The Trials of Tiffany Trott

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Authors: Isabel Wolff
Tags: Fiction, London, Dating (Social Customs), BritChickLit
seemed very interested in me, and I was certainly very interested in him and then . . . ”
    “Yes?”
    “Move down inside the bus please!” Ding ding!
    “He told me that he was married and was only looking for a part-time girlfriend. What do you think of that?”
    “I think that’s awful,” said the elderly woman sitting behind me. I turned round and looked at her. “I hope you gave him what for,” she said.
    “Yes, I did actually. I was extremely insult—Sally? Are you still there?”
    “Yes,” she said. “How ghastly. What a creep. But didn’t his ad say that he was married?”
    “No. It didn’t say he was married,” I said dismally, as we chugged up Roseberry Avenue. “It simply said that he was looking for an unforgettable girl in her twenties or thirties to ‘spoil a little or even a lot.’ ” A guffaw arose from behind me. What the hell was so funny? I turned round again and glared at the other passengers.
    “But Tiffany, you should have known,” said Sally. Ding ding!
    “How?”
    “Because an offer to ‘spoil’ a woman is shorthand for seek p. 57 ing a mistress. Like an offer to ‘pamper’ her, or a request for ‘discretion.’ You’ve got to learn the code if you’re going to do this kind of thing.”
    “Well I didn’t know that,” I wailed. “I know that GSOH means Good Sense of Humor and know [Know] VGSOH means Very Good Sense of Humor and that WLTM means Would Like To Meet.”
    “And LTR means Long Term Relationship,” added Sally.
    “Does it?”
    “And W/E means ‘well-endowed.’ ”
    “Really? Good God! Anyway, I didn’t know that offering to ‘spoil’ someone meant you already had a wife .”
    “Everyone knows that,” said the middle-aged man across the aisle from me, unhelpfully.
    “Well, I didn’t—OK?” I said. “Anyway Sally, Sally are you there? Hi. I’m just really, really pissed off. Seriously Successful? Seriously Swine-ish more like.”
    “What’s his real name?” she asked, as we left the Angel.
    “God, I don’t know. I never asked,” I said. “Anyway, whatever Seriously Slimy’s real name is, is no concern of mine. Seriously Unscrupulous . . .”
    “Seriously Shallow,” said the woman behind me.
    “Yes.”
    “And Seriously Sad,” she concluded.
    “Quite. I mean, Sally, what on earth did he take me for?”
    “Never mind, Tiffany, that was bad luck,” she said. “But I’m sure there’s someone nice just around the corner. Are you going to Lizzie’s for lunch on Sunday?”
    “Yes,” I said.
    “Well I’ll see you then,” she said. “And chin up.”
    I put my mobile phone away and took out my paper. Doing the crossword would calm me down. Bastard. Bastard. Fifteen across: Fool about with high-flyer. Seven letters, first letter, “S.” Couldn’t do it. I stood up and rang the bell. As I made my p. 58 way to the back of the bus an elderly man made a beckoning gesture.
    “Why don’t you join Dateline?” he said in a gravelly whisper. “Much safer. I think these personal ads are rather risky myself.”
    “Thanks,” I said, “I’ll think about it.”
    Fool about with high-flyer. I turned it over and over in my mind as I got off at my stop and walked down Ockendon Road. Oh God, there were cyclists on the bloody footpath again.
    “It’s the People’s Pavement you know!” I called out as the boy whizzed past, practically clipping my left ear. God I was in a bad mood. A really bad mood. Damn Seriously Successful. Damn him. Fool about with high-flyer, I thought. High-flyer. And then it came to me—with a pang— skylark.

July Continued
    p. 59 By the next morning I was much, much calmer. “What a bastard ,” I raged to myself. I mean, what a copper-bottomed swine. Disgusting behavior. Part-time girlfriend indeed! Seriously Successful? Seriously Sleazy. Seriously Shabby. Seriously Scurrilous. But I have only myself to blame—serves me right for doing something so patently risky. Might have known there’d be

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