From the Archive
Thursday, September 19, 2002

My friend Sandy is great. The most outgoing woman you’ll ever meet who isn’t annoying, she’s the kind of person who was born with invisible pom-poms in one hand and an invisible Martini in the other: half Noel Coward and half Barbie.
I was in her store a few months back, and she was telling me how much she was looking forward to getting her old car finally paid off, ticking off the days on the calendar until FREE CAR DAY. Her eyes sparkled, even though they had glitter on the lids they sparkled from the eye part, the Sandy part, and although the glitter still sparkled it looked dull compared to the Sandy sparkle.
And it was last year’s colours anyway.
So a couple of months later I go back to the store. I generally don’t go so often, as I have little money with which to make purchases there, which is sort of why the store is there and why Sandy in particular is there, to facilitate the making of purchases therein, which she rarely succeeds in doing to me, but then no-one does, much of ever.
So back to the store I go, even though I still do not have any money. And there she is, Miss Yaletown, sparkling fit to beat the band, whatever the hell that means. As far as I know she would never beat a band, except maybe Coldplay, and only if they were really into that.
“What’s up Sandy?”
“I just bought a new car!”
“Oh?”
“Actually, I just bought two of them.”
“Oh?”
“Well, my brother wanted a car for grad [I got a pen for mine] and the bus was not on with me, not after the first couple of times.”
“The Hastings?”
“You got it. Even the Davie. I’d just had enough, so I talked to my Dad and we thought we would get, like, a bulk discount if we bought two of the same car, one for me and one for Paul. He doesn’t care what kind of car he gets, anything I’d drive is good enough for him ’cause he doesn’t know what people in the Big City drive and he knows I’ve got that covered. I went next door, to the Mini dealership, and bought two. They were like, Sandy, don’t you want to take one for a drive first?”
“Nope, I know what I want. I want a red one.”
Who could argue with that? The car has some powerful magical mojo; she was downtown today, doing makeup at a posh wedding, at a posh hotel, and as soon as she arrived she realized she’d forgotten her wallet. People in Vancouver don’t keep parking meter cash in their cars; well, dumb ones do, and they can never figure out how their windows get broken so often…anyway, she had not a sou. Couldn’t use the valet parking in case they paid by cheque and she couldn’t cash it in time. She was stuck.
But there was a spot right out front. She grabbed it, city-honed reflexes in control. She sprang from her Mini to the lobby, from the lobby to the elevator, from the elevator to the hallway, to the suite, to the bride herself, for whom she recited the tale (in doubletime) and from whom she begged a toonie. Out of the suite, into the hall, into the elevator, into the lobby, onto the sidewalk (doorman only just got the glass door in time) and thrust the toonie into the parking meter. It gave her an hour.
The job took two.
The bride tipped her $45, which she figured would pay for her parking ticket and enough for lunch. Back she went, out of the suite, into the hall, into the elevator, into the lobby, onto the sidewalk in front of the hotel, and there she saw it.
A flapping, pathetic little piece of paper, tucked carefully under her windshield wiper. Picking her heart out of her shoes, she sulked her way over to the offensive scrap and wrenched it from her precious car. It read:
I put some money in your meter because my wife has a Mini just like this.
A friend
“Half Noel Coward and half Barbie”?
¢#^!$7! What were you drinking to come up with that one? ‘Tis a vision to give one nightmares, m’dear gul.
“Half a loafer’s better than no bride”?
You’re far too straight guy. She’s fabulous.
Is that one of your Australo-Quebecois sayings? I don’t think I’ve ever heard it before.
I was trying to comment in a well-fed-sort-who-wears-a-dressing-gown-all-day manner via blog-accent. Though it’s not really an accent, and anyone reading will see the words “dressing-gown-all-day” and assume I’m paraphrasing Arthur Dent.
In fact, it was supposed to be Coward. He was of course swanningly effete and winsome, and tended to refer to people as “M’dear boy/chap/lad” and “M’dear gul, lady” etc.
He also wrote one of my favourite tunes: Uncle Harry. Lyrics are tough to find out here though.
Wait a bit and it’ll be up on YouTube. There are lots of gays who want to be famous.