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30 Pieces of a Novel

Page 3

by Stephen Dixon


  She comes back with the menus. “Take as long as you like,” she says, “there’s no rush; this place is too pretty to feel rushed, and it smells so wonderful here”—for they’re on the outdoor patio—and takes a deep breath, and he says, “Just what I was thinking, and thank you,” and opens the menu and when she walks away he discreetly looks at her rear end and legs and when she returns for the order he quickly looks at her breasts a few times and tries to imagine what they look like under her shirt. High and young, and it’s funny but when he was in his late teens and early twenties he doesn’t think he ever thought how beautiful young breasts are. Older women had lower softer ones; young women, if they weren’t top-heavy, had high firm ones, and he doesn’t even think he thought of the firmness, but that was about the extent of his observations on breasts then, except if they were flat. Though there was an older woman—thirty-six, at the most thirty-eight, so for sure not “old” to him now; in fact, if he were seeing her today he’d consider her young—whom he went with one summer, about a half year before the Washington reporter’s job, when he was just out of college and worked as a soda jerk in an upstate resort and she was the stage designer of the theater there. And another who was fifty or so when he slept with her on and off for a year and he was around thirty, and both seemed to have not lower or high breasts or soft or firm, just very big and full ones. So what does he know? Every time he thinks he’s on to something, he quickly refutes himself.

  They order; she comes back many times: to bring their food, refill their water glasses, see if everything’s “satisfactory,” take away his plate, give his wife a free extra popover—she had something called “soup and popovers,” which came with two popovers but the kids split one of them. “How do they make those things, the popovers?” his younger daughter asks Sage, and he says, “Yeah, I’ve been curious about it too. Do you have a brigade of popover makers back there?” and she says, “You mean humans? No, it’s all done by machine—two, actually, and a third that mixes the dough and eggs and stuff, and these big popover machines just keep turning them out all day. From breakfast through dinner, pop pop pop, they plop out and we just grab them if we have an order and put them in the already prepared basket with a towel around them to keep them warm.” “They’re the best,” his daughter says, and he says, “Well, your mom’s made some pretty good ones in that popover pan we always bring up. Did we bring it this year? I haven’t seen it,” and his wife says, “I don’t know, you’re the one who packs the car. I know I reminded you,” and he says, “Oh, darn, I might’ve forgot,” and his wife says, “No big deal; mine aren’t nearly as good as these, and besides, I like them best when we have them here as a treat,” and he says, “Yours are wonderful on a cold night or a foggy afternoon with guests when no one wants to go out, and it’s something the kids like helping out with,” and his older daughter says, “When did we ever do that?” and Sage says, “That’s how I like them best too—as a special treat. Here, I think I’ve overindulged on them, not that we’re allowed to have all we want … but you know, if a customer doesn’t eat one and you’re very hungry, because you build up an appetite running around in this job,” and he says, “I can’t imagine someone not eating his second popover unless one of the diners with him swiped it. But that reminds me—but you’re probably too busy, you wouldn’t want to hear it,” and his older daughter says, “What?” and Sage says, “It’s true, I’ve some orders in the kitchen waiting, and all with popovers, if you can believe it, excuse me,” and goes, and his older daughter says, “What were you going to say that reminded you, Daddy?” and he says, “Oh! When I worked as a soda jerk, or fountain man as I was also called, in a resort in New York, I got so sick of eating ice cream, or maybe not so much from eating it as from dealing with it, that’s the reason I don’t like it today,” and his wife says, “Everyone likes ice cream; one has to be scarred by it to develop an aversion to it. For you it was the cigarette butts and other filth in it on the plates coming back to you, but you should finish your own story,” and he says, “Your mother’s right. You see, I had no customers of my own, just made all the concoctions from the orders the waitresses gave me. And then they handed me their dirty dishes to stick through a window to the dishwasher behind me. And they looked so ugly with all the things the customers had done to their ice cream, the butts and stuff, sometimes stuck standing up on top of the sundae where the decorative cherry had been, that I got sick of it, ice cream melting all over and around this—well, excuse me, but this shit, and that’s why I hate it today,” and his wife says, “At this place you always help yourself to a spoonful or two of ice cream, so you can’t hate it entirely,” and he says, “At this place they always have at least one very unusual exotic flavor, which we always get unless it’s with peanut butter, and they make the ice cream themselves, so I’m curious,” and his daughter says, “Oh, yeah,” and he says, “Yeah, I’m curious, as to how, let’s say, peppermint raspberry sage might taste. Not ‘sage,’ that’s just because it’s our waitress’s name, but you know what I mean.”

  He likes everything about her. He’s tried to find a profile or some part of her he could dislike, a bump on the nose, for instance, or not find faultless, but it’s all faultless: nose, lips, eyes, hair, teeth, legs, arms, fingers, nails (no crap on them and not choppy or uneven), breasts, hips, stomach from what he can make out, waist, rear … the name, though: Sage. Not faultless. Speaks well, big bright smile, pleasant personality, chipper, friendly, though no fake, doesn’t give them the bum’s rush, as his dad used to say—she has other tables, is obviously busy, yet stops to talk, listen, suggest, answer the kids’ questions generously, laughs a lot but not heehaw-like … it would be nice, moonlight, cool night, the whole works, just a comfortable unsticky night, the air—smell of it, he means; sounds of the insects—not the biting of insects, though; so you slap on some repellent—even the scent of that on her; especially that scent, perhaps—walking with her, that’s what he’s saying would be nice: after work, around the grounds, in town for a movie, whatever the town: Southwest or Northeast or Bar Harbor, or for pizza and beers anywhere, back to the rooms they stay at on the property, but now he remembers that server last year saying the staff quarters were a short walk off; sneaking into her room if you have to sneak to do it—the restaurant management might have some proscriptions about this. Doubts it, or not enforced; keep the help happy and wanting to stay past Labor Day. Holding her hand outside, kissing her outside, furtively brushing against her at work: “Need any help filling those water pitchers?” Holding and kissing and with no constraint brushing and touching every part of her inside the room or at some hidden spot in the woods. Falling in love, swimming at Long Pond or Echo Lake or some other warmwater place he doesn’t now know of on the island here. Just imagine her in a bathing suit: lying on her stomach on the sand reading, turning to the sun or him with her top off in a cove it seems only they go to, running into the cold water with him at Sand Beach on their day off if they get them on the same day. Forgot to ask the server last year if they get days off, but it’s probably a law that a full-time worker has to, once a week at least, and after a while he bets you can switch around your days off to where you and your girlfriend get them together.

  “What are you looking at?” his wife says, and he knows she’s caught him staring at Sage passing their table and means, Why are you looking at that girl so openly? and he says, “Oh, our waitress? It’s just she reminds me of someone and I can’t figure out who,” and she says, “The girl of your dreams,” and he says, “You’re that girl, or were when I first saw you, and still are the woman of my dreams, day and night and during catnaps, now that we’re married and so on … but yes, sure, if I were younger? Oh, boy, you bet. I’m saying if I were working here when I was twenty or so, still in college, feet free and fool loose, hormones up to my ears, and you were working here too … that’s what I was mainly thinking of before: how come I didn’t meet you when I most urgently needed to and not so much when—no,
this isn’t true, but I’ll say it all the same—my companionable and genital exigencies, we’ll say, didn’t have to be so imperially attended to? No, that didn’t come out right,” and she says, “If you were twenty, I’d be nine, and I think that sort of behavior’s not only prohibited here but may even be frowned upon,” and he says, “But you know what I mean,” and she says, “I think I do, and I think I appreciate some of your thoughts too, but I also think you are”—and this very low—“a liar,” and he says, “Me? Mr. Honesty?” and his older daughter says, “What are you talking of, you two, and why are you calling Daddy a liar?” and he says, “Your mother whispered that, which means even if you heard you’re not supposed to give any sign you did and certainly no words,” and his daughter says, “But why did she?” and he says, “Youth, youth, wunderbar youth, don’t lose it, enjoy it, employ it, but don’t destroy it—something.” “What’s that mean?” his daughter says, and he says, “Nothing, everything, some of what’s in the in-between … I’m in my confusing Confucian period right now”—stroking an imaginary long wisp of chin beard—“and also don’t flaunt it, I should’ve added,” and his wife says to her, “First of all, don’t mistake Confucianism with confusion, indirectness, and unintelligibility. Your father was only admiring our waitress, Sage. Or not admiring her as much as trying to recall a young woman he knew many years ago who looked like her,” and his daughter says to him, “Do you think she’s pretty? I do,” and he says, “Very pretty, and she’s very nice. One day, you know, you could get a job here … in who knows how long, nine years? Eight? Then I could come here and be reminded of another very pretty girl I once knew: you at eleven,” and she says, “I wouldn’t want to work all day waitressing,” and he says, “Why not? You’d earn money for college, travel, and clothes, and you’d make lots of friends and have this entire national park to live in,” and she says, “They live here?” and he says, “Yeah, I learned this from one of our waitresses last year: in dorms or their own rooms or ones they might have to share with another girl,” and she says, “Then I’d like it. I love it here, so clean and fresh and everything. But I’d hate getting sick of popovers. And if it’s the same thing that happened to you with ice cream, then for life,” and he says, “Ice cream’s different from popovers. And I’m sure, in a place like this, so fresh and clean as you said, customers don’t stick cigarette butts in them.”

  Thinks of Sage on and off the rest of the day: car ride home, shucking corn, taking the clothes off the outside line and folding them as he stood there, little during dinner and then when washing the dishes, and that night, in the dark when he’s outside the house peeing, he imagines them standing and him holding her, face looking up at his from a height his wife’s would be until he changes it in his head so it’s even with his, then on a bed, side by side rubbing the other’s body, and then she turns over on her stomach so he can get behind her, then the two of them in the back of a car trying to find a comfortable position to screw in, both completely naked though he thinks they’d only be naked from the waist down, if that, no matter where they parked. He never did anything like that in a car—at the most heavy petting and not for some twenty years, the last time in front of the woman’s house in the front seat of her car, just as a joke: “You know,” he said, or something like this, and they’d been sleeping together for months, “I haven’t made out with a girl in a car for years, and never one behind the wheel, so is it all right if we don’t go in just yet and sort of futz around a little out here?” and she said, “Go ahead, I wouldn’t mind fooling around like that too; it’d be different.” But how does one go about having sex in a car? He knows, to do it half in and half out of a car, she’d sit off the end of the seat with her legs outside and of course the door open and the man would do it standing with her legs up on his shoulders or against his chest or somewhere around there, or leaning over her with her legs around his waist or hanging over the side. He once, in a New York state park years ago, walked past a young couple doing it that way or something like it. But entirely in the car with the door closed? Probably in the backseat with her sitting on his thighs and facing him. Or she could sit with her back to him and in the front seat too, he supposes, depending on the size car. Sage saying when she’s on top of him in his head, “I’m in love with you, I don’t care about the age difference,” with the same smile she had when she spoke of overindulging on popovers. It gets him excited. It’s almost black out now, no moon or stars and no other house or light of any kind for half a mile, he’s behind the unlit patio, door’s closed to it from the kitchen so he’s out of view, and he forces his penis back through the fly, zips up or tries to but has to push the penis down again before he can get the zipper up over the bulge, feels the last of the pee dribbling down his thigh, not just drops but a stream. Did it too quickly, should have shook more—why’d he rush as if he were about to be caught with his hard-on out? He might think of her later if he makes love with his wife, but only up to a point. In fact if he thinks anymore of her he’ll almost definitely make love to his wife even if she’s not at first in the mood to, simply through his persistence and the way he has when he wants to very much and various things he does and her willingness after a while or just resignation to it, feeling it easier to give in than resist if she wants to get to sleep, and she also knows he’ll be quick.

  Then he thinks of the time—he’s sitting at the kitchen table now reading a book, kids asleep, wife somewhere else in the house, little radio on the windowsill next to him tuned to a classical music concert taped in St. Louis—he was a guest waiter in a children’s sleep-away camp, still in college but troubled about what he’d do when he graduated—journalism, Garment District, advertising, law, grad school in English or international relations, stay an extra year in college to get his predentistry requirements out of the way or take some education courses the next two terms so he could become a junior high school teacher for a few years, or just quit college now and join the army or odd-job it around Europe and the States till he knew what he wanted to do—and met a girl there, someone very beautiful and intelligent whom he flipped for—marriage, he began thinking, why not marriage and babies early on which’ll force him into some profession and give him a draft deferment and all the sex he wants?—and when he tried kissing her the second time one night she said something to him like—it was outside, in the middle of a baseball diamond, and she was trying to get her arm out from under his to point out some constellations she recognized in the sky and which he’d said he was interested in—“Let’s be frank about this right away, Gould: I can in no way become involved with you romantically. It’s the lack of chemistry or the void of something else and maybe of a dozen things; it’s not that there’s some other guy I specially like, although this would be the most propitious time for me to start a new relationship, since I’m completely free in every possible way and the surrounding conditions here are so perfect for it. But that’s how it is and will always be between us, I’m afraid, so please, I can see you’re a very persistent fellow when you want to be, but don’t think you can ever change it,” and he said, “Hey, fine by me; I can’t see any problem with your decision, and not to make you feel small, but there are plenty of little fishies in the sea,” and shook her hand good night, and after a few days’ sadness and then downright despair for two weeks he got her parents’ phone number and called, actually put a hanky over the mouthpiece to disguise his voice, though he’d never talked to them before—he supposes he didn’t want any speech mannerisms or defects detected and later relayed to her and she could say “Oh, you mean with a weak R and drops his G’s; I know the jerk”—and said to her father, because he answered, “Excuse me, you don’t know me, but your daughter (he forgets her first and last names now) is sleeping around. All I can say about how I know this is I’m one of the many guys she’s doing it with but the only one who resents the others and wants her all to himself, even, if you can believe this after what I said about her activities, eventually to marry her,”
and hung up. A stupid, awful thing to do, despicable, he knew that then, knew it before he did it but hardly thought twice about doing it, for he was crazy in love and couldn’t stand seeing her swimming in the lake or walking around in shorts or escorting her campers into the mess hall and thought maybe her parents would come up and whisk her away and that’d be the end of her in his life, besides being jealous, to the point where his stomach ached and he couldn’t sleep because he kept thinking of them, of this drippy, brainy squirt she was going with now and, he knew, would soon be screwing. She later came up to him and said, “Did you call my home the other night and talk to my dad? Don’t lie that you didn’t,” and he said, “Me? How would I even know where you live and what your father’s name is and so on to get your phone number?” and she said, “I’ve mentioned what borough I live in and that his first name is Jackson, a not very common first name, so it’d be a cinch to find him through Information or if the camp office has a Brooklyn phone book, which it has to, since half the campers come from there,” and he said, “Maybe you did tell me all that but I don’t recall it and I didn’t call him, I’m sorry, but also for how it’s obviously making you so upset,” and she said, “You’re a big bull artist if there ever was one and you know it. It could only have been you, as you’re the only guy I know stupid and juvenile enough to do it.” He didn’t believe she was sure it was him, continued to think of her almost constantly, stomachaches, trouble falling asleep, every time he saw her and the brainy squirt; they looked even happier, holding hands, necking in front of everybody, they had to be sleeping with each other now but where would they do it?—each had a bunk with six to seven campers in it—in the woods, maybe, late at night, or they pooled their money for a motel room or did it in someone’s car; and a couple of weeks later he called her home again, her mother answered and he said, hanky over the mouthpiece, in what he thought was a thick Middle European accent, that he was the camp director, Rabbi Berman, and he thinks her daughter’s pregnant and wants her and her husband, for the sake of Sandy’s campers—that was her name, Sandy—to come up and get her off the grounds immediately—“The girl’s a disgrace!” he yelled, and hung up. He didn’t know what happened after that, if the parents came up or even told Sandy about it or called the director, but she didn’t accuse him of making a second call and continued to avoid him the rest of the summer, turning around and hurrying away from him if she saw him heading in her direction, leaving the social hall or one of the local bars alone or with her boyfriend if Gould was there at the same time.

 

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