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  • Art of Picking the Wrong Ones

Art of Picking the Wrong Ones

christinec January 17, 2004
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Read Time:8 Minute, 32 Second

“There’s nothing wrong with you except that

you’re picking the wrong guys,” said my friend after suffering a recap of my most recent

date. If I had a nickel for every time I’d heard this phrase, I would have bought my

own football team. It always makes me wonder why my record of poor choices has remained

so perfectly flawless. This was not for lack of careful consideration. Through

experience, I had determined one type of guy to definitely avoid is the one that purports

to be nice. If he actually comes out and says, “I’m a nice guy,” he’s big trouble.

I was looking for someone with a penchant for words and a dark sense of

humor. These were my Phoenix years, an especially low point in my life. I would run

personal ads in The Boston Phoenix whenever they offered free ones. It was more a

creative outlet for me than anything. My ads got plenty of responses, but for some

reason, they caused concern amongst friends and family. Especially my favorite: “Fresh

Kill. Still warm. Wretched wench wants churlish rogue for intense chemistry and

intellectual sparring. No husbands, boyfriends or convicts. Smokers and ax-wielding

homicidal maniacs preferred.”

“What if some total lunatic answers that?”

my friend asked with a furrowed brow.

“Come on. Any self-respecting

ax-wielding homicidal maniac would be out on the streets looking for victims,” I replied.

“Well, why don’t you answer a couple of ads? Let me pick some for you

and you can call the ones that sound good to you,” she suggested.

It

sounded like an interesting experiment. She had a nice boyfriend. Maybe I was picking

the wrong ones and another set of eyes would help. I handed her my Phoenix. She returned

it an hour later with four ads circled. One seemed somewhat appealing: a romantic chef

that likes local bands. A smoker. I left a message. He called back and we talked for a

bit. He had a nice voice. We arranged to meet the following Thursday at 6:00 p.m. at

the gates in Chinatown.

Chef boy’s name was Phil, and he was cute. He

had big shoulders, light brown hair and blue eyes. We walked through Chinatown. He took

me into a small Vietnamese restaurant, introduced me to the host and immediately led me

back outside. He then took me into two more restaurants, introduced me to various

employees, and again, we left immediately after the introductions. Each time I thought

we might sit down and get a drink and maybe a bite to eat, but we did not. And I found

being introduced to various restaurant employees to be a somewhat strange activity.

Perhaps he was an undercover health inspector.

We continued walking for a

long time and my feet were beginning to hurt, so I suggested that we stop somewhere for a

drink. We were near Copley Square, and he led me into a quiet Chinese restaurant. We

sat at a table in the bar and I ordered a beer. He ordered nothing. When the waitress

left, I asked him why he wasn’t having anything and he admitted that he had no money. I

offered to buy him a drink and when the waitress returned with my beer, he ordered one

too.

He spoke about his childhood. His parents were terrible and had him

committed to a mental hospital when he was 16. He had one older brother that used to

beat him up all the time. The waitress returned with his beer and I lit a cigarette.

“May I?” he asked, gesturing towards my pack of smokes.

“Of

course.”

When I asked him where he was a chef, he explained that he

didn’t have a job right then. He had recently been let go from Bickfords. At one point,

my hands were folded on the table in front of me. He gently took them in his, turned

them so my palms were facing upward and ran his fingers over the insides of my wrists.

“Good,” he said. “No scars.”

I played along. “No, they healed years

ago,” I replied.

He wistfully told me about his suicidal ex-girlfriend,

Vivian. “She was a cutter,” he said.

We ordered another round and continued to

talk and smoke my cigarettes. We discussed Vivian, different methods of suicide,

alcoholism and depression. By the time we finished our drinks, my cigarette pack was

empty. It suddenly occurred to me that my date fell into the category of smokers that

prefer not to buy their own. I paid the check and we went outside.

Was I

being too picky? This didn’t seem to be getting off to a very good start. I’m no gold

digger. I do not expect my dates or anyone else to carry me. And I’d been in enough

relationships where I’d done all the carrying to know that I didn’t want to be

responsible for someone else. Maybe he was just nervous. I was smoking more, too. This

dating crap is nerve-wracking. I spotted a Walgreen’s and told him I needed to go in and

get more cigarettes.

“Sure,” he said, and followed me

inside.

I paid for my smokes, turned around and he had disappeared. I

walked across the front of the store looking down the aisles for him when he suddenly

emerged from an aisle at the far end of the store.

We went back outside

and continued walking. He reached into his coat pocket, pulled out a bottle of dandruff

shampoo and turned it over in his hand. “This is good stuff,” he said. He returned the

shampoo to his pocket and pulled out a votive candle and a toothbrush.

“Yeah, the price was right,” he continued, sounding pleased with

himself.
Clearly he was trying to get a reaction from me, but I would not bite. I

just walked alongside him, undaunted, acting as if all my dates shoplift.

“Not bad,” I replied nonchalantly, hoping to imply I’d seen bigger

heists. We walked further. It seemed he was navigating us

somewhere.

“Where are we headed?” I asked.

“My friend works

the door at Axis on Lansdowne. There’s a good band playing tonight and he’ll let us in

for free,” he replied.

“We’re walking to Lansdowne?” I

asked.

“Yeah, why not?”

“Well, my car is parked downtown

and if I don’t get it out of the garage by 11:00, it’s locked in for the night.” I

explained.

“Then let’s go get it,” he said, turning in the opposite

direction.

“Maybe we should call it a night,” I

suggested.

“Let me at least walk ya back,” he replied.

He

could have mentioned these plans sooner. I made a mental note to add “communicative” to

my list of adjectives to include in my next ad. Yes, a communicative ax-wielding

homicidal maniac.

During the walk back, he showered me with lines.

“Beautiful hair,” he said, gently tugging on a curl. “Great legs. You must spend a lot

of time at the gym,” he continued, smiling. He did have a nice smile, and an innocent

face.

As we neared the garage, he told me that he wanted to spend more

time together and at least reciprocate for the drinks and cigarettes. Would I just come

to see this band? He had a free parking spot for me right around the corner from the

club. In a burst of poor judgment, I reluctantly agreed.

When we got near

Fenway, he directed me to a small parking lot behind an apartment building. “I live here

and I have my own parking space, but no car,” he explained.

I parked my

car and we made our way over to Lansdowne Street, three blocks away.
When we arrived

at Axis, it happened that his friend was not working, so we went two doors down to

Jillian’s, where there was no cover.

During a brief pause between stories

of Vivian and other suicidal and/or psychotic ex-girlfriends, I yawned and told him that

I had to get up early for work and needed to start heading home.

When we

arrived back at the parking lot, my car was gone. It had already been stolen once, and

my heart started pounding as I thought about the expense and aggravation that would lie

ahead. Visions of police reports, rental cars and smashed steering columns danced

through my head. I started to cry.

“Even if they find it, I’m going to

have to start it with a screwdriver,” I told Phil through choked sobs.

He

patted my shoulder and told me not to worry. “Maybe it wasn’t stolen,” he

suggested.

“Then, where is it?” I asked, wiping my nose with the back of

my hand.

“I’ll make some calls. Do you have any

change?”

I handed him four quarters, and he went to a nearby pay phone and

called the police. They told him that my car had been towed and gave him the address

where it could be retrieved. Phil apologized. “I don’t know how this could have

happened,” he said earnestly.

He flagged a cab and made a gentlemanly

offer to go with me to get my vehicle. Since surely this would involve me having to

drive him back to his house afterwards, I politely declined.

I would need

cash to pay the cab fare and retrieve my car. The first two ATMs that the cab took me to

were “temporarily out of service.” Finally we found one that worked. I got my money,

proceeded to the tow lot, paid the cabbie and the lot lady and rescued my car. $140.00

later, I humbly made my way back to the comfort of my home.

I entered my

apartment and did what I always do after such dates. I poured a shot of scotch, buried

my face in my hands and wondered how many more nights like this I would have to endure

before I (or one of my well-meaning friends) stopped picking the wrong

ones.

I took a long sip of scotch and lit a cigarette. My cup was half

full. This would make for a very funny story. Tomorrow. Besides, he could have been an

ax-wielding homicidal maniac.

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christinec

christine@nightsandweekends.com
http://www.homestead.com/worksinprogress/
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