Happy
2013. Nothing like getting back into the swing of things with a Sunday Funday
rooftop dinner party. Anj whipped up her Cajun chicken pasta as Sayo popped
champagne bottles (stepping outside on the patio, only to aim the bottle inside,
straight for our chandelier) for Dimitri, James, and Cathy. With the peach
roses and chocolate that Cathy so kindly brought over, it looked more like
Valentine’s Day than New Year’s but we’ll take it. Eager to catch up, the Cape Town crew began our
story before we’d even finished cheers-ing. “Woah, one at a time,” James
interrupted, “I’m getting a Crash
vibe here. I like it.” He egged us on…
New
Years Eve, the holiday of high expectations, is usually a let-down. But this
holiday weekend, we got way more than we expected, or deserved.
Sleeping
three deep in a two-twins-pushed-together made waking up a bit easier on New
Year’s Eve day, despite the jet lag (Ambien hangover) from which I was
suffering. After a breakfast of stale croissants with diabetic jam, Anj, Betty
and I drove to Ocean View Drive to pick up Dimitri to join us on our excursion
to Simonstown and the Cape of Good Hope. Par for the course, Sayo was still in bed,
surrounded by the whole group trying to come up with a New Years Eve plan. “Just
go. We’ll get it sorted,” he assured us, still under the sheets in
his sweats that say “I <3 Mom” down the right leg. We trust you, Sayo.
With
Dimitri snapping away with his Nikon and Betty DJing with musical music, we
were cruising down to Simonstown to see our penguin pals. After seeing the
little fellas waddle along big boulders in water that looked (but probably didn’t’
feel) like Virgin Gorda, we headed to the Black Marlin for a nice seafood
lunch. Anj decided on the Kingclip du Jour because when you’re at the seaside
staring out towards Antarctica, you can’t not,
right? When our food finally came, they delivered her not a plate, but a sword
full of fish. So while we pulled out our butter knives to de-shell our prawns,
Anjarae had Excalibur swinging in front of her face, dripping in bacon grease.
Over our casual lunch, we laughed about how Betty’s “resting face” keeps her
from getting approached by strangers, whereas Anjarae and I are too friendly,
and end up in heart to hearts with strange old men. “I mean, we just don’t say
no to anyone!” I yelled out mid-cackle. The table behind us, full of Excaliburs
as well, turned around and stared for a good fifteen seconds. Uh, I think there’s been a misunderstanding?


After
a gorgeous afternoon belting out “Pink pajamas penguins on the bottom” and “He
Lives in You” to the baboon-infested Cape of Good Hope, we were wind-whipped and exhausted. Rally time. We headed back to Ocean
View Drive to find out our epic New Year's Eve plan. Back on the patio, the sea split the sky in two. Malibu, upgraded.
But the tranquil setting
didn’t match the scene before us. You could smell the stress from the overflowing ashtray
on the teak table. “So do you want the conclusion
or the story?” Dubi asked us. And
here we go, folks. NYE let-down number 25 of my life.
Long
story short, the EPIC plans had… fallen through. We were out of options, and it
was looking like we were going to be eating pizza in our pink pajamas in our
Cape Town Lodge twin beds at this rate. Sayo’s “I don’t call the shots, mate”
wasn’t exactly helping as Dubi’s stress mounted. On the phone trying to
coordinate with Anna, he was fumbling “yes, yes we’re all here. We’re trying to
figure it out! It’s Anjarae, and um, Betty, and um, uhh that white girl from
Bain’s here, too.” I'm guessing that's supposed to be me?
Back
at the hotel, pizza in PJ’s was looking like an upgrade until we finally pulled
together “dinner” at Lucy’s in Greenside. An apartment crammed full of girls
getting ready, drinking Patron out of Solo cups like the 25-27 year olds we
were, the “what to wear” advice was flying. Most notably, we peer pressured
Anna into wearing Erica’s heels because they
make your butt look SO good! It didn’t matter that they were two sizes too
big. You can stand in them right? You’re FINE!
It was New Year’s Eve, after all. If not now, when?

Fast
forward to Caprice, where Dubi and Chuchu have secured a table, likely by choppin' their money. We beg
for our “welcome drinks” from Don, the "cute bartender," even if it IS almost
midnight. Broken bottles are everywhere, creating quite the hazard once the 3…2…1…HAPPY
NEW YEAR champagne shower begins. Silk dresses become see-through, mascara
masks are running, and hair everywhere is straight up Mufasa. It’s not pretty. In those good-looking-but-two-sizes-too-big heels we insisted she wear, Anna falls victim to the slip and slide of the dance floor. Blood’s flowing and next thing she knows she’s in the
“clinic” (read: back room crack den) getting her two inch gash first aided by the club’s owner.
Happy New Year!

Sayo
and I are singing highlights from Les Mis
and as we look around, our once-beautiful friends are starting to look like the
opening scene of “At the End of the Day.”
One victim is sitting at the table, neck-rolling one too many times, eyes at half mast. So Sayo
does what any good friend does. He grabs the bottle of tequila, and “hydrates”
her. One can imagine what follows.
It’s ugly. We have messy couches, messy cabs, more falling, blood flowing and as Anj put it (rag in hand), “It’s just so. bad.” And yet trying to make “sober”
conversation with the cab driver to distract him, asking how his grandmother
made it to South Africa from Ghana and whether his wife was happy he wasn’t
there to ring in New Years with her… these all seem like perfectly reasonable ways to undo any damage that's been done.
From the ashes we rose! One little New Year’s surprise was
Dimitri asking Don, the cute bartender, for his number to give to Anjarae.
Apparently a 3am “I can’t read the last four digits!” fit was thrown while in
the McDonald’s drive-thru number three. The
leftover nuggets didn’t look so good the next morning, but the digits seemed to
be clearer, so there was hope.

All ten of us pile into a taxi for six, which made for quite the entrance when we pulled up to the One&Only hotel. Shockingly, we were the obnoxious table at lunch, laughing loudly over our Amarula milkshakes, playing Miss Mary Mack and reciting our
respective lines from middle school plays. The highlight: Sayo as the Constable
in Sweeney Todd, “ Ello, ello ello,
whAT’s goin’ on ‘ere, thEN?” It’s not about
the number of lines, mate. It’s the quality of the delivery. Afterwards, we
went by a day party at The Grand and tried to fit in with the locals from “SudAfukA." Surrounded by plastics - hair, boobs, bodysuits, the works - we stood out pretty clearly from the entertainment.

When we couldn't take anymore elevator house music and noodling in the sand, we
met the crew back at the Clifton beach bungalow. One of those
perfect sunsets where everyone glows and the sand turns pink and the shadows
are sharp against the turquoise silver sea. Anj and I stood against the rocks,
still warm from the sun, and took it all in with gratitude. This is incredible. A dance lesson full of new
Nigerian moves and a few dance offs to Oliver
Twist later with our new 7 year old friend, and we were on our way to Long Street.

Enter
Don, "cute bartender." He wanted to take us up to Signal Hill with his brother, insisting it was the "local thing to do." My expectations were low, but The Twin Peaks of
Cape Town, offered a breathtaking view of the city glittering against Table Mountain’s
silhouette. Such peace, broken by the echoing hum of Long Street bars below. As we stared out into the night, Don asked us about Joburg, where he'd grown up before moving to Cape Town to bartend. I told them where I
worked. “Oh, that school off of, uh, Beyers… something road?” Feeling like a "SudAfukAn" myself, I asserted, “Oh yes, Beyerskloof
Road." But Anj caught me, “That’s the name of the wine,
Alli.”

I
was embarrassed...until the brother asks us, “So why do you think there isn’t a
hotel on top of Table Mountain?” Is this
a trick question? But Don knows the answer. “Uh are you serious? Clearly it’s because they’d have to take
the bricks up on the cable car like 100 at a time! It would take too long.”
That should have been the sign to get the hell out of dodge and leave them pondering these mysteries of the universe alone.
But
hours later and we’re still talking to them, about the “evils of the ANC” (that
was all them) to Don’s modeling career (showing us his fancy Look Book as he
narrates: “That’s me with facial hair. That’s me without facial hair. That’s when
I was wearing business casual. That’s when I wasn’t wearing business casual.
That’s me with a six pack. That’s my strong jawline”). As he's narrating his physique for us, I can only shake my head. Sometimes I wonder if we’re
in the Truman Show.
The
next day, we bask in the sun over the most lovely heaping salad lunch at Roundhouse at the base of Table Mountain and then lounge in plush pillows by the sea. Looking up at the blue of the
sky, I’m in awe that this place exists. Cape Town has surprised us this go
around, that’s for sure, and we’re sad to leave. But when we arrive at the
airport 50 minutes before takeoff and all of us get free Business Class upgrades
back home to Joburg, I guess we can handle
this.