“Should I remind you I am centuries older than you, ‘Mother’?” Mimi sniffed. She was coming of age now, the memories flooding back, and Mimi did not want to have to play at being Red Bloods anymore, with typical nuclear family dynamics.
“Charles,” Trinity said. “Control your children.” “Mimi, you look beautiful,” Charles said, kissing his daughter on the forehead. “Let’s go.” Trinity scowled. “Come, darling, it is time to dance,” Charles said soothingly, taking his wife’s hand and leading her out of the room. “Shall we?” Jack asked, holding out his hand. “We shall.” Mimi smiled. And together the Force twins walked out, arm in arm, to the party of the year.
TWELVE
A few blocks away, in an altogether different penthouse—the Llewellyns’ outlandish triplex, nicknamed “Penthouse des Rêves” due to its awesome, if surreal, extravagance—Forsyth Llewellyn was standing in front of a secret compartment behind the shoe closet. He quickly turned the knob on the vault two clicks to the right, then three clicks to the left, and stepped back as the five-inch stainless steel door swung open. “Daaaad, what’s this all about?” Bliss asked, standing beside him. “I’m supposed to meet Jaime in the lobby at eight.” She was holding Miss Ellie, her Chihuahua, in her arms. Miss Ellie was her canine familiar, named after her favorite character, on Dallas, of course. Just as promised, Mimi had set Bliss up with Jaime Kip. It was a total friend-date. Jaime had absolutely no interest in Bliss, and vice versa. In fact, it was Jaime who had suggested they meet in the St. Regis lobby since they were both attending with their families. Bliss got the distinct impression Jaime had asked to be her escort for the sole purpose of getting Mimi off his back. Mimi could be quite pushy when she wanted to be.
Bliss crossed her arms and looked around at her stepmother’s enormous dressing room. It never failed to impress guests during the ritual house tour. The “closet” was easily two thousand square feet. It had a step-down Roman bath lined with travertine marble and was equipped with dancing showerheads along the side, so that you bathed in the midst of a fountain. There was an endless hallway of mirrors that masked a series of compartments that housed five thousand items of designer clothing, which had been catalogued and archived by BobiAnne’s personal assistant. Too bad so much of what was inside was, in Bliss’s opinion, vulgar and tasteless. BobiAnne had never met a marabou-trimmed leopard-print poncho that she didn’t like.
BobiAnne was absorbed in her own toilette, and Bliss could hear her stepmother’s gravelly laugh echo around the dressing chamber as she gossiped with her two stylists.
Bliss looked at herself in the infinity of mirrors. She had decided to wear the green Dior after all. Her father and stepmother had simply gasped when they saw her.
“My dear, you are so beautiful,” BobiAnne had whispered, clasping her stepdaughter in her bony arms made stringy by too much Pilates. It was like being hugged by a skeleton.
BobiAnne was forever praising Bliss’s good looks to the heavens, and disparaging her own daughter’s rather plain appearance. Jordan, who at eleven was too young for the ball, had peeked in while Bliss was getting dressed and rendered her own judgment. “You look like a slut.”
Bliss had thrown a pillow at her sister’s retreating back.
After showing her parents the dress, her father had taken her aside and led her to the safe. He pulled open several of the suede-lined drawers custom-made to BobiAnne’s exact specifications. Bliss could see the sparkle of her stepmother’s many diamond tiaras, necklaces, rings, and bracelets. It was like the inside of Harry Winston. In fact, rumor had it that when the Texans had moved to Manhattan, the senator’s wife had cleaned out the vaults at all the major diamond merchants in order to celebrate their ascendance in the city’s social realm.
He pulled out a long black velvet box from a bottom drawer.
“This was your mother’s,” he said, showing her a massive cushion-cut emerald set in a platinum necklace. The emerald was as large as a fist. “Your real mother’s, I mean. Not BobiAnne.”
Bliss was struck silent.
“I want you to wear it for this evening. This is an important time for us, for our family. You will honor your mother’s memory with this jewel,” Forsyth said, clasping the necklace around his daughter’s neck.
Bliss knew little of her mother, only that she had cycled out early for an unknown reason. Her father never talked about her, and Bliss had grown up understanding that her mother was a painful subject. There was little to remember her by, and what few photographs remained were washed-out and faded, so that her mother’s features were almost indistinct. When Bliss asked about her, her father only said to “channel her memories,” and that she would meet her mother again if time allowed it.
The dog in Bliss’s arms went berserk, snapping and growling at the stone.
“Miss Ellie! Stop!”
“Silence!” Forsyth ordered, and the dog jumped from Bliss’s arms and high-tailed it out the door.