My family and I are at this luxury hotel in Hawaii. I notice people are getting better
beach-chair treatment than us. I don’t
know the secret handshake that will get us into the club. But I desperately wanted in.
An investigation reveals that some bribery is involved. But I’m lost on the specifics. (Not the same as lost in the Pacific.) I’m in need of an adviser to tell me how to
handle things.
Okay, you’re caught up.
I needed to pick exactly the right person. Someone who won’t be offended when I walk up
to them and say, “I know you bribe people.
Can you teach me how to do it?” I
wouldn’t use precisely those words, but there was still the possibility they’d
take offense.
I decide I’ll approach the friendliest guy in the
hotel. I knew he was the friendliest,
because he even talked to me. Friendly Guy had been Christmasing at the Kahala
for over forty years. It was clear he
was experienced in the “taking care
of” arrangement. His beach chairs
were ready for him when he got off the plane.
Catching him lunching, I headed to his table and, too
nervous for small-talk, I dove right in.
“If you want your beach chairs out there...what is it ...how
much. … what do you do?” Not too
articulate, but I threw in some hand gestures and he got the idea.
Friendly Guy was extremely helpful. I was aware that a payment was required at
the beginning of the trip, a payment, Friendly Guy revealed, he duplicated at
the end of the trip. And what was
the amount of the payment, I shakily inquired? Friendly Guy mentioned a figure, hefty but
hardly “break the bank.” Having gotten the information I was looking for,
I thanked Friendly Guy, and left him to his lunch. I was ready to take action.
But I didn’t.
I had risked enough embarrassment for one day. I was tired.
It took a lot of energy to go up to a virtual
stranger and solicit bribery advice. And
now, I was expected to “do the thing”,
money changing hands, accompanied by a “knowing look”? A look that said, “Okay, it’s on” and
promising, “There’s more where that came from”?
That was going to take a lot of … what I didn’t have a lot of.
“Knowing looks” are not part of my regular repertoire.
There was also a timing problem. I’d now heard twice, once from Jane, The
Queen of the Beach Attendants, and now, from Friendly Guy, that to get the ball
rolling, you had to “take care of”
the attendants at the beginning of your stay.
It was already the third day of our stay.
You see the problem, right?
How do you “take care" of people at the beginning of your
stay when the beginning of your stay started two days ago? There was
no more “beginning.” The beginning was
long gone.
I heard no mention of “taking care" of people in the early to middle part of your stay. Was a bribe-induced arrangement at this point
still possible? And if it was, was I
permitted to bribe a lesser amount, because we were starting things two days
late?
I had no idea!
It was then that I made a strategic decision. Since it was too late to “take care" of the
beach attendants at the beginning of our trip, I decided I would “take care of” them at the end of our trip. I would reward them with double, the beginning
amount and the end amount at the same time, placed inside an envelope
with the word Mahalo, Hawaiian for
“Thank you” printed on the front. Maybe
I’d draw a little palm tree on it too.
It felt like the perfect solution. I’d get the special treatment I coveted, and
the beach attendants would be “taken
care of.”
There was only one flaw in this arrangement. The only person who knew about it was me. This is hardly a minor flaw. While I’m imagining, “It’s all worked out”,
the beach attendants are thinking, “What’s up with this guy? He’s expecting special treatment, but he
didn’t “take care" of us at the
beginning!” They don’t know I’m
planning to “double up” at the end of the trip.
They’re not mind readers. They’re
beach attendants.
Of
course, this problem could have been corrected if I’d only gone to Jane and
said, “Now, look here. I want you to
know I am fully cognizant of “the arrangement”, and I intend to fulfill it to
the letter at the end of our stay.”
Something like that, only less British.
I
couldn’t do that. Why? Because it sounded like a scam. Big shot hotel guest promising hard-working
beach attendants “I’ll take care of you before I leave”? Yeah, right.
Requesting special treatment with the assurance of future consideration
felt like the beach chair equivalent of,
“I will gladly pay you Tuesday for a hamburger today.” I couldn’t do it with a straight face.
What
did I do instead?
Nothing.
New Years was approaching.
The hotel was filling up.
Suddenly, there were more guests than beach chairs. It was “First-come, first-served.” Except for the guys with “the arrangement.” Which was not me.
There was only one thing I could do. To avoid being shut out on chairs, I had to
get down to the beach as early as possible.
Forget sleeping in. Forget a
leisurely breakfast. Forget breakfast altogether.
My only concern was getting those chairs.
That was my job. As
the man of the family. The man who had
botched “The Arrangement.” The last thing I wanted were my children
sobbing, “Daddy, there’s no beach chairs!” and a wife thinking, “I could have
done better.”
I’d show up at the “Attendants Counter” earlier and
earlier. On our last day, I bolted from
bed and raced to the beach, only to discover it was six-thirty in the
morning. The attendants don’t show up
until eight.
I
had managed to do the impossible. Turn a
dream vacation into a Polynesian nightmare.
And why? Because – God help me –
I’d wanted more.
I
took a final walk along the beach. All
around, I saw carefree families, frolicking in the sun. I made myself a
promise.
“Next time, I will do things differently.”
And then, very slowly, a nudging question started formulating in my mind.
“How do you get those cabanas?”
1 comment:
Hey, Earl, another hilarious story started in Part 1 that always leaves me looking forward to Part 2, and never disappoints. I read your blog all the time but somehow never seem to leave a comment, even though I enjoy it very much. Have you considered putting together a selection of some of your writing as a book of short stories? I really think people would enjoy them as much as I do and now with E-Publishing and such, it seems like it's becoming easier to bypass the big publishing companies and get your stories out to readers. It's just my opinion, but I think people would love them. Brian Scully
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