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Authors: Stephen Dixon

What Is All This? (27 page)

BOOK: What Is All This?
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BIFF.

This weekend.

What?

I said let's get away this weekend.

What?

I said we'll go away this weekend. For a trip. Just to be away.

What?

You telling me you still can't hear?

Is that what you were saying all the time before?

No. I was saying we should get away this weekend. Someplace.

What?

I said—can you hear me now?

Are you still there, Biff?

I'm sure you can hear me.

I can now, almost, but not before.

You mean, everything I said before?

I don't quite hear you.

I said, all the time before, you couldn't hear what I said?

Is that what you said the last time you said something?

Yes.

Though not all the times before that?

The times before that you have to know I said something about our getting away this weekend.

What?

I'll call you back.

What?

I said I'll call back. This connection's ridiculous. Something's at least ridiculous. And we're sounding ridiculous.

What?

He hangs up, calls back.

Hello?

It's Biff. Can you hear me?

Hello? Is that you, Biff?

Yes.

Biff? Hello? I still can't hear anything. Anyone there?

He hangs up, calls back.

Hello?

It's me again, Jane.

Hello? Who is it? Shout if you have to, but I want to know who's there.

IT'S BIFF.

Hello? I give up. I hope it's not someone staying silent just to upset me. But if it is someone I know and want to speak to—

It's Biff, Biff.

—then call back, okay? Anyway, I'm hanging up.

Good idea.

Biff?

You can hear me?

Suddenly I can.

You're not playing a joke on me?

Why would I do that?

You might not have liked what I was saying. That you and I should go away this weekend.

What?

Oh, come on.

This time I was kidding. But where would we like to go?

Say, a cottage on the ocean.

Why the ocean?

Then a cabin in the woods.

No, I mean it's that I could never see the ocean in the summer.

Bad eyes?

Bad joke. I don't like sitting around getting sunburned. I think it's so unromantic, getting unhealthy. Burnt skin, healing creams. White marks where the bathing suit straps were, bed soaked with sweat from your shiverings.

Then we'll rent a dark dank cave with a single warm bed. Would that satisfy you more?

I hope it's not just a bed you think makes for romance. Anyway, I can't go.

Why not? Before, you sounded as if you could.

Before, I was curious what travel suggestions you'd make. I'm curious about a lot of things with someone I only recently met. Especially that he asks me away for a weekend in a single bed. But as I said, I can't.

The single bed was a joke. But why?

Personal reasons.

Too personal to tell me?

You, yes.

Thank you.

Another thing I'm finding out about you is your infantile sensitivity.

You'd be the first woman to think or say that.

That can't be true.

It isn't. Several have.

Another about you is that you're a bit of a liar, or fibber, but can't keep to your fibs when it might benefit you or please another.

Is that an honest, dishonest or tomato aspect?

Tomato aspect? Tomato aspect. Good God. Another unpleasant aspect of yours is your numerous unfunny jokes.

And one of yours I'm pretty well fed up with is your criticisms of me. And fed up with your tomato aspect as well.

I'm sorry. And I think I better go.

My infantile sensitivity again?

Partly.

You prefer your infantile sensitivity in men to be more adult, right?

I prefer none at all.

An insensitive man, then?

No, I don't. I'm getting mixed up. You're making me mixed up. I really have to go.

This conversation's gotten us nowhere. It's in fact set us back a ways. Because I originally called with a nice attitude to ask if you wanted to go away this weekend.

You did. That's true. And I don't. That's true too. Or rather, I can't. I already told you why without being explicit. For now that should be enough.

Listen. I'll see you.

Fine, if that's the way you feel.

It seems the way you feel.

You know how I feel? How nice. Maybe this conversation hasn't been a waste of time after all. But call again if you like.

You mean that?

I said it, so I meant it.

I'll see you then, Jane.

Have a good weekend.

You too.

He calls back.

Hello?

You said call back, so I did.

I'm wondering if I meant right away.

Then you didn't mean it—see?

Let's say I did mean it. What's new?

Well, now that you ask, I was thinking if you'd like to spend part of the weekend with me in the city.

Actually, I was planning on going to the beach to develop a slight case of sun poisoning. But now that you asked.

You serious?

No. I really am tied up this weekend, Biff. Honestly…Biff. What a strange name. That your real one?

Biff Junior's my real name.

Is Biff Senior still with us, I hope?

And Biff Senior the first. You see, I'm the third. But my dad didn't like to be called Junior, so he eliminated his. But when they had me, he liked the name so much that they named me Biff, also. Not Biff Also. Biff Junior.

It would seem if he was so devoted to individuality, he would have wanted you named Biff Also. Or Also Biff. Or Biff Biff. That would be the best one, I think.

I don't. And I don't like talking about my name.

You don't? I forgot who first brought it up. Must have been me. Well, I'm sorry if it was.

Yes. So, anyway, you're busy this weekend.

Tied up in knots, I'm afraid.

I'll come and rescue you.

Touché
, but no thanks.

Not to stay; just to cut the ropes.

Touché encore, mon Bift
, but I'm sorry. I definitely can't see you this weekend.

Not so much where we have to go out or anything. We could meet for coffee somewhere.

Sorry. I'll explain some other time, but right now I can't.

Someone there with you?

It's not that. Or it might be. Whatever it is, I'm not saying. It's none of your business, that's why.

I think it is.

Think what the heck you want, but I'm not going to ask why, because it isn't and you know it.

I thought you were interested in me, that's why I said it.

I thought I was also, to a certain extent, but when you come on like this?

Like what?

Let's see, where were we? Look, I have visions these conversations are only going to get worse for us. So sometimes it's best to let them drop, wait a week or so, and then call back. Or I'll call back. But right now, whatever there was forming between us, is being grounded.

Are you saying, with me?

You really didn't think I meant you and I?

Yes, I have to admit that.

Then either the connection was bad again or you're just plain stupid.

See you, honey.

He hangs up, opens a beer, takes two swigs. calls back. The receiver's picked up but nobody answers.

I don't know who should be sorry, me for hanging up like that or you for calling me stupid.

What I said was that either the connection was bad again or else you're stupid. I didn't call you stupid outright.

To me it still sounds as if you did.

Then the connection was bad again just now or you truly are stupid.

He hangs up, finishes the beer, calls back.

I'm being silly now, maybe even stupid, calling like this. But it must mean something.

Maybe that you like making an ass of yourself on the phone and I either like helping or hearing you make one of yourself. Or maybe you're itching to know something more about me that you didn't and you're finding out because I'm doing nothing to hold it back. Or else you're working for the Secret Service and you're keeping me busy with your calls till they pound my door down and arrest me for something. Or maybe it means I've run out of reasons to explain all your calls and I really don't want to talk to you anymore today, or I don't know what. Why?

Why, what?

You continue to call me. Because you know I won't call you?

It could be I like speaking to you.

You call this speaking to me? You enjoy this? That's so silly. You're silly.

I'm going to hang up on you if you say anything more derogatory than that.

Hang up, then.

Just don't say anything more derogatory than silly. You may call me stupid, ignorant, foolish, dumb ox, hateful, aggravating, insufferable, all the others, but not, and I repeat, not silly or very silly. I don't want to be called silly or very silly.

What would happen if I did? You'd hang up?

I promise.

Then you are very silly.

No, I don't promise, because I feel you're about to call me very silly.

Now that's the first clever thing you said since your first call today.

Then I must sound very stupid to you at times.

Oh, very. At other times, extremely. And a couple of other times, profusely. But sometimes, no. You have said clever and even witty things before, but not since that first call.

Dark dank cave with only a warm bed in it, after you said you didn't like sunlight—that wasn't anything but stupid to you, right?

Wasn't that in the first call? And I didn't say I disliked sunlight. And the remark wasn't clever, no.

Bad eyes?

Bad eyes? Oh, yes. Old, old joke. What about your having a minor physical ailment in your insides to get out of going into the army—no guts.

That's very funny.

Of course it isn't. The reason I said it was to explain when I first heard it. Years ago. When I was a freshman or sophomore in college and the older boys were still fairly successful in being rejected by the army—

Deferred from.

Deferred from for physical reasons they made up or exaggerated. Let's see—another one.

All right. So my bad-eyes joke wasn't funny.

No no, wait a minute. There's one more the boys used to tell. That's right. I've stomach trouble.

You've stomach trouble. I see.

No, you don't see. You're not supposed to say anything, in fact, except maybe an oh-yes, but certainly not an I-see. That could lead to your bad-eyes joke again. But after you do say something to my stomach-trouble line, I say yes, I get sick every time I think of myself in the army.

Not bad.

It's said differently, I didn't tell it right. I never could.

None of us can.

No, some can. But there's one more and then I'll stop.

Please, no more. I don't think I could take it. I've stomach trouble also. I get sick every time someone tells me a bad old joke.

Okay, bit of a joke theft, but you're getting there.

Few years with you and I'll be a real comedian.

It would also probably save you a few thousand dollars in phone bills, but don't let me give you any ideas.

Oh, I couldn't see us communicating any other way but by phone, even if we lived together a couple of years.

Lived together? Say, really now, just put that notion out of your head.

No, listen. The idea is for us to live together for two years but to only communicate by phone. In other words, being the phone addict you obviously think I am, if you wanted me to go out for groceries, let's say, you'd pick up the phone, even if we were only ten feet from each other and this was a one-room apartment we shared, and dial the other phone in the place, and I'd pick it up and you'd tell me what you want at the store, and we'd talk like that. What do you think?

I wouldn't see any reason for it.

Now you're the one with no sense of humor.

I think a sense of humor has to have some sense. In this one, it's just projecting your fantasies a bit, wouldn't you say? Besides trying to intrigue me.

That's legitimate.

Right now, it isn't. Look, to be honest with you there is someone else. I don't want to go into it, but someone, and whatever he thinks of me, someone.

He craps on you, right?

I'm not going to answer that.

Why not? If he doesn't, say so.

I give up. Goodbye.

Don't go.

He calls right back.

Jane?

Right after this call, I'm phoning the phone company to take out my phone.

I don't like being hung up on.

Then don't call me.

Even though I've hung up on you, I think it's an exceedingly wrong thing to do. You could be nice.

The nicest thing I could do for you is convince you never to call again.

I wouldn't have. And this will be my last call. Only you sounded—something in your voice and what you said—a little sad, so I called back.

What bull. And I'm not sad. I can handle my own affairs quite well.

But he does crap on you, right?

Give up, my friend.

Biff. And give up I will. I told you, my last call. But he does, and that's always the case. With me, I mean. Whenever I'm interested in a woman, she's not. She's interested in someone who isn't interested in her, and he probably with someone else who's not interested in him, and the same with someone to her, and so on and so forth and ad infinitum, absurdum, exhaustum and dum de dum.

The dum de dum I like best. But that isn't always the case and not necessarily the case with me now.

Not necessarily but not absolutely not.

Not absolutely not, then. Or not the case absolutely in perpetuity for all time then, not. It just isn't so. And it's still not your business.

I don't believe you, but maybe that's my problem. What I wanted to add though is that it's also reversed for me too. When a woman likes me, I'm usually not interested. Not because she's interested in me, but that the ones who get interested in me I'm not interested in to begin with.

BOOK: What Is All This?
11.17Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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