August 5, 2009
From Just Looking
Jesse Dorris
Freddy caught his reflection in the window of Sophisticationâhe looked good. His hair had followed orders this morning, succumbing to the blow and comb. Heâd ratted it up and over one eye to balance the big white shirt flowing over his tight pants, the studded belt and boots. Tough and put togetherâno one in Lynch looked like him. Behind his image, Sophistication showed camel-colored sweaters and thick ropes of pearls; the store was new to Lynch, as were all of its customers, made rich by Pentagon spending and brought here by the new interstate. Freddy kept moving, past the Flying Fruit Fantasy, where Brunette Sandra stood at the counter, her belly quivering against the hot pink Formica.
âHiya, Freddy,â she called.
âHi,â he said. And that was it. Even now she was sixteen and clearly knocked up, not a fourth word ever passed between them. They might be allies, Freddy thought: she was one of the few original Lynchians who risked talking to him, even just a Hiya, since heâd turned into this. She liked his clothes, she smiled at them. She had the nerve to drop out of school. But still, somehow both of them working at the mall bred reserve, an etiquette or silence or maybe an armor. Either way, it wouldnât break this morning. He waved and walked on.
The brass handles of Bananas were still padlocked together. Behind it, the store looked neglected. The front table was chaos; the side counter, a mess. T-shirts had fallen, unfolded and uncolorized. Streaks disgraced the front display windows. Freddy banged on the door.
Eventually, his manager appeared from the back. âOh man,â Bruce groaned through the door. His face was bloated, his body lost in a large, striped shirt, like a pajama top he had yet to outgrow.
âI am hurting,â he said.
âAnother night at Terrific?â
âYou should come next time.â
âI wouldnât get in.â Freddy catalogued the store, the wall of blacklight hesher posters, all of them slipped from their tubes and unfurled, and entered the storeroom, another disaster.
By 11:30, Bananas was packed with teenage girls fingering the stuffed animals. Freddy sold hundreds of bangles to them as their mothers in sweatshirts eyed him, curious, maybe even intimidated. Boys his age moved through the girls, flirting. The rich ones caressed the static electricity globes; the poor ones fingered the cut-glass sobbing clowns.
A man came in, his good suit clinging to the muscles of his chest. Mr. Coyne looked like a movie star in all that silk and wool. He smiled at Freddy. Just like with Brunette Sandra, they had a routine. Freddy watched him all over the mall, straddling a bench or nursing a soda, laughing into the hair of some regional manager. That should be me, Freddy thought. In another world, weâd meet cute and go off into the future and so on and so forth. He left the counter and approached Vernon, his stomach prickling like the fiber-optic orchid Vernon held in his hand.
âGood afternoon,â he said. âThose glow, you know, when you plug them in. Their tips, I mean.â
Vernon smiled. âI prefer the real thing. But good for you, for the pitch. I hope business is as good as it looks?â
âToday was, well, really boffo.â The word wasnât right, but Freddy had wanted to say fabulous, or even fantastic. The sibilance would be humiliating.
âThatâs quite an outfitâFreddy, isnât it? Iâd say fashionâs more your game. To me, that takes a lot of nerve.â
Freddy wanted to die. Vernon put the toy down before Freddy could say thanks.
âYour manager around? I need to ask him something.â
âBruce? Why?â
âJust please go get him. He should be out here, anyway.â
Freddy couldnât imagine what Bruce could offer Vernon, but he ducked into the storeroom and banged on the office door.
âVernonâs asking for you!â
Bruce cracked open the door. âOh, man. He drank me out the door last night. And now heâs coming back for more.â Bruce moaned and let the door swing open. âI like the dude, but itâs all battles with him.â
He dug under the green pleather cushions on his coach, extracting bottles of eyedrops and cologne. Muttering under his breath, he prepared, and then raced to the sales floor and pumped Vernonâs hand.
âHey, Vernon, hi. Man, you look great. Never know youâd closed down Terrific, two nights in a row. Whatâs your secret?â
âThe suit.â Vernon winked at Freddy. âThe suit hides all. Listen, you want to hit Le Chou for a little hair of the dog?â
âRight now?â
âWhy not? Chicken?â
Bruce rocked on his heels. Freddy knew he didnât like the mallâs new French restaurant. But he wanted to help Vernon get what he wanted.
âGo on,â Freddy said. âItâs the one oâclock lull right now, anyway. Everybodyâs recharging, they wonât shop for awhile.â
âYou see,â said Vernon, âthis young man knows his place, knows it like the palm of his hand. Bruce, you could take a lesson from him. We probably all could.â
They left. Through the front window, Freddy could see Bruceâs face remain puzzled. Good thing I wore my boots, Freddy thoughtâotherwise, with that praise, Iâd float right out of here.
Freddy spent the afternoon imagining what Bruce and Vernon were up to. By five oâclock they would have landed at Terrificâa sticky floor in his mind, dull-eyed girls in teal T-shirts sloshing enormous Harvey Wallbangers to their glossy lips. He didnât want to be there, he just wanted to see it.
Right before closing, a group of guys rambled in, bow-legged in worn jeans and frayed denim vests. Stoned, Freddy figured. The front table, with its fleet of miniature stuffed penguins, fascinated them. They guffawed, bending one penguin over the next. They made them butt-fuck, then tossed them at the register. One hit Freddyâs head. It got caught in his hair. What do I do now, Freddy thought, alone in my store? He stomped over to them.
âYou need some help?â he asked the shortest one, whose freckles disappeared as he began to blush.
âWhat,â said the guy, âare we doing it wrong?â
The tallest turned from the others, who were pairing the penguins, two by two, into a daisy chain. âYou look like a pirate, guy. Why do you look like a pirate?â
âHeâs after your gold,â the short one growled. He minced around the table, kicking up his heels.
âThatâs not what heâs after,â another one said.
He thought of Vernon then, calling Bruce a chicken. He felt Vernonâs charisma pool deep in his stomach.
âYouâre right,â Freddy said. âPretty fucking observant. So which one wants it first? Which of you has the balls?â
They stared at him. When they saw he wasnât kidding, they dropped the birds and took off.
Ha, thought Freddy. Fucking wimps. He picked up a white ceramic hand from a shelf; designed to display bracelets, it was larger than life. He pumped it in the air, like a boxer. He locked the door and turned up the PA, dancing as he cleaned up. When the store was pristine, Freddy went to the storeroom. Bruce had left his office open. He dropped onto the couch. It really stank in here. The desk was draped with thick dustballs. A titty calendar hung over a cracked princess phone.
Freddy opened the filthy minifridge underneath Bruceâs desk. Heâd earned a drink. Inside, there were a few beers and half-empty fifth of Vodka, along with a huge tub of orange juice. He took a beer and drank it, staring at the green stains on the ceiling. Kind of a great day. He should cash out the register and see if heâd broken a sales record. But the beer undid his sense of obligation: he was back here, drinking. What could he make from another boring night?
Freddy emptied the refrigerator of all its bottles. They goose-pimpled him even through his thick shirt. He took the bottles to the bathroom, and lined them up on the sinkâs cracked yellow rim. In the mirror above it, his shirt ruffled perfectly. He drank the other beer, then poured the fifth into the orange juice. The booze turned the orange water almost clear.
Out in the storeroom, he wrapped the bottles in Bubble Wrap and laid them in an empty box; he taped the box and put it on a shelf, turning the trash into backstock. He took the bucket and sponge from their corner and returned to the office to clean out the fridge. Soon, it gleamed, free from its past. The tub was empty, and Freddy was drunk.
They had to know what they were missing. But because he wasnât there, Bruce didnât see Freddy grunt and shuffle as he carried the refrigerator to the front of the store, and Vernon didnât see Freddy leave the broken table in the hall out front, with a note that said âTrash me.â Those cocky boys werenât there to see Freddy fill the fridgeâs clean shelves with stuffed penguins, or secure a row of strobe light toys to flash across along its top. The cute blond boy whoâd bought a David Bowie poster; the girl whoâd shyly sang his favorite song as it played on the store radio; not even his sister would ever witness the door of Bruceâs refrigerator become born again as a floating display shelf. An entire tropical scene perched upon it: inflatable trees rustling in the breeze drummed up by a half-dozen blue wave machines, and crystal dolphins pranced around them. It was an oasis in the empty mall.
No one would see it, not tonight anyway. But tomorrow, maybe. His display would last. He turned off the lights and took the fire stairs to the parking lot. He carefully drove down the glowing interstate, nowhere to go, proud and alone.
âIngenious.â
The woman wore an emerald satin shirt with luxurious shoulder pads, matching culottes with dark hose and heels, and a large rhinestone chicken pinned to her breast. She ran a manicured hand across the side of Freddyâs oasis; her series of gold bangles clattered against the chrome.
âReally quite smart.â
âThank you,â he said. He had his big white shirt on, some lucky eyeliner: this morning, heâd felt something in the air.
The woman peered into the fridge and selected a stuffed penguin. She held it to her brooch.
âYouâre arguing that penguins are the new chickens, I see?â
Freddy blushed, glad that Bruce wasnât around to spray his sex vibe all over the store. On a Saturday afternoon, holiday or not, he was with Vernon, getting drunk at Terrific. After his first hangover, Freddy had decided to keep his eyes clear.
The woman examined his floating shelf next to the T-shirts. âAre these displays,â she said, âspecific to this Bananas? You look confused. What I mean is, did you do this?â
âI did,â he said.
âClever,â she said. âExplain.â
He described the long arc of the electric blue cleanser, the way it took the yellow right off the walls.
âI am refreshed,â the woman said, âthat you understand the display means how you made it. Tell me. I have a daughter, sheâs twelve now. A pill. Recommend me something to please her. To be honest ⊠whatâs your name? Iâm Mrs. Thompkins. To be honest, my daughter, Jennifer, is kind of difficult. Iâm sure you understand the way kids are. I was hoping for something to encourage a new attitude.â
Freddy nodded. He led her to a side table, where brighter spotlights attended the high-end gifts.
âToo fussy. Sheâll smash them in a fit.â She turned from the crystal birds with their diamante beaks. Freddy showed her his series of neon signs. âFor her bedroom,â he said. Sweet Dreams, one read in hot pink script.Gone Wishing in lavender, its i’s dotted with hearts.
âPerhaps not quite.â Her lips went burgundy in the neon light. âEleven-year-olds are so cynical these days.â
âThereâs so much to be cynical about.â
âI suppose. Jennifer doesnât keep up with current events, though.â
âOh,â Freddy said, âthereâs nothing current about cynicism. I myself have been cynical for years.â The words scared him, not so much for what they meantâhe could have easily admitted more terrible things, the crunchy sock under his bedâbut what scared him was how he said it. He spoke as if in italics. The woman was drawing affectation from him, and Freddy loved it. He did.
âI have just the thing.â He extracted a small teddy bear from a Lucite box on a high shelf. It wore real Ray-Bans on its white furry face, and a T-shirt bearing the slogan Too Cool for School.
She frowned. âAre you being ironic?â
âNow this is just an option,â he said. âBut Iâve found itâs always best to stare down a threat. At eleven, kids still want to be kids. They also, however, want to be adults. Sometimes theyâre forced to be, there are bills to pay. But they want how they act to be their own decision.â
âI donât disagree.â
âSo this bearâs a bit weak. But that is its genius. When Jennifer wants to be a kid, sheâll hug it. When sheâs feeling rebellious, sheâll get off on the slogan. When those feelings collide, she can write the bear off as another sign her mother doesnât get her, you know? In five years itâs her whole childhood. Sheâll probably carry it to college.â
âThatâs quite a burden,â she said, âfor one bear to bear.â
They smiled at each other. Freddy could not believe heâd pulled off such a patter, but the woman looked impressed. Weirdly, there was attraction in her eyes. Surely she knows the kind of boy he was.
âWhat a pleasure.â Vernon arrived. Sheâd been staring at him, not Freddy, of course. âWhat brings you to Bananas?â
âHey Freddy,â said Bruce. He wore a down vest and a stretched-out thermal. Vernon, striking in his suit, came up to Mrs. Thompkins and kissed her.
âYou smell like a cashmere glove,â he said. âFreddy, sorry to take Bruce from you again. You managed, I see.â
âHeâs managing just fine.â Mrs. Thompkins put a hand on Freddyâs shoulder.
âIvy,â Vernon said, âhave you had lunch?â
âI couldnât.â
âYou could.â
âI wonât,â she said. âI have fires to light.â
âWell then,â he said, âgoodbye.â He kissed her cheek again. Bruce winked at Freddy, gross, and then he and Vernon went into the stockroom and Freddy heard them both laugh. Neither of them asked how business wasâbooming, by the wayâand neither one had ever acknowledged the changes to the store. Maybe Bruce didnât notice them. But a man like Vernon should.
âOh Freddy, could I have a word with you?â Mrs. Thompkins lingered by the front door. âI assume thatâs alright with the bona fide management.â She brought him to the balcony, where kids his age milled around in their fall clothes. They had more money than he, better homes to go back to; they had fathers and DAR mothers to parent them. But above even this, the biggest separation was simple: these kids of privilege were all just killing time, while here he was waiting for a polished woman of a certain age to speak, hanging like a tennis bracelet on her sighs, her little glances.
âYou should know,â she began, âmen are like echoes. The bigger the room, the bigger the boom. Understand?â
Freddy didnât, but he nodded.
âWhat I mean is that one has to grow to fit into oneâs world. And Freddy, let me be clear. Bruce may be a good manâthough I suspect Vernon brings him along to those grimy bars so he appears the better choice of two, and Iâm glad you think thatâs funny, Freddy, it means that you agreeâbut Bruce and his whole organization will do nothing but stunt you. Youâre far too talented for that. And Iâm impossible to impress.â
âThank you,â he said.
âAnother thing that you should know is Jennifer is a Chihuahua, so unless your little bear is filled with salmon, she wonât care. But you couldnât have known, it was only test patter. Donât frown. Youâre so delicate, my goodness. Freddy, listen up. I work for the Terrace. Yes?â
She thrust an arm down the balcony to where the anchor store hummed.
âAs, come Monday,â she said, âdo you.â
âIâm sorry?â
âI want you for our windows. Assist with our windows. Theyâre blank, as you can see, waiting for your attention. Youâll be under Helen. You know Helen? You should. You will. Well, wonât you?â
âYouâre offering me a job?â
âQuick, please. You want to work at Bananas and move jelly bracelets from one table to another? Preemptively bloat like Bruce? Of course you donât. Youâll start tomorrow. Youâll make, I suspect, twice your current pay, plus the Terrace discount. That should help with those bills you spoke of. And of course the uniform. Youâll start tomorrow at 9 a.m. Weâll meet you by the loading dock. You know where that is?â
âI do.â
âIâm thrilled. Stop blushing, you look so much better pale. Iâm flattered, nonetheless.â
âYouâre flattered? Mrs. Thompkins, Iâm the oneââ
âCall me Ivy. But donât forget that Iâm your boss. It sometimes slips dear Helenâs mind.â
âIâll do my best, maâam.â
âDonât push it,â she said.
When Ivy smiled, her bottom left tooth jutted out like an English bulldogâs. The flaw made her look flawlessâthe woman worked with what she had. Frederick hugged her, shamelessly, and memorized the jut.
The next morning, he woke in his own bed. A new job. He showered and selected a twill pair of trousers. Colorized shirts hung content in his closetâa white shirt, a blank slate, a bold tie, his best shoes. Out his bedroom window, a row of maple trees shone, gold and red in the fresh autumn sun. Freddy wanted to be in all that color.
In front of his door was a warm plate of eggs. His mother had gone to some trouble: each egg had a perfect yellow rise, dusted with black pepper and awaiting puncture with a toast point from the pile on the blue plate nearby. Freddy carried them into the living room, to thank and eat with her and explain how he looked. But his Mother was gone, replaced by a mess. Salad plates and tumblers teetered atop the sideboard, amid a frozen whirl of cutlery. An oblong blue bowl held beige, skinned puddingâvanilla, her favorite, not white but oxidized, overnight, until it went beige like the crĂšme brĂ»lĂ©e theyâd watched Julia Child create and then torch. I just canât handle this, Freddy thought. Her nebulizer was on the sofa, surrounded by plates of hot dogs and saltines. Freddy wiped the machine with a dishtowel heâd laundered himself, cracking the crust of dried dip that encased the mouthpiece and trailed down the tubes. She was awfully sick. The cancer was feeding on her and she was feeding tooâthese predawn feedings, secret and disorderly. Heâd called her doctor after the first time,he did; just like with the dishtowels, he did it himself. Where was his sister? In the city, gone and fancy. All the doctor had said was to be patient with her, and it killed Freddy to pay him twenty dollars for such advice.
He created a semblance of order from the wreckage. All he could do was make the place look nicer. The mess got on his clothes and he changed once again. He grabbed a trench coat from the hall closet. Its construction forced Freddy to be strong enough to wear it, to stand up straight and breath deeply.
The glass pyramid sparkled. The blacktop faded into the gray of the sidewalk and then into the bone-colored bricks of the Pavilion walls. Success opens your eyes, doesnât it, Freddy thought. The bone line was unbroken, sweeping right from the entrance down the length of the lot. If not for the thin film of exhaust fumes and pollen, Freddy thought he might see his reflection on the wall. He stepped into the browning grass and wrote his initials into the dust. The mark was only temporary but you never knew who might see it.
At 9:15, a thin-framed woman raced to the loading dock on a burgundy bicycle.
âYou Freddy?â
He rose from his bench and adjusted his coat. The woman climbed from her bike and rolled it onto the sidewalk, wheels clicking like high heels. She wore black jeans and a white t-shirt with a sleeve rolled over a pack of cigarettes. A black cloth army bag slung over her shoulder.
âIâm Helen Windy. Nice coat, you look like The Man Who Fell to Earth. Seen it? Never mind. Come along.â
They came to a small metal door with a chocolate brown Terrace logo painted on it. Helen wore keys on a chain long enough to unlock the door with the ring still clipped to her. Frozen air fell over them.
âIn you go,â she said.
It was like a meat locker. Shuttered freight doors filled the left-hand wall; a ramp rose in back. âYou come praised,â Helen said. She locked her bike to a metal pipe. âNever been to Bananas, myself. Donât know how anyone could work there. Then again, maybe you know something I donât? I suppose thereâs always that chance.â
She clomped up the ramp and unlocked another door. Freddy followed her into a yellow hallway with aggressive bare lights.
âQuiet, huh? Like Being There? Not seen that either? Okay, youâre from Lynch. Canât expect much.â
Apparently he didnât know very much. But he knew that he probably didnât like her. They entered what must be the employee lounge, a room the size of his whole house, with metal lockers and a peach leather couch, and plush teal carpeting from wall to wall. Framed Terrace ads hung across from a tidy little kitchen, with a vintage Formica table supporting an enormous vase of vibrant, silk orchids. Youâre just intimidated, he decided. Even Bruce frightened you on your first day.
âItâs child abuse to raise kids here.â Helen opened a locker and pulled out a garment bag. Freddy sat on the couch, trying to look casual. Should he take off his coat? Did one of those lockers belong to him?
âIâll give you some advice.â Helen undid her pants. Freddy kept his eyes on the wall in front of him.
âGive Ivy what she wants.â She said her name with precision, like the word meant a needle instead of a plant. Her silk underwear was black and boyish. Helen stripped off her shirt.
âShe may not know what she wants. You still have to give it to her.â
Freddy uncrossed his knees and wiped his palms on his coat. Little streaks of sweat stained it, then disappeared before his eyes. Across from him, a tanned man in tight white pants reclined upon a bright white boat. His stomach was dimpled like an insectâs exoskeleton.
Helen unzipped the garment bag, unfurling a sleek black dress. It went over her head, then fell. Freddy gasped, despite himself.
âThatâs right,â she said. âYouâre right to gasp.â The dress was asymmetrical, it wrapped and gathered down her chest and descended, flouncy, about her bare legs. The dress was like a magic trick. It edited her boyish body into something brand new.
The way that adâs bronze muscle man looks like a different species, he thought, is how she looked nowâsuperior.
âChances to gasp havenât come around much, have they yet, Freddy? Well, all thatâs changed. Gasping shows youâve got good taste. Like burping. In Europe, itâs a compliment. Keep it in your arsenal, youâll do fine by me.â
He didnât like her. He worshipped her. She slipped her feet into shiny spiked boots, and he gasped again, louder. It was, he realized, the same kind of affectation Ivy had encouraged in Bananas; it still felt strange and right. Bananas, that felt like so many years ago.
Helen asked him for his coat. âI like how you chose real London Fog.â
The coat wasnât a choiceâit belonged to his father. She hung it in an empty locker.
âYours,â she said. âLetâs see what youâre made of.â
Another hallway, and onto the sales floor. They found Ivy in a fuchsia pantsuit, her arms around bare mannequins like they were all the best of friends. A diamante teddy bear sparkled on her lapel.
âI trust you two made fond acquaintance? Wonderful. Letâs begin.â
The Terrace was lit by security lights, sharp pools that scattered around the racks, creating more shadows than they erased.
âFirst floor,â Ivy said. âYou are here. Womenâs lingerie to the left, furnishings straight ahead. Activewear rightward.â
Freddy and Helen followed her, squeezing through the gleaming racks.
âSleepwear and intimate luxuries to the left; jewelry straight ahead; bridge lines to the right. You keeping up? Of course you are. We soldier on. Sweaters, suits, and good cloth coats are to the left. To the right, fragrance and makeup. Ahead, the Main Collections!â They had come full circle.
âAnother week,â said Helen, âyouâll be able to do this blind.â
âNot that youâll ever want to,â Ivy said. âFor there are things you must notice. For example: the mannequins I stood with disrupt the passage. They can be seen through the front doors before us. They block your way. Can you see why?â
âBecause what you should want is here.â Freddy bit his lip. âWhy go any further?â
âTheyâre like speed bumps,â said Helen.
âNo,â Ivy said, âthey are an oasis. You know just what I mean. â
âI do,â he said.
âYou see? He does. I wasnât wrong to hire you.â She slipped through a row of hanging sweaters. âYou see that there are narratives here. Above us is the menswear floor. Itâs just the same as here, except less so. See this mirror? Itâs a door. Follow me.â
Ivy swung the mirror open and parted a curtain. âGo on,â she said. Freddy was in the dark now, alone. He climbed a few steps, and track lighting blinded him. He blinked off the glare, and found himself inside the Terrace display windows. The space was narrower, maybe three feet across. Its back wall was gold, like the trees outside his house. The forms stood between him and Helen, who had squeezed to the opposite side and was kneeling now before the first form, to adjust the wool hem of its suit. The center form wore a skirt suit with brocade trim, glossy and fine. The form nearest to him wore a cocktail dress. Heâd seen these clothes before, had walked past them on lunch breaks from Bananas, had considered who might wear them. But close up now, he saw their construction, their real character.
ââAutumn elegance,ââ Helen said. âIf you ask me, this is kind of a bore. Ivy says I overestimate Lynch. What do you think? Youâre a bit of local color.â
âI think itâs really wonderful.â
âThereâs nothing real about it,â she said. âYou see this wall? Itâs a false back.â She knocked the yellow panels and the entire display shivered. Behind the streakless glass, a security guard stood in the atrium. He swung his nightstick. At the mallâs other end, the fountain was quiet. Freddy realized heâd never seen it still. The Pavilion showed itself to him, as if the mall had become the display window itself. The reversal stunned Freddy. He never wanted to leave. But Helen pushed him down the stairs, where Ivy was waiting and checking her watch.
âThatâs enough for now,â she said. âHelen, better show him the steamer.â
The two of them walked past the fitting rooms, a warren of slotted-wood doors hiding spotless rooms, each with a hook and mirror. She opened the one solid door: a storeroom with dingy concrete floors. Rows of metal bars stood proud against the walls, holding up hundreds of garments.
âHere,â said Helen, âis where youâll work your magic. At first.â
In the corner, a little beige machine sat next to a full-length mirror on wheels. An accordioned hose fit into its mouth, and hung on a hook built into the mirrorâs frame. The hose finished inside a larger plastic bulb, with an orange switch Helen flipped without looking at it. The hose filled with water and began to gurgle.
Itâs like, Freddy thought, my momâs nebulizer.
âDonât be scared of your new friend,â said Helen. âYou two will get intimate quick. We cannot sell a wrinkled suit. Not even the laziest Lyncher in town will spend money here if the clothes look like shit. My first month here, all I did was steam. My hands were giant red balloons. My complexion, Iâll tell you, never looked better. I steamed for three Terraces at once. Maybe youâll be luckier. Maybe youâll clean the windows tomorrow. For today, however, this is your fate.â
âOkay,â he said. âWhat do I do?â
âTry your hand at a couple size Fours. Two pantsuits, two skirts, two dresses. You do know how to steam?â
âSure,â he said. He could figure it out.
âWell,â Helen said, âitâs not DC. Itâs not Paris in the twenties. But make yourself at home, Freddy Spector.â
He raised the hose and said, âI will.â
Freddy sat in his metal folding chair as the lights flickered above him. A manâs naked torso filled his arms. He traced the muscles with a chemise, polishing the neck. He spritzed the abs with blue cleaner. Outside the stockroom Helen discussed him on the white courtesy phone.
âWell, Iâm certainly sorry about Jennifer. I know how you loved her. But perhaps in your grief ⊠We donât disagree, Ivy. Honestly, we donât. I just though you might want to know the reason why. I could do as much as him, if I worked eighty-hour weeks.â
Freddy lay the torso on the floor, just one of three dozen heâd cleaned off today. Helen spent the day bitching about the Halloween windows, how Ivy held the reigns right around Helenâs throat.
âI know,â she said. Her voice grew faint. âI think that heâs dropped out of school. No, I donât care. But can he commit?â She paused. Then she began to shout.
âYou change your concepts in midstream! I do, and redo, and redo, and redo, all of it at your pleasure, and the windows get done. You leave him alone, Ivy, you donât interfere with him. You let him swan around. Of course his work adds up!â
I shouldnât be hearing any of this, he thought. He stared at his hands, burned and callused from pinching light bulbs from the spotlights before theyâd cooled. He was here too often. But where else could he go? His mom was disappearing before his eyes; not even saltines would stay down anymore. The house smelled of urine and metal and mold. The filth was like a third person living with them. The doctor couldnât do much. Throw yourself into school, the doctor had said, and his mother had mumbled he was such a good boy. Freddyâd cried sissy tears in biology the next day, got chased down the halls, why the fuck should he go back. He thought now of all the fake bats around the atrium, strung above the fountain and swooping off the balconies. He was hanging in there, just like them.
âYes, Halloween. I buy the correlation,â Helen said. âI just wish youâd see the truth in what I say.â
She came into the storeroom. Donât fire me, he thought. Donât banish me back to Bananas, please donât.
âFreddy,â she said. She examined his steaming. âI need to ask you something. Okay? Where do you go when youâre not here?â
âWhere do I go?â
âWhen youâre not hereâis there somewhere else you go?â
âNot really,â he said.
âBetter find somewhere. If you donât now, you never will. Let me tell you something. You should travel. There are better worlds than here. I watched you on the floor, last week: Agnes Gooch in combat boots. You need some cool. Some detachment. Priorities, you get me? You steam like it means everything to you.â
âBut why,â he said, âshould I do a bad job?â
Helen shook her head. âYou just donât get it. But anyway, Ivy is on her way down. Sheâs going to give you more to do. Calm down, youâre only proving my point with your flushing face. Ivyâs going to suck you dry. Youâll get your suitââ
âI will!â
âUh-huh. Just watch out, Freddy. The suit has strings.â
Then tie me down, he thought. âCan I call my mom?â
âGet a boyfriendâIâll let you call him.â Helen laughed. âJust remember what I said. Your inner life attracted Ivy. Itâs yours, though, Freddy. Donât sell it short.â
It was weird how she kept saying his name. Like she was trying to remember it. Or like he might forget it, too. Whatever. He called his mom from the white courtesy phone. She didnât answer, like always, sleeping through his success.
In an hour, Ivy collected him. Her hair had gone darker and stiffer since heâd seen her; she wore a dark pantsuit with glasses, and a pantomime pin. They met Helen at the entrance to the Terrace.
âLetâs go shopping,â she said.
The atrium crawled with contestants, small children in sheets. They passed a dozen kids in cheap store-bought costumes. âWeâre looking,â said Ivy, as they swerved through the crowds, âfor what I call Aspirational Understandings of Real Appearances. AURA, for short.â
They walked around the kiosks that used to be wagons; last year, theyâd become red and yellow convertibles.
âWe examine a personâs appearance,â Ivy said, âand improve it exponentially. Not alter it or erase it, no: just take its essence and distill it. Thatâs what we do at the Terrace. Letâs take that man down by the fountain.â
âGod,â said Helen, âshorts in October!â Freddy noted their pleats and how they matched his rumpled safari shirt. He held a little girl in his arms. Her face cracked under warrior paint, which she smeared as she cried for some more candy corn.
âIâm talking,â said Ivy, âto Freddy now. Please reveal that manâs AURA to me.â
Detachment, he thought. Helen said to detach.
âHis shorts do him no favors, I guess. He looks like a sausage? The way they cut off his legs? Like flabby links?â
Ivyâs earrings whacked her pale white neck. âDonât give me that. Condescension will only hide the AURA from you. Anyone can pick out the ways people who donât give a goddamn look appalling. I mean, of course,yes: the man looks like two links and a short-stack. A haircut, a jogging habit, a diet to begin with. But please donât confuse discernment with derision. I donât want sarcasm. I want acumen. You can see how he looks. See what he wants to look like.â
Freddy watched him pull a tissue from his pocket and wipe the girlâs face. Snot went everywhere. The Dad laughed and Freddy wanted to laugh along with him. He was doing his best.
âA man wears that shirt,â he said, âto look adventuresome. To look prepared. He wants to be active. The clothes are all beige so the stains will blend in, and he slouches because his daughterâs heavy and his backâs weaker than it used to be. Sheâs usually in her stroller, anyway, but his wife is off with her family and he hates them, or they hate him. Either way, I bet she hates those shorts, so wearing them is a rebellion. I bet she also bought the shirt. She wants to be seen on the arm of a man who knows more than this mall. He wants something with pockets to keep all the stuff heâs weighed down with. Itâs ugly, but a compromise.â
âLike our windows,â Helen said.
âYuck,â said Ivy. âQuit being so blasĂ©.â
âFine,â Helen said, âbut letâs not get lost in illusions. The buyerâyouâbought too many worsted wool triple-pleated slacks. So in the window they go. Weâre hoping supply creates demand without tailoring the supply to project the demand.â
âHis belt matches his shoes,â Ivy said. âPlease note, in that balance, the conservatism Lynch embraces. As I note in the buying.â
âWhat Iâm saying is, this AURA stuff is just a gussied-up status quo fantasy. Weâre jerking them off, not inspiring them.â
Ivy took Freddyâs arm and stood him up. âHelen, youâre free to go now. You may come back to work tomorrow, if you choose. But tonight, darling, wonât you stare into the mirror? Youâll see a spoiled brat, not the spitfire and moxie you see in your mindâs eye. Come, Freddy. Iâll fit you myself.â
Holy shit, Freddy thought. He kept his mouth shut as Ivy escorted him back through the bustling Terrace and into the kitchen. She took Freddyâs combination lock in her hand, and with a raised eyebrow, she opened it. Ivy pulled out something that could have been a body bag or cocoon.
âHelenâs jealous of you,â she said. âBecause she fears you might eclipse her.â She slapped the bag onto the kitchen table. âYou might, in this.â
He carried the bag onto the sales floor, afraid it would slip through his hands. But, in a moment, Ivy opened the door to the largest fitting room and called for the tailor. He tried the suit on. It was modish and charcoal, small lapels, three buttons; the shirt was a hallucinatory white that fit like it was made for him, and slimmed and aged him just enough. Ivy knocked and entered the room, followed by the tailor, a man in his early fifties with crowsâ feet and pursed lips. Freddy slid his old clothes into a corner with his foot. The tailor knelt before him, distinguished if outdated in his blousy shirt and penny loafers, and unleashed a flaccid tape measure from around his neck. He chalked his cuffs and Ivy said, âThatâs it exactly. How nice. You look just like I hoped you would.â She jutted her jaw and then she left.
The tailor asked which side he dressed on, and Freddy said right. The tailor smirked. He chalked Freddyâs inseam and brushed his cock, twice. Freddy froze. The tailor nudged him a third time. Now Freddy was projecting through the thin wool of his pants.
âShow me,â he said, âhow you pin up the jacket. This placard here, can it be moved up?â
The tailor sighed. âYour priorities are out of shape.â
âPeople keep telling me that,â Freddy said.
âItâs time to change,â Ivy called from the sales floor. âTailor, let him be.â
âLeave your suit on the hook.â
Freddy put on the clothes heâd been happy with, this morning. The ruffled shirt, the skintight pantsâhis outfit looked quaint to him now, flinty. He examined himself, wondering what Ivy saw in him. What could Ivy think his AURA wasâsixteen and gay, a dying mom, a high school dropout with dyed, moussed hair, dressed in poor reproductions of boys in magazines. But somehow, it all worked. It had gotten him here. Freddy left the fitting room and returned to Ivy, who sat among a group of forms.
âBig day,â she said.
âThank you so much, for the suit. I love it,â he said.
âIt loves you back. Hereâs how you earn it. No more steaming today. Some fresh blood, yours, might liven up the place. Take your break, have a look around at this mall. I want this display reconcepted, according to AURA principals you discover out there. You donât have plans tonight, do you?â
Masturbation, he thought. âNo plans but the mannequins.â
âWell said.â Ivyâs hand came to rest upon his shoulder; it felt like a laurel wreath. âIâm very curious to see what youâll do. Just remember the AURA, I donât want penguins here. And donât let Helen dissuade your enthusiasm. She means well. Oh, perhaps, she actually doesnât. But the danger she poses is only to herself. Take that as instructive. Now go take your break.â
Ghosts filled the atrium, their stained sheets fraying around scissored eyeholes. Kids dressed as flying saucers spun, their clever ships made of aluminum foil folded over cardboard, around the convertible kiosks. A few boys his age were dressed up like the Dukes of Hazzard, their jeans too tight for him to look at too long. The fountain overflowed with surfer girls, and Carries with red plastic blood from Bananas. They look convincing, Freddy decided, but they glared at him as he sat on a bench and he was thrilled he didnât have to sell them more makeup or wax lips or fake fangs for their parties he would never be invited to. The Hazzards came and hassled them. Freddy watched them, thinking what do they want?
âThose assholes donât know what theyâre doing.â The fountain ceased its spurting and Freddy could see his old boss across the way. Bruce wore a tight sweatshirt. He was shouting. The fountain gushed and he disappeared again, soon to be revealed sitting next to Vernon, who was in a sharp suit and bent double. Vernon slid off the bench and collapsed on the floor, weathered and handsome like a broken-down barn. Bruce slid next to him and Freddy gasped without caring who heard it. Vernonâs face disappeared behind his own hands. His shoulders shook. He was crying. Bruce stared straight ahead, embarrassed but right there. The fountain sprayed. When it retreated, Freddy could see Bruce lean toward Vernon and whisper in his ear. That movement, their closeness, an intimate gesture in public, was astonishing. It took a gorgeous courage. It made him feel guilty he never gave Bruce any notice. The shape of their bodies, friend propped against friend, was all anyone wanted.
Later, the Terraceâs cleaning staff plopped their mops back into their buckets, and the salesclerks had refolded the jeans and the sweaters. Someone switched off the main light and turned on the securities. While all this went on, Freddy completed a triptych from the forms Ivy gave him. One man in a yellow Anorak and thick corduroys bent toward another, taller man wearing the Terraceâs nicest wool sweater. Their faces were deadpan and yet they responded, somehow in their stillness, to a third form: a young boy on his knees, in his best Sunday clothes. The boy bent to their feet. Freddy made him hold nickels. He closed his eyes, thrilled, as the coins began to drop, twinkling as they slipped into their loafersâa perfect fit.