FRESH
YARN presents:
Queen
of Hearts
By Debbie
Kasper
I guess if
a Puerto Rican transvestite hooker ever gets stabbed and bleeds to death
in front of your apartment door, you really shouldn't brag about it, even
if it is Easter. But I couldn't help it.
"You
are one lucky gal," my mother said as if I'd just been nominated
for a Peabody Award. "Everything happens to you, Debbie. Wait till
I tell the girls."
"Well
I hope I don't get murdered, too!" I screamed back into my end of
the phone --never a shred of motherly concern from this lady. "This
isn't Des Moines here! What if I'm next? People die every single minute
in New York, you know!"
"I can't
hear you, my garbage disposal is on," she shouted over the sound
of grinding eggshells. "Call me later -- after Jeopardy."
My mother
always made out like she had no control over appliances that were on,
like maybe she had no hands, or even the skill to turn things off. So
we'd just have to wait for them to run their course. Sometimes an electric
carving knife would interrupt a rare intimate moment between us, and my
mother would act as if "what are ya gonna do?" rolling her eyes,
a helpless victim of modern technology. "I can't hear you, I'm using
my battery-run eyebrow plucker," or, "I'd like to chat, but
the new electric weed whacker is whacking the lawn and I can't stop it."
Sometimes
it felt like Mom was merely taking my calls so she'd have something to
say to "the girls" at bridge club.
By the next
morning, she'd already be on her second polish of the transvestite stabbing
story, in time for Wednesday bridge club, which was really just a suburban
"open mike night" with cards. Ellen, Mary Ann, and Nancy would
all sit there, sipping their dry Manhattans, in their faux pearls and
polyester, swapping silly stories about their kids -- none of whom will
ever even dare dream to have a transvestite hooker bleed to death on their
Manhattan doorstep on Easter, or any other holiday! Mom would wait for
the perfect moment, sometime between the second and third highball. She'd
throw the cards into her electric card shuffler, while Nancy would speak
above the dull hum of a buzz, blab about her bourgeois daughters who were
both married and breeding. My mother would nod politely, unable to hear
her and wait quietly, until someone would ask, "So what's new with
Debbie? Is she still dating that bank robber?"
"No,
but a transvestite hooker bled to death knocking on her door. Two spades."
I'd actually
only had one date with the bank robber almost two years before, but they
just could not let it go! I'd even unwittingly dated a child molester
since, but my mother couldn't twist that one into a light enough story
for the girls.
"Where
in heaven's name did she meet a bank robber?" they had asked.
"At
the bank. Trump!" my mother had said. They all laughed. Then they
all worked it -- She was making a deposit, he was making a withdrawal.
Well, at her age she can't be too picky -- at least she knows where he
is nights. And on and on.
Oh they were
funny those four, during their afternoon roasts, posing as bridge games,
one club. And I would always be the girl that dated a bank robber.
Until now. A dead transvestite trumps a bank robber.
The cops
had labeled the transvestite's death as an occupational hazard, lecturing
me on the phone from his precinct saying that, "He died 'cause of
his lifestyle."
"Her."
I said
"What?"
The cop asked .
"Her
lifestyle, I said. Her lifestyle. He's a her."
"But
she had a penis. That was as much a man as me, except for the bra
-- double wide," he snickered.
"But
he wanted to be a woman, she called herself Chi-Chi and referred to herself
as 'she'. I think since she took the time to stuff herself into a Betsy
Johnson jumper, the least we can do, is call her a 'she.'"
"We
ain't gonna be calling her at all, Mrs. Kasper, "she's stabbed dead."
"Ms.
Kasper," I corrected. "It's what she wanted," I persisted.
"I bet
what she really wanted was to not be dead," he replied.
I told Officer McCool on the other side of the cordless that I was scared
for my life. A personal promise of mine was that if anybody in my immediate
nucleus was ever a victim of a violent crime, I was 'sayonara.' It seemed
a good time to move out of NYC. I told the cop I was thinking about moving
out to LA right about now.
"LA?
Why so you can get drive-by shot by a gang member? Better to stay here
and get mugged. And FYI, don't worry, the chances of another moider
in the same building are a bit unlikely," he said with a hint of
a chuckle. "You're actually really lucky, you're in a good spot.
The chances of two people living in the same building, statistically --
both getting moidered, are about a million to one. So unless you're a
prostitute, too? Hey, why were you out so late?" he asked suspiciously.
"Where were you last night?"
"I'm
a comedian, I work nights."
"Yeah
don't we all?" said officer McCool. "Life's a bitch and then
you die," he said, stealing from a tee-shirt. "The chances of
you getting raped in the subway are far greater at this point, as well.
So take the buses, and walk. But don't move to that sunny septic tank
with palm trees. My sister's kid moved out there, joined a cult, and changed
her name to Raisin. Didn't even come home for Christmas."
I
had actually missed the whole stabbing opera. I was mercifully away at
my gig in safe Princeton, New Jersey, a culture away -- 45 miles out of
Manhattan. I almost drove home at 1:00 AM after my set, but stayed at
the hotel at the last minute, to revel in the oversized bed with the extra
channels the hotel TV had to offer. At approximately 2:00 a.m., Chi-Chi
had apparently belly-crawled down the two flights of steep steps in our
pre-war walk-up, and bled out in front of my door on the chipped, off-white
tile floor, apparently trying to knock for help.
Robert, the
bum who lives on the stairs in our lobby, saw nothing. We call him a bum,
but he drinks Perrier, and sleeps by scented candlelight every night sprawled
across our lobby steps, under his tattered winter coat. He opens the door
for me when I stumble home sloshed, sometimes lecturing me about how I
shouldn't drink so much or stay out so late in the mean city, that I should
love myself more than that. He doesn't like any of my dates, and has no
problem asking them what their intentions are when they stumble home with
me. Most of them intended to wake up with a hangover, and get on home.
Robert weighs
about 300 pounds, with a stomach the size of a bean bag chair, leaving
us all wondering how he could afford to feed that lumpy beast. He has
a wrapped bum leg, swollen to the size of a side of beef. It looks like
someone wrapped the leg up with a crutch in it.
He claims
he has a lawsuit brewing and pretty soon we'll be seeing the last of him,
but he'll still swing by and pick us up in his limo if we want. He's been
living in our lobby for over a year and generally knows what time everyone
comes home, who runs out for what at what time, but he saw and heard nothing
about Chi-Chi. He is a sound sleeper, and quite often I'd have to shake
him hard to wake him up when I got home, as his bloated body made it impossible
to pass through the lobby over his sprawl. So we all assumed the moiderer
stepped right over him.
"That
just make me wanna fro up," said Robert. "It's time for me to
find a safer place to live. This is a dump. I can do better dan dis."
I sensed
the cop was winding down with me on the phone, so I turned Nancy Drew,
"Do we have any leads?" I. pressed.
"We
think he died because his John didn't care for his schlapinki," said
Office McCool. "Can't really blame the guy. Most Johns don't like
dicks on their whores, if you'll excuse my French. That makes one too
many as far as I can tell," he said in an accent suddenly thicker.
"I wouldn't want a hooka wid a dick, would you? Would jew?"
"No!"
I said quickly. It was a no win question he'd thrown my way. A bit unfair,
really, I thought.
"Did
you know she was a he?" he asked, as if he were romancing me.
"Yes
Sir, I did." I always call cops "Sir" lest they ever decided
to turn an investigation towards me, or haul me in. I hadn't done anything
to be hauled in for, but how could we know for sure? I'd seen all the
corrupt cop movies in the '70s. I saw Serpico -- twice -- and never
looked at my city's finest the same again.
"Well,
Sir, she had a beard. And she was really, really big. And, uhm, there
was hair on her knuckles. And she had a deep voice." I said, trailing
off, wondering how quickly I could pack up and leave.
"Sounds
like you two spent a lot of time together."
Suddenly
I felt like I was on the phone with the block yenta, not the desk detective
from the 128th precinct.
"She
wasn't very pretty or anything," I continued, "I mean she wasn't
even a good looking transvestite. She looked a bit like a redwood in a
dress."
"A redwood
in a dress!" laughed McCool. He covered the phone and started throwing
my simile around the room at the precinct.
I asked if they thought they'd find the guy that did this heinous thing.
"Nah,"
he said, as if I'd asked if he wanted a schmear on his bagel. "We
don't really care about a Hispanic transvestite prostitute. Good riddance
we say, good riddance. These people eventually extoiminate each
other, and then themselves, if we let them go. If only we could get the
rats and the roaches to toin on each other too, then we'd have
a nice place here for decent folks to live."
"Then
why did you call me? Why are you gathering evidence," I asked, already
knowing the answer: He was a yenta, and even he had never
-- in his life -- seen a dead Puerto Rican transvestite hooker. This was
bigger than both of us.
"File,"
he said as if I should have known. Ah yes, the "file," the proverbial
file. I remembered all about files from watching Hunter reruns.
I joined the neighbors gathering in the lobby stairwell, relaying to them
that the cops didn't give a rat's ass about our moidered transvestite.
"They
left him lying there all night. You're so lucky you weren't home,"
said Betty, a dancer who lived upstairs. I hadn't spoken to her since
I organized the rent strike the fall before. She's a ballerina-in training
at Lincoln center, with a ballerina body, long and thin like pulled rope,
her hair brushed back in a tight ballerina knot, and sunken cheeks. I
liked to offer her cookies, just to watch her eyes weep as she said no.
I doubt she'd had a cookie since Jimmy Carter was president, and she was
so self-absorbed I doubt she even knew that a Jimmy Carter was president.
I never saw any of the ballerinas in the building except on their way
to their rehearsals, which was all the time. They'd prance bowlegged down
Columbus Avenue, like graceful praying mantises, passing all who got in
the way of their dreams. They made great neighbors.
"Maybe
I could've saved his life," I said sadly. "She came to me, as
I'm the only one in the building who was nice to her."
"Her
life" corrected Betty Ballerina.
"How
do you think I feel?" asked Robert, "I didn't even know she
was a prostitute. I thought she was reading palms. I mean she was a little
BIG to be a prostitute."
A bit like
the pot calling the kettle black, I thought.
By late Easter night, I'd worked the story in my head into a morality
tale where she had slid down the stairs and bled to death in front of
my door, trying to get me to help her, lifting the last of her strength
to knock on my cold door, perhaps crying out "Hel-! Call that number!
9 something. I know I haven't had time to have you over for some crumpets,
but you seem like a nice girl."
"If
I had been home, which I came really close to being, I would've gotten
her help, she would've lived!" I said, eyes moist. "I liked
her," I lied. Sometimes to be a real liberal, and to make sure people
knew it, you just had to lie about whom you liked. On occasion I'd offer
gumballs to the black people's children in line at the grocery store,
just so they'd know I wasn't racist. It's okay to snub the whities, as
long as you reach out to the Asians and the Sikhs. I always smile at Hispanics
when I pass them, and I hold doors for crippled people, rarely letting
them know I pity them. But the truth is, I didn't like Chi-Chi at all.
Her white frouffy dog yelped constantly, and her doorbell rang like a
Mr. Softee truck in July. She was the pied piper of perverted gimps, creepy
night-crawlers, and horny old geezers. I preferred the clean little ballerinas
who made up most of the building, you never even heard a can opener, or
a potato chip crunch from their apartments, and when they did date, the
men would always be collegiate and shiny. And there was the one time when
the transvestite's sink overflowed and leaked through my ceiling lighting
fixture. When I stormed upstairs to tell her, she stood there all a-flutter,
in a fluffy robe, holding it shut in the front, like I wanted to peek.
"Good
heavens! Oh my," she had brayed, her voice trying to cling on to
a woman's register, while her Adam's apple betrayed her. When I went into
the bathroom to see that the tub was indeed overflowing, and spilling
gallons of water onto the floor, she froze. She motioned with her eyes
that I was the one who would have to take control and turn the water off,
while she vamped there in feathers and boas, a bloated Blanche DuBois,
depending on the kindness of this stranger.
But she wasn't
sorry enough, and I knew she was turning tricks in the building, so I
ratted her out. I called the landlord, and told him that one day my buzzer
buzzed, and I let a short ugly old man into the building who knocked on
my door by mistake, screaming, "Is the redhead here?"
"Oh,
is that what color that's supposed to be?" I said.
"Yes
-- the 'redhead' is indeed here, she's upstairs, in 3N. I'm the dishwater
blonde in 2N, so keep climbing, fuzzy-boy." He had eyed me up and
down with little interest and passed on upstairs to the whatever color
that is - head. I knew he'd be sorry once he got there. Even if he liked
transvestites, he wouldn't like this one. She was a linebacker. So I bolted
my door quickly, in case he decided that I wasn't so bad after all. That's
when I knew that Chi-Chi was turning tricks. Right upstairs. The landlord
told me I had to get some hard evidence.
"The
constant stream of balding old men going up and down the steps isn't evidence
enough?" I screamed into the phone.
"She
could be selling Tupperware," he suggested feebly, "you don't
know. This is America." He was Polish, and was not above slipping
into his first language when the questions got uncomfortable.
I had given
this information about the encounter with the hairy man to the cop, wondering
if that perhaps could have been the man who moidered her. McCool
didn't seem to care much, didn't even offer to send an artist over so
I could have him sketched. No, I didn't like her, but still I could've
saved her. That's what liberals do, I thought.
"Would
you have opened the door at three in the morning for a bleeding transvestite?"
asked Tina, a teacher who lived in the building, and had just joined our
stairwell meeting.
"Probably
not," I sighed. "Thank God I was out.
"It
was awful." offered another hungry-eyed ballerina. "The cops
had him roped off like a sideshow. They left him lying there all night,
still bloody, mascara dripping down his cheeks, stab wound in plain view,
skirt hiked up around his chest and his boner still erect, like a tent
pole!"
"We
were held hostage by a dead woman's boner," said Betty. They wouldn't
let us pass on up to our apartments." I came home -- I was on a first
date -- and the place was a crawling circus!"
"You'll
never hear from that guy again," I pointed out. offering her a thin
mint to soften the blow. The stairwell meeting broke up, and we all gave
one another meaningless hugs, knowing we might not all be together other
again for months.
As I lay
in my bed that night, packing my apartment in my head, I worried for a
moment about Chi-Chi's mother. How in the world she would ever know that
her poor 'daughter' was dead? I also wondered how long it had been since
they'd even spoken. I wondered if she'd ever been able to brag to her
bridge club about her daughter. I thought about how lucky I really
was.
By Wednesday's
bridge club, my own mother had spun the story with her own flair. "If
Debbie had decided to drive home after her gig, she would've come face
to face with the stabber! She could've been murdered, too. Maybe he would
have stabbed out her eyes, so she couldn't identify him! One spade."
"She's sure lucky, that Debbie. Two hearts," said Nancy.
I've got nothing. "I'll pass," added Mary Ann.
"Maybe
a nice single man will move into that apartment above her," said
Ellen. "Or is Debbie still dating that bank robber?"
©All
material is copyrighted and cannot be reproduced without permission |