Susan is Josh's best friend. She has been for a long time and I guess its fair to say that the friendship is mutual. Or was. I'm not sure where they're at now as I haven't spoken to or seen either of them for nearly four years. The complication with the friendship was my arrival, though none of us realised it until after the event. Until then the three of us got along just peachy. I was in love with Josh who was my boyfriend and I loved Susan, as cliched as it may sound, like a sister.
I know, I can hear you thinking, you let your boyfriend have a female best friend?!! I did and really it was never an issue. I lie a little here, it was an issue for a short time after I realised that I had fallen in love with Josh. And after the event. But over the course of a few days it was an issue I considered, and considered at some length, before deciding that in fact it wasn't and issue. And it wasn't! Really!
You see, Susan and Josh had been best friends since their mid teenage years. When I met them, and in fact I met Susan first, they had known each other for ten years. They acted like, and were often mistaken for, brother and sister. They could be unbelievably cruel to each other, as only siblings and loved ones can be, then show such love and compassion as to reveal the true depth of the bond that existed between them.
Of course their was a bond between them, pent up sexual frustration can be mistaken for that! You are a cynic aren't you, dear reader? You who don't believe that a man and a woman can have a truly platonic friendship. I want to tell you how wrong you are, but as you will see, perhaps your cynicism is not misplaced at all. Though, right now I have to accept full responsibility for what happened. I made it happen, me alone and so I broke the bond of friendship.
Susan wore her hair shoulder length and blonde back then, though she confided in me that her natural colour was somewhere between "mousy blonde and crappy brown." She said it with a smile and I laughed. She was able to make most people laugh or at least smile and the day we met was just one of those days.
I live in Melbourne, Australia's second city, a city of great cultural charm and personality. I was born here and although I have lived in other cities, Melbourne is my home in every sense of the word. I worked for one of our larger cable television providers in their public relations department. As all Australians, and no doubt anyone who has ever visited this great city know, the weather here is somewhat unpredictable, turning from rain to sunshine and back in the course of a few hours. "Four seasons in one day," is the saying.
It was one such day in spring of 1997 when I stepped off the tram and made a bolt for the shop awnings to escape the pouring rain. The weather man had promised no rain today and foolishly I had believed him leaving my umbrella at home. Why would a native of Melbourne believe the weather man? you ask. The week had been glorious and he had promised more of the same, I guess I wanted to believe. As fate would have it, the decision to leave my umbrella at home led directly to me meeting Susan and through her, Josh.
I stood under the awning with a few others, all of us desperately hoping for a break in the rain to allow us to scurry home. We offered each other weak smiles of acknowledgment, but little else, the rain was so loud against the tin shelter that it was almost deafening. Finally, with a sigh, I realised that standing here was a futile waste of time, so I turned to walk into the rain. As I did, the shop behind me caught my eye and I was drawn toward it. It had been a lunch type café, but was now under new management and had trendied itself up and become a licensed premise and offered continental style dinners. As soon as the door slid shut behind me the ambience embraced me, a gentle warmth, some background music and the chatter of the patrons replacing the maelstrom that surrounded the footpath.
Edging through the crowd I was unable to find a seat and eventually made my way back to the door, staring out at the rain which, if anything, seemed to have intensified. I watched as one of my fellow tram travellers dashed into the rain and in a matter of seconds his dark suit was soaked through.
'Do you want to sit with us?' At first I ignored the question, thinking it was to someone else, but I turned when a hand touched my elbow lightly. It was Susan, though I didn't know her name at the time, and she stood there with a slight smile. She turned and indicated with a nod of her head, a square table against the wall where Josh sat, watching us intently. He smiled as our eyes met and I smiled back.
'Oh, thanks, but that's okay, I don't want to intrude on you and your...' I trailed off, unsure as what to refer to the dark eyed man with the tousled dark hair. Boyfriend, husband? I envied her at that moment, he had a look that was just the right combination of boyishly handsome with kind eyes that attracted me intensely.
'He's just a friend,' she smiled. 'Seriously,' Susan added, turning back to me, 'no matter how annoying we are, it has to be better than standing out there!' I laughed and let her lead me to the table.
'I'm Susan,' she held out her hand and I was pleased to feel a firm, but feminine grip. Too many women offer the dead fish, as I call it. 'And this is Josh.' He tried to stand, but the gap between his chair and the wall was too narrow and he sort of half crouched.
'Hi Josh,' I said, accepting his grip and holding it a moment longer than I had with Susan. His eyes seemed to look into me and I was glad that Susan had insisted on me joining them. 'I'm sorry to intrude...'
'Not at all,' he countered, returning to his seat as Susan and I sat on either side of him. As we did a waiter took away the fourth chair without pausing to ask. 'I guess we're not allowed any more guests.'
'I haven't been here before,' I said, looking around.
'Only been a week since it re-opened,' Susan replied, 'and so far we've been here every day. The food's great...'
'As is the service,' Josh interrupted as he successfully signalled a harassed looking waitress. 'Drink?' he asked me.
'Uh, yes,' I said, glancing at theirs, relieved to see that they were drinking the alcoholic variety.
'A merlot,' I said to the waitress.
'A bottle of Grant Burge in fact,' Josh amended my order. 'And we need an extra glass for...'
'Oh, sorry,' I blushed. 'Alexandra.' I recovered my composure as the waitress pushed away through the crowd which seemed to have swelled more since my arrival.
The rest of the evening passed in a comfortable blur of wine, food and conversation. I have no recollection of when the rain stopped, which should have been my cue to depart, but when we stepped into the cool and fresh air, cleaned of it's big city smog by the cold front that had swept through, the streets were drying and only a few puddles remained to remind us of the downpour. It turned out that they lived only a few blocks from the café, as I did, albeit in the opposite direction. We shook hands and parted and during the walk home I reflected on my new found friends.
They both attracted me, but in very different ways. Josh, as I said, appealed to me in looks, but also in personality. I had no idea why he and Susan weren't together, nor had ever been. They liked each other a lot and I knew a few married couples who had made the lifelong commitment based on a lot less. Susan's slim figure and shoulder length blonde hair and hazel eyes (which I've always thought meant a mix of colours too difficult to define), made her an attractive person too, but I've never looked at women that way, except perhaps in the "is she prettier than me?" kind of way. But she was good humoured, compassionate, observant of others without being unkind, (even to strangers, which I admit can be fun at times!). I found myself thinking that had I been a man, she was the kind of woman I'd want to date. Of course, I was only thinking that to try and assess why she and Josh hadn't dated each other.
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