Prologue
I've always been jealous of witches. Not the incense-
burning, tree-fondling kind, but the others — the ones
that can cast real spells, that can turn people into
livestock (I'd have turned my ex-husband into an aardvark —
a faint subgenus resemblance — but that's another story).
When I was a kid, I'd watch Bewitched and wish for the
ability to turn myself pretty and blond. As I grew older
and married (my true hell on earth), I'd wish for the
ability to ban housework forever. I was never meant to be
a domestic servant, especially after a ten-hour day at the
office. Cows should be domestic servants, not women, don't
you think?
I wanted to break free. Be somebody I never was.
You know Buffy, Xena, Joan of Arc? Saving the world is for
the pantywaisted. Me? I want to rule it.
Who am I?
Call me V.
Chapter One
Which publicist/designer couple have hit a speed bump in
their marriage? Rumor has it that they are sharing
separate quarters and that she has been seen on the arm of
a well-known piano player. True love, revenge, or PR scam?
Only the piano man knows for sure.
I predict big things for the Hollywood starlet opening on
Forty-second Street in August. Her voice, her moves, it's
the best thing she's done in ages. You heard it here
first, darlings.
Fifth Avenue's most daring bag lady and her darling
designers have done it again. Current buzz on the street
says that the It Bag for the spring season is part of the
Sonata line from V.
V. Yup, that's me.Now I own a prosperous leather shop on
Fifth Avenue, and I'm not going to name names, because the
purpose of anonymity is to stay anonymous. Every day
celebrities waltz into the store, celebrity wannabes
bumbling right after them. All to buy my bags. It's a hell
of a rush, and I like to have fun with it every now and
then. (It'll be our little secret.)
If you shop on Fifth Avenue, you'll really appreciate this
one. Here's the drill:
"Are you looking for something special today?" I ask.
"I'm not sure," the customer says in that Botoxified
highbrow tone that tells me she wants me to compliment her
on her new $1,500 Viktor & Rolf knockoff and then find a
bag to match. Do these people never learn?
"I've got just the thing," I tell her, and then, in my
head, I say the magic words:
Baggara, faggara, haggara, fine, puce is what you need to
shine.
Immediately her eyes zoom in on the puce monstrosity that
is sitting behind the counter. We've discounted it 47
percent, solely because it's an ugly mother and no one
would ever touch it.
"I love it," she gushes.
I smile and rack up the price 200 percent.
Ka-ching.
After the Page Six item, I take in orders for a thousand
bags (including some in butt-ugly puce). You wonder how
hype starts?
I'm telling you, it's all in who you know. You see those
names that get paraded around and become forty-seven-
minute celebrities? Well, if you see a certain ex-hooker
at mass, I'm telling you it's a sham. As long as she's
banking the advances and fighting off the West Coast
producers with a diamond-studded stick, she's got
connections.
That evening I take off for my usual night out. I signed
over my soul to the devil almost two years ago, and I
haven't regretted it yet. Having your every whim and
desire — what's not to love?
Pandemonium is a trendy little joint over on 1111 Legion
Street. I'm meeting Shelby and Meegan ("two e's, but
pronounced Megan; it's a family name"), who belongs to one
of the political dynasties from Connecticut (who knew?).
Shelby is svelte, tall, with a deceptively casual blond
cut. Her hair was specially designed by Frederic Fekkai,
and the body was designed by Oreos and Ex-Lax. A deadly
combination.
Meegan is much less disciplined, a bluestocking with no
sense of style at all who I had met one day while getting
a facial. I promised Lucy I'd get them both in the Life
Enrichment Program, and now it's up to me to show them the
infinite rewards of my life. Oh, yeah, like that's a tough
job.
To be perfectly honest, I don't care too much for Shelby.
It's tougher to be apathetic about Meegan. She is
genuinely nice, in a way I don't even begin to understand.
We've talked a few times, and I'm feeling the disconnect.
I've never spent a lot of time around nice people; that's
what happens when you grow up in Hoboken.
I walk into the bar, and heads turn. Men like the lean,
Dolce & Gabbana "You can look, but you have to sell your
firstborn in order to touch"-clad body, and women notice
my bag. Yeah, eat your heart out, New York.
One of the Yankee ballplayers is holding court in the
back, and I wink, but don't go any further. I'm a Mets
fan, and it seems disloyal. Someday, when I get to be a
Level 7 and earn my behavior-modification status, the Mets
are going to win the pennant.
I find Meegan and Shelby near the wall in the back. I've
been trying to teach them to be bolder, more aggressive,
but that's easy when you have no reason to fear rejection.
"Evening, ladies," I say, picking up the martini the
bartender has magically provided. It's a good life.
"V" — she didn't actually say "V," but it's really
important that no one knows my real name (Life Enrichment
Clause Number 473) — "you look fabulous!"
We do the air-kiss thing, and Meegan gives me an arm
squeeze.
My cell phone rings, and I hold up a "just a minute"
finger while I fish it out. Caller ID indicates that it's
Harry, and I consider him for only a moment. Then I shake
my head and put the phone back in my bag with a little
moue. "Voice mail will get it. I'm with two of my favorite
friends, and besides, who needs a man anyway?"
Shelby's eyes sharpen with greed. She is close; I know it.
I get extra powers for each client I recruit (Life
Enrichment Clause Number 10478), and I have been just
itching for my next level, mind-reading, aka the Amazing V
Sees All.
There's an art to the program, a stealthy give-and-take,
and you never ever share the secret until the absolute
moment of desperation strikes. Neither Meegan nor Shelby
knows anything, although Shelby will soon. She's about to
hit the wall. I can tell. With Meegan, well, let's just
say she's not really the desperate type. Yet.
I push back my hair and sigh, a great, "oh, woe is me"
wellspring of breath. "The shop was brutal today," I say,
and then pause for effect. "There was a leak in the Post
about the new line, and the waiting list has already
started. Julia's assistant called and offered me five thou
to put her at the top of the list." I roll my eyes to
indicate my perpetual ennui. "Can you believe it? Like I
could be bought," I scoff.
"A new line?" asks Meegan.
"Yes, Paolo has been busy. It's to die for." Paolo is my
mentor, the one who recruited me. He had been the fabbest
leather designer in Italy and got promoted to New York as
part of the package for me. It is a big ego trip to think
that my soul was worth a move to New York. I don't know
what made me so special, but I give thanks every day
because of it.
"I can't wait to see it," Shelby gushes.
I lean in close and smile. "I'll get you the first one."
And there it is. I can see it in her eyes. I have her, and
all it cost me was a fucking leather purse. Sad. I don't
like Shelby, but I think I would have wished more for her.
"You're the best," she says, joy in her voice.
"We'll do lunch tomorrow," I answer, not disputing it at
all. I'll arrange for Lucy to be there. The paperwork and
the legal hocus-pocus can take up to two hours, but the
1040 EZ (Lucy took great amusement in naming that one) is
available for those in a hurry. Shelby looks to be in a
hurry.
Meegan starts making eyes at a broker against the back
wall. My gaydar is beeping overtime, but she isn't on the
same wavelength. "I think he likes you," I say, just as a
conversation starter. "Go talk to him."
She looks hesitant, but lonely, so she moves in his
direction. I twitch my nose (purely show business, but it
lends an air of mysticism), and the words just pop into my
head.
Hetero, Homeo, higgledy hurl, forget your preference and
go for the girl.
Immediately he turns and gives her a long once-over. His
companion looks a little startled, and I giggle to myself.
Just like a man. Give him a heat-seeking missile, and
he'll follow it anywhere. After a short five minutes of
chitchat, Meegan and her new convert are heading out the
door, arm in arm. I take a long draw on my martini. Doing
the magic takes a lot of energy, and I get a little
sapped, but soon the alcohol is coursing through my veins,
reviving the blood flow.
"She bagged him," I say with a satisfied smile.
"Lucky her," replies Shelby, bitchily.
"Ah, every dog has its day, and every woman has her lay."
"I'm being petty and small-hearted, aren't I?" she asks,
completely insincere.
"That's what Prozac is for, darling," I drawl, patting her
hand.
We share a moment of awkward insincerity as I contemplate
my soon to be ESPness and Shelby contemplates her
aloneness.
I spot him before Shelby does. An eleven-point buck in the
patent-pending Armani suit. It's the shoes that do me in.
Italian wing tips. I have a severe sweet tooth for Italian
wing tips. Some sort of postseventies Richard Gere fetish,
I suppose. He meets my eyes, and I feel nothing. However,
I figure it's time for Shelby to get some sport. A kind of
last hoo-haw, as it were.
I give him a wink that he won't remember — I do like
playing God — and chant to myself. It occurs to me
belatedly that I really shouldn't give over all my spells
to the general populace, however, I will say it involves
the words wing tips, bon vivant, and clam dip. 'Nuff said.
(But you know, I have a tendency for prolixity, so I bet I
slip up in the future. Shoot me.)
Mr. Wing Tips locks on to her, and the rest is history.
They talk for a good forty-five minutes at the bar,
comparing names (which neither know, but it is the
ultimate game of social chicken) and complaining about the
crowds at Pravda. The conversation turns racy, and I stop
listening in. Eventually, they leave.
After I finish my fourth martini, Meegan returns, flying
solo.
"What happened?" I ask, mildly curious.
Meegan begs a cosmopolitan from the bartender and sips. "I
don't know. It was so great at first. He was Mr.
Attentive, talking about how pretty I was and how
refreshing it was to meet a woman who seemed so genuine,
and then we're kissing, and then he gets this horrified
look on his face, and can't get away fast enough. It's me,
isn't it?"
My playing-God tendencies develop feelings of guilt, and
I'm wondering if Lucy ever messes up. Probably not; I
don't think Lucy was born in Jersey. "No, it's not you. I
bet he dropped some bad acid or something." Do people do
that anymore? I'm not sure, but does it really matter?
"I'm being punished," Meegan says, sounding absolutely
sure of herself. And usually she's so...not.
Ah, I say to myself, a mystery's afoot. "Have you been
bad?" I pry, because the notion that Miss Milquetoast
Meegan might be laden with pepper is just — delicious.
"My mother died in a car accident."
A car accident? That is so not me. Some people handle
death well. I, however, have a bad case of necrophobia.
It's quite logical when you consider it. "Must be awful,"
I say, with what I hope is a sensitive smile.
Obviously I'm a better actor than I give myself credit
for, because she continues: "I was in high school, and we
were having a huge fight that night. I wanted to go to a
weekend party at one of my friends' summer house, and she
said no. I told her I wished she were dead. Then there was
a big flash of light and this crash."
At this point, I nod politely and grimace. She takes a
swallow and stares off into space, and I'm thinking we're
done. Gee, no, I'm wrong. "I was seriously banged up, and
the doctors had to remove a lot of my insides. When I woke
up from surgery, they told me she was dead."
It's a heartbreaking story, but I've gone through my
entire sensitive repertoire, and serious panic is starting
to take hold. I take a long sip of my drink to avoid
having to say anything understanding, soothing, or
empathetic, only to discover that the glass is not deep
enough.
"You know what I want now? More than anything else?" she
says with a dead laugh. Then she's looking up at me, and I
realize that she wants me to ask.
"I want a kid," she says, stealing a cocktail napkin and
tearing it up.
Okay, this is better. Again with the disconnect, but I can
work with this one. "Babies are nice."
"I can't have any kids of my own. Ever. It's payback,
isn't it?"
And now we're talking about infertility. I look around for
the nearest exit.
Meegan buries her head on the bar. "Can I have another
drink?"
It's about damn time. "Bartender!" I say, and whoosh, a
cosmopolitan appears. Slowly Meegan lifts her head,
appearing eerily calm. I wait, hoping she's all talked
out. However, there is a glint in her eye, and I know that
glint. "That's what I want more than anything," she
says. "To be pregnant. To feel a life growing inside me.
And I can't...."
Awkwardly I pat her head. It's the best I can do in the
circumstances. She starts inspecting the men at the bar,
and I know that look. Every woman knows that look when
it's closing time and you're drunk.
"Maybe you should go home. Sleep it off," I say, doing my
best to rescue what is left of her family values and maybe
recruit her into the Life Enrichment Program.
"She thought I was Miss Perfect. I never wanted to be Miss
Perfect."
There's a certain irony in this moment. Why is it that
women are never satisfied? She doesn't want to live her
perfect life in that perfect house in Connecticut, and I
would have sold my soul to do just that.
"So don't be Miss Perfect," I say, because I'm not Miss
Perfect, but I do understand rebellion. You can't fight
it. You just have to give in when the Warrior Goddess
strikes you.
Meegan is no longer listening to my advice, which is
probably a good thing. She stands up, a little woozy, but
she's still got that loose-cannon glint. So much for Dr.
V's Philosophy of Life. I console myself with my drink.
"I think I need to go. Thank you for inviting me," she
says politely, because she is Miss Perfect and will always
be.
"Uh, sure. Anytime," I add.
Then I watch as she takes off through the non-smoked-
filled bar, and I sit there alone, slowly getting drunk.
Crises are not for the faint of heart. I've had my share,
and that's too much. Give me the even keel of a carefree
existence any day. Eventually, my naturally cool demeanor
returns, and I get approached by a publicist from Susan
Magrino, a castoff from JP Morgan, and a lesbian from
Soho. I turn them all down.
I adore Manhattan in the spring. You would too, if you had
my life.
Just let me know, I'll have Lucy give you a call.
• • •
I meet Shelby the next day at the Gotham Bar and Grill.
When Lucy's not writing the world's dishiest gossip at her
Sixth Avenue office, she's there. An office-away-from-
office, as it were.
I have my suspicions about the chef here, but with the
whole Life Enrichment Program, there's a high level of
anonymity. It lends to the air of exclusivity; that's why,
for instance, I am "V," and "Shelby" is, well, "Shelby."
Anywhoo, back to the program, which is, of course, the
important thing. Absolutely no riffraff allowed. You never
know who's doing deals, and it's a great bit of sport to
try and figure it all out. In fact, there's a special
bookie down in the meat-packing district who takes bets. I
put down three thousand on Alfred, but we won't know until
2033, or at least that's what the oddsmakers are saying.
I walk over to Lucy's table (I was scheduled fifteen
minutes before Shelby) and seat myself. The maître d'
looks offended. Save it for the pope, pal.
She is stunning, as you might guess. Black hair, dark
eyes, sort of an eternal Catherine Zeta-Jones look, only a
little sharper. She has two cell phones (those cool kind
with digital cameras), which are perpetually ringing.
She looks up from her conversation and smiles. Lucy's
actually pretty down-to-earth when you get to know her.
Just don't get on her bad side. You've heard the stories;
they're all true.
I order a Pellegrino and sip patiently. Eventually she
kisses into the phone and hangs up.
"My God, can you believe the day I'm having? Oh, the UN.
Those poor, misguided souls. What I could do for world
peace if they'd just give me a chance. And then Reverend
Al is up to his usual hijinks. I have an in, though, so
I'm hoping to seal that deal shortly."
I try not to look impressed, but it's hard. Some of my old
gaucheness can spring up at the most inopportune times. I
murmur a simpatico, "Sounds like hell." And she laughs.
Lucy hears a lot of that.
"Well, so tell me about Shelby. I've got all the paperwork
here." She pats the birkin, and her phone rings, a
digitally modified "MacArthur Park." Lucy is a huge Donna
Summer fan.
"Hello, Don." She lip-synchs his full name to me.
Because Lucy has the hottest nine column-inches in New
York, everybody wants to be a part of it, and her phone is
ringing all the time.
"Yes, yes. I've heard all about your troubles with rehab,"
she continues.
"Poor dear.
"Of course I can fix it, but it'll cost you. How much is
sobriety worth?"
A very classic moue that would do Revlon proud. "Too bad.
Call me tomorrow if you change your mind."
She hangs up and smiles with confidence. "We're running a
little tidbit on Page Six tomorrow about rumors
surrounding his 'vacation.' He's supposed to be at a spa
in Arizona." Lucy laughs. "When will people learn that
lies will always come out? Oh, well, maybe he'll come
around before the paper goes to bed."
She dabs at her lipstick with the cloth napkin and then
folds it into a perfect replica of a swan. "Now, back to
Shelby. You've got her?"
I nod. "I'll let you explain the rules, but she's ready."
"You never disappoint me, V."
I smile at her, because I know. I sold my own soul almost
two years ago, and my life hasn't been the same — and
trust me, that's a good thing.
One average October day, just after I turned thirty-eight,
I was driving down the turnpike, my average daily commute
to my average daily job to my average daily life, and I
screamed. No one could have heard it from the soundproofed
doors in my trusty Toyota (and trust me, you don't open
your windows in Newark), but I was done being Wilhelmina
Lohman, bending over for every dick and dickina that came
along. For me, that was it, and once I finally made up my
mind, I was happier than I'd ever been before.
Part of the deal is the soul-recruitment program. Shelby
is my third soul-taking, and I'm getting the hang of it.
The first two were relatively easy, an assistant DA I had
met at a party and the super to my old building (yes,
there is justice in the world). I should be feeling an
attack of conscience, some twinge of badness, but I don't.
Of course, I really don't like Shelby, but still, the lack
of feeling bothers me.
I've closed that chapter of my life because, well, to be
honest, it pales when compared to fawning friends and high-
fashion extravaganzas. And there are bigger things ahead.
This is the end of that sort of sentimental schmaltz. I
look Lucy in the eye. No doubts here. For just a second, I
see a smudge in her mascara, and then whoosh — it's gone
like I never saw it at all. Instinctively I reach for my
mirror, check my reflection, but everything's in order. No
smudges, no smears, everything is beautiful.
"You don't need to doubt yourself, V. The world is your
oyster, and you, my darling, are the pearl. I see great
things in your future. You have to trust me on this."
Pinch me, I'm think I'm dreaming.
And then Shelby comes through the door and spots us at the
back. She looks a little stunned. Lucy does that to
people. It's her aura, her image of pure, controlled
power, all packaged in a neat size two. Shelby waits for
the maître d' (I'm much more pushy than she is) and smiles
at him politely.
I perform the introductions and listen as Lucy begins the
Talk. I guess she treats everyone special, because Shelby
gets a different spin than I got. Lucy tells Shelby how
lucky she is to have such an orderly life, how she is
saved from the rigors of the cause célèbre. I'm scanning
the annals of my meager French vocabulary and think Lucy's
just making that one up, but it sounds good, and Shelby is
entranced.
Next comes the pitch. The surprised, "Oh, you actually
want the fame and notoriety?" The thoughtful stare up to
the ceiling. "Well, there might be a way." Shelby's
intensity is palpable, a chokehold that won't let go until
your soul is free.
Fascinated, I watch the whole interchange. There's
profound human drama at work when someone gives up their
soul. Seeing others go through the same hell and
insecurities that I did makes me realize how I have grown
and matured. Today, I'm above all that shit.
Shelby takes a sip of her drink every now and then, or
picks at her salad, but her eyes never leave Lucy's face.
Whatever you want, whatever your dreams are. Heady words.
Eventually, I get seduced as well, forgetting to critique
Lucy's approach. I'm sucked back into the sumptuous
reverie of getting whatever you want. I'll repeat that
because it's important.
Whatever you want.
Those are the dreams that fire the greed of the world.
My back starts tingling, and I look around. Eyes are
watching us, some surreptitiously, some openly. Appraising
and envious, all blended together in one ugly palette of
emotion. It's a proud moment for someone who used to be a
perpetual Z-lister, but that was a long time ago. Back
before I was footloose and soul-free.
Shelby is ready to sign, the Visconti pen poised above the
paper, but Lucy isn't quite done yet. She rests her chin
on her hand and tilts her head in a darling Audrey Hepburn-
esque manner. "I don't want you to do anything you'll
regret. There's no backing out. Ever. What I try and give
my clients is life without conscience. Who needs all that
guilt? I mean, really."
She focuses her whole attention on Shelby, oddly intimate
in the bustling setting. At this moment, I don't exist,
the restaurant doesn't exist, there's only two people left
in the world. Shelby and Lucy. And I'm watching the
tableau, waiting with bated breath for Shelby to condemn
herself to a finite, yet boundless, life.
Lucy taps her fingers on the papers. "You're sure?" she
asks.
Shelby nods.
Lucy continues. "We do ask for a few things in return. I'm
a firm believer in rewarding positive behaviors. So, for
each client you recruit for Life Enrichment, your powers
will be increased to the next level. There are nine
levels, and you begin an apprentice program under V's
tutelage for thirty days. We do ask that you use your
powers with discretion. The system works best if the world
isn't aware we exist."
"What sort of powers?" Shelby asks with such repressed
malice that I wonder who is going to be the recipient of
the seven plagues of Shelby.
"You start with non-life-forms object creation. Basically,
it's our most effective program. If Wishes Were Birkins.
After you recruit another client, you move into Level 2,
personal appearance modification, aka My Salad Days Are
Over."
Shelby turns on me. "That's how you do it!"
I smile with teeth that are perfectly white and have never
been capped. Hate me, I don't mind; I never was hate-
worthy when I had a soul. "All those wasted hours at the
gym. Poof! And dessert, all the dessert you want..."
Now she starts to fully appreciate the life before her,
and her eyes start to glaze. "What's the third level?"
Lucy points to the paper in front of her. "I can't tell
you the rest until you've signed. We have to have a
nondisclosure agreement in place with all our clients."
While Shelby signs, Lucy brings out the Life Enrichment
handbook — I've Sold My Soul to the Devil...Now What? —
and gives it to Shel. "You can take it home and pore over
the details. If you have any questions, V is there to
answer them for you. And remember, it's our little secret."
Lucy's phone rings, and she takes the call away from the
table. I'm alone with my new convert. And after the
requisite seventy-two hours (not quite standard contract
law, but still a nice touch — you have three days to back
out of the deal. After that, you're in forever), my power
base will be upped to Level 4.
Shelby looks like a kid at Christmas. "I can just think
about something, and then, voilà, there it is?"
I nod, feeling a lot like Santa. It's a good life. "Well,
sorta. You have to use a spell, and then it'll appear."
She looks as if she's about to wish up an entire wardrobe
from Barney's right there, and I hold up my restraining
hand. "Wait. Remember. Discretion."
Her face scrunches with worry. "Oh."
Karan schmaran, heels of air, Edmundo Castillo is
everywhere.
"Look under the table," I say, with all the finesse of
Harry Houdini. It never gets old.
She lifts the tablecloth and pulls out the signature
Bergdorf-Goodman shopping bag. Inside is a wished-up pair
of Edmundo Castillo sandals. "I want to do it," she says.
Feeling benevolent, I nod and point to the Frequently
Asked Questions in the back, which includes a list of the
most common spells.
She closes her eyes, and I can see the magic wash over
her. Clients get an almost physical glow, which comes from
the four-alarm, multi-orgasmic wash of having your wish
granted — immediately. She squirms in her seat and then
reaches under the table. I'm curious to see what her first
wish fulfillment is. Your most secret desire is a
cornerstone in understanding and undermining the human
psyche.
Proudly she brandishes a set of Tiffany Feathers earrings.
Personally, I think they're gaudy, but I know better than
to say anything. So silently I watch as she absorbs the
change in her status. An instant becoming. She sits
straighter, more self-assured than ever before, and there
are no spells at work for that one.
We celebrate over two pieces of chocolate cake (Alfred's
secret recipe) and a cappuccino. Lucy comes back in a
whiff of custom-designed perfume, something mysterious and
musky, as old as the world, then she waves good-bye and
departs for places unknown. All eyes follow in her wake. I
feel a surge of admiration for this fascinating female who
lifts us above a cheap imitation of life. Shelby and I
toast her new soul loss, and she smiles in an almost
drunken fog.
Today I can rule the world. Well, okay, I'm only an almost
Level 4. But someday...
After all, what good is a soul? Can you borrow against it?
Dress it up and parade it down Park Avenue? I feel the
eyes gravitate in our direction once more, and I brush
back my hair, a modest gesture to acknowledge the silent
tributes that are flowing our way.
Just remember, you can have it, too.