Suddenly B. went silent, as though responding to her own admonishment to stop rambling.
“Well,” I said, “it’s a bit of an unusual assignment. In effect, you’re asking me to produce a portrait of your home.”
“Exactly!” B. replied enthusiastically, her energy revived. “That’s just what I’m looking for! Could you do it?”
As busy as I was with other work, I was not eager to take up a new assignment, but it sounded like a challenge, and, I admit, my caller intrigued me. It was clear that if I accepted the assignment, I would have to meet her in person.
We discussed a deadline and my proposed fee. We set a date for a rendezvous at her house, at which time I would meet B. and make some preliminary sketches of what I found there. Confirming our plans, I thanked her for her call and double-checked the directions she had given me.
“I’ll make us a little snack; I’ll have some refreshments ready,” B. added before saying goodbye. “I love desserts.”
3.
“Hi, there! Nice to meet ya. Let’s smoke a joint!”
That was how Barbara-Booba-Babs greeted me when I showed up at her house in the late afternoon a few days after her phone call. In the scorching heat, I wore a nerd’s summer uniform of khaki shorts, a white polo shirt, and new sneakers with white ankle socks. B. arrived at the door holding a big, round pitcher of lemonade in one hand. She appeared in a billowing pink kaftan printed with blue and white polka dots, and her hair—I could see some dyed-red blond strands peeking out—was wrapped in what appeared to be a dish towel masquerading as a turban. Her face was round, like the pitcher, pale and glowing, with neatly plucked brows that formed perfectly symmetrical arches above lively brown eyes. I could tell she was a thin woman under all that fabric. Before I could respond to her invitation, though, B. had grabbed my hand and pulled me firmly into the house.
“Take a look around,” she ordered, “then head out back.”
As she darted to the kitchen at the back of the house, I took in the content and character of Barbara and Bob’s living room and dining room, and a short hallway that led to a staircase down to a lower floor. The house was built into the side of a hill, with its front yard and main entrance, where I had come in, on the upper level. Downstairs, I assumed, were the bedrooms. Out front I had noticed a gravel-covered driveway but no garage.
What I surveyed was a catalog of clutter, from 1960s Italian movie posters and large, animal-shaped sculptures of blown, colored glass to clear-plastic cubes at either end of a red-leather, club-room sofa and steel-framed armchairs with fuzzy, black-and-white-striped seats and backs. There was a cuckoo clock. There was a Mr. Peanut cookie jar. There were braided-macramé plant holders hanging from the ceiling with no flowerpots in their pockets; they held wine bottles instead. The dining room was packed with chairs—bar stools, bean bags, a Shaker straight-back, an antique rocker, an upholstered recliner—but no table at which to sit and eat a meal. An Oriental rug in the living room was old and faded; the green wall-to-wall shag carpet beneath it, which covered the entire upper floor of the house, was matted and needed to be raked—or ripped out and destroyed.
“Eric!” B. barked from the back of the house. “Come!”
I made my way through the kitchen to a screened-in porch overlooking, like a watchtower, a backyard dotted with a few large oak trees. The deep expanse of lawn appeared to be well-tended, and, catching my inquisitive gaze, B. explained: “That’s Bob, my husband. He’s good with grass. He takes care of the outside, and I take care of the inside—and Bob.” For a moment B. looked sad. Then, as I sat down, she cheerfully poured me a glass of lemonade and added, with a wink, “And I’m good with grass too. Here, try this.”
“What I was going to say before was, I’ve never been good at smoking pot,” I offered sheepishly. “Maybe we should talk about the pictures you want and—”
“Huh? What’s not to be good at?” my hostess retorted as she sucked on a joint the size of a carrot. “Here,” she said, shoving it into my hand and wrapping my fingers around it. She lifted it to my lips and placed it in my mouth like a mother teaching an infant to lick its first lollipop. “Now, I’m gonna light this, and you’re gonna breathe in and hold it—hold it till kingdom come, till the cows come home, till pigs start to fly. Just hold it!”
I wondered if watercolors, colored pencils, or my new set of colored felt-tip markers would be the best materials to use to capture, in art, the look and personality of Babs and Bob’s home. I breathed in. I recognized the sweet burning-grass smell. I tried to hold the smoke in my lungs. I also lost track of the time and started coughing and gasping for air.
“That wasn’t very good, Eric!” B. admonished. “Ya gotta do better than that in order to feel the effect.”
I gulped my lemonade.
“Here, don’t drink that. Drink this!” B. commanded, handing me a new glass, freshly poured from another pitcher that had been tucked away somewhere at her side. “This one has vodka. Drink up!” She watched me as, reluctantly, I guzzled the cool liquid like an obedient youngster drinking up all his milk.
“What are you looking at?” B. asked as she caught my eyes wandering across her backyard to her neighbor’s. The next-door property was filled with neatly planted shrubs, young trees surrounded by deer-intimidating protectors, exuberantly colorful flower beds, and a very full-looking vegetable garden enclosed by a fence made of chicken wire and old tree branches.
“Come on,” B. said, seizing my hand. “Let’s take a walk around the house so you can see the outside.” Pulling me down steep wooden stairs that led from the porch to the backyard, she led me around her house, back up to the front, where oak trees shaded the simple structure and big rocks surrounded untended flower beds. I made quick plain-pencil sketches in my notebook. B. sucked on the remains of the joint.
In the backyard again, we stood near the bottom of the stairs that led up to the screened-in porch. “I think I have it,” I announced.
“What’s that?” B. replied with a little cough. She pounded her chest with her fist.
“The views I’d like to paint to represent your home,” I said.
“That’s great, Eric! What do you have in mind?”
“Inside, the room with all the chairs—”
“Genius!” Babs declared. “I knew you were a real artist!”
“And outside, a view of the back of the house, looking up to the watchtower porch.”
“I like the way you think, kid,” B. cooed.
“But in order to get the right perspective, I’m going to have to set up my easel over there …” I pointed to a spot in her neighbor’s backyard, near the enclosed vegetable garden.
“Oh, Eric,” B. sighed, removing the remaining scrap of reefer from her lips and stashing it in the folds of her kaftan. “I don’t know. That would mean asking that girl for permission to let you set up in her backyard, and I …”
“Well, unless your neighbor’s really unfriendly, I’m sure she wouldn’t mind allowing me to work there. It wouldn’t take long.”
B. looked at me and then glanced over at her neighbor’s backyard. “Are you feeling any buzz from that joint?” she asked. “That was supposed to be pretty good stuff.”
I replied that, unfortunately, I had not felt any notable effect. “Maybe next time,” I said, adding: “So, what do you think? I could go next door and ask your neighbor for permission to set up my things in her yard and set a date for—”
“No, no, no, dear, we’ll go together,” B. replied, taking my arm and pulling me up the stairs to the back porch and into the kitchen. “But first let’s get the lemonade—and we’ll also bring the brownies.”
4.
B. did not stand on ceremony when the time came to announce our arrival at her neighbor’s home, even though, during the few seconds it took us to walk across her front yard to the house next door, she admitted that she had never even spoken with this person before; she had never even met her.