My stumbling progression towards life as a mad aunt with too many dachshunds.

Monday, May 25, 2009

Swine Fever Fall Out: Part 2, Alex


You last saw me trembling and miserable in my bedroom, confessing to a sickening attraction to Frightful Freddie to a suitably sickened Cora. Well, things quickly got worse. The following evening, as I endured my purgatorially long bus journey home, my phone rang. I was listening to the radio on my hands free kit, so I answered without knowing who was calling, assuming, based on past experience, that it would be my mother. ‘Hello’, I said, peering depressively out at the hateful, hateful London traffic. ‘Hi Alice’, said the caller, (male voice, slight estuary accent) ‘I wasn’t sure you’d pick up.’ He sounded drunk and not very happy, and for several seconds I couldn’t breathe.

‘Hi Alex’, I eventually murmured back, and then, automatically, ‘how are you?’ There was another longish pause before he answered, sounding even drunker, ‘Well, I got fired. Which is fucking annoying.’ I was still struggling with the fact that I was talking to Alex – or Wanker Banker to you (see first entry) – so I only managed to say ‘Oh. I’m sorry, Alex’. I really was, too. For all his wankerishness, and the never seeing him, and his drunken implication that I was lucky to be going out with him, I’d quite adored him and I’d liked to think that his life would tick along vilely but happily without me. Anyway, the idea of Alex, of all people, being fired was unspeakable. This was really bringing the formidable evil of the credit crunch home to me.

‘So look, let’s do something, I’m sick of not seeing you’ he barked in his usual, consummately self-involved way, and my heart fluttered pathetically and unexpectedly. ‘I don’t know’, I sighed, ‘I’m quite busy’. He snorted. ‘Are you seeing someone?’ A pause. ‘…Kind of’. (A lie, obviously). ‘Kind of? What’s this guy’s name?’ Now, obviously he was being a prick, and the only appropriate answer was ‘None of your business, now I’ve got to go. I’m sorry you got fired’, but somehow what I actually said was, ‘He’s called Freddie’. Even as I said it I realised that Freddie didn’t matter at all, and I wanted more than anything to go and see Alex, which ought to have been a relief but wasn’t.

‘Freddie? Shit name. Fucking awful, actually. I’ve got to go, call me later if you want to go for a drink.’ He hung up. Ahh, Alex. How I’d missed his rudeness and abrupt adieus. Naturally I spent the rest of the bus journey in a state of wretched inner turmoil, trying and failing to re-interest myself in Freddie, and leaving panicky voicemails on a range of female friend answer machines. By the time I walked into my house, I was an image of overwrought femininity, wide-eyed with distress and only avoiding tearfulness by virtue of my stiff upper lip upbringing. I burst through the door, desperately hoping to find Laura and Jamie, staunch allies in my time of Vile Alex need, but instead getting – you guessed it – Freddie. He was standing, topless and barefoot, in the middle of the living room, apparently trying to unravel his iPod earphones.

He looked up and looked worried. ‘You alright, Ally?’ I gulped and shifted from one foot to another. ‘My ex called me’, I replied miserably. ‘He’s been fired. He wants to see me and I don’t think it’s a great idea.’ I looked up at Freddie despairingly and vaguely hoped that he would say something useful. He put his earphones down on the sofa and stood with his hands on his hips. ‘Fuck him.’ He said decisively. ‘He’s feeling a bit down because he got fired and he wants to shag you to make himself and his ego feel better. Don’t go there, Ally, you’ll only get hurt.’ I stared at him tragically and protested weakly, ‘I don’t think it’s like that’. He shrugged ‘As a bloke, I’m telling you, it is.’ There was a pregnant pause as I looked at the floor unhappily and Freddie looked at me uncertainly, before he murmured ‘Oh Ally, I’m sorry, the guy just sounds like a real prick’, and pulled me into a naked-chested embrace. ‘I know’, I muttered into his surprisingly nice-smelling shoulder, ‘he really is.’ Then he let me go a bit and looked at me for a while, and I thought he might kiss me, which was interesting because I had no idea what I’d do if he did, but actually just said, ‘Right, I have to change. Neenee’s coming over in an hour’.

‘Oh,’ I gasped, stepping back and trying not to think about his nice-smelling shoulder any more than I absolutely had to. ‘Right. I’ll go out then, I don’t want to be in your way. You know what, anyway, I think you’re wrong about Alex, I think I’m going to go and see him’. And as I said it I realised that Alex didn’t matter at all, and I wanted more than anything to stay at home with Freddie, which was ridiculous and confusing. Freddie looked irritated and shrugged.

Thus, half an hour later, ridiculous and confused, I plunged back into the London evening to meet Alex. Freddie looked me up and down as I left the house in my 2nd date outfit, but didn’t pass comment. Alex, when we met, was tipsy but surprisingly human. This meant that I also got tipsy, and found myself kissing him outside his house. He also smelled nice. Freddie-ishly nice. ‘Alex’, I blurted out, ‘do you wear Lynx?’ He pushed me away in apparent disgust. ‘No, I don’t wear fucking Lynx, what do you think I am? Fourteen? This is Tom Ford.’

This was typical Alex behaviour; vain and irritating. God, he might as well have been wearing an apricot coloured scarf. ‘Well, I’m SORRY’, I snapped back, recognizing my error in coming at all, ‘but you smell like Freddie.’ (Forgetting, obviously, that I’d pretended that I was going out with Freddie.) ‘Your new boyfriend wears LYNX?’ Alex howled, either angry or amused, I wasn’t sure which. ‘No, apparently he wears Tom Ford’, I replied, exasperated, ‘and anyway, it’s none of your business and this was a mistake and I’m going home.’ This bus journey was equally hideous, though shorter, and ended with a dark and empty living room, and a bathroom in which I found my pot of Yin Yang moisturizer with the top off. Shoreditch Whorebitch.

I woke up to a hangover, the beginnings of Freddie’s swine flu, an antagonistic text message from Alex, and the miserable realization that I’d had a dream about kissing either Freddie or Alex – I wasn’t sure which. That evening, I caught the train home to Suffolk, and embraced sickness and parental care. And the whole of this week has been spent either avoiding Freddie or having to engage in painful conversations with him that clearly neither of us enjoy.

Gah. Lowest ebb.

Monday, May 18, 2009

Swine Fever Fall Out: Part 1, Shoreditch Whorebitch


‘Oh my GOD, Alice,’ Cora snapped at me, putting down her cake fork in irritation, ‘can’t you just SHUT UP about fucking FREDDIE for ONE MINUTE while I eat my éclair? You haven’t talked about anything else for the last hour, you’re OBSESSED.’ I opened my mouth to protest, but she waggled a stern finger at me. ‘I think Becky and those people that read your blog are right. You have a crush on him - as wrong as that may be - and until you admit it I don’t want to hear any more about him.’ She raised her fork again and shoveled in her mouthful of fresh cream and choux pastry with a vehemence I found almost frightening.

I stared at her, stunned and horrified by the et tu Brute-ness of it all. It was Wednesday afternoon last week, and we were in Maison Bertaux in Soho, having both escaped from work early to eat our favourite chocolate éclairs. This was supposed to be a safe place, full of understanding and free of criticism. Still, thinking about it, I realised that I really had talked about nothing else. I hadn’t told her about Becky’s new ‘boyfriend’, Paul, or mentioned my new Mango dress, or gossiped about Jamie’s dinner with his ex-girlfriend. I hadn’t even said that I’d got asked out on a date by a reasonably promising man in Whole Foods on Sunday afternoon, even though that was a genuinely funny story, unlike the one I was now telling about Freddie and his probably unintentional failure to thank me for hanging up his washing on Sunday.

And, let’s face it, this wasn’t the first complaint I’d had. Liz, at work, had rolled her eyes at me during our Monday morning coffee break, remarking with a sigh, as I began the story of Saturday evening, ‘Oh dear. Freddie again.’ Even Mad Mary seemed to have gathered that I was in some way connected with a man whose name began with an F, a sure sign that he’s been mentioned much too often in the workplace.

‘You’re right,’ I conceded, poking at the chocolate topping. ‘I’m sorry, let’s talk about something else.’ We did, and it was a very nice afternoon tea, but I went home feeling uneasy and irritable, the more so as I realised shortly before we finished our third pot of tea that I had a spot brewing on my left cheek. Finding the house empty, I decided to combat this new threat with an early night, so I showered and Yin Yanged as soon as I’d eaten dinner. Getting out of the shower, it occurred to me that I ought to drink some of Dr Stuart’s Skin Purify tea, too; a theory confirmed by a glimpse of the growing blemish in the steamy mirror.

With this in mind, I wrapped myself hastily in my (slightly too small) towel, and ran down the stairs, hair dripping in wet coils over my face, eyes piggy with shower-water and surrounded by smudgy mascara, skin cleansed and shiny, spot a-glow and – ‘Hello, Alice! This is Neenee.’ There, in the living room, looking at me with loathsome amusement on their faces, were Freddie and an immaculately made-up female with great shoes and, it would seem, an unbelievably awful name, whom I could only imagine was ‘some girl from Shoreditch’.

‘Hi Alice’, said ‘Neenee’ holding out a hand on which each fingernail had a different, arty, polish-pattern. ‘Oh – gosh – um – towel –‘ I stuttered pathetically, wanting desperately to die. ‘I just came down for some tea, I’ll get out of your way.’ ‘Neenee’ smiled coldly, Freddie grinned happily. I hurried off into the kitchen, leaving them to snuggle up hatefully on the sofa, and tremblingly boiled the kettle whilst also trying to arrange my hair to cover the spot.

Then, taking a deep breath, I went back through the living room, hoping to get away with muttering good night and dashing back up the stairs. Nope. ‘How was your day, Alice?’ Freddie asked, arm around Neenee’s shoulders. ‘Fine’, I said, wishing he wouldn’t look at me, ‘yours?’ ‘Yeah’, he began, but was immediately interrupted. ‘Sorry, darling,’ ‘Neenee’ said, suddenly, touching his face in a manner that made me want to retch, ‘Alice, your leg’s bleeding’. I looked down. Oh yes. So it was. Just below the knee. ‘Must’ve cut it shaving. ‘ I shrugged, miserably, ‘oh dear’. She looked at me pityingly. ‘Shaving? You should really wax, so much better.’

I nodded and smiled and, feeling sick with embarrassment, walked bloodily upstairs. Immediately I called Cora and whispered the awful news to her. ‘Oh my GOD,’ she squealed back, ‘that sounds DIRE. What a Shoreditch Whorebitch! And who the fuck’s called NEENEE?’ Gales of laughter. ‘Well, Alice, thank God you DON’T fancy him, anyway.’ A long, long pause.

‘Thing is, Cora, I think I do.’

Saturday, May 9, 2009

Swine Flu Freddie and Ally Cat


Look on my Saturday evening, ye readers, and despair for me...:

I arrive home with Becky, who is supposed to be eating dinner with me after an afternoon in the park, to find Freddie lying on the sofa, surrounded by piles of damp-looking man-size Kleenex and empty mugs, with the remote control dangling limply from his left hand and a self-pitying expression on his slightly gray face. ‘Hello, Freddie’, I say coolly, hoping to beat a hasty retreat to the kitchen, ‘this is Becky. Becky, this is Freddie’. ‘Hi Alice’, he groans at me, annoyingly, as he struggles into a sitting position and rudely ignores Becky. ‘How are you? Good day?’ I pause in the middle of the living room, faintly exasperated by his desire for a conversation. (I have Mad Mary to blow coffee-breath and sickness into my face all week, I certainly don’t need Freddie doing it all weekend.) ‘Fine, fine’, I say, and then, with an apologetic glance at Becky, and because I really see no way of avoiding it, ‘are you alright?’

He nods, pathetically. I sigh. ‘You don’t really look it, Freddie.’ He sighs too. ‘I don’t feel very well’. He does look wretched and my maternal instincts begin to misbehave within me. ‘Do you think you’ve got a temperature?’ I ask, sinking into an uncomfortable half-sitting position on the other sofa. He shakes his head and mutters something about being fine. ‘Freddie, you’re not fine,’ I say, because it’s manifestly true. He blows his nose loudly. ‘Do you want me to get you some more tea?’ I ask. He gazes at me gratefully. ‘I’d love that, Alice. That would be very sweet.’ I reach over to pick up his flotilla of used coffee cups and head for the kitchen, with Becky twitching slightly in my wake, obviously desperate to say something.

As soon as we’re out of sight, she explodes into stage whispers. ‘THAT is FREDDIE?’ she chokes, unable to contain herself. ‘Yes’, I reply. ‘THAT is Freddie. He’s sick. I’m going to make him tea.’ I put the kettle on. ‘He’s FIT’, she gasps, gripping my arm. ‘Mm, not right now. Right now he is unfit,’ I say absentmindedly. (Becky thinks a startling range of men fall into this category). ‘ALICE’, she squeaks, beside herself, ‘he’s GORGEOUS. You should definitely have sex with him.’ ‘BECKY!’ I explode, appalled, ‘He’s HATEFUL. He threw away my toothbrush and groped me in the middle of the night after using his awful friend to flush me out of my room. He is a BAD man and I am not having sex with him.’

She stands grinning at me. ‘You fancy him,’ she says provocatively. I roll my eyes. ‘No, Becky. At best, I tolerate him. At worst, I actively dislike him. I definitely do not fancy him. This is not a Rom-Com. In real life, Becky, when people don’t like each other it’s because they don’t like each other, not because they secretly want to have sex with each other.’ ‘Yes you do,’ she interrupts, with unreasonable disregard for my entire argument, ‘you’re making TEA for him AND –‘ (as I begin loading the dirty cups into the dishwasher), ‘you’re cleaning up after him’. I straighten up and look at her to see if she’s serious. She is. Ugh. ‘He’s SICK and I’m being NICE. That’s all that’s happening here.’ ‘You like him’, she insists, unperturbed. ‘No. I DISlike him,’ I tell her, grimly, ‘I am currently thinking that swine flu would be an appropriate karmic punishment for his revolting ways, though despite the fuss he’s making, man-flu is more probable.’

‘You fancy him,’ she says again, grinning some more. ‘And I’m going home now. You should spend time alone together, and anyway, I really don’t want to get sick. I have a date with Paul on Tuesday’. I gape at her, appalled. ‘Which one’s Paul? Wait, you’re LEAVING? I bought things for dinner. DON’T be stupid. Look, I’m sorry he’s here, I thought everyone was out tonight.’ She shrugs. ‘Seriously, he looks really ill, though also hot. He probably HAS got swine flu. Give him the dinner.’ The kettle boils and as I make Freddie his tea, Becky makes her escape. ‘Bye, Freddie’, I hear her warble as she goes, ‘have a nice night with Alice. She’s making you dinner.’

Teeth clenched, I go back into the living room carrying Freddie’s tea. ‘Ally’, he sighs at me, blissfully, ‘thank you so much for making me dinner. I’m really hungry. You’re so lovely.’ ‘No, I’m not -’ I begin, before crumbling into a begrudging ending of, ‘that’s alright, I’m cooking anyway.’ Half an hour later, Freddie is eating my salmon fishcakes and vegetables and mumbling compliments. An hour later we’re watching The Bourne Ultimatum in companionable silence. Two hours later, he’s asleep and I wash up and then go upstairs to find a blanket for him. Two hours and fifteen minutes later, having covered him with the blanket and found myself thinking that he’s really quite nice when he’s sick, I realize that Becky’s right. He’s not bad looking…

---

And then, of course, I remembered that good looking or otherwise, he is also Freddie, and frightful and overbearing and rude and probably sexist. And just to prove the point, as I bent down to pick up his dirty tissues he lurched into consciousness for long enough to pat my hip and mumble into the cushion he’s probably been drooling on, ‘You’re a great little nurse, my little Ally Cat.’ HIS LITTLE ALLY CAT? Oh god. And I made that man dinner. I swatted his horrid wandering hand off and ran upstairs to shower and exfoliate and Yin Yang myself into something approaching cleanliness. I’m going to sleep now. Angrily.

Sunday, May 3, 2009

The Breakfast Clubbing


Well, dinner didn’t happen, mostly because Freddie did another of his disappearing acts, resulting in neither sight nor sound of him until the very early hours of Wednesday morning.

I was woken by the sound of my bedroom door opening, and a male voice shouting something about it being the wrong room to some other unknown called Tommy. I sat up in bed, too confused to be frightened, and plaintively told the intruder to go away. At the sound of my voice, though, Loud Mouth took another (drunkenly unsteady) step towards my bed and bawled gleefully to ‘Tommy’ that ‘Ay ay, there’s a GIRL in here!’ Mortified, and newly scared, I made a squeaking noise and pulled the duvet over my head – a poor evasive action, in hindsight, but clearly all I was capable of at the time – and hoped Jamie would wake up and save me.

Thankfully, the period of heart-thumping suspense that followed was short-lived, because Freddie’s voice began shouting, too, from downstairs. ‘For fuck’s sake Jonny, just get out of her room. The bathroom’s next door, you cock. Get the fuck out of her room.’ Loud Mouth Jonny retreated and I bounced out of bed to slam the door behind him, to hear him remark (as he stumbled off to urinate on my toilet seat) ‘I’m leaving, but I bet she’d’ve liked me to stay’, and snigger revoltingly. I hesitated momentarily, staring at the back of the door, before adrenaline and anger got the better of me and I threw it open again and marched downstairs, wearing only knickers, a tank top and an aura of righteous outrage.

‘Hi Ally’, Freddie said uncertainly, scrambling up from the sofa. His eyes had the unnatural brightness of the drunkard, and he was staring at my knickers. (Maybe Becky had a point last week).‘Don’t you ‘hi Ally’ me,’ I retorted, intending to sound dignified in justifiable offence, but only managing a mixture of querulous and petulant. (No matter – right was on my side). ‘Firstly, my name is Alice, I hate being called Ally, and secondly, why did a strange man just walk into my bedroom?’ I paused, momentarily distracted by my own peevishness and by a glimpse of my underdressed self in the wall mirror. Then, since there was no one else in the room, ‘And why was he calling you Tommy?’

Freddie blinked at me and made an obvious effort to look at my face instead of my underwear. I thought smugly that it was a good thing that my skin has been behaving of late, and that the Yin Yang regime has left it with a healthier than usual glow. (Confrontation is easier when pretty.) ‘Sorry, Alice.’ He rubbed his face tiredly, which was, irritatingly, quite mollifying. ‘That’s my mate, Jonny, from university. He’s a bit drunk, I’m really sorry. Must’ve thought your room was the bathroom, s’my fault.’ He looked at me helplessly. ‘Well, then, I’ll just give thanks he didn’t unzip and wee all over me’, I replied grumpily, ‘but it was scary, especially because of the Tommy thing. I thought there were two strange men in my house.’

‘Oh God, Alice, I’m so sorry,’ he said, running his hand through his hair, ‘everyone at uni called me Tommy. I’ll make it up to you.’ He peered at me some more. ‘You look all cold and scared, you poor thing.’ ‘Well,’ I said in an annoyingly high-pitched voice, because it was the middle of the night and it WAS scary and I had expected Freddie belligerence, not an apology, ‘I was scared, it was horrid’. The results of this were also surprising. Freddie took a step forward and enveloped me in a Lynxy embrace, trapping my folded arms against his chest and filling my nose with deodorant and some form of alcohol. ‘Poor Ally’, he mumbled, causing my eyes to roll.

The strangeness of the moment, which was considerable, was broken when Loud Mouth Jonny descended the stairs and guffawed. ‘Bloody hell, Tom, I didn’t know you had a thing going on with one of your housemates. Thought you were seeing that girl from Shoreditch,’ he huffed out, between heavy, beery breaths. Mortified, both by this odious assumption and by my undressed state, I struggled free of Freddie and hurried back upstairs, mumbling goodnight to him and unable even to speak to the loathsome Jonny. ‘You tosser,’ I heard Freddie say as I shut my bedroom door.

If I’d expected his contrition to manifest itself in sober, daytime life, I was wrong. As usual, we saw little of each other beyond momentary crossings of our bathroom-bound paths in the morning (during one of which he angered me by raising his eyebrows at the state of my new toothbrush) but we were all at home yesterday. We were all at home, and so we all had brunch together. Freddie, annoyingly, behaved as though he was holding court, leaning back in his chair and talking endlessly, with Laura and Jamie hanging on his every word, Laura giggling wildly at his every (weak) joke, and occasionally hopping up and fussing around him with tea pots and toast racks and MY organic Grove Fresh orange juice.

‘Did you know, Jamie’, I remarked, eventually, unable to bear Freddie’s self-satisfaction any longer, ‘that Freddie brought a friend home on Tuesday night, and that he walked into my bedroom? It was horrible.’ The other two looked momentarily appalled, and then Freddie started laughing, which of course meant that his thralls had to as well. ‘Oh yeah, that was bloody funny, Ally, you have to admit. You were so frightened,’ he went on mockingly, grinning at the other two. ‘She came running downstairs in her night clothes looking like she was going to cry. I had to give her a cuddle to calm her down.’ Laura sighed disgustingly, Jamie smirked admiringly, Freddie laughed uproariously, and I just gaped disbelievingly. He has no shame.