But Lizbeth had one quality that made her an indispensable friend. No matter how bad Ninaâs life looked, all it took was one dry, but witty, comment from Lizbeth to put everything in perspective, to make Ninaâs worries dissolve into fits of laughter.
âYou know what your problem is?â Lizbeth asked, following Nina into her tiny, windowless office.
âNo, but Iâm sure youâre dying to tell me.â
âYou havenât had a date in almost six months. Honey, if you donât leave your apartment, how do you expect to meet anyone?â Lizbeth shook her head. âYouâre going to start to getâ¦what do they call that? Angoraphobia?â
âAngoraphobia is a fear of fuzzy sweaters,â Nina corrected. âAgoraphobia is a fear of strangers.â
Lizbeth sighed. âThe fact that you know something so obscure just proves my point,â she said. âSince you broke up with that crazy drummer from that awful grunge band, youâve had no life.â She picked up a framed picture of Ninaâs nieces and stared at her reflection in the glass, fussing with her hair. âYou know, if youâre not married by the time youâre thirty, chances are youâll never find a man.â
âIâm only twenty-five!â Nina said.
âFive years can go by just like that,â Lizbeth said, snapping her perfectly manicured fingers. âBesides, every year after age twenty-five is like dog years.â
Nina didnât bother to ask for further explanation. Sometimes it was better just to let a few of them fly by. Instead, she picked up the latest issue of Attitudes and flipped through it. When she reached the back, her gaze fell on the pages of Personal Touch ads that ran every month. Men seeking women, women seeking men, men and women seeking something a little kinky. âMaybe I should answer one of these ads,â she murmured.
âNow thereâs an idea,â Lizbeth said. âNot an idea Iâd ever consider, but definitely an idea.â
âWell, you donât have any trouble getting a date. And I know the ads work.â Nina grabbed a file folder from her desk and opened it. âLook at these letters. Four couples who met through the Personal Touch ads this past year, and four marriages!â
âWhere did you get those?â
âEileen in customer service has been saving them for me. Iâm thinking of pitching a story idea to Charlotte.â She picked up one of the letters, this one from the mothers of the happy couple. âNick Romano and Tyler Sheridan. Before Tyler met Nick, she was supposed to marry this other guy who ran out on their wedding and left her a âDear Joanâ ad in our magazine. Nick, whoâs a P.I.âhow sexy is that?âhelped her track down her missing bridegroom and they fell in love. Have you ever heard of anything so romantic?â
âOh, please. That sounds like one of those mushy romance novels!â Lizbeth said.
âYes, it does. And I happen to love romance novels.â Nina picked up another letter. âHereâs one from Jane Dobson Warren. She placed a personal ad in Attitudes for her boss. He was looking for Holly Baskin, an old girlfriend. After Jane placed the ad, she got hit on the head, with a Cupid statue, no less. The concussion made her believe that she was Holly Baskin. And then she and her boss fell in love and got married.â Nina sighed. âIt is just like a romance novel, isnât it?â
âAnd you think those sweet little stories are going to appeal to Charlotte?â Lizbeth shook her head. âYou donât know Charlotte very well, do you.â
Charlotte Danforth was publisher, editor, creative director, and sole stockholder of Attitudes magazine. She ran the publication like her own little fiefdom and she was the media queen. Her wealthy fatherâs money had financed the magazine and though Charlotte couldnât edit her way out of a paper bag or balance a budget, she did have an uncanny knack for hiring talented people. And for spotting trends. And thatâs what Attitudes was all aboutâwhatâs hot and whatâs not.
âIâve got to do something to make Charlotte see me as assistant editor material,â Nina said.
âWell, hon, that necklace wonât help the cause. News flashâWilma Flintstone isnât a fashion icon anymore.â
Nina giggled and stuck out her tongue at Lizbeth as she slipped the letters back into the file. âI still think itâs possible to find love through the personals. These four couples did.â She picked up the magazine and began to scan the ads. âHereâs a man that sounds nice. âNew York State of Mind. Good-looking professional seeks commitment-minded, independent SWF, 24-30. Enjoys motorcycles, the outdoors and NASCAR racing.â I love motorcycles.â
Lizbeth snatched the magazine from Ninaâs fingers. âAllow me to translate, my naive little friend. Good-looking professionalâdecent-looking car salesman. Watch out when they say âpersonable.â Then you can expect Quasimodo to show up at your front door.â
âWhat about handsome?â
âSeriously deluded or completely self-absorbed.â
âHow do you know this? You have answered one of our ads!â
Lizbeth laughed lightly. âDonât be silly. Why would I need to answer an ad? I simply know men and their tendency to overstate their own virtues. You have to learn their lingo.â
âLingo?â
âLike this ad. âCommitment-mindedâ means youâd be willing to clean his apartment. âIndependentâ means you wonât mind spending hours in a bar with his friends watching football on the big screen. And all the rest means the guy will never remember to put the toilet seat down.â Lizbeth pointed to another ad. ââEnjoys gardening, antiquing, and cooking.â Mamaâs boy. What you need is a guy who enjoys golfing, sailing, theater and working out. Thatâs means self-employed, wealthy, intelligent, and a great body.â
âHereâs one,â Nina said. âFriendlyââ
âHorny.â
âLikes to cuddle?â
âWants sex,â Lizbeth translated.
âLoyal?â Nina asked.
âObsessively jealous. The only thing worse is âintenseâ which means âstalker in training.â Youâd be better off placing your own ad, honey. At least then you could screen the candidates.â
âI donât know. Maybe I should just pitch the story about the four couples and their ads.â
âItâs a warm and fuzzy little story, but this isnât Good Housekeeping, Nina. Attitudes is edgy and trendy, and a little outrageousânot unlike that sweater youâre wearing.â
Nina glanced down at the vintage lime-green mohair with the Peter Pan collar. She bought it especially to go with the mod striped mini and green tights from the sixties. And the plastic bead necklace completed the look. âYou donât think Charlotte would like it? The idea, not the sweater.â
âIf you want her to see you as an assistant editor, youâre going to have to do more than pitch a story. Youâre going to have to go out there and experience the Personal Touch. Write your own ad, go on a few dates and tell your story. And the more horrible the experience, the better.â
âI wouldnât know what to say in an ad,â Nina replied. âHow do I advertise for Mr. Right?â
Lizbeth sighed dramatically, then searched the surface of Ninaâs desk until she found a pad of paper. âHoney, you donât have time to look for Mr. Right. Youâre looking for Mr. Right Now. Mr. Right This Minute. Charlotteâs been interviewing for an editorial assistant for the past month. If you get this story done and turn it in, maybe sheâll give you the job.â
âAll right,â Nina said. âIâll do it.â
âAll right,â Lizbeth repeated.
âNancy!â
Nina and Lizbeth looked up to find Charlotte Danforth standing at the doorway of Ninaâs office. As always, she looked like sheâd just tumbled out of bed, though this morning she wore evening clothes, a sexy beaded designer number that probably cost more than Nina made in a year. It was clear Charlotte hadnât been to bed at all, but came right to work from whatever party sheâd attended the night before. Her hair was mussed and she puffed incessantly on a French cigarette. Yet even in such disarray, she was still a force of nature, a human hurricane that left workers weeping in her path.
âNina,â Nina corrected.
Charlotte sniffed, then shrugged. âYes, fine, all right, Nina. I need you to check a fact for me. I need to know what the trendiest spot on the body is for a rather small tattoo. And the most popular subject matter. Check for both men and women, Iâm sure itâs different. And give me a breakdown by age if you can.â
âCharlotte, Iâm not sure there have ever been any studies done onââ
âI donât care if there havenât been studies, Nora!â
âNina,â she reminded. âIs this for an article? Because we did a story on tattoos just a few months ago.â
âI just need the information, Nola,â Charlotte snapped. âItâs personal. By the end of the day?â
With that, she turned and hurried from the door, leaving Nina to wonder how sheâd ever convince Charlotte to give her an editorial position if the woman couldnât even remember her name. âOh, sure. Iâll just call the Census Bureau. Iâm sure I remember answering the tattoo question on the 2000 census. Right hip, tiny rose.â She tossed aside the personal ads and straightened her desk. âI guess Iâm going to be spending the rest of the day on the phone talking to tattoo parlors,â Nina murmured.