he had a constant look of being surprised. His eyes were bright and mischievous. I could tell right from the start he was going to be bubbly, energetic, and a whole lot of entertainment and drama. But not a lot of substance. And I was not disappointed.
âIâve modeled since I was sixteen for Armani, Gucci, Tom Ford, and I was the lead model at Alberto Garelliâs 2006 Hobo Show.â
â That show set the standard. Fabulous!â Aleksei said with a didactic seriousness.
âI know, wasnât it?â David agreed. âThe show director said I actually looked like I had tuberculosis. Thatâs how I got to be the opening and closing model. They donât have shows like that anymore!â
âHaving the models crawl out of cardboard boxes at the beginning and the end of the show... totally brilliant!â Aleksei relished.
âThe press was really unkind to Alberto because of that show,â David defended. âEveryone is so PC nowadays. You canât even make fun of the homeless anymore. I personally have nothing against them, but if they didnât smell like sour milk . . . Hey, I have an idea. Perfume for the homeless! Genius! I thought of it first,â David added, then pulled out his iPhone and began texting his million-dollar idea to what I presumed was his good friend, Karl Lagerfeld.
âIs there anything else that youâd like to tell us about yourself, David?â Jeremy plied.
âNo, Iâm a very in-demand model. What else can there be worth telling?â
Then we came to the square peg in the round hole: Marcus Blade. Marcus was the complete opposite of everyone at the table. Unlike the skinny, androgynous physiques that made the other men into perfect, human clothes hangers, Marcus was built like a brick shithouse, his body so puffed up by steroids that he looked like an overstuffed knockwurst engorged with blood. He was short, too: a sapling in this forest of redwoods. I managed to get a good look at him when we were milling about earlier and he couldnât have been much taller than five feet six inches. He didnât even attempt to squeeze himself into the fine European clothing the other guys were sporting. Oh no, little Marcus had obviously spent much of his life in the gym and he wanted us to be sure of that fact, with a T-shirt stretched so tight you could actually see his abdominal muscles through it: a rare eight-pack. I counted. The other models probably had visible abdominal muscles, too, but thereâs a difference between those created from strenuous crunches and those induced by frequent bulimic vomiting.
âIâm Marcus Blade. Most of you know me. Iâm Ianâs personal trainer.â
There was a violent fit of coughing around the table. One look at Ianâs blubbery body and it was clear that either Marcus was a miserable failure as a trainer or he was Ianâs stud. I guessed the latter. The participants around the table looked at Marcus, expecting more, but nothing came. There were some whisperings about his height, followed by some tittering. I guess that was it for Marcus. He was obviously paid to screw Ian and didnât care to pretend that he was anything else. At least he was honest.
Jeremy then turned to me. âAmanda here,â he explained, âis Ianâs good friend.â
This comment got even blanker stares from the contestants than Keithâs comment about being a bulk texter. There were a few disbelieving snorts, and no wonder. Those close enough to Ian would know that Jeremyâs proclamation was patently false, and those who were just bedmates for Ian probably didnât give a shit. I was a woman and, therefore, no threat. Of course, I could have explained that I was a Realtor there to eventually list Ianâs house for sale, but I was forbidden by contract to let on to this fact. The smarter boys would no doubt go online and in 2.5 nanoseconds, figure out that I was a
Natalie French, Scot Bayless