girl crouched in a corner, sobbing quietly but with a pleased
awareness that others were watching, and sidestepped a strikingly
stylish foreign couple who were making out furiously, and with
much hip grinding. I then made a big show of ignoring the meathead
bouncer who, incidentally, was reading from a tattered paperback
version of
Lady Chatterley's Lover
(sex fiend!) and threw
my arm in the air to hail a cab. Only the street was completely
empty, and a cold drizzle had just begun, practically guaranteeing
that a taxi was nowhere in my immediate future.
"Hey, you need some help?" he asked after opening the velvet
rope to admit three squealing, tottering girls. "This is a tough street
for cabs when it rains."
"No thanks, I'm just fine."
"Suit yourself."
Minutes were starting to feel like hours, and the warm summer
sprinkles had rapidly become a cold, persistent rain. What, exactly,
was I proving here? The bouncer had pressed himself against
the door to get some protection from the overhang and was still
reading calmly, as though unaware of the hurricane that now
whipped around us. I continued to stare at him until he looked up,
grinned, and said, "Yeah, you seem to be doing just fine on
your own. You're definitely teaching me a lesson by not taking one
of these huge umbrellas and walking a couple blocks over to
Eighth, where you'll have no trouble getting a cab at all. Great call
on your part."
"You have umbrellas?" I asked before I could stop myself. The
water had soaked entirely through my shirt and I could feel my
blanket-thick hair sticking to my neck in wet, cold clumps.
"Sure do. Keep 'em right here for situations just like this. But
I'm sure you wouldn't be interested in taking one of them, right?"
"Right. I'm just fine." To think I'd almost begun warming up to
him. Just then a livery cab drove by, and I had the brilliant idea to
call UBS's car service for a ride home.
"Hi, this is Bette Robinson with account number six-threethree-
eight. I need a car to pick me up at—"
"All booked!" barked back an angry-sounding female dispatcher.
"No, I don't think you understand. I have an account with your
company and—"
Click.
I stood there soaking wet, anger boiling inside me.
"No cars, huh? Tough," he said, clucking sympathetically without
looking up from the book. I'd managed to skim
Lady Chatterley's
Lover
when I was twelve and had already gleaned as much
about sex as possible from the combination of
Forever, Wifey
and
What's Happening to My Body? Book for Girls,
but I didn't remember
anything about it. Perhaps that had to do with a poor memory,
or maybe it was the fact that sex hadn't even been a part of my
consciousness for the last two years. Or maybe it was that the plots
of my beloved romance novels crowded my thoughts at all times.
Whatever it was, I couldn't even recall something snide to say
about it, never mind clever. "No cars." I sighed. "Just not my night."
He took a few steps out in the rain and handed me a long executive's
umbrella, already unfurled, with the club's logo emblazoned
on both sides. "Take it. Walk to Eighth, and if you still can't
get a cab, talk to the doorman at Serena, Twenty-third between
Seventh and Eighth. Tell him I sent you, and he'll work it out."
I considered walking right past him and getting on the subway,
but the idea of riding around in a train car at one in the morning
was hardly appealing. "Thanks," I mumbled, refusing to meet what
would surely be his gloating eyes. I took the umbrella and started
walking east, feeling him watch me from behind.
Five minutes later, I was tucked in the backseat of a big yellow
taxi, wet but finally warm.
I gave the driver my address and slumped back, exhausted. At
this hour, cabs were good for two things and two things only:
making out with someone on your way home from a good night
out or catching up with multiple people in three-minute-or-less
cell-phone conversations. Since neither was an option, I rested my
wet hair on the patch of filthy vinyl where so many greasy, unwashed,
oiled, lice-ridden, and generally unkempt heads had
rested before mine, closed my eyes, and anticipated the sniffling,
hysterical welcome I would soon receive from Millington. Who
needed a man—or even a newly engaged best friend—when you
had a dog?
3
The week following Penelope's engagement party was nearly
unbearable. It was my fault, of course: there are many ways to piss
off your parents and rebel against your entire upbringing without
enslaving yourself in the process, but I was clearly too stupid to
find them. So instead I sat inside my shower-sized cubicle at UBS
Warburg—as I had every day for the past fifty-six months—and
death-gripped the phone, which was currently discolored by a
layer of Maybelline Fresh Look foundation (in Tawny Blush) and a
few splotches of L'Oreal Wet Shine lip gloss (in Rhinestone Pink). I
wiped it off as best I could while pressing the receiver to my ear
and rubbed my grubby fingers clean underneath the desk chair. I
was being berated by a "minimum," someone who only invests the
million-dollar minimum with my division and is therefore excruciatingly
demanding and detail-oriented in a way that forty-milliondollar
clients never are.
"Mrs. Kaufman, I truly understand your concern over the
market's slight decline, but let me assure you that we have everything
under control. I realize your nephew the interior decorator
thinks your portfolio is top-heavy with corporate bonds, but I assure
you our traders are excellent, and always looking out for your best
interests. I don't know if a thirty-two percent annual gain is realistic
in this economic environment, but I'll have Aaron give you a call as
soon as he gets back to his desk. Yes. Of course. Yes. Yes. Yes, I will
absolutely have him call you the moment he returns from the meeting.
Yes. Certainly. Of course. Yes. Naturally. Yes. A pleasure hearing
from you, as always. All right, then. Bye-bye." I waited until I heard
the click on her end and then slammed down the phone.
Nearly five years and I'd yet to utter the word
no,
as apparently
you need to have at least seventy-two months' experience before
being qualified to go there. I went to send Aaron a quick email
begging him to return Mrs. Kaufman's call so she would finally
stop stalking me and was surprised to see that he was back at his
desk, busily blast-emailing us his daily inspirational bullshit.
Good morning, folks. Let's remember to show our clients our
high energy levels! Our relationships with these good folks comprise
our whole business—they appreciate our patience and consideration
as much as our results-oriented portfolio handling. I'm
pleased to announce a new weekly group meeting, one that I
hope will allow us all to brainstorm ways we may better serve
our clients. It will be held each Friday at 7 a.m. and will provide
us with an opportunity to think outside the box. Breakfast is on
me, folks, so bring yourselves and your thinking caps and remember,
"Great discoveries and improvements invariably involve
the cooperation of many minds."—Alexander Graham Bell.
I stared at the email so long my eyes began to glaze over. Were
his insistence on using the word
folks
and his constant references
to "thinking outside the box" more or less annoying than his inclusion
of the phrase
thinking caps?
Did he craft and send these
emails just to add to the all-pervasive misery and hopelessness of
my days? I pondered this for a few moments, desperate to think
about anything other than the seven A.M. meeting announcement. I
managed to move beyond it long enough to field another frantic
call, this time from Mrs. Kaufman's nephew, that lasted a record
fifty-seven minutes, ninety percent of which he spent accusing me
of things that were entirely beyond my control while I said nothing
or, occasionally, just to switch things up, agreed with him that I
was, in fact, as dumb and useless as he claimed.
I hung up and resumed staring listlessly at the email. I wasn't
exactly sure how Mr. Bell's quote applied to my life or why I
should care, but I did know if I planned to escape for lunch, now
was my only chance. I'd abided by the no-leaving-for-lunch policy
my first few years at UBS Warburg and dutifully ordered in each
day, but lately Penelope and I had brazenly begun sneaking out
for ten, twelve minutes a day to retrieve our own takeout and cram
in as much whining and gossip as possible. An IM popped up on
my screen.
P.Lo:
Ready? Let's do falafel. Meet at the 52nd Street cart in five?
I punched in the letter Y, hit Send, and draped my suit jacket
over the back of my chair to indicate my presence. One of the
managers glanced at me when I picked up my purse, so I filled my
mug with steaming coffee as additional proof that I hadn't left the
premises and placed it in the middle of my desk. I mumbled something
about the bathroom to my fellow cubicle dwellers, who were
too busy transferring their own facial grime to their telephones to
even notice, and walked confidently toward the hallway. Penelope
worked in the real-estate division two floors above me and was already
in the elevator, but like two well-trained CIA operatives, we
didn't so much as glance at each other. She let me exit first and circle
the lobby for a minute while she ducked outside and casually
strolled past the fountain. I followed as best I could in my ugly,
uncomfortable heels, the humidity hitting my face like a wall. We
didn't speak until we'd blended into the line of midtown office
drones who stood both quietly and restlessly, wanting to savor
their few precious minutes of daily freedom but instinctively getting
pissy and frustrated at having to wait for anything.
"What are you having?" Penelope asked, her eyes scanning the
three different carts of sizzling and highly aromatic ethnic food that
men in varying costumes and facial hair were steaming, slicing,
sauteing, skewering, frying, and heaving toward the hungry suits.
"It's all some sort of meat on a stick or dough-filled something,"
I said tonelessly, surveying the smoky meats. "Does it
matter?"
"Someone's in a great mood today."
"Oh, I'm sorry, I forgot, I should be thrilled that five years of
slave labor have turned out so well. I mean, look at us, how glam-
orous is this?" I waved my arms expansively in front of us. "It's sad
enough we don't get to go out to lunch at some point in the middle
of a sixteen-hour workday, but it's fucking
pathetic
that we
aren't even permitted to pick out our food ourselves."