wanted me to think that she was a person who didnât become infatuated with bad standoffish married men who dressed in leather car coats. But it turned out she was.
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I COULD SEE the dismissal in the corners of Pollyâs eyes. I could see that she was interested in talking to me, interested in knowing an anthologist of minor notoriety, and maybe in being my friend, all that junkâbut that she probably wasnât going to be my girlfriend. And thatâs the thing I wanted. I wanted that little jingly bell in front of the word âfriendâ: girlfriend. Iâm a boyâa boy in his mid-fiftiesâand here is my friend, who is a girl. I wanted to have her next to me when we were walking and to be able to put my arm around her shoulder and draw her to me so that she stumbled a bit, happily, smiling at her stumbling. This was not in the cards.
No book review section can help you with this. No movie, no blog, no self-help book. Nothing helps, because itâs all new. Itâs something two people make up as they go along. I called her up again and told her there was an Indian place I knew where they made memorable fried eggplant balls. Then she laid the truth on me. She told me that she had something going with a somewhat famous literary man, a married man who lived in New York, and it was turning into a terrible ordeal because he probably wasnât ever going to leave his marriage, but there it was and she couldnât escape her feelings, she had to live through them. She even told me who the man was. I looked up some pictures of him. I wonât tell you his name. But there he was in a photograph with his secretive successful smile, wearing a leather car coat. And that was that.
Boy, she was pretty, though. I waggled my Shropshire lad that night.
Six
I âM SITTING in a very small park in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, where I live. There are two branches that face each other across a square of mulch and a weeping fruit tree in the middle. I have a corncob pipe between my middle molars. It has a yellow plastic stem and it was made in Missouri. The tobacco came from Turkeyâit was a special kind of tobacco, said the tobacconist at Federal Cigar, who was apportioning it into plastic bags with zip tops. The reason itâs so special is that it was dried over a smoky fire. In other words, itâs smoked tobacco that you smoke. One bag cost eight dollars, and the corncob pipe cost five dollars. The only thing I donât like about the pipe is that I can taste the yellow plastic of the stem, which has a flavor of Bic pens, and if Iâm going to be chewing on something Iâd rather be chewing on wood. The smoke itself seems to be turning my tongue into a pink tranche of smoked salmon.
Thereâs a protest outside the North Church todayâhigh school kids with a big sign that says âOccupy,â and what theyâre protesting is global warming. What a hopeless cause. The earth has been warming and cooling for a billion years and they want it to stop. Why not protest actions that we can easily end, like the intentional killing of people with missiles in foreign countries? Start small.
One thing that interests me is how long it takes to smoke a pipe. Iâm stoned out of my brain stem right now, and there still seems to be a lot of smoked turkey left in the cob. Fortunately thereâs a strong sideways wind.
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T HIS MORNING Iread some articles on how to get better posture. The best advice I found was to imagine your nipples and then imagine your way four inches down on your rib cage below them and then imagine that two large steel hooks had hooked under two ribs and were pulling you diagonally up toward the sky. When you do this you immediately sit with better posture. And you really have to imagine your own nipples only once, thank God.
I want to improve myself in a dozen ways. But my
Marguerite Henry, Bonnie Shields