"Zackel, Frederick - Dead Wrong About The Guy" - читать интересную книгу автора (Zackel Frederick)Dead Wrong About the Guy
by Frederick Zackel Copyright © 2001 The waitress was young, maybe seventeen years old, very short and very skinny. She looked fragile and small, a mere whisper of a woman, which I figured she hated about herself. But I could also see she was working hard at overcoming her faults. See, her blonde hair had been chopped short and then dyed a bright magenta. She also had three earrings in one ear and a butterfly tattoo on the crest of her right breast. She was the waitress on duty at the Pier Inn Restaurant and I was in the back booth. I was her last lunch customer. Although it fronted the piers and the gas dock, the restaurant was a bit out of the way, a tad off the beaten track and not flashy enough to attract the tourists, like this part of Maui itself. Inside, the eatery had checkered curtains and no table cloths, a half-dozen tables, booths along either side wall, and a counter with swivel stools. I looked up from my paper as she approached. "What did the parrot say about me?" The skinny young waitress was caught off-guard, and so she blushed, which surprised her. She hadn't seen me look over at her. She got ballsy to cover her confusion. "I said, that's a guy married to his job," she said. "I said, look how he's got his head buried in a newspaper." "And what’s that mean to you?" "What a waste! If he moves his head six inches, bang!, he's looking at one of the most sensational sunsets Maui ever had." I looked out at the sunset, then at her. "Well, you had your head buried in that newspaper," she said lamely. I looked at the newspaper, then at her. She said, "That newspaper's the dead giveaway. When I see a guy with his nose in a newspaper like that, he's used to traveling alone and eating alone. Bet you spend your whole life on business trips. You’re a salesman or something. Bet you doesn't even know what state you’re in now." "So, do you talk to the parrot a lot?" "Only when the place is slow." She turned on a dime and became a waitress again. "I didn't think you were ready to order." I folded the paper, set it aside, and gave her my undivided attention. "I'm ready to order now." She said, "Okay. What would you like?" "I'll have a chef salad. Blue cheese on the side." "Anything to drink?" "Coffee. Black." "Anything else?" I shook my head, gave her back the menu. When she left for the kitchen, I watched her walk. Once her cute little butt disappeared into the kitchen, I went back to my newspaper. Moments later, she returned with my salad. I started eating, still reading my newspaper. The waitress went behind the counter, poured herself a cup of coffee, and watched me for a while. She brought the coffee pot and filled my cup. I looked up, "noticed" her so I smiled a customer's smile, but said nothing to her, and she said nothing to me. She came back when I was half-finished. "How was it?" she asked. I didn't look up. "Fine." She didn't leave. "You always eat just a salad only?" I noticed her for the second time. "Yeah." "You don't look like a vegetarian." "You live longer if you keep your weight down." She looked at the broad-leafed salad and she knew better. I added, "That's if you don't die from the pesticides first." She stared suspiciously at my chef's salad, then looked quizzically at the guy. "Something I should know about?" "No. There was nothing wrong with my salad." "Oh. Okay." She tried being a waitress again. "How’s your meal?" "It was as magnificent as Maui. Or you." We made eye contact, and I was surprised that her eyes could meet mine for as long they did. When she found herself blushing, she left for the kitchen. I smiled. As she left, Flea Nichols entered the restaurant. I almost laughed seeing Flea Nichols after all those years. Flea was a small guy in his thirties, but he was already out-of-shape. And though his hair was receding, he wore it long and tied back in a ponytail. He wore a gaudy aloha shirt two sizes too big for him. Spindly legs poked out of his khaki shorts. Seeing the man in the back booth, he went pale as a ghost. I beckoned Flea to join me. Flea Nichols reluctantly came and sat across from me. I laughed, then slapped Flea Nichols' leg. "So tell me about it, Flea!" I said cheerily. "Tell me why I came four thousand miles to see you." Flea's fingers trembled as he took ten one-hundred dollar bills from his wallet and passed them across the table to me. I looked the money over. The bills were real, used bills and out of sequence. I didn't return the money. They were mine now. Flea was jittery. "They're real, Mister Paoli. A guy up here gave them to me to get somebody willing to listen to a deal he wants pulled off." We cruised past the city limits of Kahului in my rented Mustang. |
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