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a story from life. |
The Dancer by Samuel Ramratan. When I saw her I almost stubbed my toe. She has moved into my easy going neighborhood with two children and a well to do handsome husband. It was not that they were living right next door but because of how things were it could well have been. She did not see me that time because I had ducked quickly moving down another aisle away from her family. Cutting my shopping short and leaving hurriedly I returned home to muse over Miss S, the only name I had known her by. Those were the days in my early twenties when strip tease was making its way through the Torontonian suburban scene. Sure there was Zanzibar, that well known dancer joint on Yonge street embracing Dundas, but police my friends divided all downtown action from the burgeoning scene away from Toronto's city center. My first trips to those clubs were around the time when taking it all off centered around pipe dreams based in hell. It was fun those early days when the girls talked the talk, walked the walk and danced rock an roll or punk. Calling them strippers was a sure way of becoming unpopular with the fellas, but saying dancers made your presence at least bearable. By the time Miss S, rolled into the club, I was an accepted regular. Grand enough on the pool table to gain the bikers respect, quality pot in my pocket to be chosen when the local crowd headed outside, and nice enough to be picked out when the dancers were on stage. Vying for their attention, to be hailed as heroes of the hour, men were rapt with attentiveness, circled around that square stage. If you were lucky they would come sit at your table after their shift on stage. The days, those days all without taking it all off. Everything changed when it all came off and remarkably Miss S, she was a perfect example of how things had changed. The Monday she walked in, like usual we were all there at noon. Habits of nature, creaming the boldest and friendliest females in a cold society, like a drug, one you never had to take home with you and one that never left a bad taste in your mouth. We were all nervous, the pack of us crazy fellows because she was different, at once her affections were something to be cherished. I don't know but these days no affection passes in strip clubs, the G-string took off with affection, real laughter and money laden lecherous boys and crass men. Miss S, her name had made my skin tingle, my heart go bleep and eyes narrower. You see she was young, pretty, vivacious, sensual, friendly, warm breasted, and me my friend, I was young so when she sat with me that afternoon, the local gang knew at that instant there was something about me. Best of all I didn't let them down that day. It didn't take much time before I pulled a few tables together and shared her decent affections, like a lion who shares with family. Those days that followed no one would have thought that club was a strip joint. It was like an Italian backyard full of noise and activity when Mama had family over. I had become King, only because I was as they all had said, pretty cool guy. The golden crown that I wore fell quickly off soon after. I have been wondering what to do and how to face Miss S, now that she is real middle class living in our small community, not that she had ever graced those lower rungs of decrepit society. You see my friend, I run our Friday night poker game for all seven neighboring married men. For some reason the neighborhood wives trust me with their men. They retain their air of respectability Saturday morning and their pockets are never emptied. John, in whose house Miss S, and her family have taken up residence, was part of our game and we were planning on inviting the newest member of our community to those Friday night fun times. So last Friday at our habitual sessions, they asked me when was I going to introduce myself and the Friday night poker game to Chris. The next door neighbors had been in contact. Now I am single so I have no buffer zone relying mostly on my wits and good sense. Honestly I am sort of scared. You see I became scared after losing my King hood back in those days when G-strings dropped with Ontario courts ordering them off. All dancer girls had changed including Miss S. She had stopped speaking to me that day I was there watching. I myself wasn't curious, it was just habit, being there, seeking out my fun. Women are strange beings and it could have been that because she had some strange affection for me and the way we guys had embraced the newbie in her, her dignity was compromised that day all strings dropped. She had finished the week then we never saw her dance again by then dancers were termed 'nakeds'. Yes, the crew who needed shock waves of nakedness called them 'nakeds' while the viewing audience had swelled. It was good for business, that nakedness, but for us, the old gang it crushed our civility. We didn't stop going we only hung around the back, centered around a competitive pool table, but never around the squared stage except under special circumstances when some poor female implored one of us to sit close for moral support. Today it is all cold, cold hard cash even the free flow of pot these days must probably be attached to licentious behaviors. So Miss S, I never even knew her real name but I can't say I have ever seen her naked. Embarrassed I had always averted my eyes when her turn had come up or headed outside with the boys. If she had done likewise we would have been blind to each others ridiculous reactions. It was like that day in the shopping aisle, I had ducked my responsibility. Mabye she would not recognize me, my irrational self complained. Laugh. Anxiety. I cannot run away. I have to face my past and Miss S. I chose the next Wednesday night armed with an addressed invitation signed by our whole gang with my own address on it as the night out hangout. Apprehensively I rang their doorbell listening to the familiar echoes of its da ding da ding at around seven ten that chosen evening. It was one of her children who answered with a yeh, after swinging the door wide open. I heard her voice calling out, it sounded like a souped up version of what I had remembered. Chills overcame me immediately. Your parents, I mumbled in a less than authoritative voice, tell them it's one of the neighbors. He translated for me. Mom it's your friend. I warmed instantly. She appeared, how queen like, seeing me her eyes questioned mine, daring, bolder than before, secure in their double holsters. I flubbed my planned lines, I was a man again, courage instantly soaring, but my hand having nothing to do raised itself to my head scratching brushing around a bit. Hi I said, calmly, welcome to the neighborhood. I felt like I was smiling, early twenties rushed up to my head again. I am here on behalf of the Friday night outing gang. I dropped the word poker like hot cat shit. I stretched out my hand in friendship, the invitation firmly grasped in the other. Her eyes softened, she laughed softly, a whisper of the years gone by edged into her voice. Is your husband in, I asked carefully. She extended her own hand, slowly like equals, she had recognized me, come in she said, I was expecting you! |