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Standing there, watching Linda, I start to imagine, in my mind, not a perfect person, because I don’t need perfection anymore. I’m not perfect, but I want a person to give my love to. As if something inside me needs to leave my body and find an object outside my body. As I stare at the purple bougainvillea vine blooming over the door, more than seeing any one specific person, I imagine a generalized person, a woman. I conceive of a love for her. I imagine her imperfections and it’s those imperfections that I see myself loving. And she, in my dreams, is willing to return my love. My fantasies, as I run them through my mind, over and over, become, not quite reality, but something I can live for.

6

I’m excited about the prospect of … what? I don’t know exactly, excited more by the emergence of desire than the possibility of that desire getting rewarded. I go back to the bunker where I live, find Polino spreading out his blanket, and because Polino is, at the moment, my best friend, I share my excitement.

I tell him about Linda, and about Geoff and Kentucky, but Polino has already heard about Anne, and this new girl, whoever she is, means nothing to him. He changes the subject, starts discoursing to me about the Donner Party, the people who crossed the Sierra Nevada, or tried to, but bad planning or unexpected weather forced them to stay the winter and starve. Or, if not starve, to eat their fellow travelers. He’s going on about the winter of 1847 and partly I’m listening to the lecture and partly I’m thinking about the lecturer.

Polino is wiry and energetic, and it’s not that he doesn’t have ambition. I’ve noticed that in his choice of words, although there are the requisite catch phrases of the day, he also likes to experiment with words he doesn’t know, or wants to know. The two books in his box are a ragged copy of Hamlet and a badly torn dictionary. Really half a dictionary — only the letters M through Z — and in the middle of his explanation of old-time cannibalism, as he describes the state of mind of the hungry families, he uses the word “lachrymosity.” And he stops in the middle of his speech. He’s not sure the word exists, and of course in his tattered dictionary the word isn’t there, and the fact that the definition of the word, if it is a word, is unknown to him increases his belief that knowing its meaning would change things.

So he’s frustrated, and in his frustration looks around and sees me, sitting against the cinder-block wall, and he suddenly says to me, “This is my house, you know.”

“I know,” I say. “I appreciate your hospitality.”

“Hospitality?”

I can see what he wants is a little recognition. Although he’s living a life of indolence he still has some flickering desire. He too wants to be seen, and although he’s not willing to admit it, or do anything to bring it about, he’s tired of the free and easy life of romance, which for him lacks any actual romance.

I’m not blind to his dissatisfaction. Although it’s directed at me, I see it as stemming from something else, and I believe I can change that dissatisfaction. I’m feeling the anticipation of making contact with Linda and I want to pass on that feeling of anticipation. Having found a way out of my own tar pit, I want to pull Polino out. So I come up with a plan.

And the first thing I need to implement this plan is a goal. Sex is a good one, I think, so first comes the pep talk, a motivational sermon to get Polino going. I begin coaxing Polino into describing the girl he’s been talking about, a blond beachcomber girl he’s seen strolling along the beach. The thought of this girl gets him over his resistance.

That’s the first step.

The second step is getting cleaned up.

I take off my pants and shirt, get Polino to do the same, and then, in my underwear, I wash the clothes in a public shower by the beach. Using some soap that had fallen into the drain, I scrub and rinse and wash, first our clothes, then my body and my hair and my face. Polino leaves his beard alone, but with an abandoned disposable razor, I cut the incipient stubble off my face.

Wearing only our underwear, we set our clothes out on the rim of a trash can to dry. People are watching us but we don’t care, and partially we don’t care, or at least I don’t care, because I feel different now that I’m clean, or cleaner, and I believe Polino feels the same.

Grudgingly, he admits that he does. He begins to engage himself with the world of possibility, and the next step would be a haircut, but because I can’t find any scissors or comb we brush our hair back with our fingers.

And then comes finding the girl. Which would be simple enough except that Polino, having lived so long as a hermit, has lost his confidence. He’s lost belief in himself, in his own likability. But we’ve come this far, together, and so with our clothes dried, our hair combed, we go out into the world. We stand in front of a bar on Garnet Avenue and what we need, or what Polino says he needs, is a beer. But for that we need more money, so instead we buy a can of beer from a store and take up our position near the lifeguard station.

We see a girl in bikini and sandals, but she’s not the right girl. Polino has very defined criteria for the person he’s willing to share his beer with and so we stroll around, past people in restaurants watching waves, past surfer-themed bars, and motels with lawns like putting greens.

And then we find her. She’s not blond, but that’s okay. She’s sitting on the public grass in cut-off jeans, braiding her hair, and when we sit with her she doesn’t walk away. A conversation is started and we learn she’s from out of town. She’s got long black hair and Polino offers her his beer. I can see that all my motivational talk was nothing compared to a real living person, wearing a shirt several sizes too small, looking at Polino and listening to him, and seeming to be interested. Gradually I extricate myself, leaving Polino alone with the girl, talking and braiding and feeling the worm of desire.

I go back to Linda’s house.

I stand across the street in the shelter of the same weeping willow, and from the protection of this vantage I start my vigil. Her car is still parked on the street so I wait. After about an hour and a half, when she finally does walk out of the front door, I’m not sure what I’m going to say. I’ve rehearsed it a thousand times but now when I’m confronted with the real object, slightly different and less malleable than the fantasy object, I begin to waver.

Linda walks to the driver’s side of the maroon station wagon, takes her keys out of her pants — sweatpants that conform to the contour of her legs — and that’s when desire, the enemy of sloth, sets me in motion. I start running. I’ve waited so long that now, before she gets in the car and drives away, I have to run to her. She looks up, sees this man running toward her, but she isn’t scared. By the time I get to her and stop in front of her, I’m breathing more than I would like.

“Remember me?” I say.

Of course she does.

“I’ve moved to San Diego.”

“That’s a coincidence,” she says.

She’s wearing a T-shirt.

“Are you a surfer?” she says.

“A body surfer?”

“You’ve got a tan like a surfer.”

“From the sun,” I say. “How are you? Are you off to work?”

“To a class,” she says.

“A class in what? What subject?”