Damascus is my orphan work in progress. I come to it between other projects. If you love it, let me know and I may give it more of my attention. In the meantime, if you like my writing you might want to check out Mindgames, my dark novel of slavery and romance. It's playing out in the "novel and novella" section.
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My father and I didn't say much as he drove me in his rusting Chevy to Chinatown. ClichΓ©s, maybe, commenting on the weather. He was sober, though, stone, cold sober, and I gave him a lot of credit for that. It would have been so much easier for him to do this drunk and senseless.
Traffic wasn't too bad, and we were lucky enough to find a metered space. The day was incongruously sunny and warm for March, and the pedestrians turned their faces up a little towards the sky. I felt as though I was at the Aquarium, looking in on fish who lived in what might as well be an entirely different universe. I marveled that people were going about their business as if it were an ordinary day. My English class at my community college would be taking the
King Lear
exam. No one would miss me much; the fish would swim on without me.
Damascus has a drab, gray exterior. The main door leads into a long corridor where the men can wait for admission without disturbing the neighbors. Damascus has many rules, and politeness to outsiders is primary among them. The bosses know that the only thing that can take their power away is a people's uprising. It's not likely, no matter how they behave, but they figure why take chances. Chinatown has been complaining about vice for as long as vice has been zoned on Chinatown's doorstep, and that's been a very, very long time.
It was not even mid-afternoon and Damascus was mostly asleep. Not that I knew that then, or had thought about the hours a whorehouse would keep. Not that thinking would have enlightened me. I was twenty, a virgin, and an innocent. Of course I considered myself sophisticated because I knew my father was a drunk and I was at home with the fact that my brothers slapped me around once in a while.
My father buzzed the intercom and the receptionist -- it must have been Ivan -- asked the necessary questions. Then we stood and waited for what seemed like a long time. I tried to ignore the passersby, but a few, and not only men, glanced at us curiously as we stood in the doorway.
Ivan could have buzzed us in, of course -- but I'm sure Vincenzo told him not to. Vincenzo was playing the humiliation game. Not for me, or rather for me only as an aside -- it was really my father he was trying to torment that morning. In his mind my own torment would begin in earnest that night, and a prelude had little power to greater or lessen it.
"I am like Beauty and the Beast," I told myself. This was my favorite fairy tale, because, as I had earnestly told my friends, it's the only one in which the prince and the princess actually know each other before they fall in love. In the tale, Beauty's father picked a rose from the beast's garden. The Beast agreed to spare his life for this crime only if he would bring his daughter Beauty to serve him. That was my story exactly. My father, in addition to being a drunk, was a gambler. How he got the mob to allow him to run up such a grand debt I don't know -- except that his friend from school days ran the numbers racket in the suburb where we lived, and maybe thought he was doing him a favor. Joey disappeared though -- moved on or knocked out my father never learned. I never liked him. Joey left his books behind, and it came time for my father to pay his debt or set an example. Clearly he couldn't pay. All his possessions, the house, the big t.v. he bought when he won on a scratch ticket one time -- they equaled a small fraction of the debt. I later learned that he had gambled away our house three times. But he did have one possession -- a thing that would earn back, with interest, everything he owed. That thing was me.
The door opened slowly, ponderously. It was bright where my father and I stood on the doorstep to Damascus, and dark inside, so my first impression was of a shadow in the shape of a tall, thin man. "You're Lambert?" the man said to my father, and in those two words conveyed a sneering disdain.
My father nodded and overeagerly took a step forward. "That's right," he said, "and you must be Vincenzo." He pronounced it like it was spelled, Vinsenzo, and the man frowned.
"No," the man said, and he spoke his name, drawing out the syllables as if he were speaking to a child. Vintshenzo. "But you, sir, will call me Mr. Dragna." I wondered what I would call him.
My father didn't seem to notice his supercilious manner. He pulled me by the arm into the doorway, roughly, nervously. "This is Belinda, my daughter."
As my eyes adjusted to the dim hallway, I saw that Vincenzo was spare and handsome, like an actor who could play a rancher. I had just registered the color of his eyes (green) and hair (dark brown and wavy, cut short), and the birdlike crook of his nose before he said to me, "Eyes down," with a voice of such authority that contradiction was unthinkable. Immediately I looked down at his perfectly polished black dress shoes, below his perfectly cut gray suit.
My father stepped into the corridor. When I followed him Vincenzo closed the door with a thud and then a click. For a moment I was terrified, glued to the spot, and if the door had been less heavy I might have turned and run. The thud, though, echoed in my ears and I knew that escape was impossible.
Vincenzo's feet walked down the corridor and my father pulled me after him, his hands biting into my arm. He was pulling me along but I was holding him up.
Halfway down the long corridor there was door on the left. It opened into a smallish room. Vincenzo led us in. I glanced up. There was an old metal desk with one chair behind it and two in front. A single document was on the desk. Vincenzo gestured for us to sit. My father pushed me into the nearest chair and he himself stumbled into the far one. Vincenzo said, as if he mocked me, "Look at me now." Slowly I obeyed. His eyes were not just green, they were glittering. His cheekbones were chiseled and his mouth perfectly proportioned, its softness a contrast to the angles of his nose. Looking at him, I felt young and as if he were the first adult I had ever seen.
Vincenzo held my eyes for a moment, and another, and another, and another. What he was thinking I could not guess. He was trying to read me, too, I think. I felt both comforted and more afraid.
My father shifted nervously in his chair and cleared his throat. Vincenzo turned towards him unhurriedly, scornfully. He tapped the paper on the desk. "Well, Mr. Lambert," he said, the formality a subtle insult that was no doubt lost on my father. "I know you've seen this contract before."
My father said heavily, "I've seen it."
"Has he shown it to you?" he asked me, and I thought he almost said my name, Belinda, but did not.
I shook my head and tried to sound calm. "No," I said, and added, "Mr. Dragna. But I know what's in it. He explained it to me."
"You will call me sir, for now," Vincenzo said, smiling slightly. He tapped the contract with his finger. "There can be no misunderstanding about this. In the eyes of the law this contract is not binding, but morally if you sign it there is no way out. Do you understand that?"
I nodded and met his eyes. "Yes, sir," I said.
Vincenzo smiled as if to himself. "I asked the wrong question. What I really want to know is," and here he leaned back in his chair and squinted a little, "Do you believe that?"
"Sir?" I asked.
"Do you believe," Vincenzo said, "That you should be held accountable for your own choices?"
"Yes, sir," I said.