The Alley View Grill
an excerpt from Chapter 1 of
Reservations Recommended
by Peter Leroy
atthew
never takes notes in a restaurant. That's one of his cardinal rules: Never
take notes. He's worried that if he were seen taking notes he'd be identified
as a reviewer, and it's important to him that he not be identified. He's
also a little worried that if he were identified as a reviewer there would
be some kind of scene, a row. He knows that that's not likely to
happen, but still it does worry him at times. Worries aside, he enjoys
feeling that he's not himself when he's reviewing. He
signs his reviews B. W. Beath, a short version of Bertram W. Beath,
an anagram of his own name, Matthew Barber. No more than five or six people
in the world know that Matthew is B. W. Beath, and there's no reason why
anyone who doesn't already know would connect a toy company executive with
a restaurant reviewer. He's rather proud of his pseudonym; there is no
apparent connection with his own name, but, if he chose to, he could easily
demonstrate their correspondence.
The
assumed identity, the disguise, is part of the pleasure. He has a theory
that most of us are in disguise much of the time, a theory not original
with him, but one he came to independently and therefore feels a proprietary
affection for. His version goes like this:
"We
spend much of our time not as our true selves, but disguised -- to suit
our occupations, or to appear to be the people our friends or relatives
or spouses or lovers expect us to be, or to appear to be what we wish
we were. The last is the important one, because when we disguise ourselves
as what we want to be, we're doing it to hide what we think we are."
He
uses himself as an example: "I used to be a fat boy. Really I'm
still a fat boy, but now I'm a fat boy disguised as a fairly slim, fairly
good looking, not-yet-middle-aged man, an interesting man, if you took
the time to get to know him." For quite a while now he has been working
to perfect this disguise. Currently he's concerned that he has been a little
too subtle about it, that the disguise errs on the side of anonymity, so
he has been trying to make himself a little more noticeable, to bring the
inner, interesting man a little closer to the surface. He has begun to
dress with a certain flair. He still buys his suits and shirts at a conservative
shop -- a department store, to tell the truth -- but he's buying his socks
and ties at a little place with marble floors and brass doors, where everything
is imported, up-to-the-minute, and breathtakingly expensive. He doesn't
buy anything that really stands out, only things that are a little out
of sync with his conservative suits. The combination is intended to make
him look a little out of the ordinary, but the other day the worrisome
thought struck him that he might be making himself look even less
remarkable than before, that the new mix of dull and chic had made him
more generalized, spread him out all over the culture: a graying toy designer,
moonlighting as a restaurant reviewer, in a conservative suit with an interesting
Italian tie and startling socks, at heart still a fat boy, a suffering
fat boy, for all fat boys suffer, are made to suffer, tormented
by slim boys, teased and tormented by girls.
Sometimes
Matthew uses the routine about disguises at cocktail parties or dinners,
including the part about his having been a fat boy, but omitting the business
about his still being a suffering fat boy at heart. He keeps a great deal
to himself. He doesn't want to seem to be whining.
When
he was concocting anagrammatic pseudonyms, he came up with two women's
names: Beth W. A. Bertram and Martha T. Webber. At first he was strongly
attracted to them, but eventually he decided against them. For one thing,
although he might have been better concealed behind a woman's name, he
wasn't comfortable hiding behind a woman's skirts. It made him feel like
a sissy, reminded him of the time in the sixth grade when he let his mother
break up a fight he was losing. For another, he couldn't seem to make himself
sound like Beth or Martha, but he found that he sounded exactly like Bertram
W. Beath on the first try, and his, or their, reviews were a success
from the start. Matthew has been reviewing as B. W. Beath for a couple
of years now. He thinks of his alter ego as "BW," what BW's friends would
call him if he were able to have friends, which he can't, because he must
remain concealed. When Matthew's out doing a review, he's disguised as
B. W. Beath, the well-known restaurant reviewer, almost a celebrity, who,
because he must not be recognized as a celebrated restaurant reviewer,
is disguised as Matthew Barber, a nearly anonymous man, a stand-in, a shell
who lends BW a pseudonym to use when he makes his reservations, who is
disguised as BW, and so on, round and round in a circuit of disguise, each
self concealing another, each hiding within another. It's an idea that
Matthew enjoys playing with, as he does with the notion of BW as an older
brother, whose background is identical to Matthew's, but who is more worldly,
whose tastes are so sophisticated that he can find the shortcoming in any
experience. Sometimes Matthew has the feeling that BW is watching him,
as if Matthew were his creation, not the other way around, watching his
performance from an elevated position, a superior point of view, judging
Matthew, reviewing him, looking for his shortcomings. BW probably
takes notes. He doesn't have to worry; he knows that no one can see him.
He's well disguised.
atthew
arrives home from work in a terrible mood. Christmas is coming, and it
makes him nervous, even more nervous than it makes most people, because
it's the time of year when all his ideas are put to the test. He's
vice-president for new product development at Manning & Rafter Toys,
where he is sometimes referred to, even to his face, as Vice-President
for Sensible Toys. Every year, before the year is out, he must present
his proposals for next year's line. The time for that ordeal is only a
couple of weeks away, and Matthew fears it. He spent the afternoon in toy
stores, checking to see how the toys he championed last year are doing,
and they don't seem to be doing well.
Tonight
he'll be reviewing the Alley View Grill. He knows he shouldn't arrive in
a bad mood. The wise thing to do would be to shower and change his clothes
right away. That really would be the wise thing to do. Fresh clothes, a
shave -- that might change his outlook. Instead he makes a drink, a martini,
a Bombay martini. He sits in his living room with the lights out and drinks
his drink and just looks out over the city for a while.
He
has a beautiful view. It was the reason he bought this apartment. His living
room looks out over the poorest sections of the city. He knows nothing
about these areas at first hand; the newspapers tell him that black people
live there, the illiteracy rate is high, children sell crack from their
front steps, banks try to avoid writing mortgages there, many of the adults
are unemployed or have jobs that don't pay well -- food-service jobs, for
instance -- but from his living room it looks beautiful. The buildings
are old, many of them brick Victorian town houses, and their roofscape
is charming, by day or by night, but especially at sunset, when the red
sun makes the red brick glow. A woman once told Matthew that it reminded
her of Paris. He'd like to get Liz, his ex-wife, up here to take a look
at the view sometime. He's sure she still thinks of him as Mr. Suburbanite,
still the man he was until she left him fourteen months ago, but this apartment
would be quite an eye-opener for her, a penthouse, the best apartment
in the whole building, with lots of glass, a Parisian view. The building
is new. It "wraps traditional elegance in a contemporary package," according
to the sales brochure. That's me, thinks Matthew. Traditional
elegance in snazzy socks. Everything in the apartment is black or white
or glass or chrome. Matthew sits here at night with jazz playing and he
feels like Fred Astaire in an old movie. Liz would be amazed to find him
living here. She'd be amazed.
The
apartment isn't perfect. There's a mysterious odor. The black lacquer cabinets
that lined one wall have been moved to the opposite wall, in front of another
bunch of black lacquer cabinets, the dining table has been pushed against
them, and a hole, about three feet long and a foot high, has been cut in
the wall so that workers can search for the source of this offensive odor.
Sitting
there, looking out, he can't stop thinking about the toy stores, where
his offspring seemed to sit forlornly on the shelves, as unwanted as ugly
orphans. He can't understand why parents are so stupid about the toys they
buy for their children, why they buy the junk they do, especially those
video games, why they don't buy toys that do something more than just shut
the kids up for a while, why they don't buy sensible toys, like the building
sets he dreamed about when he was a boy. He once suggested that Manning
& Rafter use guilt in their advertising, but the suggestion was taken
as a joke and he laughed along with everyone else.
Matthew
lets himself start feeling blue, encourages himself to feel blue.
He hasn't done this to himself for quite a while, but he's a past master.
He cultivated this kind of self-abuse in high school, when he used to sit
in the dark, evening after evening, listening to jazz and learning to feel
blue. He got good at it, and he thinks the skill served him well in college.
He felt intimidated by his roommates because he didn't seem to have any
talents that measured up to theirs. He began to brood. His
roommates would come home from the library late at night and find him sitting
in the dark, in a corner, listening to jazz and brooding. They began to
think that he was deeply troubled, possibly dangerous. He enjoyed something
like respect for this moodiness. He has brought with him from that period
a bittersweet affection for the big, breathy saxophones of Coleman
Hawkins, Chu Berry, and Ben Webster.
He's
finished his drink. He hops up and dresses in a hurry. He's a little late.
n
the hall, when he presses the elevator button nothing happens. He's not
surprised. Among the "world-class luxury amenities" in the building are
elevators that haven't worked right for months. Every morning two representatives
of the elevator manufacturer arrive, disable one of the elevators, and
begin leafing through an enormous repair manual. Because they work in the
building every day, they've come to seem like part of the regular staff.
They greet Matthew when he passes them in the morning, and Matthew smiles
and says "Good morning" to them. Often they're still working when he comes
home at night, still turning the pages of the manual. Matthew smiles, nods,
and says hello. He never criticizes them. He doesn't want to cause trouble,
to seem to be complaining, doesn't want them to think that he thinks they're
doing anything less than the best they can, because he knows that it's
important not to offend tradespeople when they're working for you, lest
they give up on you, but he can't help asking himself where on earth the
elevator company got these clowns. Are they men who actually know how to
fix elevators, or were they sent here for on-the-job training? Every evening,
when they leave scratching their heads, the super announces, "So ends another
episode in the Adventures of the Hardy Boys and Their Amazing Electric
Elevator." Matthew sketched an idea for a toy elevator that breaks. It
would come with a troubleshooting manual, spare parts, and tools. He suggested
that this launch a series: washing machines, cars, television sets, anything
that breaks. The proposal was greeted at Manning & Rafter with a silence
that Matthew took for repressed amusement. Even while he was presenting
the idea he realized that it was too blue-collar to sell today. He was
living in the past.
At
last the elevator bell begins to bing. The left car is coming up, but from
somewhere far below the alarm bell from the right car begins to sound.
Then Matthew hears a small voice calling "Hello?" in the apologetic tone
that people who, like Matthew, don't want to cause any trouble use
when they find themselves in trouble. There is a long pause. "Hello?"
There is another long pause. "Is anyone there? Can someone get me out of
here?" More ringing of the alarm bell. The left car arrives. It comes up
to Matthew's floor, hesitates for a second, and then heads down again,
without ever opening its doors. He considers giving up. He thinks of going
back into the apartment, calling Belinda, explaining that it's impossible
for him to leave the building because the elevator isn't safe, heating
up a goat-cheese pizza that he has tucked away in the back of the freezer
for an emergency like this, opening a bottle of wine, putting on one of
his Coleman Hawkins tapes, and phoning the girls down the hall to see if
one of them wants to come to dinner, any one. It sounds like a great plan
for about a minute, but then he remembers that he's too old to interest
the girls down the hall. Besides, the elevator comes back up, and the doors
open. He takes it as a sign.
n
the lobby, one of his neighbors, a man of thirty-five or so, someone he
knows only as Robert, is screaming at the girl behind the desk. (This girl
is not a full-time professional concierge. She's a student. In fact, she's
the prettiest of the girls who live down the hall from Matthew.) Robert's
dressed almost entirely in black, including a black fur coat and black-and-white
patent-leather saddle shoes. His date is standing behind him, with his
arms folded, trying to appear uninterested, but his eyes betray him --
they're afire with the thrill of watching Robert make a scene. He too is
dressed in black. He has a rhinestone pin on the lapel of his coat.
"This
is absolutely inexcusable!" Robert is shouting. "Fifteen minutes! Fifteen
minutes we waited for the goddamned elevator. In-ex-cus-a-ble! Inexcusable."
Matthew
tries not to chuckle. It sounds like a spelling bee. He can't keep himself
from spelling, mentally, i-n-e-x-c-u-s-a-b-l-e.
"I
don't ever want this to happen again, do you hear me!" Robert stamps his
foot.
The
girl is on the verge of tears. Matthew loves the way her hair falls over
her shoulders, fine and straight, light brown, with a little red in it.
For the first time he notices that she has freckles.
Freckles,
he says to himself. My God. And he asks himself, How old is this
girl? Twenty-two? Eighteen? Twelve? He has no idea. He can't tell.
It occurs to him, just then, that he's well on his way to becoming an old
fart, or a middle-aged fart, anyway.
The
girl has a textbook of some kind open on the desk in front of her. She
pushes some hair back behind her ear in that lovely, heartbreaking way
girls do and runs her finger under her eye, wiping an incipient tear. For
an instant Matthew considers snatching the vase of flowers from the lobby
table and smashing it over Robert's head. Then he remembers himself as
not the sort of person who would do something like that.
"You
understand that I have nothing to do with this," the girl says. She's trying
to be calm, but her lip trembles a little, and there's a catch in her voice.
"All
I know is this," says Robert. He heard that little catch in her voice,
and he's pressing his advantage. He jabs his finger at her. "I never want
this to happen again. Do you understand me?"
She
frowns and nods, barely.
"Do
you understand me?"
"Yes,
I understand you, but -- "
"Good!
That's all I have to say about it." He turns on his heel, and his friend
opens the door for him. They walk out and start off down the street, talking
animatedly, flinging their arms.
The
girl puts her elbows on the desk and lets her chin drop into her hands.
"He
has no right to talk to you like that," Matthew says. He wonders if this
is a good time to ask her if she'd like to drop in for dinner sometime.
She
looks up and smiles at him, weakly. "I called the elevator company," she
says. She blinks, and she brushes her hands across her eyes.
Matthew
thinks again about staying home, just hanging out in the lobby, perhaps,
chatting with her, helping her study, sending out for whatever girls her
age eat. He pulls his stomach in and stands up a little straighter, is
immediately struck by the fact that he thinks it's necessary to pull his
stomach in and stand up a little straighter, and loses his nerve. He gives
her a crooked little grin that he hopes she'll consider conspiratorial.
"What more can you do?" he says.
She
shrugs. For a moment he thinks she's going to ask him something. Maybe
she's going to ask him why he didn't speak up in her defense, or maybe
she's about to say, "I noticed you were considering hitting Robert with
that vase. Why didn't you?" Whatever she thought of asking she thinks better
of it, he guesses, because she just shrugs. She probably knows that he
knows that she has three roommates, two more than the building allows,
and she doesn't want any trouble from him. It has occurred to her that
he must be about her father's age, and he probably has the same touchiness
about rules as her father. She smiles at him, the very smile she smiles
at her father when she wants his support but doesn't really want to talk
to him.
The
elevator alarm bell begins ringing again. "Hello?" calls the tentative
voice. Matthew shakes his head and leaves, wondering what she'll do after
he's gone. Will she call a friend and chat? Will she call the elevator
company again? Will she stick her earphones in her ears so she won't hear
the little voice calling from the elevator? Will she slip into the mailroom
and efface the unhappy incident with cocaine? Maybe she'll say to herself,
"He's kinda cute, that Mr. Barber. I'll bet he's pretty interesting when
you get to know him."
utside,
Matthew sees Robert and his friend walking ahead of him, still talking
and waving their arms. A short, heavy woman in a green coat is walking
toward them. She looks like a gumdrop. As she approaches them, Matthew
sees that she's saying something, almost shouting. They stop and put their
hands on their hips; for a moment, they are a pantomime of homosexual umbrage.
The gumdrop woman is really shouting now. They shout back, and the
exchange escalates in volume until finally Matthew can make out what the
woman's saying; in the singsong voice children use to taunt one another,
she's saying, "Animals suffered agony to make your coat."
"Your
mother suffered agony to make you, sweetheart," Robert's date shouts. Matthew
laughs. The whole scene strikes him as funny, these people in various stages
of coming unglued. Liz used to think he had no sense of humor, and at the
time she may have been right, but he has a sense of humor now -- he's sure
he does, it's one of the many ways he's changed, as she would be amazed
to see if she would take the trouble to look. He's learned this: a sense
of humor is the best defense. He
spent a whole childhood moping because he didn't have the defensive shield
of a sense of humor. He has cultivated this sense of humor that
he has now, and he believes that he mopes for only a small part of the
average day.
He
gets a cab at the corner, gives the driver Belinda's address, and then
sits in silence. Whenever he's alone in a cab, it seems to him that he
should talk to the cabdriver, but he never does unless the driver speaks
to him first. Cabdrivers, he knows, are supposed to have a wealth of information,
a repertoire of amazing stories, but they rarely speak to him, and he never
knows what to say to them. This behavior isn't really a reluctance to talk
to cabdrivers as such -- he has the same problem with anyone he doesn't
know well -- but he's not usually riding alone in a car with other people
he doesn't know well, so it's most apparent with cabdrivers.
He
rides to Belinda's without saying a word, and by the time they arrive he's
sure that the driver thinks he's the kind of supercilious shithead who
wouldn't deign to talk to a cabdriver, so he overtips. This makes him feel
like a sap.
He
rings Belinda's bell.
elinda
is not her real name. Her real name is Linda. Almost a year ago, not long
after she and Matthew began having dinner together a couple of nights a
week, she decided that Linda, as a name, had had its day. She said to him,
"Try calling me Belinda for a while." He tried it that evening, and an
amazing transformation occurred. He had known Linda for years. She was
married to a friend of his, and Liz was a friend of hers. He and Linda
were friends by extension. When they began going out to dinner together,
he still thought of her as his old friend Linda. When he began calling
her Belinda, he found that this woman Belinda seemed a lot sexier than
his old friend Linda, and at the end of the evening they went nuts, making
love on the sofa and rug in Matthew's living room until they were exhausted.
After all those years, they were suddenly lovers -- well, not lovers, to
tell the truth -- something more like sex fiends. It didn't last. Perhaps
friendship is stronger than sex. They are back to being friends, friends
who have sex once or twice a week, after dinner or the movies or the theater
-- still on the couch or the rug, but with something missing. Matthew keeps
hoping that she'll decide to change her name again.
A
brilliant satire
--LA Life
Wonderfully
readable
--Richard Gehr, The Village Voice
DO YOU HAVE YOUR COPY?
Reservations Recommended is published in paperback by Picador,
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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
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