1. The Bar Across The Street
The Bar Across The Street had a campus vibe. Trophies on shelves, framed print-media articles on the wall, a long wooden, U-shaped bar, with comfortable tall seats and hooks under the bar for ladies' purses. On one wall, Chicago Cubs posters; artsy, elegant ones that uplifted Chicago. All the decor was left over from the classy country-club-bar vibe the bar had been trying to give, with less success each year, throughout the seventies.
But now it was the eighties, and this neighborhood was on the outskirts of yuppie Chicago, a cheaper neighborhood where striving wannabe young cosmopolitan professionals like wannabe photojournalist Larry Appleton were living and taking the train or dreaming of taking the train into Chicago proper each day. Fortunately for The Bar Across the Street, the eyes of 1986 outer-Chicago discovered the place, as the only bar open after eleven in this lame neighborhood, and when they went inside and discovered the vibe was so preppy, at the height of the Eighties Preppy Style, then The Bar Across The Street became the famous spot in the neighborhood for twenty-and-thirty-somethings, and the place Larry would choose when he invited a charming young lady "for drinks."
It was a bar with always a good mix a people, a good mix of men and women, and a bar where nice girls felt safe, and mostly were.
Before Balki Bartokomous appeared in his life at the end of March in 1986, Larry had been humbly meeting women through the Personals Sections in the Chicago Reader, the Chicago Chronicle, the Chicago Tribune, the Chicago Sun-Times, and the Chicago Whip (the last one was full of Catholic Midwestern women who were rather particular in their corporal focus).
Larry arranged these dates through letters and telephone calls as they corresponded and got to know each other. Larry found The Bar Across The Street an ideal site for these semi-blind first dates in no small part because of that sweet laugh it usually produced in the woman whom he was inviting out on a semi-blind first date.
"The name of the bar is The Bar Across The Street," Larry might sometimes have to clarify. The laughter was soft, but sweet. Larry was a stranger, but he made these women feel safe.
The bar was always decently crowded, but seats along the bar itself were usually easy to secure two together. Larry was relaxed there, and the bartenders knew him, from his regular patronage, in a nodding, hellos-but-no-long-conversations relationship.
The tables and booths at the bar were usually packed, and the energy at the bar came mostly from the social groups that were the packs of post-college Midwesterners, who never came alone and who still needed to meet romantic partners through groups, group dates, softball leagues, jogging groups, church groups, and the other merry tablefulls of happy, drinking, gossiping patrons.
For all of these reasons, Larry considered The Bar Across The Street a reliable place where he could get his dick wet.
So when he took Balki there that fateful evening to teach him the American Singles Bar Scene, the way it went so bad so fast was one of those sudden reversals of expectation and past practices that would so set Larry Appleton upended against himself and reversing any of his forward motion for a long, wounded period of lateral movement, self-loathing and despair.
Making it agonizingly worse for Larry, that same-night at The Bar Across The Street, Balki met and hooked up with an adorable blonde in a robin's egg blue ensemble of pants and matching blouse, accented with a double-strand of pearls that matched her pearl earrings. Her shoes were beige pumps.
And making it still worse, she and Balki met through pure chemistry and fate, off of nothing more than a glance across the U-shaped bar, eye contact, and sweet, natural conversation.
"Do you come here often?" Balki began with.
Diane--the blonde--with deep, blue eyes the color of Lake Michigan, opened those eyes wider, shook her head honestly and her mouth sunk as she admitted her insecurity: "No," she said, her blonde hair just touching her shoulders and held in perfectly Reagan-Era big-hair coiffure.
She looked at Balki, hopefully.
"Would you smother me with your beautiful American body?" Balki said in his natural voice, which because of his unfamiliar Myposian accent, sounded to her like he was doing a character, like it was a bit. But she could feel the compliment, feel in her insecurity this handsome, tall, dark man about her age telling her that she was not only pretty but Beautiful, not only beautiful but Arousing!
She was taken aback but not offended...and kind of curious... so after this man's pleasant but overprotective friend (Larry) grabbed him out of there, she wandered over to the end of the bar where this strange, attractive foreign man was sitting with his overprotective friend, listening to their conversation... two silly boys being shy about women, as shy about women as she was about men... and so when the pleasant, American one got up to talk to another lady, she sat down and realized she had the green light to be as up-front and direct with this tall, dark, and handsome foreign man as he had just been with her when he called her beautiful and implied that he found her attractive and sexually so, as attractive as, she had to admit to herself, her needy, long-untouched Midwestern Blonde body, found him.
"Is anyone using this bar stool?"
Her soft opening line.
"Yes, you." His opening response.
"I'm sorry to be so forward."
"It's quite okay," Balki replied.