I was talking with my friend Jonesy the other day when I couldn't help but ask him what was wrong. We were sitting at my tiki bar drinking Dr. Pepper on shaved ice with crushed cherries. The sun was hot. There was no breeze.
"Oh, I'm having trouble with my younger son." he answered. "He's having trouble dealing with my divorce and he absolutely hates that I live at a nudist resort." He stirred the ice with his finger. When he lifted the glass, the beaded moisture left a ring on the bar. I'd wipe it up later.
(Note to self: put the coasters on the tiki bar.)
"What's he been doing?" I asked.
He put the drink back down near the ring.
(Couldn't he at least hit the same spot each time?)
He gave me a wry smile, "Every time we talk he feels like he has to beat me up about living here. He won't give it a rest. He thinks it's wall to wall parties, naked beauties and orgies."
"I thought the orgy thing was a secret?" I feigned incredulity. "Have you told him that people around here look like people you meet anywhere?"
A nudist resort does not automatically attract beautiful, hard bodies. In fact, just the opposite is true. Most good looking young people enjoy the dress up, the clubs and the sexy flirtations. The people who come here skew older and, as an act of gross rationalization, claim complete body acceptance. This allows them to be over weight and out of shape - without embarrassment. In fact, most of the people here would not go to a clothed beach because of how bad they would look in a bathing suit.
"Yeah. But he doesn't believe me. I even snuck a picture of Adele." He pulled a photo out of his pocket. Adele was a very sweet but large lady of our mutual acquaintance. Picture taking at the resort was mostly forbidden. We also knew that Adele was a free spirit and that she wouldn't mind.
He handed it over to me and said, "I was going to send it to him with the caption:
.............................See Son, It's not all about sex!
I glanced at it and handed it back to him. "Cute." I said. "Adele's husband, Roy, might object."
Jonesy took the photo back and looked at it again. "Oh, wait! This is Roy!" He tucked the photo away then picked up his glass and sloshed a little as he turned on his stool.
(Oh, look! You missed a spot.)
I changed the subject and asked, "What's your son do?"
"Besides bitch at me like we're married?"
"That's rhetorical, right?" I always have to check after that incident with the traffic cop.
He nodded, then said. "He's a teacher in Ohio."
"Oh!" I answered, trying to sound impressed. "He must be real bright."
"He is. if you're impressed with night lights. He was recently turned down by Mensa Lite. He spelled his name wrong on the application. I asked him how that could happen and he claimed it was a union thing. The teacher's union is very strong in Ohio."
I never know when Jonesy is messing with me. "What's Mensa Lite?" I prodded.
"Mensa Lite is for pseudo-intellectuals. People who talk about their degrees rather than their accomplishments. People who talk about the book reviews they read, rather than the books they have read. People who think Al Gore is an intellectual."
"So, why're you so down on him?" I wondered.
"Maybe it's because he won't let up on me. Maybe it's because when his mom left me he never once asked me what had happened or even how I was doing." He paused and picked a piece of cherry out of his drink, dripping across the bar and onto the deck.
Then he seemed to rouse himself, remembering that he was supposed to be making a joke or something. That was Jonesy's coping mechanism. Mine was wall to wall parties, naked beauties and orgies.
"You know," he said, "I remember the night he was conceived and, I gotta tell you, the sex wasn't that great."
There's the old Jonesy I know!
He sat a little straighter in his chair and I could see the gleam in his eye. He was getting ready to be on a roll. I picked up my drink and sloshed a little on the bar by way of encouragement.
"I kid around about his mother being unfaithful but I am almost 100% certain I am his father."
"How so?" I played the straight man.
"When he was born he had my last name." I smiled and he continued, "Did I ever tell you why we named him P.J.?"
"Uh, uh."
"Because his mother had called dibs on B.J."
"Cute." I said. I began to fondly remember Jonesy's ex-wife but he wasn't done yet.
"Isn't it ironic," he asked, "that being an actual bastard is passed on through the mother?"
I had to laugh.
"And why isn't there a specific name for illegitimate females? I think bitch would have been a great choice. But it was already handily taken by adult women." Jonesy has been a little bitter since the break up.
I sucked on some ice, tasting the cherry juice.
"I am wondering one thing, though."
"What's that?" I mumbled through the ice.
"Even though I am as certain as a guy can be that his sons are legitimate, does my recent divorce make them Bastards by Proxy?"
.
1 comment:
And the saga continues....maybe you should have had a daughter! Always daddy's little girl!
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