Summer and the City. Candace Bushnell
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I sigh, feeling thwarted. There’s a whole world out there and I’m stuck in Peggy’s apartment. I’m missing everything. And now I only have fifty-nine days left.
I’ve got to make something happen.
I race to my cubby, grab Bernard’s number, and pick up the phone.
I hesitate, considering what I’m about to do, and put it down.
“L’il?” I call out.
“Yes?”
“Should I call Bernard Singer?”
L’il comes to the door. “What do you think?”
“What if he doesn’t remember me?”
“He gave you his number, didn’t he?”
“But what if he didn’t mean it? What if he was only being polite? What if—”
“Do you want to call him?” she asks. “Yes.”
“Then do.” L’il is very decisive. It’s a quality I hope to develop in myself someday.
And before I can change my mind, I dial.
“Y-ello,” he says, after the third ring.
“Bernard?” I say, in a voice that’s way too high. “It’s Carrie Bradshaw.”
“Aha. Had a feeling it might be you.”
“You did?” I curl the phone cord around my finger.
“I’m a bit psychic.”
“Do you have visions?” I ask, not knowing what else to say.
“Feelings,” he murmurs sexily. “I’m very in touch with my feelings. What about you?”
“I guess I am too. I mean, I never seem to be able to get rid of them. My feelings.”
He laughs. “What are you doing right now?”
“Me?” I squeak. “Well, I’m just kind of sitting here trying to write—”
“Want to come over?” he asks suddenly.
I’m not sure what I was expecting, but it isn’t this. I suppose I had a vague yet hopeful idea that he would invite me to dinner. Take me out on a proper date. But asking me to come to his apartment? Yikes. He probably thinks I’m going to have sex with him.
I pause.
“Where are you?” he asks.
“On Forty-seventh Street?”
“You’re less than ten blocks away.”
“Okay,” I cautiously agree. As usual, my curiosity trumps my better judgment. A very bad trait, and one I hope to amend. Someday.
But maybe dating is different in New York. For all I know, inviting a strange girl to your apartment is just the way they do things around here. And if Bernard tries anything funny, I can always kick him.
On my way out, I run into Peggy coming in. She’s got her hands full trying to maneuver three old shopping bags onto the love seat. She looks me up and down and sighs. “Going out?”
I deliberate, wondering how much I need to tell her. But my excitement gets the better of me. “I’m going to see my friend. Bernard Singer?”
The name has its desired effect. Peggy inhales, nostrils flaring. The fact that I know Bernard Singer has to be killing her. He’s the most famous playwright in all of New York and she’s still a struggling actress. She’s probably dreamed of meeting him for years, and yet here I am, only three days in the city, and already I know him.
“Some people have quite the life, don’t they?” She grumbles as she goes to the refrigerator and extracts one of her many cans of Tab—which are also off-limits for L’il and me.
For a moment, I feel victorious, until I take in Peggy’s despondent expression. She jerks the ring from the top of the can and drinks thirstily, like the solutions to all her problems lie in that can of Tab. She drains it, absentmindedly rubbing the metal ring against her thumb.
“Peggy, I—”
“Damn!” She drops the can and sticks her thumb in her mouth, sucking the blood from the cut where the ring has sliced the skin. She closes her eyes as if holding back tears.
“Are you all right?” I ask quickly.
“Of course.” She looks up, furious that I’ve witnessed this moment of weakness. “You’re still here?”
She brushes past me on her way to her room. “Tonight’s my night off and I intend to make it an early one. So don’t be home late.”
She closes the door. For a second, I stand there, wondering what just happened. Maybe it’s not me Peggy hates. Maybe it’s her life.
“Okay,” I say to no one in particular.
Chapter Five
Bernard lives in Sutton Place. It’s only a few blocks away, but it might as well be in another city. Gone are the noise, the grime, and the vagrant types that populate the rest of Manhattan. Instead, there are buildings constructed of soft-colored stone with turrets and green copper mansards. Uniformed doormen wearing white gloves stand under quiet awnings; a limousine idles at the curb. I pause, breathing in the atmosphere of luxury as a nanny passes me wheeling a baby carriage, behind which prances a small fluffy dog.
Bernard must be rich.
Rich, famous, and attractive. What am I getting myself into?
I scan the street, looking for number 52. It’s on the east side facing the river. Swanky, I think, hurrying toward the building. I step inside, where I’m immediately halted by a low growl from a stern-faced doorman. “Can I help you?”
“Going to see a friend,” I mutter, attempting to snake my way around him. And that’s when I make my first mistake: never, ever try to get around a doorman in a white-glove building.
“You can’t just walk in here.” He holds up one gloved mitt, as if the mere sight of his hand is enough to ward off the unwashed.
Unfortunately, something about that glove sets me off. There’s nothing I hate more than some old guy telling me what to do. “How did you expect me to enter? By horseback?”
“Miss!” he exclaims, taking a step back in displeasure. “Please state your business. And if you cannot state your business, I suggest you take your business elsewhere.”
Aha.