The last cocktail party I attended
was an absente party. It was at my friend Wally’s new apartment in Brooklyn. He
just moved out of his family house in Connecticut after his last kid went off to
college, and being single and fancy-free, (and having some cash to spend after
the sale of the large suburban home) he decided to revisit his dream of heading
back to the city.
This apartment is no ordinary
apartment; it is large and has high ceilings and Wally has a talent for picking
paint colors. When I arrive the lights are dim and there are several couches
organized around a small steamer trunk/table, Wally set it up as an absente
bar. He has four different types of absente and I had no idea he had become an
absente geek. There is a special way to prepare ones glass of absente and it
requires accoutrements like special silver sugar spoons, a crystal bowl of
individually metallic wrapped sugar cubes, and a glass antique dispenser. He
also has a few bottles of alternate absente, and recites the various flavor
characteristics of each.
Wally gives each guest that arrives
instructions on how to dispense the drink and pour it over the sugar cube to
add sweetness.
The whole thing has a drug den feeling
to me, and I like it.
After taking my first sip I sort of
like the anise flavor, but not too much. I decide that I will not get drunk but
nurse the drink and keep an eye open to be sure that if I start to hallucinate,
perhaps I can stop the process from going too far. I’m not sure why I think I might hallucinate
(wormwood and Through the Looking Glass associations), but I took several
subways to get to Wally’s drug den, and I want to make sure I get home okay.
Then a few more people come in and
for some reason I start to feel like I’m in a J.D. Salinger novel, and I’m not
super comfortable. Aside from Wally, I don’t know anyone but start to wonder if
I should. Not completely paranoid, but sort of on the fringe. A bit of social
anxiety was kicking in and the absente wasn’t helping.
But I try to play it cool and think
about changing my name to Franny or Zooey when I make new introductions, but I
resist the temptation and go along with the thread. I decide to switch to water
and realize that I am officially a party pooper, but don’t want to drag anyone
down with me.
So then this cute hipster guy comes
in and it turns out that he rode his bike all the way from the west village to Brooklyn and I am impressed. It is dark out and I am a fan of biking as an alternative
form of transportation. He gets his absente tutorial and then sits next to me.
“Hi, I’m Zooey.”
“Hi, I’m Ed. Is your name really
Zooey?”
“Yup. My parents were real Salinger
fans. I know it sounds pretentious but, I had no say in the matter.”
He looks at me with slight
disbelief.
“Really?”
“Yup” and I take a sip of water.
“How do you know Wally?”
“We went to boarding school
together.”
Ed laughs.
“Seriously?”
“Yup”.
This in fact is true. I was a day
student and Wally was a boarding student. Then I start to feel like I’m in a Wes
Anderson movie and I love Wes Anderson.
“We are different” and I do that wavy
motion with my hands that Mr. Fox (“Foxy”) does in The Fantastic Mr. Fox when he
is talking to his son, Ash, and Ed gets the reference.*
“Okay, Zooey. Whatever you say.”
*Google hand motions in FMF
Love this, Liz. (Rina here)
ReplyDeleteRina- Thank you for reading. It means a lot. xo Liz
ReplyDelete