Here is another excerpt from my novella, The Ovidians. Laurel, now 30 and a graduate student in classics, travels in search of solitude to write her dissertation, and stays with her mother’s best friend, who runs an incognito getaway for people seeking solitude.

The Ovidians: “Laurel at Thirty”
On the train Laurel wrote in her diary: Here I am, thirty years old, halfway through my life; no, wait, Mom lived to be, what, sixty-three? so I’m not halfway through my life.
For the last two years, Laurel had been working on her dissertation in classics. Her topic was approved, but she wasn’t committed. She did not want to be another of those women who analzyed the role of the girlfriend/mistress in Latin elegy, though ostensibly that was her subject. And though she’d love to write about cenae (dinner parties), hadn’t that been too much done?
And then the train rolled into the station without her coming to terms with her subject. She stepped out on the platform and tried to get her bearings. She wondered if she would recognize Lucy, who had been her mom’s best friend at their “lovely snob college” in Massachusetts. Laurel had not seen Lucy since Mom’s funeral several years ago.
But here was Lucy, walking toward her, waving her arms. Lucy was charming and absurdly colorful, with her vintage ’60s wire-rimmed glasses and her frizzy Pre-Raphaelite red hair fanned over the collar of her royal blue pea coat. She immediately took control of Laurel’s suitcase.
“Lucy! You’ve an adult!”
“I’m thirty.”
“Couldn’t be. That would make me… No!”
And so they laughed as they walked the few blocks from the station to Liz’s digs, which she called “the Tudor knockoff in the formerly posh neighborhood.”
“I can’t tell if the neighborhood’s coming up or going down,” she confessed.
“Always hard to tell,” Laurel said. She and Rob lived in a shabby but cozy Mission-style house with a view of a beautiful, if polluted, river. But there was also a homeless encampment practically in the back yard. Or rather, it was sometimes there: now you see it, now you don’t, depending on whether the police had been there lately to clear it out. Rob once hired some of the homeless people to be extras in a production of As You Like It.
“Well, I don’t see any drug dealers on the street,” Laurel said. “That’s a good sign.”
“That’s their doing. The new neighbors. They have connections,” Lucy whispered as she nodded at an exquisitely-dressed couple in black coats, cashmere scarves, and $500 sneakers, who were lugging their garbage bins to the curb.
“Who are they?”
“Fancy lawyers, of course. The dealers cleared out after they moved in,” she said. And then she stopped and gestured at a house. “And here we are!”
The house was what Laurel called “rickety-cute”: it had good bones, but needed paint. Inside there was lots of ’60s kitsch, including bead curtains (“Do you want to be a fortuneteller?”), a wobbly pink chandelier, an embarrassing Jim Hendrix poster, a fake Jackson Pollock painted by Laurel’s father, and a peculiar collection of papier-mache gnomes. Why did the Baby Boomers hang on to so many hideous things?
And then Lucy showed her to her room. “This is gorgeous!” Laurel exclaimed. It was a chic studio apartment with a roll-top desk, a fainting couch, a bookcase, and a queen-size bed with at least a dozen pillows.
“I’ll never leave this room. Perfect for dissertation-writing!”
Lucy said, “Cherish your solitude. Meanwhile I’ll socialize with the would-be solitude-seeker upstairs.”
Laurel didn’t quite understand the set-up: Lucy wasn’t running a hotel, nor was it exactly a bed-and-breakfast, but she had lots of friends, some of whom wanted incognito getaways, and she rented out a few rooms and one apartment so they could have perfect solitude for a tremendous price. Somebody, and nobody knew who, had booked the top floor over Christmas, and had been given the run of the house. She called herself Fritzi. So far, Fritzi had spent most of her desperately-sought alone-time talking to Lucy and helping with the housework
“I was hoping you could run some of her errands,” Lucy said. “She’s charming and so lonely. She likes chatting to someone who doesn’t know who the hell she is – whoever that is!”
Fritzi was demanding. She sent Lucy out shopping ever day. Once for a special teapot with an art nouveau pattern of garlands and flowers, which, Fritzi explained, wouldn’t do unless it was the same as the one in a picture she’d ripped out of Country Living; then to the the Art Museum for the catalogue for a Pre-Raphaelite exhibition because Fritzi was “feeling too agoraphobic” to go in person; and the next day for a pair of pajamas that were essentially a sweatsuit – again from a picture in a magazine – but Lucy couldn’t find the designer pajamas, so she substituted 100 percent cotton sweatpants and a sweatshirt and put them in a special boutique bag she had saved for just such an occasion.
“And then my favorite errand.” A second edition of Jane Austen’s Emma, which Fritzi said was her favorite book. The aged copy had allegedly been given by Lady Sitwell to a famous American poet who’d sold it to an antiquarian bookseller when she went broke. It cost $50,000.
The local antiquarian bookseller, whose shop was called simply Draco, had the package tied up with a bow, all ready for Fritzi.
“The funny thing is,” Lucy said, “that Draco knows who Fritzi is and I don’t. He was disappointed that she didn’t show up in person! I didn’t think I should admit I had no idea who she is.”
Laurel couldn’t stop laughing. She didn’t care who Fritzi was, but she did like shopping, so she would do her best.
When Lucy left her to settle in, Laurel spread out her books on the bed and then fell gently into a nap while reading one of the detective novels from the shelf. She didn’t realize she had fallen asleep. It was that kind of sleep. It was, without doubt, the best sleep she’d had in months.
A few hours later, when Lucy knocked on the door and whispered, “Fritzi has invited Draco to dinner!” Laurel could hardly contain her glee.
And so she struggled out of sleep, combed her hair and pulled on a black knit dress over tights before clumping down the stairs to the dining room.












