LATER THAT AFTERNOON, as I sat in my makeshift home office, I was pleased to find that I wasn’t actually completely devastated. No, I was only utterly morose, decidedly depressed, and entirely lonely—but at least I no longer wanted to drown myself. The whole situation was just so stupid! Ridiculous even! Colin and I were perfect together. I missed him and he missed me, and yet … we were determined to torture ourselves by staying apart. I thought about how comfortable I’d felt in our small Capitol Hill apartment, how secure and loved I’d been. And I wanted that again, I really did. But did I want it enough to compromise?

For the first time since the breakup, I pondered a different kind of future with Colin. If I went back to him, I would have to forsake the life I had always wanted. But, I could throw myself into my career. Maybe even start my own magazine? We could get a dog … and name it Shayla or Roman! It could sleep with us and I’d take it on walks and to the park and I’d love it so much that I’d kiss it on the lips! With no plans for a family, we’d have more disposable income. We could take luxurious vacations at dog-friendly resorts! Shayla and I could lie by the pool and get massages! I reached for the phone.

Wait a minute! Why was I the one making all the sacrifices? Giving up all my dreams? I didn’t even like dogs all that much, and here I was planning to go on vacation with one! If Colin missed me so much, why wasn’t he coming to me with his compromises? “Okay, Beth,” he should be saying, “I’ll let you have one baby and a commitment ceremony. That’s my final offer.”

I dropped the receiver back in its cradle. No … dogs, vacations, and magazines were not going to compensate for the life I knew I wanted. I couldn’t call Colin. I couldn’t settle. Breaking up with him had been the right decision. In my heart, I knew it.

Just because I knew it was right didn’t make it any easier. Over the next few days I drifted back into my moping phase, trying, in vain, to concoct some sort of review for the Fremont coffee shop I’d visited on that fateful day. My bag of knitting sat untouched, all inspiration to improve my craft gone the way of my optimism. On Thursday afternoon, as I stared at my still unfinished article for “Caffeine Culture,” the phone rang.

“Hi! It’s me,” Angie said brightly. “Are you excited about tonight?”

“Tonight?”

“Stitch ’n bitch club at Nicola’s place! Didn’t you get my email?”

“Oh, right. Yeah … uh, I’m a little under the weather. I’m not sure I’m going to make it.”

“You have to!” Angie whined. “If you miss a session now, you’ll be way behind.”

“My throat is a little scratchy. I think I should get to bed early.”

“What’s really going on, Beth? Did you talk to Colin?”

“No …” I told her about my encounter with Newlywed, Engaged, and Pregnant.

“Oh hon,” she said sympathetically, “don’t let those smug bitches get to you. In a couple of years they’ll be fat and their boobs will be at their knees.”

“Hopefully …”

“And you are coming tonight. Remember how much fun it was last week? I’ll grab a cab and pick you up at quarter to seven.”

At 6:45 I was standing in front of my building clutching a plastic shopping bag containing my knitting paraphernalia. I was also clutching a bottle of wine, which explained my presence on the sidewalk in the chill winter evening. Facing the cold was far preferable to facing Kendra’s judgmental stare and potential lecture on my downward spiral into alcoholism. At 6:50, a cab pulled up, sending a spray of filthy puddle water onto the sidewalk. When the deluge had abated, I jumped into the backseat next to Angie.

“I’m so glad you decided to come,” she said, as we headed toward Belltown.

“Me too,” I acceded. “I really enjoyed it last week.”

“I know!”Angie agreed. “I didn’t expect it to be so much fun. Well, I mean the knitting part isn’t really fun fun … But it’s such a great group of people.”

“It is.”

“I mean, when I got the idea for the stitch ’n bitch club, I just thought it would be a good way to keep me out of the bars!”

I looked at Angie, eyebrows raised in question. Hadn’t she told us that she’d devised this group because knitting was all the rage? Was there actually more to it? But my friend dismissed my look away with a laugh.

Nicola’s condo was in a newer and decidedly upscale building with spectacular views of Elliott Bay. Taking in the tasteful decor and expensive furnishings, I concluded that the PR business must be more lucrative than I’d realized. Nicola really seemed to have it all: fabulous apartment; handsome fiancé (a large, black-and-white photo displayed prominently on the mantle depicted the two of them snuggling on some rocky outpost); successful career … And yet, I didn’t begrudge her any of it. She was a sweet and friendly girl. Despite my upsetting run-in yesterday, I was definitely getting stronger.

When all the members had arrived and we had settled into the luxurious furnishings, Angie spoke. “I’m so glad everyone could come. And thank you, Nicola, for hosting tonight.”

“My pleasure,” Nicola replied. “Please, help yourself to anything you need. There are lots of snacks and wine.”

“I didn’t invite Mary, our coach, tonight,” Angie continued. “I thought we could practise what we learned last week. We can always call her back if we need her.”

“Sounds perfect,” Martin said, extracting his materials. We all gasped to see that he had knitted a swatch about the size of a baby’s blanket. “I haven’t smoked all week,” he explained.

“You are so impressive,” Angie cooed. Obviously, she still didn’t get it.

There was a lull in the conversation as the rest of us removed our yarn and needles and set to work. I opened my instruction book and painstakingly began casting more blue-green stitches on to my needle. Sophie and Nicola continued on their projects from last week, while Angie filled wineglasses and nibbled on the pâté and crackers our host had provided.

Sophie broke the silence. “I hope it’s not too soon to dive into the ‘bitch’ part of this stitch ’n bitch club, but I really need to vent.”

“Of course not!” we all chorused. I, for one, was secretly pleased that someone had broken the ice. I could certainly do with some venting.

“It’s my husband,” Sophie continued.

“What about Rob?” Angie asked.

“Well …” she hesitated, concentrating on her pale blue stitches. “I don’t know how to say this without sounding … Like, I don’t want you all to think I’m a nagging bitch but … It’s just that … well …”

“Spill it!” Martin barked, his voice shrill with feigned frustration.

“Okay,okay,”Sophie said with a laugh. “He’s just so selfish … incredibly fucking selfish.”

Angie asked gently, “What happened, hon?”

“I told him on Monday that I was coming here tonight. He promised he’d be home to look after the baby, but at five o’clock, he phoned me and said he was going out for drinks after work.”

“That’s really inconsiderate,” Nicola agreed.

“This is the only social life I have,” Sophie continued. “And yet, he couldn’t manage to come home early one night a week! I’d like to see how he managed if he had to stay home with the baby full time. He’d probably kill himself.”

“Men,” I muttered, attempting a knit stitch. “Oh … No offence, Martin.”

“None taken.”

“You have man trouble, too?” Sophie asked me.

“Not any more, she doesn’t,” Angie offered helpfully, taking a large drink of Shiraz.

“I broke up with someone recently,” I said, putting down my knitting to take a sip of wine. My fellow stitch ’n bitchers were all looking at me supportively, encouraging me to elaborate. But could I talk about what happened with these virtual strangers? Could I tell them about my breakup without bursting into incoherent sobs?

Angie prompted. “She was living with the ultimate commitment-phobe.”

“Oh no!” Nicola cried, like she’d just heard that Colin had been beating me. Gee, if I was going to get that kind of support, maybe I could open up?

“Well … we were together for four years …” I began hesitantly. But once I started to speak, the words gushed from me in a torrent. My knitting sat in my lap, forgotten, as I spilled every last detail of my failed relationship. I told them how we’d met at a party because we were the only two drunk enough to dance to MC Hammer. I told them that we liked the same music and TV shows and would chop our own thumbs off for Butter Chicken from Chutney’s. I told them how I was a Scorpio and he was a Virgo, so he calmed and grounded me while I brought out his passionate side. And I told them how I’d named my children in ninth grade and shared that tale with Colin, who had said something like, “cute” or “sweet”: definitely not “I hate kids and never want any.” I told them about those horrible birthday earrings that I still kept on my dresser because Colin had refused to take them back and they were too expensive to throw away. And finally, I told them about my run-in with Pregnant, Newlywed, and Engaged, and the ensuing blow to my self-esteem.

“Oh god,” Sophie said, when I finally finished, “you poor thing.”

Nicola asked, “How long ago did you break up?”

“Two, well, almost three months ago now.”

“I had no idea you’d gone through such an ordeal.” This came from Martin.

“Well,” Angie said, leaning over to top up my glass, “if Colin can’t see what a catch you are, then it’s his loss.”

“Definitely,” Martin said, with a wink. It was such a shame he wasn’t straight.

“Men!” Sophie cried. “Can’t live with ’em, can’t live without ’em.” She held her glass up in a toast.

“Hear! Hear!” Angie said, raising her wine.

Nicola joined in, a little grudgingly, and even Martin shrugged and held his drink up.

“What about you, Nic?” Sophie asked. “How are things going with Dr. Perfect?”

“Oh, well …” Nicola replied demurely. “Neil and I are really happy. I’m just so busy planning the wedding and his job is very demanding …”

Sophie explained. “Neil is an anaesthesiologist.”

“It’s been hard to find time to be together, but once we’re married it will be wonderful.”

“Right,” Sophie said with a roll of her eyes. “That’s when the fighting starts.”

“Oh, Neil and I never fight,” Nicola said, taking a tiny ladylike sip of her white wine.

“You haven’t lived together yet,” Sophie said, sounding just a little jaded.

Angie gasped. “You don’t live together?”

Martin joined in. “And you’re going to marry him?”

While I was a firm believer in “try before you buy,” I thought Angie’s and Martin’s obvious shock and disapproval were a little rude. But Nicola was unfazed. She concentrated on her meticulous knit stitches as she explained, “Neil and I both decided to wait. Our parents didn’t live together before they got married and they’re still happy some thirty years later. It’s something we really believe in.”

“Uh … but you have had sex, right?” Angie asked.

“Well …” Nicola looked shyly down at the burgundy rectangle on her lap. “Technically no, but we still feel that we’ve made love. We both want our wedding night to be special … to really mean something …”

Angie looked like her eyeballs might pop out of her head but she remained mute, as did we all. Okay, maybe Nicola was a bit of a prude—but a cute and sweet prude … like that Elisabeth Hasselbeck on The View.

“What about you, Martin?” Sophie asked. “Any relationship dramas?”

Martin, whose purple baby blanket was fast resembling a full-on bedspread, replied, “I’ve given up.”

“No!” Nicola cried.

“I haven’t had very good luck in the past. I guess I just haven’t met the right person.”

“You will,” Nicola said kindly.

“I don’t know,” said Sophie, whom I was quickly realizing was a tad cynical. “I think Angie’s got the right idea. Keep your relationships purely recreational and you can’t get hurt.”

For the first time since we arrived, Angie picked up the pink yarn and needles nestled beside her on the sofa. “So … I guess I should get to work here,” she said, nervously.

“What’s going on with you?” I asked, instantly alerted to her change in demeanour.

“Nothing!” she cried, but when she looked up, her cheeks were pink and her eyes glowing.

“Oh my god!” I shrieked. “You’re in love!”

“I’m not in love,” Angie corrected me. “I’m in like.”

Sophie addressed Nicola and Martin. “You don’t know what a big deal this is. Angie never likes anyone!”

“Not for more than a night or two,” I added.

“Shut up, Beth!” Angie slapped at me playfully. “You make me sound like such a slut!”

“Well …”

She threw a cracker at me.

“Now, now …” Nicola scurried to retrieve the offending snack off her cream-coloured throw rug.

But it was true—not that Angie was such a slut, but she was definitely a bit of a Samantha. Ever since her high school sweetheart knocked her up, talked her into having an abortion, then dumped her and invited her stepsister to the prom, Angie had vowed to steer clear of emotional entanglements. While she had an active social life, she rarely let things get beyond a third date.

“Okay, fill us in,” Martin said. I noticed that he could already knit without looking at what he was doing. He had some kind of gift.

“His name is Thaddeus,” Angie said, suddenly beaming.

“Thaddeus?” I said.

“He goes by Thad. He’s an assistant director. He lives in LA. but I met him while he was shooting an M.O.W. up here.”

“M.O.W.?” Sophie asked.

“Movie of the week,” Angie clarified. “Anyway, we met at this function and he just totally swept me off my feet. I mean, I’ve never meant anyone like him before. I’ve never felt so … smitten. Oh god, does that sound corny? It sounds corny, doesn’t it?” She giggled.

“A bit,” I mumbled. But thankfully no one heard me since Sophie and Nicola were loudly chorusing, “Not at all!”

“It sounds wonderful!” Nicola added.

“I’m so happy for you,” Sophie cried.

Martin sighed. “Ah, young love.”

Unfortunately, I was feeling far less congratulatory. The news of Angie’s new love had left me feeling a little cold. Not that my friend didn’t deserve to find someone special after so many years of ecstasy-fuelled three-ways and orgies—or whatever went on at those trendy nightclubs she frequented. Obviously, that lifestyle couldn’t go on indefinitely. It was just that I always thought I could count on Angie to be my one single girlfriend. My list of unattached pals was dwindling rapidly, now down to gay Martin and Mel, who was in love with her dog.

“I mean, it’s only been a few weeks …” Angie was saying, her pink knitting returned to the sofa beside her. “But he’s had such a huge impact on my life already. He makes me …” She paused, seeming almost overcome. “He makes me want to be a better person.”

“Oh my gosh,” Nicola said, obviously touched. In fact, she looked like she might cry.

Angie smiled. “It’s the way he lives his life … He’s an inspiration, really.”

“An inspiration?” I snorted. I hated to let any bitchiness seep into the discourse, but come on! The guy lived in LA and worked in the movie business!

“He’s not about ego and selfishness,” Angie explained. “He’s all about positive thinking, positive energy … You know, putting good vibes out into the world.”

Martin laughed. “What is he—a Buddhist?”

“No …” Angie said, picking up her yarn and needles. And then she added casually, “He’s a kabbalist.”

“Oh my god!” Sophie blurted out. “That’s like a cult isn’t it?”

“It can’t be that bad,” Nicola countered. “Madonna’s in it.”

Angie laughed, patiently. “It’s not a cult. It’s not even a religion, in fact. It’s a spiritual power, a way of being in the world.”

Uh-oh … Someone had drunk the Kool-Aid. “What about you?” I asked fearfully. “Are you a kabbalist?” That would be just perfect. Not only was Angie no longer single, but now she would probably drop me to hang out with Demi and Ashton.

“No …” She waved me away. “I’m not. But I do want to respect the way Thad lives his life. I’m going to try to live more purely and honestly. I’m not going out to nightclubs as much, I’m being kinder in the way I deal with people, I’m learning to knit … I really just want to turn the light on, in my own world.” She reached for her glass of wine.

After Angie’s confession, our conversation was a little stilted as we focused on our projects. Even as I attempted to purl, I was wrapped up in my own thoughts. I couldn’t let go of the fact that my eternally single friend, the one I could always count on to take me out for martinis and then dancing until the wee hours, would now be spending most of her time visiting Thad in LA, and praying or chanting or whatever kabbalists did. One thing was for sure—the new pure and honest Angie wasn’t going to be nearly as much fun as the old one. My fellow knitters seemed equally absorbed in their own thoughts, each of us concentrating on our knitting as the discourse slowed to a trickle. Finally, at nine o’clock, I yawned loudly.

Martin seemed to jump at the opportunity to call it a night. “I’m beat, too,” he said, stuffing his tarp-sized knitting into his bag.

“Are we on for next week?” Angie asked.

“Sure,” everyone said, but with markedly less enthusiasm than after our previous get-together.

“We can meet at my place,” Sophie offered, “on top of Queen Anne Hill.”

“Great!” I said, hurriedly gathering my accoutrements. “See you all then.” And somewhat thankfully, we dispersed.