doing his job. He thought I needed help."
"Why are you defending him, Bette? I'll see to it that his superiors
know he initiated an incident with one of our VIPs." She
turned to Sammy and held up an empty bottle of Grey Goose. "In
the meantime, make yourself useful and get us another bottle."
"Elisa, honey, she's defending him because she's fucking him,"
piped up a girl's voice from behind us. Abby. "At least that's my
guess. Philip, you can't be too psyched about that, now can you?
Your girlfriend's fucking the Bungalow bouncer. Hot stuff," she
laughed.
Philip chuckled, none too eager to engage me in a who'ssleeping-
with-whom tell-all. "She is not." He chuckled, stretching
his legs out on the glass table. "She may not be faithful to me, but I
don't think we have to accuse her of shagging the staff. Bette,
you're not shagging the staff, are you, love?"
"Sure she is." Abby giggled. "Hey, Elisa, why'd you never clue
me in on that one? It's so obvious—you must have known. I can't
believe I never saw it before."
It was like getting hit over the head with a shovel.
Why'd you
never clue me in on that one?
Everything became suddenly and
horribly clear. Abby knew where I was and who I was with at all
times because Elisa told her. It was that simple. End of story. The
only part I didn't quite understand was why Elisa would do that
in the first place. Abby wasn't so confusing: she was an all-around
nasty, vengeful, mean-spirited girl who would sell out her own
dying mother—or sleep with a friend's fiance—if it meant furthering
her career or her reputation by an inch. But why Elisa?
Elisa, having no idea what else to do, started to giggle and sip
her champagne. She glanced at me only once—long enough for me
to know it was true—and then looked away before I could say a
word about it. Avery had begun pleading again, and Sammy had
turned to walk back to the door with a disgusted look on his face.
Only Philip was either too drunk or too indifferent to really understand
what was happening. He persevered.
"Are you, babe? Are you having a romp with the bouncer?"
Philip prodded, absently playing with Abby's hair as she watched
me intently, a look of distinct pleasure on her face. It was only
then I wondered if he, too, had known about Elisa and Abby's little
alliance all along. Or worse—had he been involved with them,
looking for some public heterosexual confirmation himself? It was
too horrific to even imagine.
"Hmm, an interesting question, Philip," I said as loudly as I
dared. Avery, Elisa, Philip, Abby, and Sammy all turned to look at
me. "I think it's interesting that you're so fascinated with whether
or not I've had sex with 'the bouncer,' as you put it. It can't be because
you're jealous. After all, you and I have never progressed beyond
a wet and rather sloppy make-out."
Philip looked as though he might die. Everyone else looked
confused.
"What? Oh, come on now, people, please! You all know everything
about everyone, and you never even suspected that this selfproclaimed
God's gift to New York women actually prefers men?
Well, believe it."
Everyone started speaking at once.
"Yeah, right," Elisa said.
"Bette, love, why are you talking such rubbish?" Philip asked
with a calmness in his voice that didn't match his expression.
A shout from an unidentified floater came out over my headphones
that P. Diddy had just arrived unannounced, having come
from an earlier party somewhere nearby. Normally, this arrival
would have been cause for celebration; however, considering that
tonight an entourage of one hundred people joined him, it was a
disaster. Apparently, he was extremely unhappy that he'd been
kept waiting so long at the door, but since Sammy had been inside,
the second-in-command security guy hadn't wanted to make any
decisions. Did we tell him he couldn't come in because we were
already too crowded? Tell him he could choose ten friends and
have the VIP table of his choice, but the rest of his group had to
leave? Figure out how to toss out a hundred current partiers to accommodate
his crew? And who, exactly, was going to be the lucky
chosen conveyer of this news? No one was exactly jumping at the
chance.
Before we could get squared away on the Diddy disaster, one
of the interns called me with the news that high-profile boy-band
guests were in the process of being arrested for buying drugs in
the bathroom—the very same bathroom where one of New York's
finest had briefly stopped at the end of his shift doing crowd control
outside. The disturbing part of this information was obviously
not the incident itself but the fact that, according to the intern, it
was currently being captured by no fewer than five paparazzi—
pictures that would, of course, overshadow in the tabs all the good
stuff we'd hoped to promote.
The third call came from Leo. He informed me that somehow—
and no one knew how—the production company had miscalculated
during their ordering and had just run out of champagne.
"It's impossible. They knew how many people would be here.
They knew our main concern over liquor and beer was champagne.
Bunnies drink it. Girls drink it. Bankers drink it. The only
way to keep girls somewhere late is to give them champagne. It's
only twelve-thirty! What are we going to do?" I was screaming over
the decibel-crushing sound of an Ashlee Simpson song.
"I know, Bette, I'm on it. I sent a few of the bartenders out in
search of as many cases as they can find, but it's not going to be
easy at this time of night. They can buy a few bottles at liquor
stores, but I don't know where they're going to find mass quantities
now," Leo said.
"Bette, I need to know what you want me to do with, uh, with
our waiting VIP," the panicked floater at the door called over the
headphones. "He's getting restless."
"Bette, are you there?" My earpiece crackled and Kelly's voice
came booming through. She'd grabbed someone's headset again
and was beginning to piece together what was happening. The
usual nice boss lady was gone and she'd been replaced by a demonic
monster. "Are you aware that we have kids here getting arrested
on drug charges? People do not get ARRESTED at our
parties, do you hear me?"
She cut out for a moment, but then came through loud and
clear. "Bette! Can you hear me? I need you at this door pronto!
Everything's falling apart, and you're nowhere. Where the hell are
you?"
I watched as Elisa removed her headpiece—out of some deliberate
sabotage or just plain wastedness, I couldn't tell—and
flopped down next to Philip, where she began to vie with Abby for
his attention. Why fight when you can drink? I was just working up
the energy to deal with all the problems I cared so little about
when I heard one final comment.
"Hey, mate? Yeah, you right there." Philip, who was now
cradling Abby under one arm and Elisa under the other, was calling
out to Sammy. Avery sat babbling incoherently at his side.
"Yeah, man?" Sammy asked, still not quite sure Philip was addressing
him.
"Be a good chap and bring us a bottle of something. Girls,
what will we have? Bubbly? Or would you prefer some vodka
drinks?"
Sammy looked like he'd been slapped. "I'm not your waiter."
Apparently Philip found this hysterical because he convulsed
with laughter. "Just get us a drink, will you, mate? I'm less interested
in the details of how it happens."
I didn't wait to see if Sammy would hit him or ignore him or
retrieve the bottle of vodka. I wasn't thinking about much besides
how comfortable a bed would be right then and how little I cared
if P. Diddy brought one guest or a hundred or even showed up at
all. It occurred to me that I'd been spending nearly every minute of
every day and night with some of the worst people I'd ever met,
and I had nothing to show for it but a shoebox full of clippings
that humiliated not only me but also everyone I loved. As I stood
there watching a photographer snap away at a mugging Philip and
listened to even more problems ring out over the earpiece as
though they were huge international crises, I thought of Will and
Penelope and the book-club girls and my parents and, of course,
Sammy. And again, with a sense of calm I hadn't felt in many
months, I simply removed my headset, placed it on the table, and
said quietly to Elisa, "I'm finished."
I turned to Sammy and, not caring who heard what, said, "I'm
going home. If you want to stop by later, I would love to see you.
I'm at 145 East Twenty-eighth Street, apartment 1313- I'll wait for
you."
And before anyone could say anything, I turned away. I
walked across the dance floor, past a couple who appeared to be
having actual intercourse near the DJ, and straight on to the door,
where a horde of people seemed to be swaying with the music. I
saw Kelly out of the corner of my eye, and a few List Girls who
were flirting with some of P. Diddy's group, but I managed to slip
quietly past them and onto the sidewalk. The crowd there threatened
to overtake the street, and no one was paying any attention
to me. I made it halfway down the block without talking to anyone
and was just opening the door to the cab I'd hailed when I heard
Sammy call my name. He ran toward me and slammed the cab
door shut before I could get inside.
"Bette. Don't do this. I can handle myself in there. Go on, head
back inside, and we can talk about all this later."
I stood on tiptoe to kiss his cheek and raised my arm to hail
another cab. "I don't want to go back inside, Sammy. I want to go
home. I hope I'll see you later, but I've got to get out of here."
He opened his mouth to protest, but I got in the cab. "I can
handle myself, too," I said with a smile as I sat down. And I pulled
away from the entire surging nightmare.
31
By two-thirty in the morning, there was still no sign of Sammy.
My phone was ringing off the hook with calls from Kelly and
Philip and Aver)', but I ignored them all. I'd calmed down long
enough to draft a letter of apology to Kelly, and by three I'd come
to the conclusion that Elisa—unlike Abby—was not necessarily evil
and malicious, just very, very hungry. When four rolled around and
I still hadn't heard from Sammy, I began to fear the worst. I fell
asleep sometime around five and almost cried when I woke a couple
of hours later to no messages and no Sammy.
He finally called at eleven the next morning. I thought about
not answering the phone—decided that I wouldn't, actually—but
just seeing his name on the little screen was enough to demolish
my willpower.
"Hello?" I said. I was aiming for breeziness, but the noise that