back to past meetings and cobble together a semi-reasonable answer.
"Well, I'll definitely be securing some sponsors, so I think
we'll do alcohol but use your bartenders. I'm assuming we'll be
using your, uh, your . . ."
"Security?" he provided helpfully, somehow sensing my discomfort
at using the word
bouncers.
"Yes, exactly, although I'll have to check on that."
"Sounds good to me. As of now, only Lot 61 is free that night,
but Amy may want to consider rearranging the schedule. Who will
be hosting?"
"Oh, uh, a guy named Philip Weston. He, uh, he's—"
"I know who he is. Your boyfriend, right? I've seen you guys together
a lot lately. Yeah, I'm sure Amy will be thrilled to hear that, so
I wouldn't worry about Bungalow being free that night."
"No, no, he's certainly not my boyfriend," I said as quickly as
possible. "It's not like that at all. Actually, he's just this weird guy I
sort of know who—"
"None of my business, that's for sure. Guy always seemed like
kind of an asshole to me, but what do I know, right?" Was that bitterness
I detected? Or wanted to detect?
"Yes, I suppose it's not any of your business, is it?" I said with
such prissiness that he actually physically recoiled.
We stared at each other briefly before he looked away.
He took another sip of his coffee and began to gather his stuff.
"Well, then, this has been fun. I'll check with Amy and get back to
you about the venue. Assume it's fine. Like I said, who wouldn't
jump at the chance to have Mr. British Royalty himself throw a
party, right? He's going to have to start tanning now if he has any
hope of being dark enough in time."
"Thanks for your concern, I'll be sure to pass that along. In the
meantime, you enjoy making your little puff pastries. I'll work out
the details of the event on my own or directly with Amy, since as
much as 1 enjoy being verbally attacked by you, I don't really
have the time right now." I stood up with as much steadiness as I
could manage and began to lurch toward the door, already wondering
how things had managed to go so terribly wrong in so little
time.
"Rette!" he called just as I was about to pull open the door.
He's
so sony. He just had a really long day and is under a lot of stress
lately and hasn 't been getting enough sleep and he didn
7
mean to
take it out on me. Either that, or he's so wildly, insanely jealous of the
fact that Philip and I are dating that he simply couldn't refrain from
saying something nasty. Or perhaps a combination of the two,
I
thought. Either way, I would of course forgive him when he begged
for me to understand and apologized profusely.
I turned around, hoping all the time that he would rush toward
me with a plea for forgiveness, but instead he was holding up
something and waving it. My cell phone. Which naturally began
ringing before I'd reached the table.
He glanced down and I spotted the tightness in his face before
he forced a smile. "What a coincidence, it's the man of the hour.
Shall I take a message for you? Don't worry, I promise to tell him
we're on a jet on our way back from Cannes and not sitting at a
downtown Starbucks."
"Give that to me," I snapped, wanting to kick myself for programming
Philip's number into my phone while yanking it from
Sammy's fingers and noticing only briefly how nice it was to touch
his skin. I silenced the ringer and tossed it in my bag.
"Don't not answer on my account."
155
156 lauren weisberger
"I'm not doing anything on your account," I announced. I
looked back only once as I stormed out, only to see him watching
me and shaking his head.
Not exactly how the same scene ivould've
played out in
The Magnate's Tender Touch, I thought with not a little
remorse. But I cheered myself up slightly with the rationalization
that all new relationships—even the fictional ones—have
obstacles to overcome in the beginning. I would not give up hope
on this one. Not yet.
13
The rest of the day after the Starbucks encounter passed in a
blur as I alternately obsessed over my bizarre fight with Sammy
and Penelope's news that she was moving. Both of these, combined
with the reality that I was entirely responsible for planning
an event that was to take place in two and a half weeks, made me
want to curl up with Millington and watch back-to-back showings
of
When Harry Met Sally
on TNT. By the time I arrived at home,
my small-talk quotient was rapidly approaching zero, and I still
had to traverse the entire lobby to reach the elevator, where I
would surely be accosted by Seamus. I'd managed to press the button
and was silently rejoicing in my victory when he materialized,
as always, out of nowhere.
"Good day?" he asked with a huge smile.
"Urn, yeah, it was fine, I guess. And you?"
"Fine sounds very different from good, Bette!" he was practically
singing. What sort of vibe did I give off that said "Talk to me"?
"I suppose it is different, but I think 'good' would be an overstatement.
It was definitively fine," I explained, wondering if it'd be
worth it to climb thirteen flights of stairs rather than wait for the elevator
and endure the interim conversation.
"Well, let's just say I have a really good feeling it's going to get
better," he replied with what was, unmistakably, a wink.
"Mmm, really?" I said, desperately staring at the elevator doors
and willing them to open. "That'd be nice."
"Yep, you heard it here first. I officially predict that your day is
going to improve significantly within the next couple of minutes."
He said this with such certainty—and in that particularly rankling
I-know-something-you-don't-know tone—that I actually looked up
at him.
"Is there something I should know? Is someone here?" I asked,
both horrified and curious as to who might be staking out my
apartment, waiting for me to get home.
"Okay, well, I've said enough, that much is for sure!" he sang.
"It's none of my business, of course. Time for me to get back to
the door." He tipped his hat and turned on his heels and I wondered
if there was any possible way to ask him nicely never to
speak to me again.
I knew exactly what he'd meant when I stepped off the elevator
and rounded the corner to lucky number 1313. Resting against
the door were the most gorgeous flowers I'd ever seen. My first
thought was that they'd been mistakenly left in front of my door
and were actually for someone else, but as I got closer, I could see
my name written in black marker on the outside of the envelope
that was nestled behind the cellophane wrapping. After accepting
that it wasn't a delivery glitch, a second thought popped into my
head immediately: they were from Sammy, who'd thought over
everything that had happened earlier and wanted to apologize for
his behavior. Yes! I knew he wasn't such a bad guy, and flowers
were such a sweet, gentlemanly way of getting in touch to say he's
sorry.
I'm sorry, too,
I mentally directed toward the flowers.
I don't
know why I was so bitchy and nasty, especially since I haven't
stopped thinking about you for one second since then. Yes, I'd love
to meet you for dinner and put that whole stupid conversation behind
us. And if you must know, I'm already beginning to envision
you as the father of my future children, so we'd best be getting to
know each other. How much our kids will love hearing that our lifelong
love affair began with a fight and makeup flowers/ It's almost
so romantic I can't bear it. Yes, darling, yes, I forgive you and I
apologize a hundred times myself and I know this will make us
stronger.
I heaved the arrangement upward and unlocked the door, so
delighted with this surprise that I barely even noticed Millington
wrapping herself around my leg. Flowers always featured promi-
nently in romance novels, which made receiving such a first-rate
bouquet even more wonderful. There were actually three dozen
roses in shades of bright purple and hot pink and white, all clustered
tightly together in a short, round bowl that appeared to be
filled with some sort of sparkling glass marbles. Completely absent
was any sort of adornment—no ribbons, bows, filler greenery,
or ugly baby's breath; it screamed simple and elegant and very,
very expensive. The card wasn't the ordinary sort, either. It was
a heavy cream vellum and I couldn't tear it from the purplelined
envelope fast enough. But it took only a split second for my
eyes to find the signature, and when they did, I thought I might
pass out.
Doll, I'll absobloodylutely host the BlackBerry event! We'll make
it the poshest party of the year. You're brilliant. Big kiss! Philip
What?! I reread it a few dozen times to make sure my brain was
correctly processing the words, and then I read it again because I
still couldn't believe it. How did he know where I lived? How on
earth did he know anything about the event when I hadn't even
mentioned it yet? But more to the point, where was Sammy, with
his declaration of undying love? I flung the card across the room,
left the flowers on the kitchen counter, and flopped quite dramatically
onto the couch. Within seconds, my cell phone and land line
began ringing simultaneously, and a cursory check of each yielded
even more disappointing results: Elisa on the cell and Uncle Will
on the home phone. No Sammy.
I flipped open my cell and told Elisa to hold on before she
could even speak and then clicked the portable on and said hi to
Will.
"Darling, is everything all right? You're late, and Simon and 1
are worried that you're drowning your public-humiliation sorrows
all alone. We both thought you looked great in that last New York
Scoop photo! Let's get sloshed together! Are you on your way?"
Dammit! I'd forgotten all about dinner. Even though Thursday
nights had been the standing plan since the day I'd graduated from
college, I'd missed the last few weeks for Kelly events and had obviously
completely flaked on tonight.
"Will! I'm sorry I'm late, but I was at the office until two minutes
ago and I just ran home to feed Millington. I'm literally walking
out the door this minute."
"Sure, darling, of course. I'll buy that story if it's the best you're
offering, but I'm not letting you out of tonight. We will see you
soon, yes?"
"Of course. In just a few minutes . . ."
I hung up without saying good-bye and turned back to my cell
phone.
"Hey, sorry about that. My uncle just called and I—"