RACHEL SPARK
1999
Dirk or
Derrick or Dick
My mother is sick at home, and I am downtown, full of
beer, kissing a long-haired man in the pizza place next door to Ruby’s
Room.
His name is Dirk or Derrick or Dick.
I make a mental note to find out which one before I let his hand into
my skirt.
I met him at the bar next door less
than an hour ago.
His hands are huge, one of them making
its way to my blouse’s top button.
It’s early May, and even at this
late hour the Southern California heat is something to talk about.
“It’s hot,” he’d
said at the bar, fanning himself with one of those hands.
I watched the long fingers flip back
and forth in front of his face. “You’d never even know
it was night,” I said.
“Too many people in here breathing
all at once,” he said. “Want to go next door?”
I shook my head no, but smiled at him.
“You’re ambivalent,”
he said.
“I’m not,” I said,
turning away from him and looking out the front door. A girl with
pink hair held a cigarette, leaned against a streetlight, and a skinny
boy stood next to her, pulling on her sleeve. She brushed his hand
off and shook her head. I turned back to Dirk or Derrick or Dick,
who now spoke with a rubber band between his lips and was using both
hands to gather his hair behind his head. “You know them?”
he mumbled.
“No,” I said.
He pulled the band from his mouth and
put his hair back in a ponytail. Several dark strands fell into his
face and he pushed them away. “Come on, let’s go,”
he said.
“Ecco’s?” I wavered.
He nodded.
“Isn’t it closed at this
hour?”
“I work there.” He picked
up a set of keys that had been sharing a napkin with his beer.
“No, really, I can’t,”
I said.
It is my mother’s first reoccurrence of breast
cancer, a pesky piece of disease showing up in her hip, appearing
two Sundays ago as an annoying limp, nothing more, no pain, just a
slight shift to the left, an inability to find balance in her body
which has become increasingly unruly.
My mother, on her way to the high school
where she’s been teaching twelfth grade English for the past
twenty years, wobbled out the front door on Monday with her book bag
over her shoulder, wondering out loud, What is this limping about?
When she returned home, we sat together
on the couch—my mother full of optimism, me full of denial—and
discussed the possibilities: arthritis, muscle strain, perhaps even
osteoporosis. Maybe she’d broken her hip and didn’t even
know it. “It happens,” I said. Wasn’t there some
distant cousin who’d done just that? We pitched diseases against
each other—feeble bones and constant joint pain nothing, when
compared to what was actually happening.
Exactly how I changed my mind and ended up in the pizza
place with Dirk or Derrick or Dick, I’m not exactly sure. I
know my best friend Angela had run into an old boyfriend on her way
to the bathroom and never returned to her stool. I know there were
several tall glasses of cold beer involved, and I know that my new
pal was talking about breast cancer, his mother sick too, good God,
dying on some farm in the middle of Maine, and then an impassioned
speech, by me, of course, about living in the moment, carpe diem,
and all of that hooey.
Now, we’re in the back of the
restaurant, in the kitchen—my ass exactly where the pies had
been earlier, where this man, all perfect torso and bad teeth, had
stood in his white shirt and funny square hat, pounding the dough
and spreading tomato sauce and sprinkling cheese and proudly scattering
little rounds of pepperoni on five pies at once. The two of us are
as ferocious and unconcerned about public safety as cancer itself,
holding on and moving and panting and kissing and sucking like we
are each other’s much needed medicine, like we are the experimental
treatment that might finally work.
Bare-chested in his boxers, he slips
his hands inside my blouse, holds my breasts like they are the first
and last breasts in the world, and all I keep thinking about is how
breasts are the enemy, armed, dangerous, two ticking bombs, how my
mother’s are killing her right this moment and he of all people
should be afraid of them, should refuse them, slip them back inside
the black bra from whence they came, but oh, oh, maybe Dirk’s
or Derrick’s or Dick’s thoughts are better, more accurate
and optimistic than mine—his lips and tongue and heat, they
certainly feel better.
His fingers are making their way into
my tights when I say, “Spell your name.”
“Huh?”
“Please,” I say.
“You don’t know my name?”
“Just spell it.”
His name is Dirk. He spells it for me.
“D-I-R-K,” he says, rolling his pretty brown eyes.
“Dirk,” I say.
“Your name is Rachel Spark.”
“First and last—impressive.”
“You teach, right? Your eyes are
green and you’ve got one dimple, on the left side of your face.”
“Now you’re just showing
off.”
Dirk reaches behind him and lets his ponytail free in one swift pull.
“What about you?” I ask.
“Story’s messy,” he
says.
“And sad?”
He nods and his hair falls to his bare
shoulders. He looks at me and leans in. “Your mother is sick,”
he says quietly.
I reach for his chest. “D-I-R-K,”
I say. “Dirk,” I whisper into his neck.
He collects old cars and toasters. He owns two Studebakers,
a Nash, and a Sunbeam. He’s thinking about buying a Triumph;
there’s one for sale on Fourth and Cherry. He owns more than
one toaster that’s older than his great-grandfather. “I’ve
got a Triple Banger worth over five grand,” he says, beaming.
A lot of vehicles, plenty of places
to stick his sliced bread, but no home; Dirk lives in a shack behind
the restaurant and bar. He uses the bathroom and sink in the restaurant
when he wants to wash up. It’s been this way for months and
he doesn’t remember the last time he paid rent.
“I couldn’t live like that,”
I say.
“It’s fine,” he says.
“It’s convenient. I practically live at my work—who
wouldn’t like to do that?”
I picture myself living in a tent on
campus. “Me,” I say.
Earlier tonight I sat with my mother on her bed, sharing
one phone. Our skulls knocked, our ears touched, and neither of us
would let go of the receiver. “I’ll hold it,” I
said. “I’ve got it,” I whispered. “So do I,”
she whispered back. Reluctantly, we decided to share.
The doctor’s voice was upbeat
and straining to remain so, even when the words came: metastasis,
diameter, radiation, and maybe some more chemo.
“Oh well,” my mother said
when we’d hung up. She was smiling. “We know now what
we’re up against.”
“Yeah,” I said.
“I feel better,” she continued,
standing up. “It’s good to know what we’re dealing
with.” She paused. “And I didn’t want osteoporosis
anyway.”
I shook my head.
“He said that there’s a
chance…”
“What now?” I said.
“A few zaps of radiation and I’ll
be fine, Rachel. Don’t get all dramatic on me. Don’t look
at me like that.”
“Like what?”
“Like I’m disappearing,”
she said. “I’m still here.”
“I know,” I said.
“It’s just my hip,”
she continued. “No one ever died from a sore hip—do you
know anyone who ever died because of such a thing?” She picked
up a blouse from her dresser and held it in front of her face, checking
for wrinkles. “Do you think I can wear this one more time?”
she asked me.
“Probably,” I said.
“Worry if it goes to my liver.
They say that’s when you’re supposed to worry.”
My mother opened her closet and took out some hangers. She set the
hangers on the bed next to me, holding on to one of them.
“That would be worrisome, yes,”
I said.
“They say you’ve got to
fight. You’ve got to be strong.”
“Okay, okay,” I said, annoyed.
“They say a good attitude makes
a big difference.” She had the blouse on the hanger now and
was putting it in the closet. Her back was to me.
“You have a good attitude,”
I said. “And it’s reoccurred—what’s your good
attitude done for you?”
“Well, they say—”
“Who are they?”
I said.
“You know, them,”
she said.
“Oh, them,” I said
angrily. “Let’s certainly listen to them. The invisible
them.”
Dirk’s shack has a metal roof and a little metal
door that he holds open for me. I stand leaning, torso forward, with
my boots half in and half out, peering in, until Dirk insists with
a gentle nudge of his hip that I move inside. He uses a flashlight
to show me around. I get most of the tour standing in one spot. He
has cats, three of them. Two look out at me from under a table, four
glowing eyes, and one circles Dirk’s pant leg. He’s got
an old mattress on the floor he calls a bed. There are toasters lined
up on shelves like fat silver books. “Check them out,”
he says.
I step past Dirk and the cat. I bend
down and feign interest. “Wow,” I say. “Nice,”
I tell him.
Yes, he is thirty-six, but he’s
been grieving—for nearly ten years. It’s pathetic, sure,
but behavior that I recognize and can empathize with—the inability
to move on, get on with things, foreseeable in my own future. In addition
to the dying mother, Dirk had two sisters who’d come to visit
him in California eight years ago and were killed in a car accident.
It was Thanksgiving and the three of them were on their way to Palm
Springs to visit an uncle. Somewhere near that ridiculous dinosaur
on Route 5 a woman swerved into their lane and killed the girls instantly.
Dirk survived with a scratch on his forehead, a bruised hip, and a
twisted toe. So, because of this, I’m guessing, he didn’t
finish college and he’s never held a decent job, and once, he
wants me to know, he lived for three months without a working toilet.
This is all wonderful news and if, in my drunk and needy state, I’d
had any intention of seeing Dirk again, the confessions are dimming
the possibility, especially the bit about living without a toilet.
“I need to get going,” I
say, stepping outside.
“Now?” he says.
I look at my watch. “It’s
after three.”
He shrugs.
“I’ve got a class tomorrow.”
“Let’s sit on the curb and
look at the moon—it’s full,” he says.
“No, I—”
“What time’s your class?”
he interrupts.
“One-thirty—but I’ve
got to prepare,” I say.
“Sure,” he says, doubtful.
“I told you that earlier, remember?”
“But the moon’s full,”
he says.
“It’ll be full again,”
I say.
In the alley Dirk holds my hand and
leads me toward the Studebaker—a big, ridiculous car. Salmon
pink. He painted it himself, he wants me to know, when his girlfriend
threw him out.
He leans down and puts the key in. “Color’s
classic—titty pink,” he says, smiling, opening the door.
“It’s the only door that works,” he tells me, “and
sometimes it gets jammed—then I’ve got to use the window.”
He climbs over the passenger seat and emergency brake, and sits huffing
behind the wheel. He pats the seat next to him. “Come on,”
he says.
We drive up Pine Avenue and down Broadway
and he chats about the toasters. He loves that Triple Banger and his
Toasterlater Model #7, which is one of the most unusual toasters made,
he informs me. It has a saw-tooth conveyor belt that jiggles the toast
through and a porthole for viewing progress.
“Does it make good toast?”
I ask.
“Hell no,” he says.
“No?”
“It’s a merciless burner.”
I laugh. “What about the porthole
for viewing progress?”
“It doesn’t matter.”
“You’d think it would matter,”
I say, getting serious. “If you could see the bread burning
you’d think you could save it.”
He shakes his head.
“I mean, the bread’s moving
along and you’re watching it, right?”
“Right.”
“Push stop, hit a button, do something.”
“Not that simple.”
At a red light we sit silently. “Oh
yeah,” he says, remembering, “there’s even a darker/lighter
control switch that adjusts toast travel speed in seven increments—but
still you’re left with a charred mess.”
“It’s green.”
“What?”
“The light,” I say.
Dirk pushes the gas pedal and we lurch
forward.
“Make a right here,” I say.
He turns onto Ocean Boulevard. “What
do you teach again?”
“Writing.”
“Journalism, that kind of thing?”
“No.”
“What then?”
“Poetry workshops.”
“Where?”
“At the University.”
“Damn,” he says. “A
professor—you don’t act like a professor.”
“Maybe not,” I say.
“I thought maybe you taught high
school—maybe grade school, but college, huh? A professor,”
he says again, clicking his tongue.
“A lecturer actually.”
“What’s the difference?”
he asks.
“Never mind,” I say wearily.
“I’m tired,” I say.
In front of my mother’s high-rise
he turns off the engine. We look at each other. “Must be nice
to live on the ocean,” he says.
“I like the way it sounds more
than anything,” I say. “I mean, looking at it is fine,
but listening is the best.”
“I went surfing once,” he
says.
“Just once?”
“Sometimes that’s all there
is—the one time,” Dirk says, leaning toward me.
I kiss his face and neck. I touch his
hair, which smells of sweat and tomatoes and yeast. “Good night,”
I tell him.
“Yeah,” he says.
“Good luck with the Triple Banger
and Toasterlater #7.” I turn to the door and try the handle.
It won’t budge. I try it again, then again. For a moment it
is funny, a woman like me, a teacher, a writer, stuck in a pink Studebaker
with a toaster-collecting man like him—and then it isn’t
funny, and I am pounding on the door, wanting suddenly to get out
of there, wanting to get to my mother’s apartment, up the elevator
and down the hall, into her room and warm sheets. Suddenly I want
to hold my sick girl more than anything, and I begin to whimper.
Dirk is nervous, saying, “Shh,
wait, sometimes the door jams, remember?” He reaches over me
and rolls down the window.
“Fuck,” I say.
He gently nudges my thigh.
“No,” I tell him.
“It’s easy,” he says.
“I’m not climbing out that
window,” I say stubbornly.
“Come on,” he says.
“I can’t, I don’t…”
“I’m sorry—about the
door, I mean. I wish it worked.”
“So do I.”
“When it’s just me—I
climb in, I climb out—sometimes I use the window without even
checking the damn door. You can do it.”
“Don’t tell me what I can
and can’t do.” I am crying now and shaking my head.
“It’s okay.”
“It’s not—it’s
too damn much.”
“I won’t look,” he
says. “I’ll face the building across the street. Pretend
that you’re alone,” he says.
“I am alone,” I
say.
“I’ll cover my eyes. See?”
he says through open fingers.
I make him turn around. I make him promise.
I make him keep his hands in front of his face, those fingers closed,
and then I take a deep breath, and hoist my leg, one black boot, then
the other, moving my hips and torso and shoulders and head out of
the car’s window and into the night, making my way back to her.