Chapter 3
3
I’m that level of boozed where I’m hovering slightly outside myself, listening to the sound of my feet stamping heavily on the ice-sparkled concrete as if they’re someone else’s.
The road’s asphalt looks so magical when it’s white-speckled and has that translucent sheen, like a mirror ball, or mother of pearl. And yet it’s so treacherous. Is the pavement a metaphor for marrying Hester? Or am I just drunk?
Everyone in the group is taxiing distance from The Gladstone, Susie in one suburb, Ed and Hester in another, Justin in town. I live in the same postcode as the pub, Carrington, a tiny suburb with winding streets, and red-brick, quirky Victorian houses, some with turrets that look like Correctional Institutions for Wayward Boys, or as if they’re made from gingerbread by fairytale witches. Suitably, Fairytale Witch is my look. There are lots of overhanging, mature trees that scatter blossom like confetti once a year.
And cats. It’s lousy with cats. Roger is engaged in a bitter ongoing territory battle with the local feral unneutered tom, Dirk. (No, I don’t know how a stray has a name either— notoriety on the local community message boards, I assume. Dirk is a rugged individualist, a white-whiskered supervillain, and no one’s going to take his liberty, or his bollocks.)
My phone pings with a text message from Susie. It’s not been sent to myself and Justin, only to me, which is intriguing. This suggests deep-dive Girl Talk, and there’s very little Girl Talk between us that Justin isn’t privy to. He asked Susie to copy him out of her graphic account of her Mirena coil removal, but that’s about it.
MAN DOWN. I have opinions on tonight’s atrocity, much to discuss. Speak soon. xx
Maybe it’s because we’re the cursed bridesmaids. I am not looking forward to remembering that dismaying fact when I wake up with a shitty head. Is it possible to decline being a bridesmaid to one of your best friend’s brides, without mortally offending them? Could I fake an injury? There’s no way Hester would let someone with an orthopedic support boot hop down the aisle, spoiling the vision. Even as I think it, I remember that I’d have been to the fittings by then and be wasting their money. Sigh.
As Justin says, a conscience weighs too much.
I’d reply to Susie, but her message sounds very much like she’s about to go to sleep, so I’ll leave it for when we’re nursing our sore heads tomorrow.
Even though I know this isn’t observing safety protocols when female and out late inebriated, in the dark, I turn my music on to the last thing I played. Kylie’s “Can’t Get You Out of My Head” pounds in my ears, which feels like Kylie knows what’s what.
La la la, lah la la lah
It interacts with the alcohol in my bloodstream and makes me feel defiant, and I have an idea.
La la la, lah la la lah
A probably really bad, and yet suddenly irresistible, idea.
I pull my phone out and scroll to WhatsApp, until I find his name, Zack. Susie calls him Baby Yoda. (Susie whispers “ The Child! He should be with his own people ” whenever he and I finish chatting, and I shush her.)
Zack works in a neighborhood bar nearby, the kind of place no bigger than a galley kitchen, festooned with fairy lights and ironic art. Pretend Warhols of Ena Sharples in her hairnet, surrounded by illuminated plastic chili peppers, that kind of thing. Flamingo umbrella-holder stands. The place that you always end up in for the very ill-advised fifth and sixth drinks on an unplanned session.
Zack’s got a man bun, a taut stomach, and the level of circulation where he’s in a T-shirt with rolled-up sleeves, year-round.
Whenever we are in, he’s always pulling up a chair, twirling it back to front, and “explaining” our cocktails to us. Insisting I sip a bit while he talks me through the vital acidic effect of the lemon zest on my olfactory experience. I never have the heart to say, Zack, I’ve had a liter of cheap gin already, it could be wheel cleaner to be honest.
After he finally left us to drink them last time, Susie whispered: “Please have sex with him before I have to get another Ted Talk on the invention of the Tom Collins, I can’t fucking take it.”
I laughed this off—me? Him?—but as we left last time, Zack said, with the insouciance of being male and twenty-four and having a taut stomach: “Hey, Eva. Give me your number and I’ll let you know when we have that hazelnut liqueur in I was telling you about.”
I’m not a hook-ups person, usually. Well, ever, apart from a Canadian guy who looked like a Mountie who I met on a training weekend when I was twenty-three. Straight afterward he made a joke about zipping me into a North Face bag on his floor, which I started to realize wasn’t a joke, and left. It was as if God knew I was acting out of character and decided to prank me.
I know this is weak, but, I’m thirty-four, and on the horizon I can see “not being blatantly hit on by twenty-something barmen anymore.” Like a sale on Boxing Day, I am suddenly interested in grabbing something that doesn’t suit me and I will soon regret, just because I can.
I need validation tonight. I want to do something that says I’m still desirable. That I’m out here on the cool-single-with-options frontier, getting up to spontaneous things. Not still hoping.
A voice says, You are doing this to tell Ed, to make him jealous. You are doing something just so you can tell him about it and make him feel something back , and I silence the voice. I don’t want to be that person and it can’t be allowed to be true, and if I don’t think it, it isn’t true.
Hi! I don’t know if you’re working tonight but wondered if you fancied a drink after your shift finishes? E x
God almighty, Eve, you’re swimming in drink already and it’s midnight. Go home and have a strong coffee and two Advil and realize you’re an idiot.
The reply is near immediate, so my fate is written.
Yeah! I am just finishing up actually. Want to hang here? Master mixologist at your service
I’m right outside my house and it’d be a lot easier to hang here , but cynically, I’d quite like this to take place off premises, so I don’t have to wake up with Zack and kick him out tomorrow. Not a one-night stand, a half-night stand. Eesh. The feminist in me always reacts badly to my mum saying, “Honestly, women are the new men!” but I’m slightly ashamed of my brute calculations.
Zack is impressed by himself, and I’m going to pretend to be impressed by him too for as long as I need to get what I want from the deal. Then we’ll be done. That’s manipulation, surely. The fact I know he’s not remotely interesting to me for anything more is exactly why he’s so right for this. I mean, maybe he feels exactly the same way. But it’s not like I’m going to check.
I hear Susie in my head: Eve, offering a man a no-strings hook-up is not exploiting him, fuck’s sake. This is your whole problem, imagining you’re emotionally responsible for some random dude who’s into bouldering and brewing his own kombucha and posts stuff on Facebook like “The new Tame Impala is a vibe.”
I can imagine replying, It’s ambitious to call that my whole problem, and Susie snorting, Yes, true.
On my way!