Chapter Eighteen

“Nothing?” I say to Vanessa as soon as we’re alone in the bathroom at Mega, a monstrosity of a restaurant in midtown. “You’ve got nothing?”

“Not a thing,” Vanessa says as she applies lipgloss while looking in the mirror. “Mainly, he just assigns her work and then they go work in their respective offices.”

Even though Jack spent the last two weeks making up the Pierre debacle to me (“What do you not understand about agreeing with everything I say in front of your parents?” [rest of scene deleted, as is unsuitable for children under the age of 17]), I still have Vanessa, my darling matron/maid of honor checking up on him. I even made Vanessa take Miranda out for frozen yogurt in an effort to keep your friends close, but your enemies closer. All Vanessa really learned from that scouting expedition was that Miranda prefers chocolate to vanilla, but even that seemingly innocuous information could turn out to be very valuable some day.

Oh please. As if you wouldn’t defend your man, too.

“How can that be? She’s the man stealer extraordinaire! No late night rendezvous-ing in the 10th floor library?” I ask, looking at Vanessa out of the corner of my eye.

“Wait, did you ever have a late night rendezvous with Jack in the 10th floor library?”

“No!” I say, laughing.

“You did, too!” Vanessa says, “I can tell!” She begins laughing while simultaneously staring me down.

“Let’s just say, don’t go near the treatises on real property law,” I say, eyebrow raised for effect, “if you know what I mean.”

“I know what you mean,” Vanessa says, putting her lipgloss back into her gold Chanel clutch. “And, ew.”

“Don’t hate,” I say, touching up my own pout in the mirror. “Appreciate.”

“You’re not allowed to use that expression if you’re over the age of twenty-two,” Vanessa says.

“Don’t try to change the subject,” I say, turning to face Vanessa, “you’re supposed to be getting me dirt on Jack and Miranda. Now, spill.”

“There’s nothing to spill, Brooke,” Vanessa says. I pause for a second, waiting for the inevitable yet.

“So, you mean to tell me that you’ve got nothing,” I say, smoothing out my skirt and adjusting the sling-back of my left shoe.

“That would be correct,” Vanessa says.

“Then what am I paying you for?” I ask, as we start walking to the door.

“You’re not paying me,” Vanessa reminds me.

“It’s just an expression,” I say. “I just can’t believe you don’t have any dirt at all.”

“‘What am I paying you for’ is not an expression,” Vanessa says to me as she holds the door open for me to leave the ladies’ room. “It’s a nasty way of saying—”

“Well, hiya, ladies!” Miranda says, her Southern accent milked for full effect, strolling into the ladies’ room. “How are y’all doing? This is quite a bridal shower, Brooke. Where I come from we don’t have bridal showers like this.”

“Me neither,” I mumble under my breath. I wanted my bridal shower to be small, but Jack’s family insisted on inviting nearly every woman that’s invited to the wedding to the shower. We either had to hold it here at Mega, or at Madison Square Garden.

“Jack’s sisters must really love Brooke if they threw a shower like this for her,” Vanessa says with a smile. “We really should be getting out of here, though. We’ll see you out there!” Vanessa grabs me by the elbow and leads me out to the party room.

“Here she is,” Jack’s sister, Lisa, announces as soon as Vanessa and I enter the room, “the woman of the hour, Brooke!”

Everyone turns around and oohs and aahs at me, and all I can think is, who are half of these people? My idea of the perfect bridal shower is a couple of friends and tons of family gathered together in someone’s home. Vanessa had wanted to throw a small tasteful shower in her apartment, but that idea was quickly vetoed by the sisters Solomon. Instead, in grand Solomon tradition, they have made for me the mother of all bridal showers, the bridal shower that ate Cleveland. Actually, the party room here at Mega is so incredibly large that most of Cleveland could probably fit inside. When I first walked into the party room, I noticed a sign announcing that the room’s capacity is 325. I’m quite certain that we are pushing that limit today.

So, I didn’t exactly get the shower I wanted, and I most certainly didn’t get the guest list that I wanted. When Jack realized what a large scale affair the shower was becoming, he quickly decided that he had to make sure that his female work colleagues were invited so that no one would take offense. Which really makes no sense to me since Jack’s already a partner and once you’re a partner in a law firm, can’t you just do as you please?

Well, Jack doesn’t seem to think so. Which is why Miranda Foxley, the man stealer, was invited (and had the nerve to show up and no, I do not think that she came just to try to be my friend, I think that she came because she is undoubtedly trying to steal my man and lull me into a false sense of security just before she pounces on said man). Along with a bunch of other female partners and associates who I really wish weren’t here, either.

I survey the twenty-something tables that have been set up, each with an ornate floral arrangement floating on top. It is a total and complete sensory overload. The smell of the peonies overpowers me and makes me sneeze. Vanessa doesn’t seem to notice as she meets and greets various Gilson Hecht associates and partners, along with some of our girlfriends from law school. But for me, the room is a swirly mess, from the 40 foot high ceilings, to the bright orange linens dressing the tables, to the massive table of multi-colored presents. I can barely get my eyes to focus.

Mega’s party room has a Cirque de Soleil theme, so the chairs are dressed in a deep magenta and the carpet is purple and yellow. At the end of the bar, there is a giant martini glass (with the requisite giant olive placed inside) and the wait staff are all dressed as court jesters in hot pink and teal.

“Let’s leave our bags on our chairs,” Vanessa says, “okay, Brooke?”

As Vanessa leads me towards our table, my eyelids begin to droop. It dawns on me that for the last two weeks, the most sleep I’ve gotten on any one given night was about three to four hours. Now, this should have been because Jack and I were making up the whole time after the debacle at the Pierre, and to be sure, that’s partly it, but what’s really drawing my eyes downward is the fact that I’ve been working non-stop. I’ve been working on the Monique case for fourteen hours a day, weekends included. I’m exhausted all day long, just praying, waiting for the moment when I can get into bed, but then when I finally get under the covers, I’m too exhausted to actually go to sleep.

Even Vanessa noticed it this morning, when she picked me up for our hair appointments, not-so-subtly suggesting that I get my make-up done to hide the circles under my eyes. (“You can’t show up at your own bridal shower looking like the Bride of Frankenstein.”)

We get to our table and Vanessa puts her place card on top of her plate and her gold Chanel clutch on her chair. I pull my chair out and plop down in it.

“Are you okay?” Vanessa asks, leaning down to whisper into my ear.

“I’m just so tired,” I say, putting my hands over my eyes. “And this Technicolor Dreamcoat mess is not helping me to relax.”

“It’s fun,” Vanessa says, trying to sound optimistic. “The décor is fun.”

With my eyes still closed, hands over my eyes, I hear Vanessa call over a waiter and order an iced coffee for me. So, basically now, in addition to her maid of honor duties of spying on the groom, Vanessa also has to rally the bride at her own shower. I’m sure at Vanessa’s own shower she was a happy, well-rested bride who did not look like she was about to pass out. I’m sure she was a gracious bride who knew all of her guests.

“Rocket fuel is on its way,” Vanessa whispers and I hear her pull out her chair and sit down next to me. She takes my place card out of my limp hand and puts it onto the table.

“So, you must be Vanessa,” Jack’s middle sister, Elizabeth says. I manage to pull my head off my hands and open my eyes.

“I am,” Vanessa says, with a smile, standing to shake Elizabeth’s hand.

“I’m Elizabeth,” she says, “Jack’s sister.”

“Yes,” Vanessa says, “Middle sister, married to Alan. Did I get that right?”

As I look over at Vanessa in her bright orange Milly dress chatting effortlessly with Jack’s sister, actually remembering who she is and which brother-in-law she corresponds to, I realize that I hate Vanessa. I hate my best friend. Jack’s been briefing me on who’s who for months now, and I still can’t get it straight. Jack told Vanessa who everyone was last night at dinner and she’s already a pro.

But then the waiter brings me my iced coffee (my fourth of the day so far), with two sweet-n-lows and skim milk, just the way I like it, and I love her again. I love my best friend. I drink the iced coffee in two big slurps, careful not to spill any onto my white shift dress, and then move in on the ice water at my table setting. Picking it up (I was instructed by Vanessa that I cannot walk around with anything but clear colored beverages while wearing a white dress), I walk over to Vanessa and Elizabeth, ready to start acting like the charming bride-to-be that I know I can be. If only I weren’t quite so tired.

I notice that Vanessa is smiling at her with her lawyerly “I’m so excited to work on this lame-ass case with you” face and I realize that she’s just making nice with Jack’s family for me. I guess she really does deserve to be my maid of honor. Or matron. Whatever.

“We worked really hard on those,” Elizabeth is saying to Vanessa, just as Lisa, the youngest sister walks over to join us.

“Yes,” Lisa says, “we wanted them to be evocative of the flowers we’ll be having at the wedding, but not the same exact ones, so that the real flowers will be a big surprise!”

Vanessa already knows, in painstaking detail, what flowers I’ve picked out for my wedding. She’s segued into the classic “you are so funny and clever in the way that you handled that judge/witness/child under the age of five!” face and I do the same. Yes, you were so clever with the flowers, sisters Solomon!

“Are you Lisa?” Vanessa says, eyes squinting as she waits to hear if she’s guessed right.

“Yes!” Lisa says, “you must be Vanessa.” Vanessa will later tell me that everyone guessed she was Vanessa since she was one of the only black people there. I will take this not as an indictment on me and the types of friends that I have, but as an indictment of Gilson Hecht, and law firms in general, and how they really need to make more affirmative action initiatives in terms of hiring.

There you are!” my mother says, rushing over to Vanessa and me. “I’ve been looking all over for you!”

I suppose that I don’t have to mention here that my mother is wearing a crisp white linen suit.

“Love your suit,” I say to my mother, much in the same tone that Hannibal Lecter uses when he says that very line to the Senator.

“Why, thank you, BB!” my mother cries, oblivious to my tone, “I saw it at Saks and I just couldn’t resist! How often do you get to be the mother of the bride at your own daughter’s bridal shower?”

Jack’s two sisters shrug and smile. My mother either doesn’t realize or doesn’t care that Jack’s mother actually got to do that very thing on three separate occasions.

“Well, you look fabulous, Mimi,” Vanessa says, giving my mom a hug.

“If you wear white to my wedding,” I say, drawing my mother in for a hug and then whispering directly into her ear, “you are dead to me.”

“You pre-approved this outfit, BB,” my mother says, trying to release herself from my grasp.

“You tried it on for me in Saks in blue,” I say, “this is not blue.”

“Oh, BB, you’re so funny,” my mother says, laughing like a crazy person, “that’s my BB. What a nervous little bride-to-be! Oh, Joan, I didn’t even see you walking over here! Hell-o!”

“So lovely to see you,” Jack’s mother says to us, giving us both a hug and a peck on the cheek. “What a wonderful day, isn’t it?”

My mother and I both smile and try not to laugh. I know exactly what my mother is thinking right now because Joan is wearing, yet again, palazzo pants.

Did they have a fire sale on these things at Armani or something? This pair is navy, and she’s wearing them with navy sling-backs and a light blue cropped jacket with three-quarter sleeves.

“My cousin made these delightful cards for us to put on the table,” my mother tells Joan, taking pale pink index cards out of her pocketbook. “You put them on the table and everyone writes down marital advice for BB. Then, BB reads them aloud when she’s opening her gifts.”

“Oh, Mimi,” Joan says, feigning disappointment. “We won’t be playing any games at the shower. The girls and I figured there were simply too many guests for such things.”

“Oh,” my mother says, keeping her smile glued to her lips, “of course. But…”

Joan walks away, Jack’s sisters in tow, towards the front of the room before my mother can finish her thought. Or maybe it was the back of the room. It’s hard to tell which end is which with all of the brightly colored ribbons floating down from the 40 foot ceiling.

“That’s an adorable idea,” Vanessa says in a hushed voice. “Why don’t we do these at our tables and at your family’s tables?”

Vanessa is referring to the fact that even though, I myself, am an only child like my mother, my father’s family is actually quite large. So large that he has seven aunts. His father’s family was a traditional Eastern European family with the eight children to back it up. I’ve spent a lifetime trying to remember who is who and which cousins correspond to which aunt. I definitely have Aunt Devorah and Aunt Jean’s families figured out, but as for the other five that don’t live in New York, I’m completely hopeless. Every once in a while, I’ll have dinner with one of Aunt Devorah’s brood and we’ll outline an ornate plan to create a massive Miller family tree, but that plan usually falls by the way side by the following Tuesday.

If Vanessa knows the names of all seven of my great aunts, I will have to strangle her on the spot.

“All of the tables are mixed up,” my mother says, with a frozen smile. “Each table is half Jack’s family, half ours. Half Jack’s friends, half yours and BB’s.”

“Right,” Vanessa says, “well, it was a cute idea anyway.”

My mother smiles at Vanessa, trying to keep her composure, and I reach over and hug my mother. This time it’s a real hug, not one where I grab her and then whisper threats in her ear.

“And you look beautiful today,” I say to her.

“May I have everyone’s attention?” Joan says at the front of the room. Or what must be the front of the room, since that’s where she’s now standing, trying to quiet the massive crowd. Somehow, out of nowhere, a podium with a microphone has materialized. “Is this thing on?” she asks, tapping the mike.

Jack’s sister Patricia nods her head at her mother and adjusts the mike upward for Joan.

“I just want to welcome all of you here and thank you for coming. I know that I speak for my family and Brooke’s family, too, when I tell you that we are all so happy to be sharing this very happy occasion with all of you. Now, I invite all of you to take your seats and enjoy your lunch!”

Inexplicably, everyone begins to applaud before scurrying about to find their seats. My mother walks with Vanessa and I back to our table—Table One, of course. Since Vanessa and I already set down our place cards, I’m anxious to rush back to our table so that we’re able to put my mother next to either Vanessa or me. The rest of the table is made up of Jack’s mother and his three sisters, and I just know that Jack’s mother and sisters will feel the need to mix the families up. I wonder if they’ve already moved Vanessa’s and my place cards around so that we don’t sit with the person we speak to every day.

Vanessa and I had hoped that we’d be at a table with some of our friends. Since I’ve been working so hard, I’ve barely seen any of my old friends from Gilson Hecht and I definitely haven’t seen any old friends from law school. Hell, I’ve barely even seen my friend Esther, who works at my very own law firm. And she’s been getting really serious with her blind date guy and I’m ashamed to say that I’ve been so busy that I haven’t had time for her to tell me all of the juicy details.

But, instead, we’re sitting at Table One. My only saving grace is that Vanessa told me that it’s good form for the bride to visit all of the various tables at her shower, so once I’ve had a bite to eat, I’ll be free to get up from the table.

My mother links her right arm into my left and Vanessa’s right arm into her left and we begin to walk back to our table. As I walk arm in arm with my mother and Vanessa, I realize that maybe it isn’t such a bad thing for the three of us to be sitting at the same table. There’s strength in numbers, right? Sure, Jack’s mother and three sisters still outnumber us, but on our side, we’ve got two attorneys and a pushy matron from Long Island, so we’re nothing to sneeze at.

“Vanessa,” my mother asks, “do you know what we’re having for lunch today?”

“I had my hands full with the table seatings,” Vanessa says, “I wasn’t really involved with the menu. But, I’ve taken summer associates here for lunch before and they have great salads. It’s like something out of Architectural Digest the way they pile them so high. You’ll love them.”

“Well,” my mother says, “I hope I can get mine with the dressing on the side.”

“Oh, me too,” Vanessa says.

Salad?!? I can’t have a salad for lunch! I’m so tired that I feel like I’m hungover and everyone knows that the one thing you need most when you’re hung over is grease. A nice, big plate of delicious grease. What are the chances that they’ll be serving a side plate of French fries with those salads? I consider asking Vanessa that very question when I see the waiters set down a few plates of the salads that they’ll be serving today. In an instant, I forget all about the fries. In fact, I can’t think at all. I stop dead in my tracks and it has the effect of making my mother jerk forward, forcing Vanessa to do the same.

I don’t even notice that I’ve stopped walking until Vanessa announces that I’ve just caused her to lose a shoe. Leaning forward, I examine the salads that the waiters have set down onto Table Twelve, certain that there’s some kind of a mistake. It’s got to be a mistake. There is no way in hell that these are the salads that we are supposed to be eating today at my bridal shower. Because what’s sitting on top of the incredibly high salads that the waiters are serving is something that I’m absolutely sure can’t be there.

Lobster.

This must be a misunderstanding. There is simply no possible way that the Solomons could be this passive aggressive. The man I am about to marry cannot possibly be born from the loins of a woman who, in the face of a holy war over serving lobster at my wedding, has instead chosen to serve it at the bridal shower she’s throwing for me.

And then my mother gets in on the action. She doesn’t say a word, but I can see in her plastered on smile that she is having the same thought process that I am having at this very moment.

“Oh my God,” Vanessa says and then covers her mouth when she realizes that she actually said it. Luckily, none of the guests at Table Twelve overhear her.

“Let’s not make a scene, girls,” my mother says quietly, “we’re too good for that. This is the party that they planned, and this is what they chose to do. We don’t agree with it, but let’s not stoop to their level and make a scene.”

Would not making a scene exclude crying? Because I can feel the tears beginning to form behind my eyes and I have to take a deep breath to keep them at bay. I turn to look at my mother and can practically see the smoke coming out of her ears.

“It looks delicious, doesn’t it?” Joan says, coming up behind us, on her way to our table. “You said that you don’t keep kosher normally, so Edward made the suggestion that a little bit of lobster today might be nice! Wasn’t that a great idea?”

My mother and I don’t say a word. We simply both look up, expressionless, and stare at Joan.

“Well, I, for one, don’t eat lobster,” Vanessa says, and I wonder if Joan is going to ask her if she keeps kosher.

“You don’t?” Joan says, “Well, that’s okay, we’ll just tell the waiter. There’s a substitution—salmon—for anyone who doesn’t want lobster. Do you like salmon?”

Vanessa looks at me and I look back at her. Vanessa, unable to come up with a response, shrugs her shoulders in response to the salmon.

Across the room, I see my great Aunt Devorah get up from her table and walk out of the restaurant.

This is all Jack’s fault. This is all Jack’s fault.

My mother, Vanessa and I all order the salmon substitution, on principle alone, while the Solomons all gobble up their salads, ooh-ing and aah-ing about how delicious they are, and are your salads good, too? My mother will later tell me that the fact that the Solomon girls all order their salads without the dressing on the side, with the dressing plopped right on top like a big fat blob, says a lot about their character. I don’t really know what she means, but I will later just nod in agreement since I’m so angry about the lobster. Solidarity. Nothing like a mutual enemy to get a team to come together.

This is all Jack’s fault.

We don’t open any presents since Joan says that there are simply too many guests, so the whole shower is over in about two and a half hours, which Joan says is the perfect amount of time for a bridal shower.

I wonder aloud how on earth Jack and I will get all of our gifts home, and then, as if on cue, Jack, his father and all three of the brothers-in-law come in to help us out.

As per the usual, the brothers-in-law are all in uniform: pastel Loro Piana cable sweaters? Check. Pressed khaki pants? Check. Black Gucci loafers? Check. I don’t even try to figure out who’s who. I don’t care who’s who. I only care that Jack, the man I am going to marry, is walking right towards me.

In that instant, I just know that everything will be all right. Jack will fix everything.

Jack walks towards me, running his fingers through his hair, and I can’t help but smile. The stress of the day just fades away and I forget about everything—about how tired I am, about how stressed I am at work, even about the lobster. Jack walks towards me, holding a bouquet of flowers that I recognize as being the same flowers we’ll be using for our table arrangements at the wedding, and it all just fades away. It’s just Jack and me in that room.

As he gets closer, I stand up to give him a hug and a big kiss. Everyone starts clapping for us as we kiss and I feel like the main character in a romantic comedy. He’s Richard Gere and I’m Julia Roberts in Pretty Woman. No, wait, actually, she played a prostitute in that movie so I’m not Julia Roberts. Okay, he’s Tom Hanks and I’m Meg Ryan in You’ve Got Mail. No, Tom successfully destroyed Meg’s business in that movie—we’re Hanks and Ryan in Sleepless in Seattle. No, wait, in Sleepless in Seattle, Tom Hanks had a kid and if it turns out that Jack has some love child stashed away somewhere, that would not be good. What kind of a cute romantic comedy would that be?!?

Wait—I’ve got it! He’s George Peppard and I’m Audrey Hepburn! I can finally have my Breakfast at Tiffany’s fantasy now. Yes, that’s it. And, anyway, she was really more of a “party girl” than Pretty Woman prostitute, so that’s okay. And she had such cute outfits in that movie.

Okay, so that’s it. We stand there, in the middle of the bridal shower, kissing, and I’m Holly Golightly (sans the $50 for the powder room) and he’s Paul Varjack (sans the whole kept-man thing) and I’ve decided to give the cat a name and we’re kissing in the rain. Or, we’re kissing at Mega, but you get the general point I’m trying to make. Then, he gives me the flowers and I tilt them towards me to take a sniff. We’re going to have lilies at the wedding—my favorite—and I just love the delicious scent they give off.

Only, when I tilt the flowers back, I see something strange inside of the wrapping. And it’s not the baby’s breath. No, there’s something blue in there that does not belong. And it’s not a little something from Tiffany and Co. I look up at Jack and he’s giving me a smirk, just staring at me. Waiting for something.

I put my hand inside the bouquet and take out the blue thing. It’s the blue back of a discovery request, with the familiar GILSON, HECHT AND TRATTNER listed as the attorneys who drafted it.

Jack is serving me with a set of Interrogatories. At my own bridal shower. I look up at Jack and he smiles at me.

“Gotcha, counselor,” he says.

Am I the only one who is starting to think that this isn’t very funny anymore?