Leila
hangs up the phone and slumps down on her cream coloured IKEA sofa, her face in
her hands. She stays in this position for ten minutes, her eyes closed, while
she tries to regulate her breath. When her face starts feeling hot and sweaty,
she slowly gets up, straightens her stained grey vest top and black velour
jogging bottoms and shuffles her way to her fake Chanel handbag that is sitting
on the tiny dining table next to a wilting bunch of flowers. She rummages around
for her diary, flicks through the pages and when she finds July 14th, she
writes: Lara’s Wedding in tiny letters, pressing down on the page so hard that
the imprint can be seen on the following three pages.
Lara,
Leila’s sister, has just been proposed to by her boyfriend of two years, and is
wearing a 2.8 carat solitaire on her left hand that is so heavy, she was barely
able to hold the phone to her ear in order to call her older sister with the
good news.
“Congratulations
habibti!” Leila had exclaimed, visibly grimacing and resisting the urge to throw
the phone at the plain, white wall in front of her. “I’m so happy for you!”
Now,
as she stares at the date that somehow seems more insulting in its written form,
Leila fights the urge to collapse into a bundle of tears. She repeatedly tells
herself that she is not a failure. She has a good job, she drives a nice car and
she has her own apartment, while Lara, although engaged, is unemployed and still
living with her parents. Leila also has a nicer ass, bigger boobs and a smaller
waist than her 28 year-old younger sister.
But
Lara has a fiancée who loves her and wants to spend the rest of his life with
her. And Leila comes home every evening to a hollow apartment, which her mother
seems to take great pleasure in reminding her of every time they speak.
Leila’s
mother has never forgiven her fiercely independent daughter for moving to Dubai
without her permission. It had taken the twenty-one year-old Leila two years to
persuade her overprotective, very Christian parents to allow her to leave Beirut
to complete her final year of her Bachelor’s in Marketing in the US. Two years
of arguing, crying, reasoning and begging eventually made them relent – but only
to study and only for one year.
Only
that year in the States wasn't half as glamorous as Leila had expected it to be.
With barely a cent to her name, she waited on tables almost every evening to get
by and her social life was non-existent. As soon as she had completed her
degree, she withdrew the little money she had managed to save and flew straight
out to Dubai, the land of opportunities, all the while pretending to her parents
that she was still in the US doing a little work experience. When she eventually
confessed that she was actually in Dubai after embarking on a flourishing career
in real estate, her mother’s first reaction was screeching: “How will you ever
find a husband if you carry on being so CRAZY? How will we ever find Lara a
husband when her older sister doesn’t care about HONOUR?” down the phone. And
every month since that day, Mrs. Saade reminds her daughter that independent,
career girls always end up alone. So far, she is right.
Sighing
audibly, Leila grabs her iPod, scrapes her hair into a messy ponytail and heads
over to the gym on the top floor of her building. She is relieved to find she is
the only one there, as she hates having to worry about people spotting sweat
patches under her arms. Thankfully, the gym is usually empty. Although ideal for
those wanting an average bit of space in a not-extremely-bad location but who
don't want to pay too much for it, half the apartments in Discovery Gardens are
still uninhabited. The rent decrease has meant that those who can afford it,
have moved to more happening locations like Jumeirah Beach Residence or the
Marina. Leila may like appearing wealthy in public but she doesn't believe in
throwing away money on rent.
Sticking
her iPod into her ears, she starts jogging on the treadmill to old Amr Diab
tracks, and with every step she takes, she feels another stab of envy at the way
her shy, sensitive little sister who everyone thought was too simple to find a
decent man, has bagged a fiancee before her.
Leila
remembers standing in the middle of Sheikh Zayed Road ten years ago absorbing in
the construction, the growth and the sheer potential rippling in the city with
excitement buzzing in her stomach. Young, naïve and full of hope, she was
certain that she would find a dashing prince, preferably a Westerner, who would
sweep her off her feet and whisk her away to a place that was protected from
war, where she would fall asleep to the comforting sound of owls hooting, not
bombs falling. But despite the loneliness that tempted most men into marriages,
somehow, she could never make a relationship last longer than a couple of
months. Every man she had ever dated just ended up disappointing her.
Her
thirty minutes of jogging over, she slows down to a brisk walk, perspiration
dripping down her hairline and tickling her forehead when she suddenly realises
that in her bitterness, she hasn’t paid much attention to Lara’s wedding itself.
The wedding where she will probably have to be the single, lonely and very
desperate maid of honour, the focus of everyone's pity.
“FUCK!”
she shouts as an image of herself in a fuchsia pink taffeta dress blinds her
temporarily, and she stumbles on the belt of the treadmill and falls down hard
on her knees. Rolling off to the bottom of the machine on her knees, she somehow
ends up on flat on her back. Gasping for air, she squeezes her eyes closed, her
legs throbbing in pain.
“Are
you okay?” a concerned voice asks as she lies on the ground, not moving. Too
embarrassed to open her eyes and face the man who has witnessed her yell an
obscenity and then fly off the treadmill, Leila keeps her eyes closed, cursing
herself for being so absorbed in her thoughts, the music and the running, that
she never noticed anyone else enter the gym. Maybe he’ll think
I’ve fainted, she thinks to herself, trying not to let her eyelids
twitch.
“Dude,
I think she’s passed out,” an American voice says from somewhere to her right.
“Shall we call an ambulance? Concussion can be serious.”
Leila,
who has no medical insurance, has no desire to be sent to hospital and billed
crazy amounts for a fake concussion. At the same time, she doesn’t want to have
to put a face to the male voices either. She is acutely aware that with no
makeup, unwashed hair and her tattered vest, she looks like she belongs in a
trailer park, not in a nice-ish apartment in Discovery
Gardens. Get lost and leave me alone she
thinks, desperately trying to transmit this thought telepathically.
“I
don’t know. Let’s see if we can wake her up first,” the first voice replies in
Arabic. “Go and get some water, let’s splash some on her face.”
“No!”
Leila cries out without thinking, her eyes flying open. The last thing she wants
is water washing away her carefully drawn in eyebrows.
“You’re
awake?!” The second voice exclaims.
“Nooooo,”
Leila whimpers, not looking at the boy. She flutters her eyelids a little,
pretending to be woozy and tries to sit up. “Nooo,” she says again, unsure what
else she can say that will make her sound ill and weak.
“Here,
sit up and drink this,” the first voice says. Leila slowly opens her eyes and
lets them roll into focus. She stares up at a beautiful, tanned face with thick
eyelashes and messy, dark brown hair and realises it's the same face that has
been appearing in her dreams all week.
"Hey,
do I know you?" Mr Delicious asks, helping her to her feet. The warmth from his
strong grip surges through her body and she feels a stirring in the pit of her
stomach that has nothing to do with the fear of him recognizing her.
"No
you don't!" she answers sharply, standing up straight. "I'm sorry but I have to
go, I don’t feel well. Thanks for your help. Bye!" She pulls her hand away from
his and mentally swears never, ever to work out without makeup, blow dried hair
and fashionable sportswear.
"Wait,
let me help you, you might hurt yourself," he says, following her as she limps
out of the gym.
"No
thank you," she replies curtly without looking around. Just go
away she prays as she calls for the lift. Her prayers go
unanswered and he enters the lift with her.
"Let
me just make sure you get to your apartment in one piece," he explains kindly,
looking down at her tiny, 5,3" frame. Well over six feet, he makes her feel like
a little girl and dizzy with anticipation, her sore knees buckle and she grabs
on to him to steady herself.
"Thanks,"
she says, finally looking up at him properly and smiling
shyly. Screw it, she tells herself. He's
seen me now anyway. Might as well make the most of it. "I think I may need
your help after all."
They
smile at each other and she leans against him, pretending that she can't hold
herself up properly and he puts his arm around her to steady her. Heart
pounding, she relishes the feeling of his lean, toned frame against her and
loves the way the top of her head nestles into the crook of his armpit. He is
looking just as delicious as he did at the Cavalli Club in black adidas jogging
bottoms, a black t-shirt and hair messed to perfection. Leila resists the urge
to run her fingers through it and clenches her fists tightly.
"This
is me," she says dejectedly when the lift reaches the eighth floor, wishing it
would break down and they would be stuck there for eternity.
"Let
me see you to your apartment," he replies without a thought. "What number is
it?"
"803,"
she tells him, barely getting the number ‘three’ out of her mouth before the
doors open and he effortlessly scoops her into his arms.
“What
are you doing?” she protests halfheartedly, wrapping her arms around his neck.
Her heart feels like it may suddenly go into cardiac arrest, and she presses
herself up to him more to let him feel it beat against his chest.
“You’re
obviously in no state to walk so just be quiet and let me make sure you reach
your home safely.” His tone is authoritative, making Leila melt even more. She
can’t believe that after an entire week of dreaming about him, wondering what
she should do with his phone number and persuading Lady Luxe not to call him,
she has ended up in his arms without even plotting. Fate must be on her
side.
The
door is unlocked as always, security rarely being an issue in Dubai, and he
walks in purposefully, carrying her as if he is afraid she may break. She is
painfully aware of her empty, plain apartment, the one bit of colour being the
half dead flowers on the dining table, wishing that it was cosy and inviting as
he gently lays her down on the sofa. He is so close that she can smell his
aftershave and she inhales deeply, absorbing the fresh, lemony fragrance.
"Let
me get you some water before I go," he says, walking through to her open-plan
kitchen and grabbing a glass as if he owns the place. "The layout of your
apartment is the same as Khaled's," he explains at her surprised face. "You
know, the guy upstairs. I don’t actually live here, I was just visiting
him."
"Where
do you live then?" she asks nonchalantly, lying back on the sofa. When his back
is turned, she quickly pulls off her hair band and lets her hair tumble to her
shoulders.
"The
Palm," he replies, filling the glass with water. He comes back to the sofa and
sits on the edge with a familiarity that makes her yearn for him to stay exactly
where he is for ever.
"I
swear we've met before," he says, frowning as he takes in her dark blonde, wavy
hair in confusion while she gulps down the water. "Anyway, get lots of rest
okay? I'm going to be at Khaled's apartment pretty much all day so here, take my
number and call me if you need anything." Scribbling down his number on her
diary that is still open at July 14th, he gives her a quick smile and then exits
the apartment, leaving her full of longing.
As
soon as the door closes, Leila runs to the bathroom and looks at herself in the
mirror. Her stained vest is pretty bad but the rest of her looks better than she
had expected. After showering, she decides that she should thank Mr Delicious
for his help. Grabbing her phone, she writes:
Thank
you for saving my life. Let me make it up to you and Khaled. Dinner at mine at
8pm?
She
enters his number without even looking at it in her diary and then waits
anxiously for a response. A minute later, her phone beeps.
Sounds
good!
Grinning
happily, Leila grabs her car keys and makes her way to Spinney's. She has a
dinner to prepare and if there's one thing she's good at after ten years of
husband searching, it's cooking.
CONVERSATION
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