Page 32
Story: Our Last Vineyard Summer
The first dinner party of the summer and it had been entirely forced upon her.
Virgie pressed her fingertips to her temples, her face thick with foundation and blush.
She lowered her hands back into the bouquet of flowers she had asked Louisa to clip from the garden, a bundle of deep pink roses, blue hydrangeas, and white dahlias, and she continued to arrange them in a large mason jar.
She’d chosen to skip the gooseneck vase she’d use if she were hosting guests in Washington—it was the joy of a summer house to employ simple jars for everything from drinking iced tea to planting vegetable seeds.
Everything was more casual on the island, and she didn’t want to change that, even if they were hosting someone Charlie deemed important.
Virgie checked the roman numerals on the kitchen clock.
Her husband would arrive in an hour, their guests thirty minutes after that.
She wasn’t sure what to say to him when he arrived, perhaps only that she was pleased he was there.
Keep things as simple between them as the style permeating her dining table.
Informal. Pleasing. Without complication.
It would be their first time together since she’d left for the island, and she felt anxious being in the same physical space as her husband. She didn’t want a confrontation.
Or did she?
Earlier, before her afternoon had twisted into a tornado, Virgie had dragged out two rickety easels from the garage and set them up for Betsy and James, who wanted to paint watercolor pictures of the harbor.
She had just delivered them cups of water and paintbrushes when the kitchen phone rang.
It was Charlie’s secretary from his offices on Capitol Hill.
She’d announced in her sweet bouncy voice that the senator had asked her to deliver a message: he would arrive tonight in Cape Cod by airplane, and India and Russell Knight—possible donors—were coming for dinner.
“What time?” There were still breakfast dishes in the sink and laundry drying on a line outside. Louisa was having a sleepover with one of the Post girls, and Betsy and James had begged to stay up and catch fireflies.
“His plane will land at six thirty, ma’am. Guests will arrive at seven. Sorry, Mrs. Whiting, for the trouble, he asked me to set this up at the last minute.”
“It’s okay, dear. You are only doing your job.
” She’d been unable to hide the irritation in her voice.
Hanging up, she immediately dialed Pamela Sunday to see if she could come and help cook.
An hour later, Pamela arrived in a fraying pea-green housedress with orange flowers, stubbing out a cigarette on the front steps when Virgie answered the door.
She agreed to prepare a crudités platter, reheat New England clam chowder Virgie would fetch from the local chowder house, and prepare steak Diane with green beans.
This would give Virgie time to finish cleaning.
At six thirty, Virgie, wearing a lace sheath with daisies at the neckline, called her three daughters into the living room, sending James home; they’d been pouting about the change of plans all day, even if Betsy hadn’t stopped talking about all of the things she couldn’t wait to show her father.
Already, Aggie was furious because she’d had to cancel plans to see a movie, and Louisa and her boy-crazy friend, Sylvie Post, would be here for the duration of the dinner party.
“You will need to stay upstairs until our guests leave. Louisa, you and Sylvie can have your room, and Aggie, you and Betsy should read or play a game in Betsy’s bedroom. Don’t come down unless you must, and if you do, please greet our guests politely.”
“You already told us this, Mom.” Louisa smoothed her pleated skirt. “Can we go now?”
“Remember, keep your voices down. These are important friends of your father’s, and we don’t want them to think we’re a bunch of hooligans.”
Aggie raised her hand, her face stone-cold. “I’m just curious, Mom. Why do we care so much what people think of us?”
Virgie inhaled an impatient breath, preparing to offer up her canned response to this question.
Dad is a public servant. He’s chosen by voters.
For a voter to choose you, they must trust you, and trust starts with the home.
If a man cannot run a household, then how can he run a country?
Instead, she said: “Hush. Now go find something to do.”
They were finished with the crudités platter, everyone already draining their first glass of wine, and Charlie hadn’t arrived.
Virgie had covered nearly every topic she could think of with India and Russell Knight, while slipping into the kitchen to check on Pamela, who was waiting to reheat the soup.
The Knights were Washingtonians by way of London, India retaining her British accent, and thus far, they’d spoken about a recent trip they took to Acadia National Park in Maine.
They discussed their young children, who were seven and nine, and the sleepaway camp they attended in the Adirondacks.
Virgie knew that the couple recently rented a dairy farm in rural Chilmark, and Russell would travel back and forth in summer between the British Embassy in Washington, where he was the ambassador, and the island.
That had been a surprise. An ambassador from England.
It was only recently that more political types had started visiting the island, thanks to the Kennedys owning property nearby in Cape Cod, and still, it surprised Virgie how politically connected the summer population was beginning to feel.
Russell had a crown of dark hair parted to one side. He glanced at his watch. “Any update about the senator?”
Virgie breezed into the kitchen to get the bottle of wine, pretending that she didn’t hear some kind of scuffle upstairs in one of the bedrooms. “Perhaps there was some air traffic,” she said, smiling at the couple when she glided back in the living room.
“Perhaps we could take a walk down to the dock and I’ll show you Charlie’s sailboat. ”
Everyone seemed relieved to leave the formality of the dining room.
As the women’s heels click-clacked down the slats, Virgie tried to keep up a lively commentary about various spots on the island they must visit.
The couple explained they’d chosen the farm since India had grown up summering in the Cotswolds; she wanted her boys to be able to roam free in summer like she had.
“Catch grasshoppers with their hands and such.” India’s hand went to her garnet earrings. “I’m not typically this fancy.”
Virgie chuckled at the woman’s long satin dress and strappy sandals. “Me neither. I despise wearing heels or anything with a zipper up the back in summer.”
When Russell climbed onto the boat to look around, India turned to Virgie. A piece of her dark hair fell from her loose waves. “I love your Dear Virgie column,” India said, sipping her wine. “The newspaper announced a replacement last week. Did they cancel you, or did you choose to walk away?”
“I’m just taking a break.” It still hurt to say it.
“Oh, good, because I loved what you were doing in the column; your advice was so liberating. There’s a hunger for that kind of writing these days.
One of my friends recently applied for a job at a newspaper in Philadelphia and she was told the newsroom was no place for a woman.
She did talk them into hiring her for the overnight shift, but don’t you see? You’re already in the newsroom .”
“I’m only giving relationship advice. Editors only let women cover fashion and gardening, maybe the odd feature on relationships.”
India turned her back so her husband couldn’t hear. “Your advice was empowering and rebellious. All the mums at my son’s school were talking about the parent conference ideas.” India paused. “You need to keep going.”
If India had perceived that Virgie’s column had been a subversive way to instill women with feminist ideology, then maybe it had been. Why was that a problem for Charlie? Isn’t that what they’d stood for: helping the disenfranchised have a voice. “Thank you. I appreciate the support. Do you work?”
Virgie realized that she’d written India off as an ambassador’s wife. It was rude and went against everything Virgie believed.
“Yes, I worked with a woman barrister with ties to Parliament. We lobbied for years on getting women access to the Pill in the UK, and we got it passed too. Well, for married women, but we still need all women to be able to buy it. I’ve had to pull back on my influence, since Russell was named ambassador this year.
It’s all too political, but I have a like-minded circle in Washington.
We should gather a group of women on the island.
As you know, there are a few rather influential people here, of both sexes. ”
“I would like that very much.” Virgie thought she heard a car and looked up to see if it was Charlie, but it wasn’t. “I wrote a Dear Virgie column devoted to the Pill, you know, whether a mother should talk to her eighteen-year-old daughter about it. Caused quite the stir.”
“I saw that. See, you were onto something, something bigger than relationship advice. Because you weren’t forming a commission or fighting for equal pay, like Betty Friedan, which is critical too.
You were quietly making a difference by shifting public opinion.
Your column was beginning to normalize conversations that no one is certain it’s okay to talk about. ”
“I would like to shout more in that column.” Virgie touched the bracelet on her wrist, a delicate gold chain with a tiny ruby charm; her father had bought it for her mother for her thirty-fifth birthday, but then she’d stopped going to her meetings and as a form of punishment, he’d given the bracelet to Virgie.
She wore it as a reminder of her mother’s longing to get better and her father’s harsh judgments.
Table of Contents
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- Page 32 (Reading here)
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