For Better Or Worse
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Synopsis
Touching, funny, and remarkably true-to-life, Jill Amy Rosenblatt's latest novel explores how the friendships between women only grow stronger with time. . .even when life throws curveballs no one sees coming. . . Emily, Elizabeth, and Karen are as different as three women can be, but that hasn't stopped them from forging an unbreakable bond. Newlywed Emily, now half of a New York City power couple, would love nothing more than to see her friends settled down with soul mates of their own. But Elizabeth still carries the sting of a past heartbreak, while Karen fears she's destined to repeat her parents' disastrous marriage. Yet even as Emily plays matchmaker, she must ultimately confront a secret truth about her own marriage. . .one that threatens the future she thought was secure. When she does, all three friends will discover that life's paths may turn out to be longer, and harder, than expected, but the twists and turns lead us where we're meant to be. . .
Release date: July 18, 2009
Publisher: Kensington Books
Print pages: 401
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For Better Or Worse
Jill Amy Rosenblatt
“I told Emily, June is best,” he heard a woman say. “There is nothing more romantic than a summer wedding in New York.”
He squinted through the smoke at the men in their finely tailored suits; no doubt financial wizards, like the groom. He wondered if Michele had chosen a man like one of these to take his place, to be her next husband. Feeling his blood pressure rise at the thought of his ex-wife, he threw his cigarette down, grinding it into the concrete with the tip of his polished shoe. That was the first and last time he’d be walking down the aisle. Turning, he entered the church.
Inside the narthex, he inhaled the welcome blast of frigid air and shrugged into his jacket. A bridesmaid emerged from a side door. His eyes traveled the length of her, lingering on the rose-colored slip of a dress hugging her slim form. Her blond hair was swept into a neat French twist and she fidgeted with the small bouquet of orchids in her hand. Wondering what scent she wore, he was instantly sorry he wasn’t closer. She caught him in his scrutiny, her delicate features furrowing into a frown.
“Which side?” she asked.
Ian couldn’t decide whether she was annoyed or bored. “Sorry?”
Her hazel eyes moved over him. “The bride or the groom’s side?”
“Neither,” Ian said, amused to find himself the subject of her examination.
She pointed to a large book lying open on a stand. “Would you care to write a wish to the happy couple?”
“I don’t think it will help.”
She gave a short, clipped laugh before catching herself. “Your accent—England, no, Scotland.”
“Very good.”
“You’ve come a long way to witness a wedding when you have no faith in marriage.”
“I didn’t say that. It’s not for everyone though, is it?”
“Let me guess, it’s not for you.”
“Not for me, no.”
She chuckled, this time without the smile. “Still finding yourself?”
“I’m not lost.”
“You need your space.”
“My flat is quite roomy.” He smiled, enjoying her look of irritation.
She straightened. “A man who knows his own mind, how refreshing.” She waved the bouquet toward the chapel. “Sit anywhere you like.” Turning on her heel, she disappeared back into the room she had come from.
Entering the sanctuary, Ian spotted Robert maneuvering his sturdy six-foot frame through the clusters of guests chatting and laughing in the aisle. He approached his friend and received Robert’s firm handshake.
“Eighty grand on flowers,” Robert lamented. “There isn’t a pink rose left in Manhattan. What a waste.”
“It’s not a waste. They’ll use them for the divorce party.”
Robert gave a laugh.
“How do you know what the flowers cost?”
Robert leaned in. “Because the groom hasn’t shut up about it since we got here.”
Ian glanced over his shoulder toward the narthex. “Did you notice the girl I was talking to?”
Robert nodded. “That’s Karen’s friend, Elizabeth, a money manager. Did you notice she’s not your type?”
“You don’t know what my type is,” Ian shot back.
“Oh, I beg to differ. As your oldest friend, I have seen your taste across five countries and two continents. She’s not your type.”
Ian gave Robert a sharp look.
“But I don’t interfere anymore.”
They stood in awkward silence.
“If you’re that interested, I can put in a good word. If I tell Karen about your many chivalrous exploits, I’m sure it will get back to Liz. Rescuing damsels in distress stranded by no-good boyfriends—”
“It was hardly a rescue.”
“Providing room and board to countless weary travelers, including myself.”
Ian smirked. “All right, are you done amusing yourself? How much have you told Karen about me?”
Robert shrugged. “Nothing. You told me not to say anything. You haven’t even told me what you’ve been doing for the past two years. Why all the secrecy?”
Ian shrugged, glancing back at the narthex. He thought he caught sight of Elizabeth again. “It’s not secrecy. It’s a new country, a new life.” He turned back to Robert. “Best to leave the past where it is, don’t you think?”
“Whatever you want.” He gave Ian the once-over. “You’re not wearing a tie.”
“I was hoping they’d ask me to leave.”
“Not a chance. The bride loves you and your no-tie, who-gives-a-shit artist attitude.”
“If she truly loved me and my attitude, she would’ve bought three of my paintings, not one.” Ian put his hand on Robert’s shoulder. “Now, let’s have it. What’s your prediction?”
“One year. Then they flame out.”
“And you’re never wrong.”
“Almost never.”
Among their friends, Robert’s keen understanding of human nature had rendered him a seer. His uncanny aptitude for foretelling the future was an urban legend, with one exception—the happily-ever-after he had predicted for Ian’s marriage.
Elizabeth and Karen watched Robert and Ian from the narthex.
“So who’s the operator talking to your betrothed?” Elizabeth said, taking in his slicked-back blond hair curling over his open-collared shirt and the short, trimmed beard. She lingered over his slim, wiry frame. I am enjoying this way too much.
“Robert’s best friend, Ian MacKay, from Scotland.”
But he hasn’t been there in a while, Elizabeth thought. The accent was watered down, the thick brogue long gone.
“I don’t know that he’s an operator, he seems like a good guy. Robert didn’t say much about him.”
“He wears the most delicious cologne,” came a voice from behind them. They turned in unison, finding Emily glowing in her Badgley Mischka gown. It was perfect for her, the scoop neckline revealing the right amount of cleavage, the dropped waist making her five-foot-nine-inch frame seem even taller, more regal. A descendant of a founding father and subsequent captains of industry, Emily’s money was as old as her lineage and it showed; she didn’t walk, she flowed, her elegance a hallmark of her birthright.
“And, his beard is like velvet,” she added.
Elizabeth feigned a look at her watch. “You still have twenty minutes. Would you like to switch grooms?”
Emily rolled her eyes. “I kissed his cheek.”
Elizabeth folded her arms.
“Okay, both cheeks, it’s the European way.” Emily laughed, coloring. “I invited him for tea a few times, strictly business. He’s going to paint my portrait.”
“And why is this the first I’m hearing about Ian MacKay of Scotland and his beard of velvet?” Elizabeth said, turning an enquiring eye on Karen.
“He just got here,” Karen said. “You haven’t come up for air since your promotion. I hardly see you anymore.”
“Uh-hunh,” Elizabeth said, giving Karen a sharp look. “Painting Emily’s portrait?”
Karen sighed. “Yes, he’s an artist.”
Elizabeth gave a disgusted laugh, and headed back to the dressing room.
“Liz, you can’t judge all artists by Josh and certainly not by William,” Emily said, trailing after her, Karen close behind.
“I do not judge all artists. I simply have an intimate understanding of their basic nature.”
“Which you use to judge them,” Emily persisted as they entered the dressing room.
“Whatever.”
Emily held out her hands to draw them into a circle. “Now, my dearest friends, this is it. This is Act Two of our lives.” She held up Karen’s hand, with its glittering diamond ring. “We’ve all found our soul mates.”
Karen’s eyes darkened with concern.
“Now, don’t fret, your wedding will be perfect,” Emily said. “Lots of people have crazy parents. Who is that philosopher you study?”
“Lao-tzu. Taoism teaches stillness, and giving up fear, anxiety, and control so all things flow naturally to the right ending,” Karen said.
“Oh, I love that,” Emily squeaked. She turned to Elizabeth. “After Karen and Robert are married, you and Nick will be next. You two are my crowning triumph, a perfect match—and Nick knows it.”
“It’s only been six months.”
“He told Parker you were the one after the first date.”
Elizabeth smiled. He knows it, and I know it too. She glanced at Karen and caught her friend’s look of doubt.
The wedding planner, flanked by her team, blew into the room. They whisked Emily away, all the while clucking at Elizabeth and Karen to take their places.
“How are you, really?” Elizabeth whispered to Karen as they fell into line for the processional.
Karen sighed. “Did you see Page Six? My parents are at it again. Divorced for ten years and they don’t see that as a reason to stop fighting. The Tao says troubles are like rocks in the middle of a stream. The rocks try to interrupt the water’s calm flow, but they can’t. My parents aren’t rocks, they’re boulders.”
“You haven’t told them you’re engaged, have you?”
“I couldn’t. She’s in Europe, on a book tour, but still found time to give a satellite-radio interview. The subject? My father’s plagiarism. She quoted chapter and verse from his solo works, claiming it was stuff she wrote when they were married. She can’t prove it. She can never prove it. You know when they created audioconferencing, I don’t think this is what they had in mind.” She sighed. “Twenty years of marriage, twelve books together, and this is how it ends. Actually it doesn’t end, it just keeps going.”
“What about your father? Did you tell him you were getting married?”
“He’s been too busy.”
“Is he finishing a new book?”
“No, his fifth marriage.”
“Oh.”
“I need to remain calm, be still, and it will all work out. The Tao says be flexible and learn to let go of the most important issues. Then they work out by themselves.”
If only it were that easy, Elizabeth thought.
The first bars of music began; there was a palpable rustle as the crowd turned in unison toward the door.
Elizabeth counted silently to five before taking her first step. Making her way down the aisle, feeling the eyes of the crowd on her, brought back a flood of memories; the steps she had taken to the altar. Up ahead she saw Parker, the groom-to-be, whispering something to the minister. For a second he became Josh, her Josh, pulling her aside and whispering that he couldn’t go through with it. He was sorry; he didn’t mean to hurt her.
It seemed a lifetime ago and yet still fresh as yesterday. She gave herself a mental shake and focused straight ahead. That was almost fifteen years ago. I’m almost thirty-five years old. I’m a grown woman. Why think about the past?
She caught a glimpse of Ian MacKay as she passed by; those deep, blue eyes, the hint of baby-smooth skin peeking out from the corners of his beard. Her eyes rested on him a second too long; she shook off any thought of him, scanning the crowd until she found Nick.
Ian turned away from the Rainbow Room’s windows and the majestic view of the kingdom that was New York City. Champagne corks popped, glasses clinked, the orchestra played. Like the Titanic, the band playing as the ship was sinking, he thought, as this marriage will sink. Wandering back into the crowd, he caught sight of a woman looking him over. She gave him a smile of invitation. He imagined her a nice girl with a pretty face and a busy life. They would fall into something easy and convenient. She would come and go until realizing he would give nothing more. After a time she would drift away on her own. If it even lasted that long. He lingered a moment, then turned away from her.
He scanned the room, settling on a woman in an expensive sequined gown. He could tell by the way she held herself she was maintained, but not a pedigree. She was on the arm of a debonair man, with unruly long hair tucked behind his ears, a long angular face; a European. The money was his, not hers. This was the kind of man Michele had left him for, someone able to give her everything she wanted: money, travel, ease. All of the things that weren’t coming fast enough being married to me, Ian thought. The art shows weren’t big enough, he wasn’t the rising star she expected, the enfant terrible she hoped for.
Ian’s attention returned to studying the woman. She couldn’t compare to Michele. Michele was exquisite, skin like porcelain and azure eyes that cut through you. One look at her and there was no going back. She could have any man she wanted. And there had been several, he found out. Michele had tried them out first, in secret, to see if they had enough to please her before finally making her choice.
Ian could feel his anger rising when a hand settled on his shoulder.
“Let’s get a drink,” Robert said.
Ian nodded. It was the least they could do to salvage the evening. When they passed Parker, the groom had a glass in one hand, its contents splashing over the side as he waved his arm, describing his real estate empire.
“Thirty thousand square feet,” he was saying. “The front entrance will be all marble. Italian. And that’s just the main house. I’m putting in a one-thousand-square-foot pool house.”
The men clicked glasses and drank to the pool house.
“You know, one of my guys quit last month. I had him on debt acquisition. I buy fifty million in debt from some shithole country—whose name I can’t pronounce—for pennies on the dollar. When they default, I send Nick to court, he sues, we win, and that shithole country has to pay me the whole fifty, maybe more.”
One of the men spoke up. “In what century will you collect?”
“Any dollar comes into that country, I get first. This guy’s whining to me about our moral obligation, aren’t we victimizing impoverished nations. I told him, if I wanted to, I could make a few currency bets and change that country’s economy in a heartbeat.”
He took another swallow of his drink, then laughed, talking almost to himself. “He says we should be safeguarding the economy. I am the economy, asshole. I’m moving the value of currency. He couldn’t take the pressure, dickless wonder. You know where he is now? Putting in eighty hours a week at some plain-vanilla mutual fund for a shit bonus check. Good luck with your fiscal responsibility, shithead. I’ll be at my compound in Greenwich, stepping out the door to the helipad to bring me to Manhattan.”
“To Parker Davis,” they said, raising their glasses.
Shaking his head, Ian hunkered down next to Robert at the bar, watching the bartender set up glasses and pour. Taking a long drink, Ian let out a sigh of relief until a heavy slap on his back made him jump and slosh his drink onto the bar.
“Hey, I hope you’re enjoying my wedding,” Parker said. “You’re looking at one and a half million.”
Elizabeth was only half-listening to Karen as they lounged at a table by themselves. Her eyes were fixed on Ian MacKay.
“I still don’t understand the change in attitude. Not six months ago you said having Emily as a matchmaker is like asking an arsonist to house-sit. She’s broken more engagements than her nails. Are you listening to me?”
“At least she had the right idea. She left them.” She should have left one more. Why did a woman who made her society debut at Le Bal Crillon marry a low-life like Parker Davis?
“Liz, how is it really going with Nick?”
“Fine.” Elizabeth continued to stare out into the crowd. “He’s kind and attentive. He takes me to dinner and sends me flowers. We discuss matters of business because we share common interests. Is there something wrong with a serious, focused man? He’s a grown-up.”
Karen was silent for a moment. When she spoke her voice sounded hurt. “Robert’s a grown-up. You don’t have to be in business to be a grown-up.”
Elizabeth turned to Karen. “Of course not. I didn’t mean it that way. Robert is a brilliant writer and so are you. I’m sorry I’ve been so busy with the job and these dinners with Emily and Parker. That doesn’t change us or our friendship. But this relationship with Nick is what I want now.”
“Sometimes I think I made a mistake convincing you to come to New York. You had a life in California.”
Elizabeth turned to give her friend a sharp look. “What life?”
“A life as a painter.”
“I was a painter. I’m not anymore. Are we going to go through this again?”
“Liz, you can’t keep punishing yourself for what your mother did. She hurt herself. You didn’t hurt her.”
“Really? Didn’t I?”
Karen leaned forward, her voice low. “I was there, remember? She knew exactly what William was doing.”
Elizabeth made a face. “What William was doing—what I was doing. There were two of us.”
“She did everything she could to destroy you, Liz. I just feel like you keep moving further away from who you are.”
“Ancient history,” Elizabeth snapped. “Nick isn’t the past. He’s the present and the future. My future. I’m with him because he’s the right one for me.”
Elizabeth returned to watching the bar, her signal that the subject was closed. Guests moved in and out of her line of vision and then a pocket would open, revealing a glimpse of Ian MacKay.
Ian sucked in a deep breath, trying for patience, his empty stomach complaining bitterly while Parker’s rambling gnawed on his last nerve.
“Let me tell you, gents, I walk into a room with this woman and every man wants what I have. Beautiful, built.” He elbowed Ian. “And the family fortune doesn’t hurt either. Now I’ve got the money and the girl, and it’s all legal. I can’t believe how happy I am,” he said with a hearty laugh, giving Ian another robust slap on the back.
Ian raised his hand, attempting to signal the bartender. He reminded himself that artists of small reputation could not afford to tell their client’s husband to piss off and lose any referrals that might come their way. He kept his mouth shut and smiled.
Parker gripped his shoulder. “You need to get married, my friend.”
Wanker. What I need is a scotch and a smoke.
“Now I realize how empty my life has been,” Parker continued.
“That’s not what I heard.”
At the sound of the soft, even voice, the men turned to see Elizabeth sliding onto the empty stool next to Ian.
“I heard your business lunches at the Plaza Hotel were quite full and satisfying,” she said.
Chuckling, Parker wrapped his arms around her, squeezing her to him. “Listen, cookie, I’m a changed man! You’re just jealous because you passed on your opportunity.”
“I yielded to the better woman,” she said.
Parker cackled. “You don’t know what you missed, babe, on so many levels.”
The lights threw colorful shadows across the planes of Elizabeth’s face. Ian felt a rush of blood surge within him and had a fleeting thought of Hemingway’s Lady Brett Ashley draped on a bar stool in a café in Spain, waiting for her bullfighter to return. She could be Lady Ashley, she looks unhappy enough.
A passing guest caught Parker’s attention. Stepping away from the group, he pointed at Ian. “You should see this guy’s stuff, Liz, it’s not half-bad. The resale value sucks but maybe he has something for your office.”
“My office is decorated.”
“Something for your flat?” Ian said.
“My apartment has everything in it I need.”
“Pity,” Ian said. He glanced over to Robert; he had retreated to a stool, a silent observer.
“Are you enjoying the wedding?”
“Brilliant party,” he said. “You don’t seem pleased. Don’t you fancy weddings, Lizzie?”
“Elizabeth,” she corrected. “Weddings are fine but they have nothing to do with marriage.”
He edged closer. There it is, he thought, catching her scent, a warm, drowsy duet of delicate flowers with a hint of vanilla. “Don’t they? I believe you need one to have the other.”
“You do, but all of this”—she waved her hand—“is not included.”
“But you’re not married, Lizzie. How do you know this?”
“Elizabeth. Because the principle of any successful endeavor is work.” She leaned back, revealing a little self-satisfied smile. “Marriage is not a four-tiered vanilla cake and a garter.”
“It’s not?” Robert interjected. “Karen has some explaining to do.”
Ian smirked in spite of Elizabeth’s sour look. “Perhaps you’re right. Why marry at all? Two people can simply enjoy each other’s company without complications.”
Elizabeth laughed. “In the colonies, we call that a one-night stand.”
Ian smiled. “You Americans, always in a hurry.”
“You Europeans and your lovers, always chasing after romance.”
“Very well then, I concede. Marriage is not romance. What is it then, Lizzie?” Ian asked. “Portfolios and property, profit and loss?”
Elizabeth slid off the stool. “Not just that. Respect, understanding, and yes, hard work, to build a solid financial future.”
Ian laughed but the sound came out hollow. “Everything but your heart. Isn’t that right, love?”
Elizabeth paled and Ian looked away, tossing back the rest of his drink. Brilliant, you stupid git. He scrambled for something soothing to say as a tall, clean-cut man approached. His dark hair was salted with gray; his stride, easy and confident. Ian judged him to be in his late forties.
“Am I interrupting?” he said.
“Not at all,” Elizabeth said, her eyes still locked on Ian. “We’re finished.”
Nick slid his arm around her. “Gentlemen, excuse us,” he said to no one in particular as he led her away.
Elizabeth’s soft laugh floated back to Ian and he felt a knot forming in his stomach as he watched Nick and Elizabeth disappear from sight, lost in the crowd.
Ian cursed under his breath.
Robert gave his shoulder a friendly pat. “So much for tales of chivalry.”
“Shut it,” he said, raising his hand and signaling the barman.
At dinner, the bride and groom worked the room, pausing at each table.
“I’ve finally found my path,” Emily was saying as she stood by Elizabeth’s table. “I’ve designed clothes, bags, perfume, but nothing can make a connection with people like the culinary arts. I intend to create the ultimate experience for my clients, allowing them to see new cultures through foods of the world. I’ll be like Anthony Bourdain—only without the travel. I wanted to study with Iron Chef Batali—but he’s always booked. So I’m studying on my own. A lot of the great chefs were self-taught. I’ll be the next Julia Child—without the hump, of course.”
Elizabeth caught Nick’s smirk. She knew that smirk all too well.
“I always thought Parker would be smart enough to pick brains over eye candy,” Nick whispered.
“Emily is not stupid,” Elizabeth said. Except for marrying Parker, she finished silently. Parker’s brains were on a perpetual elevator between his head and his pants. She thought about all of his come-ons and propositions to her when they first met. She marveled that it took him so long to figure out there was no way it would happen.
She came back to the present, smiling as she felt Nick nuzzling her neck. “Would you like a wedding like this?”
Liz pulled back to gaze into his handsome, sturdy features and ran a light touch across his cheek. “Maybe.”
“You’re going to keep me guessing. Okay. I like a woman of mystery.”
And I intend to remain that way, she thought, dropping her gaze. You must never know about California, about my mother. Suddenly Karen’s words about her past came to mind. She did everything she could to destroy you, Liz.
I should never have gone to my mother’s after Josh left me, she thought. If I hadn’t gone home, everything would’ve been different. She chided herself again for being so stupid about William. Listening to him when he said he just wanted to comfort her, be a support for her. Why did I keep letting him get closer? I should have told her…apologized…done something.
“Hey, are you still with me?”
Elizabeth found Nick viewing her quizzically.
“Yes, I’m here.”
Even as she forced a smile, Elizabeth stole a glance at the next table. Ian looked her way, giving her a bemused smile. She ignored him, turning back to Nick.
The reception was over. A steady stream of limousines pulled up, picked up, and pulled away. The stifling heat had given way to still, humid air, clinging to everyone like a damp blanket. Ian said good night to Robert and Karen, raising a hand in farewell as they disappeared into a limo and it pulled away.
Later that night, lying in bed, Ian smoked a final cigarette, letting his thoughts wander. After Michele left, everything had gone wrong. He couldn’t paint anymore. It was as if he had never picked up a brush in his life. Now, he felt his ability returning. He could concentrate here and start over. He took a last drag and thought of Elizabeth, her silky dress clinging to her soft curves, her serious, stern eyes locking with his. Robert was right, of course. Uptight, cool, calculating money managers weren’t his type. But he sensed there was more to her than that. He was intrigued enough to pursue her. He stubbed out the cigarette in the ashtray on his nightstand, switched off the light and began to formulate a plan. A tea and a chat with Karen would be his first step. She seemed a decent sort and he detected a guileless openness, even a subtle sense of helplessness. If that didn’t work, he would have to resort to doing Emily’s portrait. He frowned at the thought. Robert would keep his word and n. . .
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