Nine Women, One Dress(18)



You may think I’m crazy, but I believe you can’t help who you fall in love with. Maybe you’re in love with the correct person, the one who’s right around your age, your same religion, someone your parents were thrilled to meet when you took him or her home. If you are, well, then you probably don’t believe me. But you might just as easily have fallen for your lab partner in college, who came to your northeastern liberal arts school from some rural town in the Appalachians, and the minute her hand brushed against yours while reaching for a beaker you knew you were a goner. And you wouldn’t have cared if she was a he or he was a she or if he or she was already with someone else. That’s what happened to my freshman roommate in college. There she was, dating the star of the football team, when some girl from Kentucky came in and made off with her heart. Done. You can’t help who you fall in love with. That kind of love just swoops in and grabs hold of you, and even if you were to drop chemistry—or switch jobs, which god knows I should have done a long time ago—it’s still taken hold of your desire, and that’s a damn hard thing to free yourself of.

I am in love with Arthur Winters and have been for a very long time. And until yesterday, when I received this beautiful dress and an invitation to the Four Seasons for dinner, I never thought it possible that the feeling could ever become mutual. I can’t lose sight of the fact that it’s only possible because a beautiful woman is no longer with us. But I’m also incredibly excited to think that there could be something between us, to think that I might have the chance to bring him true happiness again.

When I started at the firm nearly eighteen years ago, at thirty-four I knew it was time to start looking for someone to spend my life with. It was a little late, actually, but I wasn’t willing to settle, like some of my friends had. I didn’t feel any clock ticking and was confident that it would happen when it happened. I wasn’t very ambitious workwise either. I didn’t necessarily have my sights set on moving up the corporate ladder. It was more that I thought I would work there for a few years, maybe fall in love, get married, have a child, work somewhere else. It was not my intention to become the longest-serving executive assistant at the firm (an award bestowed on me three years ago), and it was certainly not my intention to become an old maid. But at fifty-two years old, it seemed I was approaching just that. I had been having a one-sided affair with a married man for nearly two decades. Tonight it would either begin for real or it would end once and for all.





CHAPTER 10


Dinner at the Four Seasons


By Arthur Winters, Attorney-at-Law


Age: 60





I was running late. Sherri hated it when I ran late. My plan was to be seated at the table and have her escorted in by Julian, the ma?tre d’. The reason I was late is truly embarrassing—it’s because I changed five times. Sherri had been slowly trying to make me look a little hipper, and for the most part I had been letting her try. I drew the line the week before at a pair of glasses from a place called Warby Parker. She said my current glasses made me look like Warren Buffett and I should be going for Warren Beatty. I was happy that for once I understood her points of reference but still did not succumb. I like my glasses; my wife picked them out.

You don’t have to tell me how ridiculous this all sounds. I’m fully aware that I’m dating someone young enough to be my daughter and that we have very little in common. I mean, take tonight, for example. This reservation at the Four Seasons for our anniversary was not selected for any of the wonderful reasons one would select the Four Seasons to celebrate a special occasion. It was selected because Sherri told me she’s always wanted to go there, which made me happy until she added the reason why: “Because my favorite Real Housewives of New York star had her wedding there on TV!” This made me laugh, more at myself than her, as I pictured the future negotiations that would have to take place every time the two of us ever watched television together.

I’m not a fool, although I know I must look like one. I don’t much care. I lost the love of my life, and this girl Sherri is about as far from Marilyn as I could have gone—not one thing about her reminds me of my Marilyn. And that’s fine with me.

I didn’t set out to meet a girl as young as Sherri. I met her on a double blind date, when my recently divorced college roommate asked, “This girl I’m seeing has a sister—want to double?”

I wasn’t really ready to date, but I was beginning to fear that I might never be, so I agreed. I figured it was a good opportunity to get my feet wet—starting with a table for four would prove infinitely less intimidating than starting with a table for two. When I arrived, lo and behold, my friend’s date was twenty years his junior, and her younger sister, Sherri, looked around the age of my daughters. I was a bit mortified, but I tried not to show it. Sherri didn’t seem to notice or care. The wine flowed and the conversation was light and easy. I laughed out loud, and for the first time since Marilyn’s death I was not awash in guilt about it. When the sister mentioned wanting to see Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga at Radio City and my friend offered to get us four tickets, I agreed. Sherri seemed so excited about it, and I liked them both, actually. Two dates led to a string of dinners and eventually overnights and brunches, and suddenly, without any plan or agenda, here I was, celebrating the four-month anniversary of that first date.

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