GRAYCLIFFE
NEWPORT, RHODE ISLAND
OCTOBER 1972
Gus began his story in Newport, nearly a decade before Annie was born.
Picture an old woman, he said, sitting in an ornate, drafty home beside the sea. Before her is a young girl. The girl is beautiful, all light and gossamer. Though she is luminous, she is also unsteady, glinting like a candle’s flame.
“So you’ve come for the job,” the old lady said.
“Yes,” answered the young woman, who went by Pru. “I found it in the paper.”
She was nineteen years old, a bookish girl who left university after only one year to get married. In April she learned there would be no marriage and so Pru had spent the prior six months addled, confused, bumping around as if lost in a pinball machine. But in her purse was the newspaper ad that might finally help her land.
WHITE COLLAR GIRL NEEDED. Oxfordshire, England. Personal assistant req’d for cultured older woman living alone. 400 dollars per month and free board. No exp necessary. Only a love of literature and the English countryside.
The girl matched the admittedly slim requirements. She had the right experience, which was none, and did love books. Though she’d never been to England, Pru recognized this post as the answer, the precise action she needed to take. It was time to go away, to travel far. The Atlantic Ocean was the distance she ached for.
“I can give you references,” Pru said when the woman didn’t respond. “I’m a literature fiend and I’m close with the—”
“How old are you? Twenty if you’re a day.”
The woman was the niece of the would-be charge, but seemed far too old to call anyone aunt. Regardless, she’d evidently drawn the short end of the family stick and was responsible for dickering with the old bat in England. Best to foist caretaking duties onto a stranger for some nominal fee. What was money for if not for that?
“I’m nineteen,” Pru said. “And I’m very independent.”
“I’m sure you are.” The woman sniffed. “But don’t you have better prospects? By which I mean any other prospects at all?”
“I’m college-educated,” she said. A stretch, to be sure, but not a lie. “And I was engaged to be married.”
“You were engaged?” the woman said with a wheezing giggle. “A broken engagement. Well, well, well, you’d fit in with my aunt quite well.”
“Not broken,” Pru said. “He died.”
The words stunned even her. Pru usually didn’t have to say them herself. There was always someone else around to relay the ghastly tale.
“He died?” the woman gasped.
“He died,” she returned with a nod.
He died, he died, he died.
Pru repeated the words in her head. Even now they didn’t feel right though she’d been there when Charlie’s remains returned home. She’d watched as they installed the box of him into the family mausoleum.
“So the answer is no,” Pru said. “I have not a single prospect.”
She shivered and wrapped a shawl tight around her shoulders. Pru was slight, a slip of a girl. On top of that the grand Newport home was cavernous and cold. The windows were open, baroque curtains drooping around them like heavy eyelids.
“Oh my. He passed? Was it in Vietnam?” The woman made a face as Pru nodded. “He died in Vietnam. Lord have mercy. He’s one of those.”
“One of what?” she asked. “A soldier? A brave man?”
Pru feigned ignorance but understood what this woman saw, what most of the nation believed.
The war had long since worn out its welcome. Citizens were dying at an alarming clip. Those who survived were judged as baby-killers or nancy boys. What the bloody hell had they been up to anyhow? They should’ve won the blessed thing by now. The lads were nothing like their fathers, who had previously saved the world.
In Pru’s mind, Charlie was a hero. But he was also an idiot. His parents expended tremendous effort to backdate a fictitious sporting injury and Charlie declined to accept it. It did not sit well with him, the lying. But the lie would’ve saved his life.
“Bloodthirsty heathens,” the woman muttered under her breath.
“He died in April,” Pru said, eyes watering. “During the Easter Offensive. They found his body somewhere near Kon Tum. His name was Charlie.”
“Isn’t that the nickname for the Viet Cong?”
“It is.”
“Ha! The irony.”
Pru sucked back a thick swallow of tears.
“A damned shame,” the woman said. “All of it.”
“I agree entirely.”
“And now you need a job. A way to support yourself.”
Pru nodded again, tears shimmering on her lashes. She’d stupidly hoped Charlie’s family might help, perhaps provide a job at their dry-goods conglomerate. Pru could type memos. She could warm someone else’s coffee.
Alas, she reminded them of Charlie, which reminded them that he chose his death. They couldn’t forgive him. And they couldn’t forgive her for not convincing him to stay.
So, yes, she needed to support herself. But more than that, she had to recover from all she’d lost.
“Why not return to school?” the woman asked. “Finish your studies?”
“My family no longer has the means,” she said simply.
Her parents died when she was young, the money for her studies frittered away by the relatives who raised her. Pru received a scholarship, but when she left because of Charlie the administration made it clear: she was giving it up for good.
“No longer has the means,” the woman echoed with a remote chuckle. “Well, isn’t that how most good stories begin?”
And so she hired Pru on the spot.
The woman didn’t ask for references, or for her to verify the “love of literature and the English countryside.” Pru chalked it up to her appearance, to those clear green eyes and wide-moon face. Charlie used to say she was heavenly, ethereal. It was a touch flowery, but Pru knew her daintiness and quiet demeanor were often confused for a certain grace.
After the proper documents were secured, an attaché escorted her overseas. He was a butler of some sort and seemed equal parts annoyed and tickled by the adventure. All throughout the plane ride and in the hired hack to Banbury, Pru deliberated his purpose. It was 1972 and young women traveled unattended. As far as she could tell, his only business in England was to deposit her on the doorstep of an estate called the Grange.
“You didn’t have to come with me,” Pru said as they made the final leg of their journey. “I realize it’s a bit late to say so, but I could’ve traveled on my own.”
“This is for your own safety. The mistress of the manor is quite a force.”
“So chivalrous,” she mumbled. “And I don’t find sweet old ladies particularly intimidating.”
Suddenly the car sputtered to a stop in front of a stone house.
This? No, this could not be the place. The manor. The so-called estate.
Pru had been in the Newport home, Graycliffe. It was on the beach, fifty rooms they’d said, and so opulent it outshone its commendably palatial neighbors. But this “Grange” looked downright uninhabitable, leaning so far to the left that, well, God help town residents if there ever was a mudslide.
The home didn’t even have a proper roof. It might’ve been thatch-style once, but was now splintered and disintegrating. More windows were broken than were intact and reams of chicken wire encased the property. All around assemblages of livestock pecked and snouted at the dirt.
“Is this…?” she began.
A man burst through the front door. He was reedy and ancient, sporting a wide straw hat, soiled trousers, and no shirt. He waved madly at his visitors.
“Get away!” the person yelled. Pru quickly ascertained he wasn’t waving but brandishing a revolver. “Get away or I’ll shoot you between the eyes! I’ve done it before!”
“I thought she lived alone?” Pru said, heart pounding.
Then she realized. This wasn’t a man. The screaming, ranting figure was a woman.
“Oh my God.”
“Ah yes,” the attaché said with a sneaky smile. “We have arrived. Welcome to the Grange.”