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Authors: Stephen Dixon

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Time to Go (20 page)

BOOK: Time to Go
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“Doesn't sound funny to me and you've come to the right store.” She takes out a tray of jade necklaces. All have gold around or in them, and when I ask the price of two of them, are too expensive.

“I don't want any gold in them, except maybe for the clasp, and these are way too expensive for me.”

“Much too expensive,” my father says.

“I'll show you some a little lower in price.”

“Much lower in price,” my father says.

“Maybe a little lower than even that,” I say.

She puts away the tray she was about to show me and takes out a third tray.

“These seem darker than I want—to go with her blue eyes and kind of pale skin I mean—but how much is this one?”

“You can pick it up,” she says. “Jade doesn't bite.”

“Just the price,” my father says. “But go on, pick it up. You'll see how jade's as cold to feel as it is to look at.”

I pick it up. “It feels nice, just the right weight, and seems”—holding it out—”the right size for her neck.”

“Is she around my height?”

“Five-five.”

“Then exactly my height and this is the size I'd wear.”

“I'm sure it's still too expensive for me.”

She looks at the tag on it, which seems to be in code:
412xT+
. “It goes for three-fifty but I'll make it two-seventy-five for you.”

“Way out of my range.”

“What is your range?”

“You're going to wind up with crap,” my father says, “pure crap. If you have to buy a necklace, go somewhere else. I bet you can get this one for a hundred any other place.”

“Around a hundred, hundred-twenty-five,” I tell her.

“Let me show you these then.”

“Here we go again,” my father says.

“I have to get her something, don't I?” I tell him. “And I want to, because she wants something she can always wear, treasure—that'll remind her of me. That's what she said.”

“Fine, but what's she getting you?”

“How do I know? I hope nothing. I don't want anything. That's what I told her.”

“Oh, you don't want anything to remind you of her?”

“She'll remind me of her. I have her, that's enough, and besides I don't like jewelry.”

“You thinkers: all so romantic and impractical. I wouldn't get her anything if she isn't getting you anything. Listen, I like her, don't misunderstand me: she's a fine attractive girl and you couldn't get better if you tried for ten more years. But tit for tat I say. He who gives, receives, and one should be a receiver and giver both.”

“You're not getting my point. She wants something and I don't. I accept that and I wish you would.”

“Sucker,” he says. “All my boys are suckers. None of them took after me.”

“Some people might say that was an improvement.”

“Stupid people might, just as stupid people might make jokes like you just did. If you took after me you would've been married sooner, had almost grown-up children, a much better job, three times as much income and been much much happier because your happiness would've been going on longer.”

“Look at this batch,” the saleswoman says, putting another tray of jade necklaces on the counter. I see one I like. A light green, smaller beads, nicely strung with string, no gold on it except the clasp. I hold it up. “I like this one.”

“Hedge, hedge,” my father says. “Then ask the price and offer her half.”

“How much is it?” I ask her.

“A hundred-ten.”

“Fifty-five or sixty—quick,” my father says.

“Sounds fair, and this is the first one I really feel good about.”

“That's the only way to buy. Janine,” she says to a younger saleswoman, “would you try this on for this gentleman?”

Janine comes over, smiles and says hello to me, undoes the top two buttons of her blouse and starts on the third.

“It's not necessary,” I say.

“Don't worry,” the older woman says. “That's as far as I'll let her go for that price.”

Janine holds the necklace to her neck and the older woman clasps it behind her. “Feels wonderful,” Janine says, rolling the beads between her fingers. “This is the one I'd choose of this box—maybe even out of all the boxes despite the more expensive ones.”

“Who are you working for, him or me?”

“No, it really feels great.”

“Don't fall for their patter,” my father says. “Sixty-five—go no higher. She says seventy-five, say ‘Look, I'm a little short what with all my wedding expensives and all, can't you take the sixty-five—the most seventy?' But you got to give them an excuse for accepting your offer, and no crying.”

“How much is this one again?” I ask her.

“One-ten,” the older woman says, “but I'll make it a hundred.”

“That's just fine. I didn't mean to bargain down, but if you say it's a hundred, fine, I'll take it.”

“Idiot,” my father says. “You could've had it for seventy easy.”

“Terrific. Janine, wrap it up special as a prewedding gift. Cash or charge, sir?”

“You'll take a check?”

“Janine, I don't know this guy, so check his references. If they're okay, let him pay by check. Thank you, sir. What about calling Michaels now?” she says to a man at the end of the counter and they go in back. I take out my wallet.

My father sits in a chair next to the guard. “My son,” he says to him. “Nothing like me. Never learned anything I ever taught him and I tried hard as I could. He could've been much more successful if he'd listened. But he was stubborn. All my children were stubborn. Neither of my girls had the beauty of their mother and none of my sons the brains of their dad. Health you'd think they'd have had at least, but they didn't even have that. Oh, this one, he's healthy enough—strong as an ox. But two I lost to diseases, boy and a girl, and both in their twenties, which was hard for my wife and I to take, before I went myself. So, there you have it. And I hope his bride likes his present. He's paying enough. Though why he doesn't insist on getting something in return—hint on it at least if he doesn't want to insist—or at least insist her family pay for the wedding, is a mystery as much to you as to me. To everyone including his bride, who I admire—don't think I was just buttering him up there—he says he's too old to have anyone but him pay for the wedding, and she makes it worse by praising him for what she calls his integrity. Make sense to you? Doesn't to me. Since to me integrity is great in its place but is best when it pays. All of which is why I hound him the way I do—for his benefit and his only. So. Think it'll stay as nice out as it is? Ah, what's the difference?”

I get off the train from Baltimore, get on the subway for upper Broadway, suddenly my father's in the car standing beside me. “Welcome home,” he says. “You still going through with giving her that present and making the wedding all by yourselves? Anything you say. I won't interfere. I can only tell you once, maybe three times, then you have to finish digging your own grave.”

“If that's really the last time, fine by me,” and I go back to reading my book.

“Just like when you were a boy. You didn't like what I said, you pretended I wasn't there. But I'm here all right. And the truth is, in spite of all the mistakes you made with your life and are still making, I'm wishing you all the luck in the world. You were okay to me at the end—I won't deny it. I can't—who could I to?—the way you took care of me when I was sick—so I suppose I should be a little better to you now. Am I right? So do you want to be not only family now but good friends? If so, let's shake like friends. We kissed a lot when you were young—in fact, right to when I went and then you to me a few seconds after that, which I don't think if the tables were turned you would've got from me—but for a first time let's just shake.”

The car's crowded. Late afternoon Christmas shoppers returning home but not the rush hour riders yet. I'm squeezed right up to him. “Look,” I say, “we can talk but don't remind me of how sick you were. I don't want to think of it now. I will say I respected you for a lot of things in your life, especially the way you took the discomfort and pain then, something I told you a number of times but I think you were too out of it to understand me. But you also have to realize, and which I maybe didn't tell you, how much you screwed me up, and I allowed you to screw me up—whatever the causes or combination of them. I've worked out a lot of it, I'll try to work out the rest, but no real complaints from me for anything now for I'm going through absolutely the best time in my life.”

“Good, we're friends,” and he shakes my hand.

I get off at Magna's stop. Today began my school's winter break.

I head for the revolving exit gate at the end of the platform. A boy of about sixteen's between me and the woman exiting in front of him. But he's hesitating, looking around and behind him, at me, the downtown platform across the tracks, the woman who's now through the gate and walking upstairs, back at me sullenly. I don't know whether to walk around him or go to the other end of the platform and the main exit. Maybe I'm wrong. He might just be an angry kid who's hesitating now because he doesn't know which exit to take, this or the main one. I walk past him but keep my eyes on him. As I'm stepping backwards into the gate he turns to me, sticks his left hand into his side jacket pocket and thrusts it at me, clamps his other hand on my shoulder and says “Give me all your money.” I say “What? What?” and push backwards and revolve around the gate to the other side and he has to pull his hand away or get it caught between the bars.

“Hey, wait,” and he revolves around the gate after me, rips the satchel off my shoulder and runs upstairs. It has the necklace, my writings, student papers, a framed drawing I bought for Magna, some clothing. The boy's already gone. I yell upstairs “Police, police, catch that kid with my satchel—a canvas one,” as I chase after him. On the sidewalk I say to that woman “Did you see a boy running past?” and she says “Who?” but he's nowhere around. A police car's across the street and I run to it. The policemen are in a luncheonette waiting for their takeout order. I go in, say “I'm not going to sound sensible to you, believe me, but I was just robbed, he might've had a gun or knife in his pocket, a kid, boy, around sixteen with a gray ski cap on his head with the word ‘ski' on it, down in the subway exit there, he took my satchel with some valuable things in it and then ran upstairs. I'm sure if we—” “Come with us,” one of them says and we rush outside and are getting in their car when the counterman raps on the luncheonette window and holds up their bag of food. “Later,” the policeman shouts out his window as we drive off.

We drive around and don't find the boy. The policeman says “There are so many young thieves wearing the outfit you described. Parka jacket, fancy running sneakers, hat sort of extra tall and squeezed on top, sometimes with a pompom, sometimes not. Tough luck about your necklace and painting though.”

“I could've told you,” my father says, seated beside me. “Fact is, I told you—a thousand times about how to be wise in New York, but you always got your own ideas. You think I'd ever exit through a revolving gate when there's no token booth there, even in what they call the better days? That's where they leap on you, trap you against the gate on either side or on the stairs leaving it, but you never want to play it safe. Now you've lost everything. Well, you still got your life and it's not that I have no sympathy for you over what happened, but it seems you were almost asking for it it could've been so easily avoided.”

“Layoff me, will you? I already feel bad enough.” I get out of the car in front of Magna's building. “Thanks, officers.”

“As I say,” my father says, going in with me, “I can understand how you feel. But this one time, since your life depends on it, I wish you'd learn from your mistake.”

I go upstairs and tell Magna about the robbery. My father sits on the daybed she uses as a couch. “Every week closer to the wedding she gets more radiant,” he says. “You got yourself one hell of a catch. She's smart, she's good, she has wonderful parents and she's also beautiful. I don't know how you rate it but I'm glad you did.”

“It had your special present in it,” I tell her, “plus some drawing for you I know he's going to just throwaway. I won't tell you what the special gift is. I'll try to get something like it or close to it. God, I could have killed that kid.”

“That wouldn't have helped,” she says.

“It certainly wouldn't've,” my father says. “Because in the process you could've got killed in his place, and those kids always got ones working with them or friends for revenge. This is what I tell you and hope you'll remember for all time: stay out of other people's business, and if something like a robbery happens to you, shut your mouth and give everything you have. Twice I got held up by gunmen in my dental office and both times my advice worked. They not only didn't harm me but gave me back my empty wallet.”

Magna and I go to the Marriage License Bureau. The line for applications extends into the hallway. “I hate lines,” my father says. “I've always avoided them by calling before to see what time the place opens and then trying to be the first one there.”

“It looks like the line for food stamps,” the woman in front of us says to her mate.

“To me like the one for Welfare,” another woman says. “Unemployment insurance,” Magna says to me. “I've been on them. Didn't want to but had no choice. Have you?”

“Him?” my father says. “Oh, he was too pure to take unemployment. He deserved it too but you know what he did? Refused to even go down to sign up for it. He was living home then and I told him he was crazy. I said ‘I always want you to have a job, but if you're fired from one or laid off, well, you paid for that insurance, so take it.' But him? Always too damn pure. That can work against you as much as it can for. Must've got that trait from his mother, because he certainly didn't get that way from me.”

BOOK: Time to Go
13.05Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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