much nicer out at the seashore today," she said as she
   took off her hat and coat. "There, the sky is all blue,"
   she added and threw her fur coat over one of the
   Rococo chairs. "But it's always blue there to me, even
   when it's gray," she whispered, making her sentence
   sound like the words from a love song.
   Then, still wearing her fur cap, she fell back
   over her bed and flung her arms to her sides as she
   bounced on the mattress. I had never seen her so
   cheerful. She seemed years younger, more like one of
   my girlfriends, silly and full of giggles. Her eyes were
   twinkling as she smiled up at the ceiling. I stood there
   speechless, staring down at her. Could it be that she
   was unaware Daddy had told me everything? "Daddy told me about your telegram," I blurted. She looked up at me, her smile slowly fading,
   the glimmer in her eyes dying. The vigor and
   brightness lifted from her face. It was as if she were
   coming back to earth, back to reality. Her eyes grew
   cold, her mouth tight. She took a deep breath and sat
   up slowly and with great effort. Then she took off her
   cap, unpinned her hair and shook her head to let the
   strands fall free.
   "He was supposed to leave it to me to tell you,"
   she said with remarkable calmness. "But I'm not
   surprised. I'm sure he put it all horribly, making it
   sound like the failure of some business venture. What
   did he tell you, our marriage was bankrupt?" "Oh no, Momma, Daddy is heartbroken," I
   cried. She smirked and got up to go to her vanity
   table. "Did you really go to Mexico and get a divorce?" Some stupid childish part of me was still
   hoping beyond hope that perhaps it wasn't all true. "Yes, Leigh, I did. And I'm not sorry." Her
   words felt like needles being poked in all over my
   body.
   "But why did you do it? How can you do it?" I
   screamed, enraged at my mother. I hated how little
   she seemed to care about how I was affected by her
   selfish decision. She sat down and turned to me. "Leigh, I was hoping you would be adult about
   all this now," she said calmly, but firmly. "I have been
   wanting to do this for some time, but I held off until I
   thought you were old enough to deal with it on a
   mature level. I've gone through months, years of
   added suffering just so you would be old enough to
   understand when I took this action," she added and
   shook her head as if she had just slipped out from
   under some terribly heavy load.
   "Well I don't understand," I snapped. "I'll never
   understand. Never." I hoped that my words fell like
   daggers. She pulled her shoulders back and her eyes
   widened with fire.
   "Exactly what did your father tell you?" "That you left us to think things over and he
   received a telegram from you that you had flown to
   Mexico to get a divorce."
   "And did he tell you why?"
   "He said you were very disappointed in him
   and you were still young and wanted a chance to be
   happy. But why can't you be happy with Daddy?" I
   moaned.
   "Now Leigh, you've got to try to understand my
   point of view. It should be easier for you to
   understand now that you are becoming a woman
   yourself.
   "You don't know, you can't imagine what it's
   been like for me these last few years. Whenever your
   father takes me on one of his cruises it's been because
   he wanted to make an impression . . to use me for his
   own advantage. I've felt like a caged bird, encased in a
   gilded cage, yes, but nevertheless, imprisoned." Imprisoned? What did she mean? She could
   come and go as she wanted, buy whatever she wanted,
   do whatever she wanted. We had such a beautiful
   home, I couldn't imagine anyone thinking of it as a
   prison.
   "The other passengers pity me, Leigh. I see it in
   their faces." She threaded her fingers through her hair
   madly. "They know I rarely do what they can do
   anytime they want. I hate their pity! I hate it!" She clenched her hands into small fists and pounded the
   tops of her thighs.
   "It's been this way for years and years and I've
   tried to keep my sanity just so you would grow up in a
   happy home, but I can't sacrifice any more. I won't! I
   won't give up what is so precious and fleeting--my
   youth and my beauty. I won't wilt away like some
   flower closed off from the sun.
   "I belong out there on the dance floors, at the
   operas and the theater, at the seashore resorts, at the
   parties with my picture being taken for the society
   pages.
   "Do you have any idea how many affairs I had
   to miss because your father was too busy to attend?
   Do you?" She then took a breath. Her face was scarlet
   and her eyes were screwed so tight that I was
   frightened. I was stunned by her outburst. Never had I
   imagined she harbored such resentment and despair. I wanted to hate her for what she was doing to
   Daddy and to me, but seeing her in such a state, her
   eyes bulging, her hair pulled out, her face red with
   frustration, all I could think was that this terrifying
   creature wasn't my mother.
   "Daddy is sorry about all that. He really is." "I'm sure he is . . . for the moment, but tomorrow some crisis at his business will take up his attention and he will forget what has happened
   between us."
   "No, Momma, he won't. Can't you let him try
   again? Can't you?" I pleaded.
   "I have let him try again, Leigh. Many, many
   times. This didn't just start recently. It started almost
   as soon as we got married.
   "Oh," she said sighing and sitting back, "it
   wasn't so bad in the early years because you were
   born right away and I had you to care for and your
   father was very attentive and quite devoted to me. Of
   course, he was twelve years younger then, but you
   must remember, he was already well along in his
   years. I bet you never realized that he is old enough to
   be my father."
   The idea was so preposterous and strange that I
   almost laughed, but she didn't crack a smile. Daddy,
   her father? My grandfather?
   "His age has caught up with him. I admit this is
   all partly my fault because I agreed to marry him, but
   I was so young and so unhappy then that I didn't think
   of what the future would be like.
   "And your father made all sorts of wonderful
   promises . . . promises he has never kept . . . promises
   he can't even remember having made!"
   "But you were so in love. You told me so
   yourself." My little lifeboat of hope was sinking
   rapidly. Everything she told me punched holes in it. "I was young; I didn't know what love was
   then." She smiled. "But now, now I understand.
   Completely," she added, the brightness and sparkle
   returning to her face. "Oh Leigh. . . Leigh," she cried,
   "don't hate me, but I'm in love, really and truly in
   love."
   "What?" I looked back toward the sitting room
   and thought about those invitations. 
					     					 			 "You've fallen in
   love with someone else? Those sample invitations . ."
   I muttered, the realization falling over me like icecold rain.
   "You saw them?"
   I nodded.
   "Well you might as well know it all," she said,
   pulling herself up firmly. "I'm in love with Tony
   Tatterton and he is madly in love with me, and we're
   going to have a Christmas wedding and live at
   Farthy!" All at once the face that had seemed a
   monster version of my beautiful Momma relaxed.
   Then she smiled, her eyes filled with happiness. Even though I had anticipated something like this, actually hearing her say these words was devastating. I felt my face whiten and drain. A combination of shock and sorrow numbed my legs and nailed my feet to the floor. I couldn't speak, couldn't swallow. I think my breathing stopped and my heart froze. It was as if two giant hands of ice had
   clasped over my chest.
   "You must not hate me and you must try to
   understand, Leigh. Please. I'm speaking to you as one
   woman to another."
   "But Momma, how could you fall in love with
   someone else?" My mind was racing about, trying to
   understand. When I recalled the way Momma and
   Tony had been dancing together at the Bon Voyage
   Ball, every moment he held her there, every look he
   gave her had more meaning, had its true meaning. I
   had felt something when I went to Farthy with her and
   saw the way they walked together and whispered, but
   I had not understood what it was I had felt. Why is it
   the heart knows things so much quicker than the
   mind? I wondered. Perhaps I didn't want to know,
   didn't want to understand. Now, I had no choice. "It's not hard to understand why or how this
   happened, Leigh. Tony adores me, worships me. He
   says I'm like some mythical goddess who has descended from the heavens above to make his life worthwhile, for even men with all his money and power feel incomplete if they don't have a woman to
   love and a woman who can love them.
   "Love, true love, is what makes life fulfilling,
   Leigh. This is something you will understand, and
   when you do, you will appreciate all the things I am
   telling you.
   "Can I tell you more? Will you listen like a best
   friend, a close girlfriend? I've never had a truly good
   friend. I grew up with two terrible sisters who were
   always so jealous of me, would never tell them one
   good thing or share one good feeling with them.
   Leigh?"
   "I'm your best friend, Momma. I . . just . ." "Oh good," she said, her eyes taking on a
   faraway look. "The first time I set eyes on Tony and
   he set eyes on me, it was as if the clouds were swept
   off the blue sky. Everything became more vivid, more
   alive around me. Colors brightened, birds sang, and
   the breeze, no matter how cool, was refreshing and
   soft. I couldn't wait to awaken every morning and get
   myself to Farthy, just so I would be around him, hear
   his voice, and feel his eyes on me.
   "That's what love is, Leigh, true love." She reached out for me. Her words were so magical, her thoughts so wonderful, I couldn't help but step closer
   until she could take my hand and look into my eyes. "I knew he had opened his heart to me and that
   I had found a place there. Whenever he spoke to me,
   his voice grew so soft, so loving. There was a longing
   in his eyes that made me tingle all over," she said,
   confessing to me like a schoolgirl who had just found
   her first love. Only this was Momma talking . . .
   Momma . . . and to me!
   "Oh, I tried to resist at first, Leigh. I wasn't
   unfaithful to your father. I told myself over and over
   that I was a married woman, that I had a husband and
   a child to think about, but as Tony and I drew closer
   and closer, all restraint weakened until I could deny
   what was happening no longer.
   "It happened one night after I had finished
   working and had cleaned up to go home. It was a
   warm day, a warm late afternoon. He asked me to take
   a walk with him to look at the ocean. I hesitated, but
   he pleaded, promising to bring me right back: l-
   relented and we walked to a small hill and looked out
   over the sea. The sun was red and low, the bottom of
   it just touching the ocean. The sight was breathtaking.
   Suddenly, I felt his hand in mine, and when we touched, my heart cried . . . no . . . demanded to be
   heard.
   "I confessed my unhappiness to him, but I told
   him I couldn't just rush into anything. He was very
   understanding, but determined.
   "I tried on three or four occasions to explain
   things to your father, but he either ignored it or didn't
   really listen. His mind's always on his business.
   Finally, at the Bon Voyage Ball, I made Tony a
   promise. Even so, I tried to break it. I suffered so on
   that trip to Jamaica, but love will not be denied, when
   it is as real and sincere as it is between Tony and
   myself, and I knew at the end that I had to do
   something dramatic or I would pine away in the
   darkness like a flower.
   "Will you try to understand? Will you, Leigh?
   It could happen to you someday and you might need
   someone, someone you love and who loves you, to
   understand." She squeezed my hand and pleaded with
   her eyes.
   "Oh Momma. This is all happening so fast. It
   might not have happened overnight to you, but it has
   to me."
   "I know, Leigh. I appreciate what you're going
   through, but I'm going to need you to help me, too. I need your support and love. Will you be more than
   my daughter? Will you be my best friend, too?" Her eyes were glassy, tear-filled, but warm. I
   couldn't help reaching out to her. She kissed my
   cheek.
   "I'll try. But Momma, what will happen to
   Daddy?"
   "Nothing will happen to him, Leigh. Believe
   me. He has his business and that keeps him busy day
   and night. You'll see him and he'll see you just as
   much as you do now, which isn't all that much," she
   added dryly.
   I didn't say anything. She might be right about
   that, I thought, but still, it felt like a sword through the
   heart to hear her say it.
   "And Leigh, most important of all, will you try
   to like Tony? Will you give him a chance? If you do,
   you will see how sweet he is and you will understand
   why I love him so."
   I couldn't help my feelings. Every time she said
   she loved Tony, I thought about Daddy and how cruet
   it all was. To think of Tony made my stomach
   butterflies flutter a bit, stir from their restless sleep.
   As I sat there it slowly dawned on me, sank like water
   into concrete, that this was all Tony's fault. I hated
   Tony! Oh, why did this rich, handsome man have to
   come into Momma's life and sweep her off her feet so
   quickly and se completely? I wanted more than any
   other want to make him regret tearing my happy
   loving world asunder.
   "Leigh, will you?" Momma repeated, her voice
   a little desperate now. Once again tod 
					     					 			ay her wants
   would battle with mine and win. I nodded, "Thank
   you. Oh, thank you so much, honey." She embraced
   me, and I was so starved for this affection, so needing
   to be warmed by her touch, that knew that if she asked
   me now I might agree to anything.
   But, I couldn't help feeling cold, lifeless in her
   arms. It was horrible for me to agree to this. I was
   betraying Daddy.
   "And there is one other thing I have to ask of
   you, Leigh, one thing--a secret to be kept between
   two best friends like us, now, because I trust you with
   keeping it. Will you promise to keep it secret? A
   bosom buddy promise," she added, placing her hand
   on her breast.
   What could it be? I wondered.
   "I promise, Momma."
   "Good." She leaned toward me and whispered as if there were other people in the room. "Tony doesn't know my true age, even now, even though he has proposed and I have accepted. I don't want him to know. As I told you after we left Farthy, he believes
   I'm twenty-eight."
   "Won't you ever tell him the truth?"
   "Someday, but not right now. Okay?"
   I nodded, but wondered if they were so much in
   love, why was it necessary to lie? Didn't being in love,
   true love, mean you would have no lies between you,
   that you trusted each other so completely nothing
   could break you apart?
   "Thank you, Leigh. I knew you would
   understand. I knew you were grown up. I told Tony.
   He likes you very much, by the way. He talks about
   you continually, about how sweet you are and how
   much Troy likes you and what a wonderful time he
   had with you when the three of you walked to the
   beach.
   "Oh, I just can't wait until we're all together at
   Farthy. It's a dream life come true, Leigh. You'll see.
   You'll be a princess, a true debutante yet." She got up. "I'm going to take a warm bubble bath because
   I can relax now that I know my little girl is
   understanding and loves me. Afterward, we'll sit and talk and you'll tell me all about Jamaica and the things
   you did. Okay?" I nodded and remembered her gift. "I bought you something in the street market,
   Momma."
   "Really? How sweet for you to think of me
   even after I had deserted you like that. You're such a
   warm, wonderful child, Leigh. I'm very lucky to have
   you."
   "Let me get it," I cried and rushed back to my
   room. "It's not very much," I told her when I returned,
   "but I thought it was beautiful"