He invited her in the same tone he might have used to assign a task, which somehow made the invitation feel more serious rather than less. “You’ve made my life considerably easier, Peggy. Let me thank you properly. Dinner Friday.”
She stared at him. He was forty-five then. She was twenty-eight. He was her employer, wealthy, respected, still carrying the fresh aura of a widower though his first wife had been dead almost three years. It would have been wise to decline.
She said yes.
At dinner he was charming in a way he never was at the office. Not loose exactly. Richard was never loose. But warmer. He told stories about judges with secret gambling problems and clients who wanted him to perform miracles from impossible facts. He asked about her parents, her childhood, why she liked books more than parties, and listened to the answers as if they mattered. When he walked her to her apartment building, he did not kiss her. He touched her elbow lightly and said, “I had forgotten how peaceful good company can feel.”
She thought about that sentence for three days.
When he proposed six months after that, it was not over candles or violin music or champagne. Richard Morrison did not know how to perform romance unless there was an audience to impress, and with Peggy there was no audience. He proposed in his study after dinner, placing a velvet box on the desk between them like an irrevocable decision.
“I am not a sentimental man,” he said. “But I know certainty when I feel it. You bring order to my mind, peace to my home, and steadiness to my life. I want you with me.”
Peggy had been too surprised to answer immediately.
He studied her. “I can offer you security. A good life. And yes,” he said, voice deepening slightly, “I believe I can offer you love, though I may not express it the way other men do.”
Security. A good life. Love in whatever form he could manage.
For a woman raised to treat practical blessings as miracles, it sounded enough like everything.
“Yes,” she whispered.
The wedding took place in June.
She still remembered the heat of that day, the sweet heaviness of peonies in the church, the way her mother cried discreetly into a handkerchief while her father stood straighter than usual in his suit as if proud beyond speech. Richard looked handsome and controlled. His children looked like mourners at an event that should not have happened.
At the reception Catherine approached Peggy near the champagne tower, all eighteen-year-old beauty and hostility dressed in pale satin.
“You’ll never be our mother,” she said, smiling so no one across the room would see anything but sweetness. “Don’t even try.”
Peggy’s first instinct had been to reassure, because reassurance was her native language. “I’m not trying to replace anyone.”
“Good,” Catherine said, the smile tightening. “Because you couldn’t.”
Steven did not speak to her directly for most of the evening. Michael only looked confused. Richard either did not notice or pretended not to.
That was the first shape of the marriage’s central wound: the things Richard chose not to see when seeing would require action.
Peggy tried anyway. That became the story of the next forty years. She remembered birthdays and mailed handwritten notes. She bought Catherine books on interior design when Catherine announced, at twenty-one, that she had “more taste than talent but plenty of both compared to most people.” She bought Steven monogrammed wallets and a fountain pen for law school, though Steven later became a venture capitalist instead because litigation was “too slow for men with real ambition.” She sent Michael care packages during his disastrous freshman year when he was drinking too much and calling home too rarely. She hosted Thanksgivings and Christmases and Easter brunches and summer dinners on the terrace. She learned what wines their spouses liked, which grandchildren had peanut allergies, how Steven took his coffee, which flowers made Catherine claim headaches. She preserved their childhood bedrooms for years like shrines nobody asked her to maintain. She absorbed every slight with grace because Richard noticed grace and valued it. She told herself that patience was a form of love.
It is amazing what women will name virtue when endurance is the only socially acceptable shape of self-betrayal.
Richard was kind in the way some men are kind when they believe provision absolves all emotional omissions. He bought her coats warm enough for New England winters and dresses appropriate for charity galas. He brought back scarves from business trips. He made sure there was always money in the household account. He never shouted. He never struck her. He occasionally touched her cheek or kissed her forehead with a tenderness so brief she would live on it for weeks.
But he also kept entire chambers of himself locked.
The home office in Brookline was one. “I need one space that’s only mine,” he told her early on. “Surely you understand.” She did, because she always understood first and questioned later, if at all.
His finances were another. When she asked, once, years into the marriage, whether she should know more about the accounts “just in case,” he smiled and patted her hand.
“Don’t burden yourself with that, darling. Your job is to make this house a home. My job is to worry about money.”
Your job.
She had accepted the role because she thought being assigned one meant being needed.
Then there were the trips.
Once a month, sometimes more, Richard would leave Friday afternoon and return Sunday night saying he needed quiet. “The city drains me,” he’d say. Or, “There’s a property matter I need to check on.” Or simply, “I need to think.” He never invited her. Peggy would help him pack. She would fold his sweaters, tuck in a book, add aspirin to the side pocket, kiss him goodbye, and tell herself marriage included mysterious terrains she had no right to map.
She trusted him because trust was easier than admitting she had built a life around partial access.
Over the years, she stopped asking.
Then Richard died on a Tuesday morning in March, and trust turned into a letter in a brown envelope that asked for one last chance.
The days after the will reading taught Peggy how quickly social death can follow legal disenfranchisement.
Steven, Catherine, and Michael arrived at the Brookline house the next morning with the purposeful energy of people who smelled vacancy and were eager to occupy it. They did not storm. They did not shout. Open cruelty was beneath them. Instead they enacted a subtler violence: erasure through administration.
A realtor came first. A slim woman with excellent teeth and an even better cashmere coat who walked the foyer assessing sight lines while telling Steven the market for “character properties with bones” remained strong if staged correctly.
Peggy stood beside the staircase while this woman discussed her home as though the widow in the hallway were a vase waiting to be moved.
“We’ll depersonalize significantly,” the realtor said, glancing toward the living room where framed family photographs sat on side tables. “Neutralize the visual identity, freshen the wall colors in one or two areas, possibly update some fixtures if you want top dollar.”
Depersonalize.
The word burned almost as much as service had.
Catherine arrived two hours later with a designer. They walked through the kitchen discussing cabinet paint, brass hardware, whether the butler’s pantry should be “opened up” into a larger entertaining flow.