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)
he asked me all these questions, like were you seeing anyone and
did I think you would like Marcus. And you know, was he smart
enough for you. Stuff like that. It was really cute."
I digest this information as the store clerk rings up Darcy's
bikinis.
"So what did you tell him?"
"I just said that you were totally single, and that of course you'd be
into Marcus. He's such a sweetie. Don't you think?"
I shrug. Marcus moved to New York from San Francisco only a
few months ago. I know very little about him, except that he and
Dex became friends at Georgetown, where Marcus's claim to fame
was graduating dead last. Apparently Marcus never went to class
and got high all the time. The most infamous story is that he
overslept on the day of his statistics final exam, showed up twenty
minutes late only to discover that he had thrown his remote
control into his backpack instead of his calculator.
I haven't yet determined whether he is a free spirit or simply a
buffoon.
"So are you psyched? If you get a date in with him before our
share starts, you will have dibs on him over Claire and Hillary."
I laugh and shake my head.
"Seriously." Darcy signs her receipt and flashes a smile at the
clerk. "Claire would love to sink her nails in him."
"Who said I'm going on a date?"
"Oh, puh-lease. Don't even start with that shit. You're going. (A)
he is such a cutie. And (b) Rachel, no offense, but you can't exactly
afford to be all picky, Ms. Haven't Been Laid in what?
Over a
year?"
The store clerk looks up at me sympathetically. I glare at Darcy as
I slide my tankini across the counter. Yeah, right a year.
We leave Bloomingdale's and look for a cab on Third Avenue.
"So, you'll go out with Marcus?"
"I guess so."
"Promise?" she asks, getting her cell phone out of her purse.
"You want me to take a blood oath? Yes, I'll go," I say.
"Who are
you calling?"
"Dex. He bet me twenty bucks that you wouldn't go."
Darcy's right I have nothing else going on. But the real reason I
say yes to Marcus when he calls and asks me out is that Dex said I
wouldn't go. And just in case he thought he had cast some sort of
spell over me and I was going to turn Marcus down because I'm
preoccupied with the Incident, I will go out with Marcus.
But as soon as I say yes, I start obsessing about what Marcus
really knows. Did Dex tell him anything? I decide that I must call
Dexter and find out. I hang up three times before I can dial the
full number. My stomach is churning when he answers on the first
ring. "Dex Thaler."
"So what does Marcus know about what happened last Saturday?"
I blurt out, my heart racing.
"Well, hello to you too," he says.
I soften slightly. "Hi, Dex."
"Last Saturday? What was last Saturday? Refresh my memory."
"I'm being serious! What did you tell him?" I am horrified to find
myself talking in the girly, whiny way that Darcy has perfected.
"What do you think I told him?" he asks.
"Dexter, tell me!"
"Oh, relax," he says, his tone still one of amusement. "I didn't tell
him anything What do you think this is? A high school locker
room? Why would I tell anyone our business?"
Our business. Our. We. Us.
"I was just wondering what he knew. I mean, you told Darcy you
were with him that night"
"Yeah. I said, 'Marcus, I was with you last night and we had
breakfast together this morning all right?' And that was that. I
know that's not how it works with you girls women."
"What is that supposed to mean?"
"I mean you and Darcy share every exhaustive detail with one
another. Like what you ate that day and what brand of shampoo
you plan on purchasing."
"And like when you sleep with one another's fiances?
That sort of
detail?"
Dex laughs. "Yeah, that would be another example."
"Or like your bet that I'd say no to Marcus?"
He laughs again, knowing that he is busted. "She told you that, did
she?"
"Yeah. She told me that."
"And did it offend you?"
I realize that I am starting to relax, almost enjoying the conversation. "No but it made me say yes to Marcus."
"Oh!" he laughs. "I see how it works. So you're saying that had she
not shared that piece of information with you, you would have
turned my boy down?"
"Wouldn't you like to know?" I ask coyly, hardly recognizing
myself.
"I would actually. Please enlighten me."
"I'm not sure Why did you think I'd say no?"
"Wouldn't you like to know," he retorts.
I smile. This is full-fledged flirtatious banter.
"Okay. I thought you'd say no because Marcus doesn't seem to be
your type," he finally says.
"And who is?" I ask, and then feel instantly remorseful.
Flirting
like this is not the path to redemption. It is no way to right my
wrong. This is what my brain tells me, but my heart is galloping as
I await his answer.
"I don't know. I've been trying to figure that out for about seven
years."
I wonder what he means by this statement. I twist the cord
around my fingers and can think of nothing to say in response. We
should hang up now. This is going in a bad direction.
"Rach?" His voice is low and intimate.
I feel breathless, hearing him say my name like this.
The one
syllable is familiar, warm. "Yeah?"
"You still there?" he whispers.
I manage to say, "Yes, I'm still here."
"What are you thinking?"
"Nothing," I lie.
I have to lie. Because what I am thinking is, Maybe you are my
type a little bit more than I once thought.
Maybe I don't have a type at all. When I consider my past
relationships there is no composite picture. Not that the sample
would be considered statistically significant other than Brandon
in high school, I have had only three boyfriends.
My real dating history began my first semester of college at Duke.
I lived in a coed dorm, and every night we all gathered in the
lounge to study (or pretend to), hang out, and watch shows like
Beverly Hills, 90210 and Melrose Place. It was in that lounge that
I developed a serious crush on Hunter Bretz from Mississippi.
Hunter was scrawny and nerdy, but I was crazy about him. I loved
his intelligence, his slow, smooth drawl, and the way his brown
eyes fixed on you when you talked, as though he really cared about
what you had to say. My roommate Pam, a Jersey girl with big
hair, declared my feelings a "total fucking mystery" but still
encouraged me to ask Hunter out. I didn't, but I did work hard at
developing a friendship, cracking through his shy exterior to talk
to him about poetry and literature. I really believed that I was
making progress with Hunter when Joey Merola came in for the
kill.
Joey was the opposite of Hunter a boisterous sports guy with a
loud laugh. He played every intramural sport in the book and was
always strolling into the lounge all sweaty with a story about how
his team came from behind in the last second to win the game. He
was the kind of guy who was proud of how much he could eat and
the fact that he could get by in literature classes without ever
reading a book.
One Thursday night, Joey, Hunter, and I were the last three in the
lounge, talking about religion, the death penalty, and the meaning
of life, the stuff I had imagined discussing in college, away from
Darcy and her more shallow pursuits. Joey was an atheist and for
the death penalty. Like me, Hunter was Methodist and against the
death penalty. All three of us were unclear on the meaning of life.
We talked and talked, and I was determined to outlast Joey and
end up with Hunter. But sometime after two, Hunter threw in the
towel. "Awright y'all, I have an early class."
"C'mon, man. Skip it. I never make my eight o'clock,"
Joey said
proudly.
Hunter laughed. "I figure I'm payin' for it, I should go."
This was another thing I liked about Hunter. He was paying for
his own education, unlike most of the rich kids at Duke. So he said
good night, and I wistfully watched him amble out of the lounge.
Joey didn't miss a beat, just kept yapping, rehashing the fact that
we were both from Indiana just two towns apart and that both of
our fathers had attended Indiana (his dad had been a walk-on for
the basketball team). We played the name game and got two hits.
Joey knew Blaine, Darcy's ex-boyfriend, from reading the local
sports page. And we both knew of Tracy Purlington, a promiscuous girl from the town between ours.
Finally, when I said I really must get to bed, Joey followed me
upstairs and kissed me in the stairwell. I thought of Hunter, but I
still kissed Joey back, excited to be getting some real collegiate
experience. Annalise had already met her now-husband Greg (and
lost her virginity to him), and Darcy had hooked up with four guys
by my latest count.
The next morning I regretted kissing Joey. Even more so when I
spotted Hunter hunkered down in the library stacks, his head bent
over a textbook. But not enough to keep me from kissing Joey
again that weekend, this time in the laundry room as we waited
for our clothes to dry. And so it continued until everybody in our
dorm, including Hunter, knew that Joey and I were an item. Pam
was psyched for me said that Joey blew Hunter away and had the
cutest butt in the dorm. I wrote to Darcy and Annalise, telling
them about my new boyfriend and how I was over Hunter (only
partly true) and how happy I was (happy enough).
They both had
one question: was I going to go all the way with Joey?
I was ambivalent on the subject of sex. Part of me wanted to wait
until I was deeply in love, maybe even married. But I was also
intensely curious to find out what all the fuss was about, and
desperately wanted to be sophisticated and worldly. So after Joey
and I had been together a respectable six weeks, I marched over to
the school health clinic and returned to my dorm with a prescription for Lo/Ovral, the birth-control pill that Darcy
guaranteed would not cause weight gain. A month later, with the
added protection of a condom, Joey and I did the great deed. It
was his first time too. The earth didn't move during those two and
a half minutes, as Darcy claimed it did during her first time with
Carlos. But it also didn't hurt as much as Annalise had warned me
it would. I was relieved to have it out of the way and happy to join
my hometown friends in all their womanly glory. Joey and I
embraced in my bottom bunk and said that we loved each other.
Ours was a better first time than most.
But that spring, there were two red flags indicating that Joey
wasn't the man of my dreams. First, he joined a fraternity and
took the whole thing way too seriously. One night when I teased
him about the frat's secret handshake, he told me that if I
disrespected his brotherhood, I was disrespecting him.
Please.
Second, Joey became obsessed with Duke basketball, sleeping out
in tents for tickets to big games and painting his face blue,
jumping up and down courtside with the other
"Cameron
Crazies."
The whole scene was a bit much, but I guess I would have been
fine with his enthusiasm if he had been from New Hampshire or
another state with no huge basketball ties. But he was from
Indiana. Big Ten country. His father played for the Hoosiers, for
God's sake. And there he was, this sudden die-hard
"I've liked
Duke since the dawn of time and I'm all tight with Bobby Hurley
because he once drank at my frat house" kind of a fan.
But I
looked beyond these imperfections, and we forged ahead to
sophomore and then junior year.
Then one night, after Wake Forest beat Duke in hoops, Joey
showed up at my place in a foul mood. We began to argue about
nothing and everything. First it was petty matters: he said that I
snored and hogged the bed (how can you not hog a twin bed?); I
complained that he consistently mixed up our toothbrushes (who
makes that mistake?). The arguing escalated to more significant
issues. And there was no turning back when he called me a boring
intellectual and I called him a shameless bandwagoner who
actually believed that his painted blue face contributed to Duke's
championships. He told me to lighten up and get some school
pride, before storming off.
He returned the next day with a solemn face and his scripted "we
need to have a talk" introduction followed by the "we'll always be
close" conclusion. I was more stunned than sad, but I agreed that
maybe we should be having a more diverse college experience,
which really meant dating other people. We said we would always
be friends, even though I knew we didn't have enough in common
for that to happen.
I didn't shed a tear until I saw him at a party holding hands with
Betsy Wingate, who had also lived in our freshmen dorm. I didn't