Read Michael Thomas Ford - Full Circle Online
Authors: Michael Thomas Ford
"Who's a freak?" asked Alan, walking in with yet another carton.
"Boy George," I told him. "According to Taffy, anyway."
Taffy looked at it and whistled. "And I thought you were one hundred percent a pitcher," she said to Andy. "It just proves what I always say, the butcher they are at the bar, the faster their legs go up when you get them home."
"Speaking from personal experience?" Alan teased.
"Please," Taffy said. "You know I'm all girl. Or I will be soon enough."
I was about to say that he was plenty big enough, but realized that I hadn't told Alan the extent of my relationship with Andy. He thought Andy was an old friend; he didn't know that we had a more complicated history. As for why I didn't tell him, well, I wasn't really sure. I knew he wouldn't care, so it wasn't that I thought he would be jealous. I guess it just seemed—and this will sound strange—but too personal. Getting into what Andy had meant to me would mean talking about a lot of things I was uncomfortable talking about, namely my own behavior when it came to falling in love with men who didn't love me as much as I needed them to. Since things with Alan were going well, I didn't want him to think he was another mistake.
Fortunately, Andy answered Taffy's question by tossing her one of the videos he'd just unpacked. She looked at the cover. "Piledriver," she read. "‘These construction workers put the jack in jackhammer.'
Who writes this stuff?"
"Don't look at that," said Andy. "Look at the picture."
Andy winked at her. I knew he would never sleep with Taffy. He was just charming her, as he did everyone. What I really wanted to know was who he was sleeping with. He'd said he was moving to New York because of a "friend," but when I pressed him for more information, he changed the subject. He was equally vague about what he would be doing for work, telling me only that he knew somebody who was going to give him a job. Jack didn't know any more than I did. Andy had told him that an old friend was helping him out with an affordable apartment, but that was it.
Whoever the friend was, the apartment was a beauty. Located on the Upper West Side, it was on the top floor of one of the castle-like prewar buildings that lined the streets of that neighborhood, covering whole blocks like giant squatting dinosaurs. The enormous living room had floor-to-ceiling windows, and the master bedroom was large enough that it could easily double as a ballroom if necessary. Already furnished, it looked as if the decorators from Architectural Digest had been hired to appoint it. The carpets and furnishings were straight from the city's finest stores, and I'd already been assured by Alan, who knew such things, that the Warhol hanging in the hallway was an original. I was dying to know the name of Andy's benefactor, and what the exact nature of their relationship was. Knowing that he wouldn't tell me, I'd engaged Taffy's help in trying to find out. She was nosy by nature, and I knew that after spending some time with her, Andy wouldn't find her questions out of the ordinary. Now that she'd warmed him up, I thought it was time. Using our prearranged signal, I said, "This view is really amazing, Andy."
"I thought I might do some sales for him."
"Sales," Taffy said. "That sounds interesting. What will you be selling?"
"Insurance," Andy answered.
"Insurance?" I said, despite myself. "That's what my father did."
"Really?" said Andy. "Huh."
"Insurance sounds kind of boring," Taffy said.
"Yeah, I know," Andy replied. "But I'm getting older. I've got to start thinking about the future."
Something about the way he was talking made me suspicious. For one thing, Andy had never had an office job in his life. I couldn't see him in a suit-and-tie kind of business, especially insurance. Plus, the way he was answering the questions, he was giving Taffy a story that sounded plausible but didn't invite further questions. I wasn't buying it, but I didn't know how to get to the real story without just asking him outright, which I knew wouldn't yield any answers.
"Well, it must pay pretty well to have this place," said Taffy, trying a different tack. "It belongs to a friend," Andy said. "He's living in Florida right now, so he's letting me have it."
Again we were being stonewalled. There was no way to ask who this friend was without it sounding like an interrogation. I looked at Taffy and shook my head. The game was over for now.
"It's not about coming on Eileen," Taffy said. "It's about…oh, never mind."
"I'm just saying," said Andy. "It's kind of rude."
"Are you up for going out tonight?" I asked Andy. "We thought we'd introduce you to the scene." "Sure," he said. "Where are we going?"
"I thought the Monster," I told him.
"The Monster?" Alan and Taffy said in unison, clearly horrified by my suggestion. "It's famous," I told them. "And it's not that bad."
"If you're over sixty-five," Taffy remarked.
"Like we'd want to," Taffy sniffed.
"Is it really an old guys' bar?" Andy asked me.
"She kind of reminds me of a certain girl we met in Vung Tau a bunch of years ago, eh, Ned?" "Now that you mention it, she does kind of look like her," I said.
"Taffy, I don't suppose your mother was a Vietnamese whore, was she?"
Taffy threw a video at me, just barely missing my head.
"Careful with that," Andy chided her. "Pole Positionis a classic. I got to fuck Billy Studd on the hood of Mario Andretti's backup car in that one. We had to position ourselves over his sponsor's logo so nobody would know one of his crew guys was a fag."
After a minute or so, Taffy calmed down and we finished unloading the boxes Andy had shipped to New York from San Francisco. Then we left him to shower and take a nap before meeting us at the Monster.
He showed up just after nine, entering the bar and causing heads to turn as the regulars smelled the scent of fresh meat. Walking through the crowd as if he'd been coming to the bar every night of his life, Andy made his way to the rear of the room, where we'd positioned ourselves next to the piano, close enough to the bar to get a good look at everyone there, but far enough out of the way that we could talk.
"Nice place," Andy said when he reached us. "Lots of ferns."
"I told you," Taffy said.
"Gin and tonic," he answered. "Thanks."
"What do you think?" I asked him when they were gone.
"It's sort of like Twin Peaks, but bigger," he said. "And I don't see all that many old guys," he added. I laughed. "New York is different from San Francisco," I said. "Here you're over the hill when you're thirty."
"I have a feeling you'll do just fine," I told him. "Look, you've already got guys checking you out." I nodded in the direction of the bar, where a couple of men were giving Andy appreciative glances. Andy gave them a quick once-over. "Not really my type," he said. "I'm looking for something a little different these days."
"I do know," I said. "That's why I'm glad I have Alan."
"He seems like a nice guy," said Andy.
"He is. He's good for me."
"Unlike me and Jack," Andy replied.
"Maybe," I said. "Getting out of San Francisco was something I needed to do, for a lot of reasons."
At that point, Alan and Taffy returned with our drinks, and the conversation turned to the things gay men talk about when they're out in public in groups. Jack used to call it the Three C's—clothes, celebrities, and cock. Generally, each subject received individual attention, but occasionally we'd enjoy times where two of them would merge, those generally being clothes and cock (as in, "What do you think he's got under those jeans?"), or celebrities and clothes (a combo particularly common when discussing people such as Cher and/or Liza Minnelli). The Gay Trifecta, where all three could be applied to a single person, was the ultimate in bar chatter, but it happened so seldom that normally we didn't dare get our hopes up. That night, however, we hit the jackpot. As Taffy and Alan were having a heated debate over who had made more guest appearances on The Love Boat , Marion Ross or Audrey Landers, conversation in the bar suddenly stopped for a full five seconds. When it resumed again, we still hadn't figured out what had caused the interruption. Then Taffy gave a little shriek. "Oh, my God," she said. "It's really him."
"Who?" I asked her.
She jerked her head toward the bar. "Him," she hissed.
"That narrows it down," said Alan.
"From the TV," she said. "That show about the detective."
I looked again, and this time I saw exactly who she meant. Standing at the bar, seemingly alone, was the star of a currently-hot police drama. Propriety, not to mention the possibility of legal unpleasantries, prevents me from divulging his name, but I will say that he looked even better in person than he did on the television screen. Tall, dark-haired, and well-built, it was easy to imagine him wielding a gun and pursuing criminals in real life.
"What do you think he's doing here?" Alan asked. "He's not exactly keeping a low profile." "He can always say he's researching a role, I guess," I suggested. "Do you think he's really gay?" "There's one way to find out," Andy said. "Ask him."
"I'm sure the last thing he wants is people bothering him," said Alan.
"Twenty bucks says he'd run screaming if anybody talked to him," said Taffy.
"You're on, mama-san," Andy said, downing his drink and turning around.
"Where's he going?" Taffy asked as Andy made a beeline for the star. As we watched, Andy went up to the guy and said something. We saw the actor smile, and he shook Andy's hand. The two began a conversation that lasted several minutes, during which Alan, Taffy, and I didn't say a word. When the two men left the bar and started walking toward us, I couldn't believe it.
Before I could answer, Andy and the actor were standing in front of me, and Andy was introducing us. I remember saying something stupid about really liking his show, and him being very polite in the face of my obvious nervousness.
"I love your shirt," Taffy said, touching the man's arm. "It's so much nicer than that flowered one you wore on the show last week."
"I'm sorry you didn't like it," he said. "I'll mention it to wardrobe."
"You've only been here one day," I reminded him as I toasted along with the others. "This is your first day here?" the actor said.
Andy nodded. "Just got in this morning."
"Well, you've got a lot to see then. It's a beautiful place. I grew up here, you know."