The Elevator Trilogy by Les Cohen




  By Les Cohen

  Copyright 2013 by Les Cohen, Ellicott City, Maryland.

  All rights reserved.

  * * *

  Life is short. Are you tired of not having anything good to read while you’re eating out at the diner by yourself? Have you flipped through the magazines and catalogs you keep in your bathroom one too many times?

  Now you’ll have an answer for people who try to intimidate you, intellectually speaking, by asking, “So what have you read lately?” without your having put in all that much effort.

  Just tell them the name of the last short-short story you read and my name. They'll think you read a whole book. ("Yeah, like that's ever going to happen.")

  "Very impressive," they'll say to themselves. "You're reading, what, a book or two a week?"

  What do they know?

  * * *

  Contents

  1. The Elevator Trilogy

  2. Last Picked

  3. Birmingham Airport

  4. IM

  5. Self-Fulfilling Prophecy

  6. Finding Dana

  7. Precocious

  8. Dialogue

  9. Creative Running

  10. Mind Over Maury

  11. "Dream a little dream of me."

  12. Memo To Carolyn

  13. Business Management 213

  14. Jones

  15. Double Fake

  16. Bob

  17. Guardian

  18. Corporate Culture

  19. Jimmy Loves Melissa

  20. Organic Gardening

  21. The Bully

  22. The Eulogy

  23. Relationship Saving Time

  24. The Babysitter

  25. The Penny

  26. Say “Goodbye” to Jane.

  27. Dream On

  28. Enchilada Books

  29. The Speed Date

  30. Broken Rose

  31. Silent Partners

  32. Lot Boy

  33. The Commute

  34. The Ripple Effect

  35. Exhausted

  36. Next Contestant

  37. HonoLulu's

  38. Road Trip

  39. Unfaithful

  40. First Date

  41. I, Your Son

  42. The Hangover

  43. Trouble Sleeping

  44. Shiny Things

  45. Stranger On The Bus

  46. Craig's Lisp

  47. The Dishes Fairy

  48. "Hello?"

  49. The Plug-In

  50. Pretense

  51. The Badger

  52. Schmutz Patrol

  53. The Desk

  54. Imperfect Together

  55. "Gesundheit!"

  56. The Ladies Room

  57. The Proposal

  58. The De-Creeping Of Ross

  59. Dear Journal

  60. Interview With An Alien

  61. Bathroom Windows

  62. Mary

  That's it for now.

  * * *

  1. The Elevator Trilogy

  Part 1: Going up.

  Our story begins the morning after the night when the crew from Otis started renovating the other elevator. There were only two. True, the building was relatively short, a mere 28 stories tall, having been built in an era before downtown property values pushed buildings to the sky, but the elevators were soooo slow, so crowded, stopping on virtually every floor. They were the prefect place, you guessed it, for love.

  Of the twelve people waiting in the lobby, two of them, unbeknownst to each other, were about to meet. For the sake of discussion, we’ll call them Bob and Jane, not because I’m trying to protect their identities, but because those were their names. Their names may have been ordinary but, trust me on this, they were not.

  Jane was one of the first on and, being polite and given that she worked on the twenty-third floor, went to the back. Leaning up against the wall, a briefcase in one hand, large pocket book over the other shoulder, that hand on the strap, her plan was to relax on the way up, preparing herself mentally for what promised to be a strenuous day.

  Bob, on the other hand, had less control over his destiny. This morning, as it turned out, was his turn to get coffee for his team. Right now, he had his hands full, literally, trying to balance the ridiculously flexible cardboard box they gave him to hold eight cups, two of which were on top of two of the other six, his computer backpack slung over his right shoulder and the morning paper rolled under his left arm – all this while he kept wondering whether or not he’d remembered to zip up before he left his apartment. (He’d been running late and rushed out of his apartment without checking.) Focused as he was on keeping it all together, Bob was pushed into the elevator by the wave of people behind him. When it was all over, and door was closing on the coat of the last person on board, Bob found himself facing the back of the elevator, smashed up against one person in particular – close enough to have children had the circumstances been different, if you get my drift.

  Jane, all the while, was trying to ignore this unexpected moment of public intimacy by looking over Bob’s shoulder, pretending to read the “Maximum Occupancy” notice above the buttons panel, and then mentally counting the number of people who stood to die with her if the cable broke.

  “Hi.” Bob was the first to talk.

  “Hi.”

  “Sorry about...”

  “It’s okay, as long as you promise to practice safe elevating.” Jane smiled.

  Bob was caught off guard, but recovered quickly. “I don’t think you have anything to worry about.”

  “Sorry.” Jane was sincerely embarrassed. “I didn’t mean to flirt.”

  “Yeah, well, there’s a special anonymity you have in crowded bars and elevators. Nobody’s paying attention, and it’s not like we’re ever going to see each other again.”

  “Of course not,” Jane agreed with him, but then saw something in his eyes. “You look disappointed.”

  “Oh, no.”

  “You’re not disappointed that you won’t be seeing me again.”

  “No. I’d love to see you again, of course, and I'll be… heartbroken if I don’t.”

  Jane smiled at him.

  “It’s not disappointment, it’s just that liquid is beginning to bubble up onto the lid of this one cup and, if I’m not careful, it’s going to drip onto your white blouse, possibly staining it and you’ll have to walk around all day with a spot,” Bob nodded in the direction of Jane's left breast, “there. ...Is that silk?”

  “It’s fake silk, but thank you for noticing.” Looking at the lid in question, just a couple of inches above her mouth, everything suddenly went into adrenaline-induced slow motion. The elevator chime made a slow, deep tone announcing its arrival on a particular floor. People on the still-crowded elevator started to move, jostling Bob as they did. The tray shook, the two top cups even more so and there, teetering at the edge of the one lid, a single drop lost its hold.

  “Zaappp!!” Instantly, and with perfect timing and position, Jane stuck out her tongue, way out, and caught the drop, and then held it out there for just a second before reeling it into her mouth.

  “Geez.” Bob was impressed. “You could catch flies like that.”

  “You saying I remind you of a frog.”

  “Sort of. A very, uh, attractive frog?”

  “I do look good in brown,” Jane was thinking out loud, and then smacked her lips. “That’s not coffee.”

  “You mean green.”

  “What?”

  “Toads are brown. Frogs are green,” Bob corrected her, shaking his head up and down slightly.

&nbs
p; Jane gave Bob her trademark “Who cares?” look.

  “No. Actually, it’s a ‘Pineapple, Mango, Coconut Paradise Smoothie.’ It’s healthier and I’m trying to avoid the whole coffee breath thing.”

  Instinctively, Jane closed her mouth and rolled her lips inward, doing her beast to avoid breathing on him.

  “Oh, you don’t have coffee breath. Of course not.”

  The elevator chimed again.

  “This is my floor,” Jane announced, surprised by her own reluctance to move.

  “Right,” was all he had to say, that and the fact that he didn’t move either.

  “You need to move.”

  “Of course,” and he carefully stepped aside to let her by.

  “What floor are you getting off,” Jane asked as she brushed past him.

  “Eighteen.”

  “This is twenty-three.”

  “I’ll get off on the way back down.”

  And then she turned back just short of the door. “Maybe I’ll see you later?”

  “Absolutely. …Bob.”

  “What?” Jane called back from the hallway, just as the doors were starting to close.

  “I’m Bob.”

  “Jane. And your fly’s d..,” but the doors cut her off.

 
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