Her first month in New York, Sylvie got a job at Petunia Bakery, in the West Village. Later on, of course, she would feel a mixture of emotions around that first job and what it said about her. On the one hand, she felt that its being a famous bakery—the one responsible for igniting the cupcake craze all over the city—conferred on her a certain cachet. But on the other hand, that was just the problem. Because some people—some of the die-hard New Yorkers whom Sylvie tried to emulate—blamed the cupcake craze, and places like Petunia, for gutting the soul of the city. Years after she had left Petunia, whenever the subject came up, she would always make sure to say that she had worked at the “original” location in the Village, and not one of the ones that sprang up later on in Rockefeller Center or around Columbus Circle.
But in the beginning anyway, Petunia was a confectionary paradise, its red velvet cupcakes and saucy, ruffled vintage aprons the perfect antidote to the Colonial austerity of Black Currant. Also, there were plenty of guys there, and all of them had crushes on the cute new girl, having long since tired of the other ones behind the counter. And Sylvie, herself, hadn’t yet learned to find the kinds of guys who worked at Petunia annoying. By those kinds of guys, she meant adult men who were not ashamed to be caught dead working in the vicinity of cupcakes. But then, let it be said that in their generation, masculinity was not what it once was; just recently Gala Gubelman had had all of her friends in hysterics at an account of a date she had gone on during which the boy had tried to impress her by offering to share his homemade peanut brittle recipe. Peanut brittle recipe? the girls had repeated to one another, incredulous.
Sylvie made $8.25 an hour working at Petunia. But that was okay—everything was okay. Having gotten out from Tish and company alive was enough of a triumph to keep her in an excellent mood for a long time.
And she was living rent-free in a beautiful four-story brownstone in the Village! With a grand piano, and fluffy white couches, and all of the fabulous French paintings Vicky’s father had spent a lifetime collecting. The windows of Sylvie’s bedroom faced an iconically leafy Greenwich Village street, which was just as it should have been.
When Cassandra came to visit her at that apartment, the two of them passed hours in that bedroom with the view of the nice, leafy street, talking and talking, stopping only to eat the occasional cupcake from Petunia. That was another good thing: unlike Black Currant, Petunia let their employees get away with some freebies. Sylvie brought home boxfuls of cupcakes, and she and Cassandra could be found, toward the end of their evenings together, moaning at the deliciousness of it all and licking fat curlicues of chocolate buttercream frosting from their fingertips.
“Do you think you’ll ever move to New York one of these days?” Sylvie asked Cassandra one night, because she wondered how she could bear to go on living in Cambridge.
“Maybe,” replied Cassandra, who did sometimes envy Sylvie the comparative coolness of her lifestyle. And yet at the same time, because she was still in her early twenties, she believed that her options as to where she might live or what she might do with her life were limitless. Besides, her life in Boston was nothing if not comfortable, and Cassandra was big on having her creature comforts. She also liked having a steady boyfriend, and Sylvie had reported back to her that in New York these were not quite so easy to find because everybody knew that single women outnumbered the men. Then, too, Sylvie said, so many of the men you met there were short: “Manhattan,” she had once fumed to Cassandra over the phone, “is an island of short men!” Cassandra’s Harvard boyfriend was very tall and she liked that. It had been a point of pride when he came to visit her at Bennington. He’s a big one, Alphie the security guard had murmured, with evident approval, on checking him in. It had been a long time since Alphie had seen a male specimen so strapping.
“If you moved here,” went on Sylvie, “you’d have so many connections. You could get a job like that.” Doing what, Sylvie didn’t know and Cassandra didn’t ask: another perk of being twenty-two is that you still believe that things will just work out. For you anyway, they’ll work out. “Like, for instance. The other night, there I was doing Zumba at Crunch—”
“Doing what at where?”
“Zumba. Zumba dancing. At Crunch. Crunch is the gym I go to. Gala and I go to the one on Lafayette,” she added, with that peculiar desperation of people who are new to New York to show that they can get street names and addresses right. Cassandra failed to deduce, as quickly as Sylvie would have wanted her to, that Lafayette meant SoHo.
“Oh,” Cassandra said, suddenly feeling left out. It wasn’t that she wanted to go to the gym. Cassandra didn’t exercise, and had avoided gyms ever since the day at Bennington when Pansy Chapin had convinced her to work out with her and she had fallen and bruised her knees when trying to get off the treadmill; Pansy never invited her to go again. No, it was just the thought of Sylvie and Gala going somewhere together without her that rankled.
“Yeah, and guess who I ran into? Gala wasn’t there that night, she was off cheating on Tess with some guy.”
“Oh, God. Oh, no. Please tell me it wasn’t the guy with the peanut brittle recipe.”
“No, no, he’s ancient history. Peanut Brittle! That’s what Gala and I decided to call him: Peanut Brittle. Sometimes when we meet a new guy, we say: He seems kind of Peanut Brittle. Peanut Brittle! It’s the new crunchy granola.”
“Hmm.”
“But what I wanted to tell you is, I ran into Bitsy Citron! At Crunch.”
“Bitsy Citron? What was she doing there?”
“Teaching, actually. Apparently she teaches this class called Beach Body.”
“She would,” said Cassandra, thinking of how Bitsy had been known, at Bennington, for her tight muscle tone, sexy hair, and her family’s reportedly owning diamond mines somewhere in South America.
“Anyhow—afterward in the sauna together we started talking and I had forgotten, but! Bitsy’s older brother is this really successful artist named Ludo Citron. Like, finance guys are starting to collect his work and he just did this really cool limited edition collaboration with Puma.”
“Is that what being a successful artist means?”
“Hello, it’s the twenty-first century, Cassandra! What the hell else could it mean? Triumph of capitalism and all that.”
My, Sylvie sounds like a real New Yorker already, thought Cassandra, alternately impressed and horrified.
“But the point is, Cassandra, the point is that Bitsy said that maybe I could work for him! Like, maybe I could be an artist’s assistant. Wouldn’t that be cool if I were an artist’s assistant?”
“I guess so.”
Cassandra continued to feel left out. Peanut Brittle, she was thinking to herself. So Gala and Sylvie were making up their own adjectives and catchphrases now! Not so long ago, she and Sylvie had been the ones doing that.
“You guess so! Cassandra, Bitsy said it’s a really great gig if you can get it, like, all his assistants ever do is hang out at his studio on the Bowery and listen to the Rolling Stones and eat roast chicken from FreshDirect.”
“That does sound kind of great actually, Sylvie,” Cassandra admitted, visions of free roast chickens dancing like sugar plums in her head.
“And! If you moved here,” said Sylvie again, bolstered by the prevailing mood of optimism, “we could live together. Maybe.”
Cassandra was touched by this. The thought of living with Sylvie was as sweet to her in that moment as any love nest, and she forgave her for making up catchphrases and doing Zumba with Gala.
“But you’re living at Vicky’s,” she said, remembering reality, which, as always, was utterly inconvenient.
Sylvie shrugged and reached for the last of the cupcakes, carefully splitting it in half with Cassandra.
“Yes, but not forever,” she said.
Meanwhile, Vicky’s mother and Sylvie’s landlord, Rosa Lalage, was a former opera singer. She had tawny-blond hair and the brittle beauty of a well-manicured woman past a certain age. On several occasions, Sylvie had observed her through the French doors of the living room doing her vocal exercises while wearing nothing but a pink thong. She still had her figure, at least. One of Sylvie’s chores for living in the brownstone rent-free—and there were many of them, she was to discover—was to keep her refrigerator stocked with low-fat Greek yogurts, just about the only food she ever ate. And as the summer wore on, living with Rosa Lalage and her white silky terrier, Fabergé, was her first experience of just how bitter it was to be on the bottom end of the totem pole in New York City—at the receiving end of the whims and patronage of those more fortunate than you.
Death turned out to be the theme—the recurring note—of Sylvie’s first few months in New York. One night, Cassandra got a phone call. It was Sylvie, and she was crying.
“Oh my God. What happened?”
“Fabergé!”
“Fabergé?”
“The dog! Rosa’s dog!”
“Oh, Fabergé. The obnoxious little terrier. Right.”
“She’s dead.”
“Dead! Oh my God. What hap—”
“I was supposed to be watching her while Rosa was on the Vineyard, is the thing.”
Then Sylvie sobbed girlishly, beautifully; her sobs formed lovely moaning silver bells. She was twenty-two years old and in New York City and life was an adventure. Even this—especially this—was an adventure! When you got right down to it, what Sylvie and Cassandra had in common above all else was a lust for misfortune, the more ridiculous the better. A favorite phrase of theirs: This would happen to us!
“And I was watching her. Well, not all the time, but you know— ”
Cassandra did know. She wouldn’t have left a dog with Sylvie, who was always up to something or other at the last minute.
“Well, what happened?”
“Well, I’d been out a lot, there’s this guy, Jasper, at the bakery, oh my God, well—wait, I’ll tell you about Jasper later. Anyway, I’d been out one night. One. And when I got in this morning, I saw her. Fabergé. On the living room floor. I saw her through the French doors.”
Sylvie shuddered, then continued: “Not that I was sorry exactly. I always hated that dog.”
“God, me, too. Rosa just would have to have a dog like that.”
The next motif of death happened when Rosa— fresh off the Vineyard and nonplussed that her dog had upped and kicked the bucket under Sylvie’s care—banished her to sleep not in the guest room but in a tiny room on the fourth floor that once upon a time had been Vicky’s nursery. Getting in the bed that first night, Sylvie was puzzled to find something hard underneath the pillow. It turned out to be a small wooden box, wrapped in a French flag. She unwrapped the flag and read the label on the box.
“Cassandra!” she screamed into the phone, having picked it up to call her immediately. “Cassandra! You are not going to believe what I am holding in my hand. What I found, under my goddamn pillow—”
“Your pillow?”
“Yeah, the bitch stood there in her pink thong and waved her golden wand and exiled me to, get this, Vicky’s nursery! I haven’t figured out what the significance of that is, but it’s definitely kind of sick, right? So okay, there’s this, like, lump, not a normal lump, under my pillow. Like, you could hurt your head on it. It turns out it’s a box. A box in a French flag, okay? So I take the flag off and the label on the box says”—Sylvie paused appropriately— “ ‘Contents: Marc Lalage.’ ”
“ ‘Contents: Marc Lalage’! You mean—”
“I mean, this woman made me sleep in a bed with her husband’s ashes! Yes! That’s what I mean. Jesus Christ! I’ve got to get out of this place.”
It was after the episode of “Contents: Marc Lalage” that Sylvie first learned one of the important lessons of life in New York City, or anywhere else as a grown-up for that matter: the lesson of hoping not to run into people you have had fallings-out with. For years, long, long after leaving there, she dreaded the threat of running into Rosa Lalage and her daughter Vicky, too.