The drive from Venice to Beverly
Hills was a warm one.
In the Mexico it felt
like a heat stroke in a Senior Citizens' home while Strangelove-riding a washing machine on full spin. Kidneys rattled against spinal discs which
vibrated and clashed into intestines as the death trap on wheels rolled along
surface roads, in and out, and in through traffic. Pulling off on to the well-to-do, privately
policed, streets of the top one percent I watched as octogenarians, who had the
bagging skin pulled so tight that they looked as though they had a 365
Halloween mask, turned their new noses up at the sight of a man making his way
through their streets trying to carve out a living. ‘It’s the role of people like this to keep people like me down’ I told myself, ‘this is how
they keep the world turning.’
I turned
into the driveway and cruised up the perfectly smooth lane between the two immaculately
manicured lots of green with award winning rose bushes. I had been working this gig long enough that the
community’s private police service no longer stopped my old wagon on sight.
Turning the
engine off I climbed from the cabin. I’d
need to remember to feed her some water before I ventured back towards the
Pacific, I’d need to re-tune my banjo before the lesson as the good vibrations
from the frequently shot suspension renders chords unplayable, almost brutal.
I rang the
doorbell, Eduardo worked away with his wheelbarrow and I heard the pitter of
soft-shoed feet as Helena answered
the door. She was Filipino. I was the first white servant she had seen
call to the house in all her years working for the Tobermans. She stood five foot on her tip-toes and had a
roundness to her body which was homely.
‘Hey baby,
ready to go to prom?’ I asked her.
She’d roll her
eyes getting into character. I was the
smart-ass, she was the older woman who had no time for my personality
disorder. A beautiful roleplay.
‘Mrs.
Toberman!’ she called ‘He’s here again!’
As welcome
as a Jehovah’s witness at an orgy.
Even though
I had been to the house every Wednesday for the past three months Helena would not
unplug her frame from the doorway until she heard the mistress of the house,
and her high heels click, click, click their way down the marble staircase in
the middle of the foyer. I caught sight,
she was wearing her green dress today.
It meant emeralds on her fingers and ears. Tossing her blonde mane she’d throw me a
smile.
‘Please Helena ,’ she said
placing a hand on the maid’s shoulder ‘Douglas is a
guest. Don’t have him standing on the
doorstep. Take him to the music room
then get Tommy and let him know his tutor is here.’
‘Follow me.’
she’d sigh before leading me to the music room as though it was my first time
in the enormous New World estate of a home.
The music
room used to be the games room, before that it was the library, and before that
maybe the indoor pool or the den or maybe even a study but when young master
Tommy spoke to his mother and father of his desire to learn to play the banjo
Mr. Toberman (who was seemingly in a permanent state of weekday incommunicado)
would click his fingers and materialize several black, and brown, and yellow
men to do his building work for him; to transform the room into his son’s very
own recording studio.
Propped up
on a stool I nursed the new bruises the battered springs of the Mexico had willed
me and re-tuned my Ozark. Five
string. Bluegrass . The instrument of Great American
heartache. Tommy arrived eager,
instrument in hand, much more expensive than mine. Prick.
His blonde mop bouncing wildly as he raced to his spot. I had to give him it, he was a work-horse. He might have come from money but he was
determined. He reminded me a little of
myself. I pushed that idea to the back
of my mind, if he was me then I could be only one person.
‘Hey Doug.’
he beamed.
‘Hey
yourself kid,’ I had finished tuning ‘pull up and show me how you’re coming
along.’
He sat down
across from me, his daddy had managed to buy him some gold records from 80s
Rock bands that blew all their bank and couldn’t afford to keep any memento of
the glory days. One always sat directly
over his head, light reflecting from it making it shine as bright as a
halo. Tommy plucked his way through John Henry. He had been practicing. It was a good rendition.
‘That’s cool
boss,’ he got a kick from me calling him boss
‘but don’t be afraid to throw a little style into it. When you come back around even just throw in
a second open D to give it a little soul.’ I played it through for him,
throwing in a little of myself here and there.
He took note with his eyes, unblinking and honest.
‘Open D.’
‘Yeah. So what do you want to learn today?’
‘Hmmm.’
‘How about a
little something from the homeland me boyo?’
I threw out a few strings of Danny
Boy.
‘Oh yeah,
that would be cool.’ he said.
‘Ok, so Danny Boy is deceptive. Because you start up around the top of the
neck and then there are some big jumps and the tune gets high and then you have
to bring it right back down. Make sure you’ve your fingering right from
the get-go otherwise there’s going to be trouble.’
‘Fingering,
right.’ his voice was without snigger, and I felt bad that the boy was missing
out on a real childhood.
‘So how
about we break it up a bit. We’ll go
right up until the jump to the tenth and we’ll work on that first. Get it real solid and then next week we can learn the rest then put
it together.’
‘You don’t
think I could learn it all in one?’
‘I
didn’t. It’s a tough song, tough because
everybody knows it.’
I played him
through Danny Boy and then taught him
everything he could do with the three fingers he had been using up to this
point to work the neck. He paid
attention and played along with me when I gave him the nod. At the end of the lesson I drew out the neck,
marked up his chords to play and folded it in half before feeding it to his
shirt pocket. I packed up my banjo into
its case but when I turned around Tommy was still there. He stood awkwardly to attention, as though I
was his drill sergeant. I smiled. He mirrored.
It was as awkward as dating your cousin.
‘What’s up
boss?’ I asked.
‘I was
wondering something…’
‘Oh
yeah? And what’s that then?’
‘How do you
know if a girl likes you?’ his face grew red.
‘That’s an
interesting question kid. If I had the
answers I’d be as rich as your old man.
Speaking of him, shouldn’t this be
a question you direct to him?’
‘He’s always
busy with work.’ confessed Tommy.
‘Leave Douglas alone son,
you’ve monopolized just about enough of his time today.’ instructed Mrs.
Toberman as she lent against the frame of the door.
Tommy nodded
before turning to me and giving me that look.
The look that said it’s not too
late to give me some advice. I told
him if he liked her he should say something to her, some girls like to be
asked, some girls like asking. He’d grow
up and figure out which type of girl he liked and it would be made easier for
him or it wouldn’t.
‘Why don’t
you go outside and play?’ the blonde said.
Even I knew
that answer. The kid didn’t have much in
the way of friends. The kid didn’t have
much in the way of anything that couldn’t spring from a chequebook. The more some people have…
‘But Mum.’
‘No but Mums, off you go Thomas.’
The kid
grabbed his antique banjo. It probably
belonged to Bill Lowrey, or Burl Ives, or maybe even Don Reno. Gliding to the door she checked her son had
actually left before slotting it into its frame and turning the lock. In an instant her hair was down and her hands
on my chest.
‘I’ve a
cheque here for you.’ she said, all smiles.
‘Much
appreciated, he’s a good kid. He…’
‘I want you
to fuck me now.’ the dress came off her shoulders, stalling a second on her
breasts before it dropped to the floor.
She stepped out of it wearing only her heels.
Her body was
tight. Her stomach flat, her hips curvy
with the right amount of meat on them.
Her flanks, toned and powerful.
‘What’s it
to be today?’
‘No games
today, I just need filled, give me meat and butter!’
Mrs.
Toberman had propositioned me two weeks into employment. It started out like any other screw but the
more she got comfortable with me the more the real Julie Toberman started
coming out. One Wednesday she invited
the whole family over purely so we could play a game she called:
ANNE FRANK’S
SEXY ATTIC
I’d slide it into her,
she’d bite down on her hand as I pushed up inside and her entire family walked
around beneath us cast in the role of the Germans. In recent weeks she had embraced my Irish
roots and devised one called:
IRISH POTATO
FAMINE FUCK MARKET
She’d play the poor
Irish widow who couldn’t afford to feed her family, in a reversal of fortune
I’d be the wealthy land baron who would let her work it off. One Sunday
afternoon she told some of the girls at the country club about her son’s banjo
tutor and the little extra he’d do
around the house for her. I got two more
gigs out of it, both with children of privilege, both with wives bored of
fucking to a rota. Like there’s anything
worse.
Unbuttoning
my jeans she reached inside and grabbed herself a handful of turkeyneck. Guiding me to the piano, a Steinway, she bent
over. I grabbed her hips and jammed it
in good. I was giving his son girl
advice and dicking his wife, I was making a good trade at being Marcus
Toberman.