Page 128 - Sweet Embraceable You: Coffee-House Stories
P. 128

116                                           Jack Fritscher

             magazine page so that the athletic girls disappeared, leaving only
             the 5x7 of the handsome football player. “Tonight’s the full moon
             and the summer solstice. I’ve never seen the Pacific. I’m taking
             this picture and I’m going to watch the sunset and the moonrise.”
                 “You want maybe instead to use my john?” Floyd slipped the
             four bills directly into his white nylon pocket.
                 “What for?”
                 “What all little boys use it for when they’ve stolen daddy’s
             dirty magazines.”
                 “I never did anything like that.”
                 “No one ever does, according to them, when it’s always the
             thing they do most,” Floyd said. “Do you have anyplace to stay
             for the night?”
                 “What’s it to you?”
                 “Nothing.” Floyd backed off. He slept single in a double bed.
             “It’s nothing to me.”
                 “I’m going to the ocean. I’ll roll up my jeans and I’ll walk in
             the surf and I’ll listen.”
                 “To what?
                 Robert held up the photograph. “To him,” he said.
                 “To him?”
                 “To him. I’m old enough to see if he’ll ever speak to me.”
                 Floyd wanted to roll his strained eyes back in his head. All these
             people, all these immigrants to San Francisco were getting stranger
             than strange. “So,” he said. “What if he doesn’t speak to you.”
                 “He’ll speak to me alright.”
                 “But what if he doesn’t?”
                 “Either way it makes no difference since he never has anyway.”
                 “So if it doesn’t make any difference, why you so hot to go?”
                 “Because that picture is the Face of God.”
                 Floyd stopped W. C. Fields from cackling: “The Face of God.
             You don’t say.” He didn’t say it; instead he said: “You got to be
             kid ding.”
                 “He’ll tell me, if he wants to, everything I need to know.”


                     ©Jack Fritscher, Ph.D., All Rights Reserved
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