Under the Rose (7 page)

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Authors: Diana Peterfreund

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Humorous, #Contemporary Women

BOOK: Under the Rose
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W
HY
I D
ON’T
L
IKE
S
UNDAYS
(T
HIS
O
NE
I
N
P
ARTICULAR
)

1)
Upon waking, am smacked upside the head by calendar date and thereby reminded of all the things I need to do before Monday (usually comprising term paper, test, problem set, etc.).

2)
Often regret whatever I did Saturday night. (This week it was attending an early October Jane Fonda marathon at the Eli Film Society, which was Kevin’s—a.k.a. Frodo’s—idea, though he’d ducked out somewhere in the middle of
Barefoot in the Park.
By the end, I thought someone had roofied my Solo cup, but then I realized it was just
Barbarella.
George had intimated he’d show up as well, but he’d obviously found someone better to do. Ugh.)

3)
Always find a huge debate waiting for me on the D177 e-mail loop. (These are usually started by Graverobber, about the deplorable state of the society—like he would have anything to compare it to!—and seconded by Juno. It’s as if they insist the pot get stirred immediately prior to our Sunday meetings. Though this week, I was more than willing to get into a debate about the future of the society. I found it far preferable to the official event on the docket….)

4)
My C.B. is tonight. Gulp.

 

The C.B.s, or Connubial Bliss reports, are a rite of passage for every Digger. Each of us is assigned one evening starting in late September to stand up in front of all of our brothers and discuss our love lives, soup to nuts. It’s supposed to be some sort of bonding experience—as if, after carefully detailing all the sordid details of romances gone wrong, the rest of the club will somehow think it’s made us closer, rather than giving us juicy fodder with which to earn us a spot on a Matt Lauer show of the future.

We’d had two already: Josh Silver’s and Clarissa Cuthbert’s. Josh, being first, wasn’t quite sure exactly how much information was too much, but thankfully we’d stopped him short of any description of bodily fluids. Though single at the moment, he’d had a bunch of girlfriends over the years, none who’d really knocked his socks off. Perhaps, he explained, that was the reason why he’d never been able to remain faithful to any of them. Every single one of his serious relationships had ended when Josh had failed to keep it in his pants.

“This,” George had whispered to me from our position on one of the leather couches in the Inner Temple, “is why I don’t get into relationships. No heartache if you were never trying to be faithful in the first place.”

But Josh remained hopeful. “I like having a girlfriend,” he’d insisted. “It’s nice to know there’s someone who will be there for me.”

“Even if you’re not there for them?” Demetria had asked. Nikolos snorted, which, I was learning, was his standard reaction whenever he thought discourse in the tomb was growing too girly. This occurred with annoying frequency (cf. his firebrand e-mails). Unfortunately, no serious discussion ever took place on the topic because Nikolos didn’t see any cure to what he perceived as the problem, except to get rid of the Diggirls, full stop. This had been his argument for the past six weeks, ever since we’d lost Howard.

Clarissa’s C.B. was every bit as dishy as one would expect. Of course, she discussed her misspent youth, including the thirty-year-old boyfriend she’d hidden from her parents while in high school. Odile had nodded in silent empathy, having no doubt played the ingenue to plenty of would-be movie moguls in her time. (No one could wait to hear her C.B. and find out if the rumors about her and the various movie stars and hip-hop artists were true.) A sample of the type of anecdote to which our club was subjected:

 

Clarissa:
I mean, who amongst us hasn’t tried anal?

Most of the Rest of Us (I bet you can guess who wasn’t included in that number!):
(raises hand)
Um, me?

Clarissa:
And after a few weeks, he asked me if I’d get a Sphinx Brazilian.

Jenny:
A what?

Odile:
Bikini wax.
All
of it.

George:
(grins)
Cool.

Jenny:
(looks horrified)

Clarissa:
(not even pausing )
But after I did it, I felt prepubescent. I haven’t seen that part of me since I was eleven. I wasn’t in the mood for sex until it had grown back.

Nikolos:
(snorts)

 

See how that might be a tough act for me to follow? I didn’t know how I’d deal with another night of Nikolos’s snorts. And what if they snickered at my more embarrassing anecdotes? At least I’d already fallen in the middle of the statistics in the “virginity lost” and “partners had” categories.

Still, I doubted my tale of prom after-party sex in the bedroom of the host’s kid sister was going to impress anyone. I’m pretty run-of-the-mill for a Digger. Especially since there was only one orgasm involved, and it wasn’t mine. I bet Odile had done it on the top of the Eiffel Tower at midnight, or maybe on the Concorde. George had probably done it on the space shuttle. Would not surprise me a bit. As for Jenny, I was beginning to get the impression she was still a virgin. Not that there’s anything wrong with that. Quick C.B. and then we can all go home and study. I was all for it, especially now that it was October and classes were in full swing.

Not to give you the impression we only talked about sex! Before the C.B.s began, we’d tested the waters of knightly bonding with reports that amounted to recaps of summer vacation. I told everyone about my summer spent transcribing and editing narratives by exploited women, an experience I still hadn’t wrapped my mind around. I’d always figured I’d move to New York after graduation and work in publishing. All of a sudden I was gathering Peace Corps brochures from the Eli Career Center and looking into graduate school programs. All of a sudden I couldn’t picture myself in a cubicle, a realization I sheepishly shared with the other knights. But they were surprisingly supportive. I’d have thought with the Diggerly emphasis on ambition, the other knights would scoff at a career path that wasn’t fast track. I was wrong. Demetria had told me all about an upcoming project she was running for Habitat for Humanity, and Jenny—in one of her increasingly infrequent talkative phases—explained that she’d gone through a similar enlightenment after being involved in an Indonesian clean water project her church had sponsored two summers ago.

I’d spent my whole life getting my resume in order. Maybe it was time to turn it into confetti.

I swung my legs over the side of the bed and padded out to our common room, bypassing my computer for the time being. If I was going to deal with “Graverobber’s” griping, I needed sustenance. I reached to the top shelf, where we hid our contraband hot pot behind a large hardback of
Art Through the Ages,
and filled it with water from our purifying pitcher. (I will never understand who the fire marshal thinks he’s kidding with his surprise inspections every semester. He knows we have coffeepots and stuff in here, and we know he knows. It’s all such a game. Demetria tells this story about sophomore year when he came into her suite while she and her roommates were huddled about the hot pot, smoking—another no-no—and waiting for their soup to warm. He just shook his head and wrote them a ticket. Demetria claims she used it for rolling papers.)

What was I going to say at this thing? I plugged in the pot and plopped down on the couch, drawing my knees up inside my oversized sleep shirt and pondering the issue at hand. How embarrassing would it be to let everyone know that a week in my arms caused number two on my Hit List, a faux-beatnik named Galen Twilo, to pack up his dog-eared copy of
Howl
and burn for a
different
“ancient heavenly connection to the starry dynamo of…” whatever-it-was.

Or would I open up the wound from number three, the supposed love of my short life, Alan Albertson, who’d abruptly left me for someone named Fulbright? Or Brandon, number five, who I couldn’t manage to hold on to for longer than a few days. How about that one-night stand I’d had in between the two of them, that Spring Break mistake I don’t remember well enough to report his full name?

I could imagine why these C.B.s were so popular with male-only clubs. The double standard was in full force, once again. A man having anonymous sex was a
Penthouse
letter. A woman doing it was something different altogether. And there was probably nothing I could say that would impress George enough to keep him from sorta making plans with me and then sorta standing me up. I leaned my head back and began massaging my temples. Five minutes in, and the day already sucked.

The door to Lydia’s bedroom opened and out walked a very rumpled-looking Josh Silver.

He stopped dead in his tracks when our eyes met, and for a second we just stared at each other—me a bumpy T-shirt lump on the sofa, him in a wrinkled button-down he’d obviously unwadded from a corner of Lydia’s boudoir.

“What are you doing here?” he hissed.

“I live here,” I replied. “Did you not notice the pictures of me in her room? No, wait, don’t answer that. I don’t want to know what you were busy noticing instead.”

Lydia came to the door in her silk bathrobe.
Silk!
“Oh, Amy, you’re up. This is Josh.”

“Hi, Josh,” I said, extending my hand from inside my tee. “Nice to meet you.”

“Nice to meet
you,
” he said, taking my hand in his.

“Oh, wait!” Lydia said. “What am I saying? You guys totally know each other.”

We froze, mid-shake.

“Remember, Ames?” Lydia said. “At that political reception last January?”

I looked to Josh. Go with it? “Yeah, I think you look vaguely familiar.”

“Funny, I was just about to say the same.”

“I’m going to go hop in the shower,” Lydia said, then began to coyly toy with the felt-tipped marker attached to her whiteboard by a thin piece of yarn.
Lydia, coy!
“You, um, want to stick around for breakfast, Josh?”

“Sure.”

Lydia left. The second the door closed behind her, Josh looked at me.

“Amy—”

“No.”

“Amy—”

“No.”

“Amy—” He stopped. “Wait, ‘no’ what?”

“No, I’m not getting involved. This is barbarian matters, Josh.”

“Oh.” He plopped down beside me. “I thought you meant ‘No, you can’t see her.’”

“I like that one, too.” I crossed my arms. “This is weird.”

“That’s my assessment.”

“How did you…meet?”

He brightened. “It’s a funny story, actually. It was at the inductee ceremony for Phi Beta Kappa last month.”

My legs shot out of the bottom of my oversized T-shirt. “Phi Beta Kappa? But—”

“I know, that’s what I thought, too.” Josh nodded, getting into his narrative. “My dean called me in to her office to give me the news and I was all ‘Thank you so much for the honor, ma’am, but I’m afraid I must decline, as I am already in a secret society.’”

I blinked at him. “Isn’t Phi Beta Kappa just an honor society now? I think it doesn’t conflict with our oaths.”

“Yeah, I know that
now,
” Josh said, rolling his eyes. “After they all had a nice good laugh at my expense.”

I shook my head. We were getting way off track here. “Wait, let me get this straight. Lydia is in Phi Beta Kappa?”

“Yeah. Didn’t she tell you? The induction was the day of Angel’s champagne party.”

“Two dollars,” I said evenly. And no, she hadn’t. But she
had
been ebullient that day, and this explained it. Why would Lydia keep such great news a secret from me, her best friend?

Josh was apparently wondering the same thing, considering the raised eyebrows he was currently pointing in my direction. And then, it clicked. She was keeping it from me because I was keeping Rose & Grave from her. So not fair. She got two secret societies to my one? (Lydia’s secret society freaked me out, quite frankly. They almost destroyed our suite during their initiation last year. Of course, she’d never stand for me grilling her about it.)

“So anyway, that’s where we met. I mean, we’d known each other from class and stuff, but for some reason, after the ceremony we just clicked. Bonded.”

Knowing Lydia, seeing him in Phi Beta Kappa probably convinced her he was good enough for her.

“And now what?”

He looked at me quizzically.

“Is she your
girlfriend
?”

He looked down at his lap. “Yeah. I guess she is.”

I shot to my feet.

“Amy—” He grabbed at my arm, but I whisked it away and made a beeline toward my bedroom.

“I’m getting dressed.”

“Amy, your oath!”

“I’m getting dressed!” I yelled, and slammed the door.

What was I going to do? Lydia needed to know what she was getting herself into before she started to regret all of this coyness and Sunday morning sexy bathrobe wearing and cutesy little brunch invites. But what was I supposed to say?
Yes, this Josh fellow seems like a lovely guy, but I have it on good authority he’s never been faithful to any of his girlfriends.
If I knew Lydia, she’d try to bludgeon my sources out of me.

Why I Don’t Like Sundays (Especially This One): reason number five…

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