The Story
THEIR VERSION: For Cosmo Sinclair and Margaret Grace Ives, it was love at first sight.
โข โข โข HER VERSION: She hated him. She blamed him. She didnโt care whether it was fair or not. She went down to the library with the intention of eviscerating him. She threw open both doors, for dramatic purposes, and stormed into the room like a heat-seeking missile.
Heโd been looking at one of the many shelves of Geraldโs unread books, and when he turned toward the sound, his quiet smile was disarming.
She stumbled, just for a second, before resuming her march.
โHello, maโam,โ he said. โIโm Cosmo.โ
The Southern lilt of his voice surprised her. Sheโd heard the accent in his stage chatter, of course, but much of it had been buried beneath thousands of screaming voices, and what she had heard, sheโd assumed was
a put-on. An exaggeration.
It wasnโt.
โI know who you are,โ she said. Then: โWhy are you here?โ
โI came to apologize,โ he replied. At that point, she noticed the small bouquet hanging from his hand: a bundle of white lily of the valley, knotted
with twine.
โApologize?โ she repeated, befuddled.
He came toward her, his slick shoes clicking on the floorboards, and presented the bouquet, almost sheepishly.
Everything about him was a bit sheepish, actually. What could have passed for cool aloofness from a distance struck her now as shyness.
โI saw the paper this morning,โ he said, letting the bouquet hover between them. โFelt awful about what happened to you and your sister, and everyone else. Things got out of hand.โ
โOh, I see.โ She forced her shoulders away from her ears. โYouโre here
to kiss the ring.โ
His brows pinched. โMaโam?โ
โYou can relax. Our familyโs papers wonโt have any vendetta against you,โ she assured him, though personally, she couldnโt say the same. She wasnโt angry enough to try to tank his career, just angry enough to be rude.
He shifted between his feet, the bouquet falling back down to his side.
He seemed uncomfortable in his body, as if heโd grown too quickly, in stature or frame or both, and wasnโt quite sure how to move through the world. He looked younger than he had onstage too, so young that she couldnโt help but ask, in that seemingly random moment, โHow old are you?โ
If he was surprised or offended that sheโsomeone fan enough to attend the concertโdidnโt already know, he didnโt show it. Laura probably knew his exact birth date, his associated birthstone, what kind of car he drove, and what his dog was called. Not that Laura cared anymore.
โTwenty-three, maโam,โ he said.
Only three years older than her. It made his performance the night before all the more shocking. How could he look so at home on a stage in front of thousands, thrusting his hips and screaming his heart out, but become such a quiet, mild-tempered boy in this room with only her?
โI was raised never to ask a lady her age,โ he said, the tiny smile on his full lips surprising her.
โIโm twenty,โ she volunteered, for god only knows what reason.
He stepped a little closer. โDid you enjoy the show?โ he asked in that hypnotic murmur. โBefore all that hubbub, I mean.โ
His dark eyes shone with an eagerness that surprised her, as if the answer mattered very much. She wanted to lie, but she wasnโt a liar.
She settled on an obfuscation. โIโd never seen anything like it.โ
His smile twitched across his lips but faded quickly. He reached toward her, and she flinched for just a second before she realized he was merely brushing his fingers lightly along the edge of her bruised eye, a frown deepening the grooves in his forehead. His eyes flicked back to hers. โWill you come again tonight?โ he said quietly.
Her stomach flipped nonsensically as their sudden eye contact jolted her back into reality. โWhat?โ
โTo the last concert,โ he said. โPolice will be there this time. Canโt promise it will be a good show, but itโll be a safer one at least.โ
โOh.โ She looked away, and his calloused fingertips fell from her face.
โIโm not sure.โ
โYour sister too, of course,โ he volunteered. โWe can bring yโall backstage, where no one can see you. You can watch from the wings.โ
Her heart soared, only to crash when she remembered what Laura had told her upstairsโwas that really only minutes ago? It felt like days, weeks.
In a way she couldnโt understand and certainly couldnโt have expressed, Margaret felt as if the story of her life had been written onto a piece of paper sheโd only just now realized had been folded in half.
Now it was open, a full second half of a page appearing abruptly, with a sharp crease dividing this new chapter from what came before.
Lauraโs words dropped through her like a cold stoneโall heโll ever remind me of now is the night I lost my dearest friendโsettling in the pit of her stomach.
โLaura wonโt be able to make it,โ she said.
โBut you?โ The way his eyebrows pitched up in the middle, tenting hopefully, made something in her stomach feel like it was unraveling.
โFine,โ she said.
A smile broke across his face, bright as dawn, and he lifted the bouquet
toward her again.
This time she took it.
He won her over that night. Truthfully, that was all it had taken. Heโd come off that stage, drenched in sweat, and caught up in the thrill of it all,
when he strode purposefully toward her, sheโd pitched herself into his arms, intending only to hug him, to praise the performance. But as soon as his strong arms came around her and his heat and scent hit her, it was as if sheโd hopped universes. Moved parallel into one where the plan had always been to kiss him, just as his had always been to kiss her.
His band made a couple of little hoots and whistles, but the sound of the audience still cheering out in the dark amphitheater ate away at their teasing, and even if it hadnโt, she likely wouldnโt have registered it. Sheโd stopped registering anything but him. When he drew back, his fingers falling from her jaw, he took her hand and pulled her through the narrow backstage hallway, all the way to his dressing room.
โI donโt do this,โ she said as, together, they pushed the door shut behind
them.
โI do,โ he said.
โFine,โ she said, โI do too.โ
Because of that, she thought she was safe. Insulated. This would be one more wild night, a private story that would belong just to her, in a life that she largely lived as a worldwide broadcast.
It couldnโt be more than that, if for no other reason than she refused to
subject Laura to Cosmoโs presence.
So it was just one night.
And in the morning, when he sent her dozens of bouquets, each one a different flower, with a note that read Didnโt know what you liked. โC, she told herself that was just an addendum to the night itself.
Laura continued her grieving. Gerald had left her his fatherโs old journals, and all day long most days, she sat in his favorite chair, reeking of his cigar smoke, and read about the past, closing herself off from the future.
Margaret continued her life out on the town once her bruises had healed, and while some astute members of the press noted that the spark seemed to have left Peggy Ivesโs eyes, this change was always attributed to the recent loss of the โbeloved patriarch of the Ives family.โ
Margaret passed as much time as she could with her sister, but all Laura really did, aside from read, was sleep, with the aid of the pills the family
doctor obligingly prescribed.
Once the coverage of Geraldโs death had dissipated and the news cycle hit its first lull, the pictures from the so-called Rock โnโ Brawl made a renewed appearance in the papers. Margaret knew this because sheโd become obsessed with tracking them since that night. But she never brought the papers home. For once she was grateful that Laura was housebound, protected from the unkind things people were writing about her.
Still, one night, Margaret had walked past another of her fatherโs secretive phone calls and heard him whispering, โLauraโs not like you, Bernie. Sheโs not tough. She canโt handle this kind of scrutiny,โ and the shame filled her up from her feet to her head.
Three months passed since her night with Cosmo.
Occasionally he sent Margaret letters from his home in Nashville.
Letters mightโve been an overstatement. They were more like notes, short missives about things that had reminded him of her, or mentions of vague plans to be back in Los Angeles, well-wishes for her and her sister. He always included Laura, which cracked Margaretโs heart a bit deeper every
time.
She kept every letter.
She replied to none of them.
Gradually, Laura emerged from those first stages of mourning. Sheโd finished reading the journals and moved on to new territory. Books about physics, biology, philosophy, religion. Sometimes, she could be coaxed outside to read on a blanket alongside Margaret, with the makings of a tea party spread between them.
Margaret kept waiting to stop missing the man sheโd spent one night with. But when the letters stopped coming, she felt like a melon that had had its insides scooped out. She ached. She wasโฆlonely, like she hadnโt been since Ruth died, and before that, in those dark days when her parentsโ anger with and mistrust of each other had been so great that there was no room for anything else, even in a castle as large as theirs.
Three more months of silence went by. Margaret read about Cosmo turning twenty-four years old, about the raging, star-studded party thrown at
Chateau Marmont, and thought she might break in half at learning heโd been so close to her.
It terrified her. That one person could have so great a pull on her. That she could feel so much. That she could miss a person she didnโt know. She wondered if something was wrong with her.
Laura had become obsessed with a young, controversial psychologist whose book sheโd read. Sheโd excitedly spout some of his nonsensical theories at Margaret, one being that people were always the source of their own pain.
There was no logical reason Margaret shouldโve felt this kind of loss at being disconnected from a total stranger like Cosmo Sinclair, which for the firstโand, frankly, onlyโtime made her think Dr. David Ryan Atwood might not be completely full of shit.
But time moved on and she thought of Cosmo less and less, until finally she stopped thinking of him at all.
In 1962, four years after Margaretโs grandfatherโs death, one of Bernieโs films was nominated for an Academy Award. Margaretโs stepfather, Roy, never liked attending awards shows, so sometimes Freddy would step in to escort his ex-wife, but that year Bernie took Margaret as her date.
Margaret wore a silver gown, her hair piled glamorously atop her head, while Bernie wore simple black, as was her approach every time she found herself in a situation where a dress was more appropriate than her usual slacks.
Margaret felt more like herself that night than she had in a long time. It was promising. She and Laura would recover from the last four years, and things would go back to normal. That page would be refolded along its crease, and she would continue wandering through her sumptuous, extravagant, fun life.
She talked, she flirted, she drank, she laughed. She and her mother rolled their eyes at the inane stage banter and roared their applause for their favorite films, actors, writers of the year. Or Bernie did, and Margaret followed her lead, happy to bask in the glow of her lovely mother.
She felt filled back up by the time the night was over. She even decided to stop by the Board of Governors Ball, the after-party that had started up a few years ago. Their driver took her to the doors of the venue, and she kissed her motherโwhoโd decided to head homeโgood night, then stepped out into the line of paparazzi fire, smiling prettily. She paused to pose for several who called out her name. Just ahead were Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward, who wore a beaded gown and long white gloves. They chatted with Margaret for a moment before heading inside.
When she moved to follow them, her hem had been snagged underfoot by whoeverโd stepped out from the latest car to arrive.
She turned, her reflexive apology whizzing back down her throat before it ever reached her lips.
โHello,โ Cosmo said, his dark eyes glimmering, his mouth quirked in that funny, almost-sheepish, heartbreakingly sexy smile of his.
The smile that launched a thousand teenage tears, and plenty of shrieks of excitement around them now, even from a crowd of seasoned celebrity journalists.
The flashes went off all around her, like distant stars exploding, implodingโsignificant, sure, but not to her, not then.
She was barely aware of the actress on Cosmoโs arm, an ingenue whoโd been nominated for Best Supporting Actress earlier that night and lost out to West Side Storyโs brilliant Rita Moreno.
Cosmo didnโt seem too aware of his date either, his eyes glued to Margaret, his smile just for her.
His date, for her part, was relatively unbothered, waving and posing for the cameras in a ruby-red Dior.
The next day those pictures would be everywhere.
Two-Date Peggy and Two-Timing Cosmo? one headline asked.
Stars Collide at Governors Ball, another articleโs caption began.
There were dozens more, but only one felt right to her. One, she thought, was true.
Cosmo Sinclair Spots Margaret Ives and the World Stops.





