
NIGHTHAWKS
The LITTLE DOLL ... DEE DEE
By
Archie L. Tautfest, Jr.
"You want a cup of Joe?"
The LITTLE DOLL ... DEE DEE
By
Archie L. Tautfest, Jr.
"You want a cup of Joe?"
"You ask me, what's new? Well I'll tell ya."
All the loners in the neighborhood spent Turkey Day and Christmas Eve here.
Mostly it was great. There was a tear or two right before Christmas. But it's a new year, things'll work out.
Ya. It's slow, must be the cold spell. It's gotta be zero out. Have a refill and I'll tell you 'bout the tears.
Well like I was 'bout to say, it was a day or two before Christmas.
I was cleanin' like always, when in comes this guy, Lou. He's got a room above the Irishman's store. You might have seen him in here before. He's the one that's just old enough to beat the draft. You know the short balding guy 'bout forty, he's a sometimes cabby. -- With the war and all, it's more sometimes than ain't.
Anyway, Lou comes in that night and he's got a little doll in tow. Now I mean little -- 'bout seven or eight. This little doll looks like Shirley Temple did 'bout eight years ago, in the flick "Little Miss Marker", you know with the blonde hair and doll face.
And you know how I'm a sucker for blonds. And 'specially little doll blonds.
Anyway, Lou and the pint size doll comes in, and they sit there on the end, away from the door. Right off the little doll is having a swell time, she's going round and round on the stool, like it's a Merry-Go-Round.
"Coffee?", I asks.
"Yah.", says Lou.
"Who's the Little Doll?", I says.
"Name's Dee Dee.", he answers.
"Where'd you get her, in a Cracker Jack Box?", I asks.
He looks at me like I just killed somebody, and says, "She's lookin' for her mother. I found her on the street this morning."
Now you know me, I ain't one to put my beak where it don't belong, but, I says, "On the street?"
And he says, "Yah, I was commin' down here for coffee, and here on the street, a couple of blocks up, she's sitting on the curb crying her eyes out."
"Tell me more.", I says.
"What more -- I been looking for the mother all day?", Lou says.
"Who's her mother?", I says. I figure I know everybody in this part of town, maybe I'd know her.
"Name's Melinda, somethin' or other.", Lou says.
"Tall string bean blonde. Use to be a looker?", I asks.
"That's what they tell me.", Lou answers.
Me and Lou's talkin', and the Little Doll pipes up likes she's eighteen not eight.
"Sir, where is the ladie’s room?"
Now let me tell you, I take a double take. I figure if she's a kewpie doll, she's gunna sound like a kewpie doll, but was I wrong, dead wrong. After I get over me being surprised 'bout how old she talks, I says to her, "Down 'round the corner by the phone."
"Thank you sir.", she says grown up like.
As she slides off her stool and walks to the john, Lou says, "Give me a steak-san with lots of onions."
"What about the doll?", I asks.
"What ever little girls eat. I'm no father.", Lou says.
"Maybe some chili?", I says.
Now, Lou looks at me. You know how my Chili is. Some wags have been known to say, they oughta use it against the Japs, the war'd be over in a couple of weeks.
With that look from Lou, I says, "Okay. Okay. No Chili for the doll."
"Just give her a half a burger and some milk.... Second thought give her a half a malt.", Lou says.
Now I'm like the rest, round this time of year, you know charitable and that kinda thing. But half of this and half of that, with rashioning and all, I can't afford to throw half of this and half of that out. And I tell Lou, all I'm saying to you.
Well, you know, Lou, he looks like he's mean and what not, but I never know him to be anything but quiet. That is until I tell him how I look at half of this and half of that. He gets this look in his blue eyes that would turn the sun to ice. He don't say anything, he just looks at me. Well I says something.
I say to Lou, "That's Okay, I'm a little hungry, I'll eat the half she don't eat."
That was the right thing for me to say because he kinda slides back on his stool and relaxes, kinda like and says, "Can I have a refill, after ya put the burger and steak on?".
"Sure.", I says.
After I pat out the burger, and throw it and the steak on the grill, I take his mug and run him a refill. The place is half full so I take care of the rest of the customers.
'Bout that time the little doll comes out of the back, all spick-and-span, just like the Dutch Lady took some of her powder and scrubbed the little doll clean.
As she walked back to her place next to Lou, she says to me, "Sir, your towel is dirty, I would suggest that it be changed."
I loose my mouth for a second or two, then I answer, "Yah. Okay." What a little doll.
By this time the steak and burger were done so I dished the steak up for Lou, and the half a burger for the Little Doll. Now comes the teary part 'bout the Little Doll, Dee Dee.
After they eat, the Little Doll goes back to being a Little Doll, she's playing with the stools and, since the place cleaned out some by this time, I don't mind, and besides, Lou's telling me 'bout what he'd found out 'bout Dee Dee's mother.
Lou says that he heard the story from one of the girls who had lived in the same building, that the Little Doll's father and the Little Doll's mother lived in.
Seems the Little Doll's mother was a hoofer at some of the local clubs, 'bout six or seven years ago. But when she got tangled up with a horn player, and has Dee Dee, she quits dancing. Well things are "happily ever after" for a while. Then it seems she gets tired.
Motherhood and such don't suit her. So she takes to going to the local taxi joints, just to have fun she says.
Now the horn blower it seems takes to fatherhood, he likes the family scene. The story is, he's seen in the park walkin' a carriage, and talkin' the goo-goo talk with the Little Doll. A picture of to behold they say.
Anyways, "Happily ever after", wasn't. The Little Doll's mother starts to stay out later and later. Then it seems she started to stay out all night.
Lou tells me, and I'm tellin' you, this action don't set too well with the horn player.
So one night the horn player packs up, and takes the Little Doll with him. Nobody knows where they went but for the next five years or so nobody sees the horn player or the Little Doll.
But the mother was a different story. It seems when the Little Doll and the horn player left, the mother tried to go back to dancing. Lou says that after the two years lay off with her getting knocked up and all, she didn't have the stuff anymore.
So she starts to hang out. Then she starts to work in a house up at the lake. Then she drifts back to town where she hooked up with a one time boot-legger. But that didn't last.
"I got to take a break. Those guys look down in the mouth, they need some more java."
Now where was I? Yah the Little Doll's mother spent most of the six years as a workin' girl if you know what I mean. Anyway it seems late last summer the Horn Player and the Little Doll, show up on the mother's doorstep. The doorstep is some sleezy hotel over on Grant.
Anyways the Horn Player tells the mother that he got drafted, and he tried everybody that he knew, and since he had no family and he didn't want to put the Little Doll in an orphan's home, so the mother had to take the Little Doll.
After some screaming and yelling, the Little Doll stays with her mother, and the Horn Player goes off to war. It seems that the flea trap the mothers staying in don't allow kids. So the Little Doll and the mother move to this neighborhood. Well the mother finds it's kinda hard to have friends up to her room with the Little Doll being there and all.
So Lou tells, that on the day before he finds the Little Doll on the street crying, that's the last day anybody seen the Little Doll's mother.
Now I got to tell you, after Lou tells me the story, I got a lump in my throat, big as one of those new bombers their sendin' over to England. I don't want you to think I'm a sissy or somethin' but I had tears running down my face.
See just tellin' the story, I get a little wet.
"Excuse me why I blow my nose."
After Lou's story, we talk about what he's going to do with the Little Doll.
"Got any thoughts?", he asks.
"Not me.", I says.
"Well I can't take her to my place, ain't no room.", he says.
"Don't know anybody?", I asks.
"Not a soul. How about you?", he asks.
"Nooo...", I kinda answers, then I think of my sister and I says to Lou, "Maybe my sister'll take the Little Doll."
"Sister? I've been havn' coffee here for years, and I didn’t know you had a sister.", he says.
"Yah, she and I don't see each other much. Fact is I ain't seen her since our old man died.", I says.
"How long's that been?", he asks.
"Four or five years, maybe.", I answers.
"What makes you think she'll help?", he asks.
"Her kids are all grown now, besides she's the only one I can think of. Want another cup?", I says. Then I added, "What about the Little Doll?"
Lou shrugged his shoulders and didn't answer.
"Dee Dee you want a dish of ice cream?", I asks her.
You know, I don't serve ice cream but I do keep some on the back shelf of the ice box for special occasions.
"Yes sir.", she answers.
As I'm dipping the ice cream, I says to Lou, "When I get done with this I'll give my sister a call."
"Where's she live?", he asks.
"Out in the country 'bout an hour drive from here.", I says.
After dropping six bits in the phone, I talk to my sister. I was surprised cause when I told her the story, she said that she and Fred, Fred's my brother-in-law, would be glad to take Dee Dee. They must have broken every law on the books, 'cause it wasn't even an hour and they pulled up in front of the diner.
After Lou and the Little Doll spill some tears, the Little Doll went with Fred and my Sister. To tell the truth, even I got a little mist in my eyes, when my sister drives away with the Little Doll.
Well that's not the end of the story. Christmas day for the first time in twelve years I got the dinner, I close and me and Lou takes my coupe and drives out to see the Little Doll.
I'll tell you, it was the best Christmas I'd had since I don't know when.
Now comes the good part. 'bout a month ago this G.I. on crutches comes wobbling in and starts asking questions 'bout if anybody knows anything about a woman and a little girl. Well after a few questions and answers, I figure he's the Horn Player.
He tells me he broke his leg jumping out of an airplane in training camp, so he doesn't think he'll get over seas. But they're going to keep him in the Army for the duration.
Yah, my sister still has the Little Doll. That is she has the Little Doll until the wars over. And no, the Little Doll's mother ain't been seen. So you see the Holidays was mostly swell, but there was a tear or two.
"You want a refill of Joe?"
07-14-87




