Pretending you’re someone else takes full-scale concentration.
As I sit in my car outside the Elephant and Castle, preparing to go into Susan’s rehearsal dinner, I’m thinking I was too hard on the Grover Cleveland impersonator. He’d included some choice factoids in his e-mail: Apparently, Grover Cleveland was an unshakable man, acting on his own conscience despite party pressure. If only I could siphon his confidence and Grover Cleveland the shit out of this gig.
The rehearsal was one thing—I just had to follow instructions. Walk, stand, walk some more. This was followed by a second walk-through: lather, rinse, repeat. The most awkward part was that my equivalent on the groom’s side hadn’t arrived yet; I had to walk down the aisle with my elbow cocked, pretending to hold the arm of someone I hoped would be a dashing and gallant gentleman. Or at least smell decent.
But sitting down to dinner with a cavalcade of strangers? Quite another thing altogether.
A voice comes from the dashboard: “You have reached your destination.”
“Yeah, all right, cool your boots, Nigel,” I reply with my own attempt at a British accent.
I borrowed Lin’s GPS for the journey into D.C. Lin loves men with accents. But I can hear the judgment implicit in Nigel’s voice: You’re not getting paid to sit in your car.
Since Friday rush hour was over, I actually enjoyed the drive; the setting sun turned the Washington Monument amber as I drove into the city on I-66. A patchwork of pink and blue clouds formed a mini–impressionist painting in my rearview mirror.
I even managed to parallel-park my Corolla, also affectionately known as Beowulf: The Road Warrior. Beowulf, or Wulfie for short, has been making a funny noise the past few weeks—a sort of whinny that turns into a growl when I accelerate. I pat the dashboard and coo, “Good car. Nice Wulfie.” I need him to keep fighting until I can get the next measly paycheck from work, along with the several hundred dollars I’m going to make from this gig.
As I head into the restaurant, Susan spots me and ushers me into a back room where the families are already gathered—Wulfie moves at his own speed these days. To my great relief, Susan and her maid of honor, Lisa, sit on either side of me, buffering me from the inquiring smiles of relatives. Brandon, the groom, sits on Susan’s other side, his shoulder pressed against hers.
The conversation moves to the state of Susan’s parents’ custom suit-making and tailoring business. “Our latest client is the vice president,” I hear Susan’s mom say to one of Brandon’s family members, who makes an approving noise from the back of her throat. Both of Susan’s parents are dressed in suits. Her father has a folded handkerchief tucked into his pocket, emblazoned with a design of two interlocking wedding rings.
I sip my French onion soup and give Susan my most convincing smile, the kind of smile that might lead other rehearsal dinner attendees to believe I know secret friend things about her. Like her bra size or the time she made out with her hand and pretended it was Bobby McFee, the most popular boy at school.
I never did anything like that, for the record. Well, not with my hand. I did make out with a Ken doll once. But everyone knows he’s a fox.
“So, Piper.” Susan’s mom turns her conversational spigot on me. “We’re so glad your trip to the Himalayas fell through and you were able to join us after all! I’m afraid Susan hasn’t told us very much about you. What is it you do?”
It should be outlawed for anyone to ask a twentysomething this question.
The waiter slips around me to set a plate of maple-glazed Atlantic salmon and steamed asparagus in front of me, giving me a moment to collect myself and say, “I’m an airport bookseller.”
Susan puts a hand on my shoulder as if she senses my discomfort. “I actually met Piper at the airport.”
Lisa winks at me over her glass of wine as Susan and I ping-pong snippets of our friendship “meet cute.”
Susan: “She actually chased me down the entire length of C Terminal to give me my passport back.”
Me: “She dropped it in front of the Harry Potter display, and a little girl dressed like a witch brought it up to the counter.”
Susan: “So us meeting was pretty much magic.”
We look at each other and share a genuine laugh. When I was at her apartment, we formulated our “how we met” story, but these last few bits are pure improvisation. This is the first bit of fiction I’ve spun in a long time. I think guiltily of abandoned writing projects.
“Unlike when we first met?” Brandon begins telling the story of the first time he saw Susan across the orchestra pit, which everyone except me undoubtedly has heard multiple times. “Forbidden love: string and brass,” he says, swinging an arm around her shoulders and planting a kiss on the nape of her neck.
I’m happy to be excused from the conversation so I can focus on my salmon and asparagus. I can’t remember the last time I ate a fresh, steamed vegetable. I haven’t exactly been able to afford farmers’ market fare since graduation—if it doesn’t come in a frozen package I’m not buying it. As I work through my plate, my mind tunes back in.
Lisa is telling a story: “I’ll never forget when Susan called me after Brandon asked her out after that fated Christmas pops rehearsal. She said, ‘It’ll never work. He’s a trumpet player, for God’s sake.’ ”
Brandon claps a hand to his chest, feigning devastation. A ripple of polite tittering passes around the table. I titter along: The great love of my seventh-grade life was a trumpet player named Angus. He was Patient Zero in my history of lovesickness, followed by countless other musicians, artists, and creative types. By the time Mr. Singer-Songwriter Scott came along, I was fully primed, and it all dates back to Angus.
Angus had checked off all sorts of middle school clichés with his high-top sneakers, school band uniform, gigantic ears, and carroty hair, a formula that normally would have earned him geek status—but Angus had a mystery quotient of brassy confidence that drew me to him, along with almost every other girl in the seventh grade. I lusted after him as much as a bony, braces-clad seventh-grader can lust after any pubescent boy.
I’m still thinking about Angus, and the time he serenaded the entire school with Alice Cooper’s “School’s Out” over the loudspeakers on his trumpet (in January), when I sense someone standing behind me.
“Charlie!” Susan slides her hand from Brandon’s and leaps up from the table. “You’re here!”
I set down my fork, bracing myself to meet the person Lin’s been referring to with crossed eyes as “Charlie ‘Ring My Bell’ Bell.” We couldn’t find a Facebook profile, so Lin created several theoretical physiques for Charlie in our notebook, none of them flattering. Lin told me I should “flirt the boy up” anyway. “You need practice,” he said, tugging on my ponytail. Touché. I haven’t flirted with anyone since the early Scott days, which might as well be the Paleolithic era.
Time to get a look at my victim. I turn, stare, blink. Stare some more. Aaaand I’m ringing. Loud and clear. Shamelessly tolling the hour.
He’s wearing a worn brown suit, a pair of red Chucks, an “I Love Yeats” necktie, and a smile that stops my jaw halfway through a bite of salmon. I do a head-to-toe double take, telling myself it’s just so I can draw him for Lin.
Charlie Bell is tallish, with a slightly angular face. Strong jaw. Dark eyes with gold flecks that seem to steal bits of light from around the room. Eyebrows hefty enough to lift a set of barbells. Lips that could also pass a rigorous fitness test. Limber-looking body, with potential for quite a bit of lean muscle under that suit.
A giant eraser descends from the ceiling and rubs away everything around us with its pink tip. And I watch him, basil between my teeth and an arrow wedged between the chambers of my heart.
Susan stands on her tiptoes to throw her arms around Charlie’s neck. He smiles into her frizzy hair, then smooths it as she pulls away. “Sorry I’m late,” he says, setting a fist superhero-style on his hip. “Flight got delayed.”
Susan turns to me, a hand on his shoulder. “This is the missing groomsman, my little brother, Charlie. Just in from California. Charlie, this is Piper Brody, bridesmaid extraordinaire.”
He gives me a look I pray is saying, Well, helllooo there! One side of his mouth curls upward, and it feels like he’s evaluating me. Did his California roommate draw a series of would-be Pipers on an apartment notebook? If so, I hope I’m blowing them out of the water—I imagine their little cartoon limbs flailing as I vanquish them. I say a silent thanks to Lin for helping me choose tonight’s warm-autumn-friendly attire.
I extend my hand, but Charlie reaches down and wraps me in a hug. A little piece of salmon is stuck in my throat. I swallow it and pat his back. Dashing? Check. Smells good? Check. Taller than me? Sweet Jesus, check.
“Great to meet you, Piper.” He pulls back, disheveled hair falling across his eyes. His face is slightly flushed. “I hear I’m going to be your escort on the big day.”
Susan laughs. “I hope you won’t mind humoring him a little, maybe dancing with him a time or two at the reception?” Charlie elbows her.
“I guess I could manage.” I sneak another look at Charlie. He grins at me (holy dimples!) and runs a hand through his hair, rearranging it into another erratic pattern. Shit! Now I’m blushing, too.
Having finished her meal, Lisa offers Charlie her seat. Before she ambles over to the other side of the table, she wiggles her eyebrows at me. Still flustered, I pass Charlie the breadbasket. “You gotta try this cheese bread.” I close my eyes so my internal ninja can deliver a swift roundhouse kick to my brain. Cheese bread? Why don’t you just pop a zit in front of him and ask him to clip your toenails, Brody? Sexy and alluring! Think sexy and alluring! “So, California, huh?” Okay, so not exactly a sex-kitten conversation starter, but it definitely beats cheese bread.
“I work at a Starbucks in L.A. You know, the standard bachelor of arts fare.”
“I’m an airport bookstore employee, if it makes you feel any better.” I take a drink, hoping the wine will give my lingering blush a better justification than schoolgirl attraction and self-consciousness.
“Groovy,” he says, then flinches as if hit by an internal ninja of his own. “Sorry—I must be jet-lagged. My only conversation partner on the plane was a seven-year-old who told me the plot of literally every Thomas the Tank Engine episode.” He raises his glass. “Anyway, cheers to us and our illustrious lifestyles.”
We clink glasses, maintaining eye contact as we withdraw our hands. I attempt a demure sip of wine while simultaneously imagining myself splashing half the glass down my sienna top.
Charlie drinks, too. “Much better,” he says, setting his glass down and resting one elbow casually on the table. He cocks his other elbow on the back of his chair so his upper body is on full, glorious display. “I haven’t had anything but PBR for months. I mean, nothing against PBR, but part of the reason I was looking forward to this wedding was the free booze.”
“Me, too.” I’m relieved to be honest for the first time this evening.
“What’s your drink of choice?”
“Well, my roommate has a thing for classic cocktails, so lately I’ve been drinking a lot of sidecars. He also makes a mean Tom Collins.”
Charlie nods politely, but he’s frowning. “Is he— Is it just you two? Living together?”
“Oh! No! I mean, yes, it is, but—” I take a breath. “What I mean is, he plays for Team Tom Collins, not Team Shirley Temple.”
“Ah.” Charlie smiles into his drink. “I see. What’s in a sidecar, anyway?”
I smile, thinking of Lin brandishing his stainless steel cocktail shaker. I actually have no idea what Lin puts in a sidecar, so I make a noncommittal gesture and ask Charlie about his favorites. We chat a bit more until the table draws us into another discussion about Susan and Brandon.
Their families seem so nice, so sitcom-wholesome. I shudder to think how my extended family would behave at an event like this. No doubt my aunt would wander away to the bar, my parents would find something wrong with the food and holler for the waiter, and my cousins’ kids would tie my shoelaces together under the table to make sure I had a nice fork puncture below my eye in time for wedding photos.
Susan’s family has a grace I can’t comprehend. Charlie seems to fit in well enough, but there’s a tightness around his mom’s eyes when she asks how things are going “out west.” That look reminds me of the slightly stilted conversations I’ve had with my parents since graduation. I turn to cast an empathetic glance at Charlie to find he’s already looking at me. His gaze makes me feel like I don’t know what to do with my limbs, like I might burst into an eighth-grade show choir move at random. I feel simultaneously frozen in place. To my horror, I wink at him. I wink at him!
His cheeks flush again, and then he winks back. He winks back!
Before we can embarrass ourselves further, Susan and Brandon begin reviewing tomorrow’s schedule. Susan walks around the table, handing small bags to several guests. She has a secret smile for me when she hands me my bag. The tag reads, “I’m glad I called you. Thanks for saving my wedding.”
I open the rectangular black velvet box inside the pink sheer bag. She’s given me a pair of pearl earrings and a matching necklace. I look up, about to protest, feeling like an impostor for yet another time this evening. Then again, I bet I could pawn these and eat for a month. Or longer, if I stick to ramen and peanut butter.
I slide the bag into my purse and take a last bite of key lime pie as people begin to push back from the table, breaking off into groups of two or three and ambling toward the door. I rest my napkin on the table and smooth it out, focusing diligently on inanimate objects. Before I can stand up, Charlie catches my wrist. “I need your help,” he says, leaning close.
His tie is slightly askew from numerous hugs; the red heart symbol between “I” and “Yeats” rests on the left side of his chest above his actual heart. Inadvertently, I picture him flexing those lean-muscley pectorals one at a time. Pec winking.
“Okay,” I say, forcing my gaze back to his eyes and giving him a smile that threatens to spill off the sides of my face.
“Here’s what’s going to happen at my parents’ house. I’m going to get grilled on job prospects as my parents sip brandy and my grandparents ask me if I’m married while their crazy three-legged Chihuahua named Gus humps my leg. Have you ever been humped by a three-legged Chihuahua?”
I shake my head.
“Would you like to save me from such a dire fate?”
“What do you have in mind?” I try to be coy but fail. I’m one breath away from humping his leg myself. His hand is still on my wrist, and I can feel his pulse beating against mine.
“How would you feel about getting out of here?”
“Good.” Really good.
He pulls his hand away to push back his brown suit sleeve, which is tasseled by loose threads dangling off the cuff. This motion exposes a naked, freckled wrist. He studies it, then looks back at me with a conspiratorial grin. “It’s happy hour in California. Can I buy you a drink?”