The
High-Heeled Shoe
by Brandon Cole
"That movie?"
Eddie said. "That movie went nowhere, Ray, a long time ago."
"But she left her shoe?" I
said pointing. "A memento?"
Eddie picked the red suede high-heel
off his desk with his thumb and forefinger like it carried a disease.
"Kind of. Someone told me a
four-inch heel like this one costs four hundred fifty bucks because of
the label."
Eddie played with it a little, turning
it towards me and letting it catch the afternoon sunlight.
"Four hundred fifty dollars for a
pair of high-heeled shoes," he said. "What’s the matter with
people?"
I didn’t answer. I looked past Eddie’s
desk out the window at the thick ivy that draped the high brick wall at
the end of his back yard. It could have been the wall at a three-hundred
year old university, or a monastery, green and red and full of mold.
"What about the people who make
these shoes?" he asked me.
"What do you want them to do
instead, Eddie? You want them to build hospitals in north-east
Africa?"
"What do you know about African
hospitals, Raymond?"
"About zero."
"No, because, the hospital's in
Sudan if you’re interested –"
"I don’t want to know about
hospitals in Sudan, Eddie," I said. "Over there and
right here, there’s needy people and there’s people with
four-hundred dollar shoes. And, oh yeah, just yesterday afternoon, on
Bindah Street in Calcutta? A blind child was run over by a Mercedes Benz
and killed. The Mercedes didn’t stop. Can you imagine such
heartlessness?"
"Well, shit," he said slowly.
"Right," I agreed.
"Shit, Eddie. There’s a lot of that around."
He pointed the shoe towards me,
stabbing the air with it haphazardly a few times. "A big talker
really’s all she was," he said carelessly.
I shrugged, "Uh, huh."
"Sammy brought her in."
"Oh," I nodded. "Sammy
Lee?"
"Yeah un-shaved Sammy Lee,
generally with him something just not right around the edges."
"Sammy’s all right though, isn’t
he?"
"Sure he is," Eddie said
quickly. "I like Sammy. Sammy’s, you know."
"Not
really," I said. "What?"
"Sammy’s generous."
I nodded maybe so.
"But his generosity’s always
caused trouble between us," said Eddie. "It’s authentic but
still kind of bullshitty because he doesn’t want to confront people,
to tell them who they really are and to cut the pretense so we know
where we stand."
"Like you do that?"
"No. Yes. Maybe. Sometimes I do.
More than Sammy anyway."
"I don’t know Sammy Lee that
well," I said. "I mean I know him, you know, but not that
well."
"I’ve worked with Sammy."
"I know you have. Please don’t
tell me about those experiences."
"A lot, Ray," he said waving
the shoe back and forth between us. "Many many times over the
years."
"I know you have, Eddie. Please,
look please don’t tell me about any of it."
"I’m just saying I know what I’m
talking about. I told you Sammy brought in this girl."
"Right…."
"It was in this café, that’s
where I met them. She was a producer."
Eddie pronounced "producer"
like it was an illness.
"So she was a producer," I
said correcting him. "That’s a real job."
"I know it is."
"A good producer is
valuable."
"I know that, Ray. I’m agreeing
with you."
"So what was the problem?"
"She said she was a
producer. I didn’t know her. They met in California, Sammy and her. I
came in later," he said pointing the shoe out the window
like "later" ended in his backyard, "much later," he added
distantly, "afterwards."
"What do you think she was doing
before you met her? Training to be a producer?"
Eddie tossed her shoe on his desk and
it landed on its side. He took a moment to straighten it and place it
back where I’d always seen it, next to his phone.
"You mocking my take on her,
Raymond?" he said smiling back and half-looking at me. "You
think I was way off in my approach?"
"I’m mocking how confidently you
figure some people, yes."
"You’re right, I make
mistakes," Eddie said reproaching himself easily, "but she
brought money with her, supposedly. This producer wasn’t someone Sammy
was playing around with at that time. Her money was serious."
"Money you needed from her?"
"Well yeah, unfortunately. There
was nobody else right then. Later yes, other money came in, but right
then I needed her money and so did Sammy. That’s why we were so nice
and eager and you know what else? Friendly. We were just friendly as
could be but not this producer: she was standoffish and preoccupied. The
first thing she said to me was she was in town producing this big tv
thing."
"So she was trying to impress
you."
"Possibly."
"Nothing so terribly wrong with
that."
"I guess not. Then she complained
she was being pulled every which way by numbskulls. She didn’t look
like she worked hard one day in her life and neither had her
mother."
"Why don’t you cut out those
remarks, Eddie," I said impatiently.
"What? What remarks? What’d I
say?"
"Not everybody carries bricks. You
know that. Some people carry a clipboard and check the bricks off with a
pencil."
Eddie nodded doubtfully I could be
right. Those slow doubt-filled silences was something I liked about
Eddie. He kept me on edge.
"To me holding a clipboard,"
he said deliberately and shaking his head at me like I was a simple man,
"while some illegal Mexican laborer is carrying bricks up a ladder,
should not ever be called work. Not ever."
"All right, so that’s your
opinion about Mexican bricklayers."
"Yes, it is. And whether this
so-called producer held a clipboard or didn’t even do that is a
still-unanswered question. Maybe all she ever did was sit around in sexy
expensive clothes looking pretty."
"Was she pretty?"
Eddie shrugged and made a sound like
"Beh."
"Was she or not?"
"Christ knows, maybe, not me. She
was youth and blonde hair, is that pretty? You talking about refinement?
That kind of pretty? Or four-hundred fifty dollar spiked heels and an
illusion?" he added pointing at her shoe.
"Were you attracted to her? Can
you answer that question?"
"Listen, Ray, I was there to meet
her. Sammy and I were putting another movie together."
"So what?"
"Well, you know, I’m not some
kid. She had made strong sounds to Sammy she really wanted to do the
movie and she had the money – or could get it – to make that
movie."
"Was she attractive or not?"
"She had a hard face and a good
figure, OK?"
"So she was attractive."
"Sure she was, attractive enough.
But when the check came, Sammy and I, we had espressos and maybe she had
a pot of exotic tea and a club sandwich and she pulled out her credit
card. We were in this café way downtown, I forget the name, Sammy told
me to meet them there, the kind of dark cruddy out-of-the-way place he
likes. Credit cards? And she was amazed when they wouldn’t take
it."
"Why’s that so strange to you,
Eddie? She’s from California."
"So what? Read a tourist book
before you get here."
"What’d you do?"
"What Sammy did, Sammy acted, ‘Hey,
Eddie, don’t worry about it, I got it, relax, I got it.’ He had less
money than I did back then, a lot less, so I looked at him like,
‘What are you doing?’ He nodded me to back off and keep my mouth
shut, you know but nicely as he does, but I was already thinking this
girl was not where she should be. She said she was a producer, she was
here in New York producing some impressive tv something and she had no
cash? I’ve produced, I know what it is: you carry cash or you’re
full of shit."
"Eddie, you were bothered over
that café check? That’s why you took her shoe? How’d you get it off
her foot without her noticing?"
"Nah, that’s not why," he
said looking disgusted with himself. "Ah, Ray, this kind of
resentment, I dislike what it does to me. It’s childish."
"Well, what is the matter with
you, Eddie? Why do you get resentful over a fifteen dollar café
check?"
"It wasn’t even fifteen dollars,
or maybe it was, but nah, she and Sammy had some apartment deal going, that
was where the money was, that’s what I resented later, aside
from our movie going nowhere after all her assurances. There was this
five-thousand dollar sublet Sammy was involved in with her that I didn’t
know about."
"Five thousand? You serious?"
"Yeah, five thousand dollars a
month. Ridiculous money for rent huh? She didn’t care what Sammy
charged her. She was sticking the tv show with that rent and Sammy was
picking up more than half that silly tv money as income."
"So Sammy was subbing his place to
her?"
Eddie shook his head discouraged.
"Yeah yeah," he said.
"Sammy needed income after his divorce, you know. Badly."
"Where’s Sammy living during
this?"
"I think," Eddie began,
"I don’t remember, he had a rented room for a while or there was
a girl at that time, maybe with her. Yeah, I think with her in her
studio apartment on the west side. So his life’s all kind of pushed
together and claustrophobic and about to explode but so long as this
producer was handing him that easy five thousand, Sammy was doing OK
with his girl in her studio apartment with her two large dogs.
And then," Eddie stopped and shook his head, "and then, the
crash: the big-deal tv production this big-deal blonde producer was
doing falls apart and she tells Sammy she must return to California that
day, so forget the sublet, forget the movie, forget we met and
she wanted her security back, tah tah."
"Sammy had a deal with her or
not?"
Eddie nodded he did.
"Oh yeah, Raymond. Yes. A deal,"
he said. "They had a deal: a guaranteed fifteen to twenty thousand
dollars over three, four months that Sammy was counting on very very
much. Sammy had turned someone else away for her. So oh yes, they had a
deal, but she, you know, a situation changed in her life and so that was
it: tough luck, Sammy."
"What’d Sammy do?"
"Nothing."
"What does nothing mean?"
"It means Sammy did nothing. He
talked to her over the phone, he talked to his lawyer: he did
nothing. She leaves, Sammy was out all this income which he
needed, and get this: she left so fast she didn’t have time to
pack everything so her bags were stuffed in Sammy’s closet. She told
Sammy some guy would come by to pick them up and would he be sure to be
there when this guy came. Her boyfriend I think it was, and man would I
hate to be him."
"I’d put her stuff in the
street."
"A lot of us would, Ray. But this
is Sammy."
"Sammy was still cooperating with
her? After she walked out on him like that? I don’t believe it. What’s
the matter with him?"
"What can I say? Sammy was acting
disappointed. Like humanity had failed him yet again despite all his
precautions."
"Well, shit on
disappointment."
"I know.
"Disappointment gets you nowhere.
You have to do something."
"I know you do but that would have
been the end of her for me, it really would have. I was just discouraged
about another deal falling through and about hanging around with Sammy
so much and falling under his mindless optimism. But I would have said
the hell with her and let it go.
"You mean maybe you would
have let it go."
"No," Eddie said pointing his
hand at me. "I’ve fought back when people have spit on me, you
know that. I don’t like what it does to me and I’d rather walk away
but I’m ready to fight when I have to. But I wasn’t going to do
anything here. I really wasn’t."
"You can say that because she didn’t cheat you. She cheated
Sammy."
"But it was like she’d
cheated me too, Ray. Because, Ray, look, when she bullshitted Sammy
about the movie, she bullshitted me!" Eddie said suddenly excited.
"Ah ah ah," I said leaning
back. "OK, Eddie, OK, I got it now. You like Sammy Lee. I
didn’t appreciate that enough."
"Yeah, I do like Sammy Lee,"
he said surprised. "Sammy Lee’s a friend of mine."
"But, Eddie," I said, "I
hear all over Sammy Lee’s unreliable." When Eddie didn’t answer
right away I said, "Hey hey, Eddie, I’m saying something here: unreliable."
"Yeah, he is," Eddie said
seriously, "and he’s late for every meeting unless I drag him
there. But that producer shouldn’t have abused Sammy because if she
had stopped thinking about her clothes and her hair for two minutes she’d
have seen that Sammy can be a pretty generous person at times."
"So Sammy Lee was bleeding this
blonde producer for five thousand in monthly rent," I said
considering, "yet somehow she was this lying bastard and
Sammy Lee was the good guy in your mind, huh?"
"More or less," he said
uneasily, "but not that clearly."
"So?"
Again Eddie didn’t answer right away
and this time I waited a moment. Then I snapped my fingers and prodded
him, "Come on, Eddie, what happened? What’d you do?"
"Sammy asked me to pick up some
books for him," he confessed reluctantly.
"So now you’re picking up Sammy
Lee’s books, huh? Jesus Christ, Eddie, what’s that about?"
"Yeah, yeah," he mumbled,
"that’s what led me to the shoe."
"Really? Come on, when did you
start running Sammy’s errands?"
"I know, Ray, I know how that
looks. But it was this errand that had to be done when Sammy was out of
town that day and I was around, a box of heavy old books that was two
blocks away – and I still had Sammy’s keys on account of his dog
that died – so I said sure. If I hadn’t dropped off those old books
for him, I never would have known that producer’s stuff was still
there."
"Sammy hadn’t told you?"
"I don’t think he did. Maybe he
did. But that’s not why I took that box of books for him," he
added quickly. "But I was in his apartment and I found her stuff
and immediately I wanted to do something vengeful and ridiculous like
take all her underwear. She was a slob and her clothes were stuffed in
shopping bags, expensive garments too just stuffed however and then I
saw the high heels and I go, ‘Yeah’. I figured a ridiculous pair of
suede shoes like that had to cost something – though I never guessed
four hundred fifty bucks."
"So where’s the other high heel?
You throw it out?"
Eddie shook his head. "I was going to take them both but why should
I look like a thief? I take one and I leave one, you know?"
I nodded.
"So now what? She gets her stuff
back and she has this one expensive red suede high-heel but where’s
the other one? Maybe her lamebrained boyfriend dropped it. Could that
be? Maybe. Anyway, she would tear his face off just on a suspicion, I’d
bet, and has probably.
‘My shoe! Where’s my other God damn
shoe! Find it, you idiot! I need it right now! I’m going out!’
"Or maybe her assistant was
careless, she thinks, or maybe who knows what she’s ready to blame,
certainly not herself. But maybe some concern seeped through to her,
maybe just one burning drop of some concern that might, just might, have
made someone like her aware there are hospitals that need building like
you said in Africa."
"I doubt it," I said,
"very much."
Eddie nodded he didn’t believe that
either.
"Or, at least, maybe she
remembered there’s a filmmaker like Sammy struggling through a
divorce. And this producer or whatever she is could remind herself that
this is a planet full of all kinds of people and she shouldn’t cheat
them. And she shouldn’t over-indulge herself on expensive crap she
doesn’t need. None of us should. It’s unseemly."
"So that’s why you keep her sexy
red shoe next to your phone? So you don’t become unseemly?"
"Who knows why anything,
Ray?" he said dismissing me.
"Her shoe keeping you seemly is
it?" I persisted.
Eddie shook his head no.
"Something like that though,
Eddie, right? To remind you."
"Well, keep finding the
forgiveness," he said.
"Finding forgiveness? That sounds
tough. How you making out with that search, Eddie?"
"I can do better, Ray, I can do a
lot better."
Brandon Cole writes:
"I am a writer/director living in Brooklyn, New York. I have written, co-written, directed, or produced
five independent feature films: MAC and ILLUMINATA, co-written with John
Turturro; SONS and the recently released 13 MOONS, co-written with
Alexandre Rockwell; and OK GARAGE, which I wrote and directed that
starred Lili Taylor, John Turturro, and Will Patton. The High-Heeled Shoe
is a story about a movie that did not get made." Read an interview
with Brandon.
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