It's Got to Be Perfect: the memoirs of a modern-day matchmaker (6 page)

BOOK: It's Got to Be Perfect: the memoirs of a modern-day matchmaker
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‘That’s the hard part over with,’ she said, handing me a stack of business cards.

Later, when the beat of the music had faded into the distance, the faces of all the people we’d met that night flashed through my mind. I gripped the cards tighter and wondered if, when it came to it, they would trust me enough to put their hearts in my hands.

Chapter Five

Barristers, advocates, solicitors, heads of PR, heads of HR, heads of marketing, marketing consultants, business consultants, business analysts, risk analysts, CTOs, CEOs, CFOs, PAs, EAs. Despite the grown-up titles, the business cards I’d laid out on my coffee table seemed to stare up at me with the expectancy of a classroom of school children.

I gazed out of the window and into the early morning mist and suddenly the incredible irony of the situation hit me.

‘How am I qualified to help them when I can’t even help myself?’ I asked Cordelia after panic-calling her.

‘Seriously? I haven’t even had my morning latte and you’re throwing that conundrum at me?’

‘I don’t know what to do. I don’t know where to start. I don’t…’

She interrupted me with a sharp sigh. ‘Take a deep breath and calm down.’

I breathed in obediently.

‘Now, what exactly are you worried about?’

‘How am I supposed to match them? Where do I start? Should I be using psychological profiling? Astrology? Cosmopolitan’s latest compatibility quiz?’

‘Or what? Adding up the letters in his name and hers like we did at school?’ She laughed. ‘Come on, we all know none of that rubbish works.’

I scratched my head. ‘Well, according to the most recent studies, psychological profiles are good indicators of compatibility.’

‘According to whom? Those who commissioned them, I assume. Look, I think you’re overcomplicating things. No need to reinvent the wheel. Why not stick with what’s worked for centuries?’

‘Which is what exactly?’

‘I don’t know, rich men and pretty girls. That seems successful.’

‘Yeah, for the divorce lawyers.’

‘You have to give people what they want.’

‘What if what they want isn’t good for them?’

‘It rarely is.’

‘And what about the men who aren’t rich or the girls who aren’t so pretty?’

‘Leave that to Darwinism.’

I huffed. ‘That theory suits you.’

‘Look, I’ve got to go now. Some of us have proper jobs. But remember you’re selling a dream, not reality.’

Following a gentle reminder that the Dior shoe-buying department would never lead the world to peace, I hung up the phone and considered what she had said. If true love was a dream, then what was reality? Disillusioned brides and wanking grooms? Or if Cordelia was right and natural selection would favour the richest men and the prettiest girls, then what would happen to the rest of us? Would we fade to extinction? Nature, it appeared, was already trying to phase out asymmetrical nasal hair.

After I’d emailed everyone whose card I’d collected with a light-hearted, “meet me for a drink, no obligation” kind of invite, Matthew emerged from his room rubbing his eyes, hair upright on his head like he’d slept in a high voltage chamber.

‘What is that?’ he asked, looking down at the cards on the table. ‘Some kind of corporate
snap
? Is this what you’ve been doing all night?’

I peeled myself off the sofa. ‘Cuppa?’

He nodded and picked up a card.

When I walked into the kitchen, the morning rays sliced through the blind, as though desperate to shed some light on the situation.

‘Don’t match Teresa with Patrick Greene,’ he shouted after me.

I laughed. ‘I hope to find them more than just a socially acceptable name,’ I said as I returned, snatching the card from his hand and replacing it with his Dennis the Menace mug. I looked at Dennis then back at Matthew, then back at Dennis. He patted down his hair, but as soon as he removed his hand, it sprang back up.

‘So what happens next?’ he asked.

‘They meet me for a drink and a chat about what they’re looking for. Then I match them.’

‘And then?’

‘Everyone lives happily ever after.’

He nodded his head from side to side as though, he were weighing up his left and right brain. ‘How are you going to match them?’

‘They tell me what they want and I give it to them.’

He scrunched up his nose. ‘But most of us don’t actually know what we want. We just think we do.’

I sighed. ‘I’m not in the mood for one of your Marxist the-media-constructs-our-thoughts lectures.’

He continued, ignoring my protests. ‘Attraction is an entirely biochemical reaction set off by a combination of characteristics to which our genetic programming and social conditioning respond.’

‘And what’s wrong with that?’

‘It’s flawed. Look at the divorce rate.’

‘We don’t marry everyone we fancy.’

‘Thankfully.’

I glared at him. ‘There’s more to love than attraction. We aren’t robots driven by neurotransmitters and hormones. We have something called free will. We can think independently from our physical drives and conditioning.’

His full-body laugh caused him to spill coffee all over the table. It quickly seeped onto the business cards. I dabbed them with my sleeve but, already, the corners had started to curl.

After he’d skulked off in a huff, I looked back down at the cards and reshuffled them. I then gazed out of the window at the sky, hoping to be the recipient of some kind of divine inspiration. But, instead, a bird dropping landed on the pane. I watched the greyish gloop slide down the glass, undigested berries lagging behind and I wondered if I too might have bitten off more than I could chew.

‘If we sieve through the hookers and the sugar daddies, I’m sure we’ll find some decent people here tonight,’ Caro observed, scanning the bar. We were at Zuma in Knightsbridge, a favourite with the “chilled-out jet-set crowd”, according to Harper’s magazine.

I took in the ultra-hip minimalist interior and smoothed down my dress, trying to act as though it had been thrown on nonchalantly, rather than the result of three hours of unsatisfactory pontification. Caro leaned over the glass bar, her red Gucci dress nipped in at the waist and plunging at the neckline. Three barmen leapt towards her, their attention darting between her Bambi brown eyes and her perfectly plumped cleavage.

‘We need some cocktails,’ she declared, smoothing her sleek dark bob behind her ears.

Following a flamboyant display of glass juggling, and some kind of cocktail-shaker courtship dance, eventually we were presented with two rose-petal Martinis. The baby-faced barman grinned victoriously and Caro leaned over the bar and kissed him on the lips.

I pulled her back. ‘Caro.’

‘What?’

I shook my head.

She was still grinning when I took her hand and led her away.

‘I’d prefer us to focus on the men who’ve actually gone through puberty.’

She threw a glance over her shoulder and then strode off towards a table of suited men who appeared to be engaged in a serious work-type conversation. When she reached the table, her presence diverted their concentration like a resistor in a circuit. Once she’d delivered her opening line, their corporate faces cracked into smiles, and then the best-looking one pulled up a chair for her to join them.

Watching from the bar, and sipping my Martini, I wondered where her self-assurance came from. Was it a case of lots of cuddles as a child? Or perhaps, as I once wondered after an especially interesting episode of
Doctor Phil
, it was a pseudo-esteem masking a deeper insecurity and a need for external validation. Maybe it was simply that big boobs and a pretty face were so well received that the usual fears of rejection and public humiliation weren’t there. However, in order to begin my transition to altruism, I knew that I might be required to actually help someone, so I decided that confidence was something I would have to fake, at least until I’d figured out how to source it naturally. I took a gulp of the Martini and then sidestepped towards a group of girls.

With their long legs, dark hair and tanned skin, it was as though they were the result of some kind of accelerated breeding program between Megan and Stephen who I had met the night before. I smiled at the one nearest to me. She sucked on a pink straw protruding from a fussy cocktail and eyed me up suspiciously.

‘Are you a journalist or something?’ she asked between sucks.

‘No,’ I laughed. ‘What makes you think that?’

‘You look like one.’

I glanced down at my black dress and then back at her.

Once I’d worked my way up the seemingly endless legs protruding from tiny leather hotpants, my eyes lingered on her chest, which was braless and buoyant under a cream silk camisole.

‘What do you want?’

Her features, enhanced to cartoonish proportions, reminded me of a creature from
Avatar
.

‘I’m headhunting,’ I said.

The rest of the girls’ necks swivelled towards me. ‘You’re a model scout?’ one of them asked.

I shook my head.

‘Party promoter?’

I shook my head again, suspecting the truth might be a tremendous disappointment. ‘I’m looking for single girls who want to meet eligible men.’

When I’d explained my plans to re-introduce the world to deep and meaningful love, the girl next to me flicked a mane of hair extensions over her shoulder.

‘We only date footballers,’ she said.

She went on to explain that, despite the fact that neither her nor her friends were currently in a relationship with a footballer, in the past there had been many encounters. The affairs she described were short-lived, involved regular cash payments, provision of accommodation, full funding for any abortions required and a six-figure pay-off at the end.

Apparently, this was a routine insurance policy to protect against any negative press coverage.

‘You date the married ones?’ I asked, less to highlight the moral issue, which I suspected wasn’t a concern, but more to question the real purpose.

She laughed. ‘It’s not like we expect them to leave their wives.’

‘Well what’s the point then?’

‘Once you’re in with the footballers, sometimes they pass you on to their teammates, the ones who aren’t married.’

‘They’re like matchmakers too,’ the only blonde in the group said with a beaming smile.

‘Or pimps?’ I suggested.

‘Hey!’ Caro interrupted as she bounded up to me, and began theatrically fanning herself with a handful of business cards. ‘Check these out.’

She thrust them into my hand and then opened her bag to reveal dozens more.

‘Am I done now?’ she asked, glancing over her shoulder. I followed her gaze and saw the underage barman grinning widely, as though his expression had been fixed since Caro’s kiss. ‘His shift finishes soon. Can I?’

‘Okay. Go on then,’ I said, checking my watch. ‘I suppose I could do with an early night.’

The blonde girl looked at me, then back at the other girls and then back at me. ‘Want to come with us?’ she asked and the rest of the group nodded vaguely.

During the cab ride to the “player’s party” at Whisky Mist, the girls explained how a modern-day princess secured her happy-ever-after.

‘You only get invited if you’re in with the promoters,’ said the girl in the hotpants who I now knew was named Carmen.

‘And they only invite girls from agencies,’ another girl added.

‘What agencies?’ I asked.

‘You know, for glamour models, promo girls, dancers,’ Carmen said.

The blonde girl, who I would later learn was Kerri, smiled. ‘They want pretty, bubbly girls there.’

‘Bubbly?’ I asked.

‘You know: fun, social.’

I rolled my eyes. ‘I don’t suppose they invite the wives or girlfriends?’

They laughed.

‘So,’ I said, ‘if you win the hand of a premier-league prince, would you let him come to these parties?’

Their faces contorted as though I’d suggested one of them don a boiler suit.

When we arrived, I noticed there were no men in the queue, which snaked for a mile around the block, but the girls were huddled together in the line, shivering in the skimpy clothing that was required to gain entry. Boobs were hoisted up, squeezed together or spilling out. Skirts were sprayed on, tops were slashed at the sternum, and legs were elongated with six-inch heels. Every attribute was exploited to secure its maximum market value. Tonight, it was time to cash in their assets.

The men, it was explained to me, were safety tucked up inside, readily paying £500 for a £10 bottle of vodka. I was soon to learn that the mark-up could be justified when the beverage delivered with a sparkler and a gaggle of nubile girls.

Despite the sleek modern interior, each step down the staircase was like taking a step back in time. Men sat wide-legged at tables, downing drinks, and pulling girls onto their laps as though patrons of a medieval whorehouse. Girls wiggled passed the VIP area, until the chosen ones were summoned to straddle their prince’s lap, before going on to simulate a scene from one of Robert’s movies.

With her rock-hard nipples poking through her silk camisole, Carmen was immediately ushered into the VIP area. She blamed the forty-minute queue in ice-cold air, but her friends claimed she’d deliberately tweaked them before catching a footballer’s eye.

‘It’s not fair,’ one of them whined. ‘My tits are better than hers.’

‘And she copied my hair colour,’ another one, who I think was called Melanie, said. She went on to explain that the player in question was a reserve they were all targeting. After reading a recent interview, in which he stated he preferred brunettes, she had dyed her hair. The others, except Kerri, had copied. ‘Lucky cow.’ she added as she watched him pull Carmen onto his lap.

I waved my hand in front of her face. ‘Earth to twenty-first century woman.’

She looked at me and frowned. ‘What?’

‘Don’t you want more than that?’

She looked back at Carmen and the footballer and then laughed. ‘More than a rich husband and the perfect life, what more is there?’

‘Oh, let me think.’ I scratched my head. ‘How about independence? Self-respect? To be treated as a human being rather than a collection of body parts?’

BOOK: It's Got to Be Perfect: the memoirs of a modern-day matchmaker
11.81Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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