Authors: Gemma Townley
Tags: #Fiction, #Humorous, #Romance, #General, #Contemporary
Yes, you know, strategic stuff, I say airily.
He chuckles. Right, well, you have fun with that. Is my girl becoming a fearsome business executive?
Sort of. Fearsome. I like that.
Look, darling, Ive got to go. Ill see you after the weekend, okay?
Okay, have fun.
Bye.
For some reason I feel very flat as I put the receiver back.
It isnt too far to walk to Mikes offices, even though it isnt exactly on my way home. Although I use the wordoffices in its loosest sense. For one thing, theyre in Soho, right in the middle of Frith Street, near all the cool pubs and bars. And for another thing, inside they dont have nasty flecked wallpaper like the Leary building; they have exposed brickwork with groovy circular desks and posters from gigs and clubs covering the walls. The radio is on and there are beanbags on the floor, a TV in the corner, and a bar. A bar, for Gods sake!
Tracey, the girl I had met at the Atlantic Bar, is sitting at a desk at the front of the office with two phones on it. Shes looking pretty bored. I smile at her.
Hiya! Do you always have to work this late?
I wouldnt feel sorry for her if I were you. She doesnt get in till twelve, says Mike, whos just appeared. Tracey raises her eyebrows at me and then goes back to looking bored. Mike gives me a kiss on the cheek.
Drink?
I look around and take in my surroundings. Mike, I cant believe you have a bar in your office. Do you ever actually work?
Bars essential. Need it to keep DJs and bands happy, shrugs Mike. I sit down on one of the beanbags and immediately regret it. Ive always liked the idea of beanbagsI mean they look really coolbut somehow the reality never lives up to expectations. They arent very comfortable, and its impossible to look good when youre on one.
Mike brings me over a beer and then tosses a holdall onto my lap. Its heavier than I expected and larger, too. Still, Im going to Rome, I keep reminding myself.
Wont be a problem, will it? I wonder what Mike would say if I said yes.
Its quite heavy, I say instead, but Mike doesnt answer.
So whats in it? I ask. I mean, I have a right to know, dont I?
Mike looks up sharply. Georgie, he says with a sigh, if you dont want to help me out here, just say so, okay? If you want me to have to pay another ?500 in excess baggage costs to take it with me, just say the word and Ill do it.
I stare at him. I forgot he could be such a drama queen.
Fine, Ill take it, I say crossly. I was only asking a question.
Thanks, Georgie. Look, sorry for snapping. Ive just got so much shit to deal with right now, yknow?
I wonder what sort of shit, but dont think its really the time to ask. Instead, I lean back on the beanbag and take a gulp of my beer. These are seriously cool offices. Maybe if I get made redundant from Learys I could get a job at a record label or something. I could sit around and listen to records and sign up cool young things. I could end up going out with a pop star.
Do you have to do much researchinto bands and stuff, I mean? I ask Mike.
He looks at me uncertainly. Research? Nah. Its all in here. He points to his head.
I lean back again, imagining myself in an interview at Polygram or somewhere, pointing to my head and saying confidently All my music knowledge doesnt come from researchits all in here.
Theres a loud buzzing noise and Tracey calls over to Mike, The boys are here. They say theyve come for the gear.
Mike stands up quickly. Yeah, right. Um, let them in, will you?
He turns to me. So dont you have to make a move?
Im sorry?
Weve got to clear out in a minute. Got a record launch to go to. Id love you to come but its a stupid guest-list thing. You can get back all right, cant you?
I struggle to my feet. I was rather enjoying my beer actually.
Oh, no problemIm going out tonight anyway. Im not really, but I cant help lyingsomething about Mike always makes me want to make out like Ive got a more exciting life than I actually do. As I pick up the holdall two men appear at the door. They dont look like record label types. For one thing, theyre wearing really bad jeans, the sort of thing people wore in the eighties. Although I suppose the eighties is meant to be back in again. It could be me whos out of touch.
Drink? asks Mike.
The two men both stare at me.
Georgies just leaving, arent you, he says, looking at me pointedly.
I walk toward the door. Honestly, Im doing Mike a favor with this stupid bag, and hes desperate to get rid of me. Im going to be revisiting my SWOT analysis just as soon as I get home.
Sorry mate, cant stay, says one of the men. Just give us the goods and well be on our way.
Tracey places a blue carrier bag with a large package in it on the reception desk.
Got a sample, have you? the other one asks. I pause at the door. I somehow dont think theyre talking about music samples.
Sure enough I see Mike reach into his back pocket and pull out a small wrap.
Drugs? I say indignantly before I can stop myself. Mike, I cant believe you.
Everyone stares at me.
Georgie, werent you on your way out? Mike says angrily.
Yes, yes I was, I fume, dumping the holdall and slamming the door behind me. As I stomp down the steps I wonder if this is what David meant when he said that Mike was involved in stuff I didnt want to know about. I knew that Mike sometimes did a few lines of cokeI mean, everyone in the music industry does it, he says. But this . . . well, this is different. Is this how hes been making his money? God, what a bloody idiot. As I reach the main front door, I hear someone coming down the stairs after me.
Georgie, stop a minute, will you? Its Mike.
No, I wont stop, I say, walking more quickly. I just cant believe you. You tell me youre running a successful record label, and all youre doing is selling drugs. No wonder David didnt want me associating with you.
David? What did he say? Mike is looking agitated.
Just that I should give you a wide berth. And I think hes right.
Georgie, its not what you think, Mike says quickly. Honestly, youve got to believe me. Im not into that stuff anymore. It was just a favor for a client. A major client, actually, and we need to keep him onside otherwise were screwed. I dont want to do it, but I just said wed hold on to some gear for him for a bitand now were giving it back. End of story. Please dont be angry.
I give Mike my best withering stare.
So why were they asking for a sample if its their gear?
Theyre just the idiots who do the collections, Mike replies quickly. They dont know me from Adam, so they want to check Im not ripping their boss off. Come on, Georgie, youve got to believe me. Look, come and ask them if you like. I mean, well probably lose the client, but Id rather that than have you think Im a drug dealer.
He stands aside so I can go back to the office. If its a bluff, its a clever one. I mean, theres no way Im going back in there.
Georgie Porgie, look, you know me. Im not a drug dealer, Mike pleads, looking me right in the eye. Dont let this mess things up for us, please?
He looks so sweet, I think, when his eyes do that gooey thing. I mean, its so hard to stay angry. Resignedly, I take the holdall from him. Okay, but dont do it again, okay? Its so stupid. You could end up in prison.
He nods sheepishly. Thanks Georgie. And thanks for being fucked off. It means a lot to me that you care enough to be pissed.
So Ill see you in Rome?
Rome, says Mike softly as he kisses me on the lips. Dropping the holdall again, I reach my arms around his neck. I can feel his light stubble grazing my cheeks and can taste beer on his tongue as my lips part.
Better go, says Mike reluctantly as he gives me a final kiss.
I nod, wave good-bye, and, clutching the holdall as I walk down the street, assure myself everything is great. Im going to Rome and Im going to have a fantastic time. Arent I?
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I dont like flying. Its not that I get scared or anything, I just hate the tedium. I mean, you dont just jump on and jump off, do you? Theres getting to the airport, all the waiting around, passport control, and getting your baggage at the other end. If I was rich enough I wouldnt have luggage. Id just buy everything at the other end. I hate airports.
So far today I have been traveling for exactly five and a half hours, and Im still in Rome airport waiting for my luggage. I wish Id just taken my stuff in a small bag that I didnt have to check, but I wanted a fancy suitcase to bring with me, and the salesman convinced me that I should get a larger size because it would be so much more practical. On the plus side, it was big enough to fit Mikes bag in it along with all my clothes. Still, I wouldnt call having to wait forty minutes for my luggage practical.
I manage to get a trolley and wheel it over to the conveyor belt. Two little boys are seeing how far they can jump off the belt, and their harassed mother is trying to stop them. At least I dont have to worry about anyone else, I think to myself. Traveling on your own is quite hard enough; traveling with someone else brings a whole load more stress. Except traveling with David, that is. Hes the sort of person who looks after everything so all you have to do is sit around and drink tea. I get a slight pang and wonder what hes doing now in Geneva.
According to the screen in front of me, my flights luggage is next in line for this conveyor belt. Mind you, that doesnt mean much; its been next in line for twenty minutes at least. The airport is heaving with people, and I let the Italian conversations wash over me. Its such a romantic language. I resolve to start learning it as soon as possible. I can already ask for a bottle of mineral water without gas in Italian, so Ive probably got a flair for languages. Plus Italians are so well dressedif I could learn to speak Italian Im sure I would start dressing in tan, black, and beige like the women around me. And I wonder if Id suit highlights? I gaze at a couple of women standing a few yards away from me, both wearing floppy linen trousers with really nice sandals and smart tops. One of them looks like Sophia Loren and the other one could easily be Penelope Cruz, just a few years older. They are talking animatedly about something and I wish I could understand what they are saying.
Theres no doubt about it, when I get back to London, Im going to start Italian classes. How great would it be to have another language under my belt! Ill be able to really impress people in restaurantswell, Italian restaurants anyway. And then I could even come and work in Italy. I could work for an Italian record label!
I imagine Nigel and Guys shocked faces as I tell them that Im leaving Leary to pursue a career at . . . well, I cant think of the name of any Italian record labels, but they must have them. Ill move to Rome and get a gorgeous little apartment, and Ill walk around in full skirts and chic little shoes. Actually, if Im working for a record label, Ill probably be wearing low slung jeans and trainers most of the time. I wonder what David would say if I told him I was moving to Rome. Would he want to come with me?
As my thoughts turn to David, my eyes start to play tricks on me because I could swear I can see him on the other side of the airport walking toward the nothing to declare sign. I mean, its obviously impossible because Davids in Geneva, but it does look very like him. And hes with a woman.
Of course it cant actually be him. I mean, what on earth would David be doing with some other woman in Rome? But I could almost swear its him. Im about to call out when it occurs to me that if it is David, it wouldnt be very sensible to go charging across the airport to confront him. For one thing, there is the teeny-weeny problem that Im not actually meant to be in Rome myself. If it is David, and if there is a perfectly reasonable explanation for all this, bounding up to him when hes with some gorgeous-looking woman and explaining that Im actually here to meet my ex-boyfriend who David has explicitly asked me not to see or even speak to, is not the best idea in the world.
But it really does look like him, and hes even wearing a coat like Davids. I whip out my mobile and dial Davids number. You know, just to see how he is. In Geneva. The phone rings, and the man keeps walking toward the nothing to declare sign. Hes walking. Its ringing. Ooh, hes stopped. Still ringing. Now, hes walking again, but hes reaching, hes . . . damn, hes out of sight.
Georgie!
I always forget about other peoples caller ID.
Hi darling! Im trying to sound all breezy. Just wanted to see how things are going in Geneva!
Oh, you know, its not exactly a laugh a minute, but Id say were making progress. Id much rather be at home with you, though.
Now that I cant see whether the man I saw in the airport is on the phone or not I cant think of anything to say to David.
So whats Geneva like?
To be honest, I havent really seen much of Geneva, just the inside of offices.
Okay, well, have a lovely time, I say, and hang up just in time to hear an announcement telling me my luggage has arrived on carousel number four.
Of course my suitcase is the last to appear on the carousel, and Im half an hour late by the time I get to the station to meet Mike. I even take a taxi, which wipes out a whole load of cash. But naturally Mike hasnt arrived yet. Maybe he hasnt adjusted to Italian time. I sit on my suitcase and start reading a copy of ItalianVogue I bought at a kiosk. Not that I really understand any of it, but I like the pictures, and also I like the idea that people walking past me may think Im Italian.
Georgina, I mutter under my breath, practicing my accent. Buon giorno,Georgina. A man sitting next to me looks at me oddly and I refocus on my magazine.