by John Rechy
He told me about himself: about the stone-cold woman who was his mother; the ranting father, consumed in flames one nightmare night: a cigarette dropped drunkenly on the bed. He told me this without selfpity, merely as the recitation of his life.
And I found that I was revealing myself to him, letting slide off more than ever before the mask I had protectively cultivated for the streets and bars. At times, I felt he knew even more about me than I told him. which alternately pleased and disturbed me.
“Why do you hustle?” he asked me once. It was the first overt reference he had made to that, and it was the kind of statement that, from almost anyone else, I would quickly have put down.
I was tempted to point out that I hadnt asked him for anything. Instead, I merely said. “I have to.”
“Thats not true,” he challenged. “Youve told me youve worked.”
Annoyed far beyond his question, I said: “Okay, then, I prefer to.”
More and more, I was now in the bars or on the hustling streets only when I had to score. I avoided Main Street altogether. The craving for the sexual anarchy began to diminish for the first time since I had begun that journey through nightlives. I felt a great friendship for Dave (and an amount of pity for the paradoxical fact of him in a world of furtive contacts; he should be married, the father of adored children). . . . But all this, I told myself, was merely a welcome friendship in a period of ennui with the turbulence of the chosen world.
Still, there were those times when a different kind of fear began to seize me.
Im sitting with Dave in the outside arena of Pacific Ocean Park in Santa Monica, watching the animal circus. It’s a bright breezeless afternoon, when, miraculously, the usually hazy Los Angeles sky is purely clear, like a childhood-remembered Texas sky.
“Miss Pinky! The Graceful Elephant!”
The announcer, who has just introduced the next animal performer—“Miss Pinky”—leads a small elephant into the arena. Painted a garish purplish pink, the elephant wears a small, multicolored, flowered hat perched absurdly on the giant head, slightly bowed as if in shame. The liveried trainer puts the pink elephant through a series of dance routines, accompanied by music. The elephant with the ridiculously flowered hat goes doggedly through the motions of a hula, a mambo, a waltz. The trunk sways clumsily, enormous legs execute the steps ponderously. The flowered hat fell over one eye, and the trainer coaxed the elephant to push the hat back on with its trunk.
The audience rocked with laughter.
As the elephant lurched from side to side, the great ears as if rejecting the hat, the announcer says: “Miss Pinky isnt really a dainty young girl, Folks! She is really a boy-elephant. But he has such A Special Appeal—such Graceful Talents—as Im sure youll agree—” (Applause!—and the elephant is persuaded by the trainer to bow his great head in thanks.) “—that we think it would be a shame to waste them. And so, Folks, a Great Big Hand for Miss Pinky—the graceful boy-elephant!” ...
I see Dave stare solemnly at the elephant being led off the small arena, the flowered hat perched crookedly over one ear. . . .
“It’s sad—that great big male elephant painted pink—and that hat on his head,” Dave said.
Suddenly Im frighteningly moved by this youngman beside me. I feel that impotent helplessness that comes when, through some perhaps casual remark, I see a person nakedly, sadly, pitifully revealed—as I see Dave now.
We were both silent as we drove to his apartment.
Along the hall of that building, a door is open. Two youngmen had moved in—and the mother of one, Dave had told me earlier, had come to visit them, staying there with them, aware that her son and the other youngman were lovers. Through the open door as we passed it, I heard the voice of one, whining peevishly: “Mommee! listen to what Duane is saying to me!” ... I cringed visibly. Dave noticed this. “They fight all the time,” he told me. “Duane thinks Rick is making it with other guys—and Rick’s mother always takes Rick’s side.”
Inside the apartment, Dave said unexpectedly:
“It sure is great to be with you!” He put his hand fondly on my shoulder, letting it rest there—the first time he had touched me even this intimately since that first night
For a long moment, I didnt move, feeling his hand increasingly heavier.... I ierked away from him.
The words erupted out of me: “Maybe so—but it’s all stopping!”
Even when I saw the look of amazement on his face, even when I wanted to stop, even when I felt that compassion, tenderness, closeness to this youngman—even then, I knew, as much for me as for him, that I had to go on; that although, inside, I was cringing at my own words, in hammerblows I have to destroy this friendship. “I mean—well—Ive spent too much time with you—thats all.”
And crazily through it all, I keep thinking about the pink elephant at the park—the ridiculous flowered hat!—the sad eyes! ... And the echoing, petulant, girlish “Mommee!” that had emerged from the half-open door along the hallway. . . .
“Im sorry, Dave,” I said at the door, which I was opening now, to clinch the Escape, to get myself away from him. “Im sorry,” I repeated, “but this scene is nowhere!”
Outside in the hall, I close the door behind me. I pause for a moment, not knowing why. Then I walked out of the building quickly.
Im back in Santa Monica, alone, facing the wind-tossed ocean.
SOMEONE: People Dont Have Wings
I HAD SEEN HIM ON THE BEACH several times before.
He never wore trunks. He was always dressed neatly in summer sportclothes. After I began to notice him—and even on the crowded beach he stood out—I realized that during the last week he had been here daily.
He would stand on the sidewalk before the beach, looking, it seemed to me, not at anyone in particular but at the whole beach and everyone on it. After a few minutes, he would drive away—alone, without having spoken to anyone. Occasionally, that same afternoon, he would return. Soon, I began to watch for him to appear.
Once, going to Sally’s bar, I saw him closely. He looked at me; and realizing I had noticed, he quickly turned away. He resembled a highschool coach: neatly cropped hair, ruddy face, trim build. He was possibly in his late 30s. He didnt look like a score; he didnt look like a masculine homosexual (that is, his masculinity did not seem posed); he looked completely incongruous—and I suppose this is why I had first noticed him. After seeing him so often, standing in almost the same spot those afternoons—I began to be strongly intrigued by him.
That afternoon, when I saw him again, I was lying on the beach with two fairies who had spotted me for a teahead and were trying to get me to go with them by telling me they had some marijuana at home—changing the subject when I kept referring to being “broke”: the standard hint when youre not entirely sure someone will pay you for making it.... Both of them were youngish and slender; they looked masculine, but their coy gestures, their rolling eyes, their suggestive, high-pitched comments canceled out their initial physical appearance.
“Well, hon,” said one, “if you dig—uh—pod, we will—uh —turn you on—and have a—real smash—I mean blast—at our—uh—pad.” He spoke the jivewords as if he had memorized them.
Im still looking at the man standing before the concrete ledge separating the beach from the sidewalk.... I said to the gushing fairy lying beside me on the sand: “Well, see, I would dig making it to your pad—but I dont know how far out you live, and I dont even have enough bread to make it back downtown.”
“Well,” said the other one, “no problem there, honey—we’ll be glad to give you a lift back!” They were either very dense or determinedly avoiding the hint—and I leaned heavily toward the latter theory. In a few minutes I would leave. I had stayed this long largely because the sun kept me glued to the beach—that lazy, pleasurable, sensual feeling hugging me as I felt my skin turn browner.
“Who are you looking at?” the first fairy asked me.
Startled to find that I had been so obv
iously staring at the man on the sidewalk, I turned quickly sideways—but following my gaze, the fairy had already discovered where I had been looking.
“Look,” he said to the other one, “theres that strange man again. Hes here every weekend—just stands there. Ive never seen him go with anyone. He just stands there.”
“I wouldnt be too Interested in him, bon,” the other one warned me. “He may be welldressed—but he doesnt look like a score.” And now I knew they had been hip to my scene all along, trying to con me with the weed. “Hes kinda cute, too—but not Young enough,” he added.
“He looks like a plainclothes dick to me,” said the first one —then turning to me: “Is ‘dick’ the right word, hon?—it sounds so strangely dated or something. Or would a plainclothesman also be referred to as fuzz’?”
“ ‘Dick’—like Dick Tracy,” I said with a straight face.
He was right: The man did look like a plainclothes detective. Obviously, others had noticed him. The fairy next to me is saying: “Thats all he could be—a plainclothea dick!”
But the other one was already dismissing him: “Why dont you take your pants off, hon,” hes saying to me, “so we can see what you look like all over—before buying?” And so hes decided this is the only way.
“Im not wearing trunks,” I said.
“Thats exactly what I mean,” he said, throwing up his hands in glee. “Lets see what you really look like!”
That did it. I mumbled something about having to leave, and I walked away. They said something, but I didnt hear what it was—undoubtedly something Bitchy.
But had I left really because I was annoyed at what he had said?—or was it that I had wanted all along to do what I was now doing? ... I sat on the concrete ledge—near the man in sportclothes. Glancing up purposely suddenly, I see him looking at me. I wiped the sand off my pants, I light a cigarette -stretching the time that I could stay there without being obvious. This time I look at him directly for a response. He smiles at me.
For no apparent reason suspecting strongly that the fairy just now had been right—that this man was indeed a detective —I put my shirt on, got up, started to move away without looking back. But soon Im aware that hes taken a few steps toward me. I faced him. He opened his mouth to say something, and then, in real or pretended embarrassment, he merely smiled again. Reacting to him as if he is a cop, I look at him coolly.
“Im leaving the beach,” he blurted. “Can I give you a ride somewhere?”
Now, Im not at all sure hes a cop—not because of what he said (Southern California is notorious for entrapment—theyll even offer you money and bust you later)—but because of the diffident tone of his voice; he appeared embarrassed the moment he had spoken. It is usually relatively easy, once youve made the scene in the bars and the beaches, to peg someone quickly at those places. But not this man. I keep shifting my suspicions.
“Which way are you going?” I asked him.
He shrugged. “Oh, anywhere. I havent got anything to do. I’ll drive you wherever youre going.”
I want very much—because of a strong curiosity—to find out about this man. On the other hand, if I leave the beach now—and he merely drives me back downtown—I will have left for nothing, and it’s still early: the golden-tanning sun still holds the sky.
He sees me hesitating—saw me looking at him trying to pin him—and he said completely unexpectedly: “Dont worry, Im not on the vice squad.”
“What makes you think I’d care?” I said, annoyed.
“Honestly,” he said. “Look.” He drew open his coat, so I could see there is no badge—although of course it proved nothing. It only irritated me further.
“What makes you think I’d care if you are?” I challenged him again. The implication that he knows I have something to fear in that direction bothers me. It indicates, too, that, whatever he is, hes familiar with that world. But then, merely his repeated presence on this beach revealed that.
“Oh,” he said uncomfortably, “well, I mean, it has nothing to do with you, really. I mean—well—this beach—and I have seen you several times—you leave with different people—and they—well—...” He went on apologetically, making it worse. “Lets go get some coffee somewhere,” he said hurriedly.
We got into his car, a new stationwagon. There is a suitcase on one seat.
“Im on vacation,” he explained. “I dont live here. Usually I come down on weekends. I didnt have any plans for my vacation—so I thought I’d just drive around. Ive only got four more days left.”
At the restaurant on Wilshire—as we stood waiting to be served (surrounded by tanned faces rejuvenated by the Sun), he doesnt look at me like the other people who would usually pick you up, doesnt talk like them.... Of course, there are many men in that world who, outside of pickup places, wear a mask convincingly, but in the atmosphere of the beaches, the bars—or when theyve made a contact—the mask usually slides off—if only slightly: They remain masculine, yes, but there is usually at least the subtlest hint of the façaded sex-hunger. About the man Im with there hasnt been that slightest hint.
“Have you eaten yet?” he asked me.
“No.”
“Why dont you then?” Even this is said merely graciously, not buyingly.
Too, there is always the threat of meeting someone who looks perfectly “normal” and who turns out to be psycho—like the man in the raincoat in New York who had pulled a knife on me. In a life that thrives on the arbitrary stamp of “differentness” imposed on it by the world that creates it and then rejects it, the more “regular” the person (the more he defies the usually easy classification of masculine homosexual, queen, score, hustler, fairy), the more suspect he becomes.
He talked very little while we ate; and because of my complete inability to make him out, I had eased the hustling stance. That pose can blot out all but sexual communication. Yet, those usual times, you know—youve learned!—that it’s necessary.... This man, though, is different.
Outside again, we stood on the sidewalk. The sun is fading behind the strip of park, beyond the sand, into the ocean. Toward the horizon, the fog lifts itself gracefully like a veil welcoming the night.
“You want to stay with me for a while?” I heard him ask me. His look, unshifting on me for moments—asking—softens into one of the familiar expressions. It reveals him at last.
“Sure,” I said.
We walked across the street, along that green park—the flowers bright and alive—past the many afternoon people sitting on benches. We stand looking out toward the beach. The crowds on the sand are thinning. Across the bridge from the beach to the streets, they come with their towels bundled, fleeing from the lifting nightfog. They seem to gather on the beach for some kind of huddled protection, and when groups begin to leave, when that sense of mutual protection begins to diminish—as if this were a summons, the others leave too. A few will linger on, as the breeze from the ocean rises. The sun is frozen-white, spreading its light desperately before expiring into the ocean. Now the roaring waves will try to claim the sand throughout the night....
“Why did you begin to walk away from me on the beach?” he asked me.
I was about to say: “You didnt look like a score.” ... Instead, I said: “You dont look like you belong on that beach.”
He was silent, looking into his hands, studying them. “Let me explain something,” he says. “I guess—” he went on uneasily “—I guess maybe youve noticed me on the beach. I mean, I must stand out because I come there so often—and leave, come back. It’s just that—Well, in a way, it’s all—it’s all new to me.” Still studying his hands, he said quickly: “Im married, I have a kid—a little boy.”
This is a familiar story. Many tell you this for whatever purpose. Hustling, it emphasizes your masculinity for a score. For the others—even, sometimes, the very effeminate—this may be a symbolic subterfuge to emphasize the quandary of being in that world.... With this man, though, Im convinced beyond any doubt tha
t what hes just told me is true.... I notice an untanned circle about his finger from which he has probably just removed a ring.
“Ive only been with two men in my life—that way—” he went on slowly. “And those two times, nothing really happened. I just—... And, once—...” He broke off abruptly. “What I mean is that Ive never really done anything,” he said. “Oh, sure, Ive known for a long time. I guess-I guess thats largely the reason I got married, but I didnt really know, then.... Now Ive got a kid nine years old.... But things—from the beginning-they didnt go right. Thats mainly why she wanted a kid.... And then I started driving to the beaches, I guess to make sure there was a whole world ready to welcome me when I finally decided to join it-if I ever decided to. I always came there with the intention of meeting someone. But then I would see a screaming fairy-and suddenly I’d be ashamed. It’s very strange-but I couldnt bear to look into his eyes, afraid, I guess, that he’d look back at me with recognition. And I didnt want a fairy, I knew that. I didnt even want them to look at me in that strange, piercing way. So I would drive away-but then I’d come back.... I’d seen you before. One time I almost talked to you. You see, I’d see you there alone-then youd go off with someone youd just met. So-well-I I knew-well, that if I talked to you. youd at least talk back to me. I mean-those people I’d see you with, many of them were-well-obvious, and so-”
Turning to look at him-a man still not middle-aged, with still the hint of the attractive youngman he had been-I understood something of his struggle. That thought disturbs me, and I say quickly: “It’s getting cool, isnt it?”