Ben had come to work the night shift at the bakery during the last semester of his junior year at college. He was a nice boy, intelligent, studying journalism. He was not what I would have called attractive, though I hardly looked at him that way. He was 20, practically half my age and I learned casually through co-worker gossip and scant little conversations that he had a girlfriend.
At that time I was recently divorced. The marriage had not been a good one and I was a bit stressed out with the idea of starting to date again at 41.
I'm not saying that I have a negative self image. But after almost 19 years with the same man, it's like starting over from scratch. To add to things I had three kids, a full-time job managing my father's bakery and well... you get the idea.
But this story is about Ben.
The bakery is a small place, so it's easy for us to run the place with just one or two people at a time. The night shift is the slowest, and also the most dangerous. Ben was a big guy, 6' 2", 230 lbs, broad shouldered and intimidating.
When he first started working, my daughter Kyra commented on how scary he would have looked if it were not for his big round jack-o-lantern face. Ben was a perpetual wearer of smiles and a bit of an odd ball. A goof ball, with goofy features, who told goofy stories and made all of us laugh whenever he came in to pick up his paychecks on the morning shift.
On Mondays, my father, who is also the baker, takes his day off to go fishing, and it falls to me to do the baking. This requires coming into the bakery at 11 p.m. Sunday nights and continuously working until past 8 the next morning. This has been my routine since my dad opened the bakery when I was 18. On these nights, I would arrive to find Ben counting down the register or wiping down tables, doing the busy janitorial work of the night shift.
One night, after Ben had been with the bakery for about a year I came in to find him looking rather sullen. It was jarring. The smiling happy class clown was gone and instead there was a troubled man in his place.
"Hey," I said, waving hopefully and smiling.
He nodded and mumbled a hello.
"Somebody die?"
"Nope. Got dumped."
He said it so matter-of-factly. I'd never officially met his girlfriend, though I had seen her once or twice waiting for him out front while he got his paycheck and a couple cups of coffee. "I'm sorry," I said.
It was all I could think to say. I went back to the office to ditch my bag and coat and then grabbed an apron from the back. When I came back up front Ben had the register open and was counting the bills diligently, his shoulders rounded and sagging as he tried to concentrate on his work.
Suddenly I realized I was witnessing a change. Ben had experienced a great loss, a lessening of himself. He'd probably fallen in love with the girl and she, being young, had simply tossed him away when she'd gotten board with him. Now, the smiling happy-go-lucky boy was gone, probably forever and seeing that it made me very sad. I'm not a shy person, very friendly, everyone I work with knows this, so when I walked up behind Ben and gave him a hug from behind it was a natural thing for me to do.
Ben tensed a little and then relaxed as I planted a small kiss on his shoulderโa peck.I lingered a bit, taking in the smell of him. I'd been practically celibate since the divorce was finalized and the smell of him was all together masculine. A little sweat, some aftershave, the bakery scent worn deep into his uniform shirt. I rubbed his shoulder as I finally pulled myself away. "It gets better, sweetie," I said, and went to work baking.
Nothing happened that night, nor do I think either of us wanted something to happen, but after that whenever I came in on Sunday nights, I'd find Ben stocking the drink cooler, or finishing up something and afterwards we would talk. We talked about all sorts of things. My kids, his family back east. I made him tell me everything about college life and his dreams. He confided in me that Journalism, though "a swell field of study", was not his dream.
"What do you want to do?"
"I want to be a satirist. You know, write a column about how funny life can be if you look at it from certain angles."
Ben would often have examples, and as he talked, his voice would get excited as he made wonderful little points and puns that elicited laughter. It was like every Sunday night for one hour I had my own stand-up comedian performing for me.
"You could be an actor," I said once, pointing out how well he impersonated people in his stories and how physical he was.
"I acted a little in high school. But it's a crap job. I want a family some day."
"So that's why you're doing the reporting thing?"
"It's a good job, lots of action."
By the end of his second year working at the bakery, Ben had completed his undergraduate degree and started his masters, also from our weekly "sessions" he and I had developed a strong friendship. I myself had started dating again, and Ben was very supportive, giving me his opinions and frank appraisals of my various dates as I went through them as I folded dough and he drank Diet Pepsi.
"So I went to his houseโnice placeโhe's got a spread and horses."
"You always go for the farm boy types..."
"Well, anyway, we had a few beers on the porch and talked for a while. Then he says it's getting late and he's got an early day tomorrow."
"And that's the buzzer," Ben shook his head. "He's hung up on someone else."
"What?"
"When a man doesn't make a move it's because he's either hung up on someone else or you're not his type. It's a brush off."
"Then why did he invite me to sit for a beer?"
"Maybe he was trying to like you but in the end he just couldn't... take you in the back and give it to you."
"Men are weird."
"Yep. We are." He took a sip of his soda. "Of course there is a secret way of telling whether a guy definitely wants to sleep with you."