Getting the Girl Read online




  Susan Juby

  Getting the Girl

  A Guide to Private Investigation, Surveillance, and Cookery

  For my brothers, Trevor, Aaron, and Scott

  Mack daddy is used in some other senses parallel to extended senses of mack. One is “a good-looking man; a ladies’ man; playboy.” Another is “a person, especially a man, who is influential, intelligent, successful, etc.”

  —The Urban Dictionary

  There is no man alive who is not partially jackass. When we detect some areas of jackassery within ourselves, we feel discontent. Our image suffers.

  —Meyer to Travis McGee in A Tan and Sandy Silence by John D. MacDonald

  Contents

  Epigraph

  Part 1

  Frying Pan

  1

  On the Bleachers

  2

  The Biggest Mystery

  3

  A Thing or Two About Rhododendrons

  4

  Girls, Girls, Girls

  5

  Enjoys Working with Eggs

  6

  Dearly Defiled

  7

  A Little Friendly

  8

  Farrah Fawcett Doesn’t Live Here Anymore

  9

  The Operation

  10

  The Big D

  11

  Fair Warning

  Part II

  Fire

  12

  Back On

  13

  Mack Daddy Investigations, At Your Service

  14

  Getting Made

  15

  Tools of the Trade

  16

  Are You Still Engaged?

  17

  Closing In

  18

  Unpleasant and Unattractive Characters

  19

  Disinfected Youth

  20

  Jacked

  21

  With a Little Help from My (Hot) Friends

  22

  If the Shoe Doesn’t Fit

  23

  A Bruce Willis Moment

  24

  Cold Cocked

  25

  The Trouble with Seeds

  26

  Can I Offer You Some Meat Pie?

  27

  On Any Given Bad Mother Sunday

  28

  On the Rampage

  29

  Finding Your Place in the Man Slut Store

  30

  A Helping Hand Hug

  31

  Like Timmy, Only Older and More of a Loser

  32

  Destination Sink and Beyond

  33

  The Clothes Make the Defiled

  34

  On a Stick

  35

  D-Listed

  36

  To-Do List

  37

  Social Engineering

  38

  A Few Too Many Cows

  39

  A Small-To-Medium-Sized Get-Together

  40

  It’s Hard To Catch Perps When You’re Cooking

  41

  How’s a Guy Supposed To Impress a Girl?

  42

  Keeping the Losers in Line

  43

  All I Ever Wanted

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Other Books by Susan Juby

  Credits

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  Part I

  FRYING PAN

  OCTOBER

  1

  ON THE BLEACHERS

  LUNCHTIME

  I was sitting on the old blue bleachers with Dini. It was just the two of us. Alone. Together. It’s not hard to find Dini Trioli alone because she’s got this well-developed deep and artistic side that causes her to spend a lot of time by herself. I was waiting for her to stop chewing so I could make my move.

  We had a perfect view of the Goths who smoke down at the far edge of the athletics field. I figure the Goths using the edge of the sports field as their smoking area is probably some kind of statement on how they feel about school sports. I can dig that. A lot of people feel the same way. Take me, for example. I’m always picked third from last. Second to last is Bailey Farber, who has only one and a half legs. The guy usually picked last is my friend Rick, who has ultrasensitive pain receptors, which make sports difficult for him. Or so he says.

  I’ve also heard that if you pay close attention, which I always do, you can sometimes spot one of the Defiled wandering back and forth like a ghost at the very edge of school property.

  It’s my second month at Harewood Technical. Before I came here I was worried about going into ninth grade. High school in general has a reputation for suckage and I had heard that this high school takes the popularity thing to a whole new level.

  See, at Harewood Technical you have your usuals—jocks, Trophy Wives, scholars—but there’s also this whole other class of people called the Defiled. They aren’t just unpopular—they are basically invisible.

  Only girls get defiled at Harewood Tech and so most of the girls from my old school, Harmack Junior High, were freaking out before school started, which I can understand.

  I first remember hearing about the defilings at Harewood Tech when I was in fifth grade, although no one knows who started defiling or how long it’s been going on.

  When a girl gets defiled, her picture, with a D written over it, is posted on the mirrors of all the student bathrooms. It’s like an official notice that she’s crossed the line of no social return. At first, people say terrible things about why the girl got defiled, like that she’s nasty or skanky or a slut or whatever. After a day or so of that, people start to ignore her. Not in a not-noticing way, but more in an erasing way. No one will talk to her or even look at her except the teachers, and from what I heard, even they mostly avoid the Defiled.

  No one knows who decides who is going to be defiled. Some people think the Defiler is one person, other people think defiling is the work of a shadowy committee. So far, though, defiling seems like one of those things that kids in elementary school make up to freak themselves out about high school.

  It was tense at first, though. I mean, most eighth graders getting ready to move to high school worry about how hard the work will be and whether they’ll have any friends, but the girls in my class were nervous about getting defiled. It made me feel bad for them, which is why I offered to give them all free back rubs on the last day of eighth grade and on our first day at Harewood. None of them took me up on my generosity, but I know they appreciated the way I’m always looking out for them. I’m pretty much always looking out for the ladies. I guess you could say I’m thoughtful.

  It’s been over a month now and everyone seems to have relaxed. None of the girls from my old school have been defiled and neither has anyone else, so I’m free to focus on my real interest, which is getting with older ladies, which brings me back to Dini, tenth-grade goddess. I think the whole defiling thing might have been exaggerated. It just doesn’t seem like that big a deal. Well, it probably is for the defiled people, but I still haven’t seen one of those yet. Other than that, the school seems okay.

  Dini kept nibbling on her sandwich. I could see the little green alfalfa sprouts poking out from the sides of the whole-wheat bread. She seems like a very healthy eater, which explains her skin, which is awesome, even though she’s older. I was having fries and gravy from the Pirate Chips truck that parks on the street near the school. My skin probably looked like I had been stowed away on a boat for six months without proper food, water, or sun.

  Maybe I shouldn’t have gotten the fries. Dini didn’t say anything, but I bet they grossed her out. I should have known that the combinat
ion of trans fats and meat-based gravy would be a turnoff.

  I noticed Dini right away on the first day of school. Last Tuesday at lunch I took a chance and offered to buy her a hamburger. It was the first time I spoke to her. She told me she doesn’t eat anything with a face. Somewhere, back in the fogs of time, the gravy slopped all over these fries must have had a face. Sure, it was the face of a gravy packet or a large mother MSG. But it was still a face. Fries are not good will-you-go-out-with-me food.

  I slid the fries to the side and hoped the wind would blow the smell away from her.

  “Hey, so there’s probably a dance coming up sometime this year.”

  Dini nodded, giving me wide eyes to make up for the fact that she couldn’t answer because she was chewing. She chews nicely. With her mouth closed and everything.

  “I hate dances,” I said.

  Dini raised an eyebrow and swallowed her bite.

  “I mean, I hate most dances. The whole…music and dancing thing. With teachers. Parents. Chaperones. Watching. The way I see it, dancing should be private.”

  Dini still didn’t say anything. I tried not to stare as she took another bite of her sandwich. I once read that Hollywood celebrities are afraid to eat in case someone takes a picture of them doing it and they look like pigs, or at least like people who eat. Dini wouldn’t have that problem. I bet people would buy tickets to see her eat. I know I would.

  “Unless you’re dancing with a friend. Then dances are okay. I’m speaking now as an expiring dancer myself.”

  She swallowed and her throat moved. There was a sesame seed stuck to her lip. Most people, you’d want to tell them “Hey, you’ve got something on your face.” Me, I just wished I was that seed.

  “You mean aspiring dancer.”

  “Okay. But as I was saying, if you were interested, we could go to a dance together sometime. I bet you’ve got a few moves that you could teach me. You know, the twirl with hands raised, the twirl with hands at sides, the twirl with arms outstretched.”

  Dini laughed. “The twirls only work if you’re wearing a long skirt or a skirt over pants,” she said.

  “I’m up for it if you are.”

  She smiled at me, about to say yes, even though I have only talked to her twice and I am younger than she is and not exactly tall. Her eyes were vegetarian blue, the whites perfectly white and bright.

  My heart was racing like a greyhound, but before she could say yes, this voice came booming out of nowhere.

  “This guy bothering you?”

  Lester Broadside stood beside the bleachers. His face was at my shoe level but he still looked taller than me.

  Lester Broadside, aka Lester the Molester. Eleventh grader. One of the most popular guys at Harewood Tech. Famous for his hair, which is long and hangs in his eyes in this cool way. He has a slightly crooked smile that he probably practices making in the bathroom mirror. He’s captain of the lacrosse team. Mr. Big Man on Campus. I could forgive all that, but the guy’s an assweed, especially where girls are concerned. You can see it in his eyes. But the girls don’t notice. Girls never do.

  Right in front of my eyes, Dini turned pod. She smiled at Lester and kind of shrank into herself. She literally got smaller. It was horrible to watch.

  “You ready for that ride now?” he asked her.

  I looked around, half expecting to see him holding a unicorn or something. That’s how special he made the ride sound.

  “Now?” she said, all shy. Like she couldn’t believe her good luck.

  “Let’s go,” he said. He put a hand on the bleacher. Just rested it there. The bleacher looked grateful.

  Dini gave me a little sideways look and I knew it was all over. “I’ll see you later, Sherm?” she said, uptalking at the end of her sentence.

  I nodded and it was my turn to swallow.

  She stepped down from the bleacher, moving real careful, like she was in front of a big audience, like this is the one time in her life she wanted to make sure not to trip and fall. Like she was walking up the aisle at her wedding.

  It was the walk that got me.

  2

  THE BIGGEST MYSTERY

  I don’t have a father, so most of what I know about guys I learned from reading my friend Vanessa’s detective books and from my mentor, Fred.

  Maybe that’s why I’ve never understood what makes a guy popular. It’s not enough to be good-looking. The most handsome guy in the world can wear a turtleneck or the wrong kind of boots and bone his chances with the ladies completely. Another surprising fact is that a guy can be a total dick and still get lots of action. Take Lester the Molester, for example. Or my mother’s last boyfriend, Gerard, who was such a jerk that she says she’s cured of dating forever. Gerard’s a whole other story.

  My friend Vanessa is a mystery addict and she’s always lending me her books. What I’ve noticed is that the detectives in her books and the ones on TV ignore their women quite a bit because they are quite consumed by their investigations. They are sort of jerks, in fact. So using my powers of reasoning, I thought maybe all you need to do to get a woman to do what you want is ignore her, but so far that hasn’t worked for me. I’ve tried. I’ve ignored almost every girl in my class at one time or another and not one of them has noticed. I’ve gone whole days not speaking to my mother when I was trying to get something from her. But my mother doesn’t care, either. She just keeps talking to me the same way some people talk to their pets.

  “Hello, sweet ’ums,” she’ll say, and follow that up with a bunch of baby talk. Sometimes I worry that my mother may be trying to make me gay. It’s not just the baby talk. It’s our entire living environment. My mother is into glitter. This is very damaging for a developing male. My friend Ashton says our house looks like a stripper named Cherry Rider should live in it. We rent an old house right on the edge of Harewood in the south end of town, which some people call Scarewood, because it’s not too wealthy or anything. But even though parts of our neighborhood are kind of rough, our house looks as girly as it’s possible for a house to look, at least on the inside. My mother has painted all the walls a glossy red, except my bedroom, which I convinced her to leave off-white.

  Most of the pictures on the walls are of over-weight, old-fashioned ladies wearing what is basically underwear. I am quite mature, considering I’m the youngest guy in my class, but it’s hard to underestimate the negative effect this art is probably having on my sexual development. We have thirty-four throw pillows and every doorway has a beaded curtain. We only have one very small TV hidden behind a painted screen. I rarely get to watch the programs Vanessa recommends, such as Law & Order, Law & Order: Criminal Intent, and Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, because my mother is watching videotapes of herself dancing.

  My mother is into burlesque dancing. It’s like stripping, only not quite as naked. I know because I’ve watched all of her instructional videos several times. Most of the performers are on the bigger, jigglier side. Except my mom who is in her early thirties and probably hasn’t even finished developing. My mom’s burlesque dancing friends joke around and laugh a lot. They are like female drag queens.

  My mother spends almost everything she earns on new costumes. Her real job, which is being a bartender, doesn’t pay much, so not only are we poor, we also live in semisqualor. There is dust all over everything, not to mention fabric and feathers and bits of fake fur and fishnet stockings lying around.

  I once told my mom that if Child Services got a look at our place, she’d have some explaining to do, but she just laughed and said there is a social worker in her burlesque troop, the Bawdville Revue, and that she can set up a meeting for me if I’d like.

  “You have two choices growing up in a house like this,” Ashton told me a while ago. He was sitting with his legs crossed on our zebra-patterned chaise lounge with the faded cranberry juice stain on the arm. “You’re either going to be gay or a Peeping Tom.”

  Ashton is very open-minded, so I wasn’t offended. But Rick was. br />
  “Shut up, man. You’re going to freak him out,” he said, although he was the one who sounded freaked out. “Having a peeler for a mom is just going to help Sherm understand the ladies.”

  “My mom’s not a peeler,” I said. “She keeps some of her clothes on when she performs.”

  “Burlesque is descended from vaudeville,” said Ashton. “It’s extremely sexy.”

  Rick was right. I am very interested in girls. I actually study them. I am almost like a scholar of women. My friend Vanessa says I’m a scholar of stalking, but she’s quite cynical, probably from all her crime reading which has given her an abnormally dark view of life.

  My curiosity might come from growing up with an inappropriately youthful single mother. It’s like we’re nearly the same age. I am fourteen, the youngest guy in my class, thanks to a late fall birthday. And my mother dresses like a lot of fourteen-year-olds. Ones with bad self-esteem. I’m not trying to be critical. I’m only pointing out what other parents—mothers, mostly—have been saying for years.

  My mother had me when she was sixteen. She’s a doctor’s daughter and her getting pregnant in tenth grade by an unknown boy was not “part of the program.” Things are still a bit tense between her and my grandparents. I try to act as a median, or whatever you call it, but sometimes I feel like I just get in the way.

  Living with my mother and her dancing and dressing up and everything has been an education in the ways of womankind. I thought I knew a few things about girls—at least I did until I met Dini and Lester the Molester. Now I realize I don’t know anything about women. Not Dini. Not my mom. Every woman is an island covered in fog and surrounded by rocks and riptides and a lot of other hazards.