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	<title>Observer &#187; Winnie Dieke</title>
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		<title>Observer &#187; Winnie Dieke</title>
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		<title>Sex Lives of Serious Journalists: He’s a Feminist, She’s a Real Man</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2005/07/sex-lives-of-serious-journalists-hes-a-feminist-shes-a-real-man/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 11 Jul 2005 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2005/07/sex-lives-of-serious-journalists-hes-a-feminist-shes-a-real-man/</link>
			<dc:creator>Candace Bushnell</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/2005/07/sex-lives-of-serious-journalists-hes-a-feminist-shes-a-real-man/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><i>Back on an otherwise quiet day in the otherwise quiet 1990’s, Candace<br />
Bushnell’s Sex and the City column debuted in  </i>The New York Observer.<i> Here, a column from June 24, 1996, in which readers first met James<br />
and Winnie Dieke. Ms. Bushnell’s next novel, </i>Lipstick Jungle<i>, will be published by Hyperion in September.</i></p>
<p> This is a story about two<br />
people with jobs. Two people with very important jobs. Two very important<br />
people, with two very important jobs, who are married to each other and have<br />
exactly one child.</p>
<p> Meet James and Winnie<br />
Dieke (“it’s pronounced ‘deek,’ not ‘dyke’”) The perfect couple. They live in a<br />
five-room apartment on the Upper West Side. They graduated from Ivy League<br />
colleges (he, Harvard; she, Smith). Winnie is 37, and James is 42--the perfect<br />
age difference, they like to say. They’ve been married nearly 10 years. Their<br />
lives revolve around their work and their child. They love to work. Their work<br />
keeps them busy. Their work separates them from other people. Their work, in<br />
their minds, makes them superior to other people.</p>
<p> They are journalists.<br />
Serious journalists.</p>
<p> Winnie writes a<br />
politics-and-style column (“Is that an oxymoron?” James asked her) for a major<br />
newsmagazine. James is a well-known and highly respected journalist--he writes<br />
worthy 5,000-to-10,000-word pieces for publications like <i>The New York Times</i> <i>Magazine</i>,<br />
<i>The New Republic</i> and <i>The New Yorker</i>.</p>
<p> James and Winnie agree on<br />
just about everything. They have definite opinions. “There’s something wrong<br />
with people who don’t have informed opinions about things,” Winnie said to<br />
James, when they met for the first time, at a party in an apartment on the<br />
Upper West Side. Everyone at the party was “in publishing” and under 35. Most<br />
of the women (like Winnie) were working at women’s magazines (something Winnie<br />
never talks about now). James had just won an American Society of Magazine<br />
Editors award for a story on fly-fishing. Everyone knew who he was. He was tall<br />
and skinny, with floppy, curly brown hair. (He’s still tall and skinny, but<br />
he’s lost most of his hair.) There were women all around him.</p>
<p> Here are a few of the<br />
things Winnie and James agree on: They hate anyone who isn’t like them. They<br />
hate anyone who is wealthy and gets press. They hate trendy people and things<br />
(but James just bought a pair of Dakota Smith sunglasses, and they drive a<br />
BMW). They hate anyone who has appeared on TV, with the exception of Michael Kinsley<br />
and Ted Koppel (everyone else is a “lightweight”).</p>
<p> They hate people who do<br />
drugs. They hate people who drink too much (unless it’s one of their friends,<br />
and even then they complain about the person often). They hate the Hamptons<br />
(but take a house there, anyway, in Sag Harbor). They believe in the poor.<br />
(They do not know anyone who is poor, except their Jamaican nanny, who is not<br />
exactly poor.) They believe in black writers. (They know two, and Winnie is<br />
working on becoming friends with a third--whom she met at a convention.) They<br />
hate music. They think fashion is silly (but secretly identify with the people<br />
in Dewar’s ads). They believe in women writers (as long as the women do not<br />
become too successful or get too much attention or write about things the<br />
Diekes do not approve of, like sex--unless it’s lesbian sex).</p>
<p> James says he is a<br />
feminist, but always puts down women who are not like Winnie (including her<br />
sister). They put down women who do not have children. Who are not married.<br />
Winnie gets sick at the sight of a woman she considers a slut, a gold digger, a<br />
whore.</p>
<p> The Diekes don’t know<br />
people who go to clubs or who stay out late, or who have sex (except Winnie’s<br />
sister). People who stay up late cannot, by their definition, be “serious.” It<br />
takes the Diekes all day (and often well into the evening) to get their work<br />
done. Then, they are so exhausted, they can only go home and eat dinner<br />
(prepared by the Jamaican nanny) and go to sleep. (Winnie has to get up at 6 to<br />
be with her child and go running, which is becoming a real chore, ever since<br />
their son outgrew the baby jogger.) At home, they are cozy and superior, and<br />
sometimes, when they’re not working, they sit around in fuzzy flannel pajamas<br />
with their son, who is 4. Winnie and the boy wear slippers in the shape of<br />
stuffed animals, and Winnie makes their slippered, stuffed animal feet talk to<br />
each other. The child is a sweet and happy and beautiful child who never<br />
complains. “But he’s a real boy,” Winnie always says to her friends. It always<br />
shocks Winnie when she says this, it makes her a little afraid, because she<br />
does not like to admit that men and women are different. (If men and women are<br />
different, where does it leave her?)</p>
<p> Winnie believes (no, <i>knows)</i> that she is smarter than James<br />
(even though she’s not sure that he will ever admit it), and as good a<br />
journalist as he is, and as good a writer.<br />
 She often thinks that she is actually better than he (in every way, not<br />
just journalism), but he (being a <i>man)</i><br />
has gotten more breaks. James’ style of writing and her style of writing (which<br />
she picked up from James, who picked it up from other writers of his tall,<br />
gaunt, khakis-and-button-down ilk) was not hard to figure out how to do, once<br />
she understood the motivation. Ditto for their conversational style: pseudo-intellectual<br />
and desperately clever at the same time: clintellectual. (<i>Tell me I’m smart--or I’ll wound you</i>.)</p>
<p> Winnie is deeply bitter<br />
and James is deeply bitter, but they never talk about it.</p>
<p><B>‘Our Salon’</B></p>
<p> James is scared about his<br />
work. Every time he finishes a piece, he’s scared he won’t get another one.<br />
When he gets another assignment (he always does, but it doesn’t make any<br />
difference), he’s scared he won’t make the deadline. When he makes the<br />
deadline, he’s scared his editor (or editors--there are always faceless editors<br />
lurking around in dark little offices at magazines) won’t like the piece. When<br />
they like the piece, he’s scared that it won’t get published. When it does get<br />
published, he’s scared that no one will read it or talk about it. If people do<br />
talk about it (and they don’t always,<i> do<br />
they?</i>--in which case he’s scared that he’s not a great journalist), he’s<br />
scared he won’t be able to pull it off again.</p>
<p> But most of all, James is<br />
scared of his wife. Winnie. She doesn’t seem to be scared of anything--and that<br />
scares him. When Winnie should be scared--when she has an impossible deadline,<br />
or can’t get people to cooperate on interviews, or doesn’t think she’s getting<br />
the assignment she want--she gets angry instead of scared. She calls people and<br />
screams. She faxes, she e-mails. She marches into her editors’ offices and has<br />
“hissy fits” (his term, and he’d never tell her he uses it).</p>
<p> “I hope you’re not<br />
implying that my work isn’t good enough,” she says to editors. “Because I’ve<br />
already done a kazillion [that’s one of her favorite words, kazillion] stories<br />
for you and they were good enough. So if suddenly you don’t want to give me the<br />
assignment …. ” She lets her voice trail off. She never says the word:<br />
“sexism.” But it hangs in the air, like a glass ornament, threatening to break<br />
and draw blood.</p>
<p> Everyone is just a tiny<br />
bit scared of Winnie, and James is scared that one of these days she won’t get<br />
the assignment, or she’ll get fired.</p>
<p> But she always does get<br />
the assignment. At the potluck suppers (“our salon,” they call it) they host<br />
every other Tuesday night (they invite other serious journalists like<br />
themselves, and discuss the political implications of everything from the<br />
V-chip to rent hikes, to what’s happened to the journalists who were fired from<br />
New York <i>Newsday</i>, to the scandal of <i>60 Minutes</i> pulling its planned segment<br />
on the Clinton Whitewater book), Winnie will discuss whatever story she is<br />
working on. Everyone will be sitting with Limoges plates on their laps, and<br />
they will be eating iceberg lettuce with fat-free salad dressing and skinless<br />
chicken breasts, and maybe some rice, and then there’s fat-free frozen yogurt<br />
for dessert, and Winnie will say, “I want to know what everyone thinks about<br />
the new NBC 24-hour news channel. I’m doing my column on it this week.” When<br />
she started doing this, a few years ago, James thought it was cute. But now he<br />
gets annoyed. (He never shows it.) Why is she always asking everyone else what<br />
they think? Doesn’t she have her own thoughts? And he looks around the room to<br />
see if any of the other men (husbands) are sharing the same sentiment.</p>
<p> He can’t tell. He can<br />
never tell. Maybe if people got drunk--but they only drink little, wee glasses<br />
of wine. No one they know drinks hard alcohol anymore. James often wants to ask<br />
these other husbands what they think of their wives.   Are they scared of them, too? Do they hate them? Do they ever<br />
have fantasies of pushing their wives down on the bed and ripping off their<br />
underpants and …. (James sort of tried something like that with Winnie, but she<br />
slapped him and wouldn’t talk to him for three days afterward.) Mostly, he<br />
wants to know: Are other men scared of Winnie?</p>
<p> Sometimes, James thinks<br />
Winnie is scared that<i> he’s</i> going to<br />
leave <i>her</i>. But she never says she’s<br />
scared. Instead, she says something like, “We’ve been married for 10 years and<br />
have a child. I’d get half of everything if we ever got divorced and it’d be<br />
awfully hard for you to live on half of what we own and only your income, minus<br />
child support.”</p>
<p> There are times when<br />
James doesn’t feel like the man in the relationship. But then he asks himself<br />
what Winnie would say if he told her that. She’d say, “What does it mean to<br />
‘feel like a man,’ anyway? What does ‘a man’ feel like?” And since he never can<br />
answer those questions, he has to agree with Winnie.</p>
<p> On their second date,<br />
Winnie told James that, in the 70’s, she smoked marijuana (age 14), let boys<br />
feel her up and down (16), lost her virginity (17) to a neighborhood boy<br />
(18--very good-looking). They did it in the basement of his parents’ house,<br />
where he had a cot set up. After, he drove her home, and she can still remember<br />
him singing along to the radio (R.E.O. Speedwagon), oblivious to her wounded,<br />
yearning presence. He wasn’t impressed that she was going to Smith in the fall,<br />
and he didn’t care that she was No. 3 in her high-school class (tolerable only<br />
because the two students above her were boys). That night, she learned that<br />
achievement and intelligence were not a guarantee against being treated badly,<br />
and vowed never to be in that situation again.</p>
<p> Winnie’s birthday is<br />
coming, and James is scared. And excited. Because of Winnie’s sister.</p>
<p><B>‘Evil’</B></p>
<p> Winnie has a sister and a<br />
brother. Everybody loves Winnie’s brother. He graduated from UCLA film school,<br />
just finished a serious documentary about rice farmers in China.</p>
<p> Everybody “worries” about<br />
Winnie’s sister. Evie (“Evil,” Winnie calls her sometimes) is two years younger<br />
than Winnie. Eight summers ago, Evie had to go to Hazeldon. Since then, she’s<br />
changed her mind every six months about what she wants to do: Actress.<br />
Landscape architect. Singer. Real-estate agent. Novelist. Movie director.<br />
Painter. Now she wants to be a journalist. Like Winnie.</p>
<p> Recently, Evie showed up<br />
at a very important, very serious party for a journalist who had just written a<br />
serious book about a right-wing politician. Evie’s blouse was unbuttoned too<br />
low and she was showing off her breasts. (She used to be fairly flat-chested,<br />
like Winnie, but a couple of years ago, her breasts mysteriously grew and<br />
Winnie thinks she had breast implants.) Evie walked up to the important<br />
journalist and locked him in a conversation. The women were fuming, but they<br />
couldn’t “take care of” Evie the way they normally would have because she was<br />
Winnie’s sister.</p>
<p> The next day, Winnie got<br />
a call from a female colleague who said Evie had gone to the important<br />
journalist’s hotel room. “Winnie, I just want you to know that I’m not going to<br />
judge you by your sister’s behavior,” she said.</p>
<p> Then Evie herself called.<br />
“I think I’m going to get an assignment from <i>The New York Times</i>,” she said.</p>
<p> “Stay the fuck out of my<br />
life,” Winnie screamed at her. “You’re ruining everything.” Then she added,<br />
“Why don’t you get a job at a fashion magazine if you want to be a journalist<br />
so much?”</p>
<p> “Oh, no,” Evie said. She<br />
swallowed loudly. She was drinking a Diet Coke. She drank eight Diet Cokes a<br />
day. (Just another thing to be addicted to, Winnie thought.) Evie always acts<br />
as though her behavior is that of a normal, decent person. (She is in denial, James<br />
and Winnie think.)</p>
<p> “I’m going to change my<br />
life,” Evie said, “I’m going to be successful. Respected. Maybe even powerful.<br />
Just like my big sis.”</p>
<p> <B>A Treat for James</B></p>
<p> Evie is a mess. Sometimes<br />
James wonders if he should have married her instead.</p>
<p> Every year, James asks<br />
her to help him pick out Winnie’s birthday present. At first, he did it “as a<br />
treat for Evie.” (It was good for Evie to spend time around a man who wasn’t a<br />
user, an asshole or a scumbag--and Winnie agreed.) But then he realized that she<br />
was attracted to him.</p>
<p> He calls her up. “Evie,”<br />
he says.</p>
<p> “Hey, Bro,” Evie says.<br />
“Did you hear I met … ,” she says, naming the important journalist. “And I<br />
might get my first assignment. With <i>The<br />
New York Times. </i>Pretty great, huh?” Evie is always so chipper, James<br />
thinks.</p>
<p> “It’s Winnie’s birthday,”<br />
James says (staying in control by getting right to the point).</p>
<p> “I know,” she says.</p>
<p> “Any suggestions?” He<br />
asks. “I think I want to get her something from Barneys. Jewelry.”</p>
<p> “No, Jimmy,” Evie says.<br />
She’s the only person who has ever called him Jimmy. “You can’t afford jewelry<br />
worth giving anyone.”</p>
<p> This is why everyone<br />
hates you, he thinks. But he says, “So what then?”</p>
<p> “Shoes,” she says.<br />
“Winnie needs a great pair of high-heeled sexy shoes. I’ll help you.”</p>
<p> High-heeled sexy shoes<br />
are the absolute last thing that Winnie would want.</p>
<p> “O.K.,” he says. He<br />
agrees to meet Evie in the shoe department at Bloomingdale’s. He hangs up the<br />
phone and feels scared. Then he realizes he has a hard-on. </p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><i>Back on an otherwise quiet day in the otherwise quiet 1990’s, Candace<br />
Bushnell’s Sex and the City column debuted in  </i>The New York Observer.<i> Here, a column from June 24, 1996, in which readers first met James<br />
and Winnie Dieke. Ms. Bushnell’s next novel, </i>Lipstick Jungle<i>, will be published by Hyperion in September.</i></p>
<p> This is a story about two<br />
people with jobs. Two people with very important jobs. Two very important<br />
people, with two very important jobs, who are married to each other and have<br />
exactly one child.</p>
<p> Meet James and Winnie<br />
Dieke (“it’s pronounced ‘deek,’ not ‘dyke’”) The perfect couple. They live in a<br />
five-room apartment on the Upper West Side. They graduated from Ivy League<br />
colleges (he, Harvard; she, Smith). Winnie is 37, and James is 42--the perfect<br />
age difference, they like to say. They’ve been married nearly 10 years. Their<br />
lives revolve around their work and their child. They love to work. Their work<br />
keeps them busy. Their work separates them from other people. Their work, in<br />
their minds, makes them superior to other people.</p>
<p> They are journalists.<br />
Serious journalists.</p>
<p> Winnie writes a<br />
politics-and-style column (“Is that an oxymoron?” James asked her) for a major<br />
newsmagazine. James is a well-known and highly respected journalist--he writes<br />
worthy 5,000-to-10,000-word pieces for publications like <i>The New York Times</i> <i>Magazine</i>,<br />
<i>The New Republic</i> and <i>The New Yorker</i>.</p>
<p> James and Winnie agree on<br />
just about everything. They have definite opinions. “There’s something wrong<br />
with people who don’t have informed opinions about things,” Winnie said to<br />
James, when they met for the first time, at a party in an apartment on the<br />
Upper West Side. Everyone at the party was “in publishing” and under 35. Most<br />
of the women (like Winnie) were working at women’s magazines (something Winnie<br />
never talks about now). James had just won an American Society of Magazine<br />
Editors award for a story on fly-fishing. Everyone knew who he was. He was tall<br />
and skinny, with floppy, curly brown hair. (He’s still tall and skinny, but<br />
he’s lost most of his hair.) There were women all around him.</p>
<p> Here are a few of the<br />
things Winnie and James agree on: They hate anyone who isn’t like them. They<br />
hate anyone who is wealthy and gets press. They hate trendy people and things<br />
(but James just bought a pair of Dakota Smith sunglasses, and they drive a<br />
BMW). They hate anyone who has appeared on TV, with the exception of Michael Kinsley<br />
and Ted Koppel (everyone else is a “lightweight”).</p>
<p> They hate people who do<br />
drugs. They hate people who drink too much (unless it’s one of their friends,<br />
and even then they complain about the person often). They hate the Hamptons<br />
(but take a house there, anyway, in Sag Harbor). They believe in the poor.<br />
(They do not know anyone who is poor, except their Jamaican nanny, who is not<br />
exactly poor.) They believe in black writers. (They know two, and Winnie is<br />
working on becoming friends with a third--whom she met at a convention.) They<br />
hate music. They think fashion is silly (but secretly identify with the people<br />
in Dewar’s ads). They believe in women writers (as long as the women do not<br />
become too successful or get too much attention or write about things the<br />
Diekes do not approve of, like sex--unless it’s lesbian sex).</p>
<p> James says he is a<br />
feminist, but always puts down women who are not like Winnie (including her<br />
sister). They put down women who do not have children. Who are not married.<br />
Winnie gets sick at the sight of a woman she considers a slut, a gold digger, a<br />
whore.</p>
<p> The Diekes don’t know<br />
people who go to clubs or who stay out late, or who have sex (except Winnie’s<br />
sister). People who stay up late cannot, by their definition, be “serious.” It<br />
takes the Diekes all day (and often well into the evening) to get their work<br />
done. Then, they are so exhausted, they can only go home and eat dinner<br />
(prepared by the Jamaican nanny) and go to sleep. (Winnie has to get up at 6 to<br />
be with her child and go running, which is becoming a real chore, ever since<br />
their son outgrew the baby jogger.) At home, they are cozy and superior, and<br />
sometimes, when they’re not working, they sit around in fuzzy flannel pajamas<br />
with their son, who is 4. Winnie and the boy wear slippers in the shape of<br />
stuffed animals, and Winnie makes their slippered, stuffed animal feet talk to<br />
each other. The child is a sweet and happy and beautiful child who never<br />
complains. “But he’s a real boy,” Winnie always says to her friends. It always<br />
shocks Winnie when she says this, it makes her a little afraid, because she<br />
does not like to admit that men and women are different. (If men and women are<br />
different, where does it leave her?)</p>
<p> Winnie believes (no, <i>knows)</i> that she is smarter than James<br />
(even though she’s not sure that he will ever admit it), and as good a<br />
journalist as he is, and as good a writer.<br />
 She often thinks that she is actually better than he (in every way, not<br />
just journalism), but he (being a <i>man)</i><br />
has gotten more breaks. James’ style of writing and her style of writing (which<br />
she picked up from James, who picked it up from other writers of his tall,<br />
gaunt, khakis-and-button-down ilk) was not hard to figure out how to do, once<br />
she understood the motivation. Ditto for their conversational style: pseudo-intellectual<br />
and desperately clever at the same time: clintellectual. (<i>Tell me I’m smart--or I’ll wound you</i>.)</p>
<p> Winnie is deeply bitter<br />
and James is deeply bitter, but they never talk about it.</p>
<p><B>‘Our Salon’</B></p>
<p> James is scared about his<br />
work. Every time he finishes a piece, he’s scared he won’t get another one.<br />
When he gets another assignment (he always does, but it doesn’t make any<br />
difference), he’s scared he won’t make the deadline. When he makes the<br />
deadline, he’s scared his editor (or editors--there are always faceless editors<br />
lurking around in dark little offices at magazines) won’t like the piece. When<br />
they like the piece, he’s scared that it won’t get published. When it does get<br />
published, he’s scared that no one will read it or talk about it. If people do<br />
talk about it (and they don’t always,<i> do<br />
they?</i>--in which case he’s scared that he’s not a great journalist), he’s<br />
scared he won’t be able to pull it off again.</p>
<p> But most of all, James is<br />
scared of his wife. Winnie. She doesn’t seem to be scared of anything--and that<br />
scares him. When Winnie should be scared--when she has an impossible deadline,<br />
or can’t get people to cooperate on interviews, or doesn’t think she’s getting<br />
the assignment she want--she gets angry instead of scared. She calls people and<br />
screams. She faxes, she e-mails. She marches into her editors’ offices and has<br />
“hissy fits” (his term, and he’d never tell her he uses it).</p>
<p> “I hope you’re not<br />
implying that my work isn’t good enough,” she says to editors. “Because I’ve<br />
already done a kazillion [that’s one of her favorite words, kazillion] stories<br />
for you and they were good enough. So if suddenly you don’t want to give me the<br />
assignment …. ” She lets her voice trail off. She never says the word:<br />
“sexism.” But it hangs in the air, like a glass ornament, threatening to break<br />
and draw blood.</p>
<p> Everyone is just a tiny<br />
bit scared of Winnie, and James is scared that one of these days she won’t get<br />
the assignment, or she’ll get fired.</p>
<p> But she always does get<br />
the assignment. At the potluck suppers (“our salon,” they call it) they host<br />
every other Tuesday night (they invite other serious journalists like<br />
themselves, and discuss the political implications of everything from the<br />
V-chip to rent hikes, to what’s happened to the journalists who were fired from<br />
New York <i>Newsday</i>, to the scandal of <i>60 Minutes</i> pulling its planned segment<br />
on the Clinton Whitewater book), Winnie will discuss whatever story she is<br />
working on. Everyone will be sitting with Limoges plates on their laps, and<br />
they will be eating iceberg lettuce with fat-free salad dressing and skinless<br />
chicken breasts, and maybe some rice, and then there’s fat-free frozen yogurt<br />
for dessert, and Winnie will say, “I want to know what everyone thinks about<br />
the new NBC 24-hour news channel. I’m doing my column on it this week.” When<br />
she started doing this, a few years ago, James thought it was cute. But now he<br />
gets annoyed. (He never shows it.) Why is she always asking everyone else what<br />
they think? Doesn’t she have her own thoughts? And he looks around the room to<br />
see if any of the other men (husbands) are sharing the same sentiment.</p>
<p> He can’t tell. He can<br />
never tell. Maybe if people got drunk--but they only drink little, wee glasses<br />
of wine. No one they know drinks hard alcohol anymore. James often wants to ask<br />
these other husbands what they think of their wives.   Are they scared of them, too? Do they hate them? Do they ever<br />
have fantasies of pushing their wives down on the bed and ripping off their<br />
underpants and …. (James sort of tried something like that with Winnie, but she<br />
slapped him and wouldn’t talk to him for three days afterward.) Mostly, he<br />
wants to know: Are other men scared of Winnie?</p>
<p> Sometimes, James thinks<br />
Winnie is scared that<i> he’s</i> going to<br />
leave <i>her</i>. But she never says she’s<br />
scared. Instead, she says something like, “We’ve been married for 10 years and<br />
have a child. I’d get half of everything if we ever got divorced and it’d be<br />
awfully hard for you to live on half of what we own and only your income, minus<br />
child support.”</p>
<p> There are times when<br />
James doesn’t feel like the man in the relationship. But then he asks himself<br />
what Winnie would say if he told her that. She’d say, “What does it mean to<br />
‘feel like a man,’ anyway? What does ‘a man’ feel like?” And since he never can<br />
answer those questions, he has to agree with Winnie.</p>
<p> On their second date,<br />
Winnie told James that, in the 70’s, she smoked marijuana (age 14), let boys<br />
feel her up and down (16), lost her virginity (17) to a neighborhood boy<br />
(18--very good-looking). They did it in the basement of his parents’ house,<br />
where he had a cot set up. After, he drove her home, and she can still remember<br />
him singing along to the radio (R.E.O. Speedwagon), oblivious to her wounded,<br />
yearning presence. He wasn’t impressed that she was going to Smith in the fall,<br />
and he didn’t care that she was No. 3 in her high-school class (tolerable only<br />
because the two students above her were boys). That night, she learned that<br />
achievement and intelligence were not a guarantee against being treated badly,<br />
and vowed never to be in that situation again.</p>
<p> Winnie’s birthday is<br />
coming, and James is scared. And excited. Because of Winnie’s sister.</p>
<p><B>‘Evil’</B></p>
<p> Winnie has a sister and a<br />
brother. Everybody loves Winnie’s brother. He graduated from UCLA film school,<br />
just finished a serious documentary about rice farmers in China.</p>
<p> Everybody “worries” about<br />
Winnie’s sister. Evie (“Evil,” Winnie calls her sometimes) is two years younger<br />
than Winnie. Eight summers ago, Evie had to go to Hazeldon. Since then, she’s<br />
changed her mind every six months about what she wants to do: Actress.<br />
Landscape architect. Singer. Real-estate agent. Novelist. Movie director.<br />
Painter. Now she wants to be a journalist. Like Winnie.</p>
<p> Recently, Evie showed up<br />
at a very important, very serious party for a journalist who had just written a<br />
serious book about a right-wing politician. Evie’s blouse was unbuttoned too<br />
low and she was showing off her breasts. (She used to be fairly flat-chested,<br />
like Winnie, but a couple of years ago, her breasts mysteriously grew and<br />
Winnie thinks she had breast implants.) Evie walked up to the important<br />
journalist and locked him in a conversation. The women were fuming, but they<br />
couldn’t “take care of” Evie the way they normally would have because she was<br />
Winnie’s sister.</p>
<p> The next day, Winnie got<br />
a call from a female colleague who said Evie had gone to the important<br />
journalist’s hotel room. “Winnie, I just want you to know that I’m not going to<br />
judge you by your sister’s behavior,” she said.</p>
<p> Then Evie herself called.<br />
“I think I’m going to get an assignment from <i>The New York Times</i>,” she said.</p>
<p> “Stay the fuck out of my<br />
life,” Winnie screamed at her. “You’re ruining everything.” Then she added,<br />
“Why don’t you get a job at a fashion magazine if you want to be a journalist<br />
so much?”</p>
<p> “Oh, no,” Evie said. She<br />
swallowed loudly. She was drinking a Diet Coke. She drank eight Diet Cokes a<br />
day. (Just another thing to be addicted to, Winnie thought.) Evie always acts<br />
as though her behavior is that of a normal, decent person. (She is in denial, James<br />
and Winnie think.)</p>
<p> “I’m going to change my<br />
life,” Evie said, “I’m going to be successful. Respected. Maybe even powerful.<br />
Just like my big sis.”</p>
<p> <B>A Treat for James</B></p>
<p> Evie is a mess. Sometimes<br />
James wonders if he should have married her instead.</p>
<p> Every year, James asks<br />
her to help him pick out Winnie’s birthday present. At first, he did it “as a<br />
treat for Evie.” (It was good for Evie to spend time around a man who wasn’t a<br />
user, an asshole or a scumbag--and Winnie agreed.) But then he realized that she<br />
was attracted to him.</p>
<p> He calls her up. “Evie,”<br />
he says.</p>
<p> “Hey, Bro,” Evie says.<br />
“Did you hear I met … ,” she says, naming the important journalist. “And I<br />
might get my first assignment. With <i>The<br />
New York Times. </i>Pretty great, huh?” Evie is always so chipper, James<br />
thinks.</p>
<p> “It’s Winnie’s birthday,”<br />
James says (staying in control by getting right to the point).</p>
<p> “I know,” she says.</p>
<p> “Any suggestions?” He<br />
asks. “I think I want to get her something from Barneys. Jewelry.”</p>
<p> “No, Jimmy,” Evie says.<br />
She’s the only person who has ever called him Jimmy. “You can’t afford jewelry<br />
worth giving anyone.”</p>
<p> This is why everyone<br />
hates you, he thinks. But he says, “So what then?”</p>
<p> “Shoes,” she says.<br />
“Winnie needs a great pair of high-heeled sexy shoes. I’ll help you.”</p>
<p> High-heeled sexy shoes<br />
are the absolute last thing that Winnie would want.</p>
<p> “O.K.,” he says. He<br />
agrees to meet Evie in the shoe department at Bloomingdale’s. He hangs up the<br />
phone and feels scared. Then he realizes he has a hard-on. </p>
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