His lips mashed together into a thin line. “Hey, wait just a confounded minute. Did you say…? They didn’t hire you to, you know…”
Retaliation. “Yes! I got a job there, and I know I will love it. The clients can be quite challenging. Last night, when I had to explain that I wasn’t warmed up yet—”
“I don’t want to hear more. Hell, I might be street-smart, but I haven’t even turned fifteen yet. Porca miseria!”
“Porca what?”
“Just practicing on not saying ‘shit’ all the time. Ma doesn’t like it, and my little sister thumps me between the eyes when I say it. It’s a little Italian cuss word that means pig misery. Like saying ‘damn.’ Where you off to, anyhow?”
“My Aunt Amelia’s. Would you care to accompany me, Mr. Scallywag? I found a job because of you, did I not?”
He tore the cap off his head and rubbed his greasy black curls of hair. “Stop saying that. I had nothing to do with you getting that job!” He pointed his finger eastward and accelerated his pace.
“Oh, but you did,” I said, hurrying to catch up. “If it hadn’t been for you, I wouldn’t be tingling with avidity for this evening to arrive. That’s why I’m going to visit Aunt Amelia, to tell her the good news.”
“What’s avidity mean? Wait, you’re going to tell your great-aunt about your new job? At Fannie Porter’s?”
“Of course. She’ll be thrilled for me. Besides, she knows I’m good at it. I’ve been doing it for years now.” I muzzled the smile aching to form.
His eyes widened into a dumbfounded glare.
“And avidity means eager, like being Avid about something.”
“I gotta go,” he said, turning away.
One more chance at deception. “Giovanni? You said you were fourteen?”
“Yeah. Why?”
“Well, you are too young to be entertained at Miss Fannie’s. However, I’ll ask her if you can watch me perform sometime.”
His jaw dropped, his dander standing taller than his five-foot-five stature. “You want me to…watch?”
“Ah, we’re here. Thanks for the company.” I trotted off with the last laugh.
From The Last Bordello, historical fiction set in 1901
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