Authors: Olivia Goldsmith
Tags: #Dating (Social customs), #Fiction, #Seattle, #chick lit
“How could she say no when she likes him so much?” Laura responded, shrugging.
“You know, he told me he’d made a date with Ruth, that girl from REI. He’s probably seeing other women, too. And he hasn’t told me anything,” Tracie complained.
“What does it matter to you what he does? I think you are obsessed with him.”
“I’m not obsessed with him,” Tracie protested. “I just need to keep my information straight for my article.” She heard Stefan sniff. He was taking a very long time. He never took this long.
“That is so ridiculous. You can’t get me with that crap, Higgins,” Laura told her. “I think you’re in love with Jon.”
“Laura!” Tracie jerked her head to turn toward Laura and Stefan’s scissors narrowly missed her ear.
p. 308
“Stop it! Stop it! Stop it!” he cried. “This is about my head, not your heart.”
“
My
head,” Tracie corrected him. “And my heart has nothing to do with it. I love Phil. Jon is just my friend. He’s always been my friend.” Laura began to hum, as if listening to Tracie was a waste of time. “Come on. You know that, Laura,” Tracie protested. “I’m just trying to do a job, that’s all. I’m not obsessed with him.”
“That’s what you think,” Laura said. “We always deny we’re obsessed in the beginning.”
Stefan made a frightening noise somewhere between the hiss of a radiator and the rattle of a snake. He stomped over to Laura, and for a moment, Tracie thought he was going to hit her. Instead, he unfolded a piece of foil. “Ya. That is true,” he said. “You are finished.” Tracie wasn’t sure if he meant Laura was done with her streaking or that Tracie was in emotional trouble. Whatever, he returned and snipped again, this time at her bangs.
“Not too short,” she repeated. “And I’m
not
obsessed,” she told Laura.
“Yeah. And Marcus is a nice guy. Look, I live and breathe on Obsession Street. I own a place there. You just rent. And I got to tell you, Tracie, you
are
obsessed.”
“No. I’m . . . annoyed. I’m . . . regretful,” she protested. “The piece is really coming along, but Jon’s . . . changed. He’s not behaving like a good friend. He’s hurt Beth and he’s probably hurting other women. I just hate that.”
p. 309
“Maybe he needs someone to give him his comeuppance,” Laura said.
“Can you believe it?” Tracie asked Laura.
Laura shrugged. “You have tampered with the rules of the universe. Now prepare to meet the consequences of your karma,” she said in her most annoying Buddha tone.
Tracie moaned. “Oh God! I
have
to destroy this man’s confidence.”
“Yes,” Laura agreed. “Return balance to the universe.”
“Leave him alone. He is like cook in a candy store,” Stefan said.
“A cook?” Laura asked, but Tracie raised her brows in warning. Never correct a hairdresser with scissors in his hand was the basic belief in her universe.
“I have to have him taken down by a real man-killer,” Tracie said. “Have the hunter become the prey.”
“Too bad you don’t know a man-killer,” Laura said. “Except for me, of course, but now I have a job. Maybe Sharon Stone is available.”
“Laura, you’re a genius!” Tracie exclaimed.
“I know, but do you think these streaks are going to suit me?” Laura asked.
Stefan took one last snip at Tracie’s hair and spun the chair around. “Finished!” he said, pulling out a mirror.
“Oh my God!” Tracie moaned as she looked at her reflection. Her hair was
way
too short.
p. 310
Tracie lay on the sofa, her shorn head wrapped in a towel turban, while Phil and Laura, who were cleaning up the lunch dishes, bickered, as usual.
“Oh, come on,” Phil was saying. “Next you’ll be telling me there’s a special order for washing dishes.”
“There is,” Laura told him. “Don’t you know that?”
“I know when you’re pulling my chain,” Phil responded.
“I wouldn’t touch your chain with a dish brush,” Laura said, brandishing the dish brush and tossing her beautifully highlighted mane of hair. “But I can’t believe you don’t know the order in which you’re supposed to wash dishes.”
“Bullshit. There’s no order. You wash them when you run out of clean dishes, right, Baldy?”
Tracie murmured something from her fog of short-hair blues. But they didn’t need a response.
“It’s
not
arbitrary,” Laura was saying. “It’s based on what goes in your mouth first.”
“What are you talking about? Is this some kind of dirty joke?” Phil asked.
“Get your mind into the detergent, where it belongs,” Laura said with a scowl. “Mrs. Ogg always taught us that we have to begin with silverware, because we put silverware into
p. 311
our mouths. You wash them first, when the water is cleanest. Right, Tracie?” Tracie murmured again. “See. Then you put them aside and wash glasses, because you put glasses up to your lips.”
“You’re not fuckin’ with me!” Phil said, and his face had a look of amazement, as if she was revealing the secrets of getting published or how he could actually play his bass guitar. “I’m going to write a poem about this,” he announced. “Wouldn’t that be a great piece, ‘Chrome Dome’? Come play in the water with me,” Phil said.
Tracie rolled over and groaned. Laura just shook her head. “Just let her be, would you? Look, pay attention. Next come the plates, because they don’t get touched by your mouth.”
“Well, my plate does when you do the cooking, because I usually lick it.”
“Well, isn’t that cute?” Laura said in her toughest voice. “Like that’s going to get me to cook more often for you.” But she blushed a little. “Anyway, the last thing you wash are the pots and pans, which even you don’t lick.” She handed him the pad of steel wool.
Tracie wished they’d just disappear. She wanted Phil to go home and leave her to dwell in her own misery. At least Laura was trying to help out by keeping him busy. Tracie had been on the sofa for a few days. She’d even called in sick at work. She tried to work on her next article for Marcus, but all she could
p. 312
think about was getting Allison to take Jon down a peg. But just how could she get Allison to agree to a blind date?
“I might not lick pans, but my roommates do,” he said, and began scrubbing the pot without any protest.
“Aren’t you too old for roommates?” Laura asked.
“Look who’s talking,” he taunted. “Hey, Tracie, come out from under those blankets.” Tracie moaned as a response.
“Hey, I’m looking for a place,” Laura said.
“You are?” he asked. “You going back to that dipshit in Sacramento?”
“No,” she said as she peeled off her rubber gloves. She began to rub some cream over her hands, concentrating on the knuckles and cuticles.
“Why do you do that?” Phil asked.
“To keep my hands soft.”
He reached out and took her right hand. “Yeah,” he said. “They are soft.” He paused for a moment. Then he looked back at the pot and began to scrub harder, looking away from Laura. “So, you really trying to move out? You found a place and everything?”
“You know,” Laura told him, “I think Tracie might pay a little more attention to you if she could take you a bit more seriously. If you had your own place, and a real job and some kind of game plan.”
“I have a game plan,” Phil said, and scowled into the Farberware.
“And that would be living off the six dol
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lars a year you make from your writing?” Laura asked. “Or would it be living off the free beers you make at your gigs?”
“It would be none of your business,” Phil told her.
Laura shrugged. “Suit yourself,” she said. “But you know nobody’s adolescence lasts forever. Except Warren Beatty’s.”
“Who’s that?” Phil asked.
“It’s irrelevant. His job’s taken,” Laura told him. “Anyway, Seattle is full of jobs. All kinds of them. There’s no reason why you couldn’t find something you’d like to do that actually pays. It’s not like you do anything during the day except sleep and mooch.”
Phil put down the pot. “Well, fuck you, too,” he said. “And fuck the horse you rode in on.”
“Oh, leave Trigger out of this,” Laura said in a good-natured voice.
“I need the free time to create,” Phil said, sounding like a petulant child. “I need empty days to write.”
“Oh, come on. You might be able to get Tracie to buy that crap, but not me, buddy. My dad was a writer. You know what he did?”
Phil shook his head.
“He wrote. That’s what writers do.” She stopped a moment and then patted his arm in a sisterly way. “Look, I didn’t mean to hurt your feelings. It’s just that I think you’re not really happy.”
p. 314
“Who said you’re supposed to be happy?” Phil asked as he slipped into his jacket. “Who said life is about being happy?”
“Nobody in Encino,” Laura agreed. “But that’s why I got the hell out. And I don’t think it’s about being happy, but I don’t think it’s about being stuck, either. I think you
—I mean everyone
—just moves toward what they enjoy and away from what they don’t enjoy. That’s all that you can do. And I don’t think you enjoy sitting around all day and being fairly useless. Not to mention getting humiliated by rejections from pretentious magazines and imbeciles like Bob.” She shrugged her big shoulders. “I just think the scene’s gotten old for you. But hey, call me an optimist.”
For a heart-stopping moment, the room was very still. Tracie winced, expecting Phil’s screams to begin at any second. She heard him clear his throat. Then there was silence again. Maybe he’d hit Laura, or break something before he stormed out of the apartment. Instead, he cleared his throat again. “You know,” he said in a very gentle voice, “I’ve been starting to think the same thing.”
p. 315
Tracie sat in their usual spot at Java, The Hut, waiting impatiently for Jon. She fiddled with the tiny ends of her hair. She’d never had a cut this short. She
really
hated it, and hated Stefan, who’d cut it; Phil, who made fun of it; and Laura, who had just told her not to worry about it, that hair grew back. At least she could count on Jon for support. She looked at her wristwatch. She’d been here almost twenty minutes late, but he still hadn’t shown up. It was unlike him.
Molly strolled over, and Tracie winced in advance. This wouldn’t be pretty. “Bloody ’ell! You’ve joined a nunnery? I didn’t even know you were Catholic. Plus, you’re ’ere on time and ’e’s late. It’s the end of the world.”
“I’m not
always
late.”
Molly leaned against the chair. “Not if fifty-one weeks a year three years running doesn’t mean ‘always.’ ” Molly took out her order pad. “Shall we go through the usual pantheon until you settle for your scrambled eggs?” she asked. “Or are you just going to sit there pulling on the ends of your ’air as if that will ’elp them grow?”
Tracie dropped her hands to her lap. “Molly, underneath that nasty English exterior, you really don’t like me, do you?” Tracie asked.
p. 316
“No, actually, I don’t,” Molly agreed cheerfully.
Tracie was taken aback. She hadn’t actually expected to hear that Molly hated her. For a minute, she didn’t know what to say. “But why? I’ve never hurt you.”
“I guess I just don’t like fools,” Molly said. “I’m the daughter of one and an ex-wife of another. Call me oversensitive, but it’s given me an aversion to them.” She shrugged.
“I’m not a fool,” Tracie protested.
“Yeah, and I’m not a waitress.” Molly pointed to the plastic name tag pinned on her chest. “Read the card.” Then she pointed at Tracie. “Yours says ‘Tracie ’iggins
—part-time journalist, full-time fool’!”
“What did I do?” Tracie asked, and, for some reason, she thought of the dream she’d had where she was painting her cocker spaniel blue.
“What ’aven’t you done?” Molly asked angrily. “You date jerks. One useless git after another, and you don’t know enough to get over it.” Molly slid into the seat across from Tracie. “And, since you asked, mind you, if that isn’t enough, you’re turning the only nice guy in the great Northwest into a jerk.”
“Jon! He’s not a jerk. He’s just . . . a little more stylish,” Tracie said. “And he feels better about himself,” she added.
“At the expense of others?” Molly asked. “I know what’s going on. ’e brings them ’ere for coffee before going ’ome. It’s like my Moggy bringing ’is mousies to me before ’e fin
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ishes them off. Three different women last week! And ’e bragged to me ’e ’ad
two
dates on Saturday.” Molly leaned closer to Tracie. “You took a warm, sensitive guy, a guy who knows ’ow to listen to a woman, a guy who knows ’ow to please
—who actually
wants
to please
—and gave ’im all the tricks of the trade that the cold bastards use on us. ’e’s a full member of the Guild of Guys now. Do you know what you’ve done?”
Tracie stopped protesting, sat there a moment, and thought about it. “Something very, very, bad?” she asked tentatively. Molly stared at her, and everything the waitress had said came together in Tracie’s mind with her dream, Phil’s jealousy, and Laura’s warning. She’d need a little help and a little luck, but she thought she could undo the damage she’d done. “Molly, you’re right,” she said. The waitress nodded. Tracie swallowed her pride. “Will you help me stop him being a jerk?”
“ ’ow?” Molly demanded.
“Get me two tickets to Radiohead. You’ve got the connections.” Though Molly had stopped traveling with the rock-and-roll bands, they still called and visited when they were playing Seattle. She knew
—and had probably slept with
—every roadie, not to mention most rhythm guitarists in the business.
Molly made a face that showed she doubted Tracie’s motives. “What do I get out of it?”
“You get your nicest guy in the Northwest back.”
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“I’ll think on it,” Molly said, but Tracie could see by her expression she was sold.
“Thank you, Molly.”
“Mind you, I’m not sure I can do it. And don’t take ’im back all the way to where ’e was. I liked what you did when you just made ’im look better
—let’s face it, ’e needed a visit from the fashion police.” It was the first time Tracie could remember Molly approving of anything she’d done. “But don’t you see that changing ’ow ’e
acts
is altogether different from changing ’ow ’e
looks
?”