Book Excerpt:
1975
I recognized
his voice from across the room. When I handed him a menu, he looked up
absent-mindedly and went on talking to some guys, then did a double take.
“Cookie?” he
said.
I tried on
the name like an old article of clothing to see if it still fit. It felt like a
suede fringed jacket. “Yep,” I said.
“Wow. You
look so different.”
“I cut my
hair.”
“Everyone
did.”
“I’m older,”
I said.
“Everyone’s
older.”
“You look
exactly the same,” I said. He was wearing a beat-up leather jacket over a green
T-shirt, maybe the same jacket and T-shirt he had always worn. His thick black
hair was shorter now and curly, skin still tan from summer, small mouth with
perfect teeth. He still looked tough and handsome, but in a creepy way, like
someone you couldn’t trust.
“Cookie, what
the hell are you doing here?”
“I work here.
I’d rather you didn’t call me that. My name is Rachel.”
“I thought
your name was Cookie.”
“Nope. Do
people still call you Rat?”
He laughed.
“Nowadays I go by Joey.”
“Okay, Joey,”
I said, since this was nowadays.
“Miss?” a
voice called from a nearby table. The voice brought me back to where I was
standing, in Diana’s Grotto, a Greek diner on 57th Street, with ten
tables full of customers. For a moment, I had thought I was in Casa Sanchez.
It took me a
while to make it back to Joey’s table. A divinity student had found a fly in
his milkshake, and it wouldn’t have taken so long if I hadn’t made the mistake
of saying, “So, how much can a fly drink?” Like most academics, this guy had no
sense of humor and gave me a lecture on hygiene. It was amazing that knowing as
much about hygiene as he seemed to, he would continue to eat at Diana’s Grotto.
By the time I got back to Joey’s table, the men he had been sitting with were
gone. Off-duty police, from the looks of them, I thought, or plain-clothes. We
got a lot of cops in Diana’s; they slumped on stools at the counter with their
guns hanging from their belts, sucking down free coffee. Back in the sixties,
the sight of their blue leather jackets had always made me nervous, like I’d
committed some crime I’d forgotten about.
“So why are
you working here?” Joey asked. “I thought you were a college girl. A co-ed.” He
flashed his white teeth. “I don’t mean to be nosy.”
“The problem
with college is they make you leave when you finish.”
“And here I thought
it was a permanent gig.”
“Nope.”
“But why
aren’t you doing something a little more—”
“Collegiate?
Don’t ask.” I slid into the booth next to him. From across the room, Nicky, the
maître d’, shot me a poisonous glance. I ignored him. “I like it here.” I
smiled a crazy little smile.
“Hey,
different strokes.” His eyes swept the room, resting on a mural of a white
windmill on an island in the Aegean. The
windmill’s blades were crooked. I remembered this eye-sweep from Casa Sanchez,
where he had always sat facing the door so he could constantly scan the whole
restaurant. His eyes returned to me. “Didn’t I hear a rumor you were supposed
to be getting married? Some guy in California?”
“Just a
rumor. Glad to hear the grapevine still works.”
I felt
someone hiss into my ear. Nicky had slunk up behind me. He looked like a garden
gnome in a plaid jacket and baggy pants, reeking of aftershave that had tried
and failed. “Rose!” he snapped. He never called anyone by their right name.
“What’s in a name?” I always murmured.
“Be right
with you.” I gave him what I hoped was a reassuring smile.
“This is a
classy place,” Joey said as Nicky ambled away.
“He’s the
owner’s brother-in-law.”
“Diana?”
“There is no
Diana. She’s a mythological figure.”
“Like
Hendrix?”
“Kind of.”
“Hey, you
want to have a drink after work?”
“Actually, I
don’t drink any more.”
“You want to
come watch me drink? What time do you get off?”
“Nine thirty. You could come help me fill the ketchups.”
“What?”
“You know,
take the empty Heinz bottles and pour cheap generic ketchup in them.”
“Sounds like
fun, but why don’t you meet me at Bert’s? Back room?”
I thought for
a moment. This did not seem like a good idea, but I didn’t care. “Okay, why
not. So, can I get you anything?”
“Just
coffee.”
“You want a
side of taramasalata with it? It’s made from fish roe.”
“I’ll pass,
thanks.”
When I
brought him his coffee, he said, “You’re still a hell of a waitress, Cookie.”
“You’re still
a hell of a waitress, Rachel.”
“Whatever.”
“Thanks,” I
said.
No comments:
Post a Comment