Tiffany Simon was reviewing the checklist for the wedding ceremony she was planning for the following night at a fire station in Brooklyn where the groom was a firefighter. The couple was named Luke and Laura, which reminded Tiffany of how much her grandmother loved her “stories.” Granny Molly was always saying that no soap opera romance could ever top Luke and Laura from General Hospital in the 1980s.
Tiffany had just finished putting together the script for the ceremony when her doorbell chimed. She looked through the peephole and saw a woman, probably in her late thirties, wearing an elegant navy-blue wrap coat.
“Hello?” she called out through the closed door.
“I’m looking for Molly? My name is Jane Martin. I’m a researcher for a book publisher.”
Tiffany opened the door. “Molly’s my grandmother. This is her home, but she’s in assisted living now.”
“Can I come in? I’m doing some fact-checking for a book we’re publishing. We’re having trouble verifying one of the author’s claims. It involves your grandmother.”
Tiffany stepped aside to welcome the woman into the house.
“Wow, this is incredible,” “Jane Martin” said, looking around in awe, as most people did when they first entered the living room.
“Full of memories of my grandmother’s amazing life,” Tiffany bragged.
The walls were decorated with photographs of Grandmother Molly with various celebrities and in her cabaret performances. There were at least a dozen of her favorite costumes on display, not to mention the miniature versions worn by an assortment of dolls placed on the chairs and end tables.
“Gran would be so excited that a publisher was here to see her!”
“I wish I could say we were doing a book entirely about your grandmother, but the project in question is a presidential biography. The author has collected a series of never-before-published facts about various presidents. As you can imagine, it’s not easy to verify the events years after the fact.”
“I’m happy to help if I can. Is this about the affairs she had with presidents?”
“Oh, so you know about them?” “Ms. Martin” asked.
“Gran was so beautiful that men fell head over heels in love with her, even three presidents.”
“Three? She must have been gorgeous!”
“Oh, she was,” Tiffany crowed.
Charlotte hoped “Jane Martin’s” next question would sound natural. “Did she have a favorite?”
“Jack Kennedy, of course. You can imagine why. He was gorgeous, too. At a fundraiser at the cabaret one of the hosts came over to her and said he wanted her to meet the President. One thing led to another and Gran and the President became involved. She knew of course that it would never last, but on her birthday he gave her a lovely charm bracelet. He said to Gran, ‘You are my charm.’ Can you imagine how she felt?
“Of course, we all know what happened. Gran never got over him, and then years later, someone got into her dressing room and stole some jewelry including the bracelet. She used to tell me how much she loved it, how it made her think of him, and how heartbreaking it was to lose it.”
“She must have been very young at that time,” “Ms. Martin” suggested.
“Oh yes, she was. And she was so beautiful that an Arabian prince proposed to her and so did the Duke of Wellington. And that was after three presidents.”
Gran must have been very busy, Charlotte thought. “When did your grandmother marry?”
“Oh, not until she was forty, but unfortunately, my grandfather never amounted to a hill of beans. Gran raised my mother alone, and then my mother and father were killed in an automobile accident, and she raised me. I loved to listen when she told me the stories about her wonderful, exciting life. Now she is in a nursing home, and I know it won’t be long before I lose her. The only thing I want is for her to be as happy as possible.”
“That’s a wonderful attitude, Tiffany,” “Jane Martin” said.
“Thanks to Gran, I live every day of my life as though it will be my last. So, will Gran’s stories be in your book?”
Charlotte felt guilty as she said, “I only collect the stories and turn them over to the writer. I’m sorry if you didn’t understand that.”
“If they don’t use her, it may be for the best,” Tiffany sighed. “The excitement might be too much for her.”
“So tell me more about that bracelet from President Kennedy.”