In Los Angeles they got jobs as cleaners in a hotel near the airport. The supervisor taught them to make beds and clean bathrooms. One morning a man entering the room Pinky was cleaning said to her, "Don't go." She knew that smell. She said softly, "I need money." The man locked the door and gave her twenty dollars, and she went to him, seeing him smile.
After that, whenever she saw a man alone in a room, she took her time cleaning or sweeping or polishing the mirror, and the man sometimes spoke to her. She said, "I need some money. Can you help me?" and almost always the man would lock the door and give her money and touch her or tell her to kneel. Forty dollars and sometimes more.
One day in one of the corridors a black woman ran toward her, and as Pinky smiled the woman slapped her face. That night, Pinky cried when she told Joey the story.
Joey said, "You deserved it. You're like her."
"I need the money. I am saving to go home."
"I am never going home," Joey said. "I am bringing my mother
here."
Pinky was more fearful after the slap in the face, though she still lingered in the rooms. She could not understand why one man she smiled at got so angry that he reported her to the manager.
"She's a little whore! She propositioned me!" the man said when Pinky was brought to the manager's office. The manager said that he would deal with her. After the man had gone the manager called her a whore, and then he touched her and said, "Take your uniform off. It doesn't belong to you anymore." Pinky did as she was told. The manager then pushed her to the floor and sat on her. When he was finished, he said, "You're fired. Get out. Take this, too." Seeing that it was her uniform, she thanked him.
She had enough money for her ticket to the Philippines. Joey said goodbye. Pinky's mother, who was still in Manila, cried when she saw her daughter. Pinky's father had died. Her mother said, "Why aren't you crying?" Pinky didn't know. She never cried anymore. She didn't tell her mother that she had been to the United States. She applied for jobs. She said, "I have worked in hotels."
She became a maid in a hotel in Manila. The job was low paying and hard work. Her mother quit: she was very sick, too weak to work. Her Aunt Mariel said, "You are twenty — find a husband." Pinky put an ad in the paper, written by Aunt Mariel.
An American man answered the ad. She said to herself, I would marry him. But the man said, "I will make a video of you for my agency. It is the new way to find a husband. Maybe a foreigner."
He showed her one of the videos. It was an interview with a Young Filipina.
"It costs two thousand, but if you have no money we can make other arrangements," the man said.
He photographed her naked on the bed. Then he said, "Put your clothes on," and he interviewed her.
She did not hear again from him. She turned twenty-one, still working at the hotel. Although Philippine hotels were dirtier than American ones and the work was harder, anything was better than being bitten by a man or trapped in a motel room and hearing a man's knock. For a year she sat and watched her mother die. Uncle Tony showed up and began visiting her at night. One of those nights, her mother died.
The week she started at Reception, with the Trainee badge, she got a letter from America — Buddy Hamstra, Hotel Honolulu notepaper. He said that he had seen her video. She had forgotten about the video. He would meet her in Manila.
Uncle Tony and Aunt Mariel went with her to Buddy's room. They slept on the floor, but she woke them at midnight, gave them some pesos, and sent them away. Buddy embraced her.
In the morning she begged Buddy to marry her.
He did, on the fourth floor of the Hotel Rizal, panting from the climb, complaining that the elevators weren't working. Aunt Mariel's friend had
made all the arrangements. It took two months for Pinky to get her United States visa.
"Look," Buddy said to me. "An angel."
40 Hearts of Palm
The Christmas carols in Waikiki were being sung in Japanese. On the second-floor lanai, which contained the overspill from Paradise Lost, Buddy was comparing our Christmas decorations with those of the other hotels. I knew what was coming: the reminiscence of Santa Claus nailed to a cross, Mickey in a manger (a plastic saucer) surrounded by the Seven Dwarfs, Jesus wearing a Santa hood. "And last year — great!" The Japanese man next door in the Kodama had signed all the company Christmas cards and then jumped out the window, landing messily at the edge of the swimming pool.
"He thought he was being a good owner. Funny thing is, they had to send new cards."
"Holiday depression — I get it sometimes," Peewee said.
"Yeah, Christmas is always a ratfuck," Buddy said. "God, I hate those carols."
"I don't mind that one." Even sung in Japanese, it was clearly "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer." I said, "Something like 'In the Bleak Mid-Winter' never fails to undo me."
We could see the tops of the palm trees that fringed the beach, two streets and a row of hotels away. No Old Masters existed in our museums,
but we had Turner sunsets and Titian heavens, and I remarked that at least the world's clouds have not changed in the planet's history — sometimes I imagined our skies as Renaissance ceilings.
When I pointed to the sky, Buddy muttered something about a new Ramada hotel going up near Fort DeRussy. He was a big bulky man who whenever he was idle was always leaning on something. His elbows rested on the railing and his hands cradled his cheeks.
"I love looking at the sultry fulguration of these skies," I said, just to try out the sound. But it didn't register with him. Just a noise I was making.
Keola said, "You so hybolic."
"Oh, yeah," Buddy said. "Hey, look at them palms."
I often stared at them too, thinking: South Seas dream, where the golden apples grow, balmy Paradiso, under the hula moon.
"Some good eating there."
I thought Buddy meant the tall sign on Kalakaua Avenue advertising the sushi bar, but no, he was still talking about the palm trees. Having seen them yanked down and their feathery fronds battered by hurricane winds — never uprooted but set gracefully upright again as soon as the wind eased — I came to regard palm trees as indestructible.
"You basically lop off the trunk and tear open the core. Chop it up. Pickle it in brine. It's awesome in salad. I had palms in my yard in
Waimanalo. It looked clear-cut when I moved. I basically ate the whole yard."
To this fat man with lovely teeth, the memory of feasting on these tasty trees made his mouth juicy with saliva.
"Any palms in England?"
"No palms. Just qualms."
He queried me by squinting and opening his mouth. "What's the book?"
"This is Celine. Journey to the End of the Night."
I read: The human race is never free from worry, and since the last judgment will take place in the street, it's obvious that in a hotel you won't have so far to go. Let the trumpeting angels come, we hotel dwellers will be the first to get there.
"That babe knows what she's talking about. I love to read," Buddy said. "Maybe I should read one of your books one of these days."
"Not necessary."
I was a little sensitive on this point. The week before, Sweetie had told one of the hotel guests I was a writer. I had specifically warned her about this. "Say 'hotel manager." It had the virtue of being true and was less of a mine field.
"Your wife tells me you're a writer," the guest said.
I smiled, dreading what was to come.
"Do you write under your own name?"
"Yes."
My name rang no bells, and yet, keen to demonstrate his love of reading, he recommended several books I saw in the hands of sunbathers whenever I strolled along the beach. My anonymity made me happy here, and I reflected on how in a touristy place, as one of the herd, no one ever gets to know your name, no one ever questions why you're there.