Friday, March 28, 2014

Fiction Friday: Not for Profit, Part Two


By the time I had crossed the square, I was grateful for the dim coolness of the museum. As I entered, a balding middle-aged man was just coming out, and he held the door open for me with a charming little bow. He looked faintly familiar, and while I paused to leave a donation I puzzled over who I could possibly know in Mexico. But I didn’t puzzle long, as I quickly realized I wasn’t alone: Jonathan was standing at the far end of the room, his back to me, leaning over to examine something in a glass case.
It was Jonathan as in my ex-fiancĂ© Jonathan. The “ex” part had been his idea, not mine. We met in college and soon began spending our evenings together in the campus coffee shop, where he would beat me at darts while he talked history and I talked accounting. And somehow it worked. We got quietly engaged the spring of his senior year, before he headed off to Georgetown (the showoff) to get his master’s. I knew long-distance engagements were usually trouble, but once again, somehow it worked. We called each other most evenings, of course, and Jonathan wrote. I know, who writes letters anymore? But he did. It must have been the historian in him. On nights when he didn’t call, I could re-read the letters, and the loneliness wasn’t fun, but it was a good year. The way you handle being apart can tell you whether you’re meant to be together. Or at least, I thought so.
He came to my graduation that May. I told myself that a little reserve was only natural after we’d been separated so long. That summer, the letters became less frequent and the calls just a little shorter, but I was cramming for the CPA exam and it was easy not to think about anything else.
He waited until after I’d passed the exam. I was grateful to him for that, even then. And he flew out to talk to me in person. I don’t believe you can soften a blow, but at least you can face it. He was sorry and, I think, ashamed, but he had met someone else. There wasn’t much to say on either side. The bare statement did the trick. We wished each other well — he probably meant it — and said goodbye.
I hadn’t seen him in four years, but now I knew it was him even before he turned around. So I had a second or two’s advantage over him, and yes, I enjoyed it. I was determined that he was going to deal with seeing me.
He didn’t look pleased. It took him a few moments to make a decision, and while he hesitated, I studied him. He looked good. I could admit that, and the admission had nothing to do with the fact that he wasn’t wearing a wedding ring. Yes, I checked. But if his second engagement or his marriage (I preferred engagement) hadn’t lasted either, it was not exactly an incentive to think about a rebound. He had left me. If he had left someone else after that, well, maybe he was better off alone.
Besides, there were other things to think about. Things like the small gold signet ring on his right hand. The diamond-set Rolex on his wrist. The obviously bespoke light grey suit. This was a man who had so far published exactly one book: a biography of Sir Francis Walsingham. It was a really good biography, but Sir Francis Walsingham does not pay for that kind of tailoring. More importantly, none of it was Jonathan. Some things don’t change in four years. Or ever.
Whatever he was thinking about, he made up his mind. “Hi.”
“Hi.” This was his problem, not mine.
“‘Of all the gin joints,’ huh?” He took a step toward me. “Except that you’re a beer drinker, aren’t you?”
It hurt that he remembered that.
“Can I buy you one?”
Dignified silence is harder than it looks. “I don’t think that’s a good idea. I mean… There’s no point, is there? It’s a small town, but I’ll only be here three days. We can ignore each other that long.”
“Yeah, but I need to say a couple of things first.” He saw that I was about to speak and put up a hand. “Natalie, please. This is not to rehash the past or offer explanations. This is right here, right now. There’s something you need to know.”

*******

I let him buy me a beer. I was curious, but it was more than that. I had only heard him use that tone once before: the night he proposed. He had looked and sounded then as if a minor matter like the end of the world wouldn’t distract him, and he looked and sounded that way now.
He took me to a cantina just off the square. When the waitress had brought beer, guacamole, and chips, and then made herself scarce, I expected him to launch right in, but he started by asking why I was there. I told him about my job and about the hospital, and because it seemed natural I even told him about the week’s delay and my sister’s baby. I suddenly remembered that he’d been my date to her wedding, and that I’d tripped over my bridesmaid’s dress on the dance floor.
He murmured congratulations that we both knew I wouldn’t pass on, but his mind was elsewhere. “Do you trust me?”
“I used to.”
He deserved that, and he knew it. “And now?”
I thought, Heck no, are you crazy? But I heard myself say, “I’ll try.”
“Okay. Just listen, and I’ll answer questions at the end if I can. We met at the museum — I mean met met, as in complete and total strangers. I told you my name was David Blair and that I was in banking, but I didn’t seem to want to give details. You got the impression I was here on vacation. You let me buy you a drink, we flirted a little, I wasn’t your type.” He paused. “You want it?”
I shook my head. “Too easy.”
“No hard feelings, we went our separate ways, and that was that.” He saw the waitress glance in our direction, so he smiled, but his eyes weren’t smiling.
My first thought, when I was capable of having thoughts, was Why are you trusting me now? But the answer was obvious. He was trusting me now because he had to. And for no other reason. And there were more important questions to ask. “Are you in trouble?”
“Not if your memory’s still good.”
“Is this why you left me?” I knew it was, but I needed him to say it.
“Yes.”
“Will you call me when it’s over?” It was my turn to stop him from speaking. “I know you can’t explain. That’s become very obvious. But just this once, I need to know you’re all right.” When he nodded, I reached into my purse and handed him a business card.
He looked at it, but then he handed it back. “I wasn’t your type. You wouldn’t have given me a card.” He drained his beer and clinked the bottle against mine. “Don’t worry — my memory’s still good, too.”

*******

It occurred to me that night (when you’re not sleeping stuff occurs to you) that I had never for a second doubted what side he was on. I was angry at him, more angry now than I had been four years ago, but I simply wasn’t able to doubt him. Like the Rolex, it wasn’t Jonathan. So I forgot about doubt and concentrated on anger. He should have told me. There I was on safe ground. He should at least have asked what I wanted. But after dwelling on that in righteous certainty, at about 1 a.m. I asked myself what my answer would have been.
There I wasn’t nearly as certain.

Friday, March 21, 2014

Fiction Friday: Not for Profit, Part One

[Rationale (-ization?) can be found here.]


Not for Profit

They asked me to change the names.
Actually, they asked me not to write it at all, but I pointed out that it might as well be fiction — no one would believe it. And it needs to be told. So we compromised.
This is fiction.
I’ve changed the names.


*******


When I met Hector Perez, he was the bright spot in the middle of a very long day. I was on my first foreign site visit as the very junior program officer at a very big charitable foundation. I had a laptop case stuffed with the proposal and supporting financials of a Mexican hospital. Okay, Mexico wasn’t exactly the ends of the earth, but it still counted as foreign. I was running late — more than a week late, as I’d had to postpone the trip to help my sister while she had her third baby. Somehow Aunt Natalie, with no children and no prospect of any, was always the first choice to watch the kids. Now that the trip was finally on, I was also running late because of traffic, and on the way to the airport I managed to spill a cappuccino on the sleeve of my brand new, professional-but-still-practical-in-the-heat white linen jacket. During the flight, I convinced myself that I was completely unprepared and that it would be painfully obvious to the hospital staff, and that it must have been painfully obvious to my boss, so they must be setting me up to fail, and what was I doing in this job, anyway?
Then I took a deep breath and told myself everything was fine. That works more often than you might think.
Hector met me at the airport. He was wearing khakis and a loose shirt, and a wooden rosary around his neck peeked out at the collar. He approached with a smile and a firm handshake, and asked “Miss Evans?” with a purely American accent.
“California,” he added, either through telepathy or habit, as he took my bag. “Born and raised in Long Beach, pre-med at UCLA. I got permission to do a year of my internship here.”
“Permission from where?”
“Johns Hopkins,” he admitted, with a smile that held equal parts pride and embarrassment. I learned very quickly that that was Hector’s normal smile: it said two things at once, and they were usually contradictory.
“I don’t remember reading about you in the proposal.”
He shrugged. “I’ll be gone soon enough. They’ll still be here.”
He led me out of the airport to an ancient Volkswagen Beetle. As he opened the passenger door for me, he said that the hospital was about an hour’s drive, “not counting flat tires, washed out roads, or other acts of God.” Since the car was practically riding on rims as it was, I wanted to ask what he called a flat tire, but decided against it.
As he drove and kept a lookout for acts of God, I asked him how a Johns Hopkins intern had been drawn here. He told me about the hospital, about Dr. Reyes (whose name had been in the proposal) and about some of the patients he had seen. He was a persuasive advocate, and I wondered aloud whether he had chauffeured any other program officers.
He shook his head. “I’ve been here ten months, and you’re the first one I’ve seen. Honestly, I don’t think most of us expected you to really show up, either. We’re small, kind of under the radar out here. Maybe I shouldn’t ask, but does your being here mean we’ve got a shot at a grant?”
“I really can’t…”
“I get it. Anyway, you should see the place before you make up your mind.” And, with perfect timing, he chose that moment to tell me that the cooler in the back seat was stocked with bottled water. Before I could reach back, he had snaked his arm around the back of his seat, snared a bottle, opened it one-handed, and presented it to me. As I held it to my wrists and temples and then took a sip (gulping didn’t seem professional), Hector grinned: “How are we doing on first impressions?”


*******


Hector saw me checked into the hotel and insisted on carrying my bag up to my room. I was surprised by the size of the hotel: from what I had seen of the town driving in, it didn’t seem large enough to support that much tourism. Hector explained that the town had seen action during the Mexican War of Independence in the early 1800s, so it attracted historians, photographers, sightseers, and various combinations of the three. There was even a small museum on the other side of the square.
In the interests of full disclosure, I should mention here that I gave myself a pat on the back when I turned down an entry-level position at PricewaterhouseCoopers to take an internship at the foundation. I had the inner glow of altruism which comes from joining the not-for-profit sector, and which had lasted until I read my first grant application from Rwanda. I knew then that I understood neither courage nor self-sacrifice, and I had reminded myself of that every day since. So when Hector mentioned the museum, it seemed like a good opportunity to learn about people who had understood both.
Be careful what you wish for.

Thursday, March 20, 2014

Fiction Friday: A Thursday Introduction

Well, we’ve learned a few things in these last couple of years of mostly-not blogging. The most obvious one is that I don’t have a lot to say. Not a lot that I consider worth the trouble of saying, that is.
 
Except that’s not entirely true. I do have things to say, but I have trouble translating them into “blog”. I think in story.

So I’m going to try an experiment. Over the next few Fridays, I’m going to serialize a story I wrote awhile back. (Yes, the scheduling is totally based on alliteration.)

This is, honestly, something that I never expected anyone to read. The brief introductory section, and the central moment of inaction, popped into my head one day, and I fashioned the story around them so that they would leave me alone. But I’ve had no idea what to do with it: it just clearly wanted to exist. I’m not in the least sure it’s any good, but it says some things I wanted to say.

See you tomorrow!