âDo you hate meâ Brooke asked as she arranged her coat on the chair next to her and tossed her wet clutch beside her. She took a long, deep drink of wine and savored the feeling of the alcohol sliding over her tongue.
âWhy Just because Iâve been sitting here alone for thirty minutesâ
âI know, I know, Iâm really sorry. Hellish day at work. Two of the full-time nutritionists called in sick todayâwhich if you ask me sounds suspiciousâand the rest of us had to cover their rotations. Of course, if we met sometime in my neighborhood, maybe I could get there on time. . . .â
Nola held up her hand. âPoint taken. I do appreciate you coming all the way down here. Dinner in Midtown West just isnât appealing.â
âWho were you just on with Was that Danielâ
âDanielâ Nola looked baffled. She stared at the ceiling as she appeared to rack her brain. âDaniel, Daniel . . . oh! Nah, Iâm over him. I brought him to a work thing early last week and he was weird. Super awkward. No, that was setting up tomorrowâs Match dot-com date. Second one this week. How did I get so patheticâ She sighed.
âPlease. Youâre notââ
âNo, really. Itâs pathetic that Iâm almost thirty and still think of my college boyfriend as my only ârealâ relationship. It is also pathetic that I belong to multiple online dating sites and date men from all of them. But what is most patheticâwhat is bordering on inexcusableâis how willing I am to admit this to anyone who will listen.â
Brooke took another sip. âIâm hardly âanyone who will listen.ââ
âYou know what I mean,â Nola said. âIf you were the only one privy to my humiliation, I could live with that. But itâs as though Iâve become so inured to theââ
âGood word.â
âThanks. It was on my word-a-day calendar this morning. So, really, Iâm so inured to the indignity of it all that I have no filter anymore. Just yesterday I spent a solid fifteen minutes trying to explain to one of Goldmanâs most senior vice presidents the difference in men on Match versus those on Nerve. Itâs unforgivable.â
âSo, whatâs the story with the guy tomorrowâ Brooke asked, trying to change the subject. It was impossible to keep track of Nolaâs man situation from week to week. Not just which oneâa challenge itselfâbut whether she desperately wanted a boyfriend to settle down with or loathed commitment and wanted only to be single and fabulous and sleep around. It changed on a dime, with no warning, and left Brooke constantly trying to remember whether this weekâs guy was âso amazingâ or âa total disaster.â
Nola lowered her lashes and arranged her glossed lips into her signature pout, the one that managed to say, âIâm fragile,â âIâm sweet,â and âI want you to ravish meâ all at the same time. Clearly, she was planning a long response to this question.
âSave it for the men, my friend. Doesnât work on me,â Brooke lied. Nola wasnât traditionally pretty, but it didnât much matter. She put herself together so beautifully and emanated such confidence that men and women alike regularly fell under her spell.
âThis one sounds promising,â she said wistfully. âIâm sure itâs only a matter of time until he reveals some sort of colossal deal breaker, but until then, I think heâs perfect.â
âSo, whatâs he likeâ Brooke pressed.
âMmm, letâs see. He was on the ski racing team in college, which is why I clicked on him in the first place, and he even did two seasons as an instructor, first in Park City and then in Zermatt.â
âPerfection so far.â
Nola nodded. âYep. Heâs just about six foot, fit buildâor so he claimsâsandy blond hair, and green eyes. He just moved to the city a few months ago and doesnât know a lot of people.â
âYouâll change that.â
âYeah, I guess. . . .â She pouted. âBut . . .â
âWhatâs the problemâ Brooke refreshed both their glasses and nodded to the waiter when he asked if theyâd both like their usual orders.
âWell, itâs the job thing. He lists his profession as âartist.ââ She pronounced this word as though she were saying âpornographer.â
âSoâ
âSo So what the hell does that mean. Artistâ
âUm, I think it could mean a lot of things. Painter, sculptor, musician, actor, wriââ
Nola touched her hand to her forehead. âPlease. It can mean one thing only and we both know it: unemployed.â
âEveryoneâs unemployed now. Itâs practically chic.â
âOh, come on. I can live with recession-related unemployment. But an artiste Tough to stomach.â
âNola! Thatâs ridiculous. There are plenty of peopleâloads of them, thousands, probably millionsâwho support themselves with their art. I mean, look at Julian. Heâs a musician. Should I never have gone out with himâ
Nola opened her mouth to say something but changed her mind. There was an awkward moment of silence.
âWhat were you going to sayâ Brooke asked.
âNothing, itâs nothing. Youâre right.â
âNo, really. What were you just about to say Just say it.â
Nola twirled her wineglass by the stem and looked like sheâd rather be anywhere but there. âIâm not saying that Julian isnât really talented, but . . .â
âBut whatâ Brooke leaned in so close that Nola was forced to meet her eyes.
âBut Iâm not sure I would call him a âmusician.â He was someoneâs assistant when you met. Now you support him.â
âYes, he was an intern when we met,â Brooke said, barely even attempting to hide her irritation. âHe was interning at Sony to learn the music industry, see how it works. And guess what Itâs only because of the relationships he built there that anyone paid him any attention in the first place. If he hadnât been there every day, trying to make himself indispensable, do you think the head of A&R wouldâve taken two hours of his time to watch him performâ
âI know, itâs just thatââ
âHow can you say heâs not doing anything Is that really what you think Iâm not sure if you realize this, but he has spent the last eight months locked away in a Midtown recording studio making an album. And not just some vanity project, by the way; Sony actually signed him as an artistâthereâs that word againâand paid him an advance. If you donât think thatâs proper employment, I really donât know what to tell you.â