Until I Find You - Page 133

Tattoo artists from all over the world came to these conventions: from Tahiti, Cyprus, Samoa; from Thailand and Mexico, and from Paris, Berlin, and Miami. They even came from Oklahoma, where tattooing was illegal. (There was nowhere Alice wouldn't go to meet with her colleagues--including some Sheraton in the Meadowlands.) And it was always the same people who went.

"If it's always the same weirdos, why go?" Jack asked his mother. "Why go again and again?"

"Because we are the same weirdos, Jack. Because we are what we do. We don't change."

"For Christ's sake, Mom, do you have any idea what sort of shit can happen to you in a Hyatt Regency in Columbus, Ohio, or in a fucking Sheraton in the Meadowlands?"

"If Miss Wurtz could hear you, Jack," his mother said. "If poor Lottie, or Mrs. Wicksteed--may she rest in peace--could hear you. It's so sad what's happened to your language. Is it California or the movie business that's done this to you?"

"Done what to me?"

"Maybe it's Emma," Alice said. "It's living with that foul-mouthed girl--I know it is. It's for Christ's sake this and fucking that. To hear you talk, you'd think that shit were an all-purpose noun! And you used to speak so well. You once knew how to talk. You enunciated perfectly."

She had a point, but it was just like Alice to change the subject. Here Jack was, trying to impress upon her--a middle-aged woman--that these tattoo conventions were freak shows, and his mother got all in a knot about his language. The conventions were absolutely terrifying. The full-body wackos turned up; they had contests! Ex-convicts were tattooed--prison tattoos were a genre as distinctive as biker tattoos. Strippers were tattooed, not to mention porn stars. (Jack's "research," meaning countless Hank Long films, had taught him that.)

Just who did Daughter Alice think these conventions were for? Jack had seen those angry voodoo dolls and the slashed heart with the dagger in it--the latter inscribed NO REGRET--at Riley Baxter's Tabu Tattoo in West L.A. (On Baxter's business card, under one such voodoo doll, it said DISPOSABLE NEEDLES.)

Alice's waist had thickened, but she'd not lost her pretty smile; her hair, once an amber or maple-syrup color, was streaked with gray. But her skin was surprisingly unwrinkled, and her choice in clothing took noticeable advantage of her full breasts. She liked dresses with an empire waist, and usually a scoop or square neckline

. At her age, she wore an underwire bra--she liked red or fuchsia. That day in Daughter Alice, she wore a peasant-style dress with a neckline that dropped from the apex of her shoulders; her bra straps were showing, but they usually were. Jack thought that she liked her bra straps to show, although she never wore a dress or blouse with a revealing decolletage. "My cleavage," Alice liked to say, "is nobody's business." (Strange, Jack used to think--how his mom wanted everyone to know she had good breasts, but she never bared even a little bit of them.)

And what was a woman who wouldn't bare her breasts doing at tattoo conventions? "Mom--" Jack tried to say, but she was fussing with a pot of tea; she'd turned her back on him.

"And the women, Jack. Do you know any nice girls? Or have I just not met them?"

"Nice?"

"Like Claudia. She was nice. What's happened to Claudia?"

"I don't know, Mom."

"What about that unfortunate young woman who had an entry-level job at the William Morris Agency? She had the strangest lisp, didn't she?"

"Gwen somebody," he said. (That was all he remembered about Gwen--she lisped. Maybe she was still at William Morris, maybe not.)

"Gwen is long gone, is she?" his mom asked. "Do you still take honey in your tea, dear?"

"Yes, Gwen is long gone. No, I don't take honey--I never have."

"Actresses, waitresses, office girls, meat heiresses--not to mention the hangers-on," his mom continued.

"The what?"

"Do you call them groupies?"

"I don't know any groupies, Mom. There are more groupies in your world than there are in mine."

"What on earth do you mean, dear?"

"At the tattoo conventions, there must be," he said.

"You should go to a tattoo convention, Jack. Then you wouldn't be so afraid."

"I took you to the Inkslingers Ball," he reminded her.

"Yes, but you wouldn't go inside the Palladium," she said.

"There was a motorcycle gang outside the Palladium!"

Tags: John Irving Fiction
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