Lisa nodded tightly and closed the door.
ââ Like a hole in the head.â Ally didnât miss a beat. âAny wine leftâ
They stayed until every last drop of wine was drunk, every last crumb of Hula Hoop wiped off the tray with a licked finger, then they turned to each other and demanded in dangerously high spirits, âWhat now!â
They descended on Soho, swarming through the bars in a Friday-night, tequila-drinking, office workersâ maraud. Little Sharif Mumtaz (features assistant) got separated from the others and was helped home by a kind man whom she married nine months later. Jeanie Geoffrey (assistant fashion editor) was bought a bottle of champagne by a man who declared she was âa goddessâ. Gabbi Henderson (health and beauty) had her bag stolen. And Ally Benn (recently appointed editor) clambered on to a table in one of the livelier pubs in Wardour Street and danced like a mad thing until she fell off and sustained multiple fractures to her right foot.
In other words, a great night.
2
âTed, you couldnât have come at a better time!â Ashling flung wide her door and for once didnât utter her most overused phrase, which happened to be, âOh shite, itâs Ted.â
âCouldnât Iâ Ted sidled cautiously into Ashlingâs flat. He didnât normally receive a welcome this warm.
âI need you to tell me which jacket looks nicest on me.â
âIâll do my best.â Tedâs thin, dark face looked even more intense. âBut I am a man.â
Not quite, Ashling thought, regretfully. What a great pity that the person who had moved into the flat upstairs six months ago, and had instantly decided that Ashling was his best friend, hadnât been a nice, big, pulse-rate-raising man. And instead had been Ted Mullins, needy civil servant, aspiring stand-up comedian and small and wiry owner of a push-bike.
âFirst, this black one.â Ashling shrugged the jacket on over her white silk âinterviewâ top and magic lose-half-a-stone-in-an-instant black trousers.
âWhatâs the biggieâ Ted sat on a chair and wound himself around it. He was all angles and elbows, pointy shoulders and sharp knees, like a sketch drawing of himself.
âJob interview. Half nine this morning.â
âAnother one! What for this timeâ
Ashling had applied for several jobs in the past two weeks, everything from working on a wild-west ranch in Mullingar to answering phones at a PR company.
âAssistant editor at a new magazine called Colleen.â
âWhat A real jobâ Tedâs saturnine face lit up. âBeats me why youâve applied for all those others, youâre way overqualified for them.â
âIâve low self-esteem,â Ashling reminded him, with a bright smile.
âMineâs lower,â Ted shot back, determined not to be outdone.
âA womenâs magazine, though,â he mused. âIf you got it you could tell that crowd at Womanâs Place to stick it. Revenge is a dish best served cold!â He threw back his head and gave forth a hollow series of fake Vincent Price-type laughs. âNnnnyyyywwwwahwahwahwahwahwahwah!â
âActually, revenge isnât a dish at all,â Ashling interrupted. âItâs an emotion. Or something. And not worth bothering about.â
âBut after the way theyâve treated you,â Ted said, in wonderment. âIt wasnât your fault that womanâs couch was ruined!â
For more years than she cared to remember, Ashling had worked for Womanâs Place, a weekly, unglossy Irish magazine. Ashling had been fiction editor, fashion editor, health and beauty editor, handiworks editor, cookery editor, agony aunt, copy editor and spiritual advisor all rolled into one. Not as onerous as it sounds, actually, because Womanâs Place was put together according to a very strict, tried-and-tested formula.
Each issue had a knitting pattern â almost always for a toilet-roll cover in the shape of a Southern belle. Then there was a cookery page on buying cheap cuts of meat and disguising them as something else. Every issue had a short story featuring a young boy and a grandmother, who were sworn enemies at the start and firm friends by the end. There was the Problem Page, of course â invariably with a letter complaining about a cheeky daughter-in-law. Pages two and three were an array of âfunnyâ stories starring the readersâ grandchildren and the cutesy things theyâd said or done. The back inside cover was a platitudinous letter, supposedly from a clergyman, but always scribbled by Ashling fifteen minutes before the printersâ deadline. Then there were the Readersâ Tips. And one of these was the unlikely instrument of Ashlingâs downfall.
Readersâ tips were pieces of advice sent in by ordinary Josephine Soaps for the benefit of other readers. They were always about making your money go further and getting something for nothing. Their general premiss was that you neednât buy anything because you could make it yourself from basics already in the home. Lemon juice featured heavily.
For example, why buy expensive shampoo when you could fashion your own from some lemon juice and washing-up liquid! Youâd like highlights All you need to do is squeeze a couple of lemons over your hair and sit in the sun. For about a year. And to remove cranberry juice from a beige couch A mix of lemon juice and vinegar would do the trick.
Except it didnât. Not on the couch of Mrs Anna OâSullivan from Co. Waterford. It all went horribly wrong â the cranberry juice became ever more tenacious so that even a Stain Devil couldnât budge it. And despite magnanimous usage of Glade, the entire room stank of vinegar. On account of being a good Catholic, Mrs OâSullivan was a woman who believed in bloody retribution. She threatened to sue.
When Sally Healy, the editor of Womanâs Place, launched an investigation, Ashling admitted that sheâd invented the tip herself. Readersâ contributions had been thin on the ground that particular week.
âI didnât think anyone actually believed them,â Ashling whispered, in her defence.
âIâm surprised at you, Ashling,â Sally said. âYou always told me youâd no imagination. And Letter from Father Bennett doesnât count, I know you crib it from The Catholic Judger, which, incidentally â keep it to yourself for the moment â is about to go to the wallâ
âIâm sorry, Sally, itâll never happen again.â