"Would he have liked her?"
"Rachel? Oh yes. He would have loved Rachel."
"Unpretentious," Loretta observed. She was watching Rachel even as she spoke: arm in arm with her beloved, laughing at something one of Mitchell's old Harvard chums had said. "An ordinary girl."
"I don't think she's ordinary at all," Deborah said. "I think she's very strong."
"She'll need to be," Loretta said.
"Mitchell adores her."
"I'm sure he does. At least for now."
Deborah's lips tightened. "Must we, Loretta…?"
"Tell the truth? Not if you don't want to."
"We've had our happiness," Deborah said. "Now it's their turn." She started to get up from the table.
"Wait-" Loretta said. She reached out and lightly caught hold of Deborah's wrist. "I don't want us to argue."
"I never argue," Deborah said.
"No. You walk away, which is even worse. It's time we were friends, don't you think? I mean… there's things we're going to have to start planning for."
Deborah slipped her arm out of Loretta's grasp. "I don't know what you mean," she said, her tone making it perfectly clear that she did not wish the conversation to continue.
Loretta changed the subject. "Sit down a moment. Did I tell you about the astrologer?"
"No…" Deborah said, "Garrison mentioned you'd found someone you liked."
"He's wonderful. His name's Martin Yzerman; he lives out in Brooklyn Heights."
"Does Cadmus know you go to one of these people?"
"You should go to Yzerman yourself, Deborah."
"Why would I want to do that?"
"Advice like that's very useful if you're trying to make long-term plans."
"But I don't," she said. "I gave up trying. Things change too quickly."
"He could help you see the changes coming."
"I doubt it."
"Believe me."
"Could he have predicted what happened to George?" Deborah said sharply.
Loretta let a moment of silence fall between them before she said: "No question."
Deborah shook her head. "That's not the way things are," she said. "We don't know what's going to happen tomorrow. Nobody does." She rose from her chair. This time Loretta didn't try to stop her. "I'm astonished that a smart woman like you would put faith in that kind of thing. Really I am. It's nonsense, Loretta. It's just a way to make you feel as though you're in control of things." She looked down at Loretta almost pityingly. "But you're not. None of us are. We could all be dead this time tomorrow." And with that, she walked away.
This odd little exchange wasn't the only crack in the bliss of the day. There were three other incidents which are probably worth remarking upon, though none of them were significant enough to spoil the celebrations.
The first of the three, perhaps inevitably, involved Margie. Champagne was not her preferred mode of transport, so she'd made sure that the bar was stocked with good whiskey, and once the first round of bubbly was drunk she switched to Scotch. She rapidly became a little testy, and took it into her head to tell Senator Bryson who, along with his family, had flown up from Washington, what she thought of his recent comments on welfare reform. She was by no means inarticulate and Senator Bryson was plainly quite happy to be chewing on a serious issue rather than nibbling small talk; he listened to Margie's remarks with suitable concern. Margie downed another Scotch and told him he was talking out of both sides of his mouth. The senator's wife attempted a little leavening here, remarking that the Gearys weren't likely to be needing welfare any time soon. To which Margie sharply replied that her father had worked in a steel mill most of his life, and died at the age of forty-five with twelve bucks in his bank account; and where the hell was the man with the whiskey anyway? Now it was Garrison who stepped in to try and bring the exchange to a halt, but the senator made it perfectly plain that he was enjoying the contretemps and wished to continue. The man with the whiskey duly arrived, and Margie got her glass refilled. Where were they, she said; oh yes, twelve bucks .in his bank account. "So don't tell me I don't know what's going on out there. The trouble is none of you high and mighties gives a fuck. We've got problems in this country, and they're getting worse, and what are you doing about it? Besides sitting on your fat asses and pontificating."
"I don't think any caring human being would disagree with you," the senator said. "We need to work to make American lives better lives."
"And what does that all add up to?" Margie said. "A fat lot of nothin'. Is jt any wonder nobody in this country believes a damn word any of you people say?"
"I think people are more interested in the democratic process-"
"Democratic, my ass!" Margie said. "It's all lobbies and paybacks and doing your friends favors. I know how it works. I wasn't born yesterday. You just want to make the rich richer."
"I think you're mistaking me for a Republican," Bryson chuckled.
"And I think you're mistaking me for someone who'd trust a fucking word any politician ever said," Margie spat back.
"That's enough now," Garrison said, taking hold of his wife's arm.
She tried to shake him free, but he held on tight. "It's all right. Garrison," the senator said. "She's got a right to her opinion." He returned his gaze to Margie. "But I will say this. America's a free country. You don't have to live in the lap of luxury if it doesn't sit well with your political views." He smiled, though there was not a trace of warmth in his eyes. "I really wonder if it's entirely appropriate for a woman in your position to be talking about the agonies of the working man."
"I told you, my father-"
"Is part of the past. This administration is part of the future. We can't afford sentiment. We can't afford nostalgia. And most of all, we can't afford hypocrisy."
This little speech had the ring of an exit line, and Margie knew it. Too drunk by now to mount any coherent riposte, all she could say was: "What the fuck does that mean?"
The senator was already turning to leave, but he pivoted on his heel to reply to Margie's challenge. The smile, even in its humorless form, had gone.
"It means, Mrs. Geary, that you can't stand there in a fifty-thousand-dollar dress and tell me you understand the pain of ordinary people. If you want to do some good, maybe you should start off by auctioning the contents of your closet and giving away the profits, which I'm sure would be substantial."
That was his last word on the subject. He was gone the next moment along with his wife and entourage. Garrison went to follow, but Margie clutched his arm.
"Don't you dare," she told him. "Or I'll quote what you said about him being a spineless little shit."
"You are contemptible," Garrison said.
"No. You're contemptible. I'm just a pathetic drunk who doesn't kno"w any better. You want to take me inside before I start on somebody else?"
Rachel didn't hear about Margie's exchange with the man from Washington until after the honeymoon, when Margie herself confessed it. But she was very much a part of the second of the three notable exchanges of the afternoon.
What happened was this: toward dusk Loretta came to find her and asked if she'd mind bringing her mother and sister to meet Cadmus, who was going to be leaving very soon. The old man hadn't joined the celebration until the cake was about to be cut, at which point he'd been brought out to the big marquee in his wheelchair-to much applause-and made a short, eloquent toast to the bride and groom. He'd then been taken to a shady spot at the back of the house, where the flow of folks who wanted to pay their respects to him could be strictly controlled. Apparently he'd been anxious to meet Rachel's family earlier in the day, but only now, at nine in the evening, had the line of people eager to shake his hand diminished. He was very tired, Loretta warned; they should keep the conversation brief.