Sunday 17 February 2008

Jubilee line again

LB: "Oh hullo. Are you still camped out on Parliament Square?"

BH: [sharply] "Camped out? No I don't like that, we don't say that, no."

Getting off at Westminster I remember my obligation to record such sightings for a game we have at the office.

LB: "Er, do you mind?"

BH: "No."

Wednesday 13 February 2008

Pizza Express

There were four of us queueing at Pizza Express tonight: a couple, me, and a man in his forties.

We were: Leroy, a West Indian human rights lawyer who knew Imran Kahn and Clive Stafford-Smith; Steve, a half-Chinese dentist who once got robbed at gunpoint by a patient; Flutura, an Albanian accountant who mostly kept to herself; and me.

I know this because, when it emerged there was just one large table available, Flutura had suggested we all ate together. The waitress thought we were crazy but we had a nice time, then the couple went home and Leroy and I went to see There Will be Blood - in different local cinemas.

Then I bumped into Leroy on the bus home. We both agreed the film was disappointing. I recommended he saw the Diving Bell and the Butterfly, he that I should try the Kite Runner. And I have his card and am to drop him a line should I ever decide to pursue a more meaningful career.

Back home there were two theatre tickets through the post, for Happy Now? in April. My task now is to find someone for ticket no 2.

Sunday 10 February 2008

A night with the other half

An Old Etonian friend took me to Boujis nightclub on Friday, where a table costs £600 plus tip.

(That's £130 for each of the five males in our party since Sloan lore dictates females pay nothing in such places.)

Confronted with the strictest set of door staff in London, a large girl who'd eaten with us at Cocoon said she had to visit the cashpoint and never came back. Like Captain Oates' sacrifice in the Antarctic, I imagined it was for the sake of her companions.

Inside and already feeling culpable I was cheered by the introduction of a tall and intriguing girl from Vienna named Clara. Straightaway we started talking about the oddness of privilege and the difficulty of being happy. An hour of dilated pupils later later we were smitten and on the dancefloor I leant in... only for her to turn her face away. What!!

I continued to dance with her for as long as my embarassment allowed before slinking outside for an outraged cigarette. Women are exceptionally wonderful and, without exception, weird.

When I returned she sat next to me and asked where I'd gone, but I hardly knew what to say. Nevertheless I summoned some talk from God knows where and, at at 4am, back in my friend's Mayfair apartment, we drank champagne and smoked and she showed me her new dress. But I couldn't make another pass, and that was that. Now she's back in Austria.

I think one of the more dismal Etonians - my Friend's flatmate - liked her, as he kept putting his arm round my shoulder. Perhaps she thought kissing me would be bad form, given that she was staying on their sofa. Or else with my lunge I'd breached some code known to sophistiques.

(But she'd asked the house DJ to play some Britney Spears. A bit gauche for a Viennese aristocrat, no?)

The Diving Bell and the Butterfly on Saturday was brilliant. Perhaps my bloodstream was still coursing with Friday's alcohol, but I couldn't help weeping along with the rest of the audience.