Crossdresser
by A.C. Koch
'Whiskey' is one of those words, like 'punkrock' and
'all-nighter,' that
hasn’t circulated in my vocabulary for ten years. I’ve
grown up, after all,
and college is a long-gone dream that happened to
somebody else. I left
town, moved to the city. I’m a high school teacher now,
who goes to bed by
eleven, and if I drink anything it’s a bottle of
imported beer that ends up
half-full on the nightstand, flat and warm and
forgotten by morning. I
listen to Dixieland jazz, not Fugazi, and I haven’t
stayed up all night
since the last marathon of finals before they handed me
my Education degree.
Time went by, and everything slowed down. I’m sure
you’ve all been there.
But the past sneaks up in tricky ways.
Last week I was
handing out quizzes
in my Algebra class when I caught a whiff of cigarette
smoke on one of my
students, and something lit up my brain like an old
pin-ball machine. High
school kids reek of cigarettes all the time, but there
was an extra
ingredient to the smell on this girl. The musky tang of
fresh sex, maybe
mixed with a little booze, and a cigarette to finish
off. Jesus. I sat at my
desk flexing my jaw and staring into the paperclip
dispenser, seeing
nothing. It was a Tuesday afternoon, the last class of
the day. An hour
later, I was taking the commuter bus out of the city,
an hour’s trip back to
the college town I hadn’t set foot in for ten years. A
whiff is all it
takes, my friends.
It was autumn, with maple leaves as big as hands
scattered across the brick
mosaic of the pedestrian mall. Something about the cool
edge of the
afternoon breeze sparked a familiar tingle in the
throat. “Whiskey,” the
tingle said.
The bus had left me headachy, my feet were sore after
trekking up and down
the pedestrian mall where all the bookstores and pizza
joints had become Gap
Kids and Banana Republic, and that was reason enough
for a drink. I slipped
into the Sundown Saloon, the very bar where I’d spent
half my college years
but where I was now a stranger. The tingle of Pine-Sol
hung in the air from
the early morning clean up, with the rank of spilled
beer and decades of
cigarette smoke lingering around the edges. A handful
of men sat along the
curve of the bar, most of them regulars whose names I
might have remembered
if so much time hadn’t gone by. They were all
moustaches and cowboy hats,
and I exchanged a nod with a couple of them. The
bartender seemed to
recognize me in a corner-of-the-eye kind of way. I
almost remembered his
name but couldn’t come up with it. Well whiskey on the
rocks, I told him. I
set a ten dollar bill on the counter and he left it
there like a contract
between us.
The juke spun early motown, Marvin Gaye and Stevie
Wonder, nothing that
really fit the mood. But the whiskey went down good. I
drank it slow,
letting the ice cool my lips. A game was going on at
one of the pool tables
and I watched the balls gliding and clicking and
disappearing into their
holes. Couldn’t quite figure out why I’d come here, but
not too worried
about it.
I was into my second round when I noticed that the guy
to my right was
wearing a dress. He sat hunched over a half-empty beer
mug and an empty shot
glass. He wore an old leather jacket, and underneath it
a red polka-dot
dress that hung down the barstool, hiked over his hairy
knees. I only
noticed this out of the corner of my eye. He was
staring into his beer. His
stubbled jaw flexed and unflexed.
I wasn’t going to say anything. Who knew what kind of
day he was having? I
would never come into a place like this wearing a
dress. Not with all the
old bikers and roughnecks sitting in their drunken
clouds. But this guy sure
didn’t seem to give a damn—even in that dress he looked
tough. I kept my
mouth shut and watched the pool game. Everyone else
along the bar was mutely
watching as well, everyone except the guy in the dress
who was scrutinizing
the rising bubbles in his beer. The juke ran out of
tunes. A textured
stillness hung over us all. Then a guy in a ball cap
that said WAL-MART came
in the door and strolled past the pool tables, along
the bar, and he let out
a bark like he had just stubbed his toe. “Whoa! What’s
up with that?” he
hollered. He was standing a little ways behind me,
looking at the guy in the
dress. “What’s up with that, huh?”
The bartender came over and put two hands on the bar.
“What are you
hollering about, Jimmy?”
“Since when you start doing transvestite night, huh?”
The guy in the dress turned around. “Don’t give me any
shit, Wal-Mart. I
mean it. Just don’t say another word.”
They looked at each other for a moment. Then Jimmy kind
of snorted and
walked down to the corner of the bar where he hoisted
himself onto a stool
and said loudly to the cowboy next to him, “Panzy
wearing a dress.”
The bartender walked down to Jimmy, twisting a dishrag
in his hands. “Hey,
lay offa the man. He’s having a drink like everybody
else. What about you?”
“Alright. Gimme a PBR.”
The bartender pulled a Pabst draft and slid it onto the
bar in front of
Jimmy. I stared into my ice. It probably looked like I
was sitting with the
transvestite. There we were, side by side, staring into
our drinks, me in my
jeans and sport coat and him in his leather jacket and
summer dress. He
turned and looked at me for a minute before rubbing his
whole face with the
swipe of a hand and sniffing. “I woke up this morning
in this,” he said.
“Oh yeah?”
“Yeah. I woke up on a bus stop bench on Canyon Road
with this thing on, and
this jacket over my face. This is my jacket, but this
ain’t my dress. I
don’t know whose dress it is, I don’t know where it
came from, I don’t know
where my clothes are and I have no idea what the hell
I’m gonna do about it.
Understand?”
“Yeah.” I chewed some ice. “Pretty strange.”
“Pretty strange? You say that’s ‘pretty strange?’”
We looked at each other.
“Well, I mean, it’s probably not the kind of thing that
happens all the
time.”
He watched me, real serious.
“I mean,” I went on, “I’ve worn a dress myself,
actually, if you want to
know the truth, but it was sort of a private party. I
don’t know what I’d do
if I woke up in a dress. Get a drink, I guess.”
“Exactly.”
Truth be told, I’d worn dresses plenty of times. Back
in the days when words
like whiskey, punkrock and all-nighter zipped around
like bee-bees day and
night. I played drums in a punkrock band all through
college, and
crossdressing was one of our gimmicks. I wore a gunny
sack with combat
boots, lipstick smeared over my mouth and eyeliner
running down my cheeks
with sweat. Or sometimes a leather mini, with ripped
fishnets—that kind of
thing. Years ago, it seemed crazy and taboo, and it was
definitely a turn-on
for the kinds of girls that hung around our shows. The
girls who ended up
musky and boozy and smoky in the morning, reeking of
fresh sex and hangover
and (although we didn’t realize it) youth. Nowadays, of
course, kids keep
right on drinking and smoking and screwing, and getting
younger. And no one
really gives a damn if a punkrock kid wears a dress.
“You know,” I said,
“it’s not really taboo anymore for a guy to wear a
dress. People are used to
that kind of thing.”
He watched me dead on. “I’m fricking uncomfortable,
alright?”
“Sure.”
We both knocked back our glasses. My whiskey was gone
and so was his beer.
The bartender fixed us up.
“So,” I said, “what were you doing anyway?”
“What was I doing? What was I doing? I wasn’t
crossdressing, that’s for
sure.” He fixed me with his dark eyes, deep set and too
close together. You
could tell he was the kind of guy who took himself a
little too seriously.
Maybe a philosophy major. “I was partying with some
friends up on the Hill
and took off with this chick, friend of my
girlfriend’s. We go driving
around, the two of us, ‘cause she just got a new car,
some fancy Jetta or
something. So we end up on Flagstaff to look at the
city lights, you know,
make out a little, smoke a fatty. Then she wants more
booze so we get a
bottle of gin and keep driving around. I don’t know.
Nothing weird. She just
wants to keep driving ‘cause it’s her new car. I don’t
even know her. But
that’s all I can remember. I must’ve passed out or
something ‘cause I don’t
even remember getting back to the party.”
“Wow. So she just dumped you off somewhere.”
“I don’t know man.” He gulped down his beer, signaling
for another shot. “I
don’t know if Tracey found out or what. My girlfriend.
Shit, I bet she found
out.”
“That’s rough.”
“Yuh.”
There was nothing else to say for a while. His jaw
flexed, unflexed, flexed,
unflexed. He was trying to work it out in his head but
he couldn’t get a
hold of it: those dead hours when he had passed out and
remembered nothing
while God knew what was happening to him. He just kept
drinking himself
deeper. The silence was a little uneasy. I went over to
the juke and dropped
a couple quarters in. I selected ‘Round Midnight’ and
‘Summertime.’ Miles
Davis opened up, cool as ice.
More people were coming into the bar. They came in
happy, not like the sour
drunks that bellied up during the afternoon. It could
have been getting dark
but there was no way to tell because the door was at
the bottom of a
stairwell and no daylight ever seeped in. The guy in
the dress just kept
drinking, slow and deliberate. Nobody else bothered him
or even noticed his
get-up. Like me, he didn’t seem to know anyone else in
the bar. Maybe he too
had been out of town and out of touch for years. I
wondered if he had any
money to pay for his drinks or if he had lost his
wallet along with his pants.
Halfway through ‘Summertime’ he said in my direction,
“So what am I gonna
do, man?”
“I don’t know.”
“Shit.”
“Can’t you just go home? I mean, in Boulder it’s not
such a big deal if a
guy walks around in a skirt. Hippies do it all the
time.”
“In a red polka-dot girly dress, excuse me? I don’t
think so. I live out in
Louisville, man, gotta take a bus.”
“Hmmm.”
He eyed me. “You got a car?”
“No, huh-uh. Rode the bus into town.”
*
Someone touched my back and I swiveled around. It was
Jennifer Patrick in a
black camisole and long skirt and clunky boots. A black
ribbon tied tight
around her throat. Super sexy. She gave me a hug and
brushed her lips
against my neck. “Long time, fella,” she said, all smiles.
She was the perfect person to see at that moment. I had
been strolling
around town all afternoon and hadn’t seen anybody, and
getting a little sad
about it. The guy in the dress wasn’t helping either.
But Jennifer Patrick.
She was the girl in the back of your mind you always
hope is going to be
there, wherever you go. It had been years. She used to
go to parties, and I
knew her boyfriend. Then they split up and she stopped
coming to parties but
I would see her sometimes with her little daughter at
the cornerstore, and
she’d invite me up to her place for dinner and I’d end
up cooking while her
kid danced around to Sesame Street records and flirted
with me and Jen
smoked and watched us and said we were playing family.
But it wasn’t really
like playing family, because we never kissed and never
went to bed. Her kid
was always around.
Now (ten years later!) I rubbed the back of her head.
Her hair was
different, short and very blonde. “Beautiful,” I said.
She slid onto the barstool between me and the guy in
the dress and she
stared talking at a hundred miles an hour. I leaned on
my elbow and smiled
into her face, all bright and flashing as she spoke.
Her life had turned
around, she had her Masters, she had bought a house up
on Flagstaff looking
out over the city, she was singing with some jazz quartet.
“Hey,” I said, “did you hear ‘Summertime?’ I just
played that one. Will you
sing it for me if I play it again?”
“Mm-hmmm,” she hummed, smiling.
I went and plugged another quarter into the juke but
there were a few
selections ahead of mine so it would take a while. Over
my shoulder I heard
Jen say, “Cool outfit! What a look.” When I got back to
the bar she was
feeling the fabric of the guy’s dress. “We should trade
sometime,” she said,
“but I don’t think my camisole would fit you.”
The guy laughed aloud. He was pretty far gone by now.
“You tell the story,”
he said to me.
“Oh boy.” Jen was watching me. “Okay,” I said, “he was
partying last night,
and he blacks out. So this morning he wakes up on a
park bench wearing this
mysterious dress—he doesn’t know whose it is—and all
his clothes are gone.”
“Wow!” said Jen, looking back and forth between us.
“It was a bus stop bench,” he said. “There were a
couple people waiting for
the bus, going to work I guess. They stood around and
pretended not to
stare. They thought I was some kind of freak.” We all
laughed, even the
bartender who was washing glasses below the bar in
front of us.
“I’m sure this kind of thing happens all the time,” Jen
said. “It’s just a
practical joke.” She put her hand on my knee under the
bar and gave me a
half-wink. “You look great in a dress, I happen to
know. I’m going to put
sleeping pills in your whiskey there and then stuff you
into this”—her
camisole and skirt—“and leave you on the courthouse
lawn.” She burst out
laughing. The guy in the dress stared into his drink,
eyes large.
“I bet that’s what the assholes did,” he hissed.
Jen and I laughed even louder but now the guy in the
dress was serious.
“Those assholes,” he said. The bartender refilled his
shot glass and said,
“This one’s on me, guy. Best story I heard all day.”
This got me wondering whether the guy had any money at
all. I was about to
ask him when he put down the shot and then slid off the
stool to head to the
bathroom on wobbly feet. The guys shooting pool watched
him pass in silence
and then grinned at each other, doing a pantomime of
prancing fairies.
*
Jen and I got to talking in the old way, her hand on my
leg under the bar.
It was like the years in between had never happened.
“Why didn’t you call me
if you were coming to Boulder?” she said.
“Because I wanted to run into you, like this. Don’t you
think this is
better?”
“But what if you didn’t run into anybody, and you had
to go back home all
alone and lonely?”
“Well, then I would call you from a pay phone on the
way out of town and
make you beg me to come back.”
“And you would just be begging an answering machine
because I would already
be out on the town.”
“Then I would run into you. Like this.”
When there was nothing left to say she just let loose
with her smile and
there was nothing else you could do. I could see the
mapwork of wrinkles at
the corners of her eyes and around her mouth but they
only made her
better-looking. We clinked glasses, butted shoulders,
leaned closer to talk
as the place filled up and noise rose all around us.
Somewhere in there,
‘Summertime’ passed and neither of us noticed.
“Jen, we missed the song! You gotta sing it to me.”
She sipped her vodka and a trace of orange misted off
her breath.
“Summertime,” she started, drawing the word out extra
long and putting a smoky vibrato on the last syllable, “and the li-ving
is ea-sy,…” She sang
low over her drink, under the music and the chatter,
and to anyone else it
would have looked like she was just speaking close into
my ear. Her breath
on my cheek reminded me of another time, years ago,
when she had sung to me
just this way. She was living in a cabin back then, on
the slope of the
foothills at the edge of town. This was one of those
times when I’d run into
her and her little girl at the corner store and we
ended up pooling our
groceries to see what kind of meal we’d come up with.
“But it’s a girl’s
world,” she’d said as we went onto the sidewalk, my
arms full of paper bags
and Jen pushing the stroller. “We don’t let Sierra’s
daddy in the house,
because he doesn’t belong in a girl’s world. Right,
sweetie?” But Sierra was
glassy-eyed with child-sleep under her blankets. Jen
shrugged at me. “But
we’ll let you stay if you put on a dress.” Smile, wink.
At her place, she put on a Miles Davis record and sang
the words in her smoky voice. Candles flickered on the window sills and
white Christmas
lights gleamed in strands around the ceiling. I
lingered by the high windows
looking out over the city lights. Little Sierra dozed
in the other room and
Jen’s roommate Rachel sat smoking on the couch. I
didn’t know if that word
‘roommate’ should have quote marks around it or not,
since I knew Jen had a
tendency to play both sides of the plate, but I didn’t
dwell on it. It was a
girl’s world, after all. I took a seat backwards on a
chair and Rachel and I
both watched Jen standing in the middle of the carpet
with her cigarette
burning down to ash, forgotten in her outstretched hand
as she sang. Her
eyes closed and her lips held the shape of the notes in
slow motion. Rachel
gave me a look and shook her head, grinning. Jen was
doing it like she did
everything else: so stylish you couldn’t stand it.
“Someday my prince will come,” she sang.
She went on for a couple tunes and then suddenly
snapped out of it and a
great smile lit up her face. “You need a dress!” she
said, pointing at me,
and then whirled into the next room.
“What did she just say?” said Rachel.
“I think I’m in trouble.”
Then Jen was back with a little cotton sundress, the
kind I love to see on a
woman on a summer day but definitely too skimpy for me.
“Oh,” I said, “I was
thinking more along the lines of a cocktail dress. You
know, long and black,
maybe with a string of pearls?”
“Shush. Put this on. You’ll look marvelous.”
Marvelous, a real Jen word. I changed in the bathroom
and checked myself out
in the mirror. Usually I was half-drunk and revved up
for a show before I
put on a dress—certainly, I never did it sober. In
fact, it looked better
than it should have. I was a flat-chested, wiry woman
with a tousled hairdo.
I looked like a lesbian, I guess. That might even come
in handy.
I walked into the living room and Jen and Rachel burst
into exclamations of
delight. “What a dame!” they shouted. I spun around to
the bebop jazz and
the girls oggled me and we took turns dancing with each
other. Rachel was
crazy about me, running her hands up and down my body,
pressing her chest to
mine—though I don’t know if that meant she liked boys
or girls. Jen found a
long string of fake pearls and looped them over my head
so I could dance
like some flapper, three feet of pearls swinging down
to my knees. Then
everything stopped when we heard a tiny voice: “Mommy?”
We all turned to see little Sierra in the hallway
holding a stuffed bunny.
“Are you playing family?”
“Oh, I’m sorry, hon,” said Jen and she went and picked
her up and took her
back into the bedroom, cooing.
“Dysfunctional family,” I said.
Rachel slapped me on the chest, smirking. We turned the
music down and slow
danced until Jen came out of the bedroom and then she
cut in. Jen and I
swayed, her cheek pressed against my neck where I could
feel her lips
brushing my skin. Later, Rachel kissed me on the check
and Jen on the lips
and went down the hallway to the master bedroom. Jen
and I danced to the end
of the album, even slow dancing when the jazz was
skittish and wild. She
peeled herself away to start pinching out all the
candles. “You can have the
couch. I’ll get you a blanket.”
Alone and in the dark, I sat on the couch in that
dress, wondering what I
was doing there, pulling the blanket over my naked
thighs. True character, I
had heard somewhere, is what you are in the dark. Did
that mean I was truly
a crossdresser? A lonely crossdresser, embarrassed and
sober and a long walk
from home?
*
Jen had gotten to the end of the song. Her voice dipped
into the whispery
low notes as she sang, “So hush, little baby, don’t you
cry.”
I clinked her glass with mine. “You’re a star.”
“I sound better with a microphone.”
“No, you sound great just like that, right in the ear.”
I signaled to the bartender for more drinks (How many
was that now?) and
waited until he’d slid them onto the bar in front of us
before I said,
“Whatever happened to Rachel?”
Jen blinked, hesitated, then threw her head back in a
laugh that caught the
attention of half the bar. “Jesus, it’s been a long
time. She married some
schmuck and disappeared. No letters, no postcards,
nothing. You’ve been out
of town for a while, haven’t you?”
“Guess so.”
Jen peered at me from the corners of her eyes. “And
Sierra’s in high school
now. Can you believe that?”
Whoosh. I got that tingly feeling, just for an instant,
like when you’re
standing on a very high place and looking down and you
feel an irrational
urge to throw yourself into the void. Tiny Sierra is in
high school?! Is she
drinking, smoking, having sex with the rest of them? Is
she dysfunctional?
Or is that normal behavior now? “Wow,” was all I could manage.
Jen was twisting around to see who was in the bar, now
that things were
livening up. “Where’s the crossdresser?” she said.
It had been a while since he’d headed for the john.
“Maybe he got his ass
kicked,” I said. “Should I go check on him?”
Jen shrugged. “Nobody cares in this town if a guy wears
a dress around.”
“But a red polka-dot girly number?”
She grinned. “So pay his tab. It’ll be good karma, in
case the same thing
happens to you some day.”
I couldn’t foresee the kinds of events that would lead
to me waking up in a
mystery dress at a bus stop on a weekday morning, my
life being public
school and early bedtimes. But I called the bartender
over just the same and
settled the guy’s tab. It was a little steep as he’d
been drinking all
afternoon, but the bartender cut me a deal, charging
happy hour
two-for-ones. “I’ll let him know who his fairy
godmother is,” he said and
the three of us exchanged a smirk over that one.
Jen peered over my shoulder and gave a smile and a wave
to someone across
the room. “Look, Jacky, they’re waiting for me over
there. You’ll give me a
call, won’t you?”
I told her I would. She was gone with a kiss on the
cheek, weaving her way
through the crowd to a table full of people I didn’t
recognize. My whiskey
was not having the desired effect. Instead of taking
the edge off the day,
it was making me wistful in a sad-eyed way. Booze never
used to do that to
me. What did the guy in the dress have to complain
about anyway? All he had
to worry about was where the next party was, and
whether his girlfriend was
going to bitch him out. He didn’t have to go home
early, sober and alone,
then get up at dawn and ride the public bus to the high
school. I wouldn’t
have minded one bit being in his position. I would walk
up to the table
where Jen sat with her new friends, sit down with my
cocktail a-jingle,
start talking and bragging and shooting the shit. “You
guys aren’t going to
believe what happened to me!” Drink all night. Acquire
heady aromas. Make
something of the evening.
But tonight was not the night. I settled up my own tab
and shrugged on my
sport coat. Out the door and up the steps, the street
was hung with twilight
and the first stars were coming out beyond the skein of
trees.
*
I ended up seeing him again, but he didn’t see me. I
was easing into the
antiseptic dark of the bus seat, resting my head on the
shuddering window
and watching the campus slide by in the dark. It was an
hour’s ride back to
the city, and it would be good to get some sleep and
take the edge off what
was going to be a sour headache in the morning. The bus
stopped at an
intersection before the freeway turnoff, and I had a
view across the parking
lot of a Circle K where a woman in a red polka-dot
dress with gnarly legs
stood hip-cocked on the sidewalk in front of the doors.
It wasn’t a woman,
of course, it was him. The crossdresser. He’d taken off
his leather jacket
now, draping it with a hooked finger across his back,
and his naked
shoulders were white and bulky and very unfeminine. A
slight figure in jumbo
skater pants and a red smock stood with him, leaning in
the doorway and
holding a broom upright: a boyish girl, working the
graveyard shift. She
threw her head back and laughed. A whole series of
hoops glittered along the
curve of her ear, and there was either a fat spider or
some Chinese
character tattooed on her neck. She looked barely old
enough to sell booze
to the Circle K clientele.
Sealed in silence, I watched. How had the guy gotten
halfway across town so
fast in his get-up? Was this chick his girlfriend? or
the other one? or had
they just met? She leaned forward as if to kiss his
outstretched hand (!),
and then I saw the spark of a lighter and the cigarette
between her lips. He
lit up himself, and their exhaled smoke wafted
ghostlike under the sodium
glow of the all-night lights. Maybe he was making
something of the evening
after all. They’d be musky with fresh sex by the time
the sun came up. Then
the bus geared up and lurched into motion again, and
the gender-bent
midnight tableau at the Circle K slipped away and out
of sight. I probably
shouldn’t have paid for his drinks. But then again,
maybe my karma would
come back around sometime, in the kindness of
strangers. Someone who caught
a whiff of himself in me. Was I living some experience
at this very moment
that anyone might envy me for? I peered over the seat
back at the scattered
heads of my fellow late night commuters, each of us
headed into the city for
God knows how many reasons. Would any of them rather be
the guy in the
dress, sweetly drunk and chatting up a punkrock clerk
at a convenience
store? Would any of them rather be me, all grown up and
headed home in the
night?
A.C. Koch writes: "I live in Zacatecas, Mexico, where I teach English at a
university and edit
fiction for Zacatecas: A Review of Contemporary Word (www.zacatecas.org). My
work has appeared in The Mississippi Review, Exquisite Corpse, Blithe House
Quarterly, Carve, River City, In Posse Review,
Oasis,
and forthcoming in
Oysterboy Review. Stories of mine have recently been
awarded first place
prizes in the Stickman Review Fiction Contest and the
PusanWeb Writing
Contest. I moonlight as a jazzman."
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