Not having
washed any of my clothes for twenty-two days, on a dull Sunday in June some
year in the early nineties, I bundled up in my netted nylon hamper bag my
fragrant everythings and set off, with the bag over
my right shoulder, across two streets, kitty-corner, to the neighbourhood
laundromat, which had no name other than LAUNDROMAT, and probably still
doesn't. Two women had preceded me into it, both being older women, probably
Italian, which it was safe to guess, seeing as pretty much half the
neighbourhood was Italian-Canadian. I loaded up a machine and pumped five
quarters into it to start it up, opened up whatever book I was reading at the
time, almost definitely a novel of some sort or another, possibly by William
Faulkner, and read some five pages. When I looked up from the book, I noticed a
girl about my age loading up the machine two machines away from my machine, all
in a single bundle, as if they were the only clothes she owned; she dug into
the pocket of her skirt--yes, she was wearing a skirt, and her skirt had
pockets--and pulled out a small handful of change, and put three quarters in
the machine. Then she looked around as if in search of something, spotted
me--her face was expressionless--and came over. She said: "I think I have
to have more quarters. Is there a place around here I can get more quarters? I
don't see a change machine. Why's that?"
I looked
again at her skirt and noticed there was a small tear in it along the seam in
the left side, which I realized with something of an epiphany of course it was
torn, just as the trousers I was wearing had holes in them down at the bottom
cuffs that had gotten there because of bicycle accidents, and thus we were both
wearing what could best be called 'laundry clothes,' that is to say we were
dressed as badly as could be because we'd run out of everything else; her shirt
had a stain on it under her right breast, a red stain, perhaps from wine, and
her socks didn't match, and mine barely matched too, and we like a pair of
hoboes, and yet, I liked how she looked, and I liked that she seemed to like
how I looked too.
I said:
"The store down at the corner made a deal with the laundromat to provide
all the change for this place, in the hopes that people would buy something
there when they were getting their change; it's quite a clever deal, and the
laundromat doesn't have to buy and stock a change machine full of quarters.
It's a pretty fine exchange, don't you think?" but she was looking to the
door and she said: "Just down there to the left?" I led her out onto
the sidewalk and pointed and I said: "I guess you're new to the
neighbourhood?" She said: "Yes, as a matter of fact, I've been here
since Monday. I moved in on Monday. And I suppose they sell soap, too? They've
got the market on soap, right?" "Yes, I suppose they do have the
market on soap." She started off, and I followed her for a couple steps,
then stopped, uncertain of what I was doing. I suppose I fell out of her
peripheral vision because she turned and said, "Come on."
We went
into the corner store together, the convenience store as it was called, and she
wandered down an aisle to find a little one-shot box of laundry detergent. At
the cash register she put it down and said to the woman who worked there (whose
name I never learned), as the former pulled out a five-dollar bill: "Can I
have the rest in quarters, please?" The woman behind the cash register
gave her fifteen quarters. The girl said: "Thanks," and we left the
store and went back to the laundromat.
I sat down
where I'd been sitting, feeling that the encounter had ended well, what with
the girl having her quarters and her soap, so I returned to reading Faulkner or
whatever. I saw her shove the steel tray containing the quarters into the
machine, and the tray abrasively screamed as was its manner. She tossed her
laundry bag--a little ragged, I saw--onto the top of the machine and then she
came over to me, looking out the plate-glass window at the same time, and she
sat down beside me. She said: "Well, I got some time. Do you? Care to show me what's what in this here hood?"
I looked
over to my machine and calculated in a self-interested fashion how long it would
be before the washing machine finished, realized it would only be about ten
minutes--but I then realized that this girl was offering me the opportunity to
escort her around a few of the nearby affectionate streets. I had the idea it
was an opportunity not to be passed up regardless of how wrinkled my clothes
could get, and so we stood up at the same time and walked out the laundromat
door.
I turned
her to the right, not in the direction of the convenience store, because we'd
been that way already, and we walked up the street. Now, going up that street instead
of down was a bit of a bad idea for me because I didn't know that direction too
well; I lived down, but I figured I could tell her what little I knew and it
would be new to her and she would be naturally charmed by my anecdotes. I
pointed out the firehall on the other side of the street, saying: "That
could come in handy some day." There was a church a bit further up, I
don't know what denomination and still don't, and instead of getting all pervy
and repeating what I'd said about the firehall, I said instead: "I don't
know when the services are; in case you are interested, we could inquire,"
and she replied: "Maybe not today; maybe some other time."
I had to
look up at the street sign where we turned right in order to say: "And
this is Jonesco Street, and here you find residential
single unit semi-detached houses typical of the general low-rent utility
architecture of the 1940s and '50s in this locale; note the drainage systems on
most, with the water sent rather a distance from the foundations." She had
her head turned away, and she was actually looking at the houses.
Then she
said: "Seems there's a lot of cats around here. There's one now. Is there
some kind of cat farm hereabouts?" "Funny you should ask! As a matter
of fact, if we'd gone one street further up we would come
across it, at the next intersection in. A breeding farm, don't you know, with
about a thousand grade A housecats produced yearly. It's the largest cat farm
in the entire city, believe it or not." She replied: "That explains a
lot. I may have to make a booking there, since fate has brought me to its
environs. I have a fondness for cats. Are their rates reasonable?" I tried
to come up with something clever but I couldn't. All I could say was: "I
don't know; I've never darkened their barn door. I doubt the prices could be
off the scale; I think you could give them a visit. They're probably happy to
be of any service," and then we turned right at the next intersection.
We'd
walked about six yards when she stopped, saying: "Wait." I turned to
see her looking at a house across the street. I shoved my hands in my pockets,
awaiting the big revelation. Finally she turned back
to me and said, with a happy glint in here eye: "Sorry! False alarm. I've never
been on this street." We walked along slowly, and I asked her: "Does
that house remind you of another house?" She tutted and said: "What
do you think, laddie? Do you think I stop whenever and wherever I want without
have a good reason for it? Of course I thought it was
a house I recognized." "What house?" She looked at me
incredulously for a moment, then looked away and laughed entirely falsely.
"Ha-ha! I could tell you, but then that would mean I'd have to kill
you." The line sounded familiar, like something from a movie, yes, that's
how false it sounded and was intended to sound. I wasn't going to get anywhere
using common methods, so I stopped to look back at the house she'd been looking
at, and I stared sharply at it, as if it had insulted me and required a comeuppance.
The girl said: "Stop that; it's not right; it's got nothing to do with
that house; stop trying to kill it with your Medusa stare." I turned to
look at her, easing my eyes. "You're right, and there's nothing wrong with
that old pile of bricks." "No, nothing," she agreed, and we turned
right at the next intersection.
We went
right, and walked on.
I didn't
know anything about love back in the early 90s; I've learned some little about
love since then: but: what did she do to me there, what magic did this girl do?
We were
back on a very ordinary road, the one running east-west, an intersection below
the higher one from the last page or so, when I, since I'd walked that line of
street before, almost every day, to get to a streetcar, said: "Now here's
familiar territory. So you live somewhere around
here?" She vaguely pointed to her left. "On one over there." She
mentioned a name, but I didn't quite catch it.
"Here's
the convenience store again." "How convenient."
She
continued, after a pause: "I guess you live around here too." I
pointed down the street: "There, at 974 Dovercourt,
that's where. Day or night, at your cervix."
She raised
one eyebrow ambiguously, laughed a little, scratched the back of her head, and
stuck out her tongue slightly, before finally saying: "Well, that's
original." She didn't mean it.
I thought
she was eating out of the palm of my hand when we went back in to the
laundromat. My wash cycle had finished; the dull dead clothes I put into a
drier; she, girl, sat on one of the laundromat's plastic chairs and seemingly
watched me. Her stuff was still chugging though a cycle. Her hair was an
average brown, tawny, though that adjective is probably no good these days, and
she wasn't taller than me or much shorter than me. (Apologies for my
imprecision because it all happened so long ago; maybe I should have been
carrying a Sony Camcorder.)
"I
think my stuff is done now." She lifted the lid of her machine and yes the things had stopped spinning and were plastered
against the outer cylinder. I decided to leave her to it: I wasn't going to
offer to help: I wasn't ready to touch anything that had touched her body: so I sat down, picked up the novel, and made like I was
reading even though I couldn't get through a single mid-length sentence of
middling complexity. I wondered what she was going to do once she had her
things in a dryer. Would she come back to me, or was it all over before
anything had even started? I felt quite sincerely we had come a fair distance,
and hoped it had to continue, considering the intimate and closed space we were
both occupying. She put three quarters in the dryer, turned the metal dial, and
the machine started up like clockwork.
She came
over to me and sat down beside me to say: "That's taken care of. Are these
fast dryers, or are they slow dryers?" I replied: "They're pretty
fast; they take about a half-hour. They're very hot. The clothes come out very
hot." Neither of us picked up on the line; rather, we stared at the
opposite wall for a minute or two, which seemed at the time to be a good agreement
between us.
Finally she said: "Why don't you show
some other part? How about the other side of the street? I don't know anything
about the other side of the street."
Even
though I didn't know much about the other side of the street, I faked it,
saying: "Oh, sure, there's plenty to see on the other side of the street.
There are blocks and blocks over there."
"How
about just one block? I don't think I can stand too much excitement."
We went
outside. It was past noon, and the sun was ahead of us, since we were facing
west. We dodged a couple cars to get onto the other side of the street, and we
went to the left such that our entire journey made a figure eight.
On the
corner was a place that had once been a corner shop but had become a residence.
I told her: "This used to be a gambling house. They got raided a year ago,
organized crime was involved, and so on and so on. It was in all the
papers." "I don't think I read anything about it," she said.
"It wasn't international news. It was just some local thing of little
interest to anyone anywhere else. 'In all the local papers,' I should
have said."
She walked
on, around the corner of the biggest intersection for some blocks in either
direction, saying: "There's plenty of organized crime everywhere. I hear
about it all the time; but they're all just minor players. The biggest
crooks--the international crooks--you never hear about. There's only a few of
us that know the biggest crooks are governments."
I was
taken aback. "What do you know about it?"
She
laughed a little and said: "It's because I'm a spy, that's how I know. I
work for a particular government, never mind which one."
"Shouldn't
you be telling me you're something else, you know, like your cover? Like you're
a clerk or a Fuller brush salesman or something like that?"
She paused
before saying: "All those covers were taken, so I was given the cover
'spy'. It's a pretty good one."
"You're
not much of a spy if you don't do any secretive spying."
"I do
do secretive spying, but I cover it up by acting as a
completely different spy. No-one knows who I really work for, and they'll never
know, because they're busy believing something else entirely."
"I
think there's a couple problems with that."
"Yes,
everyone does; everyone thinks they know how the spy trade works; but they
don't understand it at all, everything they know they got from books; it's all
much more complicated than that, which throws everyone off my trail." She
stopped and looked at me genuinely. "I may be the greatest spy in history,
with my cover."
We were
getting to another intersection, with mere houses on all four corners. I didn't
know a thing about the four houses, I'd never seen anyone outside the houses, so
inside they could have been anyone in the world; perhaps I knew someone living in
one of them, or perhaps I was related to one of them: actually, I was almost
certainly related to one or more of them, considering the deep reach of time
and so forth; so I said: "I have one female
cousin living in each of these four houses. In one house, the female cousin
likes one other cousin and despises the other two. In another house, my female
cousin likes all three of her cousins. In a third house, my cousin likes two
cousins and hates only one. And finally in the fourth house, my cousin hates
all three cousins. They all want to have sex with me. Which one should I have
sex with?" The girl looked from serious house to serious house. "I
think you should start with the one who is hated by the greatest number of
cousins; that way, the other three cousins will be even more hateful through
jealousy, and, if you proceeded in this manner, you could wind up fucking all four
of them." Her logic was fine, and she had given me a most useful answer.
She then changed her mind to point to one of them and say: "Or: rather: go
with the cousin in that house. It has the nicest porch."
I was
silent for a while--really only about thirty seconds--to give her some time to
come up with another response. We were walking up a residential street, a
street entirely unfamiliar to me, that I had never even been on, even though it
was less than two blocks away from my home. The houses were originally uniform,
probably built all at the same time, and yet they'd differentiated themselves
to such an extent that to an unobservant eye they appeared to be unique and
without any relationship to their neighbours.
I had to
continue to wait, till finally she said: "You're the only person I've told about my profession, and also about my secret
profession. I don't know why I told you; I shouldn't have told you, no, never.
I think it means my cover is blown entirely, and I may have to give up this
profession. But, if I give up being a spy beneath a spy, what could I ever do
instead? My father was a spy, and his father was a spy too, and I think his
father was a spy also. I've foolishly destroyed a legacy stretching back a
hundred years, and all for what? For you? Who are you to me? Frankly, you're
nothing. I haven't known you for much more than an hour. And yet--I don't know
how I'll face my father the next time I see him. He'll be so
disappointed."
Once
again, we were at an intersection about which I knew nothing. What people lived
in these houses, what did they do, did I somehow know them all?
Up ahead
(we were heading north) about half a bock could be seen a non-residential
building of red brick seemingly nestled between ordinary houses, and I quickly
said to myself: "What could that be? Is it a legion hall? Is it Knights of
Columbus or some other service organization? Could it be the scientologists?
Maybe a mosque, maybe a buddhist monastery? Dotted
all around the city, in each block, some anomaly stood, be it a temple, a
bakery, a garage, a gang club, a concert hall: so, what could that one
be?" I knew it couldn't be any of those, since all those possibilities
were so obvious I'd managed to think of them, so I
said: "There's one of those small amusement parks up there. Do you see it?
It looks small from here, from the outside, but it's actually rather
substantial. It goes down into the ground for several storeys, and they've even
managed to get a Ferris wheel in it. Of course, just a small one, with six
gondolas, but it's there. Funny we don't see kids around it. Maybe they're
doing some kind of maintenance work. They shut it down sometimes; yes, I
remember once all these kids crying all over the neighbourhood because the
place was closed. That was two years ago or so. They seem to have a problem
communicating with the general population."
She
stopped to look up the street to it. She said: "So you think it's
closed?" I shrugged: "It looks closed to me, and I know the
scene." "That's too bad," she said: "I like Ferris wheels,
even if they only have six gondolas. Maybe we can break into the place, get it
up and running." "Oh, I'm no good at that, that crime stuff. I'm a
softie." She nodded to me: "Yes. In any case, I now know it's there,
and I can go there at some point. Would you like to come with me?" I
blushed, finally. "I think that would be a very nice thing to do. Some
time soon." "Yes, we'll do that, sure."
We turned
that corner, and we should have been going east at that point. Houses, houses,
houses. I felt like we were walking along a street we'd already walked along,
as if we'd skipped over or under Dovercourt without
knowing we had. It was the funniest feeling, for sure, because it was
completely impossible, and yet I felt like we'd done it. However, it was only a
feeling: we hadn't travelled over, or under, the most main road for blocks and
blocks. Something had been crossed, that was certainly so; but what it was that
had been crossed or how the crossing had taken place or even why the crossing
had been made, I doubt I'll ever fully understand. I have some ideas about it,
though: and you're reading them.
Allow me
to think out loud. We got to an intersection, and I didn't know which way we
should go. We should have gotten back onto Dovercourt,
but it seemed we hadn't. Where were we? She was looking around as if everything
was familiar to her, every eave and every brick and glass. I never learned the
name of the street we were on, even though later I learned the name of the
street we were on, or even if it had a name, even though it was so close to my
heart back in those early '90s.
She was at
home there, on that street which I've avoided for so long, not only because she
knew nothing about it but also because it's not where I remember it to be, she
was at home there in one of the houses, as if she were a ghost allowed out only
for a certain part of any particular day, maybe just to go to the local
laundromat to wash some really old rags (which she, being a ghost, didn't have
any use for anyway) and maybe talk to someone; a ghost whom I couldn't touch no
matter how many pointers and indications I gave.
I said:
"Come on, there's a five-corners we passed, we're going to get back to
where we were. Come along, it can't be very far. All our clothes will be clean
when we get there, you'll see. It can't be much farther."
Another
intersection appeared up ahead, and I again checked the position of the sun. We
seemed to be going, unexpectedly, south. Had we turned somewhere without
knowing it? How can you become so disoriented? It couldn't be denied the
direction we were going in.
She said,
continuing on from earlier: "So the spy business is a family business--though
I never knew it for quite some time, a time long after I started in on it. You
see, my father put some facts together, and saw me for what I was--a natural
liar. And he told me he was the same. He wouldn't tell me who he worked for,
mainly, he said, because we might be working for antagonistic entities, and, if
so, we might feel like taking our work home with us, and cause internecine
conflicts. We had it in common, and he also told me that his father had
been a spook too, but a long time ago when he was quite young, something about
the first world war, which seemed possible to me. The dates lined up all right.
I don't see my father that often; he moved to Belgium after my mother died.
That must've been five years ago now. He gave me some advice last time, though.
He told me that I had to always know when I am not telling the truth. He told
me to have a firm sense of what's true and what's false. So don't worry about
me, buster: I know what's what, and I know when I'm not telling the truth.
"There's
the laundromat." She was pointing, and I looked even though I thought it
was impossible, only to find that yes there it was, on the other side of the
street. Somehow I'd miscounted the number of turns
we'd taken, that we'd gone to the right five times instead of four, but I haven't
ever been able to figure out where the extra corner was. I invented a corner,
that was certain, but, as you've read, I've accounted for every single incident
of our neighbourhood travel. It could not have happened, really.
So anyway we were back at the laundromat and we went inside. My
clothes were dry, so I folded them up on one of the handy folding tables; while
I was doing this, her clothes stopped tumbling and she started folding them up
on a table near mine. I had mine all ready to be carried across the
intersections, and she was still folding hers. I thought waiting was a
pointless thing to do, so I said to her: "Time to go, and I hope I meet
you again." "Oh, you'll meet me again, rest assured. 974 Dovercourt, I heard you say. I'll come see you." "Oh really, you will? When?" She
jumped. "I haven't decided. Do I have to decide right this minute? Some
time soon, maybe next week, or next weekend, some time soon, if that's all
right with you."
I said:
"Oh, yes, certainly, come over any time, really. I'd like that a lot!"
I thought of kissing her at that moment ... which was the last time I ever saw
her, by the way: but I didn't kiss her; I simply said: "Okay, see you soon
then," and left the laundromat.
I went
home, and for the next week I knew I was in love. I could barely think of
anything else, and I'd catch myself staring off into space blankly as I tried
to come up with a strategy; however, of course, she didn't show up that week,
or the next week, and I did my laundry again two weeks later, expecting her to
be there, but she wasn't there. I started walking around the neighbourhood, up
one street and down another, thinking I would run into her, but I never did.
I thought:
perhaps her spymasters pulled her to another city to do a job, and I thought
maybe she'd come back: contrariwise, maybe she'd come to town to do a job in
the first place, and she'd completed it. And, of course, maybe the far-fetched
'spy' thing was as ridiculous as it sounded, and she simply moved to another
part of the city. I'll never know, and frankly I don't know if I'd recognize
her if I ever saw her again. There's a special place for these kinds of emotions
and ideas and feelings.
Anyhow, I know
that I'll never in my entire life go through a spin cycle without thinking of
her, and of the laundromat blues.