The Book Club
WAS THERE A dignified way to happen upon your dead father’s lover? If so,
I imagined it wasn’t blurting I have to pee, jerking free the bottle of wine
you’d handed your host, and running back down the hall in search of a
bathroom. But that was the best I could come up with.
I twisted the top off the wine and poured it down my throat, right there in
the nautical-themed bathroom. I considered leaving, but for some reason,
that seemed like the most embarrassing option. Still, it occurred to me that I
could walk out the door, get into the car, and drive to Ohio without
stopping. I’d never have to see any of these people again. I could get a job
at Ponderosa Steakhouse. Life could be grand! Or I could just stay in this
bathroom, forever. I had wine; I had a toilet; what else did one need?
Admittedly, it was not my good attitude and strength of spirit that got me
out of the bathroom. It was the shuffle of steps and conversation moving
down the hallway, the sound of Pete saying, “Oh, you’re sure you can’t
stay?” in a voice that made it sound much more like What the hell, Sonya?
Why is that weird little girl afraid of you? and of Sonya saying, “No, I wish
I could, but I totally forgot this work call—my boss won’t stop emailing
until I’m in the car and on my Bluetooth.”
“Bluetooth shmootooth,” Pete was saying.
“Indeed,” I said into my wine bottle. The chardonnay was hitting me fast.
I thought my way backward through my day, recounting my meals in an
attempt to understand my immediate tipsiness. The only thing I could be
sure I’d eaten was the fistful of mini marshmallows I’d grabbed on my way
to a much-needed pee break.
Whoops.
The front door was opening. Goodbyes were being said over the pitterpatter of rain against the roof, and I was still locked in a bathroom.
I set the bottle on the sink, looked at myself in the mirror, and pointed
fiercely at my small brown eyes. “This will be the hardest night you have
all summer,” I whispered. It was a lie, but I totally bought it. I smoothed my hair, shrugged out of my jacket, hid the wine bottle in my tote bag, and
stepped back into the hallway.
“Sonya had to dip out,” Pete said, but it sounded more like What the hell,
January?
“Oh?” I said. “That’s too bad.” But it sounded more like Praise be to the
Bluetooth Shmootooth!
“Indeed,” Pete said.
I followed her back to the living room, where the Labradors had
rearranged themselves, along with the ladies. One of the dogs had moved
over to the far side of the couch, Maggie having taken the vacant spot left
behind, while the second one had relocated to the armchair, mostly on top
of the third. Lauren was sitting in one of the high-backed green chairs, and
Pete gestured for me to take the one next to her as she slid into a third. Pete
checked the time on her leather watch. “Should be here any minute.
Must’ve gotten caught in the storm! I’m sure we’ll be able to get started
soon.”
“Great,” I said. The room was still spinning a bit. I could barely look
toward where Sonya had been curled on the couch, willowy and relaxed
with her white curls piled on her head, the opposite of my tiny, straightbanged mother. I took the opportunity to dig through my bag (careful not to
upend the wine) for the bookmarks.
Someone knocked on the door, and Pete leapt up. My heart stuttered at
the thought that Sonya might’ve changed her mind and doubled back. But
then a low voice was scratching down the hall, and Pete was back, bringing
in tow a damp and disheveled Augustus Everett. He ran a hand through his
peppered hair, shaking rain from it. He looked like he’d rolled out of bed
and wandered here through the storm, drinking from a paper bag. Not that I
was one to judge at this precise moment.
“Girls,” Pete said, “I believe you all know the one and only Augustus
Everett?”
Gus nodded, waved. Smiled? That seemed too generous a word for what
he was doing. His mouth acknowledged the room, I would say, and then his
eyes caught on mine, and the higher of his mouth’s two corners twisted up.
He nodded at me. “January.”
My mind spun its feeble, wine-slick wheels trying to figure out what
bothered me so much about the moment. Sure, there was smug Gus Everett.
There was stumbling upon That Woman and the bathroom wine. And—The difference in Pete’s introductions.
This is January was how a parent forced one kindergartner to befriend
another.
The one and only Augustus Everett was how a book club introduced its
special guest.
“Please, please. Sit here, by January,” Pete said. “Would you like a
drink?”
Oh, God. I’d misunderstood. I wasn’t here as a guest. I was here as a
potential book club member.
I’d come to a book club that was discussing The Revelatories.
“Would you like something to drink?” Pete asked, looping back to the
kitchen.
Gus scanned the blue plastic glasses in Lauren and Maggie’s hands.
“What are you having, Pete?” he asked over his shoulder.
“Oh, first round at book club’s always White Russians, but January
brought some wine, if that sounds better.”
I balked both at the thought of starting a night with a White Russian and
at the prospect of having to shamefully fish out my purse-wine for Gus.
I could tell by the huge grin on her face that nothing would delight Pete
more.
Gus leaned forward, resting his elbows on his thighs. The left sleeve of
his shirt rose with the motion, revealing a thin black tattoo on the back of
his arm, a twisted but closed circle. A Möbius strip, I thought it was called.
“A White Russian sounds great,” Gus answered.
Of course it did.
People liked to imagine their favorite male authors sitting down at a
typewriter with a taste of the strongest whiskey and a hunger for
knowledge. I wouldn’t be surprised if the rumpled man sitting beside me,
the one who’d mocked my career, was wearing dirty day-of-the-week
underwear inside out and living on Meijer-brand cheese puffs.
He could show up looking like a college junior’s backup pot dealer (for
when the first one was in Myrtle Beach) and still get taken more seriously
than I would in my stuffy Michael Kors dress. I could get author photos
taken by the senior photo editor of Bloomberg Businessweek and he could
use his mom’s digital camera from 2002 to snap a shot of himself scowling
on his deck and still garner more respect than me.He might as well have just sent in a dick pic. They would’ve printed it on
the cover flap, right over that two-line bio they’d let him shit out. The
shorter, the fancier, Anya would say.
I sensed Gus’s eyes on me. I imagined he sensed my brain tearing him to
pieces. I imagined Lauren and Maggie sensed this night had been a terrible
mistake.
Pete returned with another blue wineglass full of milky vodka, and Gus
thanked her for it. I took a deep breath as Pete slid into a chair.
Could this night get any worse?
The Labrador nearest to me audibly farted.
“Okay, then!” Pete said, clapping her hands together.
What the hell. I slid my purse-wine out and took a gulp. Maggie giggled
on the couch, and the Labrador rolled over and stuffed his face in between
the cushions.
“Red, White Russians, and Blue Book Club is now in session, and I’m
dying to hear what everyone thought of the book.”
Maggie and Lauren exchanged a look as they each took a slurp of their
White Russians. Maggie set hers on the table and lightly slapped her thigh.
“Heck, I loved it.”
Pete’s laugh was gruff but warm. “You love everything, Mags.”
“Do not. I didn’t like the man spy—not the main one, but the other one.
He was snippy.”
Spies? There were spies in The Revelatories? I looked over at Gus, who
looked as puzzled as I felt. His mouth was ajar and his White Russian rested
against his left thigh.
“I didn’t care for him either,” Lauren agreed, “especially in the
beginning, but he came around by the end. When we got the backstory
about his mother’s ties to the USSR, I started to understand him.”
“That was a nice touch,” Maggie agreed. “All right, I take it back. By the
end, I sort of liked him too. I still didn’t care for the way he treated Agent
Michelson though. I won’t make excuses for that.”
“Well, no, of course not,” Pete chimed in.
Maggie waved her hand lightly. “Total misogynist.”
Lauren nodded. “How did you all feel about the twin reveal?”
“Honestly, it bored me a bit, and I’ll tell ya why,” Pete said. And then she
did tell us why, but I barely heard it because I was so absorbed in the subtle
gymnastics Gus’s expression was performing This could not possibly be his book they were talking about. He didn’t
look horrified so much as bemused, like he thought someone was playing a
prank on him but he wasn’t confident enough to call it out yet. He’d drained
his White Russian already and was glancing back at the kitchen like he was
hoping another might carry itself out here.
“Did anyone else cry when Mark’s daughter sang ‘Amazing Grace’ at the
funeral?” Lauren asked, clutching her heart. “That got to me. It really did.
And you know my heart of stone! Doug G. Hanke is just a phenomenal
writer.”
I looked around the room, to the credenza, the bookshelves on the far
side of the couch, the magazine rack under the coffee table. Names and
titles jumped out at me from dozens, if not hundreds, of dark paperbacks.
Operation Skyforce. The Moscow Game. Deep Cover. Red Flag. Oslo
After Dark.
Red, White Russians, and Blue Book Club.
I, January Andrews, romance writer, and literary wunderkind Augustus
Everett had stumbled into a book club trafficking primarily in spy novels. It
took some effort to stifle my laughter, and even then I didn’t do an amazing
job.
“January?” Pete said. “Is everything all right?”
“Spectacular,” I said. “Think I’ve just had too much purse-wine.
Augustus, you’d better take it from here.” I held the bottle out to him. He
lifted one stern, dark eyebrow.
I imagined I wasn’t quite smiling but managed to look victorious
nonetheless as I waited for him to accept the two-thirds-drunk chardonnay.
“I’ve thought about it some more,” Maggie said airily. “And I think I did
like the identical twin twist.”
Somewhere, a Labrador farted.