Read Remind Me Again Why I Need a Man Online
Authors: Claudia Carroll
âJust on my way home and I thought I'd pop by to catch up with you. Is that the blissful sound of a bottle of vino being opened that I hear?'
Just the treat I need. I buzz her in and an hour later we're both stretched out on the sofa, with an empty pizza box and a half-drunk bottle of wine in front of us. âIt's such a treat for me to have a conversation with one of the Lovely Girls that doesn't involve slagging me
rotten over Gormless Gordon,' she says, lighting a fag. âThe most ill-judged one-night stand of the century. I swear, if Jamie
dares
bring up the subject one more time, over twenty years of friendship will count for naught. There will be bloodshed. It's bad enough that the Gormless gobshite is practically stalking me outside the shop at this stage. If this goes on, I may have to change my mobile phone number.'
âWe've all made fools of ourselves in the name of love,' I say. Then I fill her in on Mr Non-Closure and she roars laughing.
âCan you just
believe
how needy and pathetic I was back then?' I snort. âWaiting in on a guy to call me who clearly had no interest in me? I don't know what Dr Johnny was in, but it certainly wasn't my face.'
âYeah.' She laughs. âWe'd no finesse in those days.'
âOr pride.'
âYeah.'
âWhat time is it now?'
âHalf-eight. What time did you ring the hospital?'
âSevenish.'
We look at each other.
âHe's probably really busy. You know the way surgeons work,' she says. âI'm sure he'll ring back in an hour or so.'
âYeah, course he will.'
But he doesn't.
Eleven p.m. and still no call.
Midnight â¦
âHe was probably exhausted after operating and went straight home,' I try to convince myself. âBet he'll ring tomorrow.'
âYeah, course he will,' says Rachel, yawning. âKeep me in the loop, won't you?'
But he never calls.
Not the next day, nor the one after and now I'm starting to run out of excuses for him. It seems the twenty-first century way of being dumped/ignored isn't all that different from the last century, is it?
Plus ça change
â¦
So far, so good. I'm well on track to have all my homework done for Ira's class this week and with a bit of luck to oust Mags from her lofty position as the class golden girl. OK, so Mr Non-Closure never called me back, which is hardly my fault, is it? But at least I did make the call.
And then Tim Singed-Underwear only spoke to me so he could pitch an idea for a documentary series, but that's hardly my fault either, is it?
However, I still have one major obstacle to negotiate before I dare cross the threshold of that classroom: Philip Burke.
Since the last class I've found myself actually looking around for him in the canteen, the car park, in a lift or just walking down a corridor, but no joy.
I kind of have a speech rehearsed in my head to say to him. Now, it may not exactly be worthy of Prince Hamlet of Denmark, but it's the best I can come up with, given that (
a
) I don't even fancy him
and (
b
) I'm only doing this because I have to.
âOh, hi, Philip, haven't seen you for ages!' (This to be delivered in a casual, throwaway manner.) âAre you free over the next few days? We should have a drink and a chat.' You may not think it, but this particular piece of doggerel actually went through several rough drafts in my head before I even got this far.
Anyway. As my mother would say: Ah sure, it'll fecking well do.
Then, however, fate takes over in a way I could never have predicted â¦
I'm rushing into the production office to grab a bunch of scripts I need for a meeting with our script editor when an ashen-faced Suzy stops me in my tracks. âOh, Amelia, I was just coming to look for you. Philip Burke rang and says you're to drop whatever it is you're doing and get straight up to his office now. That it's urgent.'
â
What?
'
âThat's what he said.'
She looks petrified, like a rabbit caught in the headlamps and I don't blame her one bit. There are only two reasons why anyone gets called upstairs to that office. Either to be hired or fired.
I deliberately play it cool in front of poor old Suzy, who's probably thinking that
Celtic Tigers
is for the chop and that she'll be out of a job by the end of
the week. Not for nothing is Philip called âThe Axeman' behind his back.
âRight. I better get this over with then,' I say crisply.
âOh shit, Amelia, I can't lose this job. I just got a mortgage! And a cat!'
âShhh, shhh, calm down. Let's just see what he has to say first, will we? And we'll take the rest from there. OK?'
I give her a big, confident, encouraging smile, go back outside, get into the lift and ⦠here comes the panic ⦠I almost have a palpitation.
Thank God I have Rescue Remedy in my bag. I don't even bother with the dropper thingy; I just unscrew the lid and knock it all back in one gulp.
OK, I can think of two reasons why he needs to see me so urgently. One: he's axing
Celtic Tigers
. After all my hard work. After my turning the show around. Not blowing my own trumpet, but our ratings have gone up by 150% since I came on board, and we're now attracting an audience of 800,000. The sponsors are thrilled and the advertisers are queuing up. Yes, OK, I know we're still shy of the one million target he set me, but my six-month deadline isn't up yet. We're getting there. That's the point and if he pulls the plug now â¦
Then a second reason strikes me. He's not going to axe
Celtic Tigers
, just me.
I'm
for the chop. I haven't
met my target yet, he's not happy with my performance and now he's firing me.
My mind races ahead in double-quick time and by the time I get out of the lift, I'm playing out a scenario in my head. I'm up in court and the judge is saying to me, âSo, Miss Lockwood. You, the plaintiff, are taking this case against the head of television on the grounds of unfair dismissal and all you have to say in your defence is that you think it's personal? Because he asked you on a date and you refused? Do you really think this man capable of such bitterness? Do you really believe that you could inspire such levels of vengeance from a spurned would-be lover? Do you think you're that good-looking or something?'
Either way, I think, rapping on the heavy oak door of his office, what a bastard.
I go in all guns blazing, but he doesn't even look up at me. The lunchtime news is coming up and he's glued to the flat-screen TV beside his desk. âAmelia. There you are,' he says. âJust wanted toâ'
I don't even give him the chance to get his sentence out. âPhilip, can I just say that we have all put in a huge amount of work on the show and to pull it now or to terminate my contract would be a supreme act of ⦠well ⦠well ⦠you'd be mad. You'd be off your head.'
He turns to look at me as if I'm a few sandwiches short of a picnic. âIs that why you think I wanted to see you? To fire you?'
âYou mean you're not?'
Shit. That means the show is for the scrapheap â¦
âNo, you're not fired.'
âThen what about
Celtic Tigers
?
âWhat about it?'
âAre you going to axe it?'
âWhy would I do that?'
âBecause â¦' I stop myself from saying, âBecause it's the kind of thing that you would do. It's what you're famous for. Even the stray dogs hanging round the back of the canteen know that your nickname is The Axeman.'
âAmelia, the reason I asked you up here is because there's something coming up on the news that I want you to see.'
âOn the news?'
âYes.'
âThat you want me to see.'
âYes. Please don't feel you have to repeat everything I say. You're starting to remind me of Geoffrey Rush in
Shine
.'
It's a Philip Burkeism, but I let it pass because (
a
) I'm so relieved that everything's OK and (
b
) I'm dying to know what it is.
I don't have long to wait.
The lunchtime news comes on, the dun-dun-dun-dun theme is blaring and the announcer reads out the headlines. âPeace talks continue in the North ⦠A post
office is raided in South Dublin ⦠The annual shin-kicking contest opens in Listowel ⦠A monkey at the zoo gives birth to twins â¦'
âSlow news day,' I say, remembering back to my time in current affairs when I'd dread days like this.
Philip waves his hand imperiously for me to shut up.
And then it comes.
âAnd on a lighter note, it's just been announced that the flagship drama series
Celtic Tigers
has been nominated in the best entertainment category at the prestigious annual television awards ceremony to be held next week. The show's producer, Amelia Lockwood, credited with its recent meteoric rise in popularity, is also nominated in the best producer category. The ceremony will be televised live from the Four Seasons Hotel in Dublin.'
Philip zaps the TV off and turns to me. âSo, what do you think of that?'
I'm stunned, shocked, bewitched, bothered and bewildered ⦠you name it, I'm feeling it.
âAmelia? Do you want to sit down? Are you all right?'
âIs this a joke?' is all I can say. âAm I on candid camera?'
âNo. I put your name forward for this a few days ago.'
âOh.' I still don't know which I'm more shocked at. That he would do that, or that I'm not fired.
âJeez, don't lose the run of yourself thanking me or anything.'
âOh, sorry, thanks. I just ⦠well, I can't believe this.'
âYou deserve it. You're a bloody good producer. Keep this up and you could end up doing my job in a few years.'
âI'm lost for words. This is unbelievable.'
âYes, you've already said that.'
âThank you so much ⦠This is ⦠Oh my God!'
âYou're welcome. Is that it, then?'
âEhh ⦠yeah, I think so.'
âRight, well, you'd better go back to spending the licence payers' money then.'
Another Philip Burkeish way of dismissing me, which is fine because I'm dying to get out of there. I need to walk around the block a few times. I need to sit down. I need a brandy.
Shit!
I need to ask him out.
âEmm ⦠Philip?'
âYup?' It's as though I've already left the room. His head is buried in a pile of boring-looking financial returns and he doesn't even look up.
OK, I say to myself sternly. See the image of my headless groom and just go for it. What's the worst that can happen? The one good thing I will say about Philip is that he's as batty as I am myself, so even if he says no,
chances are he'll genuinely have forgotten in about three minutes' time â¦
Deep breath.
âI don't suppose you ⦠I don't suppose that it ⦠Well, it's just that â¦'
Now he is looking at me. âGive me the last sentence first.'
Headless groom, Vera Wang, headless groom, Vera Wang â¦
Go for it.
âDo you want to come to the awards with me? It's absolutely fine if you don't, I completely understand, I just thought ⦠well ⦠Well, for starters, you'll know everyone there, won't you? And ⦠then, it's an awards do, isn't it? It's bound to be a great laugh. Not for me, of course, I'll probably have my head down the loo for most of the night, throwing up with nerves ⦠which I realize doesn't make me sound exactly like the most fun person you would choose to be there with ⦠In fact, now that I think of it, you've probably got someone else in mind that you could bring ⦠another date, I mean, so please just disregard everything I've just said as the deranged ramblings of a woman who's just been nominated for an
award
â¦'
âYeah, OK, why not?' he says, shrugging.
âSorry.'
âI'll go to the awards with you. Anything to shut you up.'
âOh. Right. OK then. Emm ⦠thanks, I think.'
âThat's unless you want to take that South African bloke who gatecrashed your party.'
âVery definitely not.'
âRight. That's a date then.'
I leave his office, completely stunned. I honestly don't know which is the most overwhelming. That I'm up for a big, flashy award or that I just asked Philip out. And he said yes. And, considering that he's barmy, it was remarkably easy.
This mightn't be too bad ⦠Who knows? It may even turn out to be fun â¦
By the time I get back downstairs, the word's out. It seems that everyone in the whole production office either saw the news or heard about it on some mysterious tom-tom. Suzy throws her arms around me and squeals congratulations, then asks me if I'd like a loan of her good Catherine Walker evening dress, bless her. The production team give me a spontaneous round of applause and I almost have tears in my eyes.
âGood on you, girl, no one deserves it more than you!' says Dave Bruton, giving me one of his trademark bear hugs.
Everyone's standing up now and the atmosphere is just amazing.
âThank you so much, all of you,' I say tearily, still in shock that none of us is out of a job. âYou've all worked so hard for this. I'm just proud to be on this
fantastic team. I know that sounds schmaltzy, but I really mean it.'
They clap again and then someone from the back of the office shouts, âHey, Amelia! Is there any room in that production budget for champagne?'
âToo bloody right there is!' I say and they all laugh. âLet me just ring the office hotline to Berry Brothers and Rudd and I'll be right back. Crack out those plastic beakers!'