MOVING CRIBS IS NEVER EASY
“I’M HOME!” ASHLEY CALLED, BUT the only reply she got was from the butler who’d opened the door for her. Her footsteps echoed though the grand marble entryway as she marched toward the great room, the scene of her brilliant descent-by-trapeze a month ago. Ashley sighed with contentment at the memory of her total triumph. The entire seventh grade at Miss Gamble’s had been blown away by her Super-Sweet Thirteen birthday extravaganza.
But now all everyone was obsessed with was this stupid S. Society and that even more yawnworthy S. List. Ashley knew what S really stood for—a load of crap!
But you couldn’t really blame everyone for talking: She couldn’t think about much else either. The nerve of that Sadie Nobody, turning up to school in argyle socks and booties! Ashley been planning the exact same thing for the Ashleys, and now she’d have to come up with something new. There was no way they could be fashion followers.
Ashley felt her face crumple into a frown, her mood suddenly as gray as the clouds rolling over San Francisco Bay—the view from the great room’s twelve-foot windows. Why were other people so intent on spoiling Ashley’s perfect life? They were all so mean and jealous. Well, at least she was home now, among her peeps. That is, her devoted parents, their huge staff, and her gorgeous labradoodle puppy, Princess Dahlia von Fluffsterhaus.
“Mommy!” Ashley shrieked, her voice echoing around the cavernous room. “Where are you?”
“She’s upstairs, Miss Ashley.” The butler loomed in the doorway, the last of the afternoon sun glinting in his silver hair. “In your room, I believe.”
In her room? Ashley picked up her Saint Laurent tote bag and made for the broad staircase. She hoped her mother wasn’t going through one of her let’s-give-away-all-our-clothes-to-charity phases. The last time that happened, Ashley came home from school to find her room a maze of black trash bags, all filled with clothes her mother thought she didn’t need anymore.
Hello! Having clothes wasn’t about need, it was about must—as in, must-have. It was about freedom of choice. Freedom! That’s right, Ashley thought, growing more indignant with every step: Having a huge walk-in closet and dressing room (stocked with every fashionable brand on the planet, 150 pairs of shoes, a bag for every week of the year, and a forest of accessory trees) was her personal right as an American.
She didn’t mind giving one of the maids a hand-me-down from time to time, but she totally objected to raids on her personal collection every time her mother got a pang of liberal guilt. Didn’t Matilda Spencer realize that Ashley was under assault every day of her life by Ashley haters, the kind of people who were dying to see her in the same outfit twice, or—even worse—inadequately accessorized?
Ashley took the last two steps in one giant stride. Another raid on her personal space was quite possible: Ever since her parents told her that her mother was pregnant—ugh!—with another, unwanted-by-Ashley mini-Spencer, Matilda had exhibited all kinds of weird behavior.
In the last week alone, Ashley had seen her do the following: (1) weep uncontrollably at a TV commercial featuring puppies playing in a flowery meadow; (2) eat full-fat, non-organic vanilla ice cream straight from the tub; and (3) sit in the kitchen making a “Baby’s First Trimester” scrapbook with the help of Maria, one of the maids, while Maria’s wizened grandmother—flown in from San Salvador in a private plane, courtesy of Ashley’s father—sat in a rocking chair crocheting baby booties from skeins of nonrecycled angora.
Everyone in this house had gone crazy! Matilda was probably upstairs right now, selecting all of Ashley’s cutest outfits to be freighted to the needy throughout Central America. Well, Ashley had needs as well—something everyone in this house seemed to have forgotten.
“Don’t even think of . . . ,” she began, charging through the double doors that led to her second-floor suite and almost tripping over the furry, reclining form of Princess Dahlia. But the scene that greeted her wasn’t what she expected at all. Her closet doors was safely closed, and there weren’t any black bags sprouting like rotting fungi all over the handwoven Turkish carpet.
Instead there were two maids, their arms full of her bed linen, and Enrico, the asthmatic handyman, who appeared to be dismantling her antique four-poster bed. Her mother, in a billowy peasant shirt and holey maternity jeans (since they were from when she was pregnant with Ashley), was holding a roll of paper against the wall, beaming at its butterfly pattern. Redecorating without discussion or permission! This was even worse.
“Darling!” Matilda called, her beautiful blue eyes sparkling, her long blond hair loose around her shoulders. “Come and look at this wallpaper! These are handcrafted imitation butterfly wings, woven from silk and dipped in gilt. Aren’t they just precious?”
“Mommy,” whined Ashley, dumping her bag on the floor inches from her puppy’s curly head. “I don’t want new wallpaper. And I especially don’t want butterflies! It’s très juvenile. If we’re going to redo the walls, I’d rather have a George Condo mural. Remember?”
“Oh, sweetie!” Matilda rolled up the paper and stepped toward her, skirting Enrico’s unfolded tool kit. “You can have whatever you want. You know that!”
“Good,” said Ashley, smiling smugly. At last someone was listening to her. “Then maybe we could get matching panels for the bed, and one of those lacquered armoires with gold handles.”
One of the maids scuttled past, carrying Ashley’s favorite silk comforter out the door.
“Well, I’m not sure about that,” Matilda said, biting her lip. “The thing is, you may not have the space for this bed and a big armoire. In fact, Enrico thinks you won’t even have room for the bed.”
Enrico scowled at the mention of his name and viciously stabbed at one of the bedpost joints with his screwdriver.
“Why not?” Ashley surveyed the room. They might have to move the flat-screen TV, or get rid of the antique dresser and relocate the chaise, but there was plenty of space in here, really. If her mother would let her rip out the window seats, as she’d been begging for months . . .
“Sweetie, we’re moving you upstairs,” Matilda explained, one soft hand alighting on Ashley’s arm. “Didn’t we discuss this already?”
“No, we did not!” Ashley cried. Leave her room? Move upstairs? Hello? Dahlia von Fluffsterhaus woke up with a start and staggered over, rubbing against Ashley’s ankles.
“Silly me!” Her mother sighed. “I’m forgetting everything these days. This is just how I was when I was pregnant with you.”
Ashley ignored her mother’s sappy smile. Tears pricked the corners of her eyes.
“Why don’t you just send me away to live with Aunt Agnes?” she asked, meaning the Spencers’ only living relative, a batty maiden aunt who lived on a sheep farm in Vermont. Ashley picked up Princess Dahlia and clasped the puppy tightly to her chest. Dahlia squirmed and yapped in protest, wriggling her way back to the floor. Great! Even Ashley’s own dog didn’t want her.
“Now, don’t overreact.” Matilda dropped the roll of wallpaper onto the chaise, and the other maid took the opportunity to scurry out of the room, trailing a bundle of Ashley’s four-hundred-thread-count Egyptian cotton sheets. “When you think about it, you’ll realize why we’re doing this. Your room is nearer to ours, so it makes sense that the new baby sleep here.”
“Why can’t you turn the music room or the second study into the baby’s room? They’re right by your room as well.”
“But they don’t have this lovely light, or an en suite bathroom,” Matilda explained. “This is much nicer than any of the other rooms on this floor.”
“I know!” Ashley pouted, kicking off her school shoes and secretly hoping that grumpy old Enrico tripped over them. “So why do I have to move?”
“Darling,” Matilda pleaded. “You know I’m going to have to get up in the middle of the night to nurse every couple of hours. You don’t want me walking up and down the stairs all the time, do you?”
Ashley rolled her eyes.
“But you’re hiring a baby nurse to do all that middle-of-the-night stuff!” She wanted to see Matilda try to get out of this one. But her mother didn’t seem fazed at all.
“That’s right.” She nodded. “A nurse will be here to help me. And that’s another reason why we need this room. Your dressing room will be her sitting room, where she can rest and read while the baby is sleeping. It all makes sense.”
“Not to me it doesn’t!” Ashley fumed. She wanted to throw herself on the floor and cry with rage. This sibling-in-the-making was already ruining her life!
“And you know how pretty and cozy the little guest room is. The George Condo mural you mentioned will look very striking in there. I’ll send for it tomorrow, and . . .”
Matilda was still talking, but Ashley couldn’t hear another word. She was being moved upstairs to the little guest room? Not even the main guest room, which was reserved for the VIPs? The little guest room was little with a capital L! It was practically the attic.
“. . . it’s not that much smaller than this room, you know,” Matilda was saying. “Sure, it doesn’t have a closet, and you have to walk across the hallway to the bathroom. And the ceilings are a little lower, and there’s not room for a window seat—”
“Mom,” Ashley interrupted her. “You would make a terrible salesperson, okay? You’re making it worse, and it’s already bad enough.”
“Now, now,” Matilda chided, smiling. “Just remember, people in Japan live in houses that are much smaller.”
“Great!” shrieked Ashley. “Why don’t you just give me a roll-up futon and a block of wood for a pillow and stick me in a cupboard!”
Her mother was totally missing the point. It wasn’t that the guest room was really tiny, or that it was on another floor. It was that Ashley’s domain was here, where it had always been, every day of her life. And now she was being ousted by this new baby. It was like the new baby got the top of the podium and she, Ashley, was being shoved into the silver-medal position. If there was one thing Ashley hated, it was being number two.
First the S. Society, now this. A month ago Ashley was on top of the world, soaring on a trapeze and zooming off on a Vespa with Cooper. Now she was ousted from the bench outside Miss Gamble’s and evicted from her bedroom. She was a dispossessed person. How could she maintain her top-dog status when she was basically homeless and under attack from all sides?
Ashley felt a tear roll down her cheek. This wasn’t life as she knew it, not anymore. Did she still have what it took to be Ashley Spencer?