night, she’d gone down on him in the bathroom here while he was bumping up. But after two nights, he needed a break and had told her he was busy. He’d picked up this groupie girl at KGB and had had sex with her back at her apartment, but afterward he was still wide awake, and he’d ended up at the Beatrice. He was still trying to decide if he liked the place or not, but the fact that they let him in and let him do pretty much anything once there gave him incentive to approach the question with an open mind. Certainly low-down enough to suit his tastes, it looked and smelled like a dive. A smoky basement full of pretty, skinny skanks and hipster boys with clunky glasses and Chuck Taylor low-tops. Everybody smoking like it was 1948 and snorting coke off their keys, off the backs of their hands, off the top of the toilet tank in the bathroom, like it was 1984. X-heads with pinwheel eyes sucking lollipops after dropping disco biscuits. It was pretty much anything goes. Some celebrities, who seemed to behave themselves better than the party monsters. And old friends he’d made last night or the night before, including that painter Tony Duplex, who seemed to be on a tear after several years of—or so Jack had been told—yakking about his struggle against addiction. Here he was again, all dressed up in some kind of tight red suit with white winklepicker shoes that almost disguised how ragged and strung out he was—sunken eyes, dilated pupils.

  “Hey, Jack, whassup?”

  “Same old.”

  “You wouldn’t be holding, would you?”

  “Barely. I was thinkin’ about calling my man Kyle.”

  “That’d be cool.”

  “You got a place we could meet him?” To score the drugs and do them here, he decided, was just too fucking complicated.

  “Send him to my loft.”

  “Cool.”

  —

  Twenty minutes later, they were at Tony’s so-called loft, an entire building on West 27th, where he lived and worked. A bleary-eyed assistant opened the door for them, clad in a paint-stained chef’s coat. Several unfinished paintings hung on the wall, dozens more stacked in racks. Another assistant was sleeping on a futon in a corner, curled under a dirty quilted duvet. A yellow Lamborghini Gallardo was parked in the middle of the space.

  “Used to be a truck depot,” Tony said.

  “I should bring my truck here,” Jack said.

  “You got a truck?”

  “Back in Tennessee. Black Chevy Silverado 1500 Double Cab.”

  “You can park it here anytime.”

  A metal staircase led up to the living area, a kind of a mezzanine loft within the loft, furnished with antiques, Chinese porcelain and Persian carpets, except for the kitchen area, which was stridently industrial. Jack had called the dealer from the Beatrice, and wh
ile they waited for him, they snorted the last of his stash. Jack laid out the lines while Tony put New Order’s Substance in the CD player.

  Tony found a bottle of Ketel One and filled two faceted crystal goblets with vodka. “You ever mainlined?”

  “A guy’s got to have some boundaries,” Jack said. “I figure you’re safe as long as you just snort. You?”

  How does it feel to treat me like you do.

  “A little. Just chipping. Rock was my downfall. I discovered freebasing round about ’85 and that was my heaven and my hell. Me and Richard Pryor. Did it with him, too. The ritual of making it was part of the cult—it was a fucking ceremony. Dissolving the coke in water, adding the ammonia, stirring, precipitating out the impurities and finally the coke itself. That was the real deal. Nothing like it. Then crack came along, which was a kind of mass-market knockoff, an inexpensive shortcut, the Kmart version. But it was easy, it was cheap, it was insanely addictive. Making freebase became a lost art, like affresco painting.”

  “Whatever the fuck that is.”

  “It’s like wet plaster fresco painting. Giotto perfected it. Freebase—that’s like his Cappella degli Scrovegni.”

  “Whatever.”

  “Then crack came along and fucked everything up.”

  Jack checked his phone for texts and messages. “Maybe I should call him again.”

  “Good idea.”

  But the call went straight to voice mail. “Waitin’ on the man, part five hundred.”

  “I hate dealers,” Tony said.

  “Scum of the earth.”

  “Are you sure this guy’s coming?”

  “He said he was.”

  “How long did he say?”

  “He said twenty minutes. But that was thirty minutes ago.”

  “Dealer time. It’s like dog years.”

  “Don’t I fuckin’ know it.”

  “Did he say where he was?”

  “He said he was uptown.”

  “Shit, that could be anywhere. Did he say where uptown? Like Harlem uptown?”

  “Just said he was on his way downtown.”

  “You can’t believe any fucking thing a dealer says.”

  “Yeah, but what choice do we have, really?”

  “We could just say no to drugs. You’re probably too young to remember that whole fucking campaign. That was Nancy Reagan’s big slogan in the eighties. ‘Just say no.’ ”

  “How’d that work out?”

  “The drugs wouldn’t take no for an answer.”

  “Maybe I should call him again.”

  “Definitely.”

  Jack dialed again, listened to the voice-mail prompt. “Fucker won’t pick up.”

  “I know a guy,” Tony said. “But he’s up in Harlem, and we have to go to him.”

  “Man, that’s a logistical nightmare.”

  Tony pointed to the car on the main floor. “This time of night, it’s ten minutes in the Lambo up the West Side Highway, tops.”

  This sounded like a bad idea, but Jack was getting desperate, and he’d never let the fact of being impaired keep him from going somewhere to get more impaired.

  Tony’s assistant tried to stop them, but Tony insisted he was fine to drive and told him to crank the garage door open. Jack folded himself into the snug embrace of the cockpit as the engine roared to life.

  40

  STOREY HAD BEEN BEHAVING strangely all morning; she seemed agitated, on edge. Russell had roused Corrine, flexing that sense of superiority that accrued to the partner who’d gone to bed early, and requested her presence at the table, though he knew she didn’t eat in the morning. Storey was rude to her mother at breakfast, which seemed to be the norm of late. She was feeling kind of insecure about the new school, granted, but this had been going on for months. Russell had called her on it. “Don’t talk to your mother that way,” he said, prompting her to flee the table in tears.

  Later, after Corrine went out for a run, Storey marched out to the kitchen, where Russell was finishing the dishes, her lips drawn into a frown.

  “What’s up, honey?”

  “It’s about Mom.”

  “Yeah?”

  “She’s having an affair.”

  “What? That’s crazy.” Yet, somehow, he suddenly felt sick to his stomach.

  “I found an e-mail.”

  “What were you doing in your mom’s e-mail?”

  “I was looking for a scrunchie for my hair. Her laptop was open on her desk. I’ll show you.”

  Feeling light-headed, he followed her to the master bedroom. Corrine’s AOL window was open, and the most recent e-mail, sent twenty minutes ago, was from someone called Luke, with the subject line Last night was amazing.

  “I knew she wasn’t going to see Sandy. And I’ve heard them talking on the phone.” Her lower lip quivered with the effort she was making to contain her emotions, but finally she started sobbing violently.

  He took her in his arms, trying not to cry himself.

  “What are you going to do?” she eventually managed to say.

  “It’s going to be all right,” Russell said with paternal insincerity. He had no idea what he was going to do. “You say you’ve heard her talking on the phone to this…guy.”

  She nodded. “Luke.”

  He didn’t think he knew any Lukes. Stupid name. Was it better that it was a stranger? “When did you hear them talking?”

  “A couple times.”

  “Starting when?”

  “Maybe, like, six months ago.”

  “Have you ever seen him?”

  “I don’t think so.”

  “You really shouldn’t be spying on your mother.”

  He could see immediately that he’d disappointed her, but he was still living in a prelapsarian universe in which the old rules applied.

  Jeremy barreled in to announce that Washington and his kids had arrived. “What’s wrong?” he asked, picking up on the gloom.

  “Nothing’s wrong,” Russell told him. “Did you buzz them up?”

  “Uh-huh. I better go out and wait for them,” he said, running out of the room.

  “Let’s just keep this to ourselves for now,” Russell said, giving Storey a hug.

  “Okay.”

  “Go wash your face and then come join us.”

  As long as Storey had been in the room, he’d been able to treat this new knowledge as theoretical, but now it became physical. Finding it difficult to breathe, feeling nauseous, he sat down on the bed, hyperventilating. She’d betrayed him with a man named Luke. Was she really capable of treating him this way? Sleeping beside him while fucking a man named Luke. Lying to Russell, lying beneath a man named Luke. It was intolerable. Luke who—Skywalker? The apostle? Bastard. He didn’t think he could bear it. He looked at the e-mail again: Last night was amazing. Just four words had changed the course of his life, cast doubt on his most fundamental beliefs.

  Being married to Corrine was the central fact of his existence. After all these years, he’d imagined they were inseparable, their union inviolable. He went to the hamper in her closet and rooted through the dirty clothes, lifting a pair of panties and examining them for evidence before moving on to her lingerie drawer, finding the bra that had aroused Storey’s suspicions on top. He pulled it out and held it up by its straps. Did he take it off her last night, or did she take it off while he watched? In fact, he noticed that some of the lace at the top of the cup was frayed, as if it had been torn off in haste. He held it to his nostrils, inhaling the unmistakable scent of Corrine, then tugged at the lace, ripping half the cup open before regaining control of his emotions. The bra was not so damaged as to suggest vandalism unequivocally. He needed time to think, to consider his response.

  He heard Washington and the boys outside the door, chattering in a language he was no longer certain he spoke, or comprehended. How could he possibly go out there and pretend that he did? That he was the same man he’d been ten minutes before?

  On a sudden, malicious i
mpulse, he hung the bra over the screen of the laptop and walked out into the hall, pulling the door closed behind him.

  “Sorry to crash in on you, chief, but I have the kids for the day, Veronica’s at a meeting at the office, and I’ve flat run out of ideas.”

  Russell nodded, not trusting himself to speak.

  “You okay? I guess you heard about Jack.”

  “What? Jack Carson?”

  “Yeah, he…I assumed you’d heard. Jack and Tony Duplex. High-speed crash on the West Side Highway early this morning.”

  “Is he okay?”

  Washington shook his head.

  “He’s dead?”

  Washington nodded. “Both dead.”

  “Tony Duplex? How do they even know each other?” Russell was shocked, though, as the news sunk in, he realized he’d always, in the back of his mind, feared something like this would happen.

  “I thought you knew, man,” Wash said, presumably referring to Russell’s shell-shocked demeanor, for which, now at least, he had a plausible explanation.

  For a moment he considered confiding in Washington, but quickly discarded the idea. He wasn’t ready to share his humiliation. He couldn’t bear the idea of anyone else knowing, at least not yet. Perhaps, especially, his best friend.

  “Jesus Christ—Jack’s really dead?”

  “I wish I could say I was totally shocked,” Washington said.

  “Yeah, but still.”

  “I know.”

  “It was an accident?”

  “They were in Tony’s Lamborghini.”

  “Fucking lunatics.”

  Washington stepped forward and hugged Russell, slapping his shoulders blades gruffly. “I’m really sorry, man.”

  If he only knew.

  “So it looks like the girls want to go to a movie and the boys want to stay here and play video games. Big surprise. Anyway, your choice, coach. I have to warn you, though, the movie is Nights in Rodanthe. I’ve got an invite to a screening at the TriBeCa Grand. On the plus side, you have Diane Lane, but weighing heavily against it—the fact that it’s based on a Nicholas fucking Sparks novel.”

  Much as he wanted to get out of the house, Russell didn’t think he could possibly sit through a romantic tearjerker. Neither could he imagine seeing Corrine right now. He couldn’t honestly think of any activity or any known conscious state that would make this pain bearable, as the knowledge of all that had happened before Washington arrived came rushing back over him. Sad as he was about Jack, he felt he could bear that. “In that case, why don’t you go with the girls,” he said.

 

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