She studies him, his vulnerable face. Look at him: he wants to have sex with her. Reading this, she is suddenly quenched. She flips a forelock from her brow and exhales. "What time is it?" she asks. "I guess I should leave."
She checks her BlackBerry on the way home. She has an email from Accounts Payable saying the Ott board is considering her request for fresh investment. The only condition is that the paper cut labor costs. If a few layoffs win her money for new reporters overseas, it's well worth it.
She tips the cabbie generously and takes the elevator up to her apartment, imagining all that the paper will now be able to afford. A proper correspondent in Paris, finally. A full-time stringer in Cairo -God, that would make such a difference. She walks in with the standard apologies to Nigel, who hands her a glass of Vermentino. She pats him affectionately and sips. "Mmm, delicious. Really nice."
"Nothing that special," he replies modestly, but is clearly buoyed by her approval.
"Hits the spot. Truly does. Good choice. I felt like something like this. By the way, I have very cool news." Triumphantly, she recounts her victory over the tightfisted Ott board. He grows enthused along with her and, filling each other's wineglasses, they plot what the paper might do with the money.
She allows him to go first. He works himself up, eyes glowing, as if this modest tranche could transform the publication. She indulges him, touched by his excitement. Then he looks up and says, "I don't know, maybe that's dumb." He's a funny man, she thinks-he strikes these bombastic poses, then shrinks when our eyes meet, as if his every intellectual foray were like being caught singing in the shower.
At the office, she leaks news of the possible investment, shrewdly omitting specifics, so that each department becomes charged up and hopeful. Rumors spread about merit raises. She tamps down the most exuberant fantasies but allows a bit of pleasant dreaming to percolate through the newsroom.
She receives an email that afternoon from Dario but doesn't immediately open it. Must she answer right now? Maybe she shouldn't answer at all. How would a dalliance look? Highly unethical. The paper reports regularly on his employer. And Berlusconi is such a joke. If people knew she was mixed up with a Berlusconi flack, it would not look good. It's a double standard, she thinks. Everyone is so censorious when professional women have affairs-they can't pay attention at work, their judgment is affected, they're under the sway of their lovers. Yet when a male editor seduces some P.R. babe, it's he who has the upper hand, he who's taking her for a ride. It's bull. However, she has heard women demolished over less. She'll go back to the States someday, back as something bigger. She needs her reputation intact. This job, whatever its flaws, should upgrade her; she intends to leave here as executive material. Don't risk stains.
Meaning? Well, meaning Dario. A pleasant man, but weak. He had a breakdown, poor guy. Not a total surprise. Perhaps he ended up in P.R. because that's what he is: P.R. material. A sweet person, but not an exceptional one. Maybe he's found his level.
She reads his email. It's merely a remembrance of a trip they took on the Adriatic in 1988, when they rented a yacht that neither could navigate. She smiles at the mention of ajvar, the Yugoslav vegetable spread they ate throughout the vacation to economize. She pinches her hand, disgusted with herself-that assessment of Dario was such a betrayal. She rereads his email and responds: "Hey, shall we get a drink after work?"
They meet at the cocktail bar in 'Gusto. The hostess crams them into a low table by the window. A jazz band is playing at the back, and they must sit close in order to hear each other.
"Have you tried a caipiroska?" Dario asks. "They make it with strawberries here. Let me order you one."
"What is it?"
"It's like a caipirinha, only with vodka instead of cachaca."
She laughs. "I have no idea what you're talking about."
"You don't drink cocktails?"
"Pretty much wine for me. I see you've gotten into cocktails since I left."
He winks. "Drowning my sorrows."
"Don't people drown their sorrows in things like scotch? Not strawberry whatever-it's-called."
"Caipiroska. I'm ordering you one. Come on."
This isn't innocent, she thinks. This is flirting. She triggered something in him when they were in his office. She visits the toilets and, on her return, finds their drinks on the table: a strawberry caipiroska for her and a glass of pinot grigio for him.
"After all that," she exclaims, sitting, "I'm stuck with the girl drink and you got wine! Unfair!" She tastes hers. "Mmm. It's got bits of real strawberries."
"I told you."
She takes another sip. It's one of those fruity mixes in which the liquor goes straight to the knees. "I could drink this all day." She wants to touch him across the table. She won't. It's irresponsible. She has to make clear that this is going nowhere. She needs to put down the strawberry whatever-it's-called and concentrate. "Hey," she says, taking his wrist.
He places her hand in his palm and grips her fingers.
She says, "So nice to be with you again." What is she doing? This is cruel. He's clearly still in love with her.
"It was really difficult after you left Rome," he says.
"I know. I'm so sorry."
"And it's difficult seeing you again."
She considers kissing him.
He places her hand gently on the table. "I have to say something."
"I know, I know." Her mind races for a way to stop him-he's about to announce himself. She's going to have to jilt him yet again. She must cut him off.
He goes on, "I have to make clear, Kath, before this goes any further, that we can only be friends."
She sits back. She leans forward, then sits back again. "Well." She takes another sip of her cocktail.
"Not drift back into anything like before, I mean. Is that…? What do you think?"
"This thing is cloying, has a cloying taste. It's too sweet." She puts down the straw. "Yes, I completely agree. I was about to say that myself." She looks around the room. The jazz band is too loud. She takes another sip. "Hmm."
"What's the hmming for?"
"No, nothing." She pauses. "How come, though? I mean, I agree-I'm not trying to change your mind. But I'm kind of confused. A few days ago, if I'm not mistaken, you wanted to have sex with me in your office."
"No, I didn't."
She gapes at him. "Did that not happen? Was I hallucinating?"
"Nothing more was going to happen."
"It almost did happen, Dario."
"It didn't. It wouldn't have."
"Oh, come on."
"It wouldn't have happened," he insists. "I'm not attracted to you anymore."
"How do you mean?" It's perfectly clear what he means, but she is prevaricating until she can compose herself.
"I'm not sexually attracted to you anymore," he says. "I don't mean to be harsh."
She flips her hair aside. "Evidently I need to start dyeing out the gray."
"It's not age."
"Yes, right-Ruby's older than me and age never stopped you with her."
"I told you, with you it's like you're the aggressor. And I don't understand you sometimes. Even in my office, you seemed eager but then, when I responded, you just went away."
"You're fixated on how things used to be between us. But we agreed that we wouldn't revert to our old habits, no? And I'm not like that anymore, if I ever was."
He drinks the last of his wine; her cocktail is gone, too. But neither is ready to leave. This encounter has been so sour.
"Another drink?"
"I'd have another."
He catches her smiling. "What? What's funny?"
"Us. We had my dumb honesty session before-it was supposed to get rid of all my bad habits! But instead." She shakes her head. "You really are smart, you know. I haven't given you enough credit." She runs her forefinger down the bridge of his nose.