I am a bachelor. I must confess, that is an inauspicious note upon which to begin but it is a fact that continues to permeate through my life no matter what actions I take to circumvent it. I was born into this world with the love of two parents and subsequently the regard of a few close friendsβbut that is all. Not to say I have never been in love. Quite to the contraryβI fall in love everyday.
This is my curse. I love women but due to some disagreeable and unintelligible circumstance that I wish I could control, they do not seem to love me. I'm assured that the reasons are not of any physical or emotional impairment on my part. I am often told I am handsome and amiable but...
You see, I can't even finish the sentence. Nobody can. It is always "Roger, you're quite charming, but..." and then the sentence tapers off into silence and the woman speaking commences to fidgeting and doing her best not to look me straight in the eyes. They cannot, for some reason, ever bring themselves to love me. It is bothersome to the extreme. I often feel an immense pain whenever the moment inevitably comes that I am given the brush off.
Some of the women have cried, others were very reserved.
I most assuredly have held back tears on more occasions than any person should ever have to do so. It is because of this fault that I resolved myself some time ago to giving up the retched pursuit of my own happiness.
All the relationships I've had ended on amiable terms. I never had a woman throw things at me or shout. Of course, I think many of the women I've had affairs with would be quick to say in my defense that I'm not the type to give them cause to be upset or violent. On the contrary, they would attest that I am simply "the nicest guy."
Adjectives such as unassuming and intelligent would come up, phrases like well spoken and mild mannered...I suppose some would say I'm caring and compassionate. I've always tried and succeeded at being all these things to people. If I've ever met somebody who took an immediate dislike to me it was because I have an air of condescension to my demeanor.
My friend Hugo says it's what he finds most charming about me. I'm a know-it-all and sometimes a slight snob. "Never to the point of being hateful," he assures, I'm just "hard to shut up."
I don't know exactly how it all began. I suppose it was just a dare I made myself. An experiment of a sort intended to pass the time and satisfy curiosity. I can't take credit for the idea; that honor passes entirely to Hugo. I'll admit he intended it as a joke when he came up with it but... Well, the lonely and miserable become rather deranged and desperate when given the proper push.
We were in a bar, off Lexington, when he picked up the pitcher of beer and poured himself a second mug, smiling at me as I watched a group of office workers at a far booth. One of them was a slim red-haired girl with an abnormally large smile I found rather attractive.
"You wanna hear something?"
I turned back to him. "What?"
"You wanna know how you get a girl like that to talk to you?"
"Money, lots of it."
Hugo giggled. He liked it when I told jokes, even when I didn't tell them he laughed at them.
"No, man, no," he said, through his giggle fit. "That works okay though. Good guess. But I mean actual talkin' talkin'."
"If I let you tell me will you go let me go back to staring at the pretty red-head?"
Hugo looked down the bar and ferreted her out from the small crowd. "She's okay. But listen to me. I'm imparting a serious bit of information."
"Okay. How do I get women to talk to me?"
"Get hitched and women will talk to you all the time. It's a synch. I used to walk into bars all the time, remember? I'd maybe pick up a girl once in a while if I was lucky, but then I met Jackie and I got married. Now..." He held up his ring finger to show off the little silver band he'd been wearing for the past three years. "...I go out by myself I get talked to all the time."
"Is this your way of telling me that you're cheating on your wife?"
Hugo sniggered. "I'm just saying that they talk to me now. And do you know why?"
"No. Why?"
"'Cause they know I wont turn into one of those obsessed needy stalkers if I decided to actually carry on with them. Let's face it, Roger, women today don't really want relationships. They want to carry on with no strings attached. A lot of them hold off on getting into anything serious until it's absolutely last call."
"Last call?"
"You know, for kids. Look at Jackie and me. She went through college and had herself set up as a clothing designer long before she met me. Now we're married and fucking all the time. I mean, it's gotten so that all she has to say to me is 'Hugo, I'm ovulating' and I'm on her like butter on toast."
"Hugo, I'm ovulating?"
"Sexiest come on she's got these days."
"You've been reduced to a Pavlov experiment, is that what you're saying?"
"Pavlov?"
"Russian guy... Never mind."
I bought the ring from a little store on Lafayette Street. I figured nine bucks at discount is a fare price to pay for some decent entertainment.
A part of me did recognize it was a little perverted and odd, but most fun things I do are these days.
Some guys jump off bridges or out of airplanes. People pay hundreds of dollars to pilots to fly them as close to the eye of a hurricane as is possible. That millionaire, what's his name, that one with the $500,000 car-boat who owns his own island in the south Pacific, he's always blowing obscene amounts on stupidity.
Anyway, it was all a gag in the beginning.
I made up a name for her. I called her Jo, short for Josephine not Joanne. I even wrote a post card in feminine handwriting, addressed it to myself from London, and forged the postmark.
It was a week before someone noticed, a girl in a bar.
"Waiting for your wife?"
"No, just having a few after work."
She was youngish, about 23. The bartender asked her for her order she looked around and then at me.
"What you drinking?"
"Porter."
She ordered the same and took out a cigarette. With a careful pause, she seemed to want me to light it for her. I took a match from the bar and did so.
"You look married," she said after releasing some smoke out the side of her mouth.
"Do I?"
"I mean you have this air of, I don't know, being older. How old are you, by the way?"
"29."
"See, and I bet you've been married a while, huh."
"A few years."
"I'm Kris, by the way, spelled with a K. What's your name?"
"Roger, spelled with an R."
And that was it, we were talking. It was easy after that, she told me about her boyfriends, her pets, her parents, asked me what kind of books I liked to read, and at the end I bought her a drink and she asked me if I liked Bartok.
"Love him," I said, signaling the bartender.
"You don't. Nobody ever knows who I'm talking about."
"Bela Bartok. He's a Hungarian composer. My mother had some of his records when I was growing up."
"You're shitting me. You know classical?"
"I know stuff I like."
And we were off again. I asked her if she'd mind sharing a pitcher of New Castle and she accepted. Twenty minutes later she'd listed every composer she could think of, getting my yay or nay on them. Mahler... Yey, Shostakovich... Yey, Shubert...Yey, Puccini... Nay, Bach... Nay, Beethoven... Yay, Brahms... Nay, Bruckner... Nay, Verdi... Nay, Mozart...
"Last call!"
"Oh shoot," She checked her watch and then looked at me. "You kept me talking all night, you wicked man."
"Sorry."
She was standing up now, with some difficulty. "Now it's going to be hell to get a cab."
"I can call one for you."