"You a juice-aholic or something?" Carrie teased as I slid onto the stool.
"Nope, barfly," I grinned winningly.
"Lolita?"
"No, something more exotic."
"Shirley Temple then."
"Great."
"Two bucks off when I punch your membership card, first one's virtually free."
It was nearly closing time and SOL was dead. The orange juice in the tall glass was tangy and the cold was a relief from the brutal heat outside. There was supposed to be a break overnight and the prediction was for a beautiful week.
"Do you work here every night?" I asked.
"Thursday through Sunday, always nights, plus anything more that I can get. That way I can play ball during the day."
"What?"
"Softball. There's an organized game on Saturday and Sunday mornings, with some really good players. There're pickup games during the week, early, before it gets too hot. This place hasn't gotten the full memo on Title XX, so women's fields are tough to get scheduled on, but they manage."
"The heatwave's supposed to break tonight," I said, changing the subject, "or so they say. Could you make time for a picnic on Tuesday, for lunch?"
"Thought you had a steady job," she parried.
"The ad for the interviews will run in the paper on Friday. Classes start Monday and we want to be interviewing by the end of the week, so that's when I become a nine-to-fiver."
"Okay, sure. Where can we go?"
"I've got a car. There's a beautiful little park on the road out toward the ag school. I'll pack a basket."
"Okay, I'll bring drinks and hors d'oeuvres."
All they had left was a solitary chicken wrap and the waiters looked like they wanted to go home. I downed my drink and took the wrap with me.
*
The buildings guys had bolted the chair to the floor by the time I got to the lab. Anna and I were really in business.
"Let's do a trial run. I'll start recording," I said. We took our seats. She read a short explanation of the study, and we began.
Her tone was pleasant but neutral. After asking my name and address, she asked questions that required yes-or-no answers. She asked if my date of birth was January thirtieth.
"No, it's July 14."
"Please just answer yes or no."
"Oh, sorry. Uh, no."
Had I ever visited Cleveland, Ohio? Winnipeg, Manitoba? Did I know how to fish? Was the moon made of green cheese? On and on, yes mixed with no.
"Have you ever stolen money from your mother's purse?"
I was startled. "No!" A lie, I'd done it twice and always felt guilty when I thought about it.
After another twenty questions, she asked "Have you ever killed a kitten?"
"No!" I started to sweat.
Twenty questions or so later it was "Are you a virgin?"
"No."
"Is Cleveland in Ohio?"
When I said yes, she smiled. "Okay, you're pretty normal. The typical response to the date-of-birth question is to provide the right date, which we don't care about. We're looking to establish a baseline for a mild negative response and we want to reinforce the yes-or-no type answer.
"The more outrageous or personal questions test other traits. We mix in the innocuous, ever-been-to-Cleveland stuff to test the baseline. It's actually pretty clever."
"Let's check the file, see how it came out."
We ran it from the top. The audio was ever so slightly fuzzy, but the video was exactly as the technical specs required, as far as I could tell. We were both satisfied.
"Okay, I'm going to send this to Margolin," said Anna. "I'll call you if he wants anything changed."
"Marilyn says the ad is on schedule for Friday," I reported. "I'll be able to download the online responses and run the selection algorithm Sunday afternoon for whatever've come in by then. If enough of them pick Wednesday, we can start then, Thursday at worst."
"Good. It's always better to get off to a fast start. That way, if anything goes wrong, we have breathing room."
"Does anybody ever get angry at these questions?"
"This is the third study I've worked on with Don, he likes this approach. There were a couple of questions in one study that were actually designed to elicit anger, not at me but at a scripted external situation, where I was an unsympathetic commenter. I'd have liked to have the build of a linebacker for the Packers right then." Which would have been difficult, since she couldn't have weighed more than a hundred and ten pounds.
We went to lunch at Literratica. Anna seemed to know most of what was interesting about me, I guess from my resume and talking with Don.
"I've put in to be a pysch major, but I don't really know what I'm getting in to. When did you know this is what you wanted to do?"
"Four years ago I didn't know the difference between psychology and particle physics," she smiled. "I was an English major, wanted to teach high-school literature. I was doing practice teaching when they asked me to fill in for the guidance counselor, who was suddenly hospitalized.
"I think I was picked because I have a empathetic ear for adolescent troubles. I loved it, the experience changed my life.
"But I wanted to know more than just helping kids. Eventually I found that pushing the boundaries of how people tick was even more interesting, but I still care about adolescent neuroses.
"Research is what suits me. I had to take an extra year of classes to get my degree in psychology. Don asked me to be a teaching assistant, then recommended me for a graduate fellowship. I'm a year away from getting my Ph.D."
"What's the practical value of a Ph.D.?"
"You can't teach without it. And if, like me, you want to continue to do research, they won't even look at your resume without one. I was lucky to have met Don, he's very active in the field.
"We've got two different research projects going and I've already been listed as an associate on an article with him. It was published in the
British Journal of Social Psychology
, one of the biggies."
"Gee, I'm a real rookie," I said, feeling small.
"Everybody's gotta start somewhere. I was into Emily Dickenson and Edith Wharton as feminist writers. Now I'm re-reading them for the insights they had, way ahead of their time, on women's attempts to self-liberate in marriage.
"Keep your eyes and ears open around here. It may turn out that psych's not for you. Or you may find a branch that suits you. Or you could wind up in particle physics. Whatever, doesn't matter. But when you find your muse, god, the only thing that beats it is a good cum."
I blushed.
"Oops, sorry, didn't mean to cross the line, Carl."
"No, it's okay. I'm just, I suppose, I just don't associate getting satisfaction from work with, you know, satisfaction. In sex, I mean," I said, averting my eyes.