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Always and Forever Page 38


  “The test was positive,” the doctor said briskly.

  “That means I’m pregnant?” Kathy asked shakily.

  The doctor chuckled. “That’s the usual assumption. When you’ve calmed down, call my secretary and make an appointment.”

  She’d have the baby out in San Francisco, Kathy plotted. Noel and she would switch locales for a few months. But she showed so quickly, she remembered in panic.

  “She said yes?” Marge prodded as Kathy stared into space.

  “I’m pregnant,” Kathy said. “What will I tell Jesse? What will I tell my parents?”

  “You’ll worry about them later. Tell David!”

  “I can’t. He hates me now. This would be like a shotgun marriage.”

  “Kathy, you tell David. You’re giving him the greatest gift in the world—his child.”

  “But he hates me,” she said in anguish.

  “He doesn’t hate you. You upset his image of Julius. One of you has to make a move, and I don’t think it’s going to be David.”

  “I can’t do it, Marge—” But in her mind she was wavering. Remembering his longing for family. His tenderness with Jesse. That night in Montauk they had brought his dream into reality. She was carrying David’s son or daughter. Their child. “I’ll try to call him. Just get out of here and let me think about it.”

  Ten minutes later she was on the phone with David.

  “David, I’ve felt so awful about what I said to you up at the house,” she apologized, her heart pounding. “It’s haunted me ever since.”

  “You were right, Kathy,” David rushed to reassure her, and she heard the joy in his voice that she had made this overture. “I was wrong. Bella made me understand. But I didn’t have the guts to call you after the way I’d behaved.”

  “Come up to the apartment for dinner tonight,” she urged. “Jesse will be so pleased to see you, too.”

  “What time?” he asked gently.

  Kathy sat through dinner in a pleasurable haze. After dinner Jesse went off to his room to do homework. Lee cleared the table and stacked the dishes in the dishwasher, then disappeared into her room.

  “I’m so glad you called me,” David told Kathy while they walked into the living room. “I’ve been such an idiot—”

  “Have you seen the view from this front window?” she asked, all at once nervous about confiding her news. “We can see all the way across the Hudson to New Jersey.”

  “I only want to see you,” he said, reaching to pull her close.

  “David, I’m pregnant,” she whispered, her face radiant.

  “Kathy—” His eyes searched hers. “Our baby?”

  “Are you questioning that?” She clucked with mock reproach, knowing he was in shock.

  “This is the most wonderful moment in my life.” His voice was reverent. “I can’t believe this is happening. We’ll be a family.” All at once he was anxious. “We’ll get married immediately.”

  “It’ll have to be a civil marriage,” Kathy reminded. “I don’t have a religious divorce.”

  “The father of a colleague is a judge up in Connecticut. We can have him marry us,” David said.

  “I’ll need a few days to break the news to my family,” Kathy said. “About the wedding,” she laughed. “A week later I’ll tell them about the baby. Oh, David, we’ve waited so long!”

  Two limousines carried the wedding party to the judge’s home in Connecticut. Kathy’s parents, Jesse, her aunt Sophie and Bella in one. Lee, Marge, Rhoda, Frank, Sara, Noel—who flew in from San Francisco for the occasion—with David in the other.

  Kathy chose a gray velvet suit for the wedding, to highlight the jeweled bow that David would give her the moment she was his wife—as Alex Kohn’s mother had urged him to do generations ago. At her suggestion the bow now hung from a silver chain.

  Her face luminous with happiness—all those she loved surrounding her—Kathy stood with David before the judge. This marriage, she told herself with joyous confidence, would endure forever. In a brief but lovely ceremony the judge married them.

  “I now pronounce you husband and wife.”

  Kathy lifted her face to David’s. Tenderly he kissed her, then reached into the pocket of his jacket to pull forth the jeweled bow, restored now to its original splendor.

  “From my great-grandmother to her new great-grand-daughter-in-law,” David murmured and dropped the chain to which the bow was now attached in place about Kathy’s throat. “At last it’s home, my love.”

  “How beautiful!” Kathy’s mother leaned forward and inspected the jeweled bow with admiration after warm embraces were exchanged.

  “Where did you get that?” Aunt Sophie stared with an air of disbelief, then reached to turn over the bow, where initials had long ago been inscribed.

  “Kathy and I discovered it in a pawnshop in Berlin almost fourteen years ago,” David explained. “I recognized it instantly. It’s a family heirloom.”

  “Kathy said your family was from Russia.” Sophie was pale and trembling.

  “Aunt Sophie, does it matter?” Kathy was bewildered by her aunt’s agitation. “David’s great-grandmother and great-grand-uncle were furriers in St. Petersburg. His grandfather was born there, but—”

  “But Alex had to run from St. Petersburg after Czar Alexander II was assassinated,” Sophie picked up. “He went to Berlin. He became a medical student—”

  “Aunt Sophie, how do you know this?” Kathy was astonished.

  “I know the jeweled bow.” Sophie’s voice was strong with conviction. Her face radiant. “It was a brooch when Alex gave it to me. It had been especially designed as a wedding gift for his mother, with her initials on the back. When Alex had to run from St. Petersburg, his mother gave it to him and told him to keep it for his bride—”

  “Aunt Sophie, you loved David’s grandfather—that was the man you told me about.” Tears filled Kathy’s eyes.

  “My father insisted that I couldn’t marry Alex then, I must go to America with my parents and sisters. I returned the pin to Alex, to keep until we were reunited. I never saw Alex again. I never stopped loving him.”

  “This marriage was meant to be,” David said gently and leaned to kiss Sophie on the cheek. “Kathy and I are fulfilling the dream you shared with my grandfather. At last, the jeweled bow has come home.”

  Turn the page to read an excerpt from Cynthia Freeman’s Come Pour the Wine

  CHAPTER ONE

  JAPAN ORIENT LINES

  S.S. Eastern Pearl

  April 19, 1981

  Dear Kit,

  IT HARDLY SEEMS POSSIBLE that two years have passed since we said good-by, but what a time this has been.

  You and I have shared a great part of our lives together … perhaps the most important events. Now we also share the joy of two grandchildren, and I thank God that your son Mark and my Nicole were destined to give us that happiness. I received the pictures of our youngest grandchild, Eden. Need I say how full my heart is?

  I sit here devouring the magical sight before me. Today the blue Pacific is calm and serene. Her mood matches mine. Oh, dear Kit, if only I were able to articulate the gift of love that is mine, the joys and the wonders I have seen. Since we have been away I’ve had time for deep introspection and have definitely decided that this is the best time of my life.

  Last month I turned forty-seven and I have more vitality than I did at twenty-seven and surely a greater appreciation of what life is all about. Why do we fear growing older? I, for one, am certain that if offered the chance to go back to the uncertainties and frustrations of my twenties I would refuse. Love at this age is so much better, more gentle, more tender, the thrill—yes, and I don’t apologize for the word—even greater. The tempestuous urgency may be gone, but the need for love is just as great. And the fulfillment is greater, since nothing needs to be proven any longer. The time for testing is over, and now the years I hope we’ll be blessed with can be savored.

  I’ve seen the Taj M
ahal, the ancient bazaars of Tunis, the pyramids of Egypt, the shrines of Jerusalem, the beaches of Tahiti—but best of all, I have discovered a new world within myself that I might never have known had I refused to pour the wine of life. The world seems to move on and on, round and round. And if we learned the importance of moving with it, at the end we would surely be able to say we had truly lived, that the excursion had been worth every moment.

  My life is so full that if I sound terribly romantic, you are quite right. Yesterday we left Honolulu. It was paradise. We danced, as they say, ’til dawn, made love in the fragrant night, swam in the surf. The sensation of gliding between the giant waves is incredible. Who said second honeymoons aren’t better? I never thought anything like this could or would ever happen to me.

  I’m not quite sure when we will be home. Neither of us seem quite ready for that, but eventually home we must go, and when we do, these memories will be stored away in a very safe place where few are permitted—in my heart. Until the next port of call, dearest Kit, as always I remain with abounding love,

  Janet

  Janet put down the letter case and lay back in her deck chair to gaze out into the glorious mixture of sun and sea in the distance. Closing her eyes, she gave way to total relaxation. Why were people so frightened of growing older, more mature, she wondered? Between youth and middle age there should be no cul-de-sacs, no blind alleys. Getting on with life should merely be a continuing process, but somehow people were not prepared. What a pity. It should have been taught from the cradle that youth was a temporary condition from which one recovered. No, if Janet were offered the chance to relive the frustrations and uncertainties of being young again she would reject it. Indeed, she would.

  Her memory wandered back through time, back to 1953. She could remember so vividly that eager, excited, naive nineteen-year-old Janet Stevens, late of Wichita, Kansas, standing at the airport saying a tearful good-by to her mother and father, family and friends. How pathetic and unsure she had looked as she boarded the plane, holding a bouquet of red roses held together by the wide red satin bow and streamers in one hand and a large box of candy in the other.

  As she waved good-by from the top of the stairs it didn’t enter her mind how much this one special day would change her life, that it would never be the same. All she knew or thought about was that at long last she had captured what she had dreamed of for so long. She was on her way to New York to pursue the career she had been preparing for since she could remember. Janet Stevens was going to be a famous high-fashion model….

  The first night she registered at a hotel on 59th Street near Fifth Avenue. It was quiet and most respectable, and her mother had selected it very carefully through the travel agent back home. But what Janet really wanted was the flavor of Greenwich Village, where she could live the Bohemian life she had heard so much about. It would not meet with her parents’ approval, she was sure, but once she was settled she was sure her mother and father would understand.

  She woke early the next morning and eagerly set out to explore the city. New York was overwhelming and intoxicating. She walked along the streets like Alice in Wonderland, peering up at the tall buildings that seemed to embrace the sky. There was an energy and excitement that permeated the air. As she left the uptown area, however, and gradually worked her way down to Greenwich Village, her spirits began to fall. For all her fantasies about the quaint cobblestoned streets of the Village, the reality turned out to be squalid and depressing, unlike anything she had ever seen or imagined. The bearded and sandaled Bohemians she had envisioned were unkempt, ravaged-looking people who huddled together in coffee houses, reciting incomprehensible beat poems to a tuneless guitar accompaniment. Men wearing wigs, rouge and mascara loitered in the streets and doorways. Women with gray fedoras and pin-striped suits swaggered about, and prostitutes, pushers and would-be poets wandered the Village in a marijuana high. The street-corner musicians playing exotic instruments only added to the grotesque carnival atmosphere, and Janet began to feel panicked. This was a nightmare that she couldn’t escape fast enough.

  Frightened and shattered, she cried behind a locked door in her hotel room. Maybe she should never have left home … But to go back now would be too great a defeat. Her parents had asked her to wait a year or so but she had persuaded them that the time was now. It wasn’t just that she was eager to get started but also that a young age was basic in establishing herself as a model with a future. After all, it was a business in which one’s career lasted only as long as one’s looks.

  The next morning she looked through the classified section of The New York Times … “Lovely, sunny furnished apartment on West 53rd Street.” It sounded promising, but her heart sank when she arrived at the building that afternoon and the super showed her the apartment. It was dark and looked out to a faded brick wall. The sofa and matching velour chairs were a bilious green and the carpet, once rosy red, was now orange and threadbare. The kitchenette was barely large enough to accommodate a midget, but worst of all, in a way, was the grease that clung to the walls. The porcelain washbasin was worn down to the gray metal. The only redeeming feature was the rent: $65 a month without utilities.

  She returned to the living room, where the super waited impatiently.

  “Where is the bedroom?” Janet asked uneasily.

  “You’re standing in it.”

  “But … I thought the ad read three rooms.”

  “It is—a kitchen, a living room and bathroom. What do you want, the Waldorf Towers?”

  No, at this moment she wanted her wood-framed home in Wichita, with the crisp organdy curtains at her bedroom windows and the fragrant sheets that Effie ironed so meticulously and the rose garden and the porch and … Lord, why had she ever imagined she was ready for New York?

  “Look, girlie, do you want it or not? I ain’t got all day.”

  On the verge of tears, she said, “I’ve just come to New York, can I ask you a question—?”

  “So ask.”

  “Is this pretty much like most furnished apartments?”

  “Unless you want to move up to Riverside Drive or Central Park West. But this is what you get for sixty-five dollars a month.”

  Well, there was no debate. Of course, she could write home for a larger allowance … She had devised a budget that seemed enormous back in Wichita, but honor was honor—not to mention pride—and this would have to do until she was able to sustain herself on a slightly grander scale.

  Sighing, she said, “I’ll take it.”

  “Any cats, dogs?”

  “No.”

  “That will be two months’ rent in advance.”

  “But I thought it was rented by the month.”

  “It is, but I got to get a cleaning fee.”

  “I’ll clean it.”

  “You can do anything you want, but I still got to get a cleaning fee.”

  When Janet moved in, there was little indication that the cleaning fee had been put to use. She bought a mop, a scrub brush, cleaning detergent, Bon Ami and window solution, then scrubbed until her knuckles wore through the rubber gloves. Her hands were raw. If only Effie could see her now….

  The first night she lay awake on the uncomfortable couch, listening to the dripping faucets and the pounding steam pipes. The tenant above her practiced on the piano until midnight, and she could smell the odor of cabbage and other unidentifiable delicacies when the painter across the hall clattered about his kitchen to prepare his one A.M. dinners.

  She cried herself to sleep….

  The next morning she sat in Schrafft’s, having a cup of hot chocolate. She felt alien and disconnected. Should she go home and admit she’d been overwhelmed by the reality of her childhood dreams or should she stop feeling sorry for herself and go to Powers to take the modeling course? The decision had to be made today since she was scheduled for an interview. You’ll get used to it, Janet. It’s just a whole new world you’ve entered and you’re not giving it a chance. Forget Kansas and the holl
yhocks.

  Janet sitting on her deck chair of the S.S. Eastern Pearl of the Japan Orient Lines, in the middle of the Pacific, could laugh benignly at the Janet of yesterday. Hard to believe how those two Janets had merged into one. How strange. When this older Janet looked back she saw in her mind’s eye that timid young woman of nineteen picking up her portfolio and leaving Schrafft’s with a million trepidations….

  She sat in the office of Miss Phillips, the director of Powers, waiting nervously while her stills were being scrutinized.

  “Would you mind standing, Miss Stevens?”

  She stood quickly and obediently.

  Miss Phillips gave her a long look from head to toe. “Would you turn sideways, please … Lean a little forward to the left … Now, would you turn around … Very good.”

  She was asked to be seated again and her heart pounded when Miss Phillips took out a folder and dictated to her secretary all the information pertaining to the agency’s requirements.

  Resume—Janet Stevens

  Height —5’, 7”

  Weight —100 lbs.

  Shoulders —22”

  Bust —33B

  Waist —23

  Hips —33

  Eyes —Almond-shaped

  Color —Deep violet to blue

  Hair —Thick, shoulder length

  Color —Amber to brown

  Lips —Sensuous

  Face —Heart-shaped

  Cheekbones —High and extraordinarily sculptured

  Contours —Reflect light and shadow uniquely

  Skin —Clear, transparent, bordering on alabaster tones

  Classification: Wholesome, sense of style and fashion, has enormous potential

  Summation

  Shy, but energetic and will evolve with sufficient aggressiveness

  Goals —High-fashion model

  When the secretary had finished, the director of Powers stood and extended her hand to Janet. “We’re very happy to have you with us, Miss Stevens. I have high hopes for you.”

  Janet almost fainted. And if this wasn’t enough to lift her spirits after her uncertain welcome to New York, after eight weeks of instruction at Powers, she was ready to sign with an agency. She was on cloud nine when she was accepted by Conover, one of the most important modeling agencies in the world.