Fiction: The Last Blind Date
By José L. Recio
In the
summer of 2004, Anne, a twenty-year-old American college student, and Alfred, a
private second-class in the Army based at Port Irwing in the Mohave Desert, met
through the Internet.
On their
first date, Anne suggested they go to see Heaven—she had just watched a
trailer, she said—at a cinema in Las Vegas, where she lived, and Alfred agreed,
eager to meet her in person. He invariably felt elated before meeting a new
blind date. That afternoon, he drove his jeep from Port Irwing to Vegas,
a drive of over two hours, parked in front of the El Portal Cinema, downtown,
and waited for his date, guessing he would recognize Anne by her description of
herself over the screen.
Alfred
stood in the shade in the middle of the sidewalk, waiting in front of the
theater, with his back to the front of the building and gazing left and right
down the street to spot Anne approaching. While waiting, he checked that the
buttons of his green jacket were done correctly, his black boots shiny, and his
beret was well centered on his head—Anne had said she would like him to dress
in his military uniform. He smiled at the coincidence, for he liked himself
best in his uniform.
Five
minutes passed. Alfred began doubting Anne would come when he felt a light tap
on his shoulder. He turned as he heard ‘hi,’ said in a soft voice, and there
she was, standing beside him, a girl almost as tall as he, with a gracious
female figure and a face like a doll. ‘A doll with a mother-of-pearl face,
lovely pinky lips, and eyes as blue as mine,’ he thought. Together, they made a
lovely pair of young people. Both were about six feet tall and slim. Anne
possessed a flexible, undulating body and pale countenance. Alfred was a
well-proportioned, muscular young man, tanned from the Mohave sun, with trimmed
blond hair. He looked stylish in his uniform.
“That’s
the movie,” Anne said as a matter of fact, pointing to a billboard on the wall
in the hall of the building.
Alfred
half-turned to look at the movie announcement and nodded, perplexed by the
girl’s disregard for his physical presence.
“And this
is you, and this is me,” he said, smiling, half-ironic and half-serious, as he
softly tapped her hand and his chest with the tip of his finger.
Anne drew
a light smile, seemingly indifferent, which didn’t go unperceived by Alfred. He
interpreted her verbal shortness as shyness, something he had noted from the
beginning of their online communication when she only said that she shared an
apartment on campus with two other girls. Still, he let it go unchecked,
excited by the prospect of a new date.
“Don’t
worry. We’ll see that movie. Ready to buy the tickets?” Alfred conceded.
“Yes,
please.”
He walked
to the ticket window, bought two tickets, and jokily flashed them in front of
Anne as if to reassure her. She looked at him directly for the first time, and
her lips insinuated a neutral smile. She might be shy, Alfred thought, but she
has beautiful eyes. She’ll warm up.
Their pass
to see the movie was at 6 pm; they had about an hour to fill in.
“My jeep
is parked across the street,” Alfred said as they stepped out of the building
and onto the sidewalk. “Would you like to go for a ride, have a drink and a
bite, or something?”
“Okay.”
Her reply
sounded dry in Alfred’s ear. He wondered whether her shortness was indeed due
to shyness or lack of verbal ability. Or maybe she felt intimidated by him
being in military uniform? Anne was a pretty girl, no doubt, and he was
delighted by glancing at her face, blond hair, and intense blue eyes, even if,
so far, she had paid little attention to him. Nevertheless, he imagined she
would look more attractive in a brighter outfit instead of a worn-out, thin
cotton purple cardigan, white T-shirt, old black jeans, and discolored shoes.
“Okay?
Good. I know of a small Mexican place near here that serves typical dishes.
Would that be okay with you?” Alfred deliberately stressed the word okay
to signal his disappointment, which he immediately regretted, fearing his
veiled, cynical allusion to Anne’s verbal short supply would upset her.
“Yes. I
like taquitos,” Anne said.
“Sounds
good.”
Alfred
drove them to a restaurant three or four blocks down the street. While he
drove, Anne said that she liked his jeep. Alfred acknowledged her compliment
and wondered what else she liked.
“How do
you spend your days? Do you just go to school?” he asked.
“No.”
He turned
his head to look at her while keeping his hands on the wheel, expecting to hear
more words, such as, ‘No, I don’t…’ whatever, but she added nothing.
“You mean
no school?” he said, sounding a bit irritated at her dryness, and he turned to
focus on the road.
“I quit
school.”
“You quit
school? College? When?” Alfred again turned his head to see her expression.
“I don’t
know, two or three weeks ago, I think.”
“Oh, wow!”
Silence
followed. Alfred would have given away his jeep, which his parents (his father
was a surgeon, and his mother a schoolteacher) helped him to buy, to know what
was in Anne’s head. Was she socially drifting? The thought that she was weird
crossed his mind, but he quickly replaced it with the idea that she was an
intriguing girl. She’ll warm up.
“Where
were you heading to in college?” He showed curiosity.
“Drama.”
“I see.
You wanted to be a movie star?”
“My mom
says I’m an actress.”
Alfred
said nothing. He didn’t know how to interpret Anne’s declaration; she seemed to
think she was an actress just because her mother had told her she was one,
probably to show a mother’s expectations about her daughter’s future. However,
a minute before, Anne admitted to being a college dropout student. Such
inconsistency! He had never come across anyone as illogical as Anne appeared to
be. He thought of inventing an excuse and leaving. But they had reached the
tiny parking lot at the restaurant and desisted on breaking the relationship,
judging it to be cruel. Besides, he liked Anne’s looks and calmy moves, and he
still hoped things would improve in their initial connection.
“Well.
Here we are. Plenty of time to eat something,” he said.
“Taquitos,”
Anne said.
Alfred
laughed, taking Anne’s reiteration of the word as her way of joking.
“Funny,”
he said.
Anne said
nothing. Inside the restaurant, sitting at a table for two, when the waiter
approached them, each ordered taquitos with beans and rice, and Mexican beer.
“Funny,”
Alfred said.
“You said
that word before.”
“You’re
right. We go from taquitos to funny and from funny to taquitos,” he said,
laughing loudly, visibly entertained by his play with words. Anne, too,
laughed, and Alfred, still amused, noted her laughing, as compared with her
previous interactions, conveyed a warmer emotional tone.
They were
still in that joyful mood, sitting at the table one across from the other when
the waiter brought the dishes. Anne was the first to try a first bite. “Oo la
la,” she uttered as she began chewing, gazing at her companion, her eyes bluer
than the Firmament, brighter than the stars. She swallowed the bite, had a sip
of beer, and, still gazing at Alfred, smiled sweetly. She has warmed up, Alfred
thought. He wanted to believe that Anne’s emerging merriment responded to his
attentions: He had yielded to her desire to see a movie, paid for the tickets,
took her to a restaurant, and ordered the food she liked. Suddenly, it dawned
on him that tasting those taquitos triggered her contentment, not him or his
courtesies. Or wasn’t it?
The
festive atmosphere between them prevailed throughout the dinner, which they
enjoyed; they drank two jars of beer each. Anne was chatty; she talked about
many different subjects, loosely connected. Alfred, although glad to see Anne
elated, regardless of the source of her enjoyment, could not always make sense
of what she said.
After they
left the restaurant, Alfred drove back to the cinema. Anne was still talking
about this and that celebrities, names of actresses Alfred had not heard of,
or, if he had, it was only from one or two of them out of the many she named.
She became so talkative that he was not only surprised by her change of
behavior but also indignant that, apparently, he played a small role in it.
However, he was determined to catch her attention.
As they
arrived at the theater and entered the building, Anne talked about Cate
Blanchett admirably, the actress they were ready to watch in the film. However,
during the projection, Anne remained silent, watching, at times stirring in her
seat for reasons that escaped Alfred’s understanding, uninterested in eating
popcorn from the box he bought before going in, attentive only to the scenes in
the movie. When the movie ended, Anne got up from her seat while the long
casting list was still flashing on the screen. She made her way along the row
where the other spectators were still sitting and towards the dim corridor in
the middle of the projection room leading to the exit. Alfred hurried,
apologetically, behind her. He reached Anne near the exit and tenderly and
reassuringly wrapped his arm around her waist while holding his beret with the
other hand, and together, they stepped into the lighted theater hall.
“Was there
something in the movie that scared you?” Alfred said.
“No. Cate
had to do it.” She smoothly pulled Alfred’s arm away from her waist. “I’m
sorry, I must go to the ladies room,” she said coolly.
Something
in Anne’s tone of voice told Alfred the excitement she showed before entering
the cinema had softened. He observed her walking to the bathroom, and her moves
reminded him of somebody else. Suddenly, he realized she was walking like Cate
Blanchett and dressing like she did in the film. Such awareness made him think
Anne’s personality was strange rather than intriguing, or maybe strange and
intriguing. Standing in the middle of the hall, waiting for Anne to return,
Alfred internally debated whether to end their connection or try to understand
what was going on in her head. He was startled by, again, a tap on the shoulder
and a 'hi’ whispered in his ear. Anne stood beside him.
“Oh!
Sorry. I was distracted thinking about the movie,” he lied.
“What
about it?”
Alfred
hesitated for a moment. “Cate had to do it,” you said. “What did you mean?”
“I thought
the man she shot was mean. Cate believed the same thing,” Anne said.
He grabbed
her arm and stared at her. “That makes no sense!” he growled.
Anne
pulled away from him and started to walk out to the street. “I want to go
home,” she said, looking back at him.
“I’m
sorry. I didn’t mean to be rude.” He checked his watch—almost 8 pm. “I’ll take
you home.”
Alfred
drove with Anne as a passenger. He checked if she was hurt by his earlier
remark, but she said, “No.” Then why did she behave subdue? he wondered. Such
drastic changes in her behavior puzzled him. However, he wouldn’t talk about it
while driving; he would ask her out again. When they arrived at the campus, he
asked if he could call her again, and she said, “Okay.”
***
Alfred
woke up the next day feeling morose. He had tossed and turned all night, unable
to stay asleep. His date with Anne had been a failure. She had paid little or
no attention to him. He got up from bed and, while attending to his personal
routines, thought that there were two possible explanations for Anne’s
attitude: either the mismatch originated from Anne’s way of being or from him.
Anne was odd, he thought, both in her personal style and communication. Were
her oddities an indirect way to say, ‘I don’t like you, Alfred, go away?’ But
what was it about him she disliked? He considered himself a lucky guy. Born
within an upper-class American family from Arizona and being the only child, he
enjoyed significant privileges: his parents helped him to buy the car he wanted
and often gave him money allowances and gifts; he always returned home happily
when on vacation; he was admired by his peers for his physical abilities and
liked by his Sargent, and so on.
Alfred’s
blind date with Anne was not the first ugly encounter he had experienced using
the Internet for his romantic chances. Many peers in his unit also did, but he
was conscious that he had gone overboard with it because he used all his
leisure time arranging those blind dates. Aside from one or two successes,
which fulfilled his ego but ended in a neutral departure, during his other
numerous dates, he had had his wallet stolen, called an assassin by Middle
Eastern girls because of the war in Iraq, and had been offered gay sexual
relations with a man disguised as a woman, among other misfortunes. However,
his habit seemed to have evolved into an addiction, and he connected with Anne
again. He was determined to like her and make her like him.
As on
their previous date, Anne asked whether they could go to the movies in town to
see Monster. Why not see a more entertaining film, such as Spider Man?
Alfred suggested. No, it was Monser that Anne wanted to see. ‘Charlize Theron
is in the movie,’ she wrote back, and Alfred agreed, as he had the day before,
thinking that Charlize might be another of Anne’s icons.
Alfred had
the evening free. He drove to Las Vegas and waited for Anne outside the
Tropicana Cinema. When she arrived, ten minutes late, Alfred became
dumbfounded. She had shaved her head!
“Are you
acting in some movie?” he said in disbelief.
“What’s
the big deal?”
“I welcome
surprises—don’t get me wrong. But sometimes—”
“What’s
the big deal? Anne repeated.
“Why have
you shaved your head like Cate did for the movie we saw yesterday? What’s going
on?”
“Now, Cate
and I are twin sisters,” Anne said as a matter of fact.
Alfred
broke into nervous laughter. “Are you kidding?
“I’m
honest.”
“Look,
Anne, I’m sure you are. But sometimes you behave surrealistically or are
confused about who is who.”
Anne said
nothing. They entered the showroom, found their seats, sat down, and began
watching the film, which had already started. When a few minutes later, the
protagonist in the movie killed her third victim, Anne watched the scene
without blinking. Alfred wrapped her shoulders with his arm as if driven by a
protective instinct.
“I hate
Charlize,” she mumbles.
“I don’t
know what you mean,” he whispered. “She is just playing the role of Aileen
Wuornos. How can you hate the actress?”
“Charlize’s
vicious.”
“Anne, you
mean the character she plays was vicious, not her, the actress.”
Anne did
not argue. She opened her purse and got something out of it. To let her
maneuver freely, Raymond smoothly removed his arm from her shoulders. As the
scene of a fourth crime evolved, suddenly, Anne got up from her seat, leaned
forward and stabbed a male spectator sitting in front. Blood gushed from the
victim's wounded neck, sprinkling several people in the vicinity. Alfred
quickly plugged the victim’s injury with his right hand to stop the bleeding,
in vain, for the wound was deep, and the blood jetted underneath the pressure
point until the victim fainted or died. Anne, who had remained silent
throughout the attack, screamed. The lights went on, and in a split second,
cries from horrified people around them resounded and filled the theater. Alfred
paled as he witnessed the assaulted man lying slumped in his seat and blood
stains on Anne’s and his hands and everywhere.
The sight
triggered panic reactions among the spectators, and many tried to leave the
place in a hurry, blocking the exit. Anne remained in her seat, acting as if
such a commotion had nothing to do with her, still holding the blood-stained
knife in her hand—the knife she had secretly taken out of her bag to commit the
crime. Fingers pointed at her from everywhere, accompanied by angry, accusatory
words; sirens from the police and ambulance vehicles sounded outside the
building, and soon a group of paramedics and police officers burst inside the
cinema. Six agents surrounded them. The officer in charge asked how the assault
happened while other officers took pictures and examined the victim’s body
without touching it. The paramedics confirmed the victim had just died. “She
did it!” someone near them said, pointing directly at Anne. The police officer
asked her whether she had anything to declare, but she said nothing, and the
agent ordered her arrest along with Alfred’s. Meanwhile, the paramedics carried
the victim’s body on a stretcher to an ambulance.
At the
police headquarters, the agents directed Alfred and Anne into separate holding
rooms. He was visibly shocked, but Anne didn’t seem to register the
facts. An officer informed Alfred that he would be interrogated but could use
the phone to call an attorney first. Alfred called his sergeant instead and,
with a broken voice, said he was under arrest because of a crime. The girl he
had dated committed the crime in his presence.
“What kind
of crime?” the sergeant asked.
“She
stabbed a man.”
“Dead?”
“Yes.”
For a long
while, neither the sergeant nor Alfred said a word. Then the latter started
talking fast over the phone, describing in detail everything he had witnessed:
The assault, the commotion in the theater, the arrival of the police and
paramedics, the removal of the victim’s body, the arrest, and Anne’s apparent
lack of concern. He confessed to feeling numb, stunned, and confused.
To those
strings of words, a brief silence followed until the sergeant spoke again.
“Are
you in uniform?”
“Yes.”
“Have you
talked to anybody else about this crime?”
“No.”
“Don’t do
it yet, not even to your folks.”
“Can you
say why?
Alfred was
calling from a fixed phone in the hall of the police headquarters, watched by
the officers. His legs trembled, and he was afraid he would faint in the
presence of the agents and everybody else there, a shameful weakness.
“I must
report what happened,” the sergeant said. “The military may decide to channel
your case through Court Martial.”
“Is that
good or bad?”
Alfred was
aware of his voice fading.
“It might
be a lengthy, tiresome process.”
“I’m
innocent.”
“I believe
you, Alfred. But I’m your sergeant, not your attorney. A civilian lawyer may
serve you better and prove your innocence quicker than one serving in the
Advocate General’s Corps. That choice is the first thing to decide. Still, tell
me, did you notice anything indicating Anne had a criminal intention?”
“I never
did. She’s odd in various ways, but not in that one.”
Alfred was
feeling increasingly weaker and wished to end the conversation.
“Odd? You
mean like a person with a sick mind?”
Hearing
these words, Alfred's breathing paused, his vision blurred, and his hands and
lips shook. The sergeant's last phrase (‘a sick mind’) echoed in his ears.
“I…I
must…hang up,” he stuttered.
“I
see. We’ll talk again soon. Be firm.”
Each
police officer grabbed Alfred´s arms and helped him regain his composure and
led him to a holding room with a small barred window, a granite table and
stool, a bottle of water, and a plastic glass. He would remain solitary until
the police decided on the next step.
When the
two officers left the room, Alfred sat on the stool, leaning his elbows on the
table and hands capping his forehead. After a while, he shook his head as if
awakening from a nightmare. ‘Why did I fail to grasp that Anne was a sick
girl? She wasn’t shy nor stupid but brainsick,’ he mumbled to himself. Then he
loudly self-reproached: ‘Vanity, presumption, falsehood blinded me.’ Alfred’s
monologue continued until he, through a mental pirouette, promised himself to
support Anne and cut his blind dates. Then, he stopped mumbling, poured water
into the glass, sipped, and wept.
José L Recio was born and raised in Spain. He came to the States young and practiced medicine in California. He’s also interested in creative writing. A second edition collection of stories will soon appear from Anxiety Press.
Comments
Post a Comment