After
returning from Ellen’s, Chandler had been exhausted. It hadn’t been in the plans to spend most of the night sitting outside her house, looking at the sky, but that’s what wound up happening anyway. Between that, and just the excitement from being somewhere new like that, he’d come home and went straight to bed, waking up about a day and a half later.
Apparently Joey hadn’t been too worried about him, because he left Chandler’s mail on the counter, with a note saying “Give me back my Rangers jersey, you bastard.” It’s nice to feel loved.
Finding his pay cheque in the stack of mail, Chandler quickly showered and put on a more presentable outfit. By now, the bank had closed, but there was an ATM vestibule just down at the corner. It was a quick walk, and when he got there, he was pleased to find no line, so he put his cheque into the machine and turned to leave. Just as he reached the door, the lights had gone out.
“What?” he mumbled, not sure what had just happened.
A few seconds later, a back-up generator had kicked in, and Chandler tried to open the door, which had apparently locked in some sort of failsafe.
“Oh, great. This is just...” And then he realised that he wasn’t alone. Even better, he recognised the woman he was trapped with. It’s not every day he ran into a Victoria’s Secret model, so really, it was
great!Chandler watched her from the other side of the small room as she pulled a cell phone from her hand bag. He knew she was a model, but couldn’t remember her name. She was called... something Goodacre.
“Hi, mom, it’s Jill,” she said after a few moments.
She was right. It was Jill. Chandler was trapped in an ATM vestibule with
Jill Goodacre. Was it a vestibule? Maybe it was an atrium.
Right, because
that was the part to be focusing on.
“Yeah, I’m fine,” Jill told her mother. “I’m just stuck at the bank. In an ATM vestibule.
Chandler nodded to himself from his dark little corner. If Jill said vestibule, then he decided he’d go with vestibule.
“I’m fine. No, I’m not alone,” Jill continued. “I don’t know. Some guy.”
Up until now, Chandler hadn’t even been sure that she knew he was there. He was more used to women just looking straight through him. Lost in this thought, he hadn’t realised that he’d begun doing his nerdy white boy dance, slowly making his way across the dark room. Looking up from the floor, he realised that he had indeed caught Jill’s attention, and not in a necessarily good way, so he turned round and made his way back to the other side of the room.
After a few minutes (fourteen and a half, if Chandler was counting. Which he was), he realised that he hadn’t said a single word yet. He decided that smiling at Jill would be a good idea, and it worked. For a few moments, anyway, until he’d completely overdone it and scared her.
Luckily, her phone rang again. She answered, and seemed to immediately get sucked into an argument about a dog called Dexter peeing in her father’s shoes. There were definitely weirder conversations to be having in a blackout, but Chandler hadn’t exactly expected that.
With a sigh, Jill hung up the phone, and actually looked in Chandler direction.
“Mothers,” she said, in a tone that suggested hers was often having these sorts of issues.
“Yeah,” Chandler agreed.
Atta boy. One word! That wasn’t so hard. Chandler soon became so worked up over the fact that he’d actually
talked to Jill Goodacre that he found himself smiling oddly again. He quickly straightened out his face, hoping that she hadn’t been frightened by him any further.
“Would you like to call somebody?” she offered suddenly, holding out her phone.
Yeah. About three hundred guys he’d gone to high school with. Still he nervously stepped forward and took the proffered phone.
“Yeah, thanks,” he said. He’d never used a cell phone before, so it was a brief struggle to figure out how to make the stupid thing work, but he figured it out quickly enough, and called the one person he knew would be home: Monica.
She seemed relieved to hear from him, and immediately asked where he was. Apparently, he was the only one not over at hers. Not wanting to embarrass himself further, he answered Monica’s question in the secret mumbly code he and Joey had made up for just these sorts of occasions.
Completely unsurprisingly, Monica couldn’t understand a single word he’d said.
“Put Joey on the phone,” Chandler said, exasperated.
“What’s up, man?” Joey asked when he got the phone.
Chandler repeated exactly what he’d told Monica, about how he was trapped in an ATM vestibule with Jill Goodacre.
After a few moments of silence, during which Joey had presumably translated this message to the rest of the apartment, Joey passed on his own message, advising Chandler to try to be anything other than himself, because he tends to screw these things up.
Like that thought hadn’t entered Chandler’s mind already. He hung up the phone and passed it back to Jill, before returning to his side of the vestibule. After a few moments, she moved her handbag over to the counter closer to the light and started digging through it.
“Would you like some gum?” she offered.
“Oh, is it sugarless?”
Jill looked at it. “Sorry, it’s not.”
“Oh, then no thanks.” Chandler wasn’t quite sure why he’d said that. It was a stupid thing to say. Stupid, stupid, stupid. If Jill Goodacre offers you gum, you take it. If she offers you mangled animal carcass,
you take it.
“You know, on second thought, gum would be perfection.”
Gum would be
perfection? What the
hell was that? He mentally kicked the crap out of himself as he took the piece of gum from her fingers, and walked to the far side of the room. He could have said ‘gum would be nice,’ or ‘I’ll have a stick,’ but no. For him, gum was perfection. Self-loathing had never been such an art form.
Maybe if he blew a bubble, it would make up for his idiocy. Bubbles are good. They have a boyish charm; they’re impish. How could this plan possibly fail?
Well, that was an easy answer, as it turned out, which Chandler discovered by accidentally gobbing his gum at a bulletin board. Nice going, imp.
But it was an easy fix. All he had to do was reach over, and put the gum back in his mouth.
Only, it was someone else’s gum. He was chewing
someone else’s gum. This horror was short-lived, though, because he very shortly after started
choking on someone else’s gum.
“Are you all right?” Jill asked, looking up at him from where she’d sat on the floor. “Oh, my god. You’re choking!” He rushed over to him and immediately performed the Heimlich manoeuvre on him, both saving his life and causing him to quite disgustingly spit out someone else’s gum.
“Better?” she asked.
Chandler nodded weakly. “Yes,” he managed. “Thank you. That was... That was...”
“Perfection?” Jill offered.
Yep, he still hated himself.
”Chandler, we’ve been here for an hour doing this. Now watch, it’s easy.”
“Okay.”
“Ready?”
They sat across from one another on the floor underneath one of the counters, with the pens the bank kept chained down hanging in front of them. Jill grabbed the pen and whipped it around, sending it flying in neat little circles while she bobbed her head around it.
“Okay, now try it,” she said once her pen lost momentum.
Chandler grabbed the pen and tried to flick it the same way she had, but it only came back and hit him in the face.
“No, you whip it,” Jill instructed.
Chandler tried again, and this time, the pen came back and nearly took his eye out, sending both of them ducking for cover. As they laughed together on the floor, the lights flickered back to life suddenly, and the mechanically-locked door clanged loudly.
“Oh, the power’s back on,” Chandler pointed out, watching as Jill got to her feet and fetched up her handbag.
“Well, this has been fun,” she said.
“Yes,” Chandler responded. “Thanks for... letting me use your phone, and for saving my life.”
“Well, goodbye, Chandler. I had a great blackout.” Before Chandler realised what she was doing, Jill leaned in and kissed him lightly on the cheek. “See ya.”
He watched as she walked out to the street, pressing himself up against the glass door. As he leaned against the door, it occurred to him that nobody was going to believe any of this. He jumped away from the door and stood in the security camera’s line of sight.
“Hi, uhm... I’m account number 7143457, and uh, I don’t know if you got any of that, but I would really like a copy of the tape.”
[ bits of dialogue taken from, and Chandler’s inner monologue modified from Episode 01x07: The One With the Blackout ]