Authors: Sally Koslow
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Fashion Editors, #Contemporary Women, #Humorous, #Women's Periodicals, #New York (N.Y.), #Humorous Fiction, #Women Periodical Editors
C h a p t e r 3 1
What About the Obvious?
Upon close inspection
a visitor could see that the volumes filling the mahogany shelves of the faux library lobby leaned
heavily toward obsolete medical texts and encyclopedias. Still, the Fifth
Avenue co-op building spoke of wealth, decorum, and an admissions
board that subliminally whispered, "Are you kidding?" to 80 percent of
its applicants.
"Penthouse it is, Miss," the elevator man said. Magnolia entered
the private landing, wallpapered in a tangle of roses never seen in
nature, and gently tapped a brass knocker.
"Welcome, Miss Gold," said the uniformed maid Natalie had
employed at least since the era when mobile phones were as big as
pound cakes. "Take your coat?"
"Thanks, Imogene," Magnolia said. "How are you?"
"Can't complain," Imogene said in a Jamaican lilt as she led Mag
nolia past the orchid-filled solarium. She moved so briskly, Magnolia
barely got a glimpse of Natalie's newest collection, which covered the
walls of a thirty-foot gallery tiled with antique limestone. When most
people go to Australia, they return with kangaroo key chains. Not
Natalie, who now owned at least a dozen aboriginal paintings taller
than most aborigines. "What happened to the American folk art?" Magnolia asked. Not
that she missed it. She could swear the eyes used to follow her from
the portraits' bony faces.
"Mrs. Simon sold 'em at Sotheby's," Imogene said. Natalie must
again be in a state of decorating flux, but Magnolia was glad to see
that the red den, where they'd arrived, was intact. Like a quartet of
plump dowagers, paisley club chairs faced the fireplace. Magnolia
chose a seat nearest the hearth.
"Tea?" Imogene offered. "Cappuccino? A sherry?" The maid prod
ded the logs with an iron poker, and they responded in a blazing
salute. Everything and everyone at Natalie's worked efficiently.
"Tea, please," Magnolia said, warming her hands by the crackling
heat.
"The missus called to say she'll be here soon—make yourself at
home."
Magnolia did. When Imogene left the room, she got up to scruti
nize the vacation photos, framed identically in sterling silver. In each,
Natalie was dead center—her husband, Stan, and three children flank
ing her. Magnolia knew many women who loved clothes, but no one
liked them half as much as Natalie. On the Simons' recent Christmas trip
to New Delhi, the family wore khaki—except for Natalie, a dead ringer
for Princess of India Barbie in a billowing raspberry sari, matching tikka
headdress, and a coordinating bindi glued to her forehead.
Magnolia sat again and began leafing through an
Architectural Digest.
As she took in the carefully crafted whimsy of Diane Keaton's kitchen, she heard Natalie's throaty alto echoing in the gallery.
"Magnolia," she shouted, her charm fully loaded. "Let me hang
my cape and I'll be with you." By the time Magnolia had moved on to
photos of a Bavarian castle, Natalie glided into the room, lit a Rigaud
candle, and air kissed both of Magnolia's cheeks.
"So?" Natalie said, replacing her gray suede boots with red velvet
slippers waiting by the fireplace.
"Hi, Nat," Magnolia said. "Thanks for having me over." She
paused. Could this be more uncomfortable? "Anyway, without going
into specifics, I need a lawyer," she said. "For my contract." "No details, huh?" Natalie said, pouting in amusement. "Let me
guess. Age discrimination generally begins at forty. Are you preg
nant?"
"Definitely not, but can we not get into particulars, Natalie?"
Magnolia begged. "And if this is awkward . . ."
"Stop right there," Natalie said, raising her hand like a traffic cop.
"You know better than to take me for an obedient Scary stooge."
"Yes, but I was hoping you wouldn't put me in a corner," Magnolia
said. "I just need the name of a smart lawyer . . . please."
"Because your contract, obviously, was written in invisible ink,"
Natalie said, laughing. "I'm playing with you. Jock tries this every
time, in one way or another. It's a game. But I'm surprised you of all
people are asking whom to call. What about the obvious?"
"And that would be . . . ?" she said. "I'm coming up empty here."
"I say 'married couple'; you say . . ."
"My parents, Franny and Eliot Goldfarb."
"Try again," Natalie said. "You and me doing the Macarena
together at a wedding . . ."
A smile blossomed on Natalie's face as Magnolia began to remem
ber. Centerpieces as dense as a tropical rain forest. A twenty-minute
rendition of "Hot Hot Hot," which the bride had specifically placed
at the top of the no-play list. A lumpish best man declaring that the
couple's union would last forever. The groom telling 300 reception
guests he looked forward to the bride's being "a breeder."
"No!" Magnolia moaned. "Not him!"
"Why not?" Natalie asked. "Wally Fleigelman is one of the best
labor lawyers in town, and I'm not saying that because he's my cousin."
"I am not using Wally," Magnolia said. "No! This is a guy who took
the bar four times."
"Magnolia, you haven't kept up," Natalie said. "For the kind of
mess you must be in, your ex is the gold standard."
"But we haven't spoken in years," Magnolia said, which was the
least of it.
"Start," Natalie said. "Besides, if you handle yourself right, know
ing Wally, he'll waive the fee." "What do you take me for?" Magnolia looked at Natalie in mock
shock.
"Get your mind out of the gutter—I didn't mean that at all,"
Natalie said. "According to my aunt Joyce, he's gaga for his wife."
"The lovely Whitney Fink Fleigelman?"
"You know her?"
"I hear things." And see things, like Whitney in a lineup of
blondes photographed at the Central Park Conservancy annual spring
lunch, though it was hard to see her face, given the enormous, flow
ered Queen Elizabeth hat.
Natalie reached for her brown lizard address book and copied
Wally's number, which she pressed into Magnolia's hand as they
walked to the front door.
"Thanks, Natalie," Magnolia said as Imogene magically appeared
with her jacket and helped her into it.
"Anything more you want to tell me?" Natalie said mischievously
as Magnolia buttoned up. "The reason why Jock would want to be an
even bigger putz than usual, let's say?" An armful of Natalie's bangles
jingled as she placed her hand on Magnolia's arm, "Listen," Natalie
added, "I'm not Jock's type, but . . . I hear things."
Magnolia weighed Natalie's request for the fine points. "No, I'm
good," she said, kissing her on both cheeks.
"Call him."
Magnolia stuffed the number in her pocket.
How do you
start a conversation with a man who was your husband for a twelve-month eternity? It was 9:30 in the morning. If Wally
was the Mr. Big that Natalie claimed, he'd surely be at his desk by now.
She dialed his number: 212-644-0000. "Fleigelman's," a polite voice
said.
No more Fleigelman Kelly Sinatra Rodriguez and Roth? Wally
must be a lone ranger now.
"Mr. Fleigelman, please." "Who may I say is calling?"
His ex-wife? An old friend? "Magnolia Gold."
"Hold, please."
A minute went by, then several, until a breathy voice came on the
line.
"Mrs. Fleigelman speaking. May I help you?"
Damn that Natalie. Why did she give her Wally's home number?
Magnolia wanted to hang up, but all Wally's wife had to do was *69
her and she'd be busted. "I was looking for Wally, please. This is . . .
his first wife."
"Scarlett? Oh, excuse me. It's Melanie, isn't it?"
Magnolia did not care to guess how often she'd been the punch line
of Wally and Whitney's jokes. "And you must be Tiffany," she said.
"Wally's at his office," Whitney Fleigelman said curtly. "May I
know what this is in reference to?"
"Something personal. I mean, personal business. Well, really just
business," she stammered. "I'll catch him another time. Sorry to
bother you." She rushed off and called Abbey.
"I feel
like such a twit," Magnolia said. "Natalie suggested I ask Wally for legal help—"
"Wally who?" Abbey asked.
"My starter husband," Magnolia said, pacing the room.
"Oh, Wally Finklestein," Abbey said.
"Close enough," Magnolia said. "Fleigelman."
"You were Magnolia Goldfarb Fleigelman?"
"Just barely," Magnolia said.
"That anchorwoman the network wanted to replace with the
American Idol r
unner-up—a Walter Fleigelman I read about got her two million bucks. I kept meaning to ask if he's your ex."
"If he is, he's my guy," Magnolia said. "Oops, call waiting. Talk soon."
"Would this be the best damn ass in Manhattan?" the genial caller
said. "The wildly successful magazine lady?" The voice sounded even fuller of bravado than she remembered.
"Not anymore, Wally," Magnolia said.
"You mean you didn't phone my home because you hoped to start
things up again?" he said. "You're breaking my heart."
"How are you, Wally?"
"Can't complain," Wally said. "When you've got your health, you've
got everything." He'd apparently morphed into his pinochle-playing
grandfather. "Plus, in my case, seven-year-old twins; the wife, who's a
looker, by the way . . ."
"That so?" Magnolia said.
". . . the apartment, Aspen, Southampton, solid practice—knock
wood—and still shoot in the seventies. Over Christmas, my third hole
in one. Boca's always been my lucky charm."
"So I recall," Magnolia said, remembering one of their more
three-dimensional fights, which took place on a visit to his parents'
condo there, and featured a redheaded tennis pro.
"Yes, Mrs. Fleigelman. Like I said, Can't complain."
"Well, I can," Magnolia said. "My company's trying to pretend I
don't have a contract. They eliminated my job and want to cut me
loose with virtually no severance. I'm completely nuts. Don't know
what I'll do for money. Sell my eggs?"
"Does this mean there's no Mr. Gold to pay your bills?"
"You know Daddy has never given me a dime."
"I'm thinking husband, Magnolia," Wally said, chuckling.
"Oh, one of those," she said. "Tried that. Didn't take."
"I can't believe you're still single, gorgeous girl like you. You're
what now, thirty-six?"
"Give or take."
"Should have stayed with me, kid," Wally said and laughed again.
At this rate she and Wally would be kibitzing all morning. "Wally,
I hate to hit you with this, but I was wondering if you'd take my
case?" Magnolia said. "Please."
"So Maggie needs Wally, after all," he said. "Let's see. I have a load
of depositions in Washington tomorrow, then off to Seattle Monday.
May be there for a few weeks."
"If you don't have the time, I understand," she said.
"For you, I'll make time," he said. "Can you be in my office at three?"
Except for
the cigar and a slightly higher forehead, Wally hadn't changed much. He was still broad-shouldered, bespeckled, and loud.
"How do I look?" he said, patting his head. "I'm one of those
schmucks where Propecia did zip. The minute I turned forty, my dad's
face started staring back at me in the mirror."
"You look like you," she said, kissing him on the cheek "Not a day