well.
Penelope had then very calmly instructed the housekeeper
(who just so happened to be Avery's parents' engagement gift to
the happy couple) to pack all of her possessions and ship everything
back to New York. She booked two last-minute, first-class
plane tickets on Avery's credit card, called for the largest and most
luxurious stretch limo she could find, and proceeded to drink herself
into champagne oblivion in the first-class cabin while stretched
out across both seats. I'd met her at JFK and dragged her directly
to the Black Door, where I joined her in getting blind drunk. For
the first few weeks she stayed with her parents, who, to their
credit, did not once tell her to forgive him or take him back, and
when she couldn't take living at home anymore, she moved onto
my couch.
Finally together, we had been miserable, heartbroken, and unemployed,
and so were the perfect pair: we shared a bathroom,
multiple bottles of wine, and the rent, and we watched a horrifying
amount of exceptionally bad TV. Everything had been perfect until
Penelope had gotten a job. She'd announced last week that she'd
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be reverse-commuting to a boutique hedge fund in Westchester,
and that she would be moving to her own place in two weeks. I'd
known our extended pajama party couldn't last forever, but I
couldn't help feeling a teeny bit betrayed. She was doing so well
that she even mentioned that the guy who'd interviewed her had
been really, really cute. It was now stunningly obvious: Penelope
was moving on, and I was destined to be a wretch forever.
"How long do you think I have to wait before I can go check
out the restaurant?" I asked for what must have been the thousandth
time.
"I've already told you, I'm happy to put on a disguise and
sneak in there with you. Very discreet—he doesn't even know me!
Healthy? Maybe not. But definitely a good time."
"Did you see the piece in
The Wall Street Journal?
They worship
the place. It calls Sammy one of the best new chefs of the last
five years."
"I know, honey, I know. That certainly seems to be the consensus,
doesn't it? Aren't you happy for him?"
"You have no idea," I whispered.
"What?"
"Nothing, nothing. Yes, of course I'm happy for him. I just wish
I was happy
with
him."
Sammy had opened his restaurant—a charming little Middle
Eastern fusion place that in no way resembled a franchise—two
months earlier, to little fanfare. I wouldn't have even known if Will
hadn't casually mentioned it at one of our Thursday-night dinners,
but from that moment on, I tracked every new development. At
first there hadn't been much information: a biography of the chef
and some details on the quick opening. Apparently, the adorable
twelve-table Italian joint on the Lower East Side had been the pet
project of a prominent former investment banker who'd been targeted
by Eliot Spitzer and ultimately sentenced to two to three
years in a federal prison. The guy had to liquidate his assets to pay
the massive fine to the SEC. Since the entire place had just been
gutted and renovated and the entire kitchen fitted to perfection,
Sammy could open for business almost immediately. At first there
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351
were some scattered customer reviews on various websites and a
small mention of the restaurant in a piece about neighborhood
gentrification. But then something happened: Sammy's restaurant
went from Neighborhood Solid to Citywide Spectacular in a matter
of weeks.
According to the most recent
WSJ
Lifestyle article, people in the
neighborhood went early and often, and Sammy was able to keep
the doors open while his menu came into its own. By the time
Frank Bruni went to review it for
The New York Times,
Sammy had
hit his stride. Bruni gave him three stars, virtually unheard of for an
unknown chef and his very first venture. The other New York papers
and magazines immediately followed with ecstatic reviews
of their own.
New York
magazine published a typically understated
article proclaiming Sevi "The Only Restaurant That Matters."
He'd gone from being a total unknown to New York's mustget-
reservations-or-die-a-horrible-death-in-C-list-purgatory restaurant.
The only catch with that was that Sammy didn't take reservations.
For anyone. Under any circumstances. According to every interview
I read of him—and trust me, I read them all—Sammy insisted
that everyone was welcome, but no one was getting any sort of
priority treatment. "I've spent so many years determining who's allowed
in and who's not, and I'm just not interested anymore. If
they want to eat here, whoever they are, they can come on down
like everyone else," he was quoted as saying. It was his one and
only requirement.
"But no one will go if they can't make a reservation!" I'd
shrieked to Penelope when I'd first read about it.
"What do you mean no one will go?" she'd asked.
"You have to have some horribly bitchy reservationist who insists
that there's nothing available for the next six months if they
want to eat after five or before midnight."
She laughed.
"I'm serious! I know these people! The only way anyone will
ever eat there is if he makes them believe they're not welcome.
The fastest way to fill those tables is to tell anyone who calls that
they're fully booked and then promptly raise all entrees by eight
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dollars and all drinks by four. Hire waiters who think they're
above waiting tables and a hostess who looks all the guests up and
down disapprovingly as they arrive, and he'll have a
chance."
I
was only half-kidding, but it didn't much matter: his policy clearly
worked.
The review in
The Wall Street Journal
had gone on to describe
how the New York restaurant scene had lately been dominated by
a slew of high-profile restaurant openings and superstar chefs, how
there were five such restaurants in the glittering new Time Warner
Building alone. Somewhere along the way, people had grown
weary of all the pomp and circumstance. They longed for a wonderful
meal in a simple restaurant. And that was precisely what
Sammy's place offered. I was so proud of him, I nearly cried every
time I read a new write-up or heard someone mention it, which
was pretty damn frequently. I was dying to see it for myself, but I
couldn't deny that Sammy had most definitely
not
picked up the
phone to invite me.
"Here," she said, handing me my folder of delivery menus.
"Dinner's on me. Let's order something, and then maybe go get a
drink."
I stared at her as though she'd suggested spontaneously hopping
a flight to Bangladesh. "A drink?
Outside?
You're joking." I
flipped through the menus disinterestedly. "There's nothing to eat."
She snatched the folder out of my hands and pulled out a few
menus at random. "Nothing to eat? There's Chinese, burgers, sushi,
Thai, pizza, Indian, Vietnamese, deli, salad bar, Italian . . . that's
just these. Pick something, Bette. Pick it now."
"Seriously, Pen, whatever's good for you works for me."
I watched as she dialed someplace called Nawab and ordered
two chicken tikka masalas with basmati rice and two baskets of
chapati. She put the phone down and turned to me.
"Bette, I'm only going to ask you one last time: What do you
want to do this weekend?"
I sighed meaningfully and resumed my position on the couch.
"Pen, I don't care. It's not a big birthday. I already have to do the
book-club ritual, which is more than enough. I don't know why
you're so insistent that we need to do something—I'd much rather
just forget it's happening."
She snorted. "Yeah, right. Everyone says they don't care, and
everyone cares a lot. Why don't I put together a little dinner on
Saturday night? You, me, Michael, maybe a few people from UBS?
Some of the girls from your book club?"
"That sounds nice, Pen, it really does, but Will said something
about dinner on Saturday. We're going somewhere good, I can't remember
where. Want to come?"
We chatted until the food came and I managed to haul my
larger-by-the-minute butt off the couch to the little kitchen table for
chow time. As we spooned the thick, spicy chicken chunks onto
plates of rice, I thought about how I was going to miss Penelope.
It was a great distraction having her around, and more to the point,
things between us were finally back to normal. I watched her as
she waved her fork around to punctuate a funny story she was
telling, and then I stood up and hugged her.
"What was that for?" she asked.
"I'm just going to miss you, Pen. I'm going to miss you a whole
lot."
33
"Thanks, everyone. You guys really are the best," I said as I
hugged each person standing in the circle around me. During our
special birthday book-club sessions, we met to eat cake and do a
couple of group shots. My birthday cake was white chocolate
mousse, and the accompanying shot was an old-school lemon drop,
complete with sugar packets and sliced lemons. I was slightly buzzed
and feeling good after our mini-celebration, one that had concluded
with the presentation of a hundred-dollar Barnes & Noble gift card.
"Enjoy dinner tonight," Vika called after me. "Give us a ring if
you want to meet up after you leave your uncle's."
I nodded and waved and made my way downstairs. I was
thinking about how I'd have to start taking people up on offers
to go out again. It was only one in the afternoon, and I didn't
have to be at Will's until eight, so I settled in at a little table on
the patio at the Astor Place Starbucks with a vanilla latte and a
copy of the
Post.
Some habits die hard, so, as usual, I flipped to
Page Six and was stunned by what I saw: a large piece on Abby,
complete with a picture. It said that New York Scoop had just canceled
her "Ellie Insider" column and dismissed her for falsifying her
resume. Details were sketchy, but according to an unnamed
source, she'd listed herself as a graduate of Emory University when
she was, in fact, three credits shy of graduation. She did not actually
possess a B.A. I'd dialed Penelope before I'd finished reading
the piece.
"Ohmigod, have you read Page Six today? You must see it.
Now."
While I hadn't exactly forgotten about Abby, I hadn't made
good on my vow to ruin her life, either. She hadn't written another
word about me since the night of the
Playboy
party, but I didn't
know if that was because my threats had her worried or because