Bitter Spirits
Page 22
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“Win and I went to Berkeley together. Before he got the boot.” Mrs. Beecham kicked a leg out and nearly tripped over her gown.
Winter pulled the woman to the side and steadied her as guests filed past them into the parlor. “I think you better slow down on those sidecars.”
“Says the big rumrunner!”
Aida eyed the woman’s perfect pale skin and dimpled smile. An unwelcome tightness squeezed her lungs. She glanced at Winter. “I don’t believe I’ve heard the story of you and Berkeley.” Did her voice sound strained? She steeled her posture, hoping that would help.
“Oh, it’s a good one,” Mrs. Beecham confirmed. “Win can tell you the long version, but the short of it is—”
“Florie,” Winter said tiredly.
“Shhh. Lemme tell. See, we had this friend, Nolan, who edited a university literary journal, and he printed a D. H. Lawrence review that was a bit . . . risqué, and even though he left blanks for the offensive words, the university was furious and he got expelled. Then Win here”—Mrs. Beecham poked Winter square in the chest—“wrote a scathing treatise against censorship, only he didn’t include blanks for the offensive words, and there were a lot of them. He had it printed up as a handbill and circulated it around campus. The best part is that he included an unflattering caricature of the dean who fought for Nolan’s expulsion—miserable old hag. The drawing was in the buff, if you know what I mean.”
Aida cocked a brow at Winter.
“I didn’t sketch it myself,” he said, almost sheepish.
“Ugh,” Mrs. Beecham complained. “One of the art students drew it—a horrible caricature with great sagging breasts. It burned my eyes. Anyway, someone ratted on Winter and he got kicked out. It was terribly boring after he left.”
“I’ll bet,” Aida murmured.
Mrs. Beecham laughed. “The funny part is that he was only one semester away from graduating.”
“That’s not funny,” Aida said, suddenly annoyed. “That’s terrible. Why didn’t you go somewhere else and finish?”
“Why bother?” the woman answered for him. “Volstead passed and his father traded in the fishing for bootlegging. Pays better than building boat engines and chasing down salmon.”
Winter grunted.
“Can you believe that was what—seven, eight years ago? Time flies,” she said with a dramatic shrug. “It’s been such a blur since college, my whirlwind romance with Mr. Beecham, his unexpected death. It’s been trying.”
“I can feel your pain inside the walls of this lavish shanty,” Winter mumbled.
“It does help to soothe my frail nerves.”
“Is gold the new mourning color?” Winter said, looking at her dress.
“I put one of his hideous paintings in the parlor as a tribute. That means more than a boring black dress.” She gestured into the dark parlor, where candles were burning and wooden chairs had been set in rows in front of a round table draped in patchwork Romany cloth. Behind it was a garish bohemian painting of what was clearly Mrs. Beecham lying half naked in a field of flowers. Her nipples were painted a shade of blindingly bright pink and her face was blue.
“Maybe you should’ve married someone who wasn’t three times your age,” Winter said.
“He was sweet to me, once. But perhaps you’re right. Really, Win, just think if you would’ve stayed at Berkeley—the two of us might’ve been married and I could be decorating your house right now.”
“I like my house just fine as is.”
“I mean your old house, not your father’s. Never mind. Let’s not dig up bad memories.”
What in the world was she talking about? Aida’s head was spinning from all the information this obnoxious woman was unleashing. Every word that came out of her mouth made Aida loathe her more and more.
“Regardless, it all turned out fine anyway. I rather like being a widow. I can do anything I want, with whomever I want, and nobody can say a damn thing about it.” Mrs. Beecham turned her face up to Winter and grinned like a harpy while her fingers danced up his arm suggestively.
Were they lovers? Was this what he preferred in a woman? Perhaps that protective show with Mr. Morran was just everyday business for someone like him. Maybe he would’ve done that for any girl standing in her place.
Something snapped inside her. She had her pride, and she’d made a promise to herself that she would take no job she didn’t want, and Sam would’ve encouraged her to stick to that promise. “I’m sorry, but I’ve changed my mind. I think this party will do just fine without me,” Aida said to Mrs. Beecham. “I appreciate your offer, but perhaps your guests would prefer music over mysticism.”
“Aida,” Winter said, unhooking Mrs. Beecham’s arm as he started toward her.
“Come on, darling,” Mrs. Beecham said to Aida, as if she were a small child who needed to be coddled. “Don’t be that way. Win and I are old friends. Have a drink.”
“I don’t want a drink.”
The widow waved a hand toward the parlor. “Well, let’s get started then.”
“I said I’m not doing it, and that’s final.”
“Stop being silly.”
“Oh, for God’s sake, shut up, Florie,” Winter snapped.
Conversation and laugher inside the parlor halted as people turned in their seats to stare.
Winter pulled the woman to the side and steadied her as guests filed past them into the parlor. “I think you better slow down on those sidecars.”
“Says the big rumrunner!”
Aida eyed the woman’s perfect pale skin and dimpled smile. An unwelcome tightness squeezed her lungs. She glanced at Winter. “I don’t believe I’ve heard the story of you and Berkeley.” Did her voice sound strained? She steeled her posture, hoping that would help.
“Oh, it’s a good one,” Mrs. Beecham confirmed. “Win can tell you the long version, but the short of it is—”
“Florie,” Winter said tiredly.
“Shhh. Lemme tell. See, we had this friend, Nolan, who edited a university literary journal, and he printed a D. H. Lawrence review that was a bit . . . risqué, and even though he left blanks for the offensive words, the university was furious and he got expelled. Then Win here”—Mrs. Beecham poked Winter square in the chest—“wrote a scathing treatise against censorship, only he didn’t include blanks for the offensive words, and there were a lot of them. He had it printed up as a handbill and circulated it around campus. The best part is that he included an unflattering caricature of the dean who fought for Nolan’s expulsion—miserable old hag. The drawing was in the buff, if you know what I mean.”
Aida cocked a brow at Winter.
“I didn’t sketch it myself,” he said, almost sheepish.
“Ugh,” Mrs. Beecham complained. “One of the art students drew it—a horrible caricature with great sagging breasts. It burned my eyes. Anyway, someone ratted on Winter and he got kicked out. It was terribly boring after he left.”
“I’ll bet,” Aida murmured.
Mrs. Beecham laughed. “The funny part is that he was only one semester away from graduating.”
“That’s not funny,” Aida said, suddenly annoyed. “That’s terrible. Why didn’t you go somewhere else and finish?”
“Why bother?” the woman answered for him. “Volstead passed and his father traded in the fishing for bootlegging. Pays better than building boat engines and chasing down salmon.”
Winter grunted.
“Can you believe that was what—seven, eight years ago? Time flies,” she said with a dramatic shrug. “It’s been such a blur since college, my whirlwind romance with Mr. Beecham, his unexpected death. It’s been trying.”
“I can feel your pain inside the walls of this lavish shanty,” Winter mumbled.
“It does help to soothe my frail nerves.”
“Is gold the new mourning color?” Winter said, looking at her dress.
“I put one of his hideous paintings in the parlor as a tribute. That means more than a boring black dress.” She gestured into the dark parlor, where candles were burning and wooden chairs had been set in rows in front of a round table draped in patchwork Romany cloth. Behind it was a garish bohemian painting of what was clearly Mrs. Beecham lying half naked in a field of flowers. Her nipples were painted a shade of blindingly bright pink and her face was blue.
“Maybe you should’ve married someone who wasn’t three times your age,” Winter said.
“He was sweet to me, once. But perhaps you’re right. Really, Win, just think if you would’ve stayed at Berkeley—the two of us might’ve been married and I could be decorating your house right now.”
“I like my house just fine as is.”
“I mean your old house, not your father’s. Never mind. Let’s not dig up bad memories.”
What in the world was she talking about? Aida’s head was spinning from all the information this obnoxious woman was unleashing. Every word that came out of her mouth made Aida loathe her more and more.
“Regardless, it all turned out fine anyway. I rather like being a widow. I can do anything I want, with whomever I want, and nobody can say a damn thing about it.” Mrs. Beecham turned her face up to Winter and grinned like a harpy while her fingers danced up his arm suggestively.
Were they lovers? Was this what he preferred in a woman? Perhaps that protective show with Mr. Morran was just everyday business for someone like him. Maybe he would’ve done that for any girl standing in her place.
Something snapped inside her. She had her pride, and she’d made a promise to herself that she would take no job she didn’t want, and Sam would’ve encouraged her to stick to that promise. “I’m sorry, but I’ve changed my mind. I think this party will do just fine without me,” Aida said to Mrs. Beecham. “I appreciate your offer, but perhaps your guests would prefer music over mysticism.”
“Aida,” Winter said, unhooking Mrs. Beecham’s arm as he started toward her.
“Come on, darling,” Mrs. Beecham said to Aida, as if she were a small child who needed to be coddled. “Don’t be that way. Win and I are old friends. Have a drink.”
“I don’t want a drink.”
The widow waved a hand toward the parlor. “Well, let’s get started then.”
“I said I’m not doing it, and that’s final.”
“Stop being silly.”
“Oh, for God’s sake, shut up, Florie,” Winter snapped.
Conversation and laugher inside the parlor halted as people turned in their seats to stare.