14
ON MONDAY, IโM working over dinner at Rum Room when I find something strange.
Iโm prepping for tomorrowโs interview with Margaret, to continue her grandfatherโs story after his affair with the actress Nina Gill ended, and I come across a news item, in Vanity Fair, covering the opulent 1949 wedding of Geraldโs niece, Ruth Allen. The little princess heโd raised more devotedly than his own children.
Ruth was twenty-one years old when she married the actor turned decorated World War II pilot turned talent manager James Oller, and their wedding was the event of the summer.
Starlets, politicians, famous artists of all stripes descended on the grounds of the House of Ives to celebrate the union. Margaret and her sister, Laura, eleven and eight years old at the time, acted as flower girls for their first cousin once removed, wearing crowns of vibrant yellow sunflowers to match Ruthโs bouquet.
Even Nina Gill, accompanied by her husband, had attended, sitting on the same expansive lawn as Gerald for the first time since their affair ended twenty-two years earlier.
The wedding festivities lasted three days, and were completely devoid of photography, which made every society journalist covering the affair that much more committed to making the reader feel as though she were there.
Itโs effective. Iโve read four articles about the wedding back-to-back, my food going cold on the table at Rum Room, when I hit on the thing that
jolts me back to the present.
To my reality.
Itโs a line that contains Ruthโs middle name. Not legal middle nameโa quick search tells me she doesnโt have one, officially. But apparently, among close family, her full name was Ruth Nicollet Ives Allen.
A sizzle of recognition goes down my spine. Where do I know that name from?
It only takes a second to hit me. I scroll back through my notes, double- checking.
The very first inn that Lawrence Richard Ives purchased, to capitalize on other prospectors once heโd struck silver ore. Margaret had called it the Ebner. When Lawrence had first bought it, it was called the Arledge. And then, for a chunk of time in between that, just like I thought: the Nicollet.
Same spelling and everything.
Coincidence? Or is Nicollet a family name?
But if it is, it makes even less sense that Margaret referred to the hotel by its current name. Nicollet shouldโve been burned into her brain.
I do a quick search of โNicolletโ paired with โLawrence Ives,โ and the results are scant. The only thing of note is the website for the current-day Ebner, whose โHistoryโ page proudly declares its former ownership by the famed family, where it also lists its previous monikers.
I shake my head. Most likely, Margaret read something years ago about the Nicolletโs new name, and simply called it by its latest name because that was what came to mind. And maybe Nicollet is a family name, but not one sheโs familiar with.
Itโs a far more likely explanation than the one my brain keeps circling: that Margaret Ives doesnโt want me looking closely at that hotel, even as she pretends to bare the Ives familyโs history and soul.
What Hayden said keeps replaying in my mind.
Margaret Ives isnโt telling me the truth.
I shovel some now-cold lobster mac into my mouth and pull up the
email address for the Ebner Hotel.
โข โข โข ON TUESDAY, WEโRE sitting out back in Adirondack chairs, sipping more of Jodiโs incredible mint lemonade, and I decide to take a big swing.
โWhatโs significant about the name Nicollet?โ I ask.
Margaretโs glass clinks against her teeth. Rather than follow through with her sip, she returns the glass to the arm of her chair.
โWhat do you mean?โ she says. Her tone is so innocent that, if not for that flicker of surprise in her reaction, Iโd be sure Iโd read too much into nothing.
โThe Ebner Hotel,โ I say. โIt was called the Nicollet, for a long stretch of time when your family owned it. And Ruth Ives Allenโs unofficial middle name was Nicollet.โ
Her head cocks, like sheโs trying to anticipate where this is going.
โIโm curious why youโd call the inn by its new name,โ I explain. โHave you been there recently?โ I disregard the fact that sheโs already told me she hasnโt. If she wants to give me new information now, I donโt want to call her a liar for withholding it earlier.
She considers for a beat, her eye contact unyielding. Then she sighs. โI suppose youโll find out now, one way or another.โ
โProbably,โ I agree. โBut remember: Iโve signed a nondisclosure. Iโm not going to force you to publicly share anything you donโt want to.
Whatever you tell me, it doesnโt have to go beyond this room.โ
Her eyes narrow. Then, slowly, she leans forward and stops both of my
recorders. โThis includes the boy.โ
โWhat boy?โ I ask.
โI have two NDAs,โ she says. โSo whatever I tell you, you canโt take it to him. You understand that, donโt you?โ
The word boy is so wrong that it takes me thirty seconds to track her train of thought. โAre we talking about Hayden here?โ
She nods. โYouโve known I was here for months, and no one else has tracked me down, which makes me think I can trust you. But him, Iโm not
so sure of. Iโm still figuring him out.โ
Iโm surprised by the swell of protectiveness in my gut. โYou can trust him too. He wonโt break your confidence.โ
One of her silvery brows curves. It tugs on her lips, pulling her mouth into a sly smile. โOh? So youโre campaigning for him to get the job now?โ
โDefinitely not,โ I say quickly. โI want this. And Iโll do a great job. I know that. I justโฆYou can trust him, thatโs all.โ
โIโll take that under advisement,โ she says. โBut still, my point remains.
Youโre about to be the first person outside of my immediate family to hear something, and I donโt want it going any further just yet.โ
I set my pen down. โI swear.โ
She gathers herself for a second. โMy grandfather Gerald was the one to rename the inn. In 1919.โ
โThe year your great-grandfather Lawrence died,โ I point outโI noticed the correlation while I was on the Arledge/Nicollet/Ebnerโs History web page.
Margaret nods. โI told you that in those final days of Lawrenceโs life, he was raving to his former business partner and apologizing to his little brother. But there was one more thing he kept saying.โ A look of resolve steals over her, her shoulders relaxing as if whatever sheโs just decided to share has given her some measure of relief. โNicollet.โ
Iโve read it dozens of times in the last couple of days, but still the way she says it, almost reverentially, sends goose bumps prickling down my arms. โWho was that?โ
โThe one it was all for.โ The corner of her mouth twitches into a smile, small and fleeting. โThatโs what Lawrence told her. Nicollet, this was all for you. Tell me to come home, and Iโll leave all of this behind. Gerald had never even heard his father say the name before. And he only found out who Nicollet was after Lawrence died, when Gerald read his fatherโs journals.โ
A lover, I think at first, but then it dawns on me. โHis sister.โ
She nods confirmation. โIn my family, thatโs what the name came to represent: the person youโd do anything for. The only one who could make
you give it all up. Thatโs why they gave Ruth that middle name.โ
My chest pinches. โThatโs beautiful.โ I mean it. But it doesnโt answer the question. โWhy didnโt you justโฆtell me about that?โ
She studies me, another small smile unfurling over her lips. โAnd here I thought youโd already figured it out.โ
I hadnโt, evidently, but thereโs nothing like a challenge to get your brain turning, and as soon as she says it, my mind turns into a prime-time police proceduralโs serial killer board, pinning details and suspects together with little bits of red string. Ruthโs mother, Gigi Ives Allen, wasnโt in the room with her father when he died. She wasnโt even in the country, until well after her father died. Only Gerald was there, at their father Lawrenceโs bedside, to hear his ranting about Dicky and Thomas and Nicollet. Only Gerald had read their fatherโs diaries.
Then heโd fled the rest of his family, shortly after Lawrenceโs death.
Heโd met Nina in Los Angeles, and theyโd passed nearly a decade together, before her mystery illness took her overseas and she married someone else.
Right around the time Ruth Ives Allen was born.
โShe wasnโt Gigiโs daughter,โ I blurt, before Iโm even sure of it.
Margaret doesnโt look scandalized or even surprised by the theory. If anything, she looks a little satisfied, slightlyโฆsmirky. โI knew youโd get there,โ she says approvingly.
โNinaโs mystery illness,โ I say. โThe time spent in the Alpsโฆit was a pregnancy?โ
โNine months wouldโve been too suspicious,โ Margaret explains. โThey had to drag it out. And publicize it, when they were able. Staged hospital visits, complete with photographs, in those first few months of the pregnancy, and then again right after the birth, which happened overseas.
When Gigiโs husband died, Gerald and Nina saw an opportunity to bring their daughter home without a scandal.โ
โBut their affair was an open secret,โ I point out. โI mean, even Dove Franklin knew about it.โ
โYes, but back then having an affair was one thing. Maybe everyone wasnโt doing it, but loads of people in Gerald and Ninaโs circles were. Not
to mention all the showmances of the era. But Gerald was raised Catholic and was never going to subject Rosalind to a divorce. And even if he had been willing, the timeline wouldnโt have borne out, and Ruth wouldโve been the one to suffer. Nina didnโt want that for her daughter, and neither did Gerald. So they split up. She married someone else. He raised their daughter as his niece, and they were only ever in the same room again the week Ruth got married. He gave up the woman he loved to be the father he shouldโve been the first time around, and Ninaโฆโ Margaretโs voice settles into a flat, matter-of-fact tone. โWell, she gave up everything.โ
The words seem to echo around us. It takes me close to a minute to muster a reply. โDidโฆdid Ruth know?โ
Margaretโs gaze falls. โNo. You remember what happened, in the end, to Ruth Allen and her husband.โ
My heart clenches. I can picture the headlines and the black-and-white photographs so clearly, their small plane mangled on a jetty south of San Francisco. โIt was a tragedy.โ
Margaretโs throat bobs. โI always thought the worst part was, she was so much more than that. She was smart and wickedly funny, and so kind sheโd stop to help a caterpillar onto a branch before the gardener cut our lawns.
More than anyone I know, she lived her short life in raging color, and all sheโs remembered for is what she didnโt get to do.โ
โMaybe by strangers,โ I say. โBut not by the people who knew her. And someday, everyone who reads your story will have the chance to know the real Ruth. The truth.โ
A sad smile passes over Margaretโs lips. โMaybe.โ She takes a long sip of lemonade, then sets it back in its ring of condensation and looks at me, shielding her face against the sun. โA few years after Ruthโs wedding, Nina Gill came to Gerald and begged him to finally tell their daughter the truth.
Nina was sick. Actually sick. Lung cancer. In the fifties, the prognosis for that wasnโt so hot. Somehow, she managed to get Gerald to agree. But they never got the chance. The weekend of my sixteenth birthday, LPโRuth,โ she corrects herself, โand James were flying down to the House of Ives, and their plane malfunctioned on takeoff.โ
Margaret clears her throat. โHard not to feel like it was the truth that killed her. Like even the universe had bought Geraldโs lie, but once it figured out that Ruth Allen was well and truly Ruth Ives, her happiness couldnโt be allowed to continue.โ
I swallow, emotion tightening my windpipe. โDo you believe that? That your family is cursed?โ
โNo, honey.โ The flash of a smile doesnโt reach her once-sparkling blue eyes. โMy family is the curse.โ
An alarm goes off on her phone then, cracking the moment in half.
โAh,โ she says, eyeing the screen. โTime for my massage.โ
I clear my throat, emerging from the dark cloud of her story and reacclimating to this reality: a day full of sunshine, the smell of salt water and grass and pine, a world in which massages and mint lemonade are at your fingertips instead of loss and sorrow.
โI thought you didnโt leave the property,โ I say.
โI donโt, usually,โ she says.
โSo Jodi knows Shiatsu?โ I guess.
She cackles at this. โGood lord, it wouldnโt surprise me, but no. We have a routine. A gal comes to the house. Iโm already lying on my stomach by the time she gets here.โ
โAnd that works? Sheโs never seen your face?โ I say, my skepticism only mounting.
Her narrow shoulders lift. โMaybe a glimpse or two across the years, but sheโs young. I doubt sheโd have any idea who I was. Doubt anyone would. The worldโs moved on.โ
โThatโs not true,โ I say. For all Margaret knows, this massage therapist is โLinda,โ who emailed me the tip about Margaretโs life down here. A tip whose origins Margaret insisted she had no guess at, when I first tracked her down. Iโm about to suggest as much when Margaret pushes herself up onto her feet.
โIt is true,โ she says, adamant. โThe world moved on. Just like I hoped
it would.โ
โข โข โข ON WEDNESDAY MORNING, I step out into the thick mist and immediately kick something sitting on the walkway.
A cup of iced coffeeโnow toppled onto its side and leaking onto the stoneโbeside a paper bag. I crouch to pick them up, heart floating upward at the chocolate croissant inside the bag and the word scribbled on the
outside of the coffee cup.
Friends?
I carry my bounty with me to the driveway and head toward downtown.
The gallery that carries Margaretโs wind chimes and mosaics sits between a seafood shack and an ice cream shop, one block from the water, and because this is a world of retirees and vacationers, it hardly matters that itโs late morning on a weekday.
The shop is crowded with women in sun hats, men in sandals, and teenagers either glued to their phones or surreptitiously checking each other out.
I fight a smile as I pass a couple of sunburnt ladies excitedly cooing over a โdarling little turtle mosaicโโnot one of Margaretโs, of course.
But there is a large rectangular one framed in the dead center of the back wall, a spiral of pale blues, the shades so similar that you canโt quite see the pattern until you squint. And when I do, itโs like one of those old Magic Eyes, a clear path coming into focus.
Unicursal, with one way in and out.
I find it strange that someone like Margaret, who comes from a family so thoroughly ensconced in history and culture, would be drawn to this idea, that no matter what you do, youโll end up in the same place.
It would be much easier for me to imagine her strangely specific upbringing shaping her into the kind of person who fancies herself the master of her own fate.
Then again, maybe suffering the kind of loss she has makes a person need to yield some control. To stop asking What could I have done
differently? and just accept that this is the path sheโs on.
One that started with a man who tried to control the world with money, and then one who tried to control it with the written word, and eventually led to her and Cosmo Sinclair in a doomed car chase.
Maybe itโs a kind of comfort to her, to believe she was never the one in the driverโs seat.
Even that day. Even when she lost the love of her life in a stupid,
preventable accident.
โThis oneโs underappreciated.โ
I jump at the voice just over my shoulder and turn to find the shopkeeper smiling up at me, her curly hair held back from her freckled face with a neon-green headband to reveal large wooden hoop earrings.
โIs it for sale?โ I ask her.
โTechnically,โ she says. โBut I canโt bring myself to drop the price any lower. I love it too much. So it will probably live here for the rest of its
days.โ
โHow much?โ I ask.
โTwenty-three hundred,โ she says.
I try not to flinch, which makes her crack a smile.
โYep, thatโs about the usual reaction I get,โ she says. โItโs not exactly the kind of thing you buy as a vacation memento. But I thought someone would at least want it for their vacation home down here.โ She leans toward me conspiratorially. โYou interested?โ
โCurrently I donโt even have a wall big enough for this,โ I say, โlet alone the money to buy it. Whoโs the artist?โ
โHer nameโs Irene Mayberry,โ she says. โA local. A gruff sort, not very chatty, but sheโs a true artist.โ
โNot to be a plebeian,โ I say, โbut how exactly can you tell?โ
She screws up her mouth as she thinks. โI think what it isโฆis that just from looking at it, you can tell she had a reason for making it. I mean, aside from making it to sell, you know? A lot of the people I work with, Iโd consider artisans. Theyโre great at their craft and they make things they
love, and that they know my customers will love. And thatโs extremely valuable.
โBut thereโs another way of making things too. Ireneโs stuffโฆevery time I look at it, I canโt help but feel like she was trying to find something.
Or maybe get somewhere. Like she was bushwhacking through a very dense forest because something she just had to know lay on the other side.โ
She flashes a knowing smile. โOr who knows? Maybe sheโs a total charlatan, and Iโm an easy mark. Either way, I like it.โ
โMe too,โ I say honestly. โDo you have any smaller ones? Orโฆmore specifically, cheaper ones.โ
She chuckles and jerks her head toward the opposite wall. โI might have just the thing.โ
I follow her to a much smaller mosaic, no larger than five inches by five inches, the slivers of glass so small they mustโve been pieced together with tweezers and a magnifying glass, andโunlike every other piece Iโve seen of Margaretโsโcomposed of amber, red, translucent gold, a tiny tight spiral that almost looks like a galaxy.
โTwo hundred and fifty,โ the shopkeeper says.
Then I see the tiny penciled title at the bottom right corner, just inside the frame. Beside Margaretโs assumed initials, her own in reverse, in her
own handwriting: Nicollet.
โIโll take it,โ I say.





