Authors: Ioannis Pappos
“I didn't choose this country.”
“You came back,” I said.
“To do my share.”
“Of what? Declassification?”
“Yes.” Erik laughed. “Whatever it takes.”
“And you picked the right hood?” I pressed.
He pushed his plate toward Melissa, who was already eating his chicken bites, and motioned to the waiter for more beers. “I picked the only hood where we can preserve without penalizing the classless,” Erik said.
“So preservation is to blame now?” I smiled.
His manner changed. “
I'm
the journalist, amigo. I didn't say that. I said urban preservation criminalizes poverty. That's how we preserve in this country. We push the poor out of the city.”
“Three more beers! Now!” Melissa yelled, eating with her hands.
I looked at her dirty nails and mustache. Cabs were parked and double-parked on both sides of Ninth Avenue. What if Alkis or Paul walked in at that moment?
“That's the way to do it,” Erik said to Melissa, and I wondered ifâcorrection,
when
âErik would pick up a New York accent.
T
WO WEEKS BEFORE CHRISTMAS, ERIK
told me he was going to Hawaii for the holidays to cover an eco-event and kayak with his brother. He didn't ask me anything about my holiday plans, which were nonexistent.
“Your name is at the airport in Athens,” my sister told me that same week.
If I traveled back to Greece, the army could force me to enlist for a minimum of eighteen months. I'd lose both my job and my American green card. So, once again, my sister and I talked about our never-materializing plan: that I would buy the whole family a trip somewhere in Europe. My father's work, my sister's kids, my mother's health and fear of flying: the trip was always postponed for one reason or another. By 2003 I hadn't seen my family for three years, a period long enough that I could pick up on the pity on colleagues' faces when I had to respond to their query on how long had it been since I'd visited Greece.
“You're choosing comfort and privilege over family,” Paul told me at a conference in downtown Chicago when
I dodged his question about when my next trip to Trikeri would happen.
I was not proud, but I didn't doubt that my choices were right, necessary. “Even globalization has its limits,” I retaliated. “You know better, Paul. You just came back from”âpretending to beâ“surfing in the South Seas.”
He took a sip of his pink cocktail. “You know why I like you?”
“'Cause I used to let you copy my homework?”
“Because you're a white-collar prostitute with a small-village story to sell,” Paul said.
Whatever.
And yet, driving back to Lake Forest by myselfâthe rest of the Commanders on their way to Washington or San FranciscoâI was restless. Paul wasn't from a shitty island. He didn't know what it meant to grow up among a population of two hundred, or what rural life is really like. Not all of us were born to be my father or Jeevan, who spent their lives fishing and fixing boats for tourists like Paul and his friends. Whoever had the luck or the balls to ditch that might actually get to open a savings account, or drink wine that leaves less of a hangover than retsina. I worked for it. I studied, I put in the hours. I deserved it both ways: my family
and
Command. Fuck you Paul,
and
Christmas. And that Friday-night jam.
In my room at the Deer Path Inn, I ordered a steak and called Reception to ask how to get a DVD.
“We have a small collection at the front desk,” the Russian receptionist said. “I can bring it to your room so you can choose.”
“Thank you, but I'll come down in a few,” I said, and hung up.
I took off my shoes and lay on top of my bedspread. I lit a cigarette and dialed my sister from Mrs. Frederick's phone. Now that I'd been gone for a decade, our weekly calls were more or less standard. We would talk about our parents, my nephew and niece, and the new family dog, and then she would thank me for the money I wired on the fifteenth of each month.
I had just made a paper boat out of the Guest Comment Card when my sister told me that a marine patrol had retired our father's fishing boat.
“An ad hoc inspection,” she added, distracted.
“Oh,” I said. “Maybe it is for the best . . .” I stopped midsentence. There was bittersweetness in the sound of my voice.
Then she surprised me: “Are you happy?”
We never got personal, acknowledged our time apart, or talked about our hopes and yearnings.
“Yes,” I managed, turning my paper boat into an ashtray.
“That's good,” she said. There was something aged in her voice.
“It is.”
“Markos started taking English in high school. He wants to study in New York, like you.”
“Well, I went to school in California,” I said, instantly realizing the idiocy of my argument. This wasn't going well. “We have a few years for that one, right?”
“Six,” my sister said.
“That's a long time.”
“It seems that way.”
Was she referring to me? Was this my taxing call, my bill for walking? I took a drag and recalled the night I had found out about my scholarship to study abroad. I ended up at the top of Pelio, the lights from Volos across the bay giving in to the dawn. One of the few moments in my life that I thought I had perfect clarity. I would leave homeâtoo island-isolated, too windy to speak or hear emotionsâand find myself. Learn and gain, even destroyâthe way the Greeks have been rising and falling for three thousand years now. But here I was, thousands of miles away, lured by the Eriks of my new worldâequally muted islandsâby their WASPy heritage, by their dividends. Sure, I was an Associate, I was one of them, but I'd traded my island's silence for that of New England. It was ironic, really; I finally had the balls to talk emotions, but there was no one around who'd listen.
“
Hello?
”
“I'm here,” I said into the receiver. “How about we get Markos a computer for Christmas? So he can practice.”
She took her time. “When do they celebrate Christmas in Brindasi? The same days we do?” she asked.
“It's Brin
di
si,” I said. Since I left Greece, I had never corrected my sister. Our call was becoming unbearable. I fought an impulse to hang up. “Of course they do,” I added.
“Are you drinking enough orange juice?” she asked me.
I left my room for the reception desk in my suit and socks. The Russian woman was alone behind the desk, reading a paperback of
Under the Tuscan Sun
. A DVD folder, open in front of her, had
Pearl Harbor
and
Monsters, Inc
. in its first page.
“A few are out.” She put her book aside. “But most of them should be there.”
“I'm sure I'll find something,” I said. “I just wanna veg, really.”
She smiled. “I know. That's my favorite thing to do after work too. Usually with a movie I've already seen.”
I flipped the page. There was
Lord of the Rings
something,
Chocolat
, an empty holder, and
Erin Brockovich
.
“Are you going to New York for the holidays?” she asked in a harmless Midwestern way.
“Er, not sure.” I concentrated on the folder in front of me. An image of my unfurnished apartment in San Franciscoâthus, my holiday plansâflashed through my mind.
“Oh, you
must
! It's the best time to visit New York. John and I were there last Christmas. We went to three Broadway shows. Have you seen any plays this season?”
“Yes. I mean, no. I mean, only Off-Broadway,” I lied.
“We love that city. The restaurants, the museums . . . We went to Tavern on the Green, where John proposed. It was so romantic. The next day we had brunch at Pastis, in the Meatpacking District. It's so much fun. Have you ever been?”
Work lunches aside, Erik's three-dollar beer and spicy
chicken had been my only wine-and-dines in Manhattan. In fact, west Chelsea was the only neighborhood I knew. I followed its district manager around like a puppet when my base was in the six digits and New York was waking up from its 9/11 and dot-com mourningsâpeople drinking and dining in the four corners of each Manhattan intersection.
“Yes, it's fun,” I agreed. “Couldn't get a table, though.” I flipped one more page, to
Forrest Gump
,
Braveheart
, and
Titanic
. Could these movies be more fucking predictable?
“Have you been to the Guggenheim?” she asked with a scouting look on her face.
Still in my suit, the radiator's heat hitting me, I was nauseated. My only entertainment options, straight from a Dallas/Fort Worth inbound flight, lay in front of me. And this Russian-Midwestern receptionist kept rubbing it in.
“I have a friend there,” I said, loosening my tie.
Her Midwestern smile turned Russian. “A special friend,” she saidâshe didn't ask.
Special alright. I thought of the public hearings that Erik ran and I attended, standing at the back of the room, sometimes straight from the airport after seventy-hour weeks when I didn't know if or when I'd see him again. I wished she'd shut the fuck up.
“I'll take this one.” I took out a disc and closed her stupid folder.
“Oh!” She was surprised. “I love that movie.”
I rushed back to Mrs. Frederick, threw
Forrest Gump
behind
the door and my jacket on the couch, and downed an Ambien with a minibar vodka. It was dawn when I woke up, starving. I found my dinner on the coffee table and had it for breakfast, with my tie still on.
That Saturday I talked Erik into a Los Angeles stopover, where I'd invited myself to spend the holidays with Alkis and his girlfriend.
“We'll be at the Chateau,” Alkis told me from London.
I was puzzled. “Chateau?”
“The Chateau Marmont,” Alkis explained. “Call them soon, they book up fast.”
“What damage are we talking here?”
“You've been on expenses for four months now, you wanker. What on earth are you crying about?”
I hung up and dialed the number he gave me.
“Good morning, Chateau Mar
mont?
” someone answered, practically singing to me. I couldn't tell if it was a man, a woman, or a child.
“Uh, reservations,” I said.
“For the restaurant or the hotel?”
“The hotel.”
“Hold on, please.”
“This is Derek's suite at Chateau Marmont's reservation line. Please leave me a message and I will get back to you.”
I just held the receiver. Derek's voice made me uncomfortable; his busy indifference said I wasn't good enough or something. I hung up.
THE RUSSIAN GAVE ME A
lift to O'Hare, but not before a “long overdue” tour of Lake Forest that in an unwary moment I had accepted. We started from the Inn's own wedding suite, where she pointed out to me a white hart or stag, the Inn's crest. Something that I was “probably familiar with from Alexander the Great.” We drove by Lake Forest College, a fitness center, and Mr. T's or Michael Jordan's residenceâshe wasn't a hundred percent sure whose.
My cell phone flashed Andrea's number.
When I picked up, there was some static. “I'm on my way to Lake Forest,” Andrea said. “Are you at the Deer Something Inn?”
I tried to explain my situation, but she spoke over me. “Stathis, meet me at the Admirals Club at O'Hare in thirty minutes. It's across Gate 8. Terminal 3. I have another call I have to take. I'll see you soon,” she said, and hung up.
FROM A LOOK AROUND THE
Admirals Club, you could tell it was Christmas. Club members and ground staff (one in a red-nosed-reindeer sweater) were in corporate cheer. Andrea waved to me from one of the sofas overlooking the terminal, at the back of the lounge. She wore a wool coat, its red echoed by her lipstick.
“Stathis!” She smiled her bleached teeth to me. “I'm sorry I didn't have a chance to brief you from New York, but everything happened so suddenly,” she said, and threw an Airborne tablet into her Perrier, making a double-bubble drink.
“I was on the phone with our client throughout my flight, so I'm glad I got hold of you.”
Our
client? I tried not to look confused as I sat next to her. Too much perfume. “That's okay. Of course,” I said, warily.
“I'm heading to an off-the-record meeting with your friends in Lake Forest,” she said. “We want to get their metabolics therapeutic area too, but they are already in talks with McKinsey, so we have to act fast.”
I tried to warn her about the bubbles mushrooming above her glass, getting ready to spill all over her laptop, but she was on a roll: “You guys cannot handle both anti-infectives and metabolics by yourselves; we need to beef up the account. I'm getting a team together from Washington.”
“That's good news,” I said.
“It is, isn't it?” she said, flattered, almost flirty.
Andrea wants my validation?
She took a sip from her Airborne-Perrier, which dripped orange from her red lipstick. Then she reached into her reptile-leather briefcase and handed me a folder.
“What is this?” I asked.
“This is what I'm going with for the pitch,” she said busily, checking her phone.
I looked at the folder's title and almost laughed. “Er,” I said, and made myself cough. “This is Command's recommendations to their number-one competitor, from few months ago.”
What's going on here?
I thought. “We're not supposed to even look at this.” Let alone use it.
“It's only directional.” Andrea played with her phone nervously. “Stathis, you're in the service business now. This is leveraging our knowledge bank. It's called
best practices
. It helps our clients.” She started playing with her pearls, 'cause she was fucking lying. This was against Command policy. You can't have teams working for competitors see each other's work. She
knew
that. She finally looked at me. “I just e-mailed you a copy of this deck. Get online, delete the graphs that I have already marked, and change names, of course.” She rolled her eyes. “Just go through the whole thing and treat it with some imagination. I want to leave something behind with them, today. Now, I gotta call Washington. What time is your flight to LA?”
This was fucked up. I wanted to talk to Alkis. “I'm boarding in twenty . . .” I tried.
“No worries. We'll get you upgraded on the next flight out.” She smiled harmlessly, but I had frozen.
“Stathis, this is common practice. We've been using best practices to position our clients for success since long before you joined us. Honestly, if you can't support me on this I'll have to keep that under consideration for the rest of our work in Lake Forest. Where are you staying in LA?”
I leaned back on the sofa to take the situation in. “I think the Chateau Marmont,” I mumbled slowly. “But they are full,” I added quietly. What the fuck was I saying? What the fuck did my hotel have to do with any of this? Crazy bitch.