bar, and we snogged on the dance floor. My first snog since Peter and I broke up!’ I pause. ‘I wish I could remember it better.’
‘Wow,’ says Robert. ‘I haven’t snogged on a dance floor in years. Did you feel his excitement thrusting against you?’
‘Ew,’ I say. ‘Seriously, ew.’
Robert laughs. He has one of those laughs that makes everyone else feel like they might be missing out on something funny.
‘ Que ?’ says Sophie.
‘I, um, met a guy last night. Robert reduced it straight to sex, immediately,’ I say petulantly. ‘Deviant.’
‘Who’s the guy?!’ says Sophie excitedly.
‘No one, no one, I haven’t heard from him yet, he probably won’t even call,’ I say, glancing at Plum, who is carefully lighting a cigarette. She left soon after we got to the bar last night: no one was chatting her up so she couldn’t see the point in staying.
‘Doesn’t it seem a shame to spend all night chatting to just one person?’ asks Robert.
‘No,’ I say, though now that I think about it, there was a tall guy at the bar who I thought kept looking at me. I wish I’d talked to him a bit, too.
‘I knew it,’ he says smugly.
It’s kind of annoying how he can read my mind. ‘You want me to’ – I pause and look for the right word – ‘ multitask my flirting?’
Robert nods. ‘Meet, greet, move on. Unless you just want, you know, a one-night-stand.’
‘Men don’t think like that,’ says Plum, who looks a bit upset. I know she’s thinking about a guy she met a few months ago. She talked to him all night, thought a thunderbolt went off, went home with him and shagged till 5 pm on Sunday. She hasn’t heard from him since.
‘Enough about this,’ I say hurriedly.
‘But I thought you were the fuckmerchant!’ she blurts at Robert.
He shakes his head. ‘Casual relationships. Very different thing.’
‘You make it sound so noble,’ I say.
Robert ignores me. ‘I bet, if you two did exactly what I say, you could meet a guy within the next hour.’
‘How?’ interrupts Plum. ‘Write my number on the back of the boys’ toilet door?’
‘Go over to The Westbourne,’ that’s another pub just about 30 feet up, always surrounded by enthusiastic outside drinkers on days like this. ‘Walk in the side entrance and order two pints of beer and a vodka and tonic at the bar. Carry them out the main door—’
‘But how can I carry three drinks?’ asks Plum. ‘I’ll drop them.’
‘Exactly. Pause when you get outside, like you can’t see your friends. It’s packed, so that’s not surprising. Act like you’re having trouble holding all the glasses. Someone will offer to help you. Talk, laugh, flirt. Job done.’
‘Will that really work?’ I ask, as Plum heads off.
‘No reason it shouldn’t. The first step to being chatted up is being visible,’ says Robert. ‘She’s a pretty girl and she swears exceptionally well . . . Of course, she’s also transparently high-maintenance, and that’s her Achilles’ heel.’
‘What’s mine? Achilles’ heel, I mean?’
‘Lack of confidence,’ says Robert instantly. Ouch.
‘I have confidence,’ I protest feebly. (This, of course, isn’t the correct response when someone accuses you of lacking confidence. The correct response is a derisive ‘blow me’.) ‘Dating is just out of my comfort zone.’
‘Well, you also often look preoccupied, like you’re arguing with yourself. It gives you a fuck-off aura.’
‘Suck my aura,’ I say sulkily.
Robert smirks.
‘It’s not my fault,’ I say, after a pause. ‘You need experience to be confident at anything. Driving. Putting on make up. Flipping pancakes. I have no experience at being single. How could I possibly be confident at it?’
‘We’re working on that,’ he says. ‘You’re next.’
I sigh. I really don’t want to set myself up for another terrible Paulie-date.
‘Relax,’ he says. ‘You’ll be fine. It won’t be like Paulie. Experience,