LOTS OF WEEKEND ANGUISH
“HELLO! GOOD EVENING! DO you have a moment to hear about a special offer from Cozumel Cruises, the Happy Cruise People?”
“No, not really. We’re about to eat dinner.”
“Oh, well, I’m sorry, Ma’am. I understand how that can be.”
“I’m sure you do, since you’re probably human, and humans probably eat. You guys are human, aren’t you?”
Ryan adds another laugh and begins to finger the knot in his tie.
“Yes, ma’am. We are human at Cozumel Cruises.”
But he doesn’t sound human to himself. He’s talking in a game show host’s voice.
“We were here to offer a free cruise to Letitia Gaynor and four of her friends if she was interested.”
“This involves buying something, doesn’t it?”
“No, Ma’am, not at all. Cozumel Cruises wants to offer you a free get away. You work hard all day and now it’s time to play.”
“Actually you want to offer Letitia Gaynor a cruise.”
“You wouldn’t be Letitia Gaynor?”
“I sure in the hell wouldn’t be. I wouldn’t be Letitia Gaynor for the whole goddamned world. She’s been dead for the last three months.”
“Oh,” Ryan felt stupid and kept opening and closing his mouth at the station where he sat with the phone cradled in the crook of his shoulder. What was he supposed to do now?
“I’m so sorry...”
“Don’t be.”
“Was she related?”
“She was my mother.”
“Oh, I really am sorry.”
“But she was a bitch. She used to beat me with a frying pan and everything.”
Ryan just sat there. He had put on his best cologne and now all he could smell was sweat. After six hours of this he had damp armpits and a damp ass to show for it all.
“Well, Ms. Gaynor, you would be the younger Ms. Gaynor?”
“I am a Miss Gaynor.”
“Maybe you’d like a gettaway cruise.”
“You know, my dinner really is getting cold.”
“Uh... yes.” Ryan said. “Well, thank you for your time.”
“Um hum.”
And that was that.
“Hello!”
“Hello?”
“Hi, if you’re Rolf Goodson, I’d like to talk to you for a few minutes about your pre-approved Visa Platinum card with a zero percent rate of interest and increased spending power--”
“I’m not--”
“If you act now, you could even be approved for the Visa Platinum and our new sweepstakes for a Jeep Cherokee, one of the hottest selling items on—”
“Hello? Is this a recorded message?”
“No,” Ryan said, sounding breathless and giddy.
“I’m not interested.”
“You’re not interested in the new Visa Platinum card with zero percent—”
“No.”
“Oh.”
“Do you want to know why I’m not interested?”
“Uh...” Ryan debated answering this for a second and said: “Sure. I mean, yes. I… maybe I could change your mind.”
“Because the last time one of you people called up this house trying to sell me one I was a
Freshmen in college, and I got one of these damn cards and you know what happened? I spent thirty dollars on it. Thirty. But I forgot about it, as college kids will, and before I knew it collection agencies were calling my house. Those motherfuckers!”
“Oh, yeah,” Ryan chimed in trying to sound at one with the man’s anger.
“And I was over four hundred dollars in debt! And someone, someone just like you—Some white man all nice and pleasant called up trying to be my friend talking about how I needed to pay this moment right now and he could help me. Oh, but I knew the bitch was only trying to get my money cause he was on commision and wouldn’t get paid unless he rung the shit out of me. Well, he went to bed hungry that night. But I didn’t.”
“Oh, sir,” Ryan said. “Mr Goodson, I’m not a collection agency. I wouldn’t-”
“But you know what,” Rolf Goodson continued, “You can go to bed hungry too!”
And he slammed the phone down.
When the busy signal started scratching in Ryan’s ear he became newly aware of the damp chair he’d been sitting in for hours in this stuffy room. His eyes stung and his hands clenched and unclenched. He buried his face in his hands and growled, “Fuck!”
He looked around. There were only three other people in the room. Kevin was in the next one. Everyone was in his own booth doing his own thing. Ryan blew out his cheeks and shook his head.
Fuck fuck fuck I hate this place!
He looked at the call list.
Thirty more to go.
When Ryan entered the kitchen above the bookstore, Kevin beside him, everyone looked up in mild surprise.
“Kevin Nelson?” Efrem said his eyes narrowing as if he were trying to see.
“Ef.” said Kevin. “Isaac, Jinny. It’s just like school all over again.”
“Well,” Cecile shrugged. Then she said, “How was it at the telemarketing place?”
“I hate that place,” Ryan declared. “And the people I called were so rude. But who could blame them? I’d be rude too.”
“I always try to be nice to Telemarketers,” Efrem said. “I think you’d have to be really low on the wheel of life to resort to it. So I try to be as decent as possible.”
“Thanks, Ef,” Ryan pulled a sour face.
“Well, now that didn’t come out right, did it?” Efrem murmured to Isaac.
“Do you buy anything from the Telemarketers?” Kevin asked him.
“Hell, no,” Efrem said. “And I tell the bill collectors that I’m dead. Not that I have bill collectors anymore. Thank God. Bastards at the collection agency used to call and call. I was afraid I was going to jail for a while.”
Ryan opened up Isaac’s refrigerator, asking, “Do you mind?”
“Does it matter?”
“If you said no,” Ryan told him, “I would be obliged to shut it and respect your wishes.”
“You hear that, Ef?” Isaac commented. “He would actually respect my wishes.”
Efrem took the eclair off of Isaac’s plate and bit into it. “I’m your best friend. I don’t have to respect your wishes.”
“Of course the worst part of telemarketing,” Kevin said, “is you only get paid according to how many people you convince to buy your product.”
“What?” Ryan head shot up so fast from the refrigerator, that he nearly hit his head on the freezer door.
Cecile looked at Ryan’s desolate expression and said, “Maybe you should get out of this line of work, baby.”
“You know I was thinking,” Jinny said, “whenever I go to the library there are all of these interesting people working there. I always wonder where they all come from. And it seems... not low stress… But sort of unhurried and meaningful. All at the same time.”
“To work in a library?” Cecile said.
“I could work in a library,” Ryan said.
“You could,” Efrem said in a voice that implied, “but you shouldn’t.”
“You always liked the library,” Isaac turned to Efrem.
“That’s right. But I worked in one once and I discovered there’s a difference between coming for an hour or two and having free run of the place and having to stay for eight hour shifts behind a counter. A big difference. You might not want to do that, Ryan.”
“What might I want to do, then?”
“You might want to get the hell out of town for a while,” Efrem told him. “Perspective and everything.”
“I don’t know—” Ryan began and then said, “Christ, I’m whining now!”
Kevin said, “You keep on whining, man,” as if he we were saying, ‘You keep on winning this basketball game.’ “But I gotta go do some grocery shopping for my mom. Are you coming to work tomorrow?”
“Yes.” Ryan said at the same time Cecile said, “No.”
Ryan looked at Cecile, who shrugged and sank down in her chair.
“Yes,” Ryan repeated.
“I’ll see you then.”
When Kevin was gone, Ryan said, “See that? Shit! Kevin doesn’t whine about life. Why can’t I be like that?”
Efrem took out a hand and began to numerate. “Kevin has never one: left Rhodes, two: gone to college or three: had a job over minimum wage. I’m not saying anything’s wrong with that. But I am saying there’s nothing right with it. Don’t be upset because you question things and want a little bit more out of life than a bagboy.”
“I wish I knew what the little bit more was.”
Efrem frowned and said, “I think we all do. But maybe that’s not the point.”
“What’s not the point?”
“To know,” said Efrem. “At least not to know right away. You know?”
He got up. “Are we all ready for the movie?”
“I’m ready for the movie,” Isaac stood up
“I’ve got the popcorn bags and the pop stashed away in my purse,” Jinny said.
“I think I’m just gonna head for home,” Ryan said.
“I think I’ll head for home with Ryan,” Cecile told them.
“Well,” Isaac decided, “at least we can all walk out of the kitchen together.”
“At least,” said Efrem.
“WELL, I GUESS THE PUSSY must have been EXQUISITE cause it’s love now.”
“Excuse me?” Ryan turned to her, his voice cold.
They were in Jinny’s house, in her kitchen. She had that tight feeling that comes when a storm’s about to blow and there isn’t a damn thing to be done about it.
“Are you deaf?’ Cecile asked him. “Have I become suddenly incoherent?”
When Ryan did not answer, she repeated, dropping each word on the floor. “I said the pussy... must... have... been... EXQUISITE.”
“I’m going to ignore that,” Ryan said.
“You might not say anything about what I just said. But I know you won’t ignore it,” Cecile told him. “Hell, you say she went to Saint Antonin’s. I don’t even remember the bitch.”
“She remembers you,” Ryan said.
“She should, I was the only Black girl in my class. I was also the cutest in my year,” she turned to Jinny. “Except for you.”
“I know what I looked like back then,” Jinny said.
“And I would prefer if you used her name,” Ryan said.
“Well, I don’t remember Betsy.”
“Beth.”
“Whatever.”
“She’s blond,” Ryan snapped. “With bright blue eyes.”
“Let me guess?” said Cecile, pleasantly. “Is she white too?”
Ryan glared at her.
“You know what I don’t understand about white folks?” Cecile said loudly. “They all get crazy over some blond hair and blue eyes. Like Hitler. Don’t forget Hitler. No, here this bitch is, who I have NEVER seen, and Ryan fucks her once on a beach and all of a sudden—”
Ryan’s hand bammed down on the table and he shouted, “SHE IS NOT A BITCH!!!”
Ryan’s face was purple. He was so loud that Anne came from upstairs to see what the hell had happened. Jinny was terrified.
Cecile didn’t bat an eyelash. Or at least that’s all she did.
She got up, went to the kitchen door, walked out and then said, “Ryan?”
He glared at her.
“Yes, she is.”
And then Cecile was gone.
Before he could lunge after her, Jinny said, “Ryan, calm down.”
“She doesn’t understand,” Ryan said. “She’s got all of her toys. All of her Chucks and Tommys and Cecile doesn’t know a damn thing about real love. She doesn’t know how I feel about Beth. She’s never loved anyone.”
“Cecile loves me. She loves Efrem.”
“You know that’s not what I mean,” Ryan said, miserable. “Guys. She doesn’t know what it’s like to be serious for a guy.”
“She loved you,” Jinny told him blankly.
Ryan looked at her.
“She loved you, Ryan. You know she did. And you went off to Colorado, and you broke things off with her. I know you like this Beth girl, and that’s nice. But you’ve got to see it from Cile’s point. You’ve got to.”
SLEEPILY SHE SAID FROM THE BED, “Honey, what are you doing?”
“Nothing. Really. Go back to sleep.”
Cecile ignored him and crawled out of the bedpile to the pool of light made by the desk lamp. Ryan was typing.
“I can’t sleep now. What? Are you writing?”
“I’m trying,” Ryan said, hitting the save button and turning to her
“Ooh,” she gave him a delighted smile. “You’re going to be a big famous writer after all.”
“I don’t even know if I’m going to be a writer, let alone a big famous one,” he said.
She sat on his lap
“I haven’t gotten fat have I?” she said.
“What?”
“I mean, I’m not too heavy to sit on your lap?”
“No, Cile. You never have been.”
“Good.”
“And besides, if I said any different you’d wait till I fell asleep, slash all my tires and call Efrem to take you home.”
“No I wouldn’t,” she muttered, pressing her head into his shoulder. But they both knew she was lying.
“What’s it about?” she murmured.
“I dunno,” Ryan sounded stupid to himself. “There’s this girl, and she’s just come out of a crazy house. She’s come nght back to live with her sister. It’s got the working title ‘When A Bitch Comes Home’. ”
Cecile threw back her head and cackled.
She laughed and laughed until all Ryan could do was smile brightly at her. She smelled of musk and a little bit of that perfume she always wore, and the coconut oil she rubbed into her braids, into the those long, impossibly thin tracks of braid.
When she’d stopped laughing, Cecile said, “I think I’d like the title character.”
“She reminds me a lot of you.”
Cecile stopped, cocked her head and looked at him. He looked at her. He cracked a smile.
“Oh, you’ll pay For that,” Cecile told him.
“I’m sure,” he told her.
MORE AFTER SATURDAY