Authors: Tom Connolly
When they would find Oceans Bank in the cookie jar, they’d find fault using some law or other to find us conspiring. But never us as individuals, not by name. Always Oceans Bank. Always an exorbitant fine of three or four hundred million. Paid for by the bank, not by the guilty conspirators. By the bank, meaning the stockholders. But no one ever went to jail, not once. With Spitzer, he got ten banks all at once. Got them to pay one billion in fines. But not a single person went to jail, especially not Buck Simon.
John Paul Simon knew his way around the beggars. He knew how to feed them. Our Chairman, my boss, was the cleverest. He had fought to have laws changed and barriers removed that would give him more elbow room in the crowded world financial marketplace. He had always felt after nine eleven that it was the Arabs against the Jews. He knew what the real target was. Or so he told me and everyone else.
But John Paul Simon was the master of reputation building. First the financial supermarket, then the philanthropy, and the negotiated settlements, all to protect the reputation, all to protect him. He knew what leverage was, he knew how to grease palms, and he knew how to slip from the clutches of the beggars. With the competition he had the sharpest elbows in town. But even he, even Buck Simon, couldn’t hold back the tsunami that was the housing crisis, that became the financial crisis, that became the great recession. He could not stop our downfall. And it’s all gone. It was a tsunami; it wiped everything off the map. Oceans Bank is gone, in bankruptcy, a shell of its former self, trying to reorganize. They sold our building on John Street to London Equity Holdings. Most of the people are gone, laid off, and then eventually fired when there was nothing left. Everyone wiped out. Here I was risk executive for the biggest bank in the world and I had most of my life savings all tied up in Oceans stock—from fifty dollars a share to five hundredths of a cent—three hundred thousand shares worthless.
Mark Wheelwright had played this story over and over in his mind every day for the past two years. And the story never changed. He picked up his glass. Took one more drink. From the window in the library of his home, he looked out on the beauty of Long Island. He placed the glass of whiskey back on the desk and opened the desk draw. He looked at the gun and reached and touched it.
“Dad,” Edward called out as he entered the rear door. “Dad, I have a surprise for you.”
Quickly, Mark closed the drawer and turned the key to lock it. “In here Eddie,” and he rose to greet his son.
And Edward and Valerie walked in.
When Mark Wheelwright turned, there was his son and Valerie McGuire.
A smile broke out on Wheelwright senior’s face. “I had a flashback. For a second I thought that was Val McGuire standing beside you.”
And Valerie went to his arms and hugged him.
“My God, it is you,” he said laughing.
Valerie blushed. “It is so good to see you Mr. W.,” she said. “It’s been too long.”
“It has been too long,” Eddie joined in.
“So,” Mark paused, drawing out the “oh”, that meant, “what’s up here?”
And on cue Eddie said, “Val and I are back together.”
Valerie beamed at the confirmation. And they talked for a good hour. Val was married, had a son, but going to get a divorce. No, David does not know yet. He’s out of town.
Eddie explained more fully to his father why he and Santa were no more and that Santa had moved on to Sebastian.
And when Mark said to Valerie, “You must be more than a bit upset with her for what she did to you, breaking the two of you up.” Eddie was speechless.
But not Valerie. She said quickly, “No, I don’t hate her for taking Eddie from me. She’s the reason he’ll do a better job loving me this time.”
A tear came out of Eddie’s right eye. Valerie saw it, and she kissed his cheek. “I’m sorry,” she whispered. “It’s OK; it’s true,” he said back softly. “I know it is,” she said and the three of them laughed like they had on so many occasions over years. Like the four of them used to.
And they all realized that Mrs. Wheelwright was always a part of that laughter.
“I’m so sorry, still, about Mrs. Wheelwright,” Valerie said.
“Thank you, Val,” Mark said as he hugged Valerie again.
“I didn’t love him. I loved you and Mrs. W.,” she said smiling.
“Now about your son?” Mark Wheelwright asked.
“Yes, he’s wonderful. Almost two now. I’ll bring him by tomorrow, if that’s alright?”
“That would be wonderful,” the senior Wheelwright said.
“Dad, we’re going to stay in the guesthouse tonight.”
Mark Wheelwright said “OK, we’ll see you in the morning. Can we have breakfast together?”
“Sure,” Edward said.
“I don’t suppose you’ll be wanting to go to Mass with me in the morning?” Mark asked.
Valerie spoke up, “Can we take a rain check till next Sunday.”
“Yes, you can have a rain check anytime with me, Val,” the senior Wheelwright said, gave Val a hug and concluded, “Off you go. I can see the two of you have a lot in front of you. See you in the morning.” And he left the room.
Valerie and Edward went to the guesthouse, wrapped in excitement and fear.
Chapter 57
As they came back together, as the fog of betrayal opened the heart of the girl he had always loved, he saw her depth. Rather, he saw the depths to which he had subjected her. He had been wrong; walking out so easily on the girl he had forever promised to marry, he had driven her to a place of humiliation.
In fact that first night when they reunited in love, he was about to learn just how deep the humiliation was.
As they were about to enter the two-story colonial guesthouse, Edward stopped, picked Valerie up in his arms, and carried her across the threshold.
“This is late coming, but we will do this the right way, soon,” Edward told a tearful Valerie.
“Are you serious?” Val asked, shocked.
“Never more in my life, if you’ll have me,” Eddie said, realizing the second chance that was playing out on this day.
“There are a few things I need your help with, so after you show me around, I want to sit down and talk.”
The guesthouse was quaint, just enough to accommodate a family. It had three bedrooms, three baths, and a great room overlooking the pool. The house had been updated several years earlier and had a comfortable feel to it, like it had been lived in. Edward had kept it up and frequently stayed there whenever he was in Greenwich. A few days earlier, upon return from Puerto Rico, he slipped easily into a new life that he could not have imagined would change again a week later. They chose the larger bedroom to put Valerie’s overnight bag in; it had a king sized bed. Valerie jumped on it and Edward followed and they made love again, more slowly than before, but more passionately.
Later, Edward poured both Val and himself a glass of white wine, and they sat on the back patio, beside the pool in the quiet, warm night.
“I need to tell you something right now before we do anything else,” Val said. “I’m very afraid of what you will think of me, but I need you to know something right now.”
“What great secret must I know; is this the big idea you’ve wanted to tell me all day?”
“No, Eddie, it’s…” and Valerie started to cry.
“Val, what is it, are you ok?”
“I hope so, Eddie, I’m scared, for the first time in my life. I just have you back, and I don’t want to lose you,” Valerie said, looking at Edward with pleading in her eyes.
Edward laughed, “You’re going to lose me if you don’t tell me this great secret. There is nothing you can say that will change how I feel about you.”
“I hope so. Well, you know I need to tell David about us.”
“Yes. But that’s not it, right?”
“No, you know I told you I married David on the rebound from you. That I was so hurt and he chased me.”
“Yes, I know that.”
“Well, there was a reason I got married. I was pregnant, Eddie.”
“You mean there was someone else between the time you left me and when you married David.”
“No, Eddie, there was no one else,” she paused here, unsure of how he would take what she was about to say. “After you left me, I found out I was pregnant. My baby boy is our son.”
Edward Wheelwright sat straight up; he put his glass down on the table. He rose and stood beside Valerie’s chair. He stood for a moment thinking about what he had just heard. He looked down at Valerie. She had fear in her eyes.
He knelt down beside her. “Val, it’s true?”
“Yes, Eddie, it is. His name is Edward.”
“I don’t know what to say,” Wheelwright said as he put an arm around Valerie, and there was a silence, then he asked, “Why didn’t you tell me?”
“What would I have said? I tried thinking of words a thousand times. I actually came to believe that you would never know. Not that I didn’t want you to know, I never knew how I would tell you. I never knew what would happen if I did. “
“Didn’t you think I would care for my son?” Wheelwright asked quietly.
“Of course I knew you would, but you made a decision to leave. I didn’t think you would want to be bothered by me or the baby. I didn’t want to tie you down if that wasn’t what you wanted.”
“Oh, Val, It’s alright. I’m so sorry. And I’m so glad.”
“You are?” Valerie said, in a way, both relieved and startled.
“Yes, I love you. I made terrible mistakes that hurt our lives. Having a son, our son, as we come back together is wonderful. When can I see him?”
Valerie was overjoyed. She put her hands on either side of Eddie’s face, caressed it and cried.
Chapter 58
The bottle was opened early. The first drink poured by 9 a.m. Mark Wheelwright was looking out his study window, looking towards the sea, when he caught a glimpse of people coming through his rear yard from the right. There was a man, a woman, and a small boy in the middle, walking, holding his parents hands. It was a dream, an illusion: Mark, his departed wife, and his son Edward. He looked at the glass of whiskey, shivered from his late night of drinking the prior evening.
As he stared at his glass, he thought about the idea of his son and Valerie moving into the guesthouse. He wasn’t sure he liked the idea with her still married.
Wheelwright looked up from the glass, and there was the young family again, only this time they were outside of his window, not ten feet away looking in at him. He looked closer. It was his son, Edward, but not as the child, as the man, and Valerie and what must be her little boy. They smiled in at him, waved, and walked to the back door. Wheelwright moved to the kitchen, drink in hand, and dumped it out in the sink just as they opened the kitchen door.
“Hi, Dad,” Edward said.
“Hi, Mr. W,” Valerie added.
They all looked down at the little boy, all of two-years-old, walking steadily, and the boy looked up at Mark Wheelwright and said, “Papa.”
Valerie and Edward laughed as Valerie bent down to him.
Mark Wheelwright was hung over. He didn’t like the joke.
“Dad, he’s your grandson,” the younger Wheelwright said.
“That’s nice of you two, but he’s not my grandson,” said the older man in a sharp tone with the emphasis on “my.”
“Can we go in the family room and talk?” Edward said to his father.
“Sure,” Mark said, a little upset with the way this day was starting out. He didn’t like the idea of a married woman living in his guesthouse. He liked it even less if they were going to try to pass the baby off in some charade as Edward’s and that he was the grandfather. Has the persecution of an old man no end, he thought, the image of a bottle looming on the horizon of his mind.
When they were seated in the family room, the little boy sat on the floor holding a fluffy toy rabbit.
“We need to tell you something, Mr. W,” Valerie began.
“Something quite wonderful, Dad,” Edward said.
“You’re going to get married, finally,” Mark said with a smile and with a touch of sarcasm.
“Yes,” Edward said, “but something better.”
“Well let’s have it,” Mark was tiring of the game. He needed them gone and a refill of what he had just poured down the drain.
“This little boy is your grandson, Mr. W. When Eddie left me, I was pregnant. I never told him because he no longer wanted me, and I assumed he wouldn’t want the baby. I decided to have the baby, and wanting to have a normal family life and a father for the baby, I rushed into marriage.”
The older Wheelwright became very alert. He sat forward and looked at the boy. He could see a resemblance to his son. The same eyes, blue. The same jaw line, the dark brown hair. He got up and walked to the boy, bent down and picked him up. He took the boy with him and sat down in his favorite chair with the boy on his lap.
“Papa,” Edward Wheelwright Jr. said looking at his grandfather.