heâs trying to signal oncoming traffic to stop. âJesus, Jen. I just showed Conrad the roof deck.â
âAnd you stuffed cocaine up your nose while youâre at it.â
âNo!â
âDonât lie to me!â
Conrad looks guilty as hell and is too drunk to hide it. He wonât be any help, but he tries. âHey, Jen. Whatâs the big deal?â
âShut up, Conrad. Youâre an ass and I want you out of my home!â
If William hadnât been doing coke on the roof, he would put a stop to that. Instead he raises his eyebrows to Conrad in apology, which is the same as pleading guilty and throwing himself on the mercy of the court.
âWilliam, we need to get going too.â I glance at my watch as I say this, which is pointless since I donât even see what time it is. Julia is at my arm instantly. We say quick good-byes, get our coats, and are in the elevator even before Conrad can get kicked out.
If this night were a freak occurrence, weâd both be bent over laughing in the elevator, racing home to retell the evening so we each make sure the other caught all the subtle, sick moments. If we were twenty-two years old it might be okay.
âNick.â
âYeah.â
âI canât have another night like that.â
7 | OLIVER AND SYBIL BENNETT
November 23, 2005
THE FOLLOWING WEEK WEâRE OUT TO THE DINNER WITH Oliver and Sybil that puts Julia and me far down the wrong path. Julia had let me know the plan to meet at the 21 Club in Midtown, a favorite with investment bankers for decades. Like all of these places with tradition, the older and uglier the waiters, the nicer the place. When the wealthy bankers arenât out at their clubs in Long Island getting served by the ugly waiters there, theyâre having cocktails at places like the 21 Club.
The restaurant is an old speakeasy and they still have the trapdoors and secret rooms where Hemingway and others would drink during Prohibition. From the sidewalk we have to go down a few steps to get to the unassuming front door that leads to a restaurant much bigger than you would expect from the outside.
The coat check closet is the first thing you come across. I help Julia off with her coat. She was in a great mood on the way over. If this holds, the night could actually be tolerable.
âThere they are.â I hand over the coats and turn to see Oliver return Juliaâs wave. She has the presence of mind to wait until Iget the coat check stub rather than strand me there to go make her hellos across the room in the cocktail lounge, which is a bunch of old sofas and chairs next to a club bar. From there a hallway winds around to the actual restaurant in back.
We start over hand in hand to where Oliver and Sybil are seated in the lounge. Oliver has a slight build with pretty, feminine features and small round glasses like Harry Potter. It crosses my mind that his eyes need no prescription and that he just likes the look. He could be as tall as five ten but seems smaller. Itâs not that he slouches but that his manner gives the impression that heâs always sneaking around corners and it shows up in him physically.
Sybil is pleasant enough. Sheâs quite pretty and quite plain. Itâs as though Oliver picked her out based on a written resume of her appearance. Pretty blond hair, pretty blue eyes, perfect lips, cheekbones, and a little button nose, with a nice build. Above-average features everywhere, but when you put it all together and animate it, it is inexplicably plain.
Oliver stands to kiss Juliaâs cheek and shake my hand. We cross-pollinate cheek kisses and handshakes all around. âWe just put in a drink order,â Oliver tells us. âBut they havenât arrived yet. Iâll have them send the drinks to the table and we can go sit down.â
I resist letting Oliver direct traffic to start the evening. âDonât bother, thereâs no rush.
Kathi Macias & Susan Wales