So, Fox and
I stole Tuesday afternoon last week.
And so did we.
Then we
went to McSorleys, which is a famous old Irish bar in Manhattan.
McSorleys serves light beer and dark beer, and that’s it. It prides itself on being old school, and dude, it is. Sawdust on the floor, the whole bit. This is more of a Fox joint than a Gem joint, but I gamely soldiered on. (I know. I’m such a trooper.)
I highly recommend it.
It was our
last week in New York before a summer break in Europe. Fox had been travelling
a lot, I’d been writing a lot, and between friends and work and Errol, we
almost never got time alone that wasn’t about the baby, general life admin and
planning, or sleep. We didn’t want a late night, or a big extravaganza, or a
huge ‘date night’ dinner. We didn’t want to bother with booking a babysitter or
reservations or tickets or any of that. We simply wanted a teeny weeny bit
of alone time, out of the house, without the baby. Just the two of us.
So we asked
our lovely nanny if she’d work a little late. It would be the first time that I’d
miss doing the 5.30pm Hour Of Power (dinner, bath, bottle, story, bed) in the
whole ten months since Errol was born, so I was extremely excited about seeing
the world at that time. (And predictably worried Errol would implode without my
calming, nurturing presence. Apparently he barely noticed.)
Anyway. It
was raining in Manhattan, and we almost cancelled the night. Our original plan
was to walk down to Nolita (sort of a Disney Does Manhattan type area), have a
drink in the Spring Lounge or Fonda Nolita, grab a bite in Cafe Gitane or Cafe Habana,
and generally meander and flaneur and window-shop and people-watch. But, given
the rain, that was out.
“What shall
we do?” said Fox.
We stared
at each other for a long moment.
“PJs.”
At 5pm I closed
my laptop. We didn’t bother to change or dress up. We kissed Errol goodbye,
left probably over-specific Hour Of Power instructions, and got a taxi uptown.
Looking out
the window of the taxi at early-evening Manhattan, I got a delicious and
unexpected tingle of excitement in my stomach. There’s an electricity in the
air between 5pm and 8pm in any big city, and most of all New York. The night is
very, very young. Everyone is finishing work and shaking off the day, everyone
is planning dates or dinners or drinks or blissful nights at home alone with the
box set of True Blood. In other words, everyone has something fun ahead of them,
time that’s theirs and theirs alone. And so did we.
PJ Clarke’s
is the place we spent the day after our wedding two years ago. (Our friends and
family took over the place from midday to midnight. It was raucous.) So, we
took a seat at the bar and had a couple of beers and some sliders (tiny burgers that are, for some reason, way more fun to eat than normal burgers, and dudes, I like me a normal burger).
Then I had
a martini, because I really like them, even though they are a starspangled rocketship
of booze that my system is in no shape to process these days. Then we
shared a Reuben sandwich. Because we like them, too. And talked and talked and talked.McSorleys serves light beer and dark beer, and that’s it. It prides itself on being old school, and dude, it is. Sawdust on the floor, the whole bit. This is more of a Fox joint than a Gem joint, but I gamely soldiered on. (I know. I’m such a trooper.)
Then – it
was just past 7pm by now – the rain was lessening, or maybe we were too tipsy to really notice is. So we skipped down to Whiskey Town.
Whiskey Town is just the kind of bar I’d like to lose an afternoon in, if I was still in the business of losing afternoons in bars. (Damn, that was a good business.) Gently dilapidated interior, cool but comfortable, chatty
(but not overchatty) bartender, drinks that give you a gentle punch, and microwave
popcorn. I was pretty goddamn tipsy by now so apparently I was slapping the bar
in delight at my own wit a lot. (One of my more charming traits.) Just a really goddamn nice bar.
We rolled home
at 8pm, relieved our lovely nanny so she could go home, checked on the sleeping
baby and agreed we were extremely clever and talented for making such a perfect
child, watched some Family Guy, collapsed asleep by 10pm and woke without a
hangover. It was like speeddating, but in a slightly more boring married way.
Speeddatenighting. I highly recommend it.
No way has it been ten months.
ReplyDeleteMcSorley's! Do you still have to buy two beers at a time there?
ReplyDelete