Party Girl: A Novel

Read Party Girl: A Novel Online

Authors: Anna David

Tags: #Fiction, #Humorous, #General, #Biography & Autobiography, #Contemporary Women, #Rich & Famous, #Recovering alcoholics, #Los Angeles (Calif.), #Ex-Drug Addicts, #Celebrities, #Humorous Fiction, #Women Journalists

BOOK: Party Girl: A Novel
3.93Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

PARTY GIRL

A NOVEL

ANNA DAVID

FOR ALL THE PARTY GIRLS OUT THERE—
AND ALL THOSE WHO PUT UP WITH THIS ONE

“Silly things do cease to be silly if
they are done by sensible people
in an impudent way.”
—JANE AUSTEN
“My girl wants to party all the time,
Party all the time,
Party all the time…”
—EDDIE MURPHY

Contents

Epigraph

1

It is a truth universally acknowledged that crazy things happen…

2

Back in L.A., Stephanie asks me about the wedding and…

3

I’m just finishing a “Where Are They Now?” story on…

4

I’m in Brian’s office, griping about how I pitched something…

5

“Can we please concoct some reason we have to move…

6

When I wake up later that afternoon, things seem a…

7

While I really did convince myself that Chad Milan could…

8

My first instinct when I see Stephanie standing at my…

9

I read everything I can find about Kane on the…

10

Kane has one of those video camera doorbell things that…

11

“It’s completely unfair,” I say to Mom. “I mean, I…

12

I’ve always heard about how people come to and have…

13

When we pull up at Pledges, I marvel over what…

14

I’m trying to focus on reading the Pledges book when…

15

I’m not sure when rehab starts to seem like the…

16

The day I’m getting out, I decide to check the…

17

“Would you like to have your lawyer look over the…

18

I’m sitting at the Starbucks smack in the middle of…

19

“Tres belle,” Jean-Paul coos as his camera snaps away. Three…

20

I’m dreaming about signing autographs—and in the dream, my handwriting…

21

“Oh, you’re adorable!” a brunette in a wraparound Diane Von…

22

“Here we go,” Tim says as the Town Car pulls…

23

“I can’t imagine doing all of that sober,” Stephanie says…

24

When I walk in the door after a pre-Emmys party…

25

“I need to talk to you,” Justin whispers in my…

26

It’s a Sunday night, arguably the most depressing time of…

27

“He didn’t call me back,” I say into the phone…

28

“Here you go,” Stephanie says, reaching through a throng of…

29

When I come to at about three in the afternoon…

30

I spend the next week writing down my resentments, only…

31

“Amelia, we already went through this—on our hike, remember?” Stephanie…

32

“You’re something else,” Joy Behar says after she takes a…

 

Acknowledgments

About the Author

Copyright

About the Publisher

1

It is a truth universally acknowledged that crazy things happen at weddings. Or at least that’s what I tell myself as my activities segue from outrageous to risqué to downright depraved.

There’s the bathroom blow job incident, which I categorize as “outrageous” rather than “downright depraved,” solely due to the fact that my eighty-two-year-old stepdad walks in while I’m going down on the cousin of the bride in the poolhouse bathroom. Because of his eighty-two-ness (the stepdad, not the cousin, thankfully), he was prone to more “senior moments” than nonsenior moments—and thus is easily convinced that what had just happened never in fact happened. By the time I’m done talking to him, I’ve actually managed to convince him that not only was there no blow job, but also there had been no cousin of the bride. I’m pretty sure if I’d kept going I could have gotten him to believe there was no wedding. But the point is, in convincing my stepdad, I’m pretty sure I convince myself. And thus: outrageous, not downright depraved.

Don’t bother asking me how I go from sitting next to the cousin and finding him mildly attractive—not gorgeous, just mildly attractive, someone I might have gone out with had he asked me—to kneeling down in front of him while he sat on Mom’s bidet. It wouldn’t have been my style to have asked, “Care for a blow job in the bathroom?” At least I don’t think so. It’s possible that after a bottle or so of good wedding champagne, Amelia Stone is replaced by Paris Hilton minus the millions, plus a good twenty pounds, but since my exploits haven’t been caught on tape—note to exes, not that I know of—I can only venture this as a guess. I’d like to imagine that I happened to visit the restroom just as he was leaving and that our sudden passion erupted spontaneously. But by the end of the night—well, morning—the whole cousin incident was so comparatively pristine, I may as well have been a virgin in white in that bathroom.

Later, I find myself in the sauna with the groomsmen. It had been my mom’s idea, that all the “young people” from the wedding should sauna and swim, but somehow it got down to just two guys and me. By this point, I know that I’m way more than mildly intoxicated, but since technically I’m on vacation, aren’t I supposed to be? If I were this drunk in L.A., someone would probably bring out the coke and I’d thus be able to alleviate my alcohol buzz a bit, but parties at Mom’s house tend to be pretty short on drugs—at least non-SSRI ones. And since in some ways there’s no better high than having two men vying for your attention, I figure it’s just as well that I’m not holding.

“I’m going to be graduating in May,” Mitch says, as he offers me a sip of his warm Amstel Light. “Medical school has been a bitch.”

“Oh, but now you’re going to have to do your residency,” Mitch’s alleged best friend Chris interjects, while interjecting his body into the minuscule space that exists between Mitch and me. “You’ll be working, like, ninety-hour weeks for no money.”

“Which is so much worse than ‘doing your residency’ at Paramount for a salary just above the poverty line?” Mitch lobs back, looking at me.

I swear I never get tired of the attention of boys. But I prefer direct attention, rather than transparent male dick-swinging contests. Do they honestly think that the one who gets the last dig in will win my affection? Don’t they know that being an assistant and a student, even a medical student, aren’t exactly lady-killer positions to be in, and that they should perhaps be digging into their personal arsenals for more compelling things to compete over?

I stand up and they’re silenced. “Last one in has to do a shot,” I say and before I’ve even finished the sentence, they’re pushing each other aside in their zeal to jump into the pool. I stand at the sauna door, cold air rushing in, their wet towels at my feet. If I didn’t know better, I’d swear that the two of them just wanted to have sex with each other.

 

Okay, we’re going to sleep now,” I instruct them, as I try to get as comfortable as I can while lodged between these two guys in a double bed. “Sleep.”

I honestly think we’re going to bed. Was anyone ever that naive? I can’t even sleep on two Ambien by myself, but the birds are dangerously close to chirping—a horrifyingly depressing time to still be partying, as I’ve recently learned—this is the only bed left in the house, and neither of these guys are in any condition to drive. I turn toward Chris, who’s facing the wall. Mitch is on the other side, facing the other wall.

A few minutes pass and I hear Mitch breathing heavily in that way that means he could be asleep. I sigh and feel more relaxed. My insomnia always seems embarrassing, and I’m all too relieved to be able to suffer through it without witnesses. Miraculously, I drift off for a moment or two.

And am awakened by lips on mine—specifically, lips belonging to Chris. My eyes swing open just in time for me to realize that Chris’s kissing skills aren’t half bad. Some people pride themselves on their gaydars. I pride myself on my kissdar because I can usually tell on sight if a guy is going to be one of those drench-your-face-with-saliva kissers, too-tentative pecking kissers, or a possessor of one of those lizardlike tongues that darts into places it’s not wanted. Most guys, unfortunately, fit into one of these categories. It’s the ones that don’t that drive us mad, in all the good ways. Unfortunately, their kissing skills always seem to accompany a tendency for unemployment, a lack of an IQ, or just a general asshole-ishness. If they could kiss well and also possess qualities that actually made them good boyfriend material, women would probably maim and kill one another to have them. I had assumed that Chris would be some combination of too-tentative and lizardlike—that he’d start out with inappropriate propriety and then swerve into too much without the required sensuality—and am startled to discover that he seems to know what he’s doing. He even knows the take-my-face-in-his-hands move.

I kiss him back, enjoying the secretiveness of the act. Despite all their lame competitiveness, despite the fact that Chris is an assistant at Paramount and that he attacks his alleged best friend who’s actually doing something useful with his life in a pathetic attempt to win a girl’s affection, I’m more attracted to him than I am to Mitch.

Chris is kissing well enough that it’s impossible to say how many times we kiss—one time just seems to mesh into another. And then I’m utterly shocked when I feel a hand creeping from behind into my nether region. Had Chris and Mitch, in some sort of a silent pact, targeted my two most manipulatable zones and decided to each work one of them? The thrill of kissing someone while another hand works me from behind is unbelievable. I’m completely getting off on the anonymity of the hand (even though I obviously know whose hand it is) and on this wise solution to all that petty male competitiveness that was going on earlier, until I come back to earth and remember where we are. Which is in the guest bedroom directly below my mom and stepdad’s bedroom in their house, which I’m visiting for the weekend to see an old friend get married—not to blow his now-wife’s cousin and have a ménage à trois with two of his groomsmen.

Other books

Artemis by Andy Weir
Death with Interruptions by Jose Saramago
Live Long, Die Short by Roger Landry
Targeted by Katie Reus
My Wishful Thinking by Shel Delisle
White Heat by de Moliere, Serge
Taking Aim by Elle James
The Art of Keeping Secrets by Patti Callahan Henry
The Summer Book by Tove Jansson