Read Something Borrowed Online
Authors: Emily Giffin
Tags: #Romance, #Contemporary, #Fiction, #General, #Single Women, #Female Friendship, #Psychological, #Contemporary Women, #Triangles (Interpersonal Relations), #People & Places, #Juvenile Nonfiction, #Risk-Taking (Psychology)
"But I wanted to talk about this weekend," he says.
"What about it?" I ask, avoiding his gaze as I button my shirt.
"Well, it's just that I'm really sorry about this bachelorette party
and everything "
I interrupt him. "I know, Dex."
"Something has to be done soon. I just haven't had a free moment.
I haven't had a chance But I want you to know that I think about
it and you all the time. I mean, all the time" His expression is
sincere, tortured. He waits for me to speak.
This is my opening. Words form in my head; they are right on my
tongue, but I say none of them, reasoning that this is not the
moment to delve. We don't have enough time for a real conversation. I reassure myself that I'm not a coward, I'm just
being patient. I want to wait for the right moment to discuss the
destruction of my best friend. So I give him and myself an out. "I
know, Dex," I say again. "Let's talk next week, okay?"
He nods somberly and hugs me hard.
After he leaves, I call Claire and tell her that I got stuck on a work
call but will be right over. I finish dressing, down my Snapple, and
put my egg-salad sandwich in the refrigerator. I walk to the door
as I eye the folded note. I can't help myself. I go back, unfold it,
read it:
DARCY,
JUST WANTED YOU TO HAVE A LITTLE
SOMETHING FROM
ME BEFORE
YOUR BIG NIGHT OUT. I HOPE YOU HAVE A
GREAT TIME
WITH YOUR
FRIENDS.
LOVE, DEXTER
Why did he have to insert the word "love"? I comfort myself by
thinking that he didn't just make love to her, and we will talk next
week, still within Hillary's deadline. Then I scurry off to meet
Claire, to help her prepare for Darcy's big weekend.
The whole situation is completely out of control, the stuff that
happens to other people. Not to people like me.
The shower/bachelorette party is agony from start to finish, for
obvious reasons, and also because I have nothing in common with
Darcy's PR friends, all of whom are materialistic, shallow, bitchy
egomaniacs. Claire is the best of the lot, which is scary.
I tell
myself to smile and suck it up. It is only one evening.
We meet at Claire's first to give Darcy her lingerie, an arsenal of
black lace and red silk that I simply cannot compete against. If
Darcy decides to wear any of this stuff before the wedding particularly a La
Perla garter with fishnet stockings I am dead. Unless she only
debuts my gift, a long ivory nightgown with a high neckline,
something that Caroline Ingalls might have worn on Little House
on the Prairie. It screams sweet and wholesome, in contrast to the
other sultry, skimpy gifts that scream, "Bend me over a chair and
bust out the whipped cream." Darcy pretends to like my gift, as I
catch a knowing glance between Claire and Jocelyn, an Uma
Thurman look-alike. For one paranoid second, I believe that
Claire suspects the truth after our chance meeting yesterday and
has shared her suspicions with Jocelyn. But then I just chalk it up
to this sentiment: Darcy's dowdy friend Rachel strikes again. How
can she be the maid of honor when she doesn't even know how to
give a proper piece of lingerie?
After the shower segment of the evening, we cab it to Churrascaria
Plataforma, an all-you-can-eat Brazilian rotisserie in the Theater
District, where waiters bring you endless servings of skewered
meat. It is an amusing choice for a bunch of paper-thin women,
half of whom are vegetarians and subsist on celery and cigarettes.
Our group parades proudly into the restaurant, fetching plenty of
stares from a predominantly male patronage. After a painful
round of overpriced cocktails (put on my credit card) we are
seated at a long table in the center of the restaurant where the PR
girls continue to work the room, pretending to be oblivious to the
attention they are garnering from all angles.
I watch a nearby table of women in conservative, Ann Taylor attire
eye our group with a strange mix of envy and condescension. I
make a bet with myself that before the evening is over, the Ann
Taylor women will complain to their waiter that our table is being
too loud. Our waiter will give us a saccharine suggestion that we
bring the volume down just a tad. Then our table will get all huffy
and declare the Ann Taylor women a bunch of fat losers. / am
seated at the wrong table, I think, as Claire and I flank Darcy upon
her command. She is still wearing a little veil constructed out of
the ribbons and bows from her gifts, happy to be conspicuous, the
hottest girl at a table full of gorgeous women. Except for me, that
is. I pretend to care about the flimsy conversation swirling about
me as I sip my sangria and smile, smile.
After dinner, we make our way to Float, a Midtown dance club
complete with velvet ropes and self-important bouncers. Of
course we are on a VIP list compliments of Claire and are able to
power our way past the long line of nobodies (Darcy's description). The evening follows the stale, silly script for the
typical twenty-something bachelorette party. Which would be
okay, I guess, except for the fact that most of us are no longer
twenty-somethings. We are too old for the shrieking and the shots
and the wild dancing with any guy self-confident (or selfdestructive)
enough to penetrate our group of nine women. And Darcy is too old for the scavenger list that Claire has prepared:
find red-haired boy to buy her a sex-on-the-beach, dance with a
man over fifty (imagine this species who still frequents dance
clubs), kiss a guy with a tattoo or body piercing.
The whole event is overplayed and unsophisticated, but Darcy
shines. She is on the dance floor, glistening, her hair curling
slightly from perspiration. Her tanned, flat stomach shows
between her low-slung pants and halter top. Her cheeks are rosy,
dewy. Everyone wants to talk to the bride-to-be. Single girls ask
wistfully what her dress looks like and more than one guy tells her
she should reconsider the marriage, or at the very least, have one
final fling. I dance on the outskirts of the group, biding my time.
When the night is finally over, I am exhausted, sober, and five
hundred bucks poorer. We file out of the club as Darcy turns to
me and says that she wants to sleep over at my place, just the two
of us, like old times. She is so thrilled with the idea that I cannot
refuse. I smile. She whispers in my ear that she wants to shake
Claire, that it won't be the same if she comes along. It reminds me
of high school and how Darcy would decide who she wanted to
include and exclude. Annalise and I seldom had a say and often
could not figure out why someone failed to make the cut.
We hail a cab as Darcy thanks Claire, tells her the evening was a
blast, and says to me loudly, with a nudge, "Why don't we share a
cab back uptown? I'll drop you off first."
I say sure, and we head up to my apartment.
Jose is on duty. He is happy to see Darcy, who always flirts with
him. "Where you been, girl?" he asks. "You don't visit me no
more."
"Planning my wedding," she says in her beguiling way.
She points
to her now-crumpled veil that she is clutching like a precious
souvenir.
"Aww. Say it ain't so! You gettin' maah-ried?"
I clench my teeth and hit the up button on the elevator.
"Yeah," she says, cocking her head to the side. "Why, do you think
I shouldn't?"
Jose laughs, showing all his teeth. "Hell, no. Don't do it!" Even my
doorman wants her. "Blow that guy off," he says.
Clearly he hasn't put the pieces of this puzzle together.
Darcy takes his hand in hers and twirls herself around.
She
finishes the move with a hip-to-hip bump.
"C'mon, Darce," I say, already in the elevator, holding the dooropen
button with my thumb. "I'm tired."
She twirls one last time and then joins me in the elevator.
On the ride up, she waves and blows kisses into the security
camera, just in case Jose is watching.
When we get into my apartment, I immediately turn down the
volume on my answering machine and switch off my cell phone in
case Dex calls. Then I change into shorts and a T-shirt and give
Darcy clothes to wear.
"Can I have your Naperville High shirt instead? So it will feel like
old times."
I tell her that it is in the wash, and she will have to make do with
my "1989 Indy 500" T-shirt. She says it is good enough, as it
reminds her of home too.
I brush my teeth, floss, and wash my face as she sits on the edge of
my tub and talks to me about the party, how much fun it was. We
trade places. Darcy washes her face and then asks if she can use
my toothbrush. I say yes even though I think it's disgusting to
share with anyone. Even Dex. Okay, maybe not Dex, but anyone
else. Through a mouthful of toothpaste, she remarks that she is
not drunk, or even very buzzed, which is surprising considering
the amount of alcohol we consumed. I tell her it must be all the
meat we ate.
She spits into the sink. "Ugh. Don't remind me. I probably gained
five pounds tonight."
"No way. Think of how much you burned off dancing and
sweating."
"Good point!" She rinses her mouth, splashing water everywhere,
before she leaves the bathroom.
"Are you all ready for bed?" I ask, wiping up her mess with a
towel.
She turns and watches me, unapologetic. "No. I want to stay up
and talk."
"Can we at least get in bed and talk?"
"If we keep the light on. Otherwise you'll fall asleep."
"All right," I say.
We get in bed. Darcy is closer to the window, on Dexter's side of
the bed. Thank goodness I changed my sheets this morning.
We are facing each other, our bent knees touching.
"What should we discuss first?" she asks.
"You choose."
I brace myself for wedding talk, but instead she starts a long
gossip session about the girls at the parry, what everyone wore,
Tracy's new short haircut, Jocelyn's struggle with bulimia, Claire's
incessant name-dropping.
We talk about Hillary not showing up for her party. Of course,
Darcy is red-hot mad about that. "Even if she is in love, she should
have blown off Julian for one night."
Of course, I can't tell her that the real reason for Hillary's boycott
has nothing to do with a new boyfriend.
Then we are on to Ethan. She wants to know if he's gay. She is
always speculating about this, proffering flimsy bits of evidence:
he played four square with the girls in grade school, he took home
ec in high school instead of industrial arts, he has a lot of women
friends, he dresses well, and he hasn't dated anyone since Brandi.
I tell her no, that I am almost completely certain that he's not gay.
"How do you know?"
"I just don't think he is."
"There's nothing wrong with it if he is," Darcy says.
"I know that, Darce. I just don't think he is gay."
"Bisexual?"
"No."
"So you really don't think he's ever made out with another guy?"
"No!" I say.
"I have trouble picturing Ethan touching some guy's penis too."
"Enough," I say.
"Okay. Fine. What is your latest analysis on Marcus?"
"He's growing on me," I say, for added insurance just in case she
has the slightest intuition about my feelings for Dex.
"He is? Since when?"
"I kissed him on Saturday night," I say, and instantly regret it. She
will tell Dex.
"You did? I thought you went out with Hillary and Julian on
Saturday night."
"I did. But I met up with Marcus afterward for a few drinks. It
was no big deal, really."
"Did you go back to his place?"
"No. Nothing like that."
"So where did you kiss him?"
"At Aubette."
"And that was it? You only kissed?"
"Yeah. What do you think, we had sex at Aubette?
Jeez."
"Well, this is noteworthy I thought things had sort of tapered off
with you two. So can you see yourself marrying him?"
I laugh. This is classic Darcy taking a little bit of information and
running like crazy with it.
"Why are you laughing? Is he not marriage material?"
"I don't know. Maybe Now can we please turn out the light? My
eyes hurt."
She says okay, but gives me a look of warning to say it's not yet
time for sleep.
I turn off my bedside lamp, and as soon as we are in the dark, she
brings up Dex and his note. She had been fairly dismissive of it
when I gave it to her at the start of her party, but now she calls
him thoughtful.
"Hmm-mmm," I say.
A long silence follows. Then she says, "Things have been sort of
weird with us lately."
My pulse quickens. "Really?"
"We haven't had sex in a long time."
"How long?" I ask, crossing my fingers under the sheets.
She tells me the answer I want. Since before the Fourth.
"Really?" My palms are sweaty.
"Yeah. Is that a bad sign?"
"I don't know How often did you have sex before?" I ask,