Lenora had been picking up after Matt since he was in diapers. He insisted on keeping her around, even though watching Rachel cook his meals and pick up his dry cleaning seemed to cause the woman physical pain. At the moment, she looked ready to tackle Rachel to the ground and smuggle Matt’s suits away for safekeeping.
“What are you doing?” Lenora gaped like she’d stumbled into a crime scene.
Rachel knelt to attack his favorite shoes. The suede loafers were custom, handcrafted by little old European ladies, according to her mother-in-law. Rachel pressed the cigarette tip against one toe and burned a small hole all the way through.
“You know Matt’s allergic to cigarette smoke,” Lenora huffed. She rarely addressed Rachel by name. It was always you or pardon me, or when she thought Rachel wasn’t listening, that woman he married. It was a constant reminder that Rachel would always be a guest in this family.
“That’s probably a lie.” Rachel stood and took another drag. “He’s very good at those.”
Lenora swallowed hard, her hands twisting on the edge of the basket. Rachel held her gaze as she puffed out small rings of smoke. She used to tie herself into knots wondering why this woman hated her so much. Whenever Rachel completed a chore, it was deemed inadequate and had to be redone. Dinner was always supplemented by one of Matt’s “favorites since he was little.”
Maybe she hated Black people. Or women. Or Black women who fucked her precious Abbott prince.
“I need to get the laundry,” Lenora sniffed. “I tried to wait until you woke up, but well…” She glanced at Rachel’s nightgown. “It’s noon,” she said, with a tone that added, you lazy drunk.
“Why don’t you take the day off?” Rachel moved closer and reached for the basket. “I can do the laundry.”
Lenora’s grip tightened. They engaged in a brief standoff that Rachel considered ending by blowing smoke into the woman’s face.
“The washer’s broken,” Lenora said. “I called the repairman, but he won’t be able to come out until Monday. I was going to the laundromat.”
“I can go.” Rachel tugged at the basket, harder this time. Lenora finally relented but eyed the dirty clothes as if Rachel had stolen her purse.
“With all due respect, Mrs. Abbott, when was the last time you used a washer and dryer?”
Rachel hitched the basket up on one hip and leaned close enough to make the older woman flinch. “With all due respect, Lenora? That’s none of your goddamn business.”
Rachel hoped her exit was actually as dramatic as she’d intended. She wanted Lenora to be stunned silent and maybe a little intimidated, for her words to echo as she got dressed and threw her hair into a disgraceful ponytail, then carted the dirty socks and undershirts downstairs like a trophy. She was flying on wings made of spite as the door slammed behind her.
Once outside, three things immediately became apparent. One, she didn’t know where the laundromat was. Two, her car was parked in the garage, which meant she’d have to retrace her steps to reach it. And finally, Sofia Cárdenas’s bright green Corvette was headed directly for her house.
Rachel’s biggest humiliations during her early attempts to navigate the social cliques that ruled Oasis Springs could all be traced back to Sofia, a former telenovela star and the wife of a billionaire coffee mogul. Rachel received her first lesson about Sofia’s influence when she was forced to reschedule a dinner party that was supposed to be the soft launch of Matt’s political career. Every caterer Rachel contacted was unavailable. One chef who declined advised her to have a signed contract in hand before she sent out invitations. “Thursday night is Ms. Cárdenas’s book club. You should get the schedule and avoid those altogether.”
Then there was the green dress fiasco. Matt had recently announced his candidacy, and they were invited to the charity gala Sofia’s nonprofit held at the National Portrait Gallery each year. Rachel had agonized over her dress and eventually chosen a custom chartreuse satin. No one had bothered to tell her that the important women in town all had a signature color. Her mother-in-law wore purple. Joanne Wilson, whose family owned the oldest Black investment firm in the state, always wore marigold. And Sofia, the first person Rachel saw when she arrived, was a vision in chartreuse satin. Sofia’s expression remained placid as she joked about how similar their outfits were, but Rachel was never invited to the gala again.
Despite those early missteps, Rachel had become a woman other people admired. She had her own signature color now, crimson, which screamed sex and power. If she wore a scarf from a local Etsy shop, it sold out within twenty-four hours. The rosé she brought to a dinner party would soon be prominently displayed in local liquor stores. Since Matt had elevated their profile beyond Oasis Springs, there wasn’t as much pressure to keep up with her neighbors. Most felt pressured to keep up with her.