Spin Cycle

Read Spin Cycle Online

Authors: Sue Margolis

Tags: #Fiction

For my mum.
Thank you for having me.

Praise for
Sue Margolis’s novels

Apocalipstick

“Sexy British romp . . . Margolis’s characters have a candor and self-deprecation that lead to furiously funny moments. . . . A riotous, ribald escapade sure to leave readers chuckling to the very end of this saucy adventure.”

—USA Today

“[An] irreverent, sharp-witted look at love and dating.”


Houston Chronicle

“Quick in pace and often very funny.”


Kirkus Reviews

“Margolis combines light-hearted suspense with sharp English wit . . . entertaining read.”


Booklist

“A joyously funny British comedy . . . a well-written read that has its share of poignant moments . . . There are always great characters in Ms. Margolis’s novels. With plenty of romance and passion,
Apocalipstick
is just the ticket for those of us who like the rambunctious, witty humor this comedy provides.”


Romance Reviews Today

“Rather funny . . . compelling . . . brilliant send-ups of high fashion.”


East Bay Express

Spin Cycle

“This delightful novel is filled with more than a few big laughs.”


Booklist

“A funny, sexy British romp . . . Margolis is able to keep the witty one-liners spraying like bullets. Light, fun . . .”

—Library Journal

“Warm-hearted relationship farce . . . a nourishing delight.”

—Publishers Weekly

“Margolis does a good job of keeping several balls in the air at once.”


The Pilot
(Southern Pines, N.C.)

“A nice, refreshingly funny read.”

—America Online’s Romance Fiction Forum

“Satisfying . . . a wonderful diversion on an airplane, poolside, or beach.”

—Baton Rouge Magazine

Neurotica

“Screamingly funny sex comedy . . . the perfect novel to take on holiday.”

—USA Today

“Cheeky comic novel—a kind of
Bridget Jones’s Diary
for the matrimonial set . . . Wickedly funny.”

—People
(Beach Book of the Week)

“A fast and furiously funny read . . . Scenes that literally will make your chin drop with shock before you erupt with laughter.”

—The Plain Dealer
(Cleveland)

“Taking up where
Bridget Jones’s Diary
took off, this saucy British adventure redefines the lusty woman’s search for erotic satisfaction. . . . Witty and sure . . . A taut and rambunctious tale exploring the perils and raptures of the pursuit of passion.”

—Publishers Weekly

“Splashy romp . . . giggles guaranteed.”

—Daily News
(New York)

“A good book to take to the beach,
Neurotica
is fast paced and at times hilarious.”

—Boston’s Weekly Digest Magazine

“This raunchy and racy British novel is great fun, and will delight fans of the television show
Absolutely Fabulous
.”

—Booklist

“A lusty laugh-out-loud tale about adultery.”

—Woman’s Own

CHAPTER 1

Rachel Katz lifted the mike off its stand and jerked the lead away from her feet.

“So yeah, right, anyway,” she began, moving the mike stand to one side, “what do you think about this new morning-after pill for men?”

She’d hoped for a few expectant chuckles at her opening line, but wasn’t too alarmed when none came.

“The male morning-after pill, yeah. The moment the paternity suit’s filed, it changes their blood group.”

Silence. OK, she thought. It happens.

“You know,” she continued, her trademark deadpan voice not faltering, “I’m thirty-four years old and still I don’t get it. Men. And the emotions thing.

“I mean why
are
they so afraid of feelings, so alienated by the remotest display of sensitivity? Let’s face it—the only time you’ll catch a bloke watching
Oprah
is when it’s on nymphomaniacs and where they hang out.”

She paused. Waited for her laugh. Again, nothing. She was beginning to feel uneasy, and more than a little perplexed. She’d tried out the Oprah gag on a dozen audiences in the last few weeks and people always hooted.

The family of highly strung ferrets that usually inhabited Rachel’s stomach when she was performing went into a psychotic frenzy of somersaults and back flips.

“Right,” she said breezily, doing her best to ignore the ferrets. “Just me on that one then.”

She smiled at the audience, hoping she might receive a few titters of encouragement in return. But none were forthcoming.

“You see,” she continued, starting to feel mildly nauseous now, “it’s not only the emotional thing fellas can’t do. That’s just the tip of the iceberg. I mean practically all my boyfriends have missed the things that are really important to me—my birthday, the anniversary of when we met . . . my clitoris.”

She paused once more. Still not a hint of a hoot. This could not be happening.

She peered at the audience through the smoke and semidarkness. Sitting round the Anarchist Bathmat’s pub tables was the usual mix of pierced and goateed student types, a few yuppies and a smattering of forty-somethings desperate to show the world their humor was still cutting edge while forgetting their sartorial style was more cutting hedge.

“Right, er, OK,” Rachel battled on, “I was lying in bed next to my boyfriend the other night after we’d made love and I found myself thinking that God just has to be a man. I mean if God were a woman, she’d have made sperm taste of chocolate.”

Cold silence.

“God, I wish you lot had been here yesterday,” Rachel said, swallowing hard. “I was in Birmingham.”

Suddenly a woman in the front row began sniffing loudly. Others followed. Then came the sound of somebody crying. By now Rachel’s nausea, panic and overwhelming confusion were turning to astonishment. She couldn’t understand it. Usually when people didn’t like her material, they heckled, went off to the bar or simply ignored her. They didn’t collapse into depression. Her bewilderment was such that she realized she’d forgotten the next part of her routine. She had to come up with an ad lib, fast.

“ ’S funny,” she chuckled nervously, “right now, I’m having amnesia and déjà vu at the same time. I think I’ve forgotten this before.”

Rachel couldn’t believe what she was hearing. The whole place was now filled with the sound of people weeping. For the first time in her career and, Rachel suspected, in the history of stand-up comedy, an entire audience had been reduced to tears.

Through the hazy half-light she could see women hunched over tables racked with noisy sobs. Blokes were biting their bottom lips and gently consoling their girlfriends. A few fellas were even hugging each other. Through her peripheral vision, Rachel caught sight of Lenny, the emcee, who was standing to one side of the stage. He was making violent cutthroat gestures to her. She realized she had no alternative but to come offstage.

“Thank you,” she shouted above the din of wailing, sniffing and nose blowing, “I’m Rachel Katz and you’ve been . . . an audience. Good night.”

Rachel bounded over to Lenny. He was a short, thirty-something Sheffield lad with mad-scientist ginger hair and pink tartan flares. They’d worked together dozens of times and he and Rachel were good mates.

“Blimey,” she gasped. “Talk about going down like Sylvester Stallone’s dick at a transvestite convention. Do you mind telling me what was going on? I mean, I’ve died before, but I’ve never been mourned.”

“It’s OK, Rachel. Calm down,” Lenny said, smiling and gently rubbing the top of her arm. “It wasn’t your fault. You see, the audience couldn’t help it.”

“What do you mean, ‘couldn’t help it’? Course they could bloody help it.”

“No, they couldn’t, honest. You were in the bar with your bloke when Mori Bund the Jewish Goth hypnotist was on. He’d put the entire audience in a trance, managed to convince the men that England had just lost the Ashes, the Football World Cup and the Rugby World Cup all on the same day and the women that they were watching the final scene in
Casablanca
. He finished his act positive he’d brought them back. It was only when you went on that he realized they were still under.”

Rachel turned to look at the audience. The crying had stopped and everybody was sitting upright in their seats, their eyes closed and heads flopped forward. Onstage a gangly, nervous-looking chap with an Alice Cooper face, wearing a black top hat, matching satin cloak, horizontally striped black-and-white tights and red Doc Martens, was counting loudly backward from ten.

* * * * *

“You’re quiet,” Rachel said to Adam through a mouthful of Big Mac. “You haven’t even told me what you thought of my set tonight, at least what there was of it. I know it all went a bit pear-shaped because of the hypnosis thing—but weeping customers aside, what did you reckon?”

Adam took one hand off the steering wheel and leaned across to steal one of her chips. He said nothing. He looked thoughtful and uneasy at the same time. She could tell he was building up to something.

“Come on, out with it,” she said good-humoredly. “You thought I was crap, didn’t you?”

He opened his mouth to speak, but she came back at him before he had a chance.

“OK, I know what it is,” she said. “All my bloke-bashing material makes you feel like I’m getting at you. Come on Adam, you know none of my gags are personal. Jokes against men get laughs, that’s all.”

She leaned toward him and began stroking his cheek. “You’ve never once missed my birthday,” she purred. “Or my clitoris.”

Adam smiled.

“Don’t be daft,” he told her. “It never even occurred to me to take any of your antimen stuff personally. Mind you it is a bit unrelenting. Why don’t you try changing it a bit? I heard this brilliant gag the other day. Now then, how did it go? Hang on . . . OK, yeah . . . What do Japanese men do when they have erections?”

“I don’t know,” she said, her voice a perfect imitation of a music hall comic. “What do Japanese men do when they have erections?”

“Vote.”

“Right,” she said with a weak chuckle.

“Oh, well,” Adam shrugged, “it made me laugh. Still, what do I know, I’m just a dentist.”

“Yeah. You think loose dentures are funny.” She shoved some more chips into her mouth.

“I don’t know about that, but I could certainly name you dentists whose bridgework makes me laugh out loud.”

Neither of them spoke for a moment or two.

“I know what’s bugging you,” she said eventually. “You still think I should jack in the comedy, don’t you?”

“Look,” he said, bringing his brand-new Audi A6 to a stop at a red light, “with the exception of maybe your mother, nobody would be more delighted than me if you gave it up and went back to journalism. Bloody hell, Rache, two years ago you were a broadsheet features editor earning a really decent salary. You had an expense account, a company BMW. Then you just walk away. For what? To spend night after night in seedy smoke-filled pub back rooms getting heckled by drunks.”

“Er, excuse me,” she said. “For your information, I haven’t had a heckler in ages. Adam, we’ve been through this a thousand times. You know how much I love doing the comedy. You know the buzz I get from standing up there, making an audience laugh at material I’ve written.”

“I can’t imagine what it must feel like performing in front of all those people,” Adam said. “I’d be petrified.”

“I am petrified,” she said eagerly. “But in a way I love that too. Even before I get up on stage, the adrenaline starts pumping because I know I’m about to take this enormous risk. The audience may not laugh. And that’s scary. Then when they do, I get this wonderful sense of triumph. It’s like I’ve climbed a mountain or run a marathon. Journalism could be satisfying occasionally—you know, blowing the whistle on some bent MP or whatever—but it never gave me the rush the comedy does. It didn’t come close. In the end it just bored me.”

As she took another bite of burger, mayonnaise started to dribble down her chin. She wiped it with the back of her hand. When she realized all she’d succeeded in doing was transfer the mayo rather than get rid of it, she began sucking her hand.

Adam winced, and opened the glove compartment. Next to the box of tissues that he always kept in the car in case he had one of his frequent, stress-related nosebleeds was a container of Wet Ones. He handed it to her. But by now she’d already wiped her hand on her combats. She put the box down next to her feet.

“Thing is,” she went on, “I must give it a proper go. I can’t give up just because once in a while I get heckled. That’s how comics learn. It’s part of finding out what material works and what doesn’t.”

She stopped chewing and watched Adam take a neatly folded yellow duster from the driver’s door compartment, open it and wrap one corner round his index finger.

“But you’re earning no money,” he said, rubbing at a spot of nonexistent dirt on the dashboard.

“I am,” she said brightly. “I made 150 quid tonight.”

“I mean real money. Rache, you have to clean people’s houses to make ends meet. And you’ve got a child to support.”

Satisfied that the imaginary speck was gone, he refolded the duster down the original crease marks and put it back in the driver’s door compartment.

“C’mon, Ad,” she said, playfully punching the top of his arm, “I get by. And you know I’d never let Sam go without . . . Anyway, it’s only till I get famous. D’you want the rest of these chips?”

He shook his head.

She screwed up the burger paper and rammed it down on top of the half-full chip box. “Plus I’ve worked it out, I’ve got all the money I need . . . so long as I die before Monday.”

Adam turned to her and smiled, despite himself.

“Look,” she went on, “please try and understand. I’m doing something I really want to do and that means so much more to me than having piles of cash in the bank.”

By way of response, Adam took the McDonald’s rubbish from her lap, twisted round and placed it neatly in the Car Tidy hanging from the back of the passenger seat.

“Floss?” he said a moment later, taking his hand out of his jacket pocket and offering her the tiny white container.

Rachel was used to Adam’s flossing obsession. No matter how many times she begged him not to, he still offered it round at dinner parties.

She shook her head.

“Fine, but I tell you, Rache, you neglect oral hygiene at your peril. Don’t come crying to me when your teeth start to turn yellow.”

“I won’t,” she giggled, “I’ll just wear brown to compensate.”

The traffic lights changed and Adam pulled away.

“So,” she purred, moving toward him and trailing her finger over the small bald patch on the back of his head, “talking of making ends meet, when will ours meet next? It’s been ages since you told me to open wide.”

“I’m sorry,” he said. “Thing is, I’m just so busy at the moment. I’ve got bloody admin coming at me from all sides.”

“Yeah, I know,” she said sympathetically. She rubbed his arm affectionately and felt the softness of the expensive navy woolen jacket. Underneath he was wearing an immaculately pressed denim shirt. She looked down at her combats and scruffy Nikes. How the supposedly witty, “alternative” likes of her, who always looked like she’d thrown something on and missed, had managed to fall in love with a Jewish dentist with a thing about dental floss and shoe trees, she had little idea—beyond a firm belief that opposites really did attract.

“I don’t mean to put pressure on you,” she said. “Honest. But I just hate you being in Manchester. I only get to see you at weekends and sometimes not even then because you’re so busy. And when you disappear to South Africa for a month, I won’t see you at all.”

The following week, Adam was off to Durban to work in his uncle Stan’s dental practice. Adam’s father had died of a heart attack when Adam was twelve, leaving no life insurance and very little capital. When Stan, his father’s brother, discovered this, he started paying Adam’s school fees and put him through university. Despite the geographical distance, they’d always been close and Adam felt he owed Stan a great deal. When he phoned to say he was going into the hospital for a hip replacement and was there any chance Adam could take over the office for a few weeks, Adam had felt he was in no position to refuse.

“We’ll speak on the phone every day. Believe me, Rachel, I’ll be busy, you’re busy. Four weeks will go in a flash.”

“Yeah, I s’pose. But why you had to go to Manchester in the first place, I’ve no idea.”

“Come on, you know precisely why. I went because, unlike you, I recognize a sound job opportunity when I see one.”

A year ago, Adam’s best friend from dental school had offered him a partnership in his cosmetic dentistry practice in Alderley Edge with a million-pound-a-year turnover and he’d grabbed it like a shot.

She grunted. “I know. I just miss you, that’s all. Look, don’t go back tonight. Please stay. It’s already past eleven. Tomorrow’s Saturday. What’s to go rushing back for?”

“A mountain of VAT returns, that’s what. I’ve been putting it off for weeks. I’d love to stay, Rache, you know that, but I really do need to get back. Anyway, your mother and father are at your flat. I can’t bear doing it with them a few feet away on the sofa bed.”

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