By P. S. Ehrlich
“So what do you think?”
“I wasn’t aware that the Army made
camouflage prom dresses.”
“This isn’t an Army prom
dress, you turk! It’s perfectly obviously a Marine Corps
original! I found it down on the waterfront, at Wretched
Wrefuse. We really need to take you and your bank balance
there sometime. They’ve got these really cool bandoliers
that were made to go with this dress and wouldn’t clash
with the spaghetti straps at all. Hey, watch this!—”
Saluting him, Skeeter executed
a Marine-clean ‘bout-face and nearly fell off her higher-than-usual
heels. Peyton, lunging forward, caught her arm and yanked
her back to the vertical.
“YEEK!” went Skeeter. “Darn these
heels, they nearly made me go splat. Good save there,
partner! We absolutely ought to go dancin’ after the
movie. Why haven’t we ever gone dancin’? You never
take me dancin’!”
“Dancing?”
“No—dancin’. There’s a
significant difference. Disco may be dead, but I intend
to keep Stayin’ Alive, thank you kindly. And T G it’s
F, after all.”
T G it’s quitting time on a Friday
afternoon in the grim grimy city of St. Mintred. At such
a time, the safest place for a vintage DeSoto to be is
in the parking structure atop Widdershins Hill. So Skeeter
and Peyton left the car there and hiked down the Hill
on precarious foot—a descent not made any less hazardous
by Skeeter’s intermittent attempts at dancin’.
Not that level ground was any bowl
of cherries either, down around Pabst Street: home to
the dilapidated, the ramshackle, the fossilized. Where
names of 19th Century proprietors were still faintly visible
high up the sides of buildings, above (or between) the
spray paint of latter-day graffiti.
Cars inched along Pabst toward
freeway onramps, to join the factory workers streaming
out of Prithee Motors, Importune Transport, Point Beseechment
Shipping, Cadger Cargo Delivery, and Panhandle-Grattiss
Aerospace. TGIF was nowhere in the atmosphere—displaced,
perhaps, by the sour metallic whiff known as “St. Minnie’s
Bouquet,” that intensifies throughout the week and is
especially foul during Friday rush hour. The drivers
got to inhale it (along with a hundred unfiltered Marlboros)
while they idled at stoplights, hurling honkish remarks
at each other and passers-by. A bile-green Subaru blocked
one intersection; from its occupant came a whistle as
Skeeter went hightailing past.
“Ahoy there!” she waved at the
Subaru, smirking at Peyton. “Did you hear that? Aren’t
you going to run after him and challenge the guy to a
duel?”
“Maybe after the picture, before
we go dancin’…”
Then a piercing shriek tore through
the Bouquet, followed by a prolonged howl from further
down the block.
Peyton lunged forward again, only
to find Skeeter (the shrieker) already in the arms of
another (the howler). Who emerged from the embrace to
reveal a lofty olivaceous girl in Ray-Bans, tinfoil haltertop,
plaid Bermuda shorts, and stiletto-pointed footwear such
as a James Bond villainess might use to bedevil 007.
“When’d you get back?!” Skeeter
was demanding.
“Like about three this morning—too
pooped to call ya,” said the prolonged howler. “I only
got up just now, so’s I could like go over to Turbo’s
‘n’ get my ‘do made over. Whaddaya think?”
To Peyton, the ‘do resembled a
Toni home permanent sent through a wind tunnel after a
burgundy streak job, with one side draped over the other
and held in place by an enormous feathered roach clip;
but Skeeter exclaimed admiringly.
“So how was the trip?” she wanted
to know.
“Aay y’know—love ‘em ‘n’ dump ‘em.”
It seemed that the howler and one
of her loftmates (Crispy J.? no, Muchacha) had planned
to motorcycle clear around the Gulf of Mexico to Club
Med in Cancún; but got no further than the Rio Grande.
“Like I dunno where exactly
we ended up, but ‘Chacha’s still down there, I guess—”
“You left her there?”
“To get the bike fixed! Anyway
she’s got like these cousins or uncles in Matamoros or,
y’know, someplace like that.”
“So how’d you get home?”
“Hitched! It was toTALly awesome,
Skee, I did it topless a lotta the way—went through like
six cases o’ sungoop, ‘n’ had those foggin’ truckers eating
outta my hand. Aay, I almost forgot!—I boosted ya some
awesome bracelets, they’re back at the loft—I think they
might be rully bronze.”
“You robbed some poor Mexican
peddler?”
“Hell no!—got ‘em outta Neiman-Marcus.
Y’need to use like finesse in a store like that—”
“HarrumMPH,” went Peyton.
The howler slid her shades down
a long narrow snoot to inspect him through eyes adorned
by a quarter-pound of purple makeup. They were very young
eyes but immediately recognizable as belonging to a tough
chick, an urban girl, the kind Peyton had first
marveled at on inner-city road trips: eyes that looked
coolly knowing, sharply appraising, insolently challenging,
and provocative beyond the dreams of mortal man.
The tough chick eyes widened; the
urban girl mouth opened.
“Oh m’Gahd, is this him?
He’s so BAWLD!”
Skeeter, beaming elatedly: “Peyton
Derente, meet my friend RoBynne O’Ring.”
“Like ¡buenas tardes!” said
RoBynne, extending a hand festooned with gewgaws on fingers
and wrist. Before Peyton could clasp it, she reached
up to run it over his scalp (“Y’gotta excuse my doing
this”) and then moved very close, treating him to a heady
teenage compound of Giorgio, Aquanet, Tropical Blend tanning
oil, and Bazooka bubble gum.
“Yer like taller than I thought,
y’know? Whatcha doing with Li’l Bit here? Tall dudes
need tall women—”
“Hey! Who are you referring to
as a ‘bit,’ Miss Turketta?”
“WAUGH!!” went RoBynne, prolongedly,
as Skeeter used both hands to pinch plaid Bermuda patootie.
“Aaaayyyy, I was just fooling arowwwwnd!”
“So I saw.”
“And I just got back ‘n’ had my
hair done ‘n’ everything!”
“So consider that your welcome-home-I-love-your-new-‘do
tweak.”
RoBynne, pouting and massaging
her rump, stumbled over Skeeter’s poke lying unattended
on the gritty dusty sidewalk. “Aay! Now yer trying
to tweak my neck, are ya?”
“I didn’t ask you to trip over
my poke with those dominatrix booties of yours!”
“No, and y’weren’t paying any attention
to this ‘poke’ thing o’ yers! Oh m’Gahd, whaddaya
GOT in this thing? It weighs like a cow!”
“Well I guess you’d know
what a cow weighs like—”
“Shaddup, I’m being like serious
here! These’re like mean streets, y’can’t be leaving
yer stuff wherever y’feel like—even if it would
give a purse-snatching dude a hernia!” To Peyton: “Y’gotta
keep yer eye out for this one every minute, else she gets
into all sortsa kindsa trouble!”
“Thank you, Mommy,” said
Skeeter, as RoBynne rehung the poke over her shoulder
with many scolding tuts and clucks. (RoBynne herself
carried a purse no bigger than a sandwich baggie, attached
to what appeared to be a strand of dental floss.)
“So whatcha two doing around here
anyway? Looks like yer dressed to go dancin’.”
“Maybe after the movie—hey Ro,
c’mon with us, we’re going to the Rialto! You know, the
one that’s closing tonight.”
“Closing! The Rialto? Y’mean
like for always? No way!”
St. Mintred’s Rialto Theater was
not some common fleapit but a downtown picture palace
where three generations of friends-and-relations would
go to behold Hollywood extravagance. Offering both a
Wurlitzer and a five-piece orchestra in silent days, providing
lavish intermissions in a lobby decked with gilt mirrors
and crystal chandeliers, the Rialto had enjoyed nothing
but the best for half a century. Recent years, however,
had seen nothing more than tits ‘n’ laffs of the Porky’s
ilk. Where once The Sound of Music had played,
the likes of Screwballs now held sway.
Though not after tonight. Preservationists
were intent on preventing the Rialto’s demolition; its
exterior was a prime example of what Peyton called “Renaissance
Revival, or terra cotta a-go-go”—façades encrusted with
all manner of cartouches and filigrees, pilasters and
architraves and caryatids with arms outflung. But even
if the landmark folk could save it from the wrecking ball,
the Rialto might never be more than an ornate ghost looming
over the corner of 5th and Pabst—a baroque derelict, like
so much else in St. Mintred.
For its last picture show, a final
vulgarity appeared to be on the marquee:
“Risky Business!” squawked
RoBynne. “But we seen this already, like twice.”
“Hey!” said Skeeter, “you can’t
get too much of that Tom Cruise kid dancin’ in his jockeys.”
“Oh yeah! (heh heh)—” snortled
Ms. O’Ring.
So Peyton forked over for three
tickets instead of two.
Inside, the girls went bopping
off to check out the Ladies and find even the toilet paper
dispensers on the verge of shutdown: nothing available
but single-ply, and that only one square at a time.
The famous Rialto lobby was already
partly dismantled, though some of this was masked by blownup
photos of the theater in its heyday, or stills from movies
celebrated in bygone times. Beside a classic shot of
W. C. Fields, they found Peyton chatting with an elderly
man in a creaky tuxedo.
“You shouldn’t’ve had to pay your
way in, Mr. Peyton. I want you to be my guest.”
“Nonsense, Mr. Lombardi; it’s matinee
pricing.”
“That’s so. That’s so. No more
than it should be for such a picture—boys turning their
family home into a bordello, while their parents are out
of town! You got to wonder what sort of people make films
like that.”
“Fiends in human form, Mr. Lombardi.”
“I’d say you’re right, Mr. Peyton.
Yes, I’d say you’re right. Even so, I’m sorry you can’t
stay for the 10:15 show, I’ve planned a little ceremony…
but I know you’re busy. You’re busy. At least allow
me to offer you refreshments. Whatever you like, on the
house—and your young friends too, of course,” he added
as the girls joined them.
“You don’t know the extent of your
generosity, Mr. Lombardi,” said Peyton.
“Eh! I’ve got no use for it after
tonight. You’ll be doing me a kindness,” said Mr. Lombardi.
His rheumy eyes glanced from haltertop to spaghetti straps.
“It’s good to see you being like your old self again,
Mr. Peyton. Try to enjoy the picture.”
“What a nice old man,” said Skeeter.
“Whatever we like, on the house—that means we can go sit
in the balcony, right?”
“I think the balcony’s closed—”
“So we’ll have it all to ourselves!—you,
‘your old self again,’ and the two of us! I’ll run up
and grab three or four seats in the front row—you people
bring the food—remember all my favorites—and that it’s
all free!—get extra of everything!—”
ZAP, FLASH, and Skeeter was gone.
“Ain’t she cute,” said RoBynne
O’Ring.
“She is,” said Peyton, severely.
“Aay, I mean it! I love Skeeter,
she’s like my very best friend! But y’notice she’s
left us to do all the foggin’ lugwork.”
Which she had. RoBynne graciously
offered to share packmule duties, loading Peyton with
a vast array of semi-stale edibles and volunteering to
carry all the beverages.
“Three drinks’re like nothin’—I
was a carhop one summer at the Retro Rocket Drive-in,
y’know like on roller skates? So for me just three’s
way easy. Look—see?”
Peyton looked and saw her cradling
a root beer, Sprite, and strawberry slushee in the crook
of one arm, with the other outflung caryatid-style. Posing
in front of a blownup still of Louise Brooks looking exquisitely
hardboiled.
As did RoBynne.
As felt Peyton, tearing
his eyes away from beguilement and taking care to precede
her up the sweeping marble staircase beyond the Balcony
Closed sign.
“Ew, I like those, they’re
soooo bitchen.”
“What are?” asked Peyton, nearly
spilling his vast array when RoBynne slid a hand into
the back pocket of his oversized yellow slacks.
“Bananarama! Such a gnarly color.”
He glared down at her. “I don’t
keep my wallet there, if that’s what you’re looking for—”
“Guess yer just glad to see me
then,” she snortled urbanely.
And indeed Priapus, that most Pavlovian
of gods, was going Hello-o-o, Hepzibah! as they
entered the Rialto balcony. Which, though even less intact
than the lobby, still seemed able to withstand Skeeter’s
bouncing around the front row.
“What’d I tell you?” she hollered
at them. “All to ourselves! Why, we could get up to
just about anything up here, couldn’t we? Drinks are
on you two! So what took you so long? Hey is this all
you could carry? Should you go back for more?”
“Y’know what we call jockstraps
where I come from?” RoBynne asked Peyton, loudly.
“…I haven’t the foggiest—”
“HOOD ornaments!”
“Where do you come from?”
asked Skeeter, playing stooge.
“Oh, ‘bout six blocks thataway—”
(Shriek/howl of laughter.)
So: front row center. Taking
a once-plush velvet seat and using a heavy vat of popcorn
to subdue Mr. Priapus, Peyton handed out the rest of the
edibles and accepted his root beer from RoBynne. She
took the seat to his left, swinging her long sleek legs
onto the balcony rail; while Skeeter, settling into the
seat to Peyton’s right, grabbed her Sprite and asked,
“How’d you get started talking about jockstraps? Or do
I not want to know?”
“Aay, one thing like leads to another.”
“Oh, it does, hunh?”
“Yeah—like, I got the perfect
topping for that popcorn!”
She reached into her sandwich-baggie,
brought out a can of Hershey’s syrup, and removed its
plastic lid.
“Here, Peyton, lemme show ya… popcorn
tastes so good dunked in chocolate… lots
better’n caramel…—mmmmmmm—oh, like, I am so SHUwure,
Skeeter! Whyncha have ‘em shine a foggin’ spotlight on
it already?”
Peyton turned in some alarm and
found that Skeeter, rearing up to stretch her own little
legs to the railing, had extended her lower torso well
past the point of camouflage.
“Y’know,” RoBynne mused, “I hear
they like invented other color underpants—”
“—shut up—”
“—besides candy-apple red—”
“—shut up! Nothing neither of
you haven’t admired before,” said Skeeter, rearranging
her skirt.
(Another snortle from Ms. O’Ring.)
“Hey! You’re just jealous ‘cause
I have an ass!”
“I have
an ass!! I do SO have an ass!!! Whaddaya
think you were pinching just now?!”
“Well it was so flat and
skinny and fleshless, I couldn’t be sure—”
RoBynne leaned across and started
swatting her with the syrup can, till Peyton let it be
known that he would brook no more of this nonsense.
“Okay, I apologize,” said Skeeter.
“You DO so have an ass. Peyton, say something nice about
RoBynne’s bottom.”
RoBynne promptly laid her Aquanetty
head on his shoulder. “Yeah, please! If a man
says it, I’ll believe it. I was, like, a rully late bloomer,
‘n’ I’m still kinda sensitive—”
“Course you are, the way I pinch
heinies,” said Skeeter.
To forestall further swattage,
Peyton gallantly observed that RoBynne had bloomed very
fully; for which she planted a Bazooka-flavored peck on
his cheek as the house lights dimmed.
“Hey, I heard that! Just keep
your lips to yourself, Turketta!”
“Aay, like, share ‘n’ share alike,
Tweety!”
“The film’s starting,” Peyton observed.
The dream is always the same.
He had grown accustomed to Skeeter’s
moviewatching commentaries, but now got one in stereo:
both girls a-gurgle over babyfaced Joel, cooing that he
could join them in the shower and scrub their
backs whenever he wanted.
Whisper from the left: “Did Tweeter
over there ever tell ya ‘bout the time me ‘n’ her took
a shower together?… ‘n’ got so into it, y’know, pushing
‘n’ shoving, that we had this rully bitchen water fight?…
‘n’ yanked down the shower rod ‘n’ curtain ‘n’ everything?…”
From the right: “What’s all that
whispering about?”
From the screen: “Old Time Rock
& Roll.”
From the left: “(Heh heh)—I was
just saying that dancin’ with no pants on’s the only
way to dance.”
From the right: no reply.
For the center: disquiet then,
for awhile.
The girls continued to dip into
the popcorn vat, dunk into the syrup can, and occasionally
feed him a chocolate-coated kernel. But they did this
without squabbling, even taking turns to feed Peyton,
so that he was soon able to unbend (despite the sharpnailed
fingers in his mouth) and pay more attention to the movie.
And its continuity: Why would
Joel leave the beautiful call-girl Lana alone in his house
while he went to the bank to cash the bond to get the
$300 to pay for his night of unbridled carnality—other
than to give Lana the opportunity to swipe Joel’s mother’s
Steuben glass egg and so set the rest of the storyline
in motion?
No matter; suspend that disbelief.
Let’s pretend that young Joel might actually progress
from being chased by Guido the Killer Pimp to “dealing
in human fulfillment” on the home-bordello level, to “making
love on a real train” (who was Joel to say no?) to the
electrodynamic sounds of Tangerine Dream.
Time of your life, hunh kid?
Yes; no; maybe.
Mesmerizing imagery.
As the train flashes to and fro,
and Lana undergoes strobe-lit orgasms onscreen, blooming
very fully as she blends Skeeter’s angelic blue-eyed blonditude
with RoBynne’s coolly calculating urbanity to form a composite,
an amalgam, a condition in the air tonight…
It’s good to see you being like
your old self again…
…and you have the balcony to yourselves,
and what better way to memorialize the Rialto than to
share and share alike, turn and turn about, playing that
most diverting of party games: Two Girls for Every Guy?…
(Joel comes home, whistling fatuously,
to find the place denuded.)
—two girls—
(They stole the goddam house!
They took everything!)
—for every—
(Took a shower together ‘n’
got so into it…)
—cracked egg—
(Nothing neither of you haven’t
admired before…)
—there’s a crack in my egg—
(Let my love open the Box…)
Till, at last, all is darkness
and silence.
And do you know the last line?
Yes, you know the last line: Here
comes a chopper to chop off your head!
—BOOM—