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Authors: Stephen Dixon

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BOOK: Fall and Rise
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“You've a smooth protective and circumventive sense of humor, which could be a first-rate unctuous one if you did more to thwart people from detecting how protective it is. I'll be back in two minutes. If you're not off the couch by then or joined on it by anyone more than my cat, I'm moving it into the hallway and you can sit out there for as long as you like.”

“Deal.” I hold out my palm for her to slap. She looks at it and leaves. I bite off half the carrot stick. Someone sits on the couch's other end. An actor I've seen in lead roles on public TV. He's also worked in theater and movies. I smile and say hello. He nods, sets his glass down on the cocktail table, spills a little of it, “Shit!” He gets up for what I suppose is a napkin. “Here, use this,” taking out my bandanna handkerchief.

“I have one of my own, thanks very much.”

“I didn't mean I'd think you'd use yours. Excuse me,” removing a scrap of chewed carrot off my lip, “the carrot. Because believe me, I'll have to wash it some time after I get home, since I already wiped something up with it tonight, and wine leaves a nice smell.”

“Does it? Wouldn't think so. What it does leave is a gorgeous stain, at least the piss I usually drink. I'll get a paper towel,” and leaves.

He's a good actor though I've never seen him in a movie or on the stage. He goes to the bar, gets a fresh glass of wine and a napkin for the bottom of the glass. Movies and TV have to be different than theater: many takes and the entire part doesn't have to be memorized. I don't see him anymore. Maybe they're tougher than theater just because of those many takes and that the scenes aren't filmed and taped in sequence. I don't know much about those fields really, but can surmise. Accessible to so many women, but all those casting calls and waits. Bell rings. Cat weaves around lots of feet as he heads for the bedroom. I put on my glasses. Can't see the cat but bedroom door crack widens an inch when nobody's that close to it, so must be him going in or a draft. More people. Four to five greeted by Diana at the door. Just popping by, I overhear, on their way to wherever it is people go these days in evening dress, one saying “Rain's frozen me stiff—what I need's a drink,” and makes for the bar, tapping shoulders, poking triceps, startling some people when they see him in a tux. Maybe now she's somewhere around. Coat hung up, umbrella snugged beside mine in the holder perhaps. It was, so there had to be some room left in it, and seeing her take out hers when she left is another reason I didn't leave mine behind, or maybe only she tried squeezing her umbrella into the holder or someone leaving had just taken out his. Actor hasn't come back. If they'd met, which they might have, and arranged to meet another time, they'd make a very handsome couple, though I doubt she'd enjoy knowing him after a week. That And-who-might-you-be? look and no smile given back, though could be he thought I was gay and he's demonstrably or questionably not. I hear him from across the room. “‘It's outrageous,' he said, ‘and I simply won't stand for it,”' and a moment later everyone around him laughs. I don't know why. Wasn't an impersonation of a notable politico let's say. Maybe he made a motion to sit. That's an old slapstick shtick that could always do it, though I might be underrating his intelligence and overestimating his age, and I didn't hear his entire remark. My glass is empty. I bring it down from my lips. Frozen man's reaching below the bar where I suppose he knows or assumes the hard stuff is. I don't remember emptying my glass. When I watched the crowd around the actor laugh or frozen man poke his way to the bar? I put the actor's glass on the end table, wipe up the mess he left with my handkerchief and smell it. He's right. Don't know why I said it'd make a nice smell. Stupid, but something more. Policemen and performing celebrities as well as psychiatrists at parties and maybe even brain surgeons or all doctors and also scientists doing encephalic research make me uneasy at times and overeager to please. What else can I do for you, like your shoes and socks shined? Wine's left a white cloud on the wood that won't wipe off. Not my fault but someone who had only watched me when I wiped it might think it was, but I'm sure Diana or her cleaning women will know how to get it out. Should I tell her? I look at my lap. No matter how large in the crotch I buy my pants or how dark they are, my genitals still show through. Maybe I wear the wrong kind of underpants. This isn't much fun. Should I get up and if up go to the door or bar? But I don't want to go so soon. A woman might still come in whom I'll want to meet and what do I have cooking at home? Bell rings. And drink his. In the Himalayas maybe one can still get a liver-eating amoebic disease. I pour his wine into my glass.

“That was smart, taking two with you when you sat,” woman sitting down on the couch says.

“This? It was someone else's and I didn't want to waste it.”

“Someone you know I hope.”

“No, but I trust him. I figured—one of Diana's friends? How contagious could he be?”

“What if, and this is just a what-if, it happened to be a friend of her friend's—someone he just picked up at a bar? I don't mean that, since I'm sure everyone here is more than all right, but only as an example to be more cautious other times?” and drinks from a mug of beer.

“Oh, beer. That's what I should've got. I didn't see any.”

“In the refridge. Mugs in the cabinet above. Like some of mine?”

“Sure you'd want to drink from it after I took a swig?”

“You're an actual friend of Diana's, aren't you? Or at least not someone she picked up at a seedy bar minutes before she put this whole thing together, and naturally I don't mean it, and you look clean.”

“Very clean. And hand-invited, that's me. But shower a day. Obsessively clean. Believe me, I change my teeth at the very minimum once a week.”

“Maybe we ought to drop the subject.”

“Right. Sometimes I never know where my mouth's going to go.”

“That doesn't have to be a bad thing. And if you want some beer you'll get your own then, not that I'm worried I'll catch anything from you.”

“No, tainted wine suits me fine and the alcohol in it kills the—but I should stop that. Honestly, thanks for the offer.” I turn to the party, figuring she no longer wants to talk and not being that interested in the conversation either.

“Who are you,” she says, “besides Diana's friend if you are?”

“I am. From summer camp.”

“From hundreds of years ago when you were both counselors or campers there?”

“I'm sorry, I shouldn't have assumed everyone knew that reference. An artist colony upstate.”

“That place. With the signed Tiffany windows and where she went this summer. You must be a painter. You look like one.”

“Nope, a translator. And before you ask—you were going to?”

“I'll have to now.”

“For the present a not, in English, very well known contemporary Japanese poet. Name's Jun Hasenai.”

“Never heard of him. But I'm not familiar with most poetry. My husband's the one.”

“That so? What's he do?”

“Forget about him. I always talk about him when I sit on couches at parties. I want to know about your work. Your poet's very good?”

“Believe me. But most translators, when they choose what they're going to translate out of love or whatever you want to call it—”

“Certainly not money.”

“Money? Money? What's that? Some new form of currency? No, that's not funny. Anyway, they think all the previous translations of it aren't good enough, though with Hasenai I've been lucky since there's almost been nothing in English and not one book.”

“I'm excited, a terrific new writer I've never heard of. Can you quote some of it?”

“In English or Japanese?”

“You speak Japanese too?”

“Now who's kidding whom?”

“I'm not. I thought it might be one of those transliteral or what do you translators call those translations—where you translate from the less meticulous and poetic translations of the originals?”

“That's close enough. Now don't call me a chauvinist, at least the malevolent kind, for I could give you a list of my kindred and unconsanguineous sisters who'll swear I'm not, but I bet you picked that up from your husband who I bet is a lit professor who I bet has writ tomes of published poems.”

“He is and has.”

“Well, that's a good profession. No, I do the entire thing. I even write the poems for Hasenai in the original and let him take all the credit.” I take off my glasses. “I have to take these off and put them in their holder and the holder into my pocket or someplace safe so I know they won't fly off my face and break or holder flop out of my pocket and get stepped on, when I recite one of Hasenai's peppier poems. ‘Night is a moon and then it's cigarette-yellow and done. Christ, I can't go on. The evening's reached its peak and the coyote is gone.'”

“That's good. And the whole poem I wager. And who would have thought they have coyotes in Japan, or is that your word for a similar animal there that has no exact counterpart in English? Of course the poem's probably better in the original.”

“I just now made it up.”

“Translated it?”

“No, it's my own.”

“That's mean. You fooled me.”

“Or maybe I'm a good spontaneous poet, how about that?”

“You're not being very nice.”

“Why? Suppose I now said it was Hasenai's and I worked days on it and had only said it was mine to momentarily fool you? I don't usually do that and wouldn't know why I would, but I'm capable of it.”

“No, you're smart enough to know what your motives are. As for the poem, I'm no hypocrite. To my uncultivated ears—hubby's poems or not, and I plead guilt to not reading them all and those I do I mostly don't understand, a problem no one else seems to have—what you recited seemed quite good.”

“Thanks. And I was being too playful—maybe prematurely playful—with you. You already admitted you didn't know or care much for poetry, so where'd I come off trying to fool you? And it was my poem alone. I don't know if it was whole. I've even forgotten what I spontaneously wrote, but since I didn't put it on paper or memorize it—you don't remember it, do you?”

“Except for a coyote in it, no.”

“Anyway, I can't say it was written. And probably everything I'd spontaneously compose is influenced by modern Japanese writing and these days especially, Hasenai's, so you're right if you also thought it sounded somewhat Japanese.”

“Since it had no Japanese references in it, it didn't particularly sound like anything to me.”

“Okay. Just don't if you don't mind tell Diana about this or she'll never invite me back and then we'll never meet again.”

“I've a big mouth too sometimes so I can't guarantee what will happen.” She gets up. “Excuse me. I'm not going to the powder room or to take a breath of fresh exercise or anything. Enjoy yourself.”

“Please. No apologies necessary. Just mine.” She leaves. I get up for more cheese. I also don't want to be sitting here when she starts talking to someone about me. “That man there. On the couch, to the left. I don't want to turn around but he—there's nobody there? I'm referring to
his
left. He's sort of disinterestedly dressed, hair gushing out of his chest, a varicose nose? There he is. Well him. Talk about a man being mixed up?”

Jane and Phil are talking to each other at the cheese table. Now there are hard sausages on it, creamed herrings, sliced vegetables, an egg and chicken salad mold with a dollop of caviar on top, pâtés and dips. I dip a zucchini stick into a dip, bite it while I slice off some pâté, put the pâté on a cracker, add a piece of cheese to it, put the rest of the zucchini into my mouth, cheese falls to the table, while I reach for it the pâté drops to the floor. I pick the cheese up and put it into my mouth, pick up the pâté with a paper napkin, can't find a used plate or ashtray to put the napkin in so I put it into my back pants pocket, but I might sit on it by the time I get rid of it so I put it into my side pocket, eat the cracker and look at Jane and Phil. They've been watching me, resume talking. “I'm not so sure,” Jane says. “You're not so sure? Good God, if Shakespeare could mix metaphors and get away with it—”

“So what did Alan have to say?” I say and Jane says “Wuh?” and Phil looks at me curiously, skeptically, some way that way that makes me feel I shouldn't have interrupted or that I might have said something before that should have discouraged me from speaking so openly to them now. I think. Jane was nice, Phil not so much. “Nothing really,” waving them back to their conversation and I take a glass of wine off the table and am about to drink it.

“That's my wine,” Jane says.

“I'm sorry, I thought it was mine.” I hold it out to her.

“I don't want it now. I'd just rather not have anyone else drink from it.”

“I can understand that.” I put the glass down, see a full glass of wine at the other end of the table, look at the people near it and they all seem to be holding a glass of something. “There's mine.” I reach over and grab it. “Same kind of glass and green and full, just like yours. And don't worry, I'm not drunk,” I say, drinking. “Just a little uncomfortable. All these big makers here and everyone knowing one another and all that or whatever it is making me uneasy. I'm also not in any kind of therapy as that must—that remark must—those last remarks must make me sound like.”

“What?”

“Why do you say that?” Phil says.

“You referring to
her
‘what?' or to my being uncomfortable?”

“Since I was looking right at you, I think I meant you. And about your thinking you're sounding as if you're in therapy.”

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