I blame Jason Reitman.
After five years, I had just about managed to get my friends to consider the possibility that frequent business travel does not necessarily equate to a series of one-night stands offering a smorgasbord of sexual delights. Any way I looked at it, it was a little humiliating to have to keep on affirming that I'm essentially a boring person no matter what continent I land on, and that I'm no more irresistible or adventurous in Sao Paulo or Prague than I am in Manhattan. But finally, finally, the questions on the studs I (don't) meet and what I (don't) do with them had started to peter out.
And then 'Up in the Air' came out.
"So you don't ever crash parties, like they did in the film?"
Ah, jeez.
"It never even occurred to me to try."
"How about now?"
I turn my head and squint at Connor, trying to figure out if he's serious or not. He's lying on his back on his towel, eyes closed, dark blond eyelashes fanning across slightly sunburned cheeks, his chin angled up a little so as to stretch out his throat in his never-ending quest of an even tan.
"You're kidding me, right?"
He rolls onto his side and lifts himself on one elbow, so as to look down at me.
"Why?"
I shake my head and close my eyes against the glare of the sun, too sleepy to do anything but lie here and bake. Anyway, how do I even start to explain to Connor? That it's rude to crash a party. That even if I got past that, I wouldn't be able to fake belonging if somebody questioned my presence. That trying to mingle with people I don't know β make that tipsy people I don't know β holds less appeal for me than root canal.
"I think it would be fun," Connor insists when I don't answer.
He would. Connor is like a child who's never been told that there are things that he cannot have or rules that he must abide by. It's not that he's never been handed lemons, but, nine times out of ten, Connor likes to think he's managed to make lemonade. And if he can't mold circumstances to his liking, he simply ignores them.
"Well, I don't," I mumble. Though I probably would, if Connor were there with me.
I roll over and bury my face into the crook of my elbow, signaling an end to the conversation.
"I'm going for a swim," Connor says, and he drops his cap on my head. I feel him shoving his wallet under my towel and I shift a little, so that it doesn't dig into my ribs. "See you in a little bit."
What seems like a second later, a cool, damp palm splays itself on my shoulder, startling me, and I realize I must have dozed off.
"Nate. You're getting burnt. You'd better put your T-shirt on."
Dazedly, I push myself up onto my elbows and find myself looking straight at Connor's lycra-covered crotch as he squats on the sand in front of me. Still caught in a dream I already only half-remember, I almost reach out to slide my palm up his thigh. Reality catches up with me before I make a fool of myself, and I shift my gaze up to his face. His eyes are a clear, deceptively innocent-looking gray, and a small scar arches one of his blond eyebrows, so he always looks a little skeptical, as if he's aware of something the rest of us overlook. He likes to say that the scar makes him look more intelligent that he really is, but he's damned smart. He advises companies on IT security and if I believe the enthusiastic client references on his website, they don't mind the extortionate fees he charges one little bit.
"Good swim?"
He smiles and pats me on the shoulder, then stands up. I watch the rivulets of seawater run down his long legs, clearing trails through the sand dusting his ankles and feet.
He sits on his towel, lifts his cap off my head and pulls it on, the bill backwards, shading his nape. He barely looks a day older than he did back when we were All-Ivy baseball players, twenty years ago. There's some silver in the blond hair now, and the lines around his eyes and bracketing his generous mouth are slightly deeper, but he seems to have escaped most other visible effects of aging, his body still tight, his skin smooth and supple.
Would that I could say the same for myself. I peaked in my mid-twenties, and it's been a long, slow slide ever since. I'm convinced that there's more scalp visible through my hair every time I look in the mirror and comb-overs don't seem quite so ridiculous anymore, although I hope and pray that I'm a good decade away from that stage. And there's only one type of six-pack in my home, icy cold and generally imported from the Czech Republic.
"How long did you say you're in town for?" Connor asks me.
I sit up and fumble in my bag for my T-shirt.
"Three weeks or so, with just a couple of short trips out to the West Coast."
"And then it's off to Europe?"
I nod, surprised that he remembers my schedule. The last couple of months, Connor seems to have developed a memory for this type of thing.
"So you won't be here for your 40th birthday," Connor remarks idly, stretching his legs and crossing them at the ankles, and leaning back on his elbows.
"Yeah, well," I remark philosophically. In the face of his recollection, the fact that I missed his own 40th birthday three months ago makes me feel guilty; I'd meant to call him or send him an e-mail, but I forgot on the day itself, and when I remembered again over a week later, it seemed too late. "I think the big ones are best ignored."
"And that's your excuse, and you're sticking with it, right?" he smirks, and I nod, trying not to squirm. "Well, you'd better not spend your birthday ordering room service. At least go down to the hotel bar. Maybe you'll meet a George Clooney look-alike."
That damn movie again. I lie back down and close my eyes, the sun painting the insides of my eyelids red, and sigh. George Clooney doesn't really do it for me. If I had to describe my ideal, he'd be blond, about my 6'1" height but buff, with gray eyes and a sunny smile; like Connor, but not like him at all, because Connor doesn't do long-term relationships and over the years has steadfastly ignored any attempts on my side to change that.
"Nate."
"What?"
"Promise me you won't stay in your hotel room all night."
"Alright, already. I'll go out. I'll go out. I promise."