Christmas in Wine Country (3 page)

Read Christmas in Wine Country Online

Authors: Addison Westlake

BOOK: Christmas in Wine Country
10.52Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“You are totally not going to believe who’s here!” Allison squealed by her side. “I just did a little recon and had it all confirmed.” Fuzzy, Lila wondered how long Allison had been gone with her ‘recon’ while she’d had another two—or was it three?—glasses of champagne. “Now, you have to promise not to look when I tell you where to look.” After a dramatic pause, Allison stage-whispered, “Jake Endicott!”

“Jake? Endicott?” Lila echoed, not sure why the names rang a dim bell as she scanned the crowd.

“Endicott!” Allison nodded, “As in, Endicott Vineyards! Where we are right now?” Exasperated at Lila’s lack of reaction, she added, “His family owns all this! He’s, like, the hottest bachelor in the entire Bay Area.” Resuming the momentum of her monologue, Allison continued, “I can’t believe he’s here! I mean, I’d hoped but I never
really expected…” Lila scanned the crowd which had all started looking like a smudged pastel painting. “He’s at 3 o’clock behind me,” Allison added. “I mean, no, 9 o’clock.”

There, in a cluster with the CFO and two members of AdSales’ board, stood the dark-haired groundskeeper she’d yelled at earlier about the cobblestones. In place of the Fisherman-knit sweater he now sported a sleek black dinner jacket. He looked right at home in it. 

“Lila, you’re starring at him!” Allison hissed, turning around herself. Her eyes widened as she added, “And he’s staring right back at you!” 

“That’s Jake Cotton…End?” Lila asked, wondering how the surly groundskeeper had somehow turned into the heir to the vineyard hosting the party. There he was, hob-knobbing with some of the most powerful and important people in her firm. Giving her a decidedly disapproving frown. 

“Endicott,” Allison corrected. “How many glasses of champagne have you had, anyway?”

Turning toward a passing waitress, Lila grabbed some more. As she did, she detected a distinct glower in her direction from the Heir Apparent. Turning away, she found herself staring at the lovebirds in yet another ‘I touch your chest, you touch my back, You’re So Hilarious’ laugh. Over in the corner, a small plastic donkey sat patiently next to his Margarita wagon.

The snap that happened within Lila wasn’t the sort that you could hear. It had the silent sound of a tiny card slipping out of place at the bottom of an elaborately constructed house, nay tower of cards. Or, perhaps, the sound of letting go, hands opening up and off the bar that Lila had been clinging to with such determination.

Over toward the dance floor, the karaoke machine beckoned with a siren’s song.

She looked down at yet another empty champagne glass.

Game on.

             
             
             
             
*
             
*
             
*

Lila’s bedroom was dark but not dark enough. Light pierced through a crack underneath the shade and Lila wondered what could be done about it. Theoretically, it was just a few feet away from the bed and easy to reach, but that would require movement which was completely out of the question. She wondered if she could text one of her roommates to come in and pull the shade down for her, but then she’d have to find her phone and press all those buttons. With a groan, she sank deeper into the pillows and pulled one more firmly over her eyes.

A few hours later, Lila found herself conscious again and managed to squint at the clock. 1:33. AM or PM? Focusing on a crack in the ceiling of her apartment she hazily remembered that it was the morning after the party. Or the afternoon after the party. She vaguely recalled being in the backseat of her car as Allison drove them home. And getting sick in the backseat of her car.

Hand to her mouth with another groan, Lila rolled to her side. Thankfully, the wave of nausea passed and she found herself contemplating the black dress balled up on the floor next to the bed. And the red slingbacks next to it—or at least one of them… Lila’s curiosity gave her the energy to reach down and grab a second bit of red, pulling it out from under the bed. What was it exactly? It looked like half of a chopstick.

With another groan she lay back, realizing it was the stiletto heel from her second shoe. Oh God, she thought she remembered that now, the heel breaking off, but when,
exactly? Hoisting herself into a sitting position, she dangled her legs off the bed and realized that her left ankle was sore. Throbbing, actually. Left ankle, left shoe—Lila did remember limping around as the evening progressed. She attempted to run a hand through her hair. It got stuck in a mass of sticky stiffness like frozen cotton candy.

Cursing hairspray, stilettos and most of all champagne, she sank back down again onto the bed vowing she would never drink again. Never. Ever. Again.

After the lapse of another couple of hours, Lila finally made it out onto the futon in the main room of the apartment. She used all of her remaining power to pull up a blanket from the floor and wondered where her roommates were. They were pros at this kind of thing, making quick work of the most vile hangover with vitamin water, cigarettes and a shopping expedition. 

But it seemed as if Lila was alone with memories from last night relentlessly playing in her head like a bad movie.

There she was, up at the karaoke machine. A star in the making, lurching around and belting out a Pretender’s song: “Gonna make you, make you, make you notice me!” Not so much singing as really sticking it to the audience. Sort-of an angry yell, really, as she warned them all, “Gonna use my style!” Hand on her stuck-out hip, she’d FELT that song. She hadn’t even needed the teleprompter. “Gonna use my sas-say!”

And there it was—the memory of how she’d broken her heel right off her stiletto. Her attempt at a super-sexy karate kick had become an enormous twist and crash to the floor, taking an intern down with her. It was the same intern she’d grabbed the mic from earlier, slurring “Lemme show you how it’s done.”

Lila pulled the blanket over her head. But, still, the memories found her. She and the intern had gone down with the karate kick. Her stiletto heel hadn’t. It had sailed smack into the forehead of the CEO of a hot new Silicon Valley tech company, leaving a dark, red welt.  

Scrunching further down on the couch, Lila wondered again where her roommates were when she needed them? Not that they were ever “there” for each other the way it happened in made-for-TV movies, but they were, at least, a great distraction. Valeria—whose biggest contribution to the apartment was the careless shrug of her tanned and silky shoulder as she dismissed all cleaning with “I am Venezuelan” (emphasis and a lispy “th” on the third syllable)—and Venice—straight out of LA, or San Bernadino to be exact—loved to engage in competitive party recall.

“I was sooo wasted last night,” one would begin.

“I was totally wasted,” the other would echo, adding “I think I did, like, four tequila shots.”

“I did, like eight.”

“I remember licking salt off some guy’s fingers.”

“I totally licked salt off some girl’s boobs.” 

And so on. No doubt Lila’s drunken karaoke would sound like innocent preteen play. They’d make it all sound totally normal that she’d not only sung “Hungry Like the Wolf” but acted it out. Lots of pawing at the air, clawing and hissing. Making angry yowls. A bit more like a cat, she realized.

Her phone rang. “Sweetie, is that you?” Lila’s Gram’s voice reached through, sounding crackly and close all at once.

Lila bit back a sob at the homey, welcoming sound. “Hey, Gram,” she managed. It was Sunday night, time for their weekly call. Lila could picture her Gram sitting on her overstuffed floral sofa. The saltbox cottage where she’d grown up in Hyannis, MA was tiny and Lila, her mother and her Gram had all had to compete for limited space with a variety of figurines, doilies and a rotating pack of dogs taken in with various war wounds. Depending on the time of day and year, a Red Sox game might be on the radio. As much as she’d fled it all, Lila wished she could transport back for the night to hang out on the couch with Gram, snacking on popcorn and watching an old Erroll Flynn swashbuckler.

“How was the big night?” Gram asked.

“Um,” she hesitated. She was almost positive that her Gram had never both verbally and physically assaulted people with drunk, angry karaoke. After realizing that Phillip had left the party without her but very much with Axelle, Lila believed she remembered launching into a screechingly ironic rendition of the Pointer Sisters’ “It’s Raining Men! Hallelujah!” Screaming to your company’s top executives, board members and VIP clients about being absolutely soaking wet with men…she was pretty sure that was a party “don’t.”

“I twisted my ankle?” Lila offered.

“Oh dear! Badly?”

“Can’t really tell. I haven’t done much walking on it yet.” Lila stretched her leg out and propped her ankle up on a cushion. She really should be icing it but the freezer was all the way 10 feet over in the kitchen. 

“Put some ice on it and prop it up,” Gram instructed. “And wrap an ace bandage around it just in case.”

“Gram, it was so awful!” she found herself admitting, her Gram’s care and concern breaking her down. “Everything went wrong. There was all this Cinco de Mayo stuff like a plastic donkey pulling a Margarita cart and a Mexican flag cake and the DJ set up karaoke even though he was just supposed to play music and my hair feels like—” Lila paused to give her shellacked hair a feel. “Like an angry pineapple.”

“Lila,” Gram laughed not unkindly. “What’s this about sinks?”

“Cinco de Mayo.”

“I’m sure it wasn’t as bad as all that.”

“I kicked my shoe off into a guy’s forehead.”

At this, even Gram had to pause. “Did he need stitches?”

“No.” But they’d closed down the karaoke afterward, sidelining Lila and returning the DJ to light jazz standards.

“Dear, how is it you came to be in charge of this again?”

“Mariana had her baby.”

“Oh! How lovely! Boy or girl? How’s she doing?”

Giving Gram the baby facts, Lila mentally added ‘unsympathetic’ to her long list of personal flaws. Last night, especially while stuffing what seemed to be thousands of tortilla chips into garbage bags as they dismantled the nacho cheese dipping fountain, she’d devoted a good deal of energy to silently cursing the new mother for her failings.

“At any rate,” Gram continued, “I’m sure you looked lovely. The black dress you described sounded so tasteful and elegant.”

Lila gave a decidedly un-tasteful and inelegant snort. “I don’t know what happened, Gram. In the store it was perfect but at the party I looked so…Nanny 911.”

“Someone called 911?”

“No, I mean I felt all buttoned down in some sort of shapeless black sack. There was this French partner there in this tiny little red thing.”

“Well, we can’t all be French, Lila,” Gram wisely observed. “But we can all wear lovely scarves now that Oprah has shown us how to do it. You know, draped or in that funny square knot I showed you. Or if it’s a shorter one, you can look so jaunty—”

“Yes, Gram,” Lila interrupted and then immediately felt bad about doing so. “I’m sorry,” she continued. “I’m grouchy and whiny. It’s just, I have to go into work tomorrow morning and face everyone and I have this massive pit in my stomach.”

“Best to meet it all head-on,” Gram advised. “Know your worth. And wear a nice scarf.” Lila had to smile. “Thanks, Gram.” 

Closing her eyes and listening to the gossip from Gram’s circle of friends—Dottie’s son just had another baby girl, Fran and Frank were heading off to Florida next week—everything felt OK. After saying their goodbyes, Lila took a deep breath and decided it was time to rally.

First order of business: drinking some water. Moving slowly, she made her way to the apartment’s tiny, bare kitchen. Checking the freezer, she was shocked and thrilled to find ice in the ice tray. Venice and Valeria typically used it for sugar free jello shots.

Standing at the sink, sipping water and looking out onto the dark city street below, Lila decided the party couldn’t have been all that bad. So, she’d had a few drinks
and sang a little. Wasn’t that what you were supposed to do at a holiday party? What she needed to do was go pick out a fierce outfit for work the next day and show up looking radiant. She had to be feeling better by then and a little mineral makeup could give her a nice glow. She’d just walk in and get right to work, efficient, lovely and impervious to all criticism. After all, how bad could last night really have been?

On the counter her iPhone made a little chirp. A new text message. It was from Alison, her friend from work: “OMG U R on youtube!!!”

Chapter 2: All Out of Love

The Monday after the holiday party Lila stuck to her plan of dressing fierce and adopting a devil-may-care attitude. She strode into the office all in black, patent leather handbag large enough to whack anyone who laughed, ignoring the pain in her ankle as she rocked 3-inch heels by sheer force of will.

Funny thing, no one seemed to notice. An unnerving quiet enveloped the office broken only by the furtive sounds of whispers. Lila’s concern grew as she watched the Creatives in their brown pleather jackets and thick black-rimmed glasses bite their nails and scurry around like rats from cubicle to cubicle. Paranoid as she felt about the holiday party, even Lila couldn’t imagine it was all about her. Somewhere in the midst of the pre-party-planning-panic, Lila recalled she’d heard the rumors of layoffs. It had to be true when the hipsters lost all trace of ironic detachment.

Other books

Unaccustomed Earth by Jhumpa Lahiri
Hear the Children Calling by Clare McNally
The Ten Thousand by Coyle, Harold
Gump & Co. by Winston Groom
Emissary by Fiona McIntosh