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Mister tocks the thick pads of his fingertips like a dripping faucet
against the glass plate on the place mat before him. He, seated since
a quarter after, thinks, Late, she’s late, as usual. He shifts the worn
leather band of his watch, noting the time: 4:21. She’s always late,
so this hardly seems worth notice. He gazes out through the intricate
metal scrollwork, casts a long glance toward sun-washed city sidewalks,
and then adds, as usual, punctuating his discursive thoughts. Above
his head the cheap four-blade fan chases itself round, round. The motor
strains as if it knows that cooling down the tight room from the summer
heat is Mister’s only chance to have a peaceful afternoon. Why it bothers,
I don’t know. It, as does everyone who comes here, knows the routine.
His wife, Misses, that’s actually
what he calls in day-to-day life, Misses, even on the rare instances
when he whispers her name in bed like a hesitant question. He does not
use her given name. Her gait a stiff breeze, she will swish into the
room in a clichéd hurry, implying that her time is at a premium.
This will rustle the fronds of potted, tropical foliage. After announcing
her arrival to the whole of the restaurant and settling—with undue clatter—her
ample posterior upon the white lacquered seat, she—supercilious in her
air—will order her customary house salad with avocado dressing (croutons
on the side) and—yes, perforce—stall the server, the poor dear. I know
this particular server’s name to be Norman, usually a very congenial
fellow—that is, in her absence, of course. De rigueur, the woman
will concoct some pretense of interest about the special of the day,
inquire as to the freshness of the ingredients used to cook the soup
du jour, and sigh as Norman, who also knows the routine, excuses himself
to fill the much-neglected water pitchers that, thus far, have managed
to wait all afternoon. Following the customary ten minutes he allows
her to vacillate on an entree already decided, Norman will return, so
Misses may inform him, The salad will suffice. He will grumble into
the kitchen, place her order, and make a snide comment to the cook,
something to the effect that she probably still has this morning’s pastry
box (nary a crumb remaining) crumpled beneath her passenger seat. I
hope you will not consider his rapier wit cruel; it is simply his way.
Taking a running start, Norman will racewalk past the couple and drop
off their entrees with a blurred rush of words:
…And-that-will-be-all?-Very-good-Thank-you-I’ll-check-on-you-in-a-bit-Enjoy.
This is what he will say before barreling
back through the swinging doors of the kitchen and exhaling. He, meaning
Norman, has related as much to me on days like today when business is
slow and conversation scarce. Later, the rest of Mister’s meal will
arrive, bread and soup and appetizer and entree and coffee and dessert,
and it will seem to consist wholly of a series of varied-octave, stainless
steel clinks substituting for a lack of intimacy. The rippling will
impinge the dead air between him and his wife. If you have been to D.C.
and eat an early dinner, perhaps you have seen them. They are near impossible
to miss.
4:27, Mister thinks, shaking his cuff over the sharp rise of his filigree
wrist. Maybe she’s had an accident. An accident. It’s possible. Dupont
Circle, a Maryland driver. It’s more than quite possible. It’s probable.
Calmly, Mister peers out the restaurant’s plate glass window and through
the intricacies of the iron, burglar bars to inspect the street for
some sign of Misses. Instead he discerns two women, arms interlaced.
They read the menu placard poised outside the restaurant’s entrance.
Enthralled, he watches them. They appear to be drunk—with each other’s
company. They are having a brief, animated discussion, not threatening,
for they both take turns grinning. One of the women inspects the contents
of her leather tote, pulls out her wallet. She seems satisfied with
the contents. The younger of the two holds open the door. The sound
of the cowbell rigged above the door clangors. The Black woman walks
in stifling a laugh.
I’ve got enough to cover us, the
older one says, the laughter nearly squelched. Norman directs them to
a table cater-corner from Mister. I don’t want to have to use the card.
Too much explaining.
The older woman is a study of pleasant
incongruities. An untouched fringe of grey arcs over her left ear and
conjures images of a rock-strewn hill of dark soil. Her bone structure
imparts a series of jags and crags like scintillating earth; her jaw
crests forward, a cliff before dropping off into the stacked curves
of her body. Mooneyed, the younger woman follows closely behind, holding
her own body lithely erect as if a climber ever-willing to ascend the
precipitous mount. Mister checks himself. He’s staring but determined
not to be rude. He averts his eyes down to the linen napkin resting
upon his lap.
He thinks, It must be wonderful to
be so brave. Openly affectionate, even if this is the Fruit Loop…Dupont
Circle, he corrects himself. Anyway, the older woman must have ten years
on the girl who is certainly, as anyone can obviously tell, not a girl
at all. That’s if the older woman’s skin is telling the truth. Could
be more. He shuffles these thoughts and the crumpled napkin in his lap
simultaneously. You never know with those black women. But the younger
woman, no problem. Twenty-four, twenty-five easy.
He notes the time. 4:32. Maybe Misses really did have an accident.
Could be dead, he thinks. If this was the first time this thought had
traipsed across his mind, maybe he would be embarrassed, but it isn’t,
and he’s not. Mister’s thoughts wander. If Misses is dead, I can pay
off the house with her life policy, pay off the car with her company-provided
coverage. That would leave me with—let’s see—a $5000 Visa, about $1000
over the limit. I could probably pay that off, too, but I do love her,
and she must have a nice funeral. No need to be chintzy. He fixes
on the decorative pewter spittoon, followed quickly by the sweating
pitchers of water. He stares at nothing, some arbitrary point outside
the barred window and repeats, I do love her, after all. A tinge
of guilt, though fleeting, flusters him. He needn’t convince anyone
save himself.
Again, though not meaning to, his
eyes inadvertently seek out the couple seated at a cramped table a few
feet across the way. Mister watches as the younger woman’s nimble fingers
brush away a breadcrumb from the other woman’s cheek. A gesture, no
more. The older woman smiles and continues chatting. Sunlight glares
through the scripted lettering of the restaurant’s name to be dissected
into light and shadows by the iron gate. The diffused rays pour through
the painted letters, washing a blue swath across the two faces, one
light and one dark.
Honey, don’t be like that. You know I would stay tonight if I could,
but I can’t. You know I can’t. The older woman butters a roll as she
speaks, carefully coating the entire surface, offering a morsel to the
younger woman. It would cause too much trouble at home, and you know
Richard and I’ve been at each other—a lot lately. Be patient. Try to,
anyway. It won’t be that much longer. The older woman leans forward,
one hand sliding across the table, with an endearing smile to disarm
her lover’s discontent. I promise. I only need the right occasion…
Right occasion, Mister thinks
before he realizes he’s staring. Again. This time he turns his attention
to the weathered satchel at his knee. He fumbles with the tarnished
brass buckles of the leather bag to extract a book of short, short stories.
Mister always carries a book; it comes in handy when Misses is this
late. She is forever late; it is only a matter of degrees. Opening the
book and removing the pale ribbon marker, then laying it carefully aside,
he begins to read but is soon distracted, pushed inward by the trail
of dark words across the page, weaving his own desultory thoughts with
the macabre thread.
I can give Misses’ sister, Claire,
her clothes. It would please her to have them. And her other sister Meagan,
that meddlesome snot, deserves nothing. Her mother can have the china.
Yes, the china with blue cornflowers for Edna. Perfectly good stuff. After
all, she picked it out, and we never use it. Just sits packed in boxes
in the mahogany hutch, where it’s been for years. Plus, Edna was
the one who insisted that we include it on the registry. Mister thinks,
Yes, all we ever really needed was a decent set of everyday dishes. He
rereads the looping paragraph that lays open before him, trying to pay
closer attention to the plot, but he drifts, …And I could get rid of all
that porcelain bric-a-brac and chinoiserie that has to be dusted every
week as well as those godawful Boston ferns. Most definitely the ferns.
They shed dead leaves all over the dining room like dirty little tears.
The cowbell sounds. Mister looks
up to see who has entered the restaurant. Not her, not anyone, just
a stray sound, he mumbles as he flips his wrist to check the time: 4:39.
He begins to count the pristine place settings, taking in differences
between each of the tablecloths on the surrounding tables, and his eyes
are once more drawn to only other patrons, the couple, seated across
from him. Norman returns and delivers their entrees with a flourish.
As best he can discern, from what little he can see and the poignant
smell, it must be oysters and mussels. Norman places it in front of
the older woman. A very fine selection, he says, I’m sure
it will be to your liking. Something Norman has never said to either
Mister or Misses. See, Mister thinks, she is brave. I would never order
seafood.
Daphne, I do care how it affects you.
More than you believe, the older woman is saying. The younger says something
that becomes lost in her chest. I love you, you know I do, the older
is speaking again. Oh…don’t crinkle your nose up like that. I will leave
him. She drapes her hand, face down, in the younger woman’s open, waiting
palm. I’ll leave. I will.
Mister hears these clipped word and pauses reading as if he has
never realized that was a possibility. I won’t ever have the courage
to leave. Never. Neither the Misses nor I will. We talk about it, make
threats, but who takes whom seriously. We certainly don’t take each
other seriously. We don’t want that kind of blame. It’s so permanent.
Neither of us wants to be the one to be labeled as having been selfish
enough to ask the unspeakable. The server stops at the table to check
on him, and Mister’s chance to grasp this inchoate thought fully dissolves:
While you’re waiting, would you like
your usual, sir?
Yes, an Old-Fashion…please.
Of course, sir.
Mister broods in his dark corner of the restaurant, like a miser with
newfound wealth, clutching to hold onto the edges of this ephemeral
thought as it dissipates beneath the whir of the fan. He casts a forlorn
eye out the barred window at the bright energy of the congested streets:
horns honking, a pedestrian darting between car bumpers and hoods, tires
screeching, a cyclist tagging a ride on the door handle of a moving
car, a blurted obscenity. Those horrible gates—messing up my view. What
good are they? It’s not like they would stop someone who was determined.
Truly wretched things, Mister thinks. No matter how the design changes
it is all the same horrid-looking stuff. You can’t escape what they
mean. Mister lets out a resigned sigh. The loudness of the sound startles
him. He looks at his watch, the second hand ticking. His gaze seeks
the two women. They sit within the banded light--half-illuminated, half-obscured.
Mister plods his fingers across the empty plate. One, one…two,two…three,three…four.
Norman returns with the drink Mister
ordered, and he, grudgingly, goes back to reading, pouring over his
book. His eyes skipping over lines, whole paragraphs. He occasionally
sips the heavily bittered liquid, determined not to notice the time.
Resolute that he will not watch the couple, he snaps shut the book.
He reads the back cover of review blurbs. The Assignation.
And why don’t you leave? he interrupts
his reading. Why not? That woman can do it. It’s been done. He
looks at the couple, the older woman in particular. Well? he thinks.
Why can’t I? It’s not like I’m leaving for my secretary. I would be
leaving for myself, which is the same as no one at all. What would it
mean besides no more having to endure these damn Friday evening dinners?
As these adumbrations reveal themselves, the change in the older woman’s
appearance distracts him. Mister watches as the elder of the two, clutching
at her side, excuses herself to the restroom.
The woman’s taut skin now appears
languid. She assures, I’m fine. Daphne maneuvers and slides from behind
the table to assist the woman, accompany her, whatever is called for.
No, really, the older one says, I really am o-kay, before she makes
her way down the ill-lit foyer, with careful steps, to the bathroom.
Alone.
Mister sips his drink until the ice
rattles and orders another. A double. The older woman still has not
returned by the time the server sets the fresh cocktail before him.
Cock. Tail. Surely no one could have been so crass, he thinks. Would
the gentleman like to go ahead and order? Norman asks. Mister curbs
his instinct, doesn’t check his wrist.
Yes, I’ll have my usual… he begins
and then, noticing Daphne, the ways she’s fidgeting, smiles at her.
She returns an anxious simper. No, he says, returning his attention
to the server, Norman, I think I’d like to see a menu please.
Very well, sir!
Norman vanishes and reappears, instantaneously,
with a full, toothy grin. Mister fumbles with the baffling menu.
What do I want? What do I want?
Would you like for me to suggest
something, sir?
Mister looks up at Norman, suddenly
unsure if the server means something else, but then notices the older
woman stumbling out of the darkness of the arched doorway leading from
the foyer. Her thick lids falter, her steps waver. Quietly, she slumps
down the wall. Daphne, without hesitation, darts to her side.
Lorraine, what’s the matter? Tell
me what’s wrong.
Lorraine is graceful, sprawled across
the tile floor. She attempts to sit. The effort fails. Both Norman and
Mister move to see if they can be of assistance.
No, I’m fine. Really. I’ll be okay
in a moment. Dee, just help me stand. Please.
Norman and Mister help move her to
an upright position. Daphne layers Lorraine’s limp arm around her shoulder
like a shawl, gently tugging at the older woman’s dangling wrist. She
even manages to raise Lorraine to her feet, but it’s as if Lorraine’s
melted. This time she’s clutching at her stomach.
Should I call an ambulance, ma’am?
Norman asks.
Yes, Daphne says, her voice authoritative—and
panicked.
Lorraine’s eyes go from faint to
wide. No! You can’t. She now turns to Daphne. I can’t. How will I explain?
Norman halts, unsure of which directions
to follow.
Okay, then you’ll have to show me.
Get up and walk. Can you do that? For me?
Lorraine tries again and is unable
to right herself. Her feet refuse to stay beneath her. Norman shifts
his glance skeptically to meet Daphne’s, waiting for instructions.
Call an ambulance, now, Daphne says.
The server rushes away toward the
kitchen.
No, wait!
Norman stops.
You can’t, you just can’t. He can’t
find out. Not this way. It’s all wrong.
So you dying on the floor of some
restaurant sounds rational. This is crazy.
Daphne slides down upon her knees. She
places Lorraine’s head in her lap. You know I’ll do whatever you want,
but I… They gaze at each other, as though affecting some sad, mutual
understanding. Daphne slides the backside of her fingers down the older
woman’s pallid cheek, but Daphne, try as she may, cannot quite sculpt
her own lips into a smile. Lorraine closes her fingers around the younger
woman’s steadfast grasp.
Never looking away, Daphne says,
Call, call now, her voice barely audible like shame.
Dee? Lorraine says. Daphne understands.
Go, the young woman says to Mister, See what’s taking so long. Is the
ambulance coming or not?
Mister hastens away across the chipped,
marbled tiles and through the kitchen doors. He moves past the cutlery,
the hanging arrangement of copper pots, around the woodblock island
stationed in the center of the room, past the utility sinks. Reaching
a small desk near the rear exit, Mister finds Norman on the phone. The
cook is standing next to him. Both are giving out directions and street
names, each correcting the other, their voices frantic. Mister believes
he hears the slight sound. A cowbell a ways in the distance. Norman
hangs up the phone, and finally, all three stride through the kitchen
door and into the main dining room. They look at the tiled floor where
they left the couple. They look at the table where Daphne and Lorraine
had been seated. They look around the intimate confines of the restaurant.
The cook says, I’ll check the restroom,
hurrying away. He returns almost immediately. No one. All the stalls
are empty. I looked.
Baffled, Norman begins
to tell the cook every detail he can recall, some in order, some not,
doing the best he can working from memory alone. Mister stares out the
barred, glass window. He moves to the restaurant door, opens it, causing
the cowbells to clank against one another. His birdlike gaze is drawn
to the clarity of the simple sound. Once outside he cranes his neck
both right and left, stretching upward. He looks up and down the dense
sidewalks, studies each moving face. There is no trace of the couple.
Mister stands in the diminishing light of the afternoon sun. He can
hear the bustle of the streets subdued by the unmistakable far-off blare
of sirens approaching. Mister checks his watch. His wife still has not
arrived.
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