Ghosts of Tom Joad (17 page)

Read Ghosts of Tom Joad Online

Authors: Peter Van Buren

Kim, my angel of the strip mall.

Man, she was a whole story in a sigh. I always wanted to know why she did what she did, you know, her job. I especially wanted to know if she had a boyfriend or whatever they called it over in Korea. She is probably too busy to get on the bus with me right now, but I remembered her none the less.

“Why my job any different than yours?” Kim asked me. “I saw that movie, ‘greed is good.' I wanna make my money.”

It helped that day that I had had a couple of eye-openers for breakfast out of that half-finished bottle of Everclear from last night's therapy. Okay, maybe I drank half the damn bottle before breakfast.

“Kim, I'm sorta embarrassed to ask, but—”

“Little brother Earl, I have sex with strangers for money. I don't embarrass.”

Kim didn't get embarrassed. She just said stuff. Not like Reeve girls.

“Okay, you, you know, sell your—”

“Kitty. That's what I got, that's what I sell.”

“Aren't you—”

“Oh cut the shit. You no virgin, and I'm not either. We all do what we have to do. It's a job. I'm in business, taking as much as I can from them and giving as little as I can get away with. I want to be dirty rich, no, you say filthy rich, same thing. I give them with my kitty, not my brain. I no there. Maybe you look and see him naked, I look and see his wallet on the dresser. If he on top of me, I look up at my nails and think about what polish color is best. You, boy friend Earl, what'd you do last week for money?”

“Some guy hired me, two bucks an hour, though he shortchanged me on the last twenty minutes, to pick up construction crap and throw it in a Dumpster.”

“And you used your body, used your muscles, yeah? Got all sweaty? Pretended to be enthused about some shitty work?”

“I get it Kim, but I ain't no whore. I work for my money, hard work.”

“Me too baby. I also ain't no whore. It no different. You selling your body, I selling mine. Guys who pay me, they selling something somewhere else to make their money. Anyway, look at them. I use their sad, weak parts. They more pathetic than me 'cause they lying to they wives and they lying to themselves. Even you. You'd fuck me Earl, if you had the money. I let you,
if you had the money, but nothing for free little boy. You pay for coffee, you pay for me. And I saw you stealing the milk too. You in love with all those little high school chicks you screwed?”

“No. Course not.”

“And they no in love with you, yeah?”

“Right, but we both were wanting, so it was okay.”

“Yeah, me too. He want to do me for sex, and I want to do him for dollar. Different reason, but the same in the end. Everybody wants something, that's what money is for, stupid boy Earl.”

“But ain't you ashamed or something?”

“You made few bucks an hour. I could do that at a nail salon with your mother my customer, sure, but I can pull in fifty, sixty, maybe a hundred an hour with the right guy and my kitty.”

So I sorta understood that you could imagine you still owned something you'd sold, at least until you ended up sleeping in a bath tub hoping one of the seven guys a night would leave a few bucks on your sticky belly after he left. See, I knew my way around this. There was a bar called The Promised Land run mostly for Mexicans, but in the back was another room where they said they told fortunes. You paid up at the bar for a palm reading, they had a sign and all, and went back in. It was cheap, not classy like I imagined Kim's place, designed more for the Mexican day workers, but they'd service anyone. It was just dark and shadows and then some chiquita would reach out and take your hand and lead you off to a cot without sheets. It smelled like Clorox and sweat. It was quick and sad, not even fast food. Sometimes I'd be more lonely than the other thing, but them girls didn't speak English, not like Kim. They'd say “okay, okay”
to whatever you said, but even in the dark you could see there were no smiles. I guess it was fair, 'cause I wasn't smiling either. In the end, paying for sex was mostly about not being alone.

They didn't like to kiss, but would let you sorta do it if pushing back was harder than giving in. Every time you'd taste cigarettes and gum. Kinda odd, a girl who'd suck you off wouldn't kiss you back, but that really told the story if you could understand the language. When it was done she'd hand you a baby wipe in the dark and you'd walk out still alone. After a while when fucking was, well, just fucking, you started to forget how it could be anything else. It was just appetite, and we were all embarrassed to be hungry, but we had to eat. Funny thing, the cops closed the bar down because getting fucked for money was illegal. I then recognized two of the girls working in Bullseye just the next week when I went in for my last paycheck. Small world.

I was talking some more to Kim.

“So, they just walk in and you guys, what? Just fall on the floor?”

“You an idiot. Gimme that lighter, I wanna smoke before I go back. They come in, pay sixty dollars to the house. Some old whore Mama who married one of the gangsters takes the money from them and passes them back to me or one of the other girls. If Mama likes you, she'll throw the rich-looking ones your way. To make Mama like you, you gotta kick back to her some of your tips. She gotta turn over her money to the gangsters, or they'll beat her up or worse, stop sending her fresh kitty like me. A whole club full of cheap street meat mean no customers come back. She bitch. Right, or you say ‘she a bitch'? Don't matter, everybody screwing everybody.”

“So the guy get passed to me, and I size him up. He know the game? He know the price? If he's new, I try to pull as much as I can up front. But most of the guys know it all, so I gotta play them. I worry he might want to change girls too, maybe I not pretty enough or my tits too small or remind him of his wife, so right away I take his pants off. He no gonna run out naked. On the table, we start massage. I tease him. The more he lay there thinking about fucking me, the more money I gonna make. I start out behind, owing Mama her off-the-book tip, plus I owe the house another twenty bucks for towel fee. They making all the money, man. I work the guy all over his back, teasing underneath, making sure he not bored. Mama told him the house fee was for an hour, and if he finish too fast he thinks he got cheated or I have to talk to him to fill time. An hour is at least forty-five minutes now days. Anyway, him on his stomach longer mean I don't have to see his face for more time.”

“I turn him over. If he not hard, I get him happy before I ask for the money. I ask for $200. He knows that's a joke, and I see what he really will pay. Or maybe he no understand, and I get my money. Whatever he wants, when he asks what it cost, I just say ‘more.' One way is as much trouble as the next. Most of them finish quickly, or I tell them to hurry up. ‘Oh, you so big. Oh, you turn me on baby. Oh, you make me come, honey.' I don't mean it, and he don't believe it, but we playing the game. He probably starting to think of his wife and feel guilty anyway, and then he never finish. I hate that, feels like I am doing hand laundry in the sink. He finish, he pay, and he leave. I make more now anyway, with my fake boobs. Invest in yourself baby. These two cost me five hundred.”

As she said that, I came to realize that Kim was a woman made of many products, a whole arsenal of creams and lotions, nail enamels, makeup and hair color, so it wasn't out of place that other parts of her came from a store too. What was real and what was made up seemed to matter little when you were making money. Fooling customers was part of the process, and they readily participated. Kim was nothing if not consistent.

“Ain't you afraid of the cops around here?”

“Nah, Mama usually know all the cops, not like those stupid Mexicans. She send cops back same as anyone, but they no have to tip, it free for them. Cost of doing business, jerking off a cop once in a while. Ha, ha, stupid Earl, maybe you try it once, jerk off the cop out there in your parking lot and he leave you alone too.”

On the bus I kept seeing that one Korean kid, the only person riding the bus I didn't recognize, so I just nicknamed him “Tom” 'cause it was easy to remember. I worried who he was, thinking I must have known the kid from around the coffee shop, or somewhere at this strip mall. There were enough Koreans around for sure, but I could not place the one on the bus. He wasn't the kid that got beat up in the parking lot a while back, this one was even younger. I thought it might have to do with Kim, so I got my courage up to ask.

“You aren't worried about, you know, a baby? Havin' sex with all them men?”

“Yeah, I have a baby, had, a baby somewhere. Couldn't afford to keep her, too expensive and getting in the way of my work. Got to cut expenses, cut overhead, cut personnel, you know. Baby not efficient, so I took her to Christian orphanage.
That's economics. Usually it ‘no glove, no love,' but some guys pay me double for no condom. If I wanna make money, gotta have business risk.”

“Do they know you, see you outside work? You know, like your boyfriend?”

“No way. You stupid. I can't afford a boyfriend, they want free sex. I tell customers my nickname is ‘Money,' or they call me whatever name they like, like owning a dog, they get to pick it. It don't matter to me. I forget their names even before the smell of their cum leave my room. You don't get it Earl. They my customers. They buy something from me, pay and leave. We say ‘in, up, off, out,' like we practicing English verbs. I never see them outside. You have more of a relationship with the counter guy at the coffee shop you buy from? It just sex, baby. I gotta make it now, while I got my looks. My time is short.”

Kim wasn't just some mousetrap. I sorta had feelings for her by this time.

“I never met a woman like you. You're not afraid of sex, you can talk about it. It's effortless with you. Maybe it's the booze talking now, but I think I love you Kim.”

“Do you?”

“Kim, I've never met someone like you. I really think I love you.”

“Guys I do for money tell me that all the time. Love you, love you, love you baby.”

“Whattaya say back?”

“I say ‘I love you too,' because they tip more that way. Just business, like ‘Have a nice day!' Makes people feel good.”

“But you don't mean it?”

“Have a nice day? Sure I do. You an asshole.”

“You know what I'm asking, Kim.”

“I don't have to mean ‘I love you,' I just have to say it. Just words.”

“I never meant to fall in love with you, Kim.”

“Yeah, I love you too.”

One time I ran into Kim at the coffee shop after dark, and she asked me to walk her back to work. She entered through the back door. Door didn't have any handle on the outside, as if announcing clearly I was not welcome; somebody had to push it open for you from the inside. Kim would yell something in Korean, and Mama or one of the others would open it, always with a scowl for me. Mama was rough on all the edges, called everyone “Honey” in a voice like she stopped smoking cigarettes and just chewed on them, eye makeup that looked like it hadn't been pried outta her wrinkles in years. Breath that would peel paint, good paint. Ugly, sorta like forage the deers wouldn't eat until the end of winter even if they was hungry. Smelled of garbage out back there, greasy trash from the fast-food places next door. The big smell came from inside the club however, a storm when the door opened, a flood of perfume and disinfectant, the two not getting along, competing with each other for ownership of your nose. After walking Kim over two or three more times, she'd say if it looked like a slow night, and she'd prop the back door open and we'd talk. She slam it shut quick when Mama called, and I'd sometimes hang out, waiting for that forty five minute hour to be up for the customer and she'd open up and we'd talk more. Sometimes she'd hand me some soda or something from inside, when the customer
wouldn't take the drink she was supposed to offer him as a signal it was time for him to get out.

One night I had my first ever hit of speed from Kim. Mama handed out little red and blue pills so the girls would work longer hours, and Kim said if she took two or three or four or eight her head spun and the time passed more quickly. Kim looked tired without the speed, but when I said something she'd laugh at me and say, “I don't even open my eyes until after midnight.” Some nights Mama laid out lines of the new, cheap coke coming into town to perk up her girls. Hours were pretty rough for Kim at the club, basically stay on as long as customers were coming, but it was her job and she had a work ethic. I just hung out for something to do.

By now I was used to finding myself in a place without a really specific reason for being there. Sometimes in the dark I'd see people in the Dumpsters looking for food or whatever. I don't think they lived there, just came to eat, like them animals in nature documentaries coming to the water hole. When I was a kid, the places in Reeve where you could go at night to do technically illegal but really just wayward stuff like climbing the water tower, or pulling off some road to make out, were limited. Desire and interest were there, but usually without opportunity; you didn't want someone to tell your mom the next day that they'd seen the family car parked behind some store. In those days, you couldn't find a place like this, back of a strip mall, that was public enough no one knew you but still private enough that you could do whatever you wanted.

I started noticing the same couple of cars from time to time, one maroon, a big old LTD, and the other light green, I think, a
righteous Camaro for sure. All Detroit iron, when that mattered. They'd pull up nose-to-tail, and the drivers would exchange something. Had to be drugs. Like I said, we had weed in Reeve forever, but the speed and shit Kim took was new, kinda fighting for turf with the home-made meth. Meth was a local product, but this new stuff was factory-made, maybe another import pushing out an American product. I didn't know much about drug deals, but it seemed odd that they always used the same place, since that'd make it easier to get caught. Once, when they came a bit earlier and it was still a little light, I thought I recognized one of the guys in the Camaro from high school. I waited for the other car to pull away and shouted his name. No response, so I walked outta the shadows a bit so he could see me, sayin' the kid's name again, kind of pleased to recognize someone. He tore away, and I didn't think anything of it until about ten minutes later two cops roll up. I was scared, trying hard to think of what to say, thinking they wanted me to rat out what was going on. The one cop stayed near the car and the other got up in my face.

Other books

His Obsession by Ann B. Keller
Mandy's Story by McClain, D'Elen
Criminally Insane by Conrad Jones
Escape from Shanghai by Paul Huang
The Choices We Make by Karma Brown
Commander by Phil Geusz
The Bass Wore Scales by Mark Schweizer
First Born by Tricia Zoeller
Kwaito Love by Lauri Kubbuitsile