“I understand that you’ll move into the house after the wedding.”
“Yes. That’s the plan.” He grew silent.
“Are you worried about that? I assure you, the staff are lovely and it’s a divine place to live.”
“Oh, no, of course, you’re right. I guess it’s a matter of parting with my parents’ objects, having to disburse them. It’s like letting go of a piece of them. If I’d seen them before they died, I might not be so maudlin about it. But the last time we spoke was before I left for Europe, two years earlier. I always assumed they’d be here when I returned. It’s hard to move on.”
She thought of her mother’s clothes. “I know. I had to leave everything of my mother’s behind when I fled.”
“You what?”
“When I left.”
He didn’t seem alarmed by her misstatement. “Well, I look forward to working with you once I’m here for good. Miss Helen and I may need an interpreter, at times. I have to confess, she’s a funny one. Then again, I’m a little off myself. Maybe we’ll make a good match.”
A prickle of guilt washed over her, knowing that she wouldn’t be here when he moved in. He’d have to find his own way around his new wife and in-laws. Still, she wanted to help. “Mrs. Frick doesn’t say much, and rarely leaves her rooms, but Miss Helen more than makes up for it. When she’s chatting, it’s best to let her run out of steam at her own time. If she’s interrupted, she can get quite short. You can never tell what Mr. Frick is thinking, so don’t assume because he’s quiet and listening that he’s not about to erupt in anger, usually about a delinquent payment or an unexpected bill. If he thinks he’s being taken advantage of, watch out for the fireworks.”
Mr. Danforth had gone pale. She’d said too much.
“This is from my perspective, of course, as an employee. As a son-in-law, you’ll be treated quite differently.”
When he looked at her, his eyes were slightly glazed. “I don’t think I’m up to this.”
“Well, we can take a break, come back first thing tomorrow. They’re returning on the afternoon train.”
“No. I mean any of it.”
Was he implying he wasn’t up to the marriage? Lillian was causing damage, speaking so openly. At this rate, Mr. Danforth would be running for the hills and the engagement would never happen. And she was so close. “Please don’t say that.”
He took out a handkerchief and wiped his face. “It’s stifling hot in here, don’t you think?”
“Look, let’s take a quick walk in Central Park. The air will do us both good.”
To her relief, Mr. Danforth accepted the offer.
His color returned in the brisk autumn air, and his spirits rose the farther they got from the mansion. “I have an idea,” he said. “This way.”
They followed the pathway along the East Drive, and as they walked along the southern edge of Turtle Pond she guessed where they were headed. “The castle?”
“Exactly.”
Belvedere Castle loomed ahead of them. The first time Lillian and her mother had wandered by it during one of their few walks in the park—Kitty had never been one for meandering constitutionals—Lillian had been entranced. The castle had been constructed upon one of the highest points in the park, a giant cropping of schist that rose out of Turtle Pond, surrounded by elm and plane trees, a fairy-tale fortress in the dead center of a busy American city.
“I’ve always wondered what it was built for,” she said as they climbed the steps that led to one of its terraces. “I imagined that they figured the mayor of New York could live here, like a king reigning over his fiefdom.”
“In fact, it was built in the 1870s as a folly, a decorative structure with no real use. Something pretty to look at.” Mr. Danforth gently guided her by the elbow to the edge of a terrace facing north, where the great rectangular reservoir of water just beyond Turtle Pond sparkled in the sunlight. “Although now the castle serves as a weather station.”
“I’m glad it has a purpose,” said Lillian. “Everything ought to have a purpose.”
“Including people?”
“Most definitely.”
“Miss Helen says that you’re quite good at your job, so you can count yourself among the purposeful.”
The thought that Miss Helen had complimented Lillian to Mr. Danforth came as something of a shock. “She did?”
“She did. And said that you were quite knowledgeable about art, as I’ve discovered during our scavenging sessions. Where did you learn so much?”
“Reading books,” she answered crisply. “I suppose that means the Frick mansion is the opposite of a folly since Mr. Frick has already designated it as a museum for the city. He built it with a purpose in mind.”
Mr. Danforth didn’t reply right off. “To gild refined gold, to paint the lily / To throw a perfume on the violet / Is wasteful and ridiculous excess,” he recited.
“What’s that from?” she asked.
“Shakespeare. King John.”
The words were beautiful but the sentiment unnerving, coming out of the mouth of the man designated to marry Miss Helen. “So you’re saying that Mr. Frick’s collection is one of ridiculous excess?”
“One of his paintings could feed an entire Lower East Side tenement block for years and years. I would add that there’s some question whether or not the decision to leave his paintings and mansion to the city springs from guilt.”
“Guilt about what?”
“Something that happened ages ago, probably thirty years or so. Long forgotten except by a few, probably.”
She waited, and eventually he continued. “Mr. Frick and his rich friends had a private lake for their fishing club upriver from a town called Johnstown in Pennsylvania. There was a dam, which needed repairs, and it burst and pretty much wiped out the entire town. Over two thousand people died.”
“How awful. And it was Mr. Frick’s fault?”
“His and the other club members’, for their negligence in not making the repairs. Afterwards, the members formed a relief committee to help the survivors, but it’s rumored that they used their influence to pressure the investigators. No charges were ever made.”
Over two thousand people dead. An utter catastrophe. Mr. Frick’s reputation had been whitewashed in the ensuing years as he solidified his power, and his increasing wealth made him untouchable.
“So you see, Miss Lilly, the Fricks are the gilded ones of this great city. How lucky for them.”
She gave him a look.
“Right, it probably comes across as ludicrous, me saying such a thing. But we Danforths are upper class only in name. My family’s business has been in trouble for a long time, preceding my father’s death. I have only my butler on hand these days, having had to let go of the valet, the cook, the whole lot of them.” He laughed. “In many ways I’m a folly myself, with no purpose other than saving my family’s name and fortunes by marrying up. Although, don’t get me wrong, I am quite grateful that Miss Helen has found me worthy. She will keep me on my toes, of that I have no doubt.”
That Mr. Danforth would feel comfortable enough with Lillian to confide such intimacies gave her a tiny jolt of pleasure, but she was saddened to hear his low consideration of himself.
“You’d mentioned the other day that you wanted to pursue medicine,” she asked. “What drew you to that?”
“It’s not a pleasant story, I’m afraid.”
“That’s all right.”
“During the war, we were told to be on guard for the smell of garlic, to put on our gas masks at the first whiff. One of my fellow soldiers didn’t have a sense of smell, it turns out, and while we were suiting up, he was shuffling a deck of cards, ready for another round of gin rummy in the trenches. Two hours later, he was in blinding pain, throwing up, screaming, and we got him to the medics, where all they could do was pour water over his face to try to flush it out. I’m sure there is more we could have done, instead of watching as he bled out of his nose and mouth, gasping for air as his lungs became ravaged with ulcers. I don’t want to stand idly by ever again.”