forgot I was about to be sick. He looked even tanner than I remembered,
which was only highlighted by a skintight white
T-shirt, flowy white pants, and some of the straightest, brightest
teeth I've ever seen in a British mouth. He was like Enrique in
The
Tycoon's Virgin Bride,
his looks utterly begging to be on a dust
jacket.
"Uh, yeah, I guess I was. This, uh, has never really happened
to me before. I'm afraid I don't even remember your name."
He seemed to remember that I was an actual person and not a
bed adornment, and sat down next to me on the pillow.
"I'm Philip. Philip Weston. And don't worry about it—I only
brought you back here because I couldn't get two taxis and didn't
want to maneuver to the East Side. Nothing happened. I'm not
some rapist. I'm an attorney, actually," he said with not a little
pride in a thick, upper-crust English accent.
"Oh, well, thanks so much. I really didn't think I drank that
much, but I don't remember anything after dancing with you."
"Yes, well, it happens. Stressful fucking morning so far, don't
you think? I loathe having my post-yoga calm shattered by rubbish
like this."
"Yeah."
He
didn't just wake up in a stranger's bed, but I wasn't
feeling great about my arguing position.
"My housekeeper was washing my Pratesi sheets in scalding-
hot water. I mean, what bloody good are they if you have to
double-check every move they make? Can you imagine what a disaster
it would've been if I hadn't spotted it?"
Gay. He was definitely gay. He wasn't Enrique, but Enrique's
fey friend Emilio. This was a tremendous relief.
"What would have happened, exactly?" I washed my own
sheets in hot water and dried them on high because it seemed like
the best way to make them softer faster. But then again, I'd bought
them at Macy's and admittedly didn't spend all that much time
thinking about it.
"What would have happened? Are you
serious?"
He strode
across the room and spritzed some Helmut Lang cologne on his
neck. "She would've burned out the thread count, that's what!
Those sheets cost twenty-eight hundred pounds for a king set, and
she would have destroyed them!" He put the bottle down and
began patting what I hoped was aftershave but was more likely
moisturizer into his golden skin. I did a quick calculation: four
thousand dollars.
"Oh. I guess I didn't understand. I, uh, I didn't know sheets
could be that expensive. But I'm sure if I paid that much for them,
I'd be concerned, too."
"Yes, well, I'm sorry you had to endure all that." He pulled the
T-shirt over his head to reveal a completely bare, perfectly sculpted
chest. It was almost a shame he was gay, considering just how
good-looking he was. He closed the bathroom door briefly and
turned the shower on, and then a few minutes later he emerged
wearing only a towel. Pulling a dress shirt and suit from the oakpaneled
walk-in closet, he handed me my clothes in a neatly
folded pile and discreetly left the room while I stripped.
"Will you be all right getting home?" Philip called from what
sounded like a million miles away. "I must be off to work. Early
meeting."
Work. Jesus Christ, I'd completely and entirely forgotten that I
was currently employed, but a quick check of the bedside clock
reassured me that it was only a little after seven. He'd already been
to yoga and back, and we couldn't have possibly gotten home be-
fore three in the morning. I had a brief but intense flashback to the
one and only time I'd gone to yoga. I'd been fumbling through my
first class for thirty minutes when the teacher had announced thirty
seconds into our current pose—the half-moon pose, to be precise—
that it was equivalent to eight hours of sleep. I'd accidentally
snorted and she'd asked me if there was a problem. Luckily I'd
been able to restrain myself from asking what was really on my
mind: namely, why had no one before enlightened us to the miracle
of the half-moon pose? Why, for all these centuries, have humans
wasted a third of their lifetimes sleeping when they could've
just bent at the waist for one half of one minute? Instead, I mumbled
something about it being a "really cool concept" and sneaked
out when she wasn't looking.
Philip's hallway was longer than the entire length of my apartment,
and I had to follow the sound of his voice to find the right
room. Colorful abstracts hung on the walls and the dark-stained
wood floors—real wood, not New York parquet—highlighted the
stark, metal-frame furniture. The entire place looked like a Ligne
Roset floor sample, as though it had been plucked directly from
the showroom and put back together in this guy's apartment. I
counted a total of three full bathrooms, two bedrooms, a living
room, and a study (complete with floor-to-ceiling built-in bookcases,
two Mac G4 computers, and a wine rack) before I found
him leaning against his granite countertop, feeding blood oranges
into a high-tech juicer. I didn't even own a can opener.
"You do yoga? I don't know any guys who do yoga."
Any
straight guys, that is,
I thought to myself.
"Of course. It's smashing strength training, and I love how it
clears your mind as well. Very American, I suppose, but worthwhile
nonetheless. You should try it with me." And before I knew
what was happening, he lifted me up on the counter, pushed
my knees apart so he could come closer, and began kissing my
neck.
Instinctively, I jumped off the counter, which resulted only in
my pushing even farther into him.
"I thought, well, um, aren't you . . ."
Two clear green eyes stared back at me, waiting.
"It's just that, uh, considering last night and the whole, you
know, Pratesi thing and the yoga class . . ."
Still waiting. No help here.
"Aren't you gay?" I held my breath, hoping he wasn't still in the
closet or, worse, out but self-hating.
"Gay?"
"Yeah, as in, liking guys."
"Are you serious?"
"Well, I don't know, it just seemed—"
"Gay? You think I'm a homosexual?"
I felt like I was roaming around on the set of some sort of reality
TV show where everyone was in on the secret but me. Clues,
so many clues, but no real information. I was trying to piece it all
together as quickly as possible, but nothing was quite working out.
"Well, of course, I don't know you at all. It's just that, well, you
dress so nicely and seem to care a lot about your apartment and,
uh, you have Helmut Lang cologne. My friend Michael wouldn't
even know who Helmut Lang is . . ."
He flashed those shiny teeth once more and tousled my hair
like one would a toddler's. "Perhaps you're just spending time with
the wrong blokes? I assure you, I'm very, very straight. I've just
learned to appreciate the finer things. Come now, there's time to
give you a lift home if we hurry." He shrugged on a cashmere
sweater and grabbed his keys.
We didn't say anything at all in the elevator ride to the lobby,
but darling Philip did manage to pin me against the wall and nibble
on my lips, which somehow felt utterly disgusting and heartstoppingly
amazing all at once.
"Mmm, you're delicious. Come here, let me taste you one last
time." But before he could once again use my face as his own personal
Chupa pop, the doors swept open and two uniformed doormen
turned to witness our arrival.
"Bugger off," Philip announced, walking ahead of me and raising
his hand up, palm forward, to the grinning men. "I don't want
to hear it today."
They snickered, obviously accustomed to the routine of Philip
escorting strange women out of his apartment, and silently pulled
open the door. It wasn't until we stepped outside that I had any
idea where we were: Christopher and Greenwich, all the way west,
about a block from the river. The famous Archives building.
"Where do you live?" he asked, pulling a silver helmet out from
underneath the seat of a Vespa, which was resting under a monogrammed
tarp three feet from the building's entrance.
"Murray Hill. Is that okay?"
He laughed, not nicely. "I don't know, you tell me. / sure
wouldn't clamor to live in Murray Hill, but hey, whatever turns
you on."
"I meant," I said tightly, no longer even attempting to keep up
with his psycho-style mood swings, "is it okay for you to drop me
off? I can certainly take a cab."
"Whatever you want, love. No worries for me. My office is midtown
east, so you're right on the way." He occupied himself by
fishing his keys from his pants pocket and securing his Hermes bag
to the back of the bike. Scooter. "Let's just get a move on, okay?
People are needing me right now." He swung his legs over the
bike and deigned to look my way. "So?"
I was momentarily speechless, until he actually snapped his fingers.
"C'mon, sweetheart, decision time here. Ride or not? It's not
so difficult. You sure didn't seem this indecisive last night. . . ."
I've always harbored the classic girl fantasy of having a real
reason to slap some jerk across the face, and the opportunity had
just presented itself in Technicolor. But I was dumbfounded by the
finger snapping and the suggestion that something actually
had
happened last night, so I just turned my back and began walking
down the block.
He called out, sounding almost worried, "You don't have to be
so sensitive, love. I was just kidding around. Absolutely nothing
went down last night. Not you, not me. . . ."I heard him chuckle
at his own cleverness, but 1 just kept walking.
"Fine. Be that way. I don't have time for the drama right now,
but I'll track you down. Seriously, it's not often a woman can resist
my charms, so consider me duly intrigued. Leave your number
with my doorman and I'll give you a call." The Vespa's engine
caught and he sped away, and although I'd just been insulted and
abandoned, I still felt like I'd somehow won . . . if he was telling
the truth, of course, and I actually hadn't slept with him in a
wasted stupor.
The victory lasted all of forty minutes, during which time I
jumped in a cab, raced home, took a washcloth-bath in the bathroom
sink, and applied copious amounts of deodorant to my underarms,
baby powder to my scalp, and scented moisturizer
everywhere else. I raced around the apartment looking for clean
clothes and wondered how I would ever manage to be a good
mother when I couldn't even remember to care for my own dog.
Millington was sulking in the corner under the coffee table, punishing
me for abandoning her the previous evening. She'd also