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You were corrupting hot Mormon chicks. I was student body treasurer Top that.
From: Richard Margo Sent: July 27, 10:19 am.
To: Claudia Parr Subject: Re: Nope
Well, I was the school mascot and who said she was hot?
From: Claudia Parr Sent: July 27, 10:25 a.m.
To: Richard Margo Subject: Yeah, right
Something tells me that she was hot.
From: Richard Margo Sent: July 27, 10:26 a.m.
To: Claudia Parr Subject: I was a stud
Okay. I wasn't really the school mascot. And she actually was pretty hot A dead ringer for Marcia Brady. Which, at the time, was a big deal. Have I impressed you yet?
From: Claudia Parr Sent: July 27, 10:44 a.m.
To: Richard Margo Subject: Re: I was a stud
Man, you are ancient. Yes, I'm impressed My boyfriend was more like Screech on Saved by the Bell
From: Richard Margo Sent: July 27, 10:49 a.m.
To: Claudia Parr Subject: Still a stud
I know the show, but you lost me on Screech? I was a big X-Files fan, though. Wasn't that during your high school days?
From: Claudia Parr Sent: July 27, I 1:01 a.m.
To: Richard Margo Subject: Re: Still a stud
Don't tell meyou had a crush on Scully, right?
From: Richard Margo Sent: July 27, I 1:09 a.m.
To: Claudia Parr Subject: Re: Still a stud
Ah, Scully.Yes, I did have a crush on her You actually sort of look like her: All you need is a navy suit and one of those FBI badges pinned on you and you'd be set to go. Can you spout off medical jargon on cue? If so, I might fall in love with you.
From: Claudia Parr Sent: July 27, I 1:22 a.m.
To: Richard Margo Subject: This do the trick?
White male, 38. Stress lesions along the superior vena cava, anterior left lung and bronchi Code Blue! He's bradying down! We need a pericardiocentesis stat!
Are you in love with me yet?
From: Richard Margo Sent: July 27, I 1:23 a.m.
To: Claudia Parr Subject: Sure did
Totally am. Want to have dinner Sat.u.r.day night?
On Sat.u.r.day Daphne comes into the city to go shopping with Jess and me. Our mission: date wear to impress Richard. Jess guarantees that a new outfit will give me all the confidence I need to make the evening a success. I hope she's right, because ever since I agreed to the date, I've been feeling more nervous than excited. I'm nervous about dating again generally, and I'm nervous about dating someone from work. Compounding my anxiety is the fact that Richard and I have not talked face-to-face since our lunch at Bolo. We haven't even spoken on the phone. I recognize that e-mail allows you to be much bolder than you truly feel inside. Part of me worries that it's the cybers.p.a.ce equivalent of having s.e.x too quickly and then having to face your guy the next morning, sober and without makeup. Richard and I have said an awful lot of flirtatious things over the computer, but sitting across the table from him is a different matter altogether, and antic.i.p.ating the first moment in the restaurant makes me nothing short of queasy.
So Jess, Daphne, and I start out bright and early on our shopping spree. We hit Intermix on lower Fifth first as it is only a few blocks from Jess's apartment. The dance music blaring through the store is a pretty good indication that the clothes are too trendy for me. I don't do clubs anymore, and I'm over having to yell to be heard at a bar, so certainly the same applies when I'm shopping.
I shout this sentiment to Jess, but she holds up her hand to signal that she's not ready to leave. I watch her whip expertly through a rack of clothing, finding a funky pair of white pants, a paisley silk halter, and a fuchsia shrug. They are items that I would never pick up on my own, as an ensemble or even individually, but Jess has an amazing sense of style. She also has a knack for pairing garments you would never imagine going together to create a completely original look. Of course, having gobs of money helps in that department. She can afford a lot, but she can also afford the inevitable mistakes all women make when shopping. Who doesn't know the phenomenon of loving something in a dressing room and hating it at home? If I buy something I don't end up wearing, I berate myself for months, but at any given moment, Jess has a dozen designer rejects still hanging in her closet, worn once, if at all. The great tragedy of our friends.h.i.+p, at least from my perspective, is the fact that we don't wear the same size. I would especially kill to make my feet grow one inch and fit into Jess's rainbow of Jimmy Choos.
Still, despite trusting Jess in matters of fas.h.i.+on, I am skeptical of her selections now. "That's so not me," I say, pointing to the halter she is holding up against my torso. I glance at the white pants in her other hand. "And there's no time to get those hemmed." Pants off the rack never work when you're only five four.
"Daphne can do a makes.h.i.+ft job. Right, Daph?" Jess asks.
Daphne nods eagerly. She is a whiz on the domestic front. She knows how to do little things, like fold egg whites, get red wine stains out of garments, or arrange flowers. I don't know where she picked most of the stuff up. It certainly wasn't from our mother, who has trouble lining up the seams of pants on a hanger. Not that I can talk. Hanging pants was one of the things Ben always did for me. Before I lived with him, most of my wardrobe could be found draped over the backs of various chairs. Which is exactly where they've returned.
"Just try them." Jess points to the dressing room again, with authority. I obey her instruction, thinking to myself that when she does have kids, she'll be the rare mother who gives teeth to the concept of time-out.
"A total waste of time," I mumble, but it's doubtful that she can hear me over the pulsing remix of George Michael's "I Want Your s.e.x." I am reminded of the time Jess went out with colleagues for a little karaoke and picked this tune. Talk about bold, taking the stage to a song that, as a grand finale, has you screaming the words Have s.e.x with me ! over and over again to a room full of drunken bankers. Par for the course for Jess.
A moment later, I emerge from the dressing room, thinking for sure that I've proven my point. The pants look and feel baggy, which is shocking because they're a size six, and I'm usually an eight. Then again, I know I've lost some weight since my divorce, at least ten pounds, maybe more. I was just telling Jess last night that there are two kinds of women, those who eat in a crisis and those who lose their appet.i.te in a crisis. Most fall into the chowhound crowd, so I consider myself blessed to be in the second camp.
"Those are incredible," Jess says. "Whether you wear them tonight or not, they're a definite yes."
"Aren't they too big?" I ask, tugging at the waist and checking my reflection in the mirror.
Jess slaps away my hand and explains that they're supposed to hang low, on my hips. "Besides, you can't go tight with white pants. You'll look ghetto. Tight black pants are one thing, but tight white pants are so Britney Spears," Jess says to push Daphne's b.u.t.tons.
It's sort of a contradiction to her traditional, homemaker side, but Daphne is one of those full-grown women who loves all things cheesy and adolescent. She has the complete DVD box set of Dawson's Creek . She still keeps stuffed animals on the window seat in her bedroom. She also orders those glittery tank tops from the back of Us Weekly that say things like DIVA IN TRAINING. So obviously, Daphne's a Britney fan. At one point, Daphne went so far as to see her teen idol perform out on Rockefeller Plaza on The Today Show . She was one of the only women in her late twenties, rocking out without a preteen in her company. The funny thing was, a couple of kids in her fifth-grade cla.s.s spotted her on television the morning before school and seemed to be profoundly impacted by the sight of their teacher singing along to "Hit Me Baby One More Time." I told Daphne it would be like watching your teacher dance on Soul Train or Solid Gold . Impressive, but a little bit unsettling. Teachers, after all, were supposed to freeze in their cla.s.srooms at night while we went home and had a life.
Anyway, Daphne and Jess agree that my white pants are fabulous, and Daphne insists that she can hem them, no problem. They agree that the silk halter is flattering, too. It displays what little cleavage I have and is tight in just the right places (which adheres to another of Jess's fas.h.i.+on rulesif the pants are loose, the top should be tightor vice versa). And the fuchsia shrug is the perfect finis.h.i.+ng touch.
"In case the restaurant is chilly," Jess says.
"Or in case Richard keeps the air low in his apartment" Daphne says, giggling as I spin in front of the mirror on my tiptoes. I have to admit that I do look pretty good. Above all, the thought of being finished with our spree holds tremendous appeal. I really hate shopping. If I won the lottery, one of the first things I'd do is hire a personal shopper for groceries, clothing, Christmas presents, everything. So I change quickly, hurry over to the cash register and toss down my Amex, purchasing the ensemble guaranteed to give me confidence and make Richard swoon.
That night, I can tell straightaway that Jess and Daphne were right about the outfit. For starters, I fit right in with the crowd at Spice Market, the lavish duplex restaurant in the Meatpacking District. More important, Richard comes right out and tells me that I look fantastic.
"I've never seen you in anything like that," Richard says as we follow the maitre d' to our table. His hand rests for a beat on the small of my back. "But I guess I've never seen you outside of a work function"
"You, either," I say, admiring Richard's corduroy jacket.
I'm suddenly reminded of Richard's flamboyantly gay ex-a.s.sistant Jared Lewison. Jared used to keep cards marked 1 through 10 at his desk and would rate people's outfits as they walked by (behind their backs, of course) as if he were a gymnastics judge at the Olympics. Michael, who was pretty good friends with Jared, derived much amus.e.m.e.nt from the exercise, pa.s.sing on the results to the rest of us. In fact, I owe Jared grat.i.tude for teaching me one of life's crucial lessons: do not wear patent leather after Labor Day. Michael informed me that I earned myself a 3 for that fas.h.i.+on lapse.
I ask Richard now if he knew about Jared Lewison's cards.
"Sure did," Richard says. "Apparently I was regularly rated between a two and a four With a high score of six."
"What were you wearing when you got the six?" I ask as our waitress, wearing an orange kimono, delivers us our menu.
"I think it was some kind of turtleneck sweater," he says, laughing.
I smile, recognizing that I'm no longer nervous.
Richard looks as if he's still considering Jared's cards as he says, "I heard that if you had on any sort of Louis Vuitton or Prada, Jared automatically gave you an extra point, while if you wore anything from the Gap, or G.o.d forbid, Old Navy, you were docked three points."
I laugh and then say, "Where is ol' Jared now?"
"I'm not sure. But something tells me he's sitting at a bar somewhere with his fas.h.i.+onista friends, all of them telling each other how fabulous they look."
I smirk as I recall another Jared story.
"What?" Richard says.
"Nothing," I say, as I spot a man who I am pretty sure is Chris Noth sidle up to the bar with a gorgeous blonde. He is way shorter than I thought he'd be, and I think to myself, Mr. Medium . "I'm just smiling."
"C'mon. What's so funny?" Richard says again, because it's clear that I'm smirking rather than merely smiling. There is a difference between a smirk and smilewhich is especially apparent to the recipient.