Read Something Borrowed Online
Authors: Emily Giffin
Tags: #Romance, #Contemporary, #Fiction, #General, #Single Women, #Female Friendship, #Psychological, #Contemporary Women, #Triangles (Interpersonal Relations), #People & Places, #Juvenile Nonfiction, #Risk-Taking (Psychology)
after school, the kind of woman (as of tomorrow, I am no longer
any part girl) who flosses every night and makes her bed every
morning.
Darcy returns with the shots but Dex refuses his, so Darcy insists
that I do two. Before I know it, the night starts to take on that
blurry quality, when you cross over from being buzzed to drunk,
losing track of time and the precise order of things.
Apparently
Darcy has reached that point even sooner because she is now
dancing on the bar. Spinning and gyrating in a little red halter
dress and three-inch heels.
"Stealing the show at your party," Hillary, my closest friend from
work, says to me under her breath. "She's shameless."
I laugh. "Yeah. Par for the course."
Darcy lets out a yelp, claps her hands over her head, and beckons
me with a come-hither expression that would appeal to any man
who has ever fancied girl-on-girl action. "Rachel!
Rachel! C'mere!"
Of course she knows that I will not join her. I have never danced
on a bar. I wouldn't know what to do up there besides fall. I shake
my head and smile, a polite refusal. We all wait for her next move,
which is to swivel her hips in perfect time to the music, bend over
slowly, and then whip her body upright again, her long hair
spilling every which way. The limber maneuver reminds me of her
perfect imitation of Tawny Kitaen in the Whitesnake video "Here I
Go Again," how she used to roll around doing splits on the hood of
her father's BMW, to the delight of the pubescent neighborhood
boys. I glance at Dex, who in these moments can never quite
decide whether to be amused or annoyed. To say that the man has
patience is an understatement. Dex and I have this in common.
"Happy birthday, Rachel!" Darcy yells. "Let's all raise a glass to
Rachel!"
Which everyone does. Without taking their eyes off her.
A minute later, Dex whisks her down from the bar, slings her over
his shoulder, and deposits her on the floor next to me in one fluid
motion. Clearly he has done this before. "All right," he announces.
"I'm taking our little party-planner home."
Darcy plucks her drink off the bar and stamps her foot.
"You're
not the boss of me, Dex! Is he, Rachel?" As she asserts her
independence, she stumbles and sloshes her martini all over Dex's
shoe.
Dex grimaces. "You're wasted, Darce. This isn't fun for anyone but
you."
"Okay. Okay. I'll go I'm feeling kind of sick anyway,"
she says,
looking queasy.
"Are you going to be okay?"
"I'll be fine. Don't you worry," she says, now playing the role of
brave little sick girl.
I thank her for my party, tell her that it was a total surprise which
is a lie, because I knew Darcy would capitalize on my thirtieth to
buy a new outfit, throw a big bash, and invite as many of her
friends as my own. Still, it was nice of her to have the party, and I
am glad that she did. She is the kind of friend who always makes
things feel special. She hugs me hard and says she'd do anything
for me, and what would she do without me, her maid of honor, the
sister she never had. She is gushing, as she always does when she
drinks too much.
Dex cuts her off. "Happy birthday, Rachel. We'll talk to you
tomorrow." He gives me a kiss on the cheek.
"Thanks, Dex," I say. "Good night."
I watch him usher her outside, holding her elbow after she nearly
trips on the curb. Oh, to have such a caretaker. To be able to drink
with reckless abandon and know that there will be someone to get
you home safely.
Sometime later Dex reappears in the bar. "Darcy lost her purse.
She thinks she left it here. It's small, silver," he says.
"Have you
seen it?"
"She lost her new Chanel bag?" I shake my head and laugh
because it is just like Darcy to lose things. Usually I keep track of
them for her, but I went off duty on my birthday. Still, I help Dex
search for the purse, finally spotting it under a bar stool.
As he turns to leave, Dex's friend Marcus, one of his groomsmen,
convinces him to stay. "C'mon, man. Hang out for a minute."
So Dex calls Darcy at home and she slurs her consent, tells him to
have fun without her. Although she is probably thinking that such
a thing is not possible.
Gradually my friends peel away, saying their final happy
birthdays. Dex and I outlast everyone, even Marcus.
We sit at the
bar making conversation with the actor/bartender who has an
"Amy" tattoo and zero interest in an aging lawyer. It is after two
when we decide that it's time to go. The night feels more like
midsummer than spring, and the warm air infuses me with
sudden hope: This will be the summer I meet my guy.
Dex hails me a cab, but as it pulls over he says, "How about one
more bar? One more drink?"
"Fine," I say. "Why not?"
We both get in and he tells the cabbie to just drive, that he has to
think about where next. We end up in Alphabet City at a bar on
Seventh and Avenue B, aptly named 7B.
It is not an upbeat scene 7B is dingy and smoke-filled. I like it
anyway it's not sleek and it's not a dive striving to be cool because
it's not sleek.
Dex points to a booth. "Have a seat. I'll be right with you." Then
he turns around. "What can I get you?"
I tell him whatever he's having, and sit and wait for him in the
booth. I watch him say something to a girl at the bar wearing
army-green cargo pants and a tank top that says "Fallen Angel."
She smiles and shakes her head. "Omaha" is playing in the
background. It is one of those songs that seems melancholy and
cheerful at the same time.
A moment later Dex slides in across from me, pushing a beer my
way. "Newcastle," he says. Then he smiles, crinkly lines appearing
around his eyes. "You like?"
I nod and smile.
From the corner of my eye, I see Fallen Angel turn on her bar
stool and survey Dex, absorbing his chiseled features, wavy hair,
full lips. Darcy complained once that Dex garners more stares and
double takes than she does. Yet, unlike his female counterpart,
Dex seems not to notice the attention. Fallen Angel now casts her
eyes my way, likely wondering what Dex is doing with someone so
average. I hope that she thinks we're a couple. Tonight nobody has
to know that I am only a member of the wedding party.
Dex and I talk about our jobs and our Hamptons share that begins
in another week and a lot of things. But Darcy does not come up
and neither does their September wedding.
After we finish our beers we move over to the jukebox, fill it with
dollar bills, searching for good songs. I push the code for
"Thunder Road" twice because it is my favorite song. I tell him
this.
"Yeah. Springsteen's at the top of my list, too. Ever seen him in
concert?"
"Yeah," I say. "Twice. Born in the U.S.A. and Tunnel of Love. "
I almost tell him that I went with Darcy in high school, dragged
her along even though she much preferred groups like Poison and
Bon Jovi. But I don't bring this up. Because then he will
remember to go home to her and I don't want to be alone in my
dwindling moments of twenty somethingness.
Obviously I'd
rather be with a boyfriend, but Dex is better than nothing.
It is last call at 7B. We get a couple more beers and return to our
booth. Sometime later we are in a cab again, going north on First
Avenue. "Two stops," Dex tells our cabbie, because we live on
opposite sides of Central Park. Dex is holding Darcy's Chanel
purse, which looks small and out of place in his large hands. I
glance at the silver dial of his Rolex, a gift from Darcy.
It is just
shy of four o'clock.
We sit silently for a stretch of ten or fifteen blocks, both of us
looking out of our respective side windows, until the cab hits a
pothole and I find myself lurched into the middle of the backseat,
my leg grazing his. Then suddenly, out of nowhere, Dex is kissing
me. Or maybe I kiss him. Somehow we are kissing. My mind goes
blank as I listen to the soft sound of our lips meeting again and
again. At some point, Dex taps on the Plexiglas partition and tells
the driver, between kisses, that it will just be one stop after all.
We arrive on the corner of Seventy-third and Third, near my
apartment. Dex hands the driver a twenty and does not wait for
change. We spill out of the taxi, kissing more on the sidewalk and
then in front of Jose, my doorman. We kiss the whole way up in
the elevator. I am pressed against the elevator wall, my hands on
the back of his head. I am surprised by how soft his hair is.
I fumble with my key, turning it the wrong way in the lock as Dex
keeps his arms around my waist, his lips on my neck and the side
of my face. Finally the door is open, and we are kissing in the
middle of my studio, standing upright, leaning on nothing but
each other. We stumble over to my made bed, complete with tight
hospital corners.
"Are you drunk?" His voice is a whisper in the dark.
"No," I say. Because you always say no when you're drunk. And
even though I am, I have a lucid instant where I consider clearly
what was missing in my twenties and what I wish to find in my
thirties. It strikes me that, in a sense, I can have both on this
momentous birthday night. Dex can be my secret, my last chance
for a dark twenty-something chapter, and he can also be a prelude
of sorts a promise of someone like him to come. Darcy is in my
mind, but she is being pushed to the back, overwhelmed by a force
stronger than our friendship and my own conscience.
Dex moves
over me. My eyes are closed, then open, then closed again.
And then, somehow, I am having sex with my best friend's fiance.
I wake up to my ringing phone, and for a second I am disoriented
in my own apartment. Then I hear Darcy's high-pitched voice on
my machine, urging me to pick up, pick up, please pick up. My
crime snaps into focus. I sit up too quickly, and my apartment
spins. Dexter's back is to me, sculpted and sparsely freckled. I jab
hard at it with one finger.
He rolls over and looks at me. "Oh, Christ! What time is it?"
My clock radio tells us it is seven-fifteen. I have been thirty for
two hours. Correction one hour; I was born in the central time
zone.
Dex gets out of bed quickly, gathering his clothes, which are
strewn along either side of my bed. The answering machine beeps
twice, cutting Darcy off. She calls back, rambling about how Dex
never came home. Again, my machine silences her in midsentence. She calls back a third time, wailing,
"Wake up and
call me! I need you!"
I start to get out of bed, then realize that I am naked. I sit back
down and cover myself with a pillow.
"Omigod. What do we do?" My voice is hoarse and shaking.
"Should I answer? Tell her you crashed here?"
"Hell, no! Don't pick up lemme think for a sec." He sits down,
wearing only boxers, and rubs his jaw, now covered by a shadow
of whiskers.
Sick, sobering dread washes over me. I start to cry.
Which never
helps anything.
"Look, Rachel, don't cry," Dex says. "Everything's going to be
okay."
He puts on his jeans and then his shirt, efficiently zipping and
tucking and buttoning as though it is an ordinary morning. Then
he checks the messages on his cell phone. "Shhhit.
Twelve missed
calls," he says matter-of-factly. Only his eyes show distress.
When he is dressed, he sits back on the edge of the bed and rests
his forehead in his hands. I can hear him breathing hard through
his nose. Air in and out. In and out. Then he looks over at me,
composed. "Okay. Here's what's going to happen.
Rachel, look at
me."
I obey his instructions, still clutching my pillow.
"This will be fine. Just listen," he says, as though talking to a client
in a conference room.
"I'm listening," I say.
"I'm going to tell her I stayed out until five or so and then got
breakfast with Marcus. We got it covered."
"What do I tell her?" I ask. Lying has never been my strong suit.
"Just tell her you left the party and went home Say you can't
remember for sure whether I was still there when you left, but you
think I was still there with Marcus. And be sure to say you
'think' don't be too definite. And that's all you know, okay?" He
points at my phone. "Call her back now I'll call Marcus as soon
as I leave here. Got it?"
I nod, my eyes filling with tears again as he stands.
"And calm down," he says, not meanly, but firmly.
Then he is at
the door, one hand on the knob, the other running through his
dark hair that is just long enough to be really sexy.
"What if she already talked to Marcus?" I ask, as Dex is halfway
out the door. Then, more to myself, "We are so screwed."
He turns around, looks at me through the doorway. For a second,