When
I was in high school, I worked with my best friend, Dawn, at our hometown’s
movie theatre, The Roseland. With only one screen, showing one movie a weekend
on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday nights, it was a small operation. Dawn and I
ran the concessions stand, opening at 7 p.m. and closing by 9 p.m. Our years
there together were filled with constantly smelling of popcorn, sneaking candy
bars, slipping in soda, freezing in the winter, melting in the summer, ice
fights (filling popcorn tubs with ice and throwing it at each other with brutal
force), sifting through movie posters going back for decades, and spying on
people from the closed balcony. We had the best gossip in town. The Roseland
was the only movie theatre for miles around, so people of all ages piled in any
time we were showing a decent flick and, filled with excitement, they would
buzz all around the theatre talking a little too freely. Dawn and I soaked up
all the information we could and giggled about it from our private balcony seats,
the top of our world.
One
fateful night, our mutual friend Anne came in with a group of friends. Anne was
a couple years younger than Dawn and I and was somewhat synonymous with
“drama”. I privately dreaded nights that Anne showed up, because she was notorious
for bombarding us with prying questions and worrying us by leaving the theatre
with various undesirable suitors. About half an hour into the film that evening
I went to check that no cell phones were out and Anne followed me back to the
lobby. “Hey, Sarah,” she began, “I don’t want to have any problems, but a girl
from my group went into the ladies' restroom with Jerry Jones to have sex.
Please don’t tell anyone I was the one who told you.” I assured Anne we would
take care of it with discretion and practically skipped off to tell Dawn of
this latest scandal. We didn’t really feel that the two of us would have the
authority to shake the confidence of someone cocky enough to get frisky in a
two stall bathroom who was only a few years our junior anyway, and decided to
alert our superiors.
Upon
entering the office, we found only Linda, a sour woman in her late 60’s who ran
the ticket booth most nights, and the owner’s wife, Mrs. Chandler, who was
roughly the same age as Linda and was occasionally known to be a bit out of her
mind so I’d heard. Seemingly unfazed by this scandalous development, the two
women asked us to go confirm the story. Our teenage body’s alive with the spark
of a juicy story, we devotedly carried out the task. We stood silently in the
corner of the bathroom as a woman washed her hands and left the restroom,
giving us a look that said, “what the fuck?” as she walked out the door. A few
moments of silence passed before we heard a deep voice saying, “Hey, hey, hey!
So I think we’re alone now!” Silently, Dawn and I looked at each other, mouths
agape in wide unbelieving grins. Scarcely able to contain our fits of giggles,
we shuffled out of the restroom. As the door swung shut behind me, I heard the
same voice say, “What was that?”
We reported
to Mrs. Chandler and Linda, breathless from laughter and unable to hide our
wicked grins. Mrs. Chandler sighed as if to say, “I’m too old for this shit,”
and marched off to the women’s room, phone in hand with Linda, Dawn, and me in
tow. She busted through the door like a gangster, barking at a few young
gossiping girls to get out as Dawn and I huddled in the corner holding each
other up as we shook with laughter. Rapping on the door, Mrs. Chandler called
out, “Jerry Jones? We’ve got your parents on the phone. They want to speak to
you.”
“Shit,”
we heard come hissing out from behind the stall door sending us into fresh
peels of silent laughter (silent because of the fearsome glares we were getting
from Linda). The girl’s voice called out again, “Uh, I don’t know what you’re
talking about. It’s just me in here. I’m, uhm, just…pooping.”
Mrs.
Chandler wasn’t in the mood to play. “Young lady, we know that Jerry Jones is
in there with you. You both need to come out now.”
“No
he’s not! It’s just me!”
“Fine,”
Mrs. Chandler called out, “We’ll just call the police. They’ll open the door
for us.”
“Just a
minute,” Jerry Jones’ deep voice called out immediately. We heard a distinct
ZIP; a moment later, the door opened, and Jerry Jones came barreling out. Attempting
to slide past Mrs. Chandler, he said, “I’ll just be going now.”
Mrs.
Chandler’s arm shot out, blocking his path, holding him and the young girl in
the corner of the restroom. “Oh, no, you don’t,” she spat out. “You listen to
me! You listen to me, real good! This movie theatre is not your personal love
shack! Obviously, your parents don’t want you two doing this or you’d do it at
home, but you will NOT be pleasuring each other on my time!” As Mrs. Chandler
launched into a full-on furious lecture, Dawn and I could barely hold ourselves
upright from laughter. I leaned against the wall, arm around Dawn, as Dawn
leaned against me, our heads together. Jerry Jones gave us the meanest,
nastiest look he could muster. Mrs. Chandler shouted out, “Don’t you look at
those girls! You look at me and listen up! I know you think you’re in love, but
you two don’t know the first thing about love! You don’t have a damn clue what
love is! You’re just children!”
“Uh,
I’ll just leave…” Jerry Jones tried, but was cut off again.
“You’d
like that, wouldn’t you?” Mrs. Chandler’s fury growing by the second, she
declared, “No! You two will sit through the rest of this movie with me between
you! You will each be escorted to your parent’s cars where you will tell them
what happened, and then you will be banned from the theatre for six months!
Now, back to your seats!”
As Mrs.
Chandler marched the sorry suckers out of the restroom, she gave us a stern
glare that had absolutely no effect on us whatsoever. We were far beyond the
point of being concerned about discretion as we full-out ran to our balcony
seats to watch Mrs. Chandler chaperone the remainder of Jerry Jones’ ill-fated
movie date, shamelessly giggling and ogling at their unfolding punishments for
the rest of the evening.
*Jerry Jones' name was changed for his privacy.
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