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)
Then Ethan tells them that he thinks I should blow off the
wedding. Phoebe wants to know more about the bride, so Ethan
gives the rundown on Darcy, including some color on our
friendship. He even throws in the bit about Notre Dame. I answer
questions when directly asked, but otherwise I just listen to the
three of them discussing my plight as if I'm not present.
It is
amusing to hear Martin and Phoebe using Dex's name and Darcy's
name and analyzing both in their British accents.
People whom
they have never met and likely will never meet.
Somehow it helps
put things in perspective. Almost.
"You don't want to be with him anyway," Phoebe says.
"That's what I tell her," Ethan says.
Martin offers that maybe he'll still call it off.
"No," I say. "He came over to my place the night before I left and
told me in no uncertain terms. He's getting married."
"At least he told you outright," Martin says.
"At least," I say, thinking that that was a good thing.
Otherwise I
would be filled with hope on this visit. I have to give Dex limited
credit for telling me face-to-face.
Suddenly Phoebe gets this fabulous idea. Her friend James is
newly single, and he loves American women. Why not set that up
and see what happens?
"She lives in New York," Martin says. "Remember?"
"So? That's just a minor logistical problem. She could move. He
could move. And at the very least, they both will have a good time.
Perhaps have a good shag."
"Not everyone sees a shag as therapy," Martin says.
Phoebe raises one eyebrow. I wish I could do that.
There are times
when it is such an appropriate gesture. "Oh, really?
You might
want to give it a go, Marty." She turns back to me, waiting to hear
my position on this topic.
"A good shag can never hurt," I say, to win favor with Phoebe.
She runs her hands through her tousled hair and looks smug. "My
point precisely."
"What're you doing?" Ethan asks, as Phoebe retrieves her cell
phone from her purse.
"Calling James," she says.
"Fucking hell, Pheebs! Put your mobile down," Martin says. "Have
some tact."
"No, it's okay," I say, fighting against my prudish instincts. "You
can call him.'
Phoebe beams. "Yeah. You boys stay out of this one."
So the next night, thanks to Phoebe, I am eating Thai food on a
blind date with James Hathaway. James is a thirty-year-old
freelance journalist. He is nice-looking, although Dexter's
opposite. He is on the short side, with blue eyes, light hair, and
even paler eyebrows. Something about him reminds me of Hugh
Grant. At first I think it's just the accent, but then I realize that
like Hugh, he has a certain flippant charm. And like Hugh, I bet
he's slept with plenty of women. Maybe I should let him add me to
his List.
I nod and laugh at something James just said, a wry comment
about the couple next to us. He's funny. It suddenly occurs to me
that maybe Dex is not very funny. Of course, I've always
subscribed to the notion that if I want to laugh out loud, I'll watch
a Seinfeld rerun, that I don't need to date a stand-up comic, but I
contemplate revising my position. Maybe I do want a funny guy.
Maybe Dex is lacking some crucial element. I try to run with this,
picturing him as humorless, even boring. It doesn't really work.
It's hard to trick yourself like that. Dex is funny enough. He is
perfect for me. Other than the small, bothersome part about him
marrying Darcy.
I realize that I have missed what James has been going on about,
something about Madonna. "Do you like her?" he asks me.
"Not especially," I say. "She's okay."
"Usually Madonna elicits a stronger response. Usually people love
her or hate her Ever played that game? Love it or hate it?"
"No. What is it?"
James teaches me the rules of the game. He says that you throw
out a topic or a person or anything at all, and both people have to
decide whether they love it or hate it. Being neutral isn't allowed.
What if you are neutral? I ask. I don't love or hate Madonna.
"You have to pick one or the other. So pick," he says.
"Love her or
hate her?"
I hesitate and then say, "Okay then. I hate her."
"Good. Me too."
"Do you really?" I ask.
"Well, actually, yes. She's talentless. Now you do one."
"Um I can't think. You do another one."
"Fine. Water beds."
"So tacky. I hate them," I say. I'm not on the fence with that one.
"I do as well. Your turn."
"Okay Bill Clinton."
"Love him," James says.
"Me too."
We keep playing the game as we finish our wine.
As it turns out, we both hate (or at least hate more than we love)
people who keep goldfish as pets, Speedos, and Ross on Friends.
We both love (or love more than we hate) Chicken McNuggets,
breast implants (I lie here, just to be cool, but am surprised that
he does not lie in the other direction maybe he fears that I have
them), and watching golf on television. We are split on rap music
(I love; it gives him headaches), Tom Cruise (he loves; I still hate
for dumping Nicole), the royal family (I love; he says he's a
republican, whatever that means), and Las Vegas (he loves; I
associate it with craps, dice-rolling, Dex).
I think to myself that I like (I mean, love) the game.
Being
extreme. Clear-cut. All or nothing. I do Dex in my mind, flipflopping
my decision twice hate, love, hate, love. I remember that
my mother once told me that the opposite of love isn't hate, it's
indifference. She knew what she was talking about. My goal is to
be indifferent to Dex.
James and I finish our dinner, decide to skip dessert, and go back
to his place. He has a nice flat larger than Ethan's full of plants
and cozy, upholstered furniture. I can tell that a woman recently
moved out. To this point, half of the bookshelf is bare.
The whole
left side. Unless they kept their books segregated all along, which
is doubtful, he has pushed all of his to one side. Maybe he wanted
an exact percentage of how much more empty his life is without
her.
"What was her name? Your ex?" I ask gingerly. Maybe I shouldn't
be bringing her up, but I'm sure he assumes that Phoebe told me
his situation. I'm sure she filled him in on mine as well.
"Katherine. Kate."
"How are you doing?"
"A bit sad. More relieved than anything. Sometimes downright
euphoric. It's been over a long time."
I nod, as if I understand, although my situation could not be more
different. Maybe Dex and I saved ourselves years of effort and
pain if we were only going to end up like James and Kate anyway.
"And you?" he asks.
"Phoebe told you?"
I can tell that he is considering a fib, and then he says,
"More or
less yes How are you?"
"I'm fine," I say. "It was a short-lived situation. Nothing like your
breakup."
But I don't believe my words. I have a flashback to July Fourth
and feel a wave of pure, intense grief that catches me off guard
with its intensity. I panic, thinking I'm going to cry. If James asks
another thing about Dex, I will. Luckily, serious conversations
seem not to be James's thing. He asks if he can get me something
to drink. "Tea? Coffee? Wine? Beer?"
"A beer would be great," I say.
As he leaves for the kitchen, I breathe deeply and force Dex from
my mind. I stand and survey the room. There is only one
photograph in view. It is of James with an attractive, older woman
who appears to be his mother. I wonder how many photographs of
Kate and James were uprooted with the breakup. I wonder if he
threw them away or saved them. That fact can tell you a lot about
someone. I wish that I had a few photos of Dex. I have none of us
together, only a few of him with Darcy. I'm sure I'll have a lot
more after the wedding. Darcy will force me to order some, maybe
even give me one in a frame, as a wedding keepsake.
How will I
ever get through it?
James returns with linen cocktail napkins, two beers poured into
mugs, and a small glass bowl of mixed nuts. All nestled neatly on a
square pewter tray. Well trained by Kate.
"Thanks," I say, sipping one of the beers.
We sit close to each other on the couch and talk about my job, his
writing. It's not perfectly comfortable, but not horrible.
Probably
because we are in a dead-end situation. There will be no second
date, so there is no pressure to perform. No expectations. We will
never have to deal with that awkward period after all the gettingto-know-you topics are covered, the lulls in conversation that
usually come on the second date, at which point both people must
decide whether to fight their way through to the comfort zone or
throw in the towel. Of course, Dex and I didn't have to deal with
that. Another great thing about Dex. We were friends first. Don't
think about Dex. Think about now, being here with James!
James leans in and kisses me. He uses a little too much tongue working it in frantic circular motions and his breath
smells vaguely of cigarettes, which is odd because he didn't smoke
this evening. Maybe he had one in the kitchen. I kiss him back
anyway, faking enthusiasm. I even moan softly at one point. I
don't know why.
How many times will I have to endure kissing someone for the
first time? Although Darcy says she will miss this element of
single life, I have no fondness for it. Except for my first real kiss
with Dex, which was absolute magic. I wonder if James is thinking
about Kate as much as I am thinking about Dex. After a reasonably long time, James's hand drifts up my shirt. I do not
object. His touch is not altogether unpleasant, and I think, why
not? Let him sample an American breast.
After a half hour of minor-to-significant groping, James asks me
to spend the night, says that he doesn't want to sleep with
me well, he does, he says, but he won't try. And I almost agree,
but then I learn that James has no saline solution. I can't sleep in
my contact lenses, and I left my glasses at home. So that is that. It
seems amusing that James's 20/20 vision prevents me from a
potentially promiscuous move.
We kiss for a bit longer, listening to his Barenaked Ladies CD. The
songs remind me of graduating from law school, dating Nate,
being dumped by Nate. I hear the lyrics and remember the
sadness.
Songs and smells will bring you back to a moment in time more
than anything else. It's amazing how much can be conjured with a
few notes of a song or a solitary whiff of a room. A song you didn't
even pay attention to at the time, a place that you didn't even
know had a particular smell. I wonder what will someday bring
back Dex and our few months together. Maybe the sound of
Dido's voice. Maybe the scent of the Aveda shampoo that I've been
using all summer.
Someday being with Dex will be a distant memory.
This fact
makes me sad too. It's like when someone dies, the initial stages
of grief seem to be the worst. But in some ways, it's sadder as time
goes by and you consider how much they've missed in your life. In
the world.
As James walks me back to Ethan's flat, he turns to me and says,
"Do you want to go to Leeds Castle with me tomorrow? Ethan
too?"
"What's Leeds Castle?" I ask, realizing that it's probably like
asking what the Empire State Building is.
"It's a castle that was a Norman stronghold and a royal residence
for six medieval queens. It's really quite lovely. There's an openair
theater nearby. It is a bit touristy, but you are a tourist after all,
aren't you?"
I am beginning to notice that Brits put a little question tag at the
end of every statement, looking for affirmation.
I give it to him. "I am a tourist, yes."
Then I tell him that Leeds Castle sounds perfect.
Because it does
sound nice. And because everything I do, every person I meet,
puts a certain distance between Dex and me. Time heals all
wounds, particularly if you pack a bunch of stuff into that time.
"Ask Ethan what he thinks about it. And call me." He writes his
phone number on the back of a gum wrapper I find in my purse.
"I'll be around."
I thank him for a nice night. He kisses me again, his hand on the
back of my neck.
"Snogging someone new right after a big breakup.
Love it or hate
it?" he asks.
I laugh. "Love it."
James smirks. "I concur."
I unlock Ethan's door, wondering if James is lying too.
The next morning Ethan stumbles bleary-eyed into the kitchen,
where I am pouring myself a glass of pulp-free orange juice.
"So? You in love with James?"
"Madly."
He scratches his head. "Seriously?"
"No. But it was fun."
I realize that I can't even recall exactly what James looks like. I
keep picturing this guy from my Federal Income Tax class in law