Amanda's Wedding (12 page)

Read Amanda's Wedding Online

Authors: Jenny Colgan

‘Ehmm … are those all the options?'

‘Yup.'

‘I'm sorry! I couldn't, not for that! He wouldn't understand! Oh, Fran, don't make me …'

‘God, what is this,
Sophie's Choice
? OK, fine. You want to go out with a wanker that lives with another wanker, then fuck it, that's how it is, flowers or no flowers.'

‘You know about the flowers?'

‘What? Yeah, I got a big bunch, from Charlie. Odious little creep.'

‘Ohhh. I got flowers from Alex.'

‘How nice. They obviously bought them in a job lot.'

‘Hmm. How big was your bouquet?'

‘ENORMOUS. What about yours?'

‘Average. Average to good.'

‘Ha ha ha. Listen, bloody Amanda phoned me again.'

‘Wow, now she's falling in love with you.'

‘She just wanted the gossip on Charlie. And she wants to know if we'll help her pick out a tiara.'

‘I'd rather eat my feet with a spoon.'

‘Me too.'

Seven

We were sitting in an All Bar One, after spending six hours with Amanda trying to choose a fucking tiara because her mother was in the Priory, a drying-out clinic so exclusive that Amanda managed to make it sound like an absolute honour to end up there, and her bridesmaids were all in Barbados or somewhere. Not only had I been forced to make admiring noises in Amanda's direction as she tried on four thousand identical filigree things that cost more than I make in three months, I'd had to stop Fran from shoplifting out of delirious boredom. It had been a tiring day.

‘So, ‘manda, when's your hen night, then?' asked Fran.

Unusually, Amanda didn't immediately start talking. Instead, she blushed.

‘Ehm … I'm not sure I'm going to … you know, nothing big.'

‘But you just said you wanted to do everything properly!' I said, the implications not hitting home. ‘You can't get married without a hen night!'

‘Ehm, yes, I know …' Her voice trailed off. ‘Ectually, ehm, I am having one, but with a few close friends from varsity.'

I was genuinely shocked.

‘What?!' said Fran. ‘When? Why didn't you invite us, you bitch?'

‘Ehm, it's in a couple of weeks. Look, I'm sorry. I didn't want to hurt your feelings.'

Yeah, right …

‘… I'm sorry. But, you know, I didn't invite you because you'd probably get drunk and cause a fight. You two are always getting into trouble. I mean, aren't you, darlings?'

She gave a little laugh.

‘Fraser and I, well, in the position we're in now, we have certain friends and, anyway, we're going to Quagli's, and that's so expensive, and then Yanna's, and, well, it's just going to be my close friends really. You do understand, don't you?'

‘Close friends! Amanda, you came crying to us when you had two periods three days apart in primary seven!' Fran was furious. ‘And when Daryl Stobson said you'd gone up the bikes with him and everyone believed him, we convinced them all otherwise for you, even though it was true!'

That was true?

‘Oh, for God's sake, Francesca! Can't you see that this is exactly why I'm not inviting you? What if you started coming out with that kind of … crap in front of all my friends? You'd completely show me up. We're just … Things are different now.'

‘No, they're not,' snarled Fran. ‘You're still the spoilt little cow you always were. God, I pity Fraser. Come on, Mel, we're off.'

She dragged me up by the sleeve.

‘Are … are we … still invited to the wedding?' I couldn't help asking, pathetically, as we left.

‘Yes. But then everyone is,' sneered Amanda, turning away from us.

Outside, I could see Fran's nostrils flare like a horse.

‘That stupid cow,' I said companionably.

‘Oh, who gives a fuck!' said Fran. ‘It's not like I even want to go to that poxy wedding anyway. What do I give a toss for? Prats in cravats? Some chinless wonder whose life she's about to make a complete misery?'

‘Fraser's not a chinless wonder.'

‘Yeah, right, and Alex isn't a complete piss weasel.'

We walked along in grumpy silence for a while. Then a brilliant idea occurred to me. Really, a brilliant, brilliant idea.

‘Of course,' I began subtly, ‘we could always …'

Fran looked at me sideways. ‘What?'

‘No, no, you probably wouldn't like the idea.' Heh
heh heh. My reverse psychology skills were second to none.

‘OK, cock that then.'

We marched on in silence.

I started again.

‘We could always' – it came tumbling out – ‘ask Angus if we could go to the stag night instead, and really piss her off.'

‘My reverse psychology skills are second to none,' said Fran. ‘But, you know what?'

‘What?'

‘Oh no, you wouldn't be interested …'

‘What?' I said.

‘That is not at all a bad idea.'

‘Thank you,' I said proudly.

‘We could annoy them big time. In fact, a few little words in Fraser's ear … Maybe we should let him know what little missie is really like before he gives her a castle and stuff.'

I looked at her, shocked.

‘What, like, talk to him about Amanda?'

‘Why not? You're his friend, right?'

‘I suppose so.'

‘And if you saw a friend about to be eaten by a crocodile, you'd warn them, right?'

‘Hmm.' It sounded a bit dubious to me.

‘A big, poisonous crocodile, Mel!'

‘Do you get poisonous crocodiles?'

A look at Fran's face convinced me that you did.

‘Well,' I concurred, ‘then, yes, I suppose I would.'
‘Jamesh Bond?'

‘Hullo thair, Moneypenny.'

‘You know the Evil One, whom that brother of yours insists on marrying?'

‘The person of whom you speak is not unfamiliar to me.'

‘Well, I have a secret mission for you that could piss her off mightily.'

‘Tell me more.'

I explained her treacherous betrayal, and he instantly saw no trouble at all in inviting us to Fraser's stag night.

‘Even though I'm not best man, I'm still doing all the organizing. McLachlan can't sort his way out of a paper bag, as you'll see when you meet him.'

‘Are there going to be strippers?'

‘Why, do youse two want to do it?'

‘Do you think Fraser would approve?'

‘Och, you know my brother. He'll be hiding under the table anyway. Yes, there might be a stripper, but nothing, you know …'

‘What?' I asked innocently. I could sense his pink face getting even pinker over the phone.

‘Now, stop being a naughty girrul. It'll be fine. Saturday night, starting at the Princess Louise. And tell that skinny pal of yours not to get into any more fights.'

‘Ha! You tell her! Then I can watch her kick your head in.'

Alex was faintly perturbed that he hadn't been invited to the stag do and we had.

‘You don't even know him,' I pointed out. ‘You've met him about twice.'

‘I know Amanda and her friends.'

‘Well, go to her hen night then.'

‘No thanks. Bunch of screaming Harpies. Why aren't you going?'

I rolled my eyes at him.

‘Long story. OK, look, why don't you tag along with us? No one's going to mind.'

Except Angus, who inexplicably hates you, I thought. Oh yes, and Fran, who barely tolerates you.

‘Well, OK then,' he said diffidently, as if we'd all been begging him to come for hours.

He stretched his legs out on the chaise longue. Charlie's place, while lovely and clearly very expensive, was done up in boy-meets-mother style. Soft furnishings – no doubt spares from the country – shared house room with mountain bikes; expensive and overwrought stereo equipment rested on expensive and overwrought occasional tables. Over it all was a faint aroma de rugby kit. Still, I was making the two-hour trip to West London more and more often, as Alex showed a marked reluctance to cross the river now he didn't absolutely have to. It was Sunday afternoon.

Charlie walked in and ignored me as usual.

‘Splinters!' he hollered at Alex.

‘Fishcake!' returned Alex, and they burst out into hearty guffaws.

‘I've got tickets to Twickers on Saturday.'

Alex leapt up. ‘Fantastic! How'd you manage that, you old bastard?'

Charlie tapped his Huguenot nose. ‘It's who you know, innit?' he said in fake Cockney.

‘That's Fraser's stag night,' I said.

Charlie's heavy half-shut eyes lit up. ‘Stag party! Wo ho ho!'

‘And you are NOT invited,' I added.

‘How do you know? It's a stag party. Blokes, beer and birds, way hey!'

‘Because I'm going, and Fran's going and – oh yes, a whole bunch of other people who actually know the groom.'

Charlie was obviously ruffled by the mention of Fran but merely swept through to the kitchen saying, ‘Totty at a stag party? Shouldn't be allowed. Sounds like absolute crap, if you ask me.'

‘Shall we go out for lunch?' I asked Alex pointedly.

Alex gave me a hangdog look and trailed out the door after me.

‘Got you by the apron strings there, hasn't she, matey boy?' I heard as we left.

‘I don't think,' I said, walking down the street, ‘that I could dislike that boy any more than I do. He's such an … an oaf.'

‘Charlie is not an oaf!' said Alex, looking cross. ‘And he doesn't like you either.'

‘Boohoohoo,' I said. ‘The molester doesn't like me.'

‘You get more like that friend Fran of yours every day,' he said.

We ate lunch reading the papers sullenly. Eventually, I kicked him under the table and gave him a grin. He grinned back and raised his eyebrows, and we returned to the papers in relative harmony, reading out our favourite small-time celebrity shagger-of-the-week stories, before Alex had to disappear for a tour in his friend Henry's new car – a two-seater, natch.

That friend Fran of mine was waiting outside my flat when I got back later that afternoon.

‘I can't see why you won't just give me a key,' she huffed.

‘I can't see why you think you actually live at my house.'

Fran slouched herself off the wall and deigned to mount the stairs to my flat. She still looked good being pouty, given that most of us had grown out of it at nineteen.

‘Anyway …' she said, sitting down and lighting a cigarette. This was strictly
verboten
in Linda's house, but she didn't look in the mood to be trifled with. ‘That molesting bastard friend of your very own personal bastard phoned me to ask me out for a drink.'

‘What? Charlie? NO! When?'

‘About two hours ago.'

‘Jesus. So, this time he's going to buy you dinner before he attempts to rape you.'

‘Looks like it,' said Fran, narrowing her eyes.

‘God. That really takes the piss. No wonder you got the big flowers. What did you say?'

‘I didn't say anything: he left a message asking me out. Well, I think he did. You know what posh boys are like. He said, “Maybe a drink sometime, right, yars, OK, right, yars, sorry, right, bye then, yars.” So, statistically, it could have meant anything.'

‘What are you going to do?'

‘I'm not sure. I mean, I could tell him to take the phone, stick it up his arse and dial 999 with his prostrate now, or I could do it loudly in front of a lot of other people somewhere public.'

Now I came to think of it, this could be good. This could be very good indeed.

‘Ooh, do the second one. Where's the most public place you could actually dump him?'

‘Well …' She exhaled in an actory way and leaned forward. ‘First I thought, what's the highest-rated TV show? Then I realized that what we'd have to do is qualify for
Stars in Their Eyes
.'

‘Don't tell me … Sonny and Cher?'

‘Keith Harris and Orville.'

‘Yuk. Who'd be Orville?'

‘Who d'you think?'

I winced. ‘Well, I suppose he'd be used to it.'

‘Quite.'

‘So, you'd dump him on
Stars in Their Eyes
?'

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