He’d also been thrilled with the house they’d found in the heart of the Garden District, on Fourth near Coliseum.
He’d been thrilled with fixing it up, spending endless hours in antiques and junk stores on Magazine Street. Talking fabrics and color chips with designers. Meeting with armies of landscapers, gardeners, painters, plasterers.
What hadn’t thrilled Richard was Diana’s snuggling close to him after they switched off the ever-so-charming lamps he’d chosen for their ever-so-handsome bedside tables. He was the only man Diana had ever lived with, so it had taken her a long while to realize that she wasn’t the problem.
She’d been crushed, then furious, and, ultimately, humiliated when Richard, and the truth, finally came out.
“Three years,” she’d answered Rob, letting him lead her onto the dance floor of the place out by the lake where nobody went anymore. Nobody she knew, anyway. “We were married three years from start to finish.”
Diana loved to dance. She and Richard had been like Fred and Ginger on the dance floor, one of the ways, she’d realized later, he’d seduced her into marrying him.
And why? Now there was a mystery. Richard had said he’d loved her, truly, deeply loved her, but—
It was a big but.
She’d been talking about Richard earlier today in her creative-writing seminar. Obliquely, of course.
Revenge was the theme she’d assigned the class for their next stories, and they’d spent nearly an hour discussing that primal urge: an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth.
One girl recounted her humiliation by a bully at summer camp, and how she’d stolen the bully’s diary and photocopied the juiciest pages, then turned them into mess-hall placemats.
There was talk of turning the other cheek.
Destroying someone with kindness.
And what exactly did that Bible passage mean: “Vengeance is mine, saith the Lord”?
It had been more than twenty years now since Richard had left Diana for Jeffrey, a lighting designer. At first she’d lain awake night after night, plotting to burn down their ever-so-elegant house, just around the corner, dammit, from hers. When she did sleep, poison, knives, guns, ropes, and bottomless caverns filled her dreams.
After a while, she’d rested easier, but she’d never forgiven Richard. She’d tried, but maybe she was too much her daddy’s little girl. She knew her dad had never meant the first half of that old lawman’s adage: Forgive your enemies, but never turn your back on them. When Richard was dying of AIDS, there was a little part of her that felt — not that she was proud of it, but there it was — Serves you right.
Diana had never married again. Not even close. Which is not to say that she hadn’t had her share of good times. This was New Orleans, after all, the country’s epicenter of good times. Laissez les bons temps rouler. Diana had dated quite a bit, in fact, keeping rather steady company with more than one beau.
But there’d been no one with whom she was willing to take the plunge — the risk of incurring that kind of pain again. Not that the decision was conscious. Diana had scores of rationalizations for avoiding commitment. Her suitors were too needy, too controlling, too depressed, too married to golf, too fat, or too just plain damned boring.
And they all drank too much.
Of course, nearly everyone in NOLA overindulged. The philosophy was you might as well drink, smoke, too, eat all the fried foods you wanted here in the murder capital of the U.S.A. Carpe diem was the general consensus, ’cuz any day now a bad guy might hit you in the head just a little too hard.
(In fact, just this week, there’d been two home intrusions in Diana’s very own block, one especially frightening, as the owners had been home, the burglars armed.)
Then there were the poisons spewed by the petrochemical plants up and down the river, delivering cancer to the water, the air, the land.
And don’t forget the surety that one of these days a hurricane would blow your house down.
Such fatalism was part of the city’s charm. That sense of living on the edge lent a certain frisson to the everyday, the humdrum.
Just like the part-time, no-strings (no-pain) pleasures of a handsome man.
As Handsome Rob had twirled Diana around the floor on that second date, he’d asked the question she’d heard a million times:
“How come nobody’s snagged you since?”
“Maybe I’m just too picky.” Her standard response.
“Picky? I can sure understand that. Woman like you, picky, that makes sense.”
Then Rob had flung her out with one strong arm, let her stay there distanced from his touch, his body’s heat, his scent — a mix of lime, smoke, leather, and sweat — until she began to long for him as if he were cool water on an August afternoon. An eternity, then he reeled her back in.
She’d laughed, trying to cover her yen for him. He was an adjunct, for chrissakes, and way too young.
Buckwheat Zydeco came on the jukebox with “Give Me a Squeeze, Please,” and she’d begun a step-pause-step-step by her lonesome.
“Or maybe nobody’s been able to keep up,” she’d teased.
In north Louisiana, where Diana was raised among the Southern Baptists and the even more conservative sects — Assembly of God, Church of Christ, Church of the Nazarene — dancing was frowned upon if not outright forbidden.
What was that old joke...?
Why do Baptists disapprove of screwing?
Because it looks too much like dancing.
There was, of course, the flailing around that the Pentecostals called divine: a kind of non-partnered floor-flopping punctuated by speaking in tongues and foaming at the mouth.
South Louisiana, NOLA its capital, was a whole other continent. In NOLA everybody danced.
“Can’t keep up? Oh yeah?” Then Clever, Handsome, Hot Rob had grabbed her in his arms and whirled her around the floor in one floating side step after another until she was breathless. And damp.
Then he’d taken her home and slid her right into bed.
Over her own thoughts, the drumming rain, and the hum of the streetcar, Diana heard a familiar voice from a few seats up. “I’ve got so much work, really, I’m ready to kill myself.” Pause. Giggle. “And a hot date with You Know Who.”
“I know. Me, too.” Sigh. “The work, not the hot date. But I’m kinda looking forward to doing that story for Banks.”
It was the mention of her own name that made Diana crane a look forward, and, yes, there two rows directly in front of her, she spotted the unmistakable red-gold mane of Amber Reynolds.
Amber would be the one with the hot date: a real dazzler, campus queen bee, and a bit of a bitch, but still, one of Diana’s favorites. Amber was a talented writer with a great eye for detail.
Beside her, Chloe McClain, Amber’s dark-haired, less attractive, and even more talented friend.
Diana was quite fond of both of them.
Probably going downtown to shop, she thought.
“I’m going to write about my wicked stepmother,” said Chloe, in that penetrating voice all girls seemed to have these days. Too nasal. Too loud. Broadcasting their business. “You know, about how I really tried when my dad married her, after my mom died, but she was so awful to me. Though she was sweet as pie when Dad was around. Then one day—”
The streetcar rattled on past the columned mansions of St. Charles, the sidewalks a tumble of concrete uprooted by dripping oaks. It stopped every couple of blocks. Thirteen miles from one end, Carrollton and Claiborne to its terminus downtown at Canal, though it was only about ten, the part of it from the university to Erato Street, just before Lee Circle, where Diana would get off to walk a few blocks to the auto shop. The trip would take forty-five minutes, more or less. Breakdowns on the streetcar line were more common than not.