Summer 1995
I was twenty-five and I
was sure that Denise was the one true love of my life. Yet here she was, telling me with two weeks’
notice that she was moving to Italy. I
had to sit down at the news – the apartment we shared suddenly felt so much
smaller and hotter, even with the ceiling fan strumming its beat above us.
“But Denise, what about
the plans we made?” I asked desperately.
She went to the window so she wouldn’t have to face me.
“It’s too good of an
opportunity to give up,” she said. She’d
said that at least three times already.
The outside sun lit up Denise’s dyed blonde hair from my vantage point
inside the dark room. I slipped my hand
into my jeans’ pocket to play with the ring that had been hidden there for the
last two weeks. It felt dangerous to
have it loose in a pocket, but I had to be ready when the time came.
“But Denise, we just
renewed the lease on the apartment.” She
turned back to me, her face shining with light that didn’t reach me.
“This could set up my
whole career, Phil,” she insisted. I
squeezed the ring so hard I could feel the halo of diamonds digging into my
skin.
“Even if we break the
lease, what am I going to do? What job
could I get? I don’t even speak
Italian.” Denise’s eyes widened. She moved away from the sunny window, tugging
the curtain shut and darkening the room further.
“No Phil, you shouldn’t
come. You have a good job here, the
apartment, your friends…” I took my hand
out of my pocket and stood up, looking down at Denise. From this vantage point I could see the brown
roots growing in.
“So that’s it? You’re leaving everything to make yourself a
new life in Italy?” How sad she was,
looking up at me through her eyelashes.
“Phil, this is
important. I could do important things,
I could be important, working for a national news organization. You don’t know what an incredible opportunity
this is.” That word again, opportunity. Never mind the opportunity to stay, to be
with me. I left the apartment before she
had the opportunity to see my tears.
Summer 1996
When I met Angela I was
under no illusion that she was the love of my life. It never occurred to me that I might love her
at all, at first. She was decades older
than me, lived in a mansion, and wore pearls and furs. I was merely assigned by my company to manage
her financial affairs. I never dealt
with her husband – the money coming in was all from Angela’s long-dead grandfather’s
business so Grey left her to make the decisions. Angela talked a lot to me, but my company
never minded that a simple monthly statement review took an entire day. When Grey was away on his own business Angela
would have me over for dinner. She’d
tell me stories of her travels and I’d contribute by telling her about books I
had read about those places. Her
favourite place was Italy, but Grey would never agree to move there. Sounds sensible, I told her, moving to Italy
would only cause grief.
It was a hot August
evening when I got a phone call from Angela.
Her voice was breathless and frightened.
“Philip dear, I know
it’s late and this is terribly uncalled for, but I need somewhere to go. Could I come by your place for a few
hours? I need to get away from here.” It shook me to the core hearing her usually
composed voice so distraught. I agreed,
and had to give her my address because with an estate such as hers why would
she ever come to my small, dark apartment?
It was odd seeing her
in my living room – though she wasn’t a large woman with her fine clothes,
glittering jewelry, and regal posture she seemed too big for the place. I got her to sit down and brought her a
coffee, even though it wasn’t Cuban like she was used to. Finally, she told me what had happened.
“I came home from some
shopping, and went to find Grey. He was
supposed to be home, and I had bought some shirts for him to give me his
opinion on. I went all the way through the
house, looking for him and calling for him.
Then there, in the second guest bathroom –” Her voice caught and she
paused to dab her eyes with a silk handkerchief even though no tears dared to
leak out and smudge her mascara. “I
found him. Oh Phil, the tile was all
red. I didn’t even know what had
happened at first. The police said that
he’d been shot five times. They said it
was unnecessary; he was probably dead after the first shot, they were so
precise.” She dabbed her eyes precisely
again. I moved to sit beside her and
rest a comforting hand on her shoulder.
“There’s going to be a huge, awful investigation now. They have the house all taped up, that’s why
I needed somewhere to go. They already
interviewed me for hours and the press was waiting outside the police
station.” She gave a shudder and I
pulled her closer to me.
Summer 1997
The publicity and
pressure had become too much for Angela, so she realized her dream and fled to
Italy. This time, I broke the lease on
my apartment, quit my job, and fled with her.
I had been interviewed too by the police, though nothing came of it. Still, I heard the rumours and felt stifled
by the heat and oppression of the city.
And Angela needed me. I helped
her tie up all the financial loose ends from Grey, adding his business assets
to hers. More than that, I held her
close, closer than I suspected Grey ever had.
It was hot in Italy, but we lived out in the countryside where the
breeze blew freely and clear streams cooled our feet. I thought it was our escape, but one day I
came home from shopping (I didn’t have a job – I still didn’t speak Italian) to
find Angela with real tears running down her face.
I hurried to her
side. She handed me a magazine and I
looked down at the page she had it opened to.
The article was in Italian, but I could guess its topic from the
paparazzi picture of me and Angela at the top, with a picture of Grey inset.
“They’re saying such
terrible things about you, Philip. That
you shot Grey so that you could run off with me. They know everything about you – your family
and your old job. Philip dear, if we
can’t get away from it here, where can we go?”
But I knew exactly where I needed to go, because I had seen the name on
the byline – Denise Allegretti.
It was a delicate dance
to get Denise to agree to meet. First,
she wanted to meet in public. When I
refused, she suggested my and Angela’s house, but I wouldn’t bring her into our
sanctuary. Finally, Denise begrudgingly
gave me her address, a bright and airy flat in a trendy area. Like her flat, Denise was impeccable – there
were no dark roots showing in her hair today.
Even though she knew by now why I was there I still threw the magazine
down dramatically on the table.
“You’re big news,
Phil,” she said cooly.
“I wasn’t until you
wrote all of this garbage about me! What
are you doing, telling everyone my dirty laundry? Oh, and accusing me of murder!” My words came out in a jumble, not at all
like I had rehearsed them in the shower.
Denise folded her arms, her head held high.
“The public deserves to
know the truth. There were already
rumours back in the States, but then you and Angela show up here? What did you expect?” Her voice was so cold it seemed to chill the
midday heat.
“The truth? Denise, you’re working for a tabloid! That’s not the truth. For one, I didn’t kill the guy. And then you go and write all this personal
stuff about me, stuff you knew from when we were dating. What’s wrong with you? How could you do this to me?” Denise shook her head, strands of hair
escaping from her smooth bun.
“It’s important, I have
responsibilities you know. I need this
job, I need to be good at it. And to be
good at it I have to write what the people want to hear.” I started to interrupt, but she took a step
back and held up her hand. “And I didn’t
do this to you.” The coldness was back
in her voice. “You’re the one who ran
off with a rich old widow whose husband was conveniently murdered. How do you think I felt, reading that? I thought I knew you.”
We argued in circles a
few more times. By the time I left
neither of us were bothered about maintaining a cool exterior, and the heat of
our words matched the heat of the pavement outside. I thought I was saying goodbye to Denise for
the last time a second time.
Summer 1998
Angela’s sickness
progressed so fast I wondered if she hadn’t known she was sick for a long time
and hadn’t told me. It didn’t matter – I
stayed by her side as I had after Grey had died. I held her hand, I brushed her thinning hair,
I lied to her that she would get better.
She insisted on staying at home at the end even though the heat and
humidity made her struggle for breath. I
told her I loved her and I’m fairly sure I meant it. When she died, I was left to deal with the
doctors and funeral home workers who all spoke to me in rapid Italian that was
as nonsensical to me as it had been a year ago.
I came out of the
post-mortem haze at the office of Angela’s lawyer, who mercifully spoke perfect
English. He discussed her assets at
length, but I already knew most of the details from being her financial
manager. Then he pulled out the will and
read through a lengthy list of bequests Angela had made to various charities. She was very passionate about the Girl Scouts
– who knew. Then he turned the page and
read out that the remainder of her estate was to go to Philip Spry.
“Okay,” I said, and
gave the lawyer my banking details for the deposit when the estate was
settled. Then I returned to the home
that Angela and I had shared. It felt
less like home now even though I now was the sole owner. I started packing.
Denise called multiple
times in the weeks after Angela’s death.
I ignored them until everything was packed, then agreed to meet her the
day before my plane was to leave. I
suggested a coffee shop, but she didn’t want to meet in public. I decided it didn’t matter at this point, so
I invited her to the house. She looked
tired, but more unusually wasn’t trying to hide it under a layer of
makeup. I served her the last of the
Cuban coffee, then observed her cautiously.
“Are you here for the
scoop about Angela’s scandalous death?” I asked. Denise sipped the strong coffee and shook her
head.
“They didn’t like the
article I wrote about it. I got a new
job, back in the States. I think you’d
approve – I’ll be working for National Geographic. Not as much money, but…” She trailed off as though there wasn’t really
any other positive side. Her eyes took
in all of the packed boxes. “You’re
moving back too?” I nodded.
“I still don’t speak
Italian, so it’s not like I could get a job here.”
“Well, you don’t need
to work anymore, do you?” Denise asked delicately. It was true, and it was public knowledge
thanks to the scathing article Denise’s former tabloid had published in her
absence.
“I don’t know what I’ll
do,” I admitted. Denise took another sip
of coffee, then set it to the side.
“Well, when you’re back
in the States, if you want, you can look me up. If you’ve got the time.”
Summer 1999
I did look her up,
eventually. Unconstrained by a
workplace, I moved to Jacksonville for the summer to be with her. Even if all had gone well between us I don’t
think I could have handled another summer of constant, clinging sweat and
choking humidity. Denise was still
passionate about her career, but now she was also passionate about new camera
gear and expensive freelance trips to foreign lands. Angela’s money and Denise’s article were both
a constant source of unspoken tension between us. Some days I dug the diamond ring out of the
back of my sock drawer and twirled it longingly between my fingers. Other days I fished Denise’s article out from
the jumble of papers in a desk drawer just to look at the picture of me and
Angela at peace in Italy.
One day in September
the humidity had finally broke, leaving behind a torrential downpour. Denise was trying to sell me on a trip to
research Mediterranean diets to, of all places, Italy. I was having none of it.
“But the people there
are so nice! You’ve lived there, you
know,” Denise insisted.
“Yeah, especially the
reporters,” I snapped back. She brushed
back her hair, now dyed red for some reason, to gaze at me with a pout.
“Phil, I thought we’d
moved past that.”
“If we’ve moved past
that then don’t expect me to go back to Italy.
Angela died there, in case you forgot.” I didn’t often bring up Angela’s name around
Denise, but the pictures of pastoral countryside that Denise kept showing me to
entice me to return were too wrapped up in my memories of Angela to deny.
“Oh, I remember. I remember that the only reason you can do
all these things and go all these places is because the old woman you fell in
love with just so happened to be filthy rich.”
Denise’s hair had fallen back into her face but she didn’t bother
brushing it aside this time. Maybe she
didn’t want to look at me, or maybe she didn’t want me to see her face. Instead, I looked around the apartment. It was Denise’s apartment and she paid the
rent, but everything else was paid for by me.
By Angela. By Grey, even. The man Denise had thought I’d murdered, or
at least had found it expedient to pretend she did. I stood up.
“I can’t help it if I’m
lucky,” I said coldly. I left for the
last time again.
Summer 2009
I hit send on the
e-mail I’d been working on half the morning before finally turning to the stack
of new files my manager had dropped off.
Why were we still using thick files full of useless paper? Computers were supposed to have solved
this. I flipped through the first file
dispassionately. A rich woman, single by
the looks of it. Her name was Denise,
but the last name was Greenway. No
matter, there were plenty of Denises. My
eyes lingered on the date of birth. There
were plenty of Denises born in the ‘70s, but how many were born August 15th
of 1970? I started combing through the
file more closely. After flipping
through a stack of financial reports from the last company that managed this
mysterious Denise’s money I came to my senses.
I turned back to my computer and quickly typed in ‘Denise
Greenway’. She had a Facebook page. I clicked on it, and there she was. Denise was now a haughty brunette who
described herself as a ‘freelance photographer’ and had a profile picture of
herself staring down a lion through her camera lens. I closed the Facebook page and turned back to
the file. I was still staring at it when
Rodney arrived at my desk.
“Hey Phil, looked at
those new files yet?” He leaned over my
shoulder to read Denise’s name on the file.
“Oh yeah, that’s a good one.
Wealthy divorcée, more money than sense, I reckon. You good to go meet up with her and sell her
on the whole package?” I listened to
Rodney, then looked back down at the file.
I flipped a few pages as though I was considering my answer based on
Denise’s financial holdings. There were
a lot of Italian companies in the stock listings, none doing well. I closed the file.
“Yeah, no problem. Set up a meeting.”
I enjoyed your story, Vanessa. A nice mix of description and dialogue. I chuckled every time at “the last time again”. Very good.
ReplyDeleteThis is quite good Vanessa.
ReplyDeletePhil couldn't seem to keep himself from going back for more.