Poet’s Corner- Langston Hughes- “50-50”
50-50
I’m all alone in this world, she said, Ain’t got nobody to share my bed,
Ain’t got nobody to hold my hand—
The truth of the matter’s
I ain’t got no man.
Big Boy opened his mouth and said,
Trouble with you is
You ain’t got no head!
If you had a head and used your mind
You could have me with you
All the time.
She answered, Babe, what must I do?
He said, Share your bed—
And your money, too.
Langston Hughes
The whole world knew, or at least the important
parts of that world, that summer of 2012 downtown Boston world (near the Common
say from the Public Gardens to Newbury Street but also near birth place
Columbus Avenue), knew that Larry Johnson was Ms. Loretta Lawrence’s every day
man (and it goes without saying her every night man too). Make no mistake,
girls, women, even though they didn’t hold hands in public or throw public
kisses at each other, and Loretta at five-ten and rail thin, fashion model day thin
didn’t look like trouble, keep your hands off. And they did, those in the
fashion industry, mostly her fellow models, and maybe a few longing sidewinder
guy designers too. But somebody had Larry’s attention and Loretta was going to
get to the bottom of it.
It all started back in February when Larry asked her
for a hundred dollars one night, out of the blue. Now Larry had been on a tough
stretch ever since the financial collapse in 2008 (although it only bagged him
in early 2010) when the markets went crazy and he got caught short, and since
business was bad he eventually got that old dreaded pink slip. And nobody was
hiring so he had just been kind of living off his old time bonuses, and a
little of this and that. Funny they had
met at a bar down in the financial district where he had stopped off for a
drink after passing his resume around for about the umpteenth time and she had
just finished a shoot (for a cosmetic company that had keyed on her for her
ravishing dark looks, brown hair, brown eyes, brownish high cheek-boned skin as
they were trying to expand their markets) down near the water at International
Place and her photographer had offered to buy her a drink. His eyes met hers,
her eyes met his in return and before anyone really knew it he had moved in on
her like something out of one of those old time novels that you read and at the
end both can’t believe that you spent you r good hard-earned rest reading and
cannot believe that the “she” of the story would be so stupid in the end to
have gotten mixed-up with a wacko like that.
Larry had moved in on her too, literally, after a
few weeks of downy billow talk and his argument (which she was okay with, she
wasn’t saying she wasn’t) that two could live as cheaply as one (which isn’t
true but close enough) and he could cut down on expenses during his rough
patch. And it was nice, nice to have a man around, with man’s things, a man’s
scent, and a man’s silly little vanities that she had not experienced since
Phil (she would not use a last name because Phil was well known, too well-known)
had left her a few years back. Every once in a while though she would notice a ten
here or a twenty there missing from her pocketbook but figured that either she,
spendthrift she, had spent it on some forgotten bobble or Larry had taken it
for some household thing and didn’t report the fact (although she, they, had
insisted on a collective counting of expenses). Then came the night of Larry’s
official request. And she gave it to him, a loan, a loan was all it was. The
first time.
After a few more requests for dough, and the granting
of those requests, Loretta started to
try to figure out what the heck he was doing with the dough (he said it was to
help get a job, or he needed new shirts, or something, something different each
time). Then she thought about Phil, not about the money part (Jesus, he had
thrown his dough at her when he was strong for her, called her his little
money-machine and laughed) but as he started losing interest in her he stopped
showering the money because he was seeing another woman on the side and
showering it on her (that “her” being a friend of hers, and not even beautiful,
just smart). And so she started thinking that Larry, Larry the guy who was
sharing her bed every night (every night so it had to be a daytime dalliance),
was having another affair. She resolved that Larry would get no more money, no
more loans, as he called them and if she found out that he was two-timing her
that woman had better leave town because, two-timer or not, bum-of-the-mouth or
not, he was her man and she had told one and all hands off. And she meant
it.
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