I was in a shop the other day – no
need to name it, but any woman who has been in it might recognize which shop it
was – looking at some attractive serving trays painted with designs of olive
trees, lemon groves, vegetables, and so on, when the proprietor of the shop
approached and to my utter astonishment put his arm around my shoulders in an
intimate manner and whispered in my ear, “It’s melamine.” He chuckled, tugged
tighter, and whispered, “You remember melamine. All of us who were around then
remember it.”
I mumbled something incomprehensible,
although to tell the truth, I had no idea what melamine was and I was so
astonished at the intimacy of his salesmanship I didn’t know what to say. He whispered
something else about the product, then was gone. Later, when I was looking at
something else, he again scurried up and hugged me close to whisper something about
it before darting off again.
I mean, really! Hadn’t he been
listening to the news? Wasn’t he aware that those are not socially acceptable
behaviors towards women he doesn’t know – and even, depending on the woman and
the circumstances, to some he does know? What right did he think he had to put
his arm around me, a complete stranger, and whisper in my ear not only things
about the product he was selling, but insinuations about my age? Incredulity
was so great it blocked anger at the insult.
The man’s wife (I assume she was his
wife) was watching him from behind the counter, eagle-eyed. Had she never said
to him, at home, while she was preparing dinner, “You really shouldn’t treat
our women customers like that,” to which he would have replied, “Oh, I’m not
doing any harm. They like it.” And how would he know I didn’t like it? Would he
have noticed my slight shrinking from his chummy arm? Maybe he thought I would
be flattered by those attentions. I saw him put his arm around another woman
customer, but I doubt he would do that to a male customer. When he chatted with
a young couple also looking at items, he proved the salacious nature of his
gestures with me by not putting his arm around this young woman. Her male
companion was a barrier.
I could have made a scene by demanding
he take his hands off me (“You beast!”), and I probably at least should have
turned immediately and walked out of the store, but I continued to browse, and
in the end, because I liked it, not because I had been flattered into buying it
by the selling techniques of the store owner, I bought the melamine tray, the
one with a large olive tree spreading its branches over half the plate. Every
time I look at it, I see, in the thick olive-green branches, a pruriently peering,
luridly lurking satyr.
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