New York_ The Novel - Edward Rutherfurd [445]
“Go to hell,” he’d said.
“That’s not a fair response.”
“It’s the only one you’re getting. You run your life, I’ll run mine.”
“We share our lives, Gorham.”
“Some things we share, some things we don’t. Get used to it.”
They hadn’t spoken any more that night.
In Gorham’s experience, at any dinner party, there was usually one thing somebody said that stuck in your mind afterward. This evening, it was Maeve O’Sullivan who provided it.
Gorham admired Maeve. By day she managed money, and did it brilliantly, but she didn’t find it satisfied her intellect. She spoke four languages. She played the piano seriously well. And she read books. Lots of them.
They were discussing the long hours the young kids worked in the Financial District.
“You know,” Maeve said, “I was reading Virginia Woolf the other day, and she remarked that at one period of her life, she was able to get so much done because she had three uninterrupted hours to work in every day. And I thought, what on earth is she talking about? Only three hours a day? And then I looked around the office at all the people working their fourteen-hour days, and I thought, how many of you actually spend three hours in real, creative, intellectual activity in a day? And I reckoned, probably not one.” She smiled. “And there’s Virginia Woolf achieving more than they ever will in their lives, on three hours a day. It makes you think. They might do better if they worked less.”
“Mind you, she killed herself,” said John Vorpal, and everybody laughed.
But Maeve was right, all the same. It was something to think about.
The evening ended pleasantly, and one could tell the guests had enjoyed themselves. As he said good-bye to the last of them and went back into the living room to face John Vorpal, Gorham felt almost friendly toward him. There was just Vorpal—his wife had gone back to their apartment.
“Okay, Gorham,” Vorpal said, pulling out the papers, “7B.”
Gorham was sorry that the people in 7B were leaving, but a big job opportunity was taking them to California, so 7B was on the market. A good offer had been made. They wanted to take it. But of course, the prospective purchasers had to go before the board. Or to be precise, a committee of the board. This was the first time an apartment had been sold since Vorpal became chairman. The committee was due to meet, and then interview the applicants, that coming Wednesday. So if Vorpal wanted to talk to him now, that could only mean one thing. Trouble.
Maggie came into the room.
“May I join you?”
Gorham frowned. It was he who was on the board, not her. This was an unwarranted interference. But Vorpal looked up, and smiled.
“I wish you would.” Vorpal liked Maggie. He supposed that, as a partner in Branch & Cabell, she’d agree with him, whereas he considered Gorham to be a little unreliable. He passed her a copy of the application. “I think we may have a problem with this. Jim Bandersnatch thinks so too.”
“Dr. Caruso?” said Maggie.
“I think I’d better tell you that we know this man,” said Gorham. “He delivered all three of our children. We like him.”
Vorpal’s face fell.
“Not,” said Maggie quietly, “that Gorham would let that influence him in considering Dr. Caruso’s suitability for this building.”
Gorham stared at her. This was a deliberate undermining of his position. He kept his temper, however. He must remain calm.
“So what’s the problem?” he asked.
“He lives on West End Avenue,” said Vorpal.
“He has for years. Lots of good people live on West End.”
“I’d have preferred Central Park West.”
“There are some quite exclusive buildings on West End, you know.”
“His isn’t one of them,” said Vorpal drily.
“His references look all right. Here’s one from a trustee of Mount Sinai—those are very important people. This guy Anderson’s a big hitter.”
“Yes. As a professional reference, excellent. But as a social reference, not so good.”
“Why?”
“Anderson lives in a town house. And Caruso’s other social reference comes from out of town.” Vorpal shook his head. “What we like to