In a Mexicali Mood
Love by the Glass
Brian McNeece
Just as Alex expected, the Refranes Bar was nearly empty. It was only three o’clock Friday afternoon. But that didn’t diminish his excitement. He had the whole evening ahead of him with his Nancy, and he was nearly giddy as he passed from the harsh sunny world of a Mexicali January through the swinging door into the dim red glow of the bar. She was there behind the bar, dropping coins into the register, her black hair cascading over the silky green blouse. Tight black leather pants captured her young plump buttocks like the skin on a ripe mango. He smiled and sat on the stool across from her.
Alex couldn’t remember when love and marriage, love and marriage like he vaguely imagined it one day long, long ago, had completely evaporated and was gone. After he and Elida got married, a couple of years passed. Two then three kids. They bought a tract house on the edge of town. The house filled up with stuff. Shoes and shirts and pants spilling out of the closet. Socks and underwear and papers off the top of the dresser. Cups and wrappers and knick-knacks on the end tables. Towels and blankets and more clothes on the arms of the armchairs, and finally boxes and jars and dishes on all the kitchen counters and the kitchen table. When the kitchen table filled up, they reached steady state. Nothing changed. Why the stuff didn’t go away, Alex couldn’t quite figure out. It had never been like that before he got married and left his mother’s house. He and his wife barely had enough room for each other in their house, not to mention the kids. Just to get enough room, they slept in separate beds.
“Hello baby,” he called to Nancy. She turned and nodded. He breathed in her fragrance. Her mouth moved as she counted silently. She raised her chin and turned back to her task. No hurry. Feeling safe inside the five-foot swath of the smell of Nancy, Alex looked around the bar. It wasn’t much to talk about, but it was clean and airy and open. The walls were bare block painted dark red. Alex loved the dark red light and the soft green tablecloths and the jukebox alone against the wall in the back on the dance floor. He didn’t mind the smell of spilled beer; it was no different than any other bar.
The music was off, and the place seemed too empty, too bare. He walked over and deposited some pesos in the jukebox. A pounding beat filled the room with sonic bubbles, musical pillows. He felt better now. A beer sat on the bar. Before eight o’clock, the beers were only one dollar. Nancy leaned over the bar to him and shared her fresh breath and left her soft, warm, delicate hand in his for a deliciously long time. “Buy me a drink?” she said. She put her forehead against his and let her hair form a tent over the space between them. She drew back. Her eyes shone bright and clear. She was so young, so beautiful. He nodded.
Fridays Alex didn’t work at his usual job at the hospital as a transporter. He was free to create a one-day a week life in Mexicali to balance the static clutter of his life in Calexico. His Calexico life was a haze of trips to and from school with his kids, a nearly daily marijuana smoke, an occasional ten minutes of sexual release with his wife, and some hours a day transporting documents and people from place to place at the El Centro Regional Medical Center.
He watched Nancy in the mirror as she mixed the drink. She was so young so fresh, someone you would want to meet over the papayas down at Vons. So fresh. She looked up and smiled. She was the only other person in the bar, and for an instant he felt he saw into her, through a clean, uncluttered space, she alone, content for a moment just to be there, in that place, with him. In another instant came a look of sadness, only to be replaced by her working smile.
In Mexicali, he owned three houses and one small apartment building. But for Nancy’s sake, it was many, many more units to manage, and for Nancy’s sake, he lived in Tijuana, where he was second in command at a construction company.
She rested her elbows on the bar and slumped so her head was below his. Even her eyebrows looked young and perfect, like a photo for a makeup ad. “I got the papers signed,” Alex volunteered.
“What papers?” she said. She ran her tongue along the corner of her mouth.
“Remember, I told you, my cousin Jaime, the architect, he’s going to build some apartments for me. That’s why I came today, for the papers.” He took her hand in his. She took a long swallow of her drink and wiped her mouth with her hand.
“Oh yeah. Good.”
Nancy used to be a model, and married young, at sixteen. Now she had three children and a husband serving eight years in prison for car theft. That’s what she told Alex. She hadn’t had sex for one year. That’s what she told Alex. But she didn’t go with men, she said.
Alex liked Nancy. The rhythm of their conversation was relaxed, even across the many silences when there was nothing to say and the music held them up with boulders and embankments of sound, and the light ball bathed them like a warm flurry of friendly stars. But she drank so fast. Alex was content to sip and chat and put the peanuts into his mouth then her mouth one by one. “Another drink?” she asked. Alex nodded again.
He had barely taken another sip of his beer when she returned to her slumped position on the bar with her second drink, her eyes bright, her smile ready. She reminded him of a little girl in grade school long ago, a girl with a magic wand in a play, a silvery crown, a princess, she was. As she drank from her glass, he noticed how perfect her fingers were, long and thinner than the rest of her, with perfect red nails.
“Excuse me,” she said. “I’ll be right back.” He knew the routine. Now began her many trips to the bathroom. When she left the room, he looked around, and seeing only the other bar girl setting glasses at the end of the bar, he quickly tipped his beer into Nancy’s glass.
Her drinks were $3.50 each. One dollar and twenty cents of that went to Nancy. Otherwise, she made about $10 per day. Just about any little job in Mexicali was $10 a day, about double the minimum wage. Alex always added a little beer to her glass when she emptied her bladder. If he was going to have to pay her for her conversation, she would have to get drunk. He was ready for a long night
The harsh bright light of day stabbed into his eyes from the mirror as three men entered through the swinging door. When Nancy came back, they huddled close to talk to her. The other bargirl was drinking with an old man in the corner of the bar, laughing and touching his face. Nancy served the new customers beers and lingered at the bar with them, smiling and glowing with the attention.
Alex was angry. Nancy was his girl. “Hey,” he shouted to her, glancing quickly at the three men. She looked at him and back at the men. She took two steps to talk to him. The full volume of the music made it unnecessary to hide his words. “You need to stay with me,” he said, his anger obvious. She raised her eyebrows. “All right, baby. Just let me get Betty from the back.”
As she passed the eager men, she seemed to put something extra into her walk. Alex scowled and left his stool. He crossed the empty space to a small table with a soft green tablecloth and waited for her. Betty emerged from a side door and attended the men. He saw their disappointment in the mirror, for Betty had a few more years on her and carried a scuffed, well-used look that the dim light and heavy makeup couldn’t hide. Too bad. Nancy was his girl.
She sat next to him in the low leather chairs with her knees hard against his. He put his arm around her and gently squeezed her to him. “Are you jealous?” she said into his ear. The music seemed to pull them together even more here away from the bar, here where Nancy was now his for the night, for as long as he wanted.
“Of course, baby,” he cooed. “You’re my girl.” Suddenly he noticed something. “Where’s your drink?”
“Oh, I finished it. I’ll get another.” She stood. For a moment he looked up at her face past her breasts pushing out her thin green silk blouse. Warmth flowed through him like a soul massage. He felt good. He felt very good.
Alex and Nancy sat against the wall through the afternoon, and the light no longer knifed at them when the door opened and closed. Other men filled the jukebox with pesos, and more bargirls appeared as if some rule demanded a perfect ratio of bargirls to patrons. She drank and he drank and the night wore on. How many drinks had she had–fifteen, twenty, twenty-five? He had no idea. What did they say to each other? Who could remember? He only loved her lightness; from her eyebrows and eyelashes to the way she lifted her fingers as she talked. Her full lips pouted red and tempting, and he kissed them now and again. At first she didn’t return his kisses, but little by little her kisses came back to him–little girl kisses.
She left for the bathroom, and now he didn’t worry about anyone seeing him tip his beer into her glass, for the bar was full with dark shapes bumping into one another in the cracks between the beat of the drum and the rocking steps of the bass and the warm swirling stars spinning galaxies across the red concrete walls.
He watched her cross the dance floor with her hand on her forehead, looking down, being knocked this way and that, unsteady. She was drunk. He rose and gathered her in his arms. She leaned on him for support, and he held her close, pulling her tight against him. She tucked her head under his chin and sighed and hummed into his heart. His Nancy. His little Nancy, who liked him and needed him and cuddled him. “Come with me,” he yelled into her ear. “Let’s go!”
She shook her head. Her hair dangled sloppily on his chest. She looked up to him and asked, “Why are you doing this to me?”
Alex was surprised. What was this? She wasn’t supposed to say anything like this. He shrugged. He put his mouth to her ear. “I want to be with you, I want you next to me. You make me do it.”
“Do you want me?” she asked. “Do YOU want ME?” She dropped her arms to her side and began to sob.
She sat heavily, grunting. He folded himself into his chair, for it was too small for his large frame. He didn’t know what to say, so he just sat. His hand rested on her young back, but he did not move it. Her back no longer felt like the back of a princess grown up, but of a stranger. He wanted to tell her that he liked her this way, he liked her taking his money drink by drink. He liked her being the boss and he being the boss, a fair exchange, his money for her perfumed air, for the five foot perfumed swath around her body, for her leather pants and silk blouse and the heaviness on her chest he felt when he danced with her, for her smile and for her breath. Here, he got something he didn’t get as a married man, some warmth, some presence, some romance. A teasing distance, an interest in a courting dance that he didn’t have to lead or win.
His hand was still on her back. He didn’t want to move it. Did he really want to take her someplace? Did he really want to go with her?
Nancy raised her head and looked at him. Her eyes were old now, drowning, sinking. “All you want to do is put your thing into me, that’s all. All this, all these hours, just for that.” She sat back clumsily in her chair. “That’s all it’s about–your thing.”
He wanted to tell her it wasn’t true. Where were the words? He could put his thing into one of those sneering whores lined up in front of the Hotel del Pacifico. Twenty-five dollars included the fifteen minutes of rent on the room and the condom. Not too much money, but don’t touch above the waist. No, he didn’t need that from Nancy.
She sat up. Her face was wet with the tears of a little girl and vacant like a house after a party. “Aren’t you going to say anything?”
Alex took the last peanut from the bowl on the table and chewed it slowly, his moustache moving up and down. He didn’t say anything.
“If you want me, if you like me, why don’t you let me stay in one of those apartments you own? Why don’t you help me, Alex, if you are Alex, if you own apartments?” She rolled her head as if to throw off the suffocating heaviness of her drunkenness.
He thought about having his Nancy always there, ready for him in one of his apartments. Fresh and soft and ripe like an avocado. Then he saw it all. Perfumed leather pants on the floor, high-heeled shoes spilling out of the closet, bras slung over the chair, panties in the corner, bus tickets, shoe boxes, tissue paper on the bureau And three kids in the other room with their underwear, comic books, X-Box controllers, candy wrappers, cups, shoes, pants. He saw it all.
* * *
Three rows of cars stretched for a quarter mile in front of him, humming their contentment. Not a long line. The night wasn’t late, only eleven o’clock. He would cross the border drinking a cup of coffee and cooperate fully with the agent. He wasn’t drunk. Maybe he drank about ten beers, but over eight hours, it was nothing. He was used to it. Some of every beer went into Nancy’ glass, so she shared in his sea of liquid love.
So many people complained about the lines to the border crossing, but Alex enjoyed having his place, knowing step by step he would get to where he was going. What was the hurry? Alex took comfort in the certainty of it, the order, the inexorable progress. He took his foot off the brake and flowed automatically forward with the car in front of him.
A hundred dollars for nearly eight hours with his Nancy. He settled back into his seat and remembered her fragrance, her skin. He felt good. He could do whatever he wanted. He wondered if his Elida was home yet, whether she had gone to her mother’s house after work to pick up their kids, or would his house be empty. It didn’t matter. Elida would be there sometime tonight. And when he woke up in the morning, she would be there, waking the children, fixing the breakfast. Not his breakfast, but she would be there.
Traffic moved quickly. He fumbled for his green card as he rolled up to the inspection booth.
“Going home to the missus?” said the officer. Alex squinted at him. Did he know him? He vaguely reminded Alex of one of his teachers in junior high.
“Yeah.”
“Did you save a little romance for her?” The officer returned him his card.
“Huh? A little romance? Yeah, sure.”
Alex pulled away from the booth and weaved through the concrete barriers. A little romance for Elida? Who the hell was that guy? Elida wasn’t too old, but she was thin, not like a real woman. Anyway, she didn’t like him. A little romance? Hmmm. He felt warm in the afterglow of Nancy. Well, he would see; he would see.
bmcneece@adelphia.net">bmcneece@adelphia.net">brian on 03.20.09 @ 12:48 AM PST [link]