The Alley View Grill (continued)
an excerpt from Chapter 1 of
Reservations Recommended
by Peter Leroy
now
has begun to fall, a pretty sight in the warm yellow light that spills
from Belinda’s windows. It's a charming place, two floors of a town house
on Marlborough Street, a very desirable location, very pretty in the snow,
and it should seem inviting, yet Matthew hesitates before ringing the bell.
Why? He finds Belinda's daughter unsettling. Her name is Leila. She and
Belinda say "Lay-la." He would say "Lie-la," but he supposes people should
be able to decide how they want their own names pronounced.
Leila is fifteen. She's a girl of heart-stopping sexiness,
with brand-new breasts that erupted from her chest as if overnight not
long ago. Matthew can't seem to pin down just when they appeared. He remembers
her as a girl without breasts, but he can't recall any slow blossoming
of the disconcertingly assertive, boastful, taunting, teasing things that
she's equipped with now. Whenever he sees her he has to work to keep himself
from staring at them. With the addition of breasts, Leila now looks much
more like her mother, and Belinda somehow looks much more like her daughter.
This makes Matthew feel like a pervert, a highly specialized pervert: a
seducer of the mothers of young girls. He suspects that Leila thinks he's
exploiting her mother. She might be right, but she might be completely
wrong -- her mother might be exploiting him. He has wondered whether Leila
regards him as a potential stepfather, and he has often wondered what she
says to Belinda about him, constructing imaginary conversations, like this
one:
"So, now that you changed your name, what's next? Are
you going to marry Matthew? 'Belinda Barber,' won't that be great."
"No, I am not going to marry him. Matthew and I
just go out together now and then. We're very happy with that arrangement.
We have a good time together, and that is that."
"Do you fuck?" |
He supposes that Leila would ask that, exactly that way. He
thinks he can see it in her smile, that sarcastic,
wise-child, know-it-all smile.
Leila answers the door; she usually does. Her hair is
wet. She's wearing something that looks like an athletic undershirt her
father might have left behind. "Hey," she says. "How ya doin'?"
"Fine," says Matthew. Leila's breasts fill all the space
between them. Matthew gives her the half grin he has developed to avoid
showing his yellowing teeth. "How about you?"
"Okay. Come on in. Where're you guys going tonight?"
"I thought we'd go to a new grill not far from my place.
It seems interesting."
"Then back to your place to fuck, right?" She doesn't
say that, of course. "Sounds nice," is what she actually says, and smiles
-- sweetly and, Matthew thinks, possibly sarcastically. "Do you want me
to make you a drink?" It's a trick that her father -- once a friend of
Matthew's, now gone -- taught her. She can mix just about anything, and
pretty well, too, though she tends to use too much vermouth.
"Sure, that would be fine."
From upstairs Belinda calls, "We don't have time. I'm
ready."
Matthew shrugs.
"Another time," says Leila. Is there an odd little lilt
in her voice, not quite appropriate? Is she flirting with Matthew? Is she
mocking him? Belinda comes into the room, dressed like an accountant. Belinda
is head of new-product development for Zizyph,
a computer software company that had six employees a year ago, has a hundred
now, and at this time next year may have six hundred or may be only a fuzzy
memory. Belinda is smart and attractive, but she dresses like an accountant.
Though they have such similar jobs, she and Matthew never talk about work.
Matthew thinks that this is because they are both embarrassed by his working
on toys. (Years ago, at a party, Matthew was telling someone what he did,
and Liz -- they were still married -- came up beside him and rumpled his
hair. She smiled at the woman he was talking to and said, "Matthew never
grew up." She meant it to be a compliment, that Matthew had kept his childlike
innocence and charm, Matthew supposed, but he couldn't be sure that she
hadn't meant something else. He still wonders just what she did mean.)
Belinda says, "Bye, honey," to Leila. She gives her a
kiss and a pat. "Don't you stay out too late."
"You either," says Leila. She gives Matthew and her mother
another smile. Matthew gives her another half grin. As she closes the door
behind them, she says, "Have fun, you two." Again, her tone may not be
quite appropriate.
[continued in the paperback edition]
|
Description
Brief Reviews
Not-So-Brief Reviews
Where to Find It
Dedication
Contents
Epigraphs
Copyright Notice
|
Hilarious
--Frederic Koeppel, The Commercial Appeal
Witty
Enough to Steal
--Robert Nadeau, The Boston Phoenix
DO YOU HAVE YOUR COPY?
Reservations Recommended is published in paperback by Picador,
a division of St. Martin's Press, at $12.00.
You should be able to find Reservations Recommendedat your local
bookstore, but you can also order it by phone from:
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Post Office Box 3162
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Libros en Español:
Reservations
Recommended is also available in Spanish from Ediciones
Destino.
Copyright © 1990 by Eric
Kraft
Reservations Recommended is a work of fiction. The characters,
incidents, dialogues, settings, and businesses portrayed in it are products
of the
author's imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance
to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted
in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying,
recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without
permission in writing from the publisher.
First published by Crown Publishers, Inc., 201 East 50th Street, New
York, New York 10022. Member of the Crown Publishing Group. |
Description
Brief Reviews
Not-So-Brief Reviews
Where to Find It
Dedication
Contents
Epigraphs
Copyright Notice
|