"I need a new fur," Libby sighs, staring into her champagne
"Full length or ankle length?" Daisy asks in the same tonelow voice.
"A stole?" Caron suggests.
"Either a full length or…" Libby stops and thinks hard for a minute. "I saw this short, cuddly wrap…"
"But mink, right?" Daisy asks. "Definitely mink?"
"Oh yeah. Mink," Libby says.
"Hey Taylor," I whisper, nudging him. "Wake up. They're talking. You've gotta see this."
"But which kind?" Caron's on a roll.
"Don't you find some minks are too… fluffy?" Daisy asks.
"Some minks are too fluffy." Libby this time.
"Silver fox is very popular," Daisy murmurs.
"Beige tones are also increasingly popular," Libby says.
"Which ones are those?" someone asks.
"Lynx. Chinchilla. Ermine. Beaver–"
"Hello?" Taylor wakes up, blinking. "I'm here."
"Go back to sleep, Taylor," I sigh.
"Where's Mr. McDermott?" he asks, stretching.
"Wandering around downstairs. Looking for coke." I shrug. "Silver fox is very popular," one of them says.
"Raccoon. Fitch. Squirrel. Muskrat. Mongolian lamb."
"Am I dreaming," Taylor asks me, "or… am I really hearing an actual conversation?"
"Well, I suppose what passes for one." I wince. "Shhh. Listen. It's inspiring."
At the sushi restaurant tonight McDermott, in a state of total frustration, asked the girls if they knew the names of any of the nine planets. Libby and Caron guessed the moon. Daisy wasn't sure but she actually guessed… Comet. Daisy thought that Comet was a planet. Dumbfounded, McDermott, Taylor and I all assured her that it was.
"Well, it's easy to find a good fur now," Daisy says slowly. "Since more ready-to-wear designers have now entered the fur field, the range increases because each designer selects different pelts to give his collection an individual character."
"It's all so scary," Caron says, shivering.
"Don't be intimidated," Daisy says. "Fur is only an accessory. Don't be intimidated by it."
"But a luxurious accessory," Libby points out.
I ask the table, "Has anyone ever played around with a TEC nine-millimeter Uzi? It's a gun. No? They're particularly useful because this model has a threaded barrel for attaching silencers and barrel extensions." I say this nodding.
"Furs shouldn't be intimidating." Taylor looks over at me and blankly says, "I'm gradually uncovering some startling information here."
"But a luxurious accessory," Libby points out again.
The waitress reappears, setting the drinks down along with a bowl of grapefruit sorbet. Taylor looks at it and says, blinking, "I didn't order this."
"Yes you did," I tell him. "In your sleep you ordered this. You ordered this in your sleep."
"No I didn't," he says, unsure.
"I'll eat it," I say. "Jjust listen." I'm tapping my fingers against the table loudly.
"Karl Lagerfeld hands down," Libby's saying.
"Why?" Caron.
"He created the Fendi collection, of course," Daisy says, lighting a cigarette.
"I like the Mongolian lamb mixed with mole or" – Caron stops to giggle – "this black leather jacket lined with Persian lamb."
"What do you think of Geoffrey Beene?" Daisy asks her.
Caron ponders this. "The white satin collars… iffy."
"But he does marvelous things with Tibetan lambs," Libby says.
"Carolina Herrera?" Caron asks.
"No, no, too fluffy," Daisy says, shaking her head
"Too schoolgirl," Libby agrees.
"James Galanos has the most wonderful Russian lynx bellies, though," Daisy says.
"And don't forget Arnold Scaasi. The white ermine," Libby says. "To die for."
"Really?" I smile and lift my lips into a depraved grin. "To die for?"
"To die for," Libby says again, affirmative about something for the first time all night.
"I think you'd look adorable in, oh, a Geoffrey Beene, Taylor," I whine in a high, faggy voice, flopping a limp wrist on his shoulder, but he's sleeping again so it doesn't matter. I remove the hand with a sigh.
"That's Miles…" Caron peers over at some aging gorilla in the next booth with a graying crew cut and an eleven-year-old bimbo balanced on his lap.
Libby turns around to make sure. "But I thought he was filming that Vietnam movie in Philadelphia."
"No. The Philippines," Caron says. "It wasn't in Philadelphia."
"Oh yeah," Libby says, then, "Are you sure?"
"Yeah. In fact it's over," Caron says in a tone that's completely undecided. She blinks. "In fact it's… out." She blinks again. "In fact I think it came out… last year."
The two of them are looking over at the next booth disinterestedly, but when they turn back to our table, their eyes falling on the sleeping Taylor, Caron turns to Libby and sighs. "Should we go over and say hello?"
Libby nods slowly, her features quizzical in the candlelight, and stands up. "Excuse us." They leave. Daisy stays, sips Caron's champagne. I imagine her naked, murdered, maggots burrowing, feasting on her stomach, tits blackened by cigarette burns, Libby eating this corpse out, then I clear my throat. "So it was really hot out today, wasn't it?"
"It was," she agrees.
"Ask me a question," I tell her, feeling suddenly, well, spontaneous.
She inhales on the cigarette, then blows out. "So what do you do?"
"What do you think I do?" And frisky too.
"A model?" She shrugs. "An actor?"
"No," I say. "Flattering, but no."
"Well?"
"I'm into, oh, murders and executions mostly. It depends." I shrug.
"Do you like it?" she asks, unfazed.
"Um… It depends. Why?" I take a bite of sorbet.
"Well, most guys I know who work in mergers and acquisitions don't really like it," she says.
'That's not what I said," I say, adding a forced smile, finishing my J&B. "Oh, forget it."
"Ask me a question," she says.
"Okay. Where do you…" I stop for a moment, stuck, then, "summer?"
"Maine," she says. "Ask me something else."
"Where do you work out?"
"Private trainer," she says. "How about you?"
"Xclusive," I say. "On the Upper West Side."
"Really?" She smiles, then notices someone behind me, but her expression doesn't change, and her voice remains fiat. "Francesca. Oh my god. It's Francesca. Look."
"Daisy! And Patrick, you devil!" Francesca screeches. "Daisy, what in god's name are you doing with a stud like Batman?" She overtakes the booth, sliding in with this bored blond girl I don't recognize. Francesca is wearing a velvet dress by Saint Laurent Rive Gauche and the girl I don't recognize is wearing a wool dress by Geoffrey Beene. Both are wearing pearls.
"Hello, Francesca," I say.
"Daisy, oh my god, Ben and Jerry's here. I love Ben and Jerry," I think is what she says, all in a breathless rush, shouting over the light din – actually, drowning out the light din – of the jazz band. "Don't you love Ben and Jerry?" she asks, her eyes wide, and then she rasps out to a passing waitress, "Orange juice! I need orange juice! Jesus fucking Christ the help here has got to go. Where's Nell? I'll tell her," she mutters, looking around the room, then turns to Daisy. "How's my face? Bateman, Ben and Jerry are here. Don't sit there like an idiot. Oh god I'm kidding. I adore Patrick but come on, Batman, look lively, you stud, Ben and Jerry are here." She winks lasciviously then wets both lips with her tongue. Francesca writes for Vanity Fair.