I didn’t break my stride, just turned to him and said:
a) ‘Do I know you?’ (manipulative, challenging)
b) ‘Oh, wow, I’m so happy to see you!’ (eager, doormatlike)
c) ‘Go fuck yourself.’ (aggressive, bitter)
d) ‘Well, you certainly
take your time about it, don’t you,
Nick?’ (light, playful, laid-back)
Answer: D
And now we’re together. Together, together. It was that
easy.
It’s interesting, the timing. Propitious, if you will. (And I
will.) Just last night was my parents’ book party.
Amazing
Amy and the Big Day
. Yup, Rand and Marybeth couldn’t
resist. They’ve given their daughter’s namesake what they
can’t give their daughter: a husband! Yes, for book twenty,
Amazing Amy is getting married! Wheeeeeee. No one
cares. No one wanted Amazing Amy to grow up, least of all
me. Leave her in kneesocks and hair ribbons and let
me
grow up, unencumbered
by my literary alter ego, my
paperbound better half, the me I was supposed to be.
B ut
Amy
is the Elliott bread and butter, and she’s
served us well, so I suppose I can’t begrudge her a perfect
match. She’s marrying good old Able Andy, of course.
They’ll be just like my parents: happy-happy.
Still, it was unsettling, the
incredibly small order the
publisher put in. A new
Amazing Amy
used to get a first
print of a hundred thousand copies back in the ’80s. Now
ten thousand. The book-launch party was, accordingly,
unfabulous. Off-tone. How
do you throw a party for a
fictional character who started life as a precocious moppet
of six and is now a thirty-year-old bride-to-be who still
speaks like a child? (‘
Sheesh,’ thought Amy, ‘my dear
fiance´ sure is a grouch-monster when he doesn’t get his
way
…’ That is an actual quote. The whole book made me
want to punch Amy right in her stupid, spotless vagina.) The
book is a nostalgia item,
intended to be purchased by
women who grew up with
Amazing Amy
, but I’m not sure
who will actually want to read it. I read it, of course. I gave
the book my blessing – multiple times. Rand and Marybeth
feared that I might take Amy’s marriage as some jab at my
perpetually single state. (‘I, for one, don’t think women
should marry before thirty-five,’ said my mom, who married
my dad at twenty-three.)
My parents have always worried that I’d take
Amy
too
personally – they always tell me not to read too much into
her. And yet I can’t fail to
notice that whenever I screw
something up, Amy does it right: When I finally quit violin at
age twelve, Amy was revealed as a prodigy in the next
book. (‘Sheesh, violin can be hard work, but hard work is
the only way to get better!’) When I blew off the junior tennis
championship at age sixteen to do a beach weekend with
friends, Amy recommitted to the game. (‘Sheesh, I know it’s
fun to spend time with friends, but I’d be letting myself and
everyone else down if I didn’t show up for the tournament.’)
This used to drive me mad, but after I went off to Harvard
( a nd
Amy
correctly chose my parents’ alma mater), I
decided it was all too ridiculous to think about. That my
parents, two
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