“Mr. Flanders,” she said, which made me wonder why I should call her Candy if she was going to call me Mr. Flanders, “isn’t there some way I can get the money?”
“Well—” I said.
“I mean I really have to have it.”
“Well, if you had a first-class co-maker—”
“What,” she wanted to know, “is a co-maker?”
“Someone who’ll make good the money if you don’t.”
“Oh, but I’ll make good the money.”
I nodded vacantly. “We need more than that. If you can dig up somebody who knows you well, who’s willing to co-sign the loan application, who’s been employed at the same job and lived at the same address for a considerable length of time, who’s draft-free, who’s married—”
“I don’t know anyone like that.”
“Oh,” I said. The next thing I should have said was good-bye, but the helplessness of the gal kept me from giving her the brush-off. Well, it was partly the helplessness. The view I was getting of her sweater wasn’t helping matters any.
“Mr. Flanders,” she said suddenly, “how long have you been working here?”
“A little over three years.”
“Are you married?”
“Yes, but—”
God alone knows what I was going to say after that but.
“That’s it!” she squealed, clapping her hands like a kid who had just won a game of jacks.
“What’s what?”
“You!”
“Me?”
“You can be my co-maker or whatever it is.”
I stared at her blankly.
“Won’t you do it for me?” Her face looked as though someone had just told her that there wasn’t a Santa Claus and she wasn’t sure whether to believe him or not.
“Well,” I said, “I don’t see how I can.”
“Why not?”
“I don’t even know you.”
“That’s nothing,” she said. “You can take me out to lunch and you’ll get to know me and then you can be my co-maker. Would that be all right?”
“Well—”
“Come on,” she said. She got up from the chair and smiled at me. “I can really use a dinner. I haven’t had anything to eat in days.”
There was only one thing to do at this point. I should have snarled at her, told her I hoped she starved to death and ordered her off the premises of the Beverley Finance Company, never to return.
That would have been the smart thing to do.
Needless to say, I did nothing of the sort.
I got up from my chair, walked around the desk and took her arm. I informed Les Boloff that I would be back eventually and he gave me one of those man-to-man winks that was positively obscene.
And away we went.
Ahfen Yahm is an Arabian restaurant on 38th Street just east of Fifth Avenue. The food starts with that thin Lebanese bread that’s great for scooping up yogurt with if that happens to be your cup of tea. It runs a course through the usual run of shishkebabish dishes and winds up with this far-out pudding that’s on fire when they bring it to your table.
I had just finished my pastrami-plus-cream-soda lunch and I wasn’t especially hungry, so I drank my lunch while Candy Cain polished off everything that the waitress put in front of her. The waitress was a big fat sow of a woman and her uniform looked as though it had been specially designed for her by Omar the Tentmaker. She watched Candy devour the food with a very sympathetic smile on her cowlike face.
It was about this time that I realized that Blondie’s name was Candy Cain, which was like the things they hang on Christmas trees. I clued her in on my brilliant observation and she let me know that this had gone through her parents’ minds when they named her. They thought it was cute. I, in turn, thought she was cute.
“Candy,” I said as I drank my third Gibson, “why do you need a thousand dollars?”
“To live on.”
“Huh?”
“I don’t have any money, Jeff. I came to New York with very little money to begin with and now it’s all gone.”
“Why don’t you get a job?”
“Doing what?”
“Can you type?”
She shook her head.
“Wait on tables?”
She shook her head again.
“Retail sales?”
She shook her head a third time and I began wondering how in the world anybody could be unqualified for something so elementary as slinging hash. Then she explained herself.
“You see,” she said, “I don’t want a job.”
“You don’t?”
“No.”
“Why on earth not?”
“Jeff,” she said, as if she was spelling things out for an idiot, “if all I wanted was a job I could have stayed in Gibbsville.”
“Then—”
“I want to be supported,” she said.
“Looking to get married?”
“Possibly,” she said. “Or kept.”
I was, to put it mildly, floored. I tried to match the baby face and the baby voice and the incongruous words that kept coming out of the pretty mouth. They didn’t match.
She sipped her Turkish coffee and I slurped my Gibson and we stared at each other. She didn’t smoke but I had a cigarette between my fingers and I was flicking at it nervously. Up to this point, no thought of cheating on Lucy had entered my thick head. It was strictly a look-but-don’t-touch type of fling, but I was suddenly beginning to realize two things.
One—I could have this babe if I wanted to.
Two—I wanted to.
“Jeff,” she said gently, “are you going to be my co-maker?”
I opened my mouth to say God knows what but she didn’t give me time.
“If you’ll be my co-maker for a thousand dollars, I’ll let you.”
“Let me what?”
“You know.”
Yeah, I knew. But I had a feeling she was a little gone in the head and I wanted to hear her say it, so I asked her to explain what she had in mind.
“If you are my co-maker for a thousand-dollar loan,” she said slowly, “I’ll let you have what you want—anything!”
You figure it. I’m damned if I can. Here I was, a happily married joker with a spotless record as far as adultery was concerned, a guy who loved his wife and got along with her in bed as perfectly as two people can. Not an inexperienced guy, because while I was married at twenty-three, there were a lot of women before then. But no skirt-chaser.
There I was. And there, also, was Candy. Nineteen years old and built for boffing. Here we were, just the two of us, and she wanted me to pay a mere thousand dollars in return for which she would be my ever-lovin’ mistress.
Yeah, pay her a thousand dollars. Being co-maker was absurd—she had about as much intention of ever repaying that loan as Hitler had of settling for half of Czechoslovakia. It added up to paying her the grand, which I preferred to do than sign for her anyway, all things considered.
While I sat across from her being dumfounded she regaled me with details of how good she was in bed and what a hot number she was. It was impossible to believe those grown-up words were being spoken in that little-girl voice.
“I’ve got the hardest and firmest breasts of any girl I know,” she told me. “They’re big, too. You can see how big they are.”
I could see how big they were.
“And I know lots of tricks. I’m real good at it, and it’s not as if I did it with just anybody.”
“How many men have you had?”
“Four.”
“One doesn’t count,” she said, “because I was only sixteen then and he got me drunk on applejack and I didn’t know what he was doing. Another one only half-counts because we didn’t really.”
I asked her what in hell she meant and she told me. The explanation of just what it was that the two of them did would have made Krafft-Ebing blush.