There's a (Slight) Chance I Might Be Going to Hell - v4 (16 page)

BOOK: There's a (Slight) Chance I Might Be Going to Hell - v4
8.69Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Maye tossed down a vodka gimlet and found Charlie just as dinner was announced and the party moved into the dining room.

“Whatever you do, Charlie,” Maye whispered, “don’t leave me.”

“Oh, I won’t,” he assured her. “Your shirt is tucked in, right?”

“My shirt?” Maye asked. “What shirt? I’ve got a unitard underneath this.”

To Maye’s great dismay, she arrived at the table to discover that dining room democracy had been quashed and name cards rested above each place setting. She let out a small groan, then was heartened when she saw that Charlie was seated across from her. Two seconds later, that was an aspirin’s worth of comfort when she saw who flanked her: Rowena to her right, who sat at one of the heads, and Melissabeth to her left.

She suddenly had the urge to yell out, “I JUST STARTED MY PERIOD TODAY!”

Maye and Charlie took their seats and waited for the Most Torturous Event Involving Food to begin. When Melissabeth appeared, she looked disappointed to see that she wasn’t sitting next to a real friend but did ask Maye politely to scoot her chair in so she could pass to get to her seat. Maye pushed the chair in as far as it would go, not only to make room for her neighbor but mainly because as she moved her own seat in, she noticed how her snug-fitting sweater was now contoured around the pair of jelly rolls that rented space around her abdomen. The sweater stretched tightly around her middle, as tight as a balloon that’s been pushed beyond kind limits, although it wasn’t so much uncomfortable as it was unpleasant to look at. On a baby, it would have been darling and cute, but protruding from the undercarriage of a malformed reindeer on an adult woman, it somehow lost its touchability appeal.

Rowena was too busy ordering her waitstaff around to be nasty before the first course, and when the wine was poured, Maye couldn’t have been more grateful. On her first gulp, Charlie gave her a stern look; on her second gulp he kicked her under the table. Suddenly someone was behind her and a salad was being passed over her shoulder. Oooooh, she thought as she looked at the dish, sprinkled with Gorgonzola, dried cranberries, and her all-time favorite salad accessory, candied pecans. Yummy, yummy, yummy, Maye thought as she took her first bite.

“I’d like to make an announcement,” said Rowena with a smug little grin, from the head of the table; then she turned and looked Maye square in the eye. “I’ll have all of you know that we have the front runner for the Sewer Pipe Queen title sitting among us.”

Maye was shocked. She hadn’t even filled out the entry paperwork. How did Rowena know this? How could she have possibly known? Did she know Cynthia? Had Cynthia mentioned it? She’d only talked to Cynthia yesterday? My God, this Old Queen network operated at the speed of sound!

Maye didn’t know what to say, so she smiled gently, vastly suspicious of Rowena’s kindness, which she recognized as bait, and tried delicately not to get the hook plunged too far into her lip. “Well, that’s kind, Rowena, but I wouldn’t exactly say that,” Maye replied. “I don’t even have my talent segment coordinated yet.”

“Excuse me?” Rowena said, clearly shocked. “You? I wasn’t speaking about you! I was referring to Melissabeth, whom I happen to be sponsoring. And who will happen to win. So tell us, Maye, when was it that you entered? And who on earth is your sponsor?”

Maye’s ears sizzled with embarrassment, although they would have burst into flames if it hadn’t been for the vodka gimlet and the two glugs of wine. The entire table had grown silent, as if waiting for Mother Superior to release her brimstone on a particularly disobedient student.

“I haven’t entered yet,” Maye said, slowly and cautiously, “but my sponsor is Cynthia McMahon.”

Rowena raised her eyebrows and put her waxy index finger on her chin. She paused for a moment.

“Is that right?” she said. “Cynthia McMahon? And how did you stumble upon Cynthia McMahon?”

“Cynthia,” Maye began, “is my neighbor. And she has agreed to sponsor me. Do you know her?”

Rowena nodded. “Yes, I do,” she said through her pinched mouth. “She held the title several years after I did. I had heard she was sponsoring a UNICEF girl from Africa who was going to dance in native costume, which was, by the way, nonexistent.”

“No,” Maye corrected her. “She was sponsoring a Peace Corps volunteer who had worked in Cameroon and caught a parasite.”

“Well, that’s a relief,” she said with an exaggerated, full-blown smile and a cackle. “With no naked, native disease-ridden girl, there is a chance for first place after all! Melissabeth is a trained opera singer, isn’t that right, dear?”

“Absolutely,” Rowena’s protégée chirped. “I got into Juilliard but went to the University of Virginia instead to be near Stuart. I did get a five-minute standing ovation for my Queen of the Night aria when I sang with the Virginia Opera. I can’t wait to sing it again.”

“She was amazing,” her ruddy-faced potato of a husband said.

“Now, now,” Rowena cautioned. “Let’s be a little careful with our cards, shall we? We don’t want to give our whole hand away.”

Maye realized that unless she had been a former prima ballerina with the Bolshoi Ballet, she couldn’t touch Melissabeth’s talent segment, and Rowena knew it. But Rowena apparently also knew what Maye had heard—that Cynthia had been one of the most regal Sewer Pipe Queens in Spaulding history, and that made Rowena nervous. Maye could tell by the way she pursed her lips tighter than usual and picked at her salad, just moving the pieces around. She was thinking. Her hooked finger was tapping against her fork.

Maye was about to whisper to Charlie to ask if she could have his pecans when one of her molars bit into something much harder than a pecan. Much harder than any nut, even if it was entombed in a glorious hard-shell candy coating. It was so hard Maye thought it might be a penny.

Suddenly, she gasped, and sucked a gulp of air into her mouth, immediately sending knives of pain into her jaw. Within a fraction of an instant, she knew what it was, covered her mouth with her hand, and hoped Charlie had good dental insurance.

Charlie looked at her, perplexed, but Maye could say nothing. She just waved her right hand discreetly but quickly to signify, “Holy shit, Charlie, that woman planted a candied concrete pecan in my salad that has now wrenched the massive filling out of my molar that was the only thing keeping it whole and in my jaw!”

She couldn’t spit it out, and she certainly couldn’t swallow it. Maye took the only avenue she saw open to her—either finding the elusive restroom or at least holing up in the hallway where she could find the filling privately. She quickly pushed her chair back, but as she did, in slow motion, her wineglass, salad dish, and silverware moved oddly toward her as if being pulled by a magic force, like she was a magician. The wineglass teetered from side to side, sloshing its contents, as the china crawled closer and closer to the table’s edge. Maye was entirely perplexed by the unexplained parlor trick as the dishes and glasses kept moving and moving as if they were on a conveyor belt until Charlie jumped up and in one sudden, heroic swoop yanked the tablecloth trapped between Maye’s two holiday belly sausages away with the precision of a bullfighter and without sacrificing a single drop of wine.

While Charlie got a mild round of applause for his magnificent efforts in releasing the hostage tablecloth from Maye’s fat rolls—whose size was clearly exaggerated and magnified, by the way, by the cheap acrylic and ill-fitting sweater—Maye stood up, the fat rolls vanished into the girth of her belly, and she tried not to choke on her filling.

“I’m so sorry,” Maye said as the chunk of silver swam around her mouth. “But we have to go. I need to find a dentist on call, apparently. Thank you for a wonderful evening.”

And as Charlie and Maye left the room, they both heard Rowena chuckle and then announce, “Well, I think we all know what her talent segment should be, now don’t we? I bet there’s enough suction there to pull a tractor!”

 

8
Blood on the Street

 

Mickey’s best friend in dog school, Sammy, looked at Maye with sad, longing eyes. “Please take me home and raise me as your own,” they said. “I live with a stripper and her son, Fish Face. He’s a decent kid, but they feed me generic Lucky Charms for dinner and the only clean dish in the house is the one I wash myself. I drink out of a toilet bowl, and I would give my left nu-nu for a patch of green grass. I often pee in her stripper shoes for well-deserved revenge. She never notices.”

“Sit, Sammy, sit!” Finding Nemo instructed, but the greyhound was not a bit interested in performing a command for which the reward was a dirty chunk of a Milk-Bone the mother had fished out of the bottom of her purse.

“Please sit, Sammy, please!” the child cried again, and clearly out of pity, the dog finally obeyed, although he refused to gobble the lint-covered reward that Finding Nemo held out so proudly for him.

“Yeah, Sammy, whoop, whoop, whoop, whoop!” Gwen, the dog trainer, called, winding her arm in the air as the crinkled flesh beneath it swung wildly, grazing her face several times. “Now, can Sammy lie down?”

The dog collapsed to the floor without any further encouragement, almost as if to get the show over with. “Yeah, Sammy!” Gwen ballyhooed again, and this time Maye knew what was coming and averted her eyes.

“Eat the cookie, Sammy!” Finding Nemo insisted. “Don’t you like it, boy? Don’t you like it?”

“Shh! Give me that,” Mama Nemo whispered as she grabbed her son’s arm, plucked the rotten purse turd out of his fingers with her glittery, pterodactyl nails, and placed it on the floor in front of the dog. “There, Sammy! Leave it! Don’t eat the cookie, Sammy. Don’t eat it!”

The dog wasn’t remotely attracted to the cookie, which on closer inspection didn’t look so much like a cookie as it did a mummified rabbit’s foot or a chunk of hashish or Dick Cheney’s dehydrated, rock-hard, and coal-like soul. Luckily for Sammy, dogs have sharper senses, and he probably knew that digesting the mystery lump would have most likely led him down a truly dark path, like an encounter with a tube shoved down his esophagus and a stomach pump.

“Okay, I am happy to say that Sammy has now graduated from obedience school! Congratulations, Sammy!” Gwen cheered as she handed the stripper a diploma at the same time that Sammy launched his body over the volleyball net that surrounded the class and tried to find another family on the adoption aisle to take him home. “Who’s next? Grand Duchess Anastasia?”

Lady, the one and the only, had already had her turn and successfully responded to every command with a nice little spray from her bladder, and Mad Dog had been expelled from class several weeks before when he showed up with blood on his face that had not yet dried.

Maye was not really even sure if Grand Duchess Anastasia, the bichon frise show dog, even had a heartbeat. She had never seen it so much as blink, and it never once in the course of the class left its treelike perch in its owner’s arms. Maye and Charlie had speculated that the dog was not so much a stuffy dog as it was a stuffed toy made in an Asian sweatshop by child workers, and that there were some deep-rooted loss and abandonment issues taking place behind those BluBlockers.

“Okay,” Gwen started. “Can Grand Duchess Anastasia sit?”

“Yes,” the owner said in a rusty, deep voice.

“Oh, good, that’s good,” Gwen agreed. “Can we see it?”

“You’ll have to take my word for it,” she said from behind her windshield of sunglasses. “She can sit.”

“Can she lie down?” Gwen asked, getting frustrated.

“Of course,” the owner said, completely unflinching, as was her dog, both of them staring at Gwen like prey.

“All right, we’ll come back to you,” Gwen said, moving on to Mickey, who sat, lay down, stayed, shook, rolled over, and left his cookie (a real cookie, not some leftover narcotic residue Maye found at the bottom of her purse) when he was supposed to, and ate it when he was given a reward.

“Congratulations, Mickey!” Gwen announced when Mickey finished his last test. “You’re the valedictorian of your class!”

“There’s a valedictorian?” Maye asked incredulously. “Wow, Mickey! That’s amazing! What a good boy!”

“I will even write a letter to the post office to let them know how well he did,” Gwen said. “Mickey was a joy to have in class. I wish I had more like him.”

“We had fun,” Charlie agreed. “I know we arrived by dubious means, but it turned out to be a good thing for all of us, even though Mickey still goes ballistic when the mailman—I mean
letter carrier
—comes. There’s something about him that does not agree with Mickey.”

“That’s so odd, Mickey is such an agreeable dog. Actually, I think Mickey should continue his training,” Gwen added. “He’s very bright, loves a challenge, and is quite responsive. And he can sing! I would like to see Mickey go on to our agility-training course, in which he will not only jump hurdles but learn how to drive a doggie car and play a piano!”

“I don’t know if Mickey needs to know how to play a piano,” Charlie began.

“Are you kidding? Yes he does!” Maye interrupted. “What if he’s a canine Mozart or Elton John? We can’t just stop his education now, when it’s going so well! Consider him in.”

“Class starts next week,” Gwen informed them.

“We’ll be there,” Maye said, smiling.

 

 

“Mickey does not need to learn how to play a doggie piano,” Charlie said as they drove home. “We fulfilled the post office’s demands. Let’s just leave it at that.”

“Charlie,” Maye said sternly. “Are you insane? There is only one way I’m going to beat Beverly Sills singing one of the most difficult arias in all of opera, and that’s singing a song accompanied by my dog, at the piano.”

“Ahhhhh,” Charlie said, nodding and grinning wide as he pulled to a four-way stop sign. “I see your dastardly plan now! That’s true. If you could incorporate the element of fire as well, you’ve got it hands down, baby.”

“I have to beat them,” Maye replied as the driver of a VW bus at the south stop sign, whose turn it really was to go, motioned for the Honda at the west stop sign to go ahead. “It’s become a whole thing for me now, it’s taken on a completely new meaning. I went in and filed my pageant paperwork today and paid the five-dollar entry fee. It’s official now. I have to beat Rowena Spaulding.”

Other books

All of Me by Bell, Heatherly
White Fangs by Christopher Golden, Tim Lebbon
Owned by the Ocean by Christine Steendam
Black Rainbow by KATHY
Hemlock 03: Willowgrove by Kathleen Peacock
Lost Princess by Dani-Lyn Alexander
Tucker's Crossing by Marina Adair
Cloudburst Ice Magic by Siobhan Muir