Dauntra refused to believe this, but itâs cool she even cares. Some people I knowâwell, okay, Kris Parks, to be exactâonly pretend to care about issues because doing so looks good on their college applications.
âI was thinking about pouring Aunt Jemima all over the inside of my JanSport,â Dauntra went on, âso when Stan reaches inside it tonight, he gets a big handful of syrup. But I donât want to ruin a perfectly good backpack.â
âYeah,â I said. âI can see how that might hurt more than help. Besides, it isnât Stanâs fault, necessarily. Heâs just doing his job.â
Dauntra narrowed her eyes at me. âYeah,â she said. âThatâs what all the Nazis said in their own defense after World War Two.â
I didnât think searching someoneâs backpack for stolen DVDs was quite the same as killing seven million people, but I didnât figure Dauntra would appreciate me mentioning that out loud.
âAnyway,â she said, changing the subject, âhow was that new art class? The life drawing one?â
âOh,â I said. âKind of, um, startling.â I still didnât feel comfortable bringing up the David thing, so I just said, âDid you know life drawing meant nudes?â
Dauntra didnât even look up from the manga sheâd cracked open over the registerâs keyboard.
âYeah. Of course.â
âOh,â I said, slightly let down. âWell, I didnât. So I got to see my firstâyou know.â
That got her attention.
âThe nude model was a GUY?â She looked up from the comic bookâwell, it was really a comic novel, or graphic novel. I should start trying to get the terminology correct, since someday I hope to write and illustrate mangas of my own. âI thought nude models were always women.â
âNot always, I guess,â I said.
âYou know, some guy dropped his pants in front of me on the Metro the other day,â Dauntra said incredulously, âfor free. I had to call the cops. And, like, this Susan Boone lady, she pays some guy money to do it?â
âYeah,â I said.
Dauntra shook her head in disbelief. âDid you feel violated? Because whenever a guy shows me his goods when Iâm not interested in seeing them, I feel violated.â
âIt wasnât really like that,â I said. âI mean, you know. It was art.â
âArt.â Dauntra nodded. âSure. I canât believe a guy gets paid to show off his goods, and people call it art.â
âWell, not the showing-off-his-goods part,â I said. âBut the drawings we make of it.â
Dauntra sighed. âMaybe I should take up being a nude model. I mean, you get paid just to sit there.â
âNaked,â I pointed out.
âSo what?â Dauntra shrugged. âThe human form is a thing of beauty.â
âExcuse me.â A tall guy in a beretâno, really, a French beret, although he didnât happen to look Frenchâapproached the counter. âI believe youâre holding a film for me. The name is Wade, W-A-Dââ
âYeah, itâs right here,â I said quickly. Because the guy in the beret is a regular, and even though Iâd only been working at Potomac Video for two months, I knew that if you didnât head off Mr. Wade at the pass, heâd go on for as long as he could about his film collection, which is extensive, and mostly in black and white.
âAh, yes,â he said, when I showed him the DVD weâd been holding for him. â The Four Hundred Blows . You know it, of course?â
âOf course,â I said, even though I had no idea what he was talking about. âThat will be fourteen seventy-nine.â
âOne of Truffautâs finest,â Mr. Wade said. âI have it on video, of course, but itâs really the kind of film you canât own enough copies
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