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Crystal Clear
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Crystal Clear
Jane Heller
Copyright
Diversion Books
A Division of Diversion Publishing Corp.
443 Park Avenue South, Suite 1008
New York, NY 10016
www.DiversionBooks.com
Copyright © 1998 by Jane Heller
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or locales is entirely coincidental.
For more information, email [email protected]
First Diversion Books edition March 2016
ISBN: 978-1-68230-354-2
Also by Jane Heller
Fiction
Best Enemies
Clean Sweep
Female Intelligence
Infernal Affairs
Lucky Stars
Name Dropping
Princess Charming
Sis Boom Bah
The Club
The Secret Ingredient
An Ex to Grind
Some Nerve
Non-Fiction
Confessions of a She-Fan: The Course of True Love with the New York Yankees
You’d Better Not Die or I’ll Kill You: A Caregiver’s Survival Guide to Keeping You in Good Health and Good Spirits
For Peggy Van Vlack, the Queen of Sedona
Acknowledgments
Many thanks to the following people, without whom Crystal Clear would still be a germ of an idea: former Barnes & Noble community relations whiz Judy Martin, who said, “So maybe your next heroine goes to an ashram?”; Ruth Harris, who came up with the book’s title; my agent, Ellen Levine, who was supportive beyond the call of duty; and my editor, Ann La Farge, who worked her usual magic on my words.
Special thanks to my husband, Michael Forester, for allowing his aura to be cleansed, his energies to be palpated, and all the rest.
Part One
Chapter One
It all started when my secretary, Rona Wishnick, told me I needed my aura cleansed.
“My what cleaned?” I asked, then glanced down at my navy blue suit and inspected it for stains. It was 7:30 on a Friday night and Rona had come into my office to say she was going home. Or so I’d thought.
“I didn’t say cleaned. I said cleansed,” she explained as she stood beside my desk, fingering the angel pendant wedged between her “heat-seeking missiles,” as one of the more sophomoric men in the office had nicknamed her large breasts. “And I was referring to your aura, not your outfit.”
I didn’t have a clue what she was talking about. I was a CPA, for God’s sake—a down-to-earth, practical-to-a-fault, nose-to-the-grindstone accountant. I was a whiz at preparing income tax returns but totally out of my element when it came to making sense of New Age-speak, Rona’s second language. By telling me that my aura needed cleansing, was she suggesting that I should switch perfumes? Underarm deodorants? What?
“I’ve been wanting to talk to you about the problem for a while,” she said as I popped two Bufferin, a NoDoz, and a Pepcid AC into my mouth and washed them all down with an Ensure Plus. My dinner.
“Oh, I get it now,” I said, nodding. “You want a raise. Or is it more vacation time?”
She shook her head, marveling at my obtuseness. “You’re the one who needs more vacation time.”
“A trip on the astral plane, right?” I laughed.
“Go ahead. Make jokes. But I’m worried about you, about the pressure you put on yourself. Sure, there’s a lot of work to be done around here, but it’s Friday night and, once I’m out the door, you’ll be the only one left in this office. Even the housekeeping people went home hours ago. The point I’m trying to make is that you’re in complete denial of your…” She stopped, grasping for the right word, then gave up after several seconds when she wasn’t able to seize on it. Rona and I are both in our mid-forties—that age when grasping for the right word and not being able to seize on it starts to become embarrassingly routine. “Look, you’re this close to total burnout, okay?” Rona said finally, holding her thumb and index finger about an eighth of an inch apart.
“You’re sweet to care, Rona, but I think you’re exaggerating,” I said, polishing off the rest of the Ensure.
“Oh, really?” she said, tapping her foot on the white Berber carpet that had recently been installed in all the partners’ offices. “Then why the canned milkshakes instead of a nice, home-cooked meal?”
“I like the taste of them,” I said. “The chocolate one’s terrific.”
“I’ll bet,” she said. “What about the headaches, the heartburn, the insomnia? You’re telling me you’re not stressed out?”
“Of course I’m stressed out. Who isn’t?”
“Who isn’t? People who have found their center, that’s who. People who have achieved balance in their life. People who have evolved.”
Rona was, hands down, the most evolved person I knew. She meditated in the office every morning in one of the stalls in the ladies’ room, was a heavy user of the Psychic Friends Network and quoted frequently and liberally from The Celestine Prophecy. Recently, she announced that she was considering changing her first name to Raven because it sounded Native American and, therefore, more “spiritual.” I didn’t tell Rona this, of course, but there was nothing remotely ravenlike about her; she was a platinum blonde with a body that more closely resembled a bison than a bird.
“What I’m saying,” Rona went on, “and I’m saying it with love in my heart, okay?—is that this place has become your entire universe, Crystal, and it’s sad.”
By “this place,” Rona meant the Manhattan accounting firm where we worked, Duboff Spector. By “Crystal,” she meant me, Crystal Goldstein. Rona liked to think my name was linked in some paranormal way to the chunk of rock she kept on her desk to ward off negative vibrations, but it was simply the name my parents had given me in memory of my maternal grandmother, Crystal Schwartz.
“Look, hon,” Rona said tenderly. “You and I have been together for seven years and in all that time I’ve seen you successful but I’ve never seen you happy. Really happy.”
“Rona,” I sighed, patting her massive arm. She was so much more than an employee to me; she was the closest thing I had to a best friend. “You’ve been reading too many of those magazine articles about baby boomers who have all the trappings of success but are still searching for Meaning in their lives. Well, I don’t have time to search for Meaning or anything else. There aren’t enough hours in the day. Besides, I hate people who sit around whining about whether or not they’re happy. I’m happy enough.”
“Oh, sure,” she said skeptically. “You work like a dog, and when you do take ten seconds off, you either shlep up to Larchmont to see your father, who’s too busy watching that big-screen TV you bought him to notice you’re even in the room, or you grab a few hours with Steven, the man you say you’re going to marry but never do. That’s not my idea of bliss, Crystal.”
I smiled. Rona’s idea of bliss involved bathing in aroma-therapeutic essences with her husband, Arthur, a manufacturer of doorbells.
“I appreciate your concern, Rona, and I promise I’ll think about everything you’ve said. But right now the IRS is breathing down Jeff Jacobson’s neck, and I’m the one he hired to straighten out his books. In other words, instead of searching for Meaning tonight, I’m gonna be searching for a way to keep this guy from an audit. Now, am I excused?”
She nodded grudgingly, then blew me a kiss. “Have a good weekend.”
“You, too. Say hi to Arthur.”
Ro
na was about to exit my office when the phone rang, making both of us jump. Instinctively, she reached across my desk and picked it up.
“Crystal Goldstein’s office,” she said. “Oh, Steven. Yes, she’s still here. I’ll put—”
I tugged on her sleeve and mouthed the words: “Tell him I’m busy.” I hadn’t made a dent in Jeff Jacobson’s tax problems. Steven would have to wait.
Rona did as she was instructed and hung up the phone. “He said he’ll be in his office for another fifteen minutes or so if you want to call him back.” She shook her head disapprovingly as she moved toward the door. “You and Stevie,” she snorted. “You communicate through secretaries, answering machines, and E-mail. Is that what you call true love, Crystal?”
Before I could answer, she was gone.
Alone at last, I sank back in my chair and fanned myself with a legal pad. It was an unseasonably warm September night in New York, and since the air conditioning in the building automatically shut off at six o’clock and the windows were hermetically sealed, my office was as fetid and airless as a sauna and I felt weak, light-headed. Still, there was work to be done. I pulled up Jeff Jacobson’s file on the computer and tried to focus on the numbers on the screen. But for some reason, Rona’s comments kept floating through my mind, haunting me, taunting me, and before I knew it I wasn’t concentrating on Jeff Jacobson’s tax problems at all; I was asking myself the sort of insipid, self-indulgent questions I swore I’d never ask.
Was I on my way to total burnout? Was all my hard work worth it? And what was an aura, anyway?
The latter question suddenly inspired me to reach inside the top drawer of my desk, pull out the little mirror I kept there, and scrutinize my reflection. I had expected to see a sort of dingy cloud hovering over my head—wasn’t that what an aura that needed cleansing would look like? But what I actually saw was a woman with dark circles under her eyes and dark roots along her hairline.
I continued to study myself in the mirror, and the more I studied, the more startled I became. I was still pretty at forty-three—big brown eyes, a straight nose, a strong chin with a little cleft in it, full lips—but I was no longer a dish by any stretch of the imagination. A dishrag was more like it. My once-bouncy auburn hair hung limply at my shoulders, my skin had taken on a sickly pallor, and the full lips men had always found so sexy were cracked and peeling where I’d been gnawing on them, another unfortunate habit I’d picked up during the last tax season, along with nail biting. I seemed to myself to have a sort of parched, dried-up look. The look of a woman who needed her aura cleansed.
I shoved the mirror back in the drawer and shuddered. Was that what Rona and everyone else saw when I walked into a room? The drabness? The brittleness? The pallor? Had my so-called “success” robbed me of all my juice?
My success, I scoffed. I wasn’t exactly some big shot mogul. Please. I was just a professional woman who had put my career ahead of everything else in my life, mostly because there was nothing else in my life. Well, nothing except a boyfriend I rarely slept with, due to the fact that I was either too busy or too tired, and a father I rarely bonded with, due to the fact that I wasn’t born a boy. My mother hadn’t minded that I wasn’t a boy, but she died when I was twelve, taking whatever warm and fuzzy feelings my father had with her. So I worked and worked and worked, making partner at Duboff Spector before I was thirty, buying a co-op on East End Avenue, tooling around in my BMW, squirreling away plenty of money for my Golden Years. I had “made it.” I was in the right tax bracket. I felt good about myself.
Or did I? Was there Meaning in my life? Was I even in touch with my real feelings? Was I happy?
I gagged. Talk about self-indulgent. Talk about a cliché! I reminded myself of the “boomers” quoted in those nauseating magazine articles.
Maybe I’ll give Steven a call back, I thought, hoping to snap out of my funk. I dialed his private line at the office and got his voice mail. Apparently, he had already left for the day.
He must be running off to have dinner with a client, I mused, or heading home with a briefcase full of paperwork.
An attorney, Steven was as consumed by his career as I was by mine, which was how we had managed to stay together for three years. Neither of us made demands on the other. Neither of us minded the other’s long hours. Neither of us mentioned the word “marriage,” although I was relatively certain we’d get to the altar eventually. Only Rona thought otherwise. She had done our charts and maintained that we were incompatible astrologically.
I leaned back in my chair and recalled my first date with Steven Roth—a blind date arranged by his mother, an extraordinarily pushy but well-meaning client of mine. I hadn’t wanted to go on the date, figuring that if a guy has to depend on his mother for fix-ups there has to be something really wrong with him. But I hadn’t been out with a man in months and decided it was probably a good idea to keep my hand in, so to speak.
“So, you’re an accountant” was Steven’s opening line at dinner that fateful night. He had chosen a Pakistani restaurant in an attempt, I assumed, to demonstrate how worldly and sophisticated he was. His mother had already filled me in on his extensive trips abroad. She had also warned me that he did not like it when people called him “Steve.”
“Yes, Steven,” I said. “I’m a partner at Duboff Spector.” But then he already knew all that. Mommy Dearest had to have told him.
“Accounting. Of all the professions to go into,” he said dismissively, as if I’d just told him I delivered pizzas for a living.
“What do you mean by that?” I asked, trying not to get my back up. I didn’t care for his remark—or his tone.
“Just that it can’t be very fulfilling,” he said smugly.
“Actually, being an accountant is about as fulfilling as being a medical malpractice attorney,” I said with a definite edge. According to Mrs. Roth, that’s what her son was.
A forty-six-year-old “med mal” lawyer. A goddam ambulance chaser. And I was the one who was supposed to feel inferior?
“You sound a little defensive, Crystal,” said Steven, who was patronizing but not bad looking. He had dark hair and green eyes—an attractive combination—and, for the most part, his features were quite pleasing. I say “for the most part” because his ears protruded from his head at ninety-degree angles. Okay, forty-five-degree angles. They weren’t the stuff of Dumbo but they were there in a way that made me wonder why Steven hadn’t had them “pinned back,” as they used to call the procedure when I was a kid. On the other hand, maybe he did have them pinned back and the doctor screwed up the operation. Maybe that was why he’d gone into medical malpractice.
“You’re right. I am being defensive,” I said, “because you seem to be putting accountants down. We get enough of that during the day. We don’t need it at night. On blind dates, for example.”
Obviously, things weren’t clicking right from the get-go. We were at that awful juncture in Blind Datedom when you’re only minutes into the date yet you’ve already sized the guy up and decided that there is not now nor ever will be any chemistry between you.
“Look, I’m really sorry. I didn’t mean to insult you,” he said as he scanned the menu. Earlier, I had suggested that he order for both of us. I was not familiar with Pakistani food. I was a connoisseur of Ensure Plus. “I don’t know why I said what I said about accountants.”
“I do,” I replied, sighing with resignation. “You said what you said because accountants are the Rodney Dangerfields of the business world—we never get any respect. Bean Counters, they call us. Number Crunchers. Anal Retentive Drudges. And do you know why they call us these things?”
Steven shook his head. I had his full attention now.
“Because we’re like domestic help, hired to clean up people’s messes,” I continued. “Everyone thinks we’re humorless nerds until presto—we save a client money. Then all of a sudden we’re heroes and are spoken of in the same hushed tones usually reserved for doctors or, at the very
least, dentists. And if we save the client a lot of money, we get invited to his kid’s bar mitzvah. But most of the time, we’re the butt of jokes. On national television, no less. The minute the accountants from Price Waterhouse walk onto that stage during the Academy Awards ceremony, it’s one big ‘Ha ha ha.’”
“I see your point,” said Steven with a slight smile, his first of the evening, “since lawyers are the butt of jokes, too.”
“Yes, but lawyer jokes hinge on the premise of lawyer-as-shark. Accountant jokes hinge on the premise of accountant-as-shlemiel.”
He laughed. “I promise I’ll never put accountants down again.”
“My colleagues and I appreciate that,” I said, feeling better after having vented my spleen.
“You mentioned the Academy Awards,” Steven said, eager to change the subject, it seemed. “Are you a movie fan?”
“Yes, actually I am,” I said after a deep breath. “Although I don’t have much time to go to the movies anymore. I end up renting the video a year or two after the fact.”
Steven nodded ruefully. “I understand,” he said. “I still remember when I used to see a film the day it opened. But that was before I became a lawyer and essentially said goodbye to leisure time.”
“Do you like being a medical malpractice lawyer?” I asked, suddenly curious about the man sitting across from me. He was better looking when he wasn’t scowling.
“I love it. Getting multimillion-dollar settlements for people who’ve been screwed by big companies gives me a pretty good feeling.”
“You mean, it’s fulfilling,” I teased.
“Exactly.” He laughed in a self-deprecating way that made me think I had probably misjudged him. Perhaps he wasn’t smug, just shy. “I feel fulfilled when the firm wins a 20-million-dollar award for an out-of-work electrician who had the wrong leg amputated by an intoxicated surgeon,” he went on, then told me about some of his other recent cases before turning the focus of the conversation back onto me. “I gather that you like being an accountant,” he said, smiling again.