Brief Encounters with the Enemy Page 8
In its place, I composed something delicate and thoughtful, how at the very moment I was sitting in Winchester Parks with three boxes of Walmart merchandise in my trunk about to ask Mr. Bildman’s daughter out on a date, he, Chip, was sitting in an Internet café on the other side of the world. “By the way,” I asked, “were you being up-front on how much Mr. Bildman was paying you for the boxes?”
Then I had the thought that this question was too trivial, given what he was going through, even if he wasn’t going through much, so I backspaced over that, too. Then I backspaced over everything because he might not want to hear me crooning about Mr. Bildman’s daughter and philosophizing about the speed of the Internet, while I sat in the comfort of my car and he waited for some new boots that fit his feet.
After that, I sat there staring at my blank BlackBerry not knowing what to write to him, wishing quite frankly that he’d never sent me anything at all, wishing that I could ignore the email altogether. Now I was the one stuck having to picture things that were unpleasant about my friend, like him sitting in the Internet café, his enormous frame slouching in the chair, typing away to his mom, to his girlfriend, to me, probably saying pretty much the same thing to each of us, hoping that someone would write back before his fifteen minutes of allotted time expired.
So I wrote,
Kick some ass!
Your friend,
Nick
I clicked send fast and got out of my car. I opened my trunk and the butterflies returned. The boxes were big and unwieldy, bottles of laundry detergent and the like, and I regretted not having brought Joey Joey along to help. I teetered under their weight. I hoped Zlottie would not notice me teetering.
But when I got to the front door, I saw that the lights were off and there was a sign taped to the window. CLOSED FOR SHABBOS.
So I had to wait. I had to wait four days until my day off. On my days off, I usually sleep till noon, but I was awake at seven, thinking about what to wear. I ended up putting on a suit and tie. Dark suit, white shirt, dark tie. I thought it’d be good for her to see me in professional attire. “You look like a senator, Nick,” she’d say. I took the tie off—business casual. “Oh, this is just what I wear when I’m not working,” I’d say. Then I took everything off and masturbated.
When I got to the store, I had to get the big boxes out of the trunk again. All the pushing and pulling wrinkled my clothes and pissed me off. The door jingled like a sleigh bell when I entered, but Zlottie didn’t hear me because three Chinese women were crowding the counter, screaming about some apples and oranges. They were sitting on top of the counter, the apples and oranges, and the Chinese women kept picking them up and putting them down as if this would prove their point. I couldn’t see Zlottie, but I could hear her voice. “I’m sorry,” she kept saying over and over. In the face of the customers’ displeasure, she was as polite as ever, her voice as sweet as ever. “You, you, you,” the women said, unswayed. They were short and round, and they wore polka-dot outfits that could have been pajamas. They crowded her like bullies. Somebody was trying to rip somebody off, and it wasn’t clear whom. I could imagine Zlottie’s father sitting at his gunmetal desk in the back room, oblivious to his daughter’s dilemma.
The women must have thought I was an official in my suit, a detective maybe, because they got quiet and made way for me. “What seems to be the problem here?” I said. I set my boxes down on the counter, amid their apples and oranges, and I smiled at Zlottie, who, even in her distress, looked beautiful. Strands of black hair dangled in front of one eye.
“You, you, you,” they said to Zlottie, but in my presence the fight had gone out of them. They paid the ticket price and gathered their fruit and left. The door jingled three times.
In their wake, it was silent. In the silence, Zlottie blurted, “You, you, you,” with breathy exaggeration, and she pulled the corners of her eyes so that they slanted. Her imitation was surprisingly good. I laughed. Then I took the high ground: “There’s good and bad in all races,” I said.
She thought about it. “That’s true,” she said.
It was something my father had told me in his better moments. “There’s good and bad in all races, Nick.” He had an obsession with good and bad, the latter of which generally included, among others, Jewish people. When I was about six years old, he had observed me peeling a banana without first washing it. “What’s wrong with YOU?” he had shouted as if I were about to insert a burning torch into my mouth. He got off the couch and pounded his hands on his legs. His face was contorted with terror and fear, and this made me cry. “You see them in the supermarket putting their hands over everything!” Then calmly, patiently, lovingly, he said, “Go wash that banana in the sink, Nicholas.”
“You look like a salesman, Nick,” Zlottie said. I couldn’t tell if this was a compliment.
“Thank you,” I said.
“A door-to-door salesman,” she continued. “What did you bring”—she patted my boxes—“encyclopedias?” She laughed. “Girl Scout cookies?”
“Zlottie,” I said, leaning toward her and pressing hard against the counter and speaking too loudly. “I happen to have a Sunday off at the end of the month—”
But before I could finish she’d already said yes.
I’d been wrong about Joey Joey: maybe he did have that thing. Because when he came in to work the next day, he informed me that he had joined the army.
“Effective immediately, brigadier general!” he said. He saluted and clicked his heels.
Apparently he’d gone down to the Career Center, taken a physical, signed some papers, and now he was officially a soldier.
“I’ve got twenty-eight percent body fat,” he said. “That’s not too bad.”
I told him I was proud of him and gave him the rest of the day off. In turn, he invited me over to his mom’s house that weekend for a going-away party. Then he spent the rest of the afternoon walking around the store shaking hands with the guys and getting kissed by the girls. By the time he was done, he looked like his face had been painted with a Magic Marker.
It was eight P.M. when I left the store with my spreadsheets.
“See you tomorrow, Mr. McDonough!”
Out in the parking lot, the air was finally getting nice and warm and I took a deep breath. When I exhaled, I heard someone calling “Niiiiiiiiiiiiiiick!” It was Pink calling. Pink from the neighborhood, from high school, Pink who’d worked one year at Walmart before coming in stoned and getting fired and losing all his benefits. He still shopped there, no hard feelings. He was wearing an enormous gold watch and pushing a stroller with a sleeping baby that had jelly on its face.
“Niiiiiiiiiiiiiiick!” he yelled. “Nick!”
He shook my hand hard, with deep feeling, like we were long-lost friends who hadn’t seen each other in years. I’d seen him two weeks ago.
“Did you hear what happened to Chip?” he said, holding on to my hand and looking at me with half-sad, half-sober eyes.
“What happened to him?” I asked.
But I suddenly knew what had happened to him. I could hear my voice crack as I spoke—“What happened, Pink?”—and I felt queasy, wobbly, happy to be grasping Pink’s soft hand as I saw my friend Chip lying six feet six facedown in a ditch somewhere on the other side of the world. And here he had just emailed me, saying it was boring and there was nothing to worry about, and I’d believed him. I’d said there wasn’t going to be a war, and he’d believed me. And now Joey Joey was on his way there, to that same war, all smiles and lipstick and papers signed.
“He got called up for the army,” Pink said. “You didn’t hear?”
I withdrew my hand. “That’s old news, Pink,” I said. Pink always had old news.
“I need a job, Nick,” he said amiably, pushing the stroller into the store.
“That’s old news too,” I said.
That weekend I went to the going-away party that Joey Joey’s mom was throwing. The grill was on when I got there and so was
the music. There were nieces and nephews crawling around in the backyard, and his mom had strung red-white-and-blue streamers all through the house and tree.
“Well, look who’s here,” his mom said. She was fatter than last time, and she was wearing a T-shirt that said, HOLD STEADY. She hugged me hard. Her arms went around my neck. She was doughy and it felt good. “Get yourself a plate, Nicky,” she said. “Get yourself a beer.”
Joey Joey was on the deck with everyone I hadn’t seen in a long time. Everyone had put on weight. The flag was out and it was waving in the breeze. The breeze felt nice. It was going to be a nice spring.
“If more people made an effort to keep the flag out,” someone said, “we wouldn’t be in the mess we’re in today.” Everyone agreed.
“You look good, Nick,” someone said. I had come from work in my white shirt and was overdressed for the occasion.
“Nick’s a businessman now,” Joey Joey said. He winked.
“Can you get me a job down there, Nick?”
“What about me, Nick?”
“Sure,” I said to everyone. “Come down and fill out an application.” I’d hire them. They’d work three months maybe. They’d work a year. I’d fire them.
I ate a hot dog and I drank a beer. The beer made me tired. So did the sunshine.
“You look tired, Nicky,” Joey Joey’s mom said. I felt like sitting down but there was nowhere to sit except the ground.
“Nick’s always tired,” Joey Joey announced. He was reclining luxuriously in a blue chaise longue with the back put down to the last notch. He’d bought it at Walmart. Everything in the backyard he’d bought at Walmart, including the grill and including the flag. The rest he’d bought when he sold drugs.
“Nick runs the store,” Joey Joey continued. The way he was lying in the chaise, the center of attention, all comfort and ease, with one arm behind his head and his shoes off, speaking about me but not to me, made it seem like he was big man around town again.
I ate another hot dog.
“You got ketchup on your shirt, mister,” one of the little cousins said. In the middle of my white shirt, right near my heart, was a red stain about the size of a thumbprint. “You look like you got shot, mister,” she said.
Everyone thought this was funny.
“Bang bang!” she said. “Bang bang!” The words were infectious, and all the little cousins and nieces and nephews, everyone under the age of ten, ran around the yard, screaming, “Bang bang! Bang bang!”
I was ready to leave. I waited fifteen more minutes and then I kissed Joey Joey’s mom goodbye. “It was good seeing you, Nicky,” she said. “Don’t be a stranger.” Then confidentially, she said, “Thank you for everything you’ve done for Joey Joey.”
“Aw,” I said, “I haven’t done anything much for him.” Which was kind of true.
Joey Joey said he’d walk me out. We passed through the kitchen, where his sister was making a bowl of pasta salad. “Are you leaving already?” she said. She was five years older, her hair had highlights, and her nails were so long she had to grip the serving spoon with her palm. She’d visited Joey Joey every day when he was in jail.
“Nick’s a businessman,” Joey Joey said again. “He’s got spreadsheets to work on.” He thought this was funny.
But out on the porch he got quiet, he got melancholy. We stood around with our hands in our pockets, looking at the traffic go by.
I said, “You’re about to go on an adventure,” and I slapped him on the back.
“Sure am,” he said, but he didn’t seem too excited. He was staring at the traffic.
“When you see Chip,” I offered, “tell him I said hi.”
“Sure will,” he said.
His demeanor made me earnest. “When you get back, your job’ll be here for you.” It was company policy, but it sounded like I was doing him a favor.
“I do appreciate that, Nick,” he said.
“You’re welcome,” I said.
Then he turned and I saw those eyes again, wide, white, tense. I could have been staring at him through a jailhouse window.
“I don’t want to die, Nick,” he said.
The sentiment caught me off guard. “You’re not going to die.” I was oddly offended.
“I don’t want to die,” he said, as if he hadn’t already said it.
“You’re not going to die,” I said, louder now, like I demanded it. I was angry and also embarrassed. “You have a greater chance of dying in a plane crash,” I said, because that was what the statistics had shown.
He was nodding and taking deep breaths as if he was trying to catch up to the absurdity of his panic. He smiled a brave smile. Then he hugged me unexpectedly, putting his arms around my neck and pulling me close. He was doughy like his mom, but he was stronger than I expected, and I felt at his mercy. He held me long enough for it to begin to feel awkward. When he released me, we stood staring at each other.
Then, to lighten the mood, I grabbed him by the shoulders. “Kick some ass, Private!”
On Sunday, when I pulled up in front of the shop, Zlottie didn’t look as if she thought she was going on a date. She was dressed in that same black blouse with that same black skirt and those same black shoes. She looked like a witch. Or a mortician. It was going to be seventy degrees and sunny, the first day that year we were going to hit seventy degrees, and I couldn’t imagine she’d be able to stand the heat for long, especially considering we were spending the day at the amusement park. “I’ve never been to the amusement park,” she’d told me, clapping her hands in delight. I couldn’t believe it—twenty-six years old and never been to the amusement park.
Still, she had dressed like this.
I got out of the car and opened the door for her like a gentleman. Her father was nowhere to be seen, so I thought I’d start the day off right by giving her a kiss on the cheek, but she giggled and moved past me and sat down and slammed the door closed herself.
I took the bridge. I drove slowly. I wasn’t in a hurry. I’d been up early again, trying on different outfits: dressy, sporty, casual. In the end, I decided on jeans and a tank top. I wanted her to see my arms and shoulders, just like I wanted to see her legs and ass.
“Down there,” I said, indicating the river, “is where I used to go fishing.” I’d only gone fishing once, the time we caught Zero the turtle.
“Fishing!” Zlottie said. “I’ve never been fishing.”
It sounded like an invitation for an invitation. “I’ll take you sometime,” I said. I glanced at her to see if the promise of a future engagement had made an impact. She was staring down at the river. “I’ve never been fishing,” she repeated. “I’ve never been to the amusement park. I’ve never been to a ball game.”
All her life in this city and she’d never been anywhere except BILDMAN’S SH P.
The entrance to Adventure Playland was clogged with strollers and soldiers. The park had become all the rage again because they’d built a new roller coaster called Kingdom Coming and everyone wanted to see if it lived up to the hype. Up and down in sixty seconds, the commercial said. The commercial ran every fifteen minutes. It had been ten years since I’d been on a roller coaster, any roller coaster, and I couldn’t wait.
At the ticket booth, I bought two all-you-can-ride passes for thirty dollars.
“All you can ride?” Zlottie said with apprehension.
I bought a hot dog for myself but nothing for her because: “I can’t eat anything here, Nick, you know that.”
“Aren’t you going to be hungry?”
“No.”
“Aren’t you going to be hot?”
“No.”
The line to Kingdom Coming was long and it wrapped around the fence twice. You could hear the coaster before you saw it, a big whoosh of air, and then a few moments later a long train of red cars coming past the fence in a blur, one hundred miles per hour, jammed with people screaming their heads off.
“Wow!” I turned to her in excitement.
/> “I’m not going!” Zlottie said. Her face was filled with terror.
I took her hand in a comforting fashion. She let me hold it for a moment and then she took it away. “We’ll come back a little later,” I said.
At the far end of the park was a minor wooden roller coaster from the old days; it had a couple of hills and a few turns and there wasn’t much to it. It was the first roller coaster I’d ever gone on, but I’d outgrown it and moved on to bigger and better thrills. Apparently everyone else had outgrown it as well, because no one was in line.
“I’m scared,” Zlottie said.
We took our seat in the car. The car was wooden, and it looked like it couldn’t go faster than a bumper car. “Don’t be scared,” I whispered, and I imagined putting my arm around her shoulder and holding her close. Onto my palm I briefly mapped the course that the ride would take. “See?” This seemed to settle her, but as soon as the attendant came by to push the rubber restraining bar in front of our waist, Zlottie repeated, “I’m scared!”
It was too late now, the train was starting up, clanking and groaning as it climbed that first little hill. “See?” I kept saying. “See?”
We crested tranquilly, and for a moment I could see the whole wide city. Over there was Winchester Parks, and in the other direction was where I lived, and in the middle was Walmart with its big blue roof, where I’d be back tomorrow morning at seven-thirty. And then we dropped.
I hadn’t remembered the drop to be so sharp. It seemed as if the wheels had lifted from the tracks and we were pointing straight down, hurtling toward the ground below. The momentum pulled me from my seat and I was sure I was about to be thrown from the car. I grasped the restraining bar. “Hold on, Zlottie!” I screamed in anguish. The car hit the bottom of the hill headfirst, a jarring landing that snapped me back into my seat and banged me against the wooden backrest, giving me only a second to catch my bearings before we went tearing around the bend. Now it felt as if I would be hurled out sideways against the railing that was inches from my face. “Whatever you do,” I screamed, “hold on!” Around another bend we went, nearly perpendicular to the ground, with the terrible roar of the wind in my ears, the terrible screeching of the fragile dilapidated fifty-year-old wheels on the track. And just beneath the roaring and the screeching, just beneath the screaming and the pleading, I was surprised to hear the familiar sound of Zlottie’s laughter. It was long and loud and without pause. Up the hills and down the hills she laughed, wheeeeeeeeee, through the tunnel and around the curve, and when we pulled into the finish line and the restraining bar released us mercifully into the world, she said, “Let’s do it again!”