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)
"Yeah, right. She always knows what she's doing."
"I guess so. Maybe. But it really wasn't significant."
That explains why she thought Ethan was gay. Turning her
down it must be the only explanation. "Guess her fifth-grade
charms wore thin on you."
He laughs. "Yeah. We did go out once upon a time." He makes
little quotes in the air as he says "go out."
"See. You picked her over me too."
He flashes his dimple. "What the hell are you talking about now?"
"On the note. The check-the-box note."
"What?"
I sigh. "The note that she sent you. The 'Do you want to go out
with me or Rachel?' note."
"That's not what the note said. It didn't say anything about you.
Why would it say anything about you?"
"Because I liked you!" Somehow I am embarrassed admitting it,
even after all these years. "You knew that."
He shakes his head firmly. "Nope. Did not."
"You must have forgotten."
"I don't forget shit like that. I have a bomb-ass memory.
Your
name was not in the note. See. I'd know because I liked you back
then." He peers at me from behind his glasses and then lights
another cigarette.
"Bullshit." I feel myself blush. It's only Ethan, I tell myself. We are
adults now.
"Okay." He shrugs and inverts the cover of his matchbook. Now
he looks embarrassed too. "Don't believe me."
"You did?"
"Big time. I remember always helping you out in four square so
that you'd get to be king. I'd always pound the king when you were
in the queen position. Tell me you didn't notice that."
"I didn't notice that," I say.
"As it turns out, you're markedly less perceptive than I once
thought
Yeah, I liked you. I liked you all through junior high and high
school. And then you dated Beamer. Broke my heart."
This is big news, but I still can't get past the fact that my name
wasn't in that note. "I swear I thought Annalise saw it."
"Annalise is a sweet girl but such a lemming. Darcy probably told
her to say that your name was in the note. Or somehow tricked
her into thinking it. How is Annalise, anyway? Did she have her
kid yet?"
"No. But any minute now."
"Is she going to the wedding?"
"If she's not in labor," I say. "Everybody is but you."
"And you. Terrible thing about your spleen."
"Yeah. Tragic." I smile. "So you're sure my name really wasn't in
the note?"
I am focusing on evidence from twenty years ago. It is absurd, but
I ascribe all kinds of meaning to it.
"Positive," he says. "Pos-i-tive."
"Damn," I say. "What a bitch."
He laughs. "I had no clue that I was the man. Thought it was all
about Doug Jackson."
"You were not the man. It was all about Doug Jackson," I say.
"That's the point I was the only one who liked you. She copied
me." Again, I notice how juvenile I sound whenever I describe my
feelings about Darcy.
"Well, you didn't miss much. Going out with me consisted of
sharing a few Hostess cupcakes. Wasn't very exciting.
And I still
hooked you up in four square."
"So maybe Dex will hook me up the next time we all play four
square," I say. "That would be really" I can't think of the right
word. I can feel myself getting drunk.
"Nifty? Brilliant? Smashing?" Ethan offers.
I nod. "All of those. Yes."
"Feeling better?" he asks.
He is trying so hard. Between his efforts and the beer I feel
somewhat healed, at least temporarily. I consider that I am
thousands of miles away from Dex. Dexter who did have my
name as an option when he chose, instead, to check the box next
to Darcy's name. "Yes. A little better. Yes."
"Well, let's recap. We determined that I never picked Darcy over
you. And that she didn't get into Notre Dame."
"But she did get Dex."
"Forget him. He's not worth it," Ethan says, and then glances up
at the menu scrawled on a blackboard behind us. "Now.
Let's get
you some fish and chips."
We eat lunch fish, French fries, and mushy peas that remind me
of baby food. Comfort food. And we have a couple more pints.
Then I suggest that we go for a walk, see something England-y. So
he takes me into Kensington Gardens and shows me Kensington
Palace, where Princess Diana lived.
"See this gate? That's where they piled all the flowers and letters
when she died. Remember those photos?"
"Oh yeah. That was here?"
I was with Dex and Darcy when I found out that Diana had died.
We were at the Talkhouse and some guy walked up to us at the bar
and said, "Did you hear that Diana died in a car crash?"
And even
though he could only have been talking about one Diana, Darcy
and I both asked, Diana who? The guy said Princess Diana. Then
he told us that she died in a high-speed crash while the paparazzi
chased her through a tunnel in Paris. Darcy started bawling right
on the spot. But for once it wasn't the give-me-attention tears.
They were genuine. She was truly devastated. We both were.
Several days later we watched her funeral together, waking at four
a.m. to see all of the coverage, just as we had done with her
wedding to Prince Charles sixteen years earlier.
Ethan and I meander through Kensington Gardens in a drizzle,
without an umbrella. I don't mind getting wet. Don't care that my
hair will frizz. We pass the palace and circle a small, round pond.
"What's this pond called?"
"Round Pond," Ethan says. "Descriptive, huh?"
We walk past a bandstand and then over to the Albert Memorial, a
huge bronze statue of Prince Albert perched on a throne. "You
like?"
"It's pretty," I say.
"A grieving Queen Victoria had this thing built when Albert died
from typhoid fever."
"When?"
"Eighteen sixty- or seventy-something Nice, huh?"
"Yeah," I say.
"Apparently she and Al were pretty tight."
Queen Victoria must have been sadder than I am now, I suppose.
I then have a fleeting thought that I'd prefer losing Dex to illness
than to Darcy. So maybe it's not true love if I'd rather see him
die Okay, I wouldn't rather see him die.
The rain starts to come down harder. Other than a few Japanese
tourists who are snapping pictures on the steps of the memorial,
we are alone.
"You ready to head back?" Ethan points in the opposite direction.
"We can explore Hyde Park and the Serpentine another day."
"Sure, we can go back now," I say.
"Your spleen acting up in this weather?"
"Ethan! I have to go to the wedding."
"Just blow it off."
"I'm the maid of honor."
"Oh, right] I keep forgetting that," he says, wiping his glasses on
his sleeve.
As we walk back to his flat, Ethan chuckles to himself.
"What?"
"Darcy," he says, shaking his head.
"What about her?"
"I was just thinking about the time she wrote to Michael Jordan
and asked him to our prom."
I laugh. "She actually thought he was going to come!
Remember
how she was worried about how she would break the news to
Blaine?"
"And then Jordan wrote back to her. Or his people did, anyway.
That's the part that I found unreal. I never thought she'd get a
response." He laughs. No matter what he says, I know he has a
soft spot for her, in spite of himself. Just as I do.
"Yeah. Well, she did. She still has the letter."
"You've seen it?"
"Yeah. Don't you remember how she taped it up in our locker?"
"And yet," he says, "you never saw the letter from Notre Dame."
"Okay. Okay. You might be right. But where were you twelve years
ago with that insight?"
"As I said, I thought we were on the same page there.
The whole
thing was pretty transparent You know, for a smart woman you
can be pretty dim."
"Why, thank you."
He tips an imaginary hat. "Don't mention it."
We return to Ethan's flat, where I succumb to my jet lag. When I
wake up, Ethan offers me a cup of Earl Grey tea and a crumpet.
Lunch at a pub, a walk past Diana's old pad, an afternoon nap
where I don't dream once about Dex, and tea and crumpets with
my good friend. The trip is off to a good start. If anything can
really be good with a broken heart.
That evening we meet up with
Ethan's friends Martin and Phoebe, whom he met during his stint
writing for Time Out. I have heard much about both of them: I
know that Martin is very proper, went to Oxford, and comes from
a ton of money, and that Phoebe hails from East London, once got
fired for telling her boss to "piss off," and has slept with a lot of
men.
They are exactly as I imagined. Martin is well dressed and
attractive in an unsexy way. He sits with his legs crossed at the
knee, nods and frowns a lot, and makes a "hmm" sound whenever
anyone else speaks, showing rapt attention. Phoebe is Amazontall
with untamed, tomato-red hair. I can't decide whether her
orange lipstick clashes with her hair or complements it.
I also
can't decide whether she is very pretty or just plain weird-looking.
Her body is definitely not ideal, but she doesn't try to hide it. One
roll of her big white stomach shows between her shirt and jeans.
Nobody in Manhattan would expose her stomach unless it was as
hard as bedrock. Ethan told me once that British women are much
less obsessed with appearances and being thin than American
women. Phoebe is evidence of this, and it is refreshing.
All night
she talks about this bloke whom she wants to shag, and that bloke
whom she has already shagged. She makes all the statements
matter-of-factly, as you would tell someone that work has been
very busy or that you are tired of all of the rain. I like her candor,
but Martin rolls his eyes a lot and makes dry comments about her
being uncouth.
After Phoebe has carried on for a while about this guy Roger, who
"deserves to have kerosene poured on his balls," she turns to me
and asks, "So, Rachel, how do you find the men in New York? Are
they as bloody dreadful as English men?"
"Why, thank you, darling," Martin deadpans.
I smile at Martin and then turn back to Phoebe. "It depends
widely varies," I say. I have never thought in terms of
"American
men." They are all I know.
"Are you involved with anyone now?" she asks me, and then blows
smoke up toward the ceiling.
"Um. Not exactly. No. I'm unattached."
Ethan and I exchange a look. Phoebe is all over it.
"What? There is
a story here. I know there is."
Martin unfolds his arms, waves smoke out of his face, and waits.
Phoebe makes a hand motion, as if to say, come on, out with it.
"It's nothing," I say. "Not worth discussing, really."
"Tell them," Ethan says.
So now I have no choice in the matter because Ethan has
established that there is, indeed, something to tell.
I don't want to annoy everyone with a long session of
"it's
nothing," "tell," "really nothing," "c'mon, tell," and Phoebe does
not seem the type to tolerate that evasive charade. She is Hillarylike
in this regard Hillary is fond of saying, "Well then, why'd you
bring it up?" Only in this instance, Ethan brought it up.
In any
case I am stuck, so I say, "I've been seeing this guy all summer
who is getting married in less than two weeks. I thought he
might call the wedding off. But he didn't. So here I am.
Single
once again." I tell my story without emotion, a fact that makes me
proud. I am making progress.
Phoebe says, "Usually they wait until they're married to cheat.
This bloke has a head start, eh? What's his wife-to-be like? Do
you know her?"
"Yeah. You could say that."
"A real bitch, is she?" Phoebe asks solicitously.
Martin clears his throat and waves away her smoke again. "Maybe
Rachel doesn't wish to discuss it. Have we considered that?"
"No, we haven't" she says to him, and then to me, "Do you mind
discussing it?"
"No. I don't mind," I say. Which I think is the truth.
"So? The girl he's marrying how do you know her?"
"Well" I say. "We've known each other a long time."
Ethan cuts to the chase. "In a nutshell, Rachel is the maid of
honor." He pats me on the back and then rests his hand on my
shoulder in a congratulatory way. He is clearly pleased to have
offered his mates this nugget of transatlantic gossip.
Phoebe isn't fazed. I'm sure she's seen worse trouble.
"Bloody
mess," she says sympathetically.
"But it's over now," I say. "I made my feelings known.
I told him
to call the wedding off. And he picked her. So that's that." I try to
mask the fact that I am a rejected mess; I think I am doing a good
job of it.
"She's moving on marvelously," Ethan says.
"Yes. You don't look a bit ruffled,' Phoebe says. "Never would have
guessed.'
"Should she be crying in her Carling?" Martin asks Phoebe.
"I would be. Remember Oscar?"
Ethan groans, and Martin winces. Clearly they remember Oscar.