Showing posts with label london. Show all posts
Showing posts with label london. Show all posts

Wednesday, 29 April 2015

The Empty Conference Room

She stares at her keyboard in the well lit, open office. Nervously, she looks around, checking behind her, before opening a chat window on her laptop.

She: He, you have to come here now.
He: Why? What’s up?
She: I got the thing in the post.
He: Oh, what? What was it?
She: A vinyl. A vinyl of an album we listened to in bed together.
He: Well, I mean, that’s nice, no?
She: Yes, but there’s more. Please come out and find me.
He: Haha, you’re crazy. OK. One sec.

She sits back in her chair, and swivels. Peering behind her, she sees a tall, well dressed Swedish guy emerge into the main foyer area. She leaps from her chair, runs over and grabs him.

“Haha, what’s wrong?” he giggles. Ah. He's so good-looking, so great, but weirdly, she has never flirted with him. Instead, his loveliness means she just wants to tell everything to him, everything awful. He is her priest to confess to, in a cathartic, Irish-Catholic manner. Which is funny, because she isn’t Catholic. It used to be that she would barely share anything with anyone, but more recently she shares it all. Except for with people she fancies. We can’t be our real selves with people we fancy after all.

Catholic or not, she needs to confess, to spill. Especially now, as she seizes and directs him quickly through the sea of awkward computer engineers. Peering into meeting rooms as she speeds by, she gasps an exclamation of glee as the final room is empty.

When in the room, he is still laughing. “What’s going on? The vinyl is nice though, right? It’s a thoughtful gift, aren’t you happy with it?”
“Yes… I am. I think? These goddamn boys keep giving me vinyl records, though they know I don’t have a record player.” This unsettles her.  She can never tell if these gifts are really thoughtful (the vinyl are always perfectly chosen albums) or just an easy choice (she loves music, ferociously), that skate over the fact that these records simply sit, looking good but never played, in her tiny apartment, gathering dust.



“Anyway…” She shakes off that sad fact for the meanwhile. “Anyway… the thing is, I’m late.”
“...”
“Come on. YOU KNOW. My period is late.”

He suddenly takes a step back in horror, such is the wont of a boy in his mid twenties at such a statement, before bursting into laughter.
“Wait, WHAT? No, come on. Are you growing a little poet in there? God, his mother will be so pleased!”

She winces and grudgingly allows herself to grin. Her recent crush had been a charmingly penniless (well, enough pennies to afford a record) poet from London. Although she had been quite swept away by his luxurious language and thick hair, the fact of the matter was, his business was beautiful words and the seduction therein. He also was charming to the point of total insincerity, and being naturally on the back foot with men that she was utterly forward in every other sense with, she didn’t fully trust him. Were that not enough, he also lived with his mother. It’s a fact universally acknowledged that no man on earth can make living with his mother, sexy.

She is laughing.

“Yes, oh god, right? But, I’m serious. I noticed last week and then, just kind of...forgot? I only remembered again today and now… well now I think this will transform my trip to London this weekend.”

Yes, dear reader. She lost her mind and fabricated a trip to London, to manufacture a reason to be near the poet. Without wanting to come clean and admit, yes, she likes him, she instead magicked a fake business trip. Charming is as charming does, and of course, the poet picked up the proffered baton like a gentleman, and offered her to stay with him… and his mother.

“She, this is easy. Send him a Facebook message and say ‘Hi poet. My period is late...dot dot dot….’?”

He is still laughing. She hits him.

“Oh come on! I can’t do that!”
“If those kind of messages resulted in babies, I would have twenty kids by now. Was this... something you planned?”

If she hadn’t already hit him seconds before, she would smack him again.

“Planned?! Are you kidding me? Yeah SURE, I was planning this. Pricking holes in the condoms and stuff. NO, asshole, this was not planned.”
“But I mean, could it realistically have happened? Did you have any, you know, little slip-ins? Any little late night fumbles?”
“Ha, love a late night fumble. Actually no. He was incredibly conscientious about safety. Almost in a non-poetic way, now that I think about it. More so than any other boy I’ve known.” She grins wickedly, and adopts a sweet, questioning voice. “The only way I could have got pregnant is if you can get pregnant through the mouth?”
He laughs a deep laugh, lying somewhere between shocked and delighted.

“Oh God.” She is laughing too. “I wish I could use this in my comedy set tomorrow night, but I’ve invited the whole goddamn office.”
“Well She, I mean, I’m sure you didn’t give that little toddler the best start in life this weekend, did you?”
“Well, no actually….wait a minute FUCKER, fuck off, there’s no toddler for me to be abusing with substances yet! And for your information, I had a very moderate and well behaved weekend, so even if there were a goddamn toddler, he would be having a GREAT start.”

A colleague walks past, looking curious.

Without words, they both know that they need to go back to work. Still laughing, they walk back through the office.

He leans forward and tries to pat her tummy, “Look after that little fella in there!”
“Oh my god, shut up!” she hisses through the laughter.

She sits down and genuinely feels sheer, unadulterated panic.

Monday, 12 September 2011

The Worst Chatting Up Ever

So this weekend, I trotted back over the Irish Sea to visit some pals in Reading and London.  


I know I've been neglecting this blog, but it was broached by some on Friday that I ought to blog more, so...here we are.  I probably could write about a lot of things, but in the spirit of reflecting reality, there's only one event that is sticking in my mind.


On Saturday, I went to London to see a friend's band play.  They were called Move and Fire, and were super awesome, in The Good Ship in Kilburn, North London.  Unfortunately, amid the sea of smiling waving faces when I entered the bar, one smiling waving face stood out.   My stomach froze and my heart did the congo.  I never react to people like such a geek, but this particular boy- I met him once years ago and just thought he was IT.  I mean, he's a nice boy and certainly not unfortunate looking, but my reaction to him is totally irrational.  


I mentally cursed that he was there on Saturday because I knew it would turn my (already slightly) drunk self into a gushing idiot.


Oh, how well I know myself.


Within very little time I had introduced him to my friend with what I can only imagine was a very loud stage whisper 'Yes, and this is the boy I will marry one day....'.  These sort of stage whispers, coming from me, who is always such a quiet girl...yeah.  Frig.


 Were that not bad enough, we got to chatting.  The stupid boy indulged me.  Come ON!  You never indulge the dickheads!  We got to chatting about his course at uni- architecture.


Me: So, How's it going at school?
Him:  Yeah, really well....*blah blah blah*
Me: (gazing earnestly and blearily up at him) You should work for Kitsuné though.  
Him: Ehh... is that an architecture firm?
Me: Oh no.  Its a record label in France.  Very cool.
Him: ?
Cat:  (lost in my soft focus view of him)  Yeah.  Definitely.  You're....you're handsome enough to work for them.


I swear to God, I shouldn't be allowed out.  I NEVER get on like this, its just this boy makes me go crazy.  Frig.  What a complete tosser I am!  Surprisingly, this didn't sink like a lead balloon, in fact, it was only the following day when I remembered the word 'handsome', that I recalled with horror what a schmoozy tool I am.   I also woke him up later that night at about 5am with the whispered words "Hey [   ].  I'm bored, tell me a story?".  TELL ME A STORY?!  Ugh JESUS.  I clearly have ALL THE MOVES.  Thank God he's English and so dealt with me politely.  I know plenty of Irish lads who would've lobbed at pillow at my face and told me to piss off!


Wan


Ker.


Seriously.  Thank God I only see him once or twice a decade.  Maybe thats my lifetime quota filled, and for his sake, I hope it is.  I don't like being a buck eejit!