Soul/Mate

Soul/Mate

by Joyce Carol Oates
Soul/Mate

Soul/Mate

by Joyce Carol Oates

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Overview

A lonely widow is romanced by a “brilliantly portrayed” pathological killer in this novel by the National Book Award–winning author of them (The New York Times).
 
Dorothea Deverell is a New England art historian working for a Boston museum, resigned to entering middle age alone—until she’s swept off her feet by the flattery of a charming younger man who calls her his soul mate. Colin Asch is swept away too. He admires Dorothea’s gentle nature, innate goodness, decency, and acceptance of others without judgment. She’s nothing at all like the people Colin has met before—and murdered.
 
A self-appointed “Angel of Death,” Colin is determined to keep Dorothea happy—by eliminating anyone who gets in the way of his plan. They’ll be clever kills, untraceable and fast as a knife-slash to the throat. Each one will bring him closer to the woman he loves. And by the time Dorothea discovers what horrors passion has wrought, she’ll be in so deep, so dark, that giving in might be her only chance of survival.
 
This novel, called “a hair-raiser” by Elmore Leonard, comes from the #1 New York Times–bestselling author of We Were the Mulvaneys, a four-time Pulitzer Prize finalist and recipient of the O. Henry Award, the National Book Award, and the Bram Stoker Award. In Soul/Mate, “it is clear from the start that we are in Joyce Carol Oates territory, for the book is stamped with her hallmarks—her complex, detailed prose; her fascination with violence; her obsessive concern with rendering not so much action as the way action haunts the hidden consciousness of her characters” (The New York Times).

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781504045179
Publisher: Open Road Media
Publication date: 05/02/2017
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 215
Sales rank: 431,201
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

About The Author
Joyce Carol Oates was born in Lockport, New York. After graduating from high school, she attended Syracuse University and then earned her master of arts from the University of Wisconsin–Madison before becoming a full-time writer. In 1963, she published her first book, the short story collection By the North Gate, and in 1964, when she was twenty-six years old, her first novel, With Shuddering Fall. Oates has written over forty works, many of which have won awards, including the National Book Award for them (1969), two O. Henry Awards, four Bram Stoker Awards, a World Fantasy Award, the National Humanities Medal, the Norman Mailer Prize for Lifetime Achievement, and the Stone Award for Lifetime Literary Achievement. Black Water (1992), What I Lived For (1994), Blonde (2000), and Lovely, Dark, Deep (2014) were Pulitzer Prize finalists, and her 1996 novel We Were the Mulvaneys was a New York Times bestseller. Under the pen names Rosamond Smith and Lauren Kelly, she published eleven psychological suspense novels, including Snake Eyes (1992), Double Delight (1997), and Starr Bright Will Be with You Soon (1999). While writing and publishing books, Oates taught at the University of Windsor in Canada from 1968 to 1978, and then moved to New Jersey, where she currently teaches in Princeton University’s creative writing program as the Roger S. Berlind Distinguished Professor of the Humanities. She also teaches creative writing courses at New York University, Stanford University, and the University of California, Berkeley.
Joyce Carol Oates is the author of over seventy books encompassing novels, poetry, criticism, story collections, plays, and essays. Her novel Them won the National Book Award in Fiction in 1970. Oates has been a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters for more than three decades and currently holds the Roger S. Berlind Distinguished Professorship at Princeton University. 
 

Hometown:

Princeton, New Jersey

Date of Birth:

June 16, 1938

Place of Birth:

Lockport, New York

Education:

B.A., Syracuse University, 1960; M.A., University of Wisconsin, 1961

Read an Excerpt

Soul/Mate


By Joyce Carol Oates, Rosamond Smith

OPEN ROAD INTEGRATED MEDIA

Copyright © 1989 The Ontario Review
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-5040-4517-9


CHAPTER 1

Dorothea Deverell knew herself at a disadvantage.

On this drizzly misty evening of November 14, driving in her secondhand Mercedes to the dinner party that would forever alter the course of her life, Dorothea — thirty-nine years old, widowed for fourteen years, and for all of those years childless — felt the sharpness of disadvantage like an early, ominous, shivering presage of the flu: and did not like the feeling. She did not like it because it was too familiar.

She was already twenty minutes late for the Weidmanns' dinner party (which she did not much want to attend, in any case, since her lover and her lover's wife were also to be guests), and she had been so delayed in leaving the Institute (where she was assistant to the Director, a charmingly incompetent gentleman who not only publicly claimed he could do nothing without Miss Deverell's help but saw to it that the extravagant claim was daily, even hourly, substantiated) she had not had time to hurry home, bathe, calm her thoughts, and change into something more formal, and more feminine, than the navy cashmere suit she had worn that day to work — a Chanel ten years out of date, elegantly shabby, with raised slightly knobby shoulders and long sweeping skirt to mid-calf that gave her the look, as her lover, Charles, once remarked, of a sweetly befuddled prioress in a nineteenth-century French novel. Dorothea dreaded being late for any occasion, however innocently, out of a fear that those awaiting her might guess she really did not want to come at all; sociable gatherings, though the very life's blood of the unmarried and the staple, so to speak, of her administrative work at the Institute — she was in charge of scheduling lectures, chamber music concerts, art exhibits, trustees' meetings, charity functions, luncheons, receptions, and many another gregarious event at the community-minded Morris T. Brannon Institute — often filled her with a mysterious malaise.

That morning Charles had telephoned her in her office to ask if she was going to the Weidmanns' tonight, and Dorothea had said in a weakly ebullient voice, "Of course — I wouldn't miss one of Ginny's lovely parties for the world, would you?" "God, yes," Charles said. He spoke with more than usual vehemence; he was no more naturally sociable than Dorothea, though, like Dorothea, he usually managed to acquit himself well at such events; even, upon occasion, to shine. He was a tall lean greyhound sort of man, in his late forties, with sandy-silvery hair, a fair face splashed with pale freckles, a frowning smile, somber pebble-colored eyes beneath rather prominent brows — trained in the law but reserved, even shy. Ah, yes, enormously shy! He and Dorothea Deverell had been romantically involved with each other, to the ambiguous degree that they were romantically involved with each other, for more years than Dorothea cared to recall. "And is Agnes coming too?" Dorothea heard herself ask, rubbing harshly at an eye; and Charles said, "She plans to be, yes," with a just perceptible sigh, an exhalation of breath Dorothea would not have noted had she not had so many years' practice. "Well," she said. "Well," Charles said. The line went silent, though not yet dead; like two shy, bumbling adolescents they did not want to say goodbye. Finally Dorothea said, in a resolutely neutral voice, "I'd heard from Ginny that Agnes was sick," and Charles said quickly, "She was, last week, with a migraine headache, and nerves, and — the usual. But she's better now. And she intends to come to dinner tonight; she wouldn't miss one of Ginny Weidmann's parties, she says, for the world." "How nice," Dorothea said dryly. Her lips twitched in a fierce little smile, but of course Charles Carpenter, miles away on the far side of town, could not see.

Ginny and Martin Weidmann, whom Dorothea had known from the days of her marriage — her young, doomed husband had been in fact a classmate of Martin's at Williams College — lived in the most fashionable section of town, in a splendid old "Italianate Victorian" house with a square central tower, tall narrow fretwork-framed windows, steep shingled roof. The very street was antique and otherworldly: cobbled, in chronic need of repair, banked in so severely at the curb that Dorothea invariably scraped the lower edges of the Mercedes' fenders whenever she parked in front of the house — as she was now doing. "Why am I here?" she cried aloud. She foresaw that it would be one of those evenings when nothing would happen that had not happened countless times before.

Judging by the cars parked on the street and in the Weidmanns' circular driveway, all the other guests were here. She recognized the Carpenters' white Cadillac, on the opposite side of the street, poised as if for a quick getaway. Impractical eye-catching white had been Agnes' choice though she rarely drove the car; Charles did all the driving.

Dorothea rang the doorbell breathlessly and smiled her bright beautiful smile as Ginny embraced her and scoldingly greeted her —"You're almost half an hour late, Dorothea! It isn't like you! We were all worried!" Inside, the hum and buzz of conversation filled the downstairs, like a familiar piece of music; there was a delicious odor of roasting lamb; smells of wine, flowers, fruit. The Weidmanns' black maid, Tula, came to take her coat away, and for a blurred instant Dorothea had a consoling glimpse of herself in Ginny's antique Venetian mirror — she did not look nearly so haggard as she felt. Her burnished-mahogany hair fell smoothly about her face as if it had been conscientiously brushed, her large intelligent brown eyes shone with expectation. "How lovely you look, Dorothea, all the same!" Ginny said ambiguously. "That suit is so becoming!" — with a fleeting frown that cut Dorothea's heart. (For it meant, didn't it, that the suit had become by now too familiar? that it wasn't at all the sort of thing Dorothea should have worn this evening?) Ginny was perfumy, chatty, Junoesque, her hostess gown as splotched with color as chintz wallpaper. She was a dear friend of Dorothea's who did not in truth know Dorothea very well; one of those older, dauntingly generous married women who see it as their task to find the perfect mates for their unmarried female friends. Over the years Ginny had introduced Dorothea to so many eligible bachelors, Dorothea swung between a sense of guilt for having failed her and a sense of outrage for being so frequently hauled up on the auction block, against her will and, indeed, often without her knowing what was going on — until it was too late. She had begun to feel like one of those suddenly stubborn mares who at a certain weary age refuse to "stand" for a stallion and have to be impregnated, if at all, by artificial means.

Thus Ginny Weidmann — who meant, of course, only well — was now hurriedly briefing Dorothea on the subject of tonight's candidate, another in her seemingly inexhaustible store of very nice men, gentlemanly men, business associates of Martin's. "Why do you look so surprised, Dorothea? Surely you haven't forgotten? I told you I was inviting Jerome Gallagher tonight, didn't I?" Ginny asked.

"Yes, I'm sure you did," Dorothea said quickly.

Wineglass in hand, husky voice lowered, Ginny provided Dorothea with a hurried compendium of facts regarding Mr. Gallagher to which Dorothea made a spirited pretense of listening. Surely this too was familiar? She understood that, remaining unmarried for so long, she was a sort of enigma to her friends and that after a certain period of time there is something disquieting, even disagreeable, about an enigma. She was trained as an art historian at Yale; traveled and studied abroad in her early twenties; came home and met, fell in love with, and married a young French architect, newly an American citizen, named Michel Deverell, who died in an automobile accident on a Boston expressway, aged twenty-eight, when Dorothea was herself only twenty-five years old and recovering from a miscarriage suffered in the seventh month of a difficult pregnancy. And how quickly the subsequent years had passed, how swiftly and seemingly without event her life was passing from her! There was Charles Carpenter, whom she had known since her marriage, and whom, for the past eight or nine years, she had loved, but their affair, their friendship, was a strictly private matter, suspected perhaps by some — by Agnes Carpenter? by sharp-eyed Ginny Weidmann herself? — but not known: decidedly not known. It was Dorothea's custom, when asked discomfortingly personal questions, to say simply, "I was married once, a long time ago; my husband died when I was twenty-five. I've worked for the Brannon Institute since 1982." She did not willingly elaborate; though shy, she was also stubborn, the sort of person, usually female, who so subtly shifts the subject away from herself, and onto others, the finesse of the maneuver goes unremarked. Vaguely it was thought that Dorothea Deverell had been pregnant when her young husband had died and had lost her baby as a consequence, was thus a doubly tragic figure, and this misconception Dorothea could scarcely correct, for it belonged to the genteel mythologizing of her life to which she had no access: like the belief that she was, for all her well-bred delicacy of manner, actually a woman of enormous unexercised passion (like the proverbial virginal prioress) and that she was an heiress of considerable means who did not therefore require serious advancements in position or salary at the Institute — this, the most invidious notion of all, based on the evidence of haphazard items inherited years ago from an elderly great-aunt, including the 1979 Mercedes-Benz 500 SEL, which was always stalling on the expressway, a well-worn natural stone marten coat several sizes too large for her, and various pieces of costume jewelry, furniture, and household goods. If the mythologizing did not represent her, neither did it betray her, and Dorothea took care not to contradict its general outline. She knew that she was locally admired, even, to a warming degree, well liked: she was lovely, she was reliable, she was beautifully mannered, she was good. Yet even to her face people evinced airs of pity, for, having such advantages, why then did Dorothea Deverell appear so disadvantaged? At the last dinner party at the Weidmanns' she'd attended, not so many months ago, at which, thank God, Charles Carpenter and his wife had not been guests, a well-intentioned older gentleman had inquired of her at the dinner table, in full hearing of the others, why a pretty girl like herself wasn't married, his very words being, unblushing, in fact quite forceful and accusing: "Why isn't a pretty girl like you married?" And Dorothea had smiled and had replied, sweetly enough, though inwardly trembling and feeling a rude hot blush rise up into her face, "I was, once — when I was a girl."

And the entire table went silent, eyes averted. For a space of several awkward seconds.

Now Ginny was saying, "Oh, and another thing. What is this campaign of Roger Krauss's against you? I hear such —"

They were midway in the Weidmanns' polished and sparkling foyer, about to join the festive group in the living room, when, to Dorothea's dismay, Ginny did a characteristic thing — even to laying an exclamatory hand on Dorothea's arm and squeezing. Having just thought of this new subject, Ginny, who was all spontaneity, emotion, and thoughtlessness, not unlike an overgrown bullying child, could not keep it to herself for a more felicitous moment but had to thrust it immediately at Dorothea, as if, indeed, thrusting it into her appalled face: "I hear such disturbing things, Dorothea, really! We must talk!"

"But now? Must we talk of that terrible man now?" Dorothea cried with a despairing little laugh.

The older woman, regarding her with some concern, relented and merely shook her head, making her diamond earrings flash and her splendidly glowing red-rinsed hair catch the light. Dorothea's heart panicked in her breast. She had now to compose her face, her very self, as best as she could, entering the living room in which her unacknowledged lover awaited her — her lover, and the others. Ah, how she did not want to appear in their eyes as she so sadly, emphatically, felt: one of those persons of whom the world says with surprise and pity, But how unfair! how unfair, her life!


Dorothea Deverell had fallen in love with Charles Carpenter by degrees; even, it might be said, against her will. She was a woman of principle and she did not believe in provoking others to violate principle — and Charles was of course a married man. However unhappily and pointlessly, a married man. At every step she had warned herself, You'll regret this! like a brash child venturing out onto thin ice, ever outward onto thin thin ice, wind wailing in her ears and heart pumping: You'll regret this! You'll regret this! How very unlike the precipitous headlong plunge into passion, emotion, and eventually grief she had experienced with the young French architect. (Dorothea had known her husband so briefly, if tenderly, it seemed natural for her to think of him in formal terms. And, dead at twenty-eight, he would remain forever young.) Charles Carpenter was a partner in a prestigious Boston law firm for which Michel Deverell's architectural firm had done some work; thus the two couples came to know one another socially, if not intimately; but it was during Dorothea's first flush of local renown, when she was establishing herself as a new bright cultural presence in Lathrup Farms (a suburban village, resplendent on Boston's North Shore) that she became reacquainted with the Carpenters: with Charles in particular.

One Sunday afternoon he had appeared seemingly out of nowhere close beside her to touch her shoulder and murmur, "Dorothea? Might we talk? alone? — for a minute — back along here?" as with a surprisingly forcible grip of her elbow he led her along a rather slippery marble walkway out of sight and earshot of a crowd of others; and Dorothea, frightened, excited, guilty, had known at once what the man intended and how she would respond. The occasion was a large cocktail reception for some charity purpose held in one of the area's stately old homes, a neo-Georgian mansion overlooking the Bay, one of those from which Mrs. Carpenter had mysteriously absented herself, requiring of her husband that he convey her apologies and offer, never quite convincingly, an explanation of some kind — usually having to do with health. It would be false to say that Dorothea had not been aware of Charles Carpenter for some time, and aware of his interest in her; that she did not bloom in his company, enlivened by his wit and the vigor of his conversation; that she had not in fact often sought him out at such gatherings, as a way of establishing that the gathering, for her, had some human validity. And now Charles was saying in a hurried undertone, staring at Dorothea's face, "I don't want to embarrass you, Dorothea, and I certainly don't want to alarm you, but I seem to have fallen in love with you, and I thought that you should know."

Dorothea said softly, wonderingly, "Yes."

So it began, their romance, their mildly adulterous friendship, with Charles talking and Dorothea listening: an attractive couple in young middle age whose rapt interest in each other would have been (perhaps was?) self-evident to any incidental observer. So long a widow in her own and the world's imagination, Dorothea had felt herself comfortably a virgin again; her womb, emptied of any substance, was again a virgin's womb, chaste, tight, and inviolate. Hearing Charles Carpenter's faltering, agitated, but finally quite moving declaration of love and his desire to see her privately, as soon as possible, if only she would allow it, Dorothea remained strangely calm: as (so memory cruelly tossed up to her) she'd been, at first, when news came of Michel's death, and she had stood in their little rented Beacon Street apartment listening, nodding, head bowed, nothing to say, only a few practical questions to ask. If her eyes had flooded with tears they were not so much tears of emotion as simply a nervous response, as if she had been slapped hard across the face. You'll regret this! she told herself coolly, but there she was agreeing just the same to see Charles Carpenter, a married man, the very next evening. And to tell him, as he loomed dangerously near to her, squeezing her hand in his, that she was very fond of him too: she'd long thought of him, she said, as a special friend, to whom she might have turned in time of trouble.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Soul/Mate by Joyce Carol Oates, Rosamond Smith. Copyright © 1989 The Ontario Review. Excerpted by permission of OPEN ROAD INTEGRATED MEDIA.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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