After their host went to bed, the four guests sat around the dining room table a little while longer, and then decided to hit the sack themselves, the “sack†in this case being three single-bed mattresses placed side-by-side, amply covered over so there wouldn’t be any gaps.
But since nose-ring took up much of it, the fizzy one retreated to the couch.
The porcine-looking one wanted to cuddle, and so cuddled with walrus-face.
The snow had stopped falling, although one could see through the windows that it was very cold out there.
The moon, the stars, and the blinking light atop the William Rivers Pitt, and that there were no coverings on the windows, and further that the walls of the living room were mostly enormous windows, made it not quite totally dark, but the porcine-looking woman was uncomfortable anyway.
“I’m scared,†she said, cuddling even tighter to walrus-face. “I’m scared. We shouldn’t be here. That framed picture of George and Barbara Bush over on the wall there bothers me.
“And that cross, hanging over the thermostat; this guy’s a freaking Christie, a fundie.
“I should’ve never left Tucson to chase my dream.
“I’d feel better down there with my luvvie Dave, my huggie-bundie Dave.
“My soft cuddly teddy-bear Dave.â€
The nose-ring, tired of her whining, smacked her on the side of her head, knocking her out, enabling everybody to get to sleep.
- - - - - - - - - -
About 3 a.m., the host got up to go into the kitchen and put the turkey in the oven; about an hour later, while he was bending over eyeballing the turkey in the oven, he sensed a shadow in the semi-darkened kitchen, and stiffened; oh my God, I hope it’s not the nose-ringed one, he thought. Or worse, the porcine-looking one wanting to cuddle.
He relaxed when he stood up and turned around; it was only the fizzy one, standing at the doorway, staring.
It being too late to establish eye-contact, as hers were riveted on something else, he instead nonchalantly walked over to the kitchen table and took a cigarette and the lighter. The lighter must’ve been low on fluid, as he shook it vigorously, but the flame wouldn’t stay lit. Giving up, he walked back to the stove and turned on a burner to light the cigarette.
Well, he thought to himself, at least she’s only surprised, not offended.
And besides, with her short-cropped hair, it was easy to “see†her as just another guy, no big deal.
He decided to play it cool. He pointed to the faraway door to the bathroom, thinking that’s what she wanted, but it wasn‘t.
“So…..†he said, “I hope you slept well. I’m sorry for the rough accommodations, but it beats sitting in a car.â€
That didn’t elicit a response, so he pointed out, “As soon as this turkey’s done in here, we’re going to start the one for our dinner, unless you think it’s a good idea to roast them both at once.â€
She wasn’t hearing him.
“At least the snow’s stopped,†he said, looking out the window. Crossing his arms over his chest so the hands touched the shoulders opposite, he added, “But brrr, it’s still pretty cold out there.â€
He walked over to the coffee-maker on the counter, only a couple of feet away from her. “However, you being from Colorado, you’re probably more used to it than we are here.
“Want some?†he asked, pulling out a second cup. She nodded, but didn’t say anything.
He gave her the cup, and pointed to the cream on the table across the room. She went over there and sat down. He followed her to get a second cigarette, and then went and stood by the stove, facing her, his arms crossing his chest.
“I figure what’s going to happen,†he said, “is that one of the mechanics from town’ll come out, oh, about three o’clock, to drag your car out and look at the damage. If it’s only a flat tire, he’ll probably fix it on the spot, but if it’s a bent tie-rod too, he’ll have to drag it into town to the garage.
“He keeps a full supply of parts on hand, and it shouldn’t, at the most, take more than a couple of hours, and then you can be on your way to the big city.â€
He decided to smear more butter on the carcass in the oven, but when he bent over in front of the opened door, the warmth blasting out swelled him, and so he quickly turned, so she wouldn’t see. Slamming the door shut, he sidled over to the counter and looked out the window, his back turned to her.
“It’s not quite ready for more butter,†he said, after which passed half a minute or so of silence.
- - - - - - - - - -
“Why are you naked?†she finally asked.
It now being safe to turn around, he shrugged.
“I’m sorry,†he said. “Since it was so early, I didn’t think anybody would be up. It’s purely an accident, not meant to happen. But what’s been seen can’t be unseen, so…..here we are.
“Does it bother you?†he asked. “I mean, I’m not going to touch you or anything, and I’m outnumbered and outweighed by the four of you. I can guarantee I’ve got no malicious motives.â€
No, it didn’t bother her, she said; “Your house, your rules.â€
He heaved a sigh of relief. She didn’t feel threatened, which was the last thing he wanted.
However, he was somewhat discombobulated that she gave no suggestion she’d be more comfortable if he went and put something on. It was if she found it interesting, which was another last thing he wanted.
“Well, it
is interesting,†she said; “I’ve never seen a naked Republican before.â€
In an exaggerated act of feigned shock and dismay, he crossed his hands over his front part, acting surprised to find they wouldn’t cover it all.
“I sleep this way, but usually only when I don’t have overnight company. But you’re hippies, that ‘let it all hang out’ thing. You guys run around without clothes on all the time, and in public.
“Surely you’re not seeing anything you haven’t seen before, what with all your wild raucous love-ins and be-ins and sit-ins and drop-outs and rock concerts.
“It saves wear-and-tear on the underwear, and besides, even here, in the reddest part of one of the reddest states, we’re not prudes. It‘s just that we don‘t do it with reckless abandon, like they do in blue states.
“I’m way out in the middle of nowhere; nobody’s around to be upset or offended--â€
“But don’t you worry about if--†she began.
“Sure, it happens a few times,†he interrupted, not wishing to let her know it actually happened quite a lot, “that someone who I didn’t know was around pops in, but it’s cool. But it’s never ancient people or respectable women or children, because they’re all sleeping in bed at the time.
“Most of the time, it’s somebody I know, who‘ve seen it all before.â€
“But they
all can’t be people you know,†she insisted, “and you’re out here all alone. Hasn‘t anybody ever tried to, you know, rob you and attack you and stuff?
“There’s some vile people out there, and here you are, with nothing on.â€
“Oh,†he said, “there’s been a few times one’s had to deal with rough characters in the middle of the night, all drunk or crazy on drugs, looking for a fight, three or four of them all at once, and alas each of them bigger and stronger than me.
“But something usually happens, and they run away.
“The sour-faced guy who cooks at the bar in town, Swede, says I’m the luckiest son-of-a-bitch he’s ever seen in his life, and this is one of the reasons why.
“I only get worried if it’s women high on drugs or booze or from a trailer court or otherwise the trashy sort, who get ideas I don’t want them to get.
“You can tell them right away; you can see them reeling out the measuring tape in their eyes. No way in Hell, any of these women.â€
Thinking he might’ve given her the wrong impression, he added, “I’m already spoke for.
“By a
femme--so nose-ring out there can shelf it.â€
“But haven’t you ever been embarrassed?†the fizzy one asked.
Oh my yes, he thought, too many times to count, but to relate those would require him to reveal to the fizzy one that he was deaf, and he didn’t want to do that, so he lied, “No, never, not once."
The three others in the living room began to stir--he caught the movement of shadows through the door from the kitchen to the dining room--so he decided it was time to get decent, especially since he didn‘t want
them to get any ideas.
And then coquettishly flaunting it all, just as he did long ago in the boys’ locker room in high school to the accompaniment of others snapping towels, he strutted past her into the bedroom to get dressed.
- - - - - - - - - -
The neighbor arrived in late morning, aboard the snow-plough, bringing with him an empty 60-quart thermos cooler, in which to cart the cooked turkey, partially cut up, back home. While he and the host were in the kitchen, he mentioned there wouldn’t be anybody available to fix the stranded vehicle until after mid-afternoon, it being Thanksgiving and all that.
The neighbor brought along his oldest son, the 10-year-old eager young lad, who stood in the living room staring at the jiggling jugs of the porcine-looking one, wondering if they were real or not.
“Did the guests behave last night, no problems?†the neighbor asked.
Yeah, no problems at all, their host said. “As easy as strawberries-and-cream, dealing with them.â€
- - - - - - - - - -
Since the fizzy one looked as if she might be competent in the kitchen, while the porcine-looking one seemed as if she couldn’t even handle a wet fork and a dry dish-towel competently, he assigned the first to the kitchen, showing her all the equipment and chow, and ignored the second
femme, who sat on the couch in the living room, typing on her lap-top computer.
The one-eyed guy and nose-ring sat at the table in the dining room, watching the snow fall on the other side of the picture-windows, drinking beer from the refrigerators in the garage, and gabbing. Probably about college football, he figured, unable to hear them, although nose-ring could be discerned staring from the corner of his eye at his host’s lower regions.
Geezuz, his host thought; I should’ve put on boxer shorts and too-big pants so he wouldn’t get any ideas, as the jerk‘s a professional crotch-scanner, who can detect through regular underwear and regular-sized pants, no matter how thick the material.
He didn’t care for people looking at what wasn’t supposed to be looked at; it gave him a sense of being violated, much as if someone were to lift his hair and see he‘d been born without ears.
While the fizzy one prepared the breast of turkey, the mashed potatoes, the gravy, the fresh corn and fresh peas, the whole-wheat buns and real butter, the sour cream, and the apple, pumpkin, cherry, and rhubarb pies, he got ready to set the table in the dining room, but prudently using only the second-best china (a wedding present in 1910), silver (an anniversary present in 1935), and Belgian linen and napkins (from the 1920s), which had belonged to grandparents of his, rather than putting out, as he usually did, the more-exquisite and fragile antiquities of his great-grandparents.
But first, the table had to be set up. The table was solid walnut, one of those dining sets sold mail-order by Montgomery, Ward in 1926 for $140 (an enormous amount of money back then), and with extensions. It was usually set up so as to accommodate eight, three on each side and one at each end, but as he reminded everybody, there was going to be plenty of food, and so the table needed lengthening.
Pulling the table apart, he took three leaves and four extension legs, inserting them into the gap, making the table so as to fit in eighteen, eight on each side and one at each end.
And then he assigned the places to sit; the porcine-looking woman at the far end, nose-ring on her side to the left, walrus-face on her side to the right, and the fizzy one next to walrus-face.
For himself, he assigned the end opposite the porcine-looking woman, seemingly half a football field away, and a large ornate 32-taper sterling-silver candelabra in between.
to be continued