Read Dancing in the Dark Online
Authors: David Donnell
“Who? Suzanne Vega?” She is, she’s quite good-looking in a sort of neat snooty way, and I like her haircut.
“Suzanne Nova.”
“No,” I say, “I think Nova’s a corporation. Suzanne Vega, like Vegas without an s.”
“Yeah,” she says, she’s still laughing, “Suzanne Vega without an s, is she good-looking?”
“Yeah, sort of slim and preppy, I guess she’s good-looking.”
I take a last look at the yellow sky, it’s going paler bluey. I’m thinking about boats. I can’t help thinking how terrific it would be if we lived closer to Lake Huron or down towards Lake Ontario, and we would probably have a share in a boat or a lend of somebody’s boat.
“Suzanne Nova,” Susan says, “that’s funny.” She has the empty peanuts bowl, which was, an hour before, full of salted redskins, in one hand, and her empty glass in the other. She gives me a nudge in the ribs with her elbow. “Open the door, Alvin,” she says. We close the screen door behind us, and go back into the house to make the big salad before we meet Ted and Alice and go to a film.
Late 60s,
maybe 1970. He appeared
on the lower east-side New York scene –
a young guy
out of acting school and looking for jobs in any play at all.
I read about him in
Vanity Fair
. He just got written up
for a little side bar. I liked
the fact
that he was 6’6”, ambitious &
had a small 12×10 room
close to Avenue B,
& that before leaving every morning
he would make his bed & put all his socks
all 6 pair
rolled up, you know,
at the tops, in a row on his bed.
Compulsive, like the history student in Updike’s story
Roommates
,
but he found work, & guess what,
fortune’s play,
he made a # of films – including
The Fly
. Dopey. I liked him
in
The Big Chill
,
where he played the tall vaguely sinister dacron-suited
MBA
,
It wasn’t a great film, post-college sentiment & popcorn,
but he was really good. I think they should make 3 or 4
films in a row like
The Big Chill
, & let Jeff Goldblum
play an
MBA
,
a mathematics grad-school drop out
& an ex-college basketball forward. He’s an intense guy,
& he was good in
The Big Chill
.
We fold up the brown paper bags
& the waxed paper
after laying out the food we’ve bought,
2 steak&kidney pies,
a plate of beefsteak tomatoes,
4 loaves of crusty Calabrese baguette, flour dusted, chewy,
rigatoni with feta & oil & black olives,
cheese,
put the dogs out in the back yard
& go into the shower together dripping with good intentions.
I am moving the dark blue washcloth dripping with hot
water & soap over one of your hips
& then you are
almost reclining on my back,
head comfortably
snuggled against my shoulder. I can feel your warmth
more completely than the hot water of the shower. Your
weight seems an afterthought,
resting on your perfect
splayed toes,
down there in the rising water
When I turn around to face you & we kiss
the dark blue washcloth is I don’t know where really.
I seem to rise up & turn around in a sense without
leaving you.
No, I am still very much here,
feet flat on the bathtub floor,
water up to our calves,
your calves are a little fuller than mine,
joke, rural,
antecedent, & smoother, no hair,
no soft dark fluff.
We kiss, erections aren’t a problem
they’re a window sill
to lean on.
You say you are sleepy & would like to make love
& get in between the new cotton sheets & sleep –
you don’t want any company.
I say “Okay, that’s funny,
she’s your cousin & her husband’s not such a bad guy.”
But what I see – kissing your thick dark hair –
isn’t any invasion,
approx. 7 – 7:30 p.m., & the dogs will be
clamouring to get in the kitchen just to say hello,
but rather that image I’ve had for several days
of Borges walking through downtown streets in Buenos Aires
showing some visitors around, dark glasses, huge bald
head, gestures, famous buildings.
I like the calm way
Borges looks in the image. I thought I was going blind
once, it was a mistake,
their mistake. I have no
desire to write like Kafka. I like dark blue washcloths,
hounds, & rigatoni.
I want to see
The Tin Drum
a third time because I like it as a film. But
I am so in love with the tangible things
of this world I don’t think
you could persuade me to read the novel. The novel
is brilliant but it’s too abstract.
“Every woman needs a man
sometimes,” she says
blithely
as she slips around the dark blue suit who has tried to pat her
on the ass
& extends one arm, black sweater sleeve rolled up
under white waitress uniform,
a plate with a wide pork chop, tinned
green peas,
& mashed potatoes. The potatoes aren’t home mash,
she points out good humouredly,
she doesn’t own this place,
a Greek guy does. She has a daughter, Louise, 4 ½ years old.
“Sometimes,”
I say, “but not always?” “Sometimes,” she says,
& she goes on to explain that being linked is too complicated
unless you’re perfectly matched & even Donald &
Ivana Trump aren’t perfectly matched. She’s young,
36,
a very good looking woman with dark hair & just a splash
of entrancing early grey across one side of her forehead.
I look
back at that city, Ann Arbor, & I think of her, & think I should have
asked her out, we could have gone to a film, maybe
A Fish
Called Wanda
,
& she would have been great in bed, I guess, or dancing.
But you know me,
I like relationships
to end happily
with both people feeling
there have been no misunderstandings,
no distortions
of the kind you find in amateur photography
where sometimes it looks as if Jack is trying to pick
up Carolyn in his arms
but it’s a blurred image
with a child in the background
& actually he was just leaning over with a hand on her
shoulder to say something to her about the photographer
who used to be his roommate in college.
“What’s happening, momma?”
he says jovially
as he comes through the door,
not famous as jazz musicians go
but famous enough, about medium height,
close cut hair,
a yellow & brown check sports jacket
but it looks good on him. There are about 2 cars parked
up over the curb outside, we’re having dinner,
& I realize there are certain idioms that are exclusive,
that is,
they go with a specific vocation [software writer,
hardware installation team supervisor, etc.] or colour,
colour at least in the broad American sense
in which the landscape of America is so large it contains
every colour
from cactus flower yellow to pale blue Massachusetts
fence in a small town back yard.
And just for a split nano
second I envy him & resent the fact that I can’t use any idiom
I happen to feel like using. Well, sure, I can,
use any idiom I feel like, using. And then I reach over to
shake his hand
& I say, “Good to meet you, Coy, I love your work.”
And I do, he’s a great piano player, and every idiom is like a
bass motif that you can play if you like, as long as it works.
So,
this guy Harold,
26, a bit of a nebbish
out of college,
NYU
,
a big yellow bow-tie, etc.
shows up at the Blue Note when it was on 52nd street in the 1940s,
& dig this,
he was something of a writer when he was at college,
NYU
& this is the late 1940s,
1946 to be preeeee/cise,
but like hey, a reeeeeally bad poet,
no intellect
&
NO
sense of hoooomour.
And there he is leaning on the bar
& waddda ya think he sees? Some guy
called Wallace Stevens
is up on stage reading a poem about Kentucky & grackles
& talking about Hart Crane
& a young black dude is playing bass oboe behind him.
“Wow,
fuck,” says Harold the nebbish
just out of college,
NYU
, big yellow bow-tie, etc.
“so the text doesn’t mean diddle-fuck, I’m saved, I’m alive,
I can pretend I’m a writer like Thos. Wolfe or somebody.
So,
where do I meet somebody who plays a mean bass oboe
or a violin,
or maybe a French horn would be good
for an afternoon reading in Central Park?”
I’m over at Jack Forbes’ 2 ½ storey 6’ skylights
on the west side
house on Chestnut Park Road in northeast
Rosedale. Jack’s out,
his wife Carol is home
& there’s a copy of the
New Yorker
with a fairly good R. Crumb cover in about 9 different colours
lying on the coffee table. She says she thinks the
New Yorker
is still good,
just because it gives you the taste of New York.
Atmosphere is what she means, I guess, hints & flash cards.
But I’m not sure if a taste is much good when you want supper,
you know,
when you want a couple of gin&tonics with lime & ice first,
& then a bowl of black bean soup
followed by a plate of fettuccine
with those small Italian sausages & 1 or 2 cold Heinekens
to wash it down. You know
what I mean? More walk arounds
in different areas of New York, more input from young artists,
put Tom Stoppard on the cover and a 4-page essay on Bill Clinton;
but of course they haven’t done this & now it’s just another
version of the
Atlantic
or
Harper’s
–
but they’ve got an R. Crumb cover & Richard Avedon photos of Dinkins
& colourful New York lead-in pages with a nice magenta
poster of Eartha Kitt.
He calls his sister Bones,
because she’s 5’10 ½”
& as slim as a bright green stalk of west Florida asparagus. “Hey,
Bones,” he says, or
“Turn down the football game, Bones, I’m on
the phone
in the kitchen.” And she takes it gracefully. She’s sprawled
on the living room 4-part couch,
watching,
long legs in snug new Levi’s, feet bright in orange & yellow socks,
skimpy t-shirt just a piece of cotton.
The B.C. Lions destroy
Baltimore. She has short curly dark honey blond hair, she
is in 4th year English Lang
& Lit. It’s 9:00 p.m., darkness
has settled
over the huge city of Toronto, the wind outside is about 50 mph,
the huge lake at the south end of the city must have 10’ waves,
nothing like a tsunami but big,
& the television set full of colour
shows the B.C. fans in t-shirts the cheerleaders in short skirts
& Austin has just thrown a big long one for about 65 yards. “Pizza”
he says, “B.C. wins, I pay.” He hates football, loves computers
& basketball, is working now, good quality dark green corduroys,
makes a big paycheque for 25. “Anchovies,” she says; “No,” he says;
“You’re cruel,” she says, & Passaglia kicks the big one
that wins the game, & the B.C. crowd goes wild.
Night in the city
splash of burnt mauve
across the end of an alleyway,
must be old paint. Slacker
aka Alec
Harrison & Tom, walking home from the BamBoo Club
up Beverley & over to Huron, named after the Hurons
who lived in Ontario
before there was a Ford Motor Company
of the World
or those old General Electric red brick buildings
along Dupont west of Yonge Street. “What do you think, Tom,”
Alec says, “what
do you think of the city?” “Great, man,
just
fucking great.” Tom is drunk, stumbling slightly, steel rims
in his jacket pocket
he has a long pink t-shirt on
& the t-shirt says
N I R V A N A
. “So,”
says Alec, aka Slacker, “what do you think of the scene,
the cool
Lauras & Harolds,
at the Left Bank & the BamBoo?”
“Hey,” says Tom, “Slackers with expense accounts
& cordless telephones, fettuccine with eggplant & Italian sausages.”
“No,
no,” says Slacker, aka Alec Harrison, “Slackers with nose rings
& exposed underwear
defying gravity.” “Yeah,” says Tom, “gravity, man, gravity.”