Excerpt
Wishes And
Kisses
by
Nancy Pirri
August 13, 2000
St. Paul, Minnesota
100° in the shade
My
twenty-first birthday had arrived, and on the hottest
day of the year. Unfortunately, the only thing I had to
look forward to was a drink called an Ultimate Mudslide
that my best friend, Stephanie Hanson, insisted I try.
As I sit beside her at Schwietz’s Bar on St. Paul’s
lower east side, I, Angel (Angelina to mom and dad)
Marrone, am experiencing a deep feeling of apprehension.
This feeling, I’m certain, will soon be followed by a
big-time case of dread.
Damn. I
was certain Stephanie was setting me up for another
blind date.
Sure, I
want to fall in love like any normal (if there is such a
thing) woman, but some of the guys Stephanie chose for
me in the past were bad boys. Stephanie adores them. I’d
had enough of them during my young, impetuous past. They
don’t impress nor appeal to me anymore.
“Come
on, Angel, loosen up!”
I scowl
at my tall, blonde and beautiful friend since
kindergarten, her coloring and build totally opposite of
my own dark hair and eyes. We were also completely
different in size; she’s tall and lanky and I’m tall,
not overly plumb but a bit Amazon-ish, like Zena. I’ve
even been called Zena-Warrior Princess by children in
the grocery line.
At last
I say, “I’m trying, but you know I don’t go for the bar
scene anymore.”
I’d
dated, at least once, every ball player on the Men’s
Thirty and Under League during my crazy stretch of
bar-hopping days between the ages of eighteen and
twenty. Yes, I know the drinking age in Minnesota is
twenty-one, but I’ve always been resourceful.
“So,
explain what’s in this drink and why I have to try one,”
I said.
“Cream,
oh, yeah, cream for sure.” Stephanie grinned, then slid
her tongue in a circle over her lips.
Now
hear this; Stephanie was one of those women who could
get anyone hot, man, or woman, after a move like that.
“Stop
it!” I whispered as I looked around self-consciously.
“Someone might think you’re coming on to me.”
Stephanie threw her arm around my shoulders and let
loose a big belly laugh. “You worry too much. Now let me
continue. Besides cream, there’s Kahlua and Irish cream,
bananas and, let’s not forget the most important
ingredient, and a girl’s best friend, grated chocolate.”
It
sounded heavenly, even as my stomach gurgled. I’d been
up since early morning, pounding the pavement (okay, I’m
prone to clichés so give me a break) looking for a job,
not breaking for any nourishment. I knew better than to
drink on an empty stomach but at the moment I didn’t
want to think about it.
Harrison Photography, where I’d been employed just six
months after graduating from the Minneapolis Institute
of Arts with a bachelor of fine arts degree in
photography and media arts, had let me go. They called
it a layoff but I knew better. I didn’t meet the
standards of that snooty bitch, Pauline Harrison, the
owner of the company. T.G.I.F. is all I can say, and
sleeping in Saturday morning sounds better than an
orgasm at the moment. But then, I haven’t experienced
one of ‘those’ in so long its tough making a comparison.
“Doesn’t sound half bad,” I said. “Order me one.”
The
bartender whipped one up, placed the drink in front of
me and I took a tentative sip. I let loose a colossal
groan of ecstasy, immediately hooked. Then I turned to
Stephanie and gave her one of my lop-sided, sheepish
grins. “You’re right. It’s better than an or—uh, better
than anything I’ve ever tasted.”
Stephanie gave me a smug look. “I knew you’d like it.
Once you finish we’ll head over to Bob Ross’s Bar to
pick up the best present of all.”
“Listen, best friend, I’m bushed. After this drink I’m
calling it a night.”
“Oh,
no, you’re not. I’ve got the biggest, bestest (that’s
what she always said when she was a kid to describe
something she loved) present yet. You can’t leave and
you don’t turn twenty-one every day, you know!”
I
sighed. “Okay.” I sipped down the rest of my drink,
stood up and felt—well—pretty darn good. I’d also gained
a sense of humor and giggled when Stephanie shoved me
ahead of her out the door.
“How
can just one drink make you tipsy?” she snapped.
“You
know I don’t drink much anymore,” I said, shrugging
apologetically.
“Doesn’t matter. What you’ll be getting at the next
bar-stop will sober you up quick.
This
was getting interesting even though I knew I was headed
for a set-up. I hate set-ups; I’d had enough blind dates
in my life to know no good ever came of them.
I
yanked down my cropped silk top that had just one button
and tied below my breasts. It stuck to me like a second
skin due to the heat, but nicely showed off my 38 D
cleavage. It didn’t help that Schwietz’s
air-conditioning had broken down. I straightened the
silver chain belt on my low-waist snug jeans that showed
a lot of my midriff, which I’d worked feverishly to tone
over the last few years.
A gust
of muggy air hit me in the face as we left the bar and I
gasped. I hate summer; hate the heat, which is why I
live in Minnesota. Give me a whopping snowstorm and
temperatures below freezing any day of the week.
For as
long as I’ve known Stephanie she’s been a woman of
understatement. I was reminded of it shortly after
entering Bob Ross’s Bar. I took two steps then stopped
abruptly. “Ohmygod.” The Chippendale dancers—rather
clones of them—were dancing on top of a makeshift stage.
I saw the sign in back of the bar flashing neon red,
‘Ladies Night Out’.
“Come
on,” Stephanie urged.
“Uh-uh,” was all I managed to utter.
“No use
backing out now. I’ve got the best table in the room
reserved for us.” She led the way to a round table, in
the center first row, below the stage. I had no choice
but to follow, then sank into a chair, my jaw hanging
open.
There
were five of them in various shapes and colors, and
wearing only g-strings, black bowties around their necks
and white cuffs on their wrists. One of the dancers
strutted over, bent his knees and shook his family
jewels at me. If he’d bent any lower ‘they’ would have
been about eye-level. He swung his lean hips in circles,
thrusting out his pelvis. Raising his tanned muscular
arms he cupped the back of his dark, curly hair and did
this amazing thing with his pectorals.
My
mouth watered, my armpits starting sweating and I knew I
had to get out of the place. I grabbed the edge of the
table to stand. Stephanie planted a firm hand on my
shoulder. “You aren’t going anywhere.”
I
nearly swallowed my tongue when the guy winked at me
then motioned to his groin with his eyes. I kept my eyes
on him but shouted at Stephanie over the bump and grind
music, “What does he want?”
“A tip.
Got a ten or twenty on you?”
I
whipped my head around and scowled at her. “If this is
my birthday treat, all I can say is forget it.
I’m not paying out on my birthday.”