There's no shortage of watering holes near my apartment, so I asked Dolores what sort of bar she'd like to go to.
"Some place with strippers," she said. "Mama hasn't seen a good piece of tushie since Oprah wore girdles."
We walked down Halsted Street to the Lucky Horseshoe, an establishment noted for just this sort of entertainment. Dolores hopped up on a stool and ordered a cosmopolitan and a bowl of hay.
"A bowl of what?"
"I said hay, bartender," said Dolores, fishing a pack of Virgina Slims out of her purse.
"What'll you have?" the bartender asked me.
"A Coke with lime," I said.
"Ooh," said Dolores. "Don't hold back, killer. You mind if I smoke?"
As she'd already lit up, I decided the question was rhetorical.
"So," she said, taking a deep drag, "I bet you're wondering what the hell I'm doing here."
I couldn't disagree, and said so.
"Well," she said, "I tried the retirement thing. Got myself a nice little condo at Twelve Willows and figured I'd just cruise along until it's time to head to the big fiber festival in the sky, but–you ever live in the country? I mean deep country?"
I shook my head.
"Too damn quiet. No shopping. The nearest decent cup of coffee was four hours away. And the goddamned cows mooing every morning at 4 a.m. was driving me batshit."
"I don't mean to make assumptions, Dolores, but I thought sheep preferred the country," I said.
Dolores slugged down the last of her cosmo. "Mother's milk," she sighed, waving the empty glass at the bartender. "Another of the same, kid, and send Emilio over here."
"I did the farm thing until I was old enough to duck out. Never suited me. I wound up on a commune outside Seattle for a coupla years, had a thing going on with this ram who turned out to be a bigamist, so I split. Fell ass-backwards into a modeling gig with Woolrich, that took me to New York, picked up an MBA in marketing, yadda yadda yadda. The usual."
Emilio, a member of the Lucky Horseshoe's corps de ballet, sauntered over to us and presented his very original interpretation of "Baby Got Back" on top of the bar.
"Oh, now that's more like it," said Dolores, peering over the top of her glasses. "Come here, honey chile."
She slipped a five-dollar bill between her teeth and Emilio deftly removed it without the use of his hands.
"Where was I?" she said vaguely.
"Yadda yadda yadda," I said.
"Oh, right. Anyway, got an ulcer and high blood pressure from agency work, so I went into academics for a while. But when Columbia denied my tenure I told them if groundbreaking work on the Oresteia wasn't to their liking they could kiss my wooly ass. Which brings us to the present, and my need for another cosmo"
"I'm afraid I still don't quite understand what you're doing here," I said.
"And I'm afraid I don't quite understand how you can nurse a Coke with lime all night, but then life is full of mysteries. Look. You need wool, I got wool. You got an apartment with a view of the lake, I got a pen with a view of a cow's ass. I give you wool, you give me a pied a terre. I call that synchronicity."
"Well, but–"
Dolores, however, had grabbed her purse and jumped off the stool and was following Emilio's retreating figure toward the back room.
"Don't wait up," she shouted. "See you tomorrow morning. Or Wednesday at the latest."
How CAN you be so funny? a loyal fan, just had to come out of lurking to note you made my day, and they are looking at me a little oddly as I chortle in my cubby and try to explain why I am rolling around on the floor in helpless giggles when I should be deeply engrossed and consumed with tension and stress.
ReplyDeleteOh boy :) I can't wait for the, no doubt, deeply moving shearing scene! Cosmo, eh? I had her pegged as an "Old Fashioned" girl...
ReplyDeleteOMG! Dolores is a gas!!
ReplyDeleteI don't think I will be getting any work done this week.
ReplyDeleteAs in, "I said, 'Hey, Bartender, hey. looka here'"?
ReplyDeleteIf so, I love you more than Koigu PPM.
Does Emilio know what he's in for?
ReplyDeleteDolores is my hero.
ReplyDeleteAnd "Life According to Dolores" is coming out when?
ReplyDeleteLord liftin' love a duck - that's hilarious.
ReplyDeleteCame for a glimpse at the gold medal... stayed for the humour and the cartoons.
That Dolores is going to be a challenge, I see!! What a girl....
ReplyDeleteThose hard drinking sheep. They're a handful. I'd get some roving up front......wait. Is that what Emilio is for?
ReplyDelete(snicker).
ReplyDeleteThose cosmos can add up. Of course you knew: there's no such thing as free wool.
ReplyDeleteOkay, I keep coming back and reading these two posts over and over again, and they are still funny. Knowing who "Franklin" is in the knitting world is like being in the "in" crowd. Cool in a sheepy sort of way.
ReplyDeleteThanks for an always entertaining read.
Franklin, you'd better be careful with Dolores. She's one ewe not to mess with, it sounds like! (And I'm a Diet Coke with Lime person myself, so ignore that last "eww" from someone. It's a matter of taste, and we all know you have lots of that.) ;-) So whaddya think? Does her proposition sound good, or are you mulling it over? She might be a difficult ewe to live with, but maybe not, as long as you aren't in her way...hmmmm
ReplyDelete"Lucky Horseshoe"? Dolores is definitely new to the city.
ReplyDeleteOh, man, I got my laugh for the day. And it is almost bed time, so I really needed a good laugh. How could I sleep without it? Thanks.
ReplyDeleteA child's story for grown-ups (sort of)! I can't wait for the further adventures. Thanks, Franklin, for making my day!
ReplyDeleteThis nearly killed me absolutely dead:
ReplyDelete"Too damn quiet. No shopping. The nearest decent cup of coffee was four hours away. And the goddamned cows mooing every morning at 4 a.m. was driving me batshit."
(When you're done with this whole Delores line, it needs to be excerpted into a chapbook.)
cara menghilangkan kutil kelamin cara mengobati kutil di sekitar kemaluan kutil di kemaluan obat kutil di kemaluan obat kutil kelamin atau jengger ayam
ReplyDelete