Heather Macallister

Male Call


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nodded.

      “Not cute?”

      “Oh! Yes! Yes, of course it’s cute.” She was not having this conversation. She simply was not. This was an alternate universe and the construction worker with the cute butt was just a figment of her imagination.

      A figment that was walking over to the sidewalk. She should say something that didn’t involve body parts. “You’re doing great on the house.”

      What a wonderfully insightful remark. So far, he’d torn everything off the front, so who knew if he was doing a good job or not?

      “Thanks.” He came to a stop a careful distance away from her and proceeded to subject her to an unabashedly thorough scrutiny. His gaze flicked over her hat, dwelt on her face and lingered questioningly on her puffy ski parka. Then, of all things, he studied her shoes and narrowed his eyes on the black canvas pouch containing her laptop. It wasn’t a normal laptop case because Marnie didn’t particularly want to advertise that she was carrying an expensive piece of computer equipment when she walked through the neighborhood.

      Now, the man couldn’t expect to stare at her like that without being stared at in return, and Marnie figured she might as well stare since she’d already blown the first impression. She truly wasn’t the sort to make lewd remarks at construction workers.

      At least she hadn’t been a couple of days ago.

      Marnie wished that he’d say something. She wasn’t ready to try her luck again at meaningful conversation.

      He drew his hands to his waist and regarded her sympathetically. “You need a place to stay tonight?”

      Marnie nearly swallowed her tongue. “I—” Apparently it was very easy to become this type of man’s girlfriend. Too easy.

      “You hungry?” He used his teeth to pull off this work glove, dug in his back pocket and withdrew his wallet.

      He was going to offer her money.

      She took a step backward. “I—I’m fine. I live with my mom in Pleasant Hill.” That sounded very sophisticated. “I’m headed to the 24th Street Mission station.” Continuing to back away from him, she hooked a thumb over her shoulder. “It’s just a couple of blocks this way. I should get going.” Giving him a quick nod, Marnie decisively strode toward the BART terminal. She was walking uphill and her shins began to tingle, but she wasn’t going to slow down.

      And she wasn’t going to look back, either.

      2

      The Legend of The Skirt

       by Franco Rossi

      Act One, Scene One.

      Exterior: Charming Victorian

      Camera pans (unless is play) details of Victorian woodwork.

      ENTER: (unless is movie, then camera zooms in through window) Handsome, with an air of superiority that he tries to hide, charismatic doorman, clearly bound for greater things.

      (Note to self: decide if writing a play or movie)

      A Skirt in San Francisco

      A Play in Three Acts

      by Franco Rossi

      Act One, Scene One.

      A world-renowned parapsychologist, acting as a doorman, (see above description) successfully rents his apartment to three women who will time-share during the week. The possessor of a skirt, which, legend has it, attracts men (and he must rely on legend since he is immune to the skirt), he awaits the opportunity to study the skirt’s effects firsthand.

      (Note to self: keep it snappy, keep it moving)

      Ms. Monday-Tuesday is a preoccupied computer programmer. Very smart, but very unaware. Nice eyes and hair—needs a trim—has no clue how to dress, presumably a good figure, but how would one know beneath the sleeping bag she wears as a coat? Wants to give city living a try and a break from long commute.

      Ms. Wednesday-Thursday is looking for her father. Something mysterious going on there. Must explore.

      Sadly, Ms. Friday-Saturday used to own the apartment and is attempting to get on with her life after a broken engagement.

      (Note to self: take notes before writing script.)

      (Additional note to self: Wear earplugs only if sitting in foyer, otherwise cannot hear doorbell.)

      IT HAD BEEN several days since Zach had seen the homeless person. He hadn’t meant to scare her—he’d decided the person was a “her”—but that might be the best thing if it had sent her on home. These runaways took to the streets thinking it was a solution to their problems. Maybe in some cases it was, but that kid was too soft for that kind of life.

      And then this morning, there she was again, dragging her belongings behind her. She hadn’t had the duffel when he’d seen her last week. He wondered if she’d stolen it or accepted a handout from somebody.

      Surreptitiously from his perch on the ladder, Zach watched her climb the steps to a Victorian across the street and was more than surprised when that Frank character opened the door and let her in. Moments later, without the duffel, she climbed down the steps and hurried on up the street.

      Zach started down the ladder, intending to check on the guy, but stopped. It wasn’t any of his business. Besides, Frank came and went all the time. If Zach didn’t see him by noon, he’d check up on him then.

      In the meantime, he had some trim to finish tacking up.

      Man, he loved his job. Even when things went wrong, he loved his work.

      Zach had cut out thirty-six linear feet of gingerbread trim. This morning, he was tacking it between the bay window on the ground floor and the upper floor bay window, the oriel, to see how it looked.

      It was an ornate pattern, full of curves and swoops and intricate cutouts because Zach wanted to show off a little bit. He hammered up the three strips, then climbed down the ladder and walked to the edge of the front yard.

      An excellent job, if he did say so himself. But the trim didn’t have the impact he’d thought it would. He tried to imagine various exterior color schemes that would highlight the pattern, but the problem was that the curves and cutouts and curlicues were too small for the scale. The intricacies of the design were lost. Maybe if he painted the house a dark color and the gingerbread white, like icing, it would work.

      He was standing there imagining it when he heard a throat clear behind him and was relieved to see Franco from across the street. He was walking three dogs, yet managed the leashes in a way that told Zach he’d done it many times before.

      “Would you be adverse to a comment from a layman?”

      “Go for it.”

      “The trim doesn’t work.”

      Zach exhaled heavily. “I know.”

      “It’s too fussy.”

      “I prefer ornate.”

      “I prefer ornate, too, but sometimes, less is more, if you know what I mean.”

      Zach had meant the word “ornate,” but he let it pass.

      Franco shifted the leashes to one hand and gestured up and down. “Look at the tailored lines of the house.”

      Zach knew what he meant. “It’s Sticks-Eastlake style. See the square bay window? And there are still some of the original wooden strips outlining it.” Restoration was Zach’s favorite subject. “When the facade is finished, there will be more strips outlining the doors and the framework of the house and then—”

      Franco held up a hand. “My point is that you wouldn’t dress a gloriously statuesque six-foot tall woman in girlish frills and lace, would you?”

      “A gloriously statuesque