Read Garbage Online

Authors: Stephen Dixon

Tags: #Garbage

Garbage (10 page)

“Then for them then: ‘Nice and quiet now huh?' Maybe their friends knew they were here and it was some kind of occasion like a celebration for the two men and the message was an odd inside joke that that group likes to play.”

“If their friends knew they were here for only the big honeymoon day, why would they send it two days late? Besides that it's not how it was. Those two were right out of a goldfisted mensroom. That telegram had to be meant for you.”

“Who was in my room before the men?”

“I can't even give that information to the police.”

“Sure you can. Police come in my bar all day long and tell me how they operate.”

“This telegram really worries you, nice almost peaceful-like message and all?”

“For my own reasons, yes.”

“Tied to those bizarre early morning phonecalls you used to get? No? Well, if you have to know who was before you not counting our honeymooners, something I don't do for everyone I want you to know. It's illegal, but seeing you have to relieve your mind some, I suppose I can bend the law backwards a little—”

“You drink, don't you?”

“I don't go psycho on rum but do enjoy the taste of it.”

“Tomorrow I'll bring a bottle of my best stuff if you want.”

“I won't complain.” Looks in the register. “Not worth two?”

“For a name? All right, two.”

“Second one you could make it cheap or even both. Anyway, you now know you can call on me for other things—Of course, the elderly gentleman, Mr. Addissay, no help to you I'm afraid, who lived here as a permanent for six years. I wasn't supposed to tell you this, bad luck and even worse hotel business, since nobody likes to know he's sleeping in the same bed and bedroom someone recently died in, though I suspect you've seen and heard it all. He actually only had a rough time the last few days there and passed away on the stretcher going downstairs.”

“That doesn't bother me. The honeymooning couple does more.”

“Way to go. Though I for one have nothing against them no matter how they mutilate their bodies, unless they're truly taking advantage of the very young.”

Telegram could still be a mistake. That's what I'll think: not from Stovin's to me but meant for 419 or 421 or even 520 or something, and just get a good night's sleep.

Little later I call the telegraph office and a man says “Room number and address is correct but telegram was sent from another city and sender gave an anonymous.”

I have a couple of drinks in my room, try to sleep, still staying away from most of the pills I'm to take, particularly since I'm drinking, and can't sleep and then oversleep and awake, eat, walk to work with an even worse headache than yesterday's and knowing I should take a cab, but on that score I've always been a cheapskate. All my bar garbage is on the sidewalk where we left it the night before.

I call George Ecomolos and tell him about the garbage and say “What's the trouble—you got a strike or something?”

“Worse than that, but think on the phone I be telling you, you're nuts.”

“Come on then. It's cold and I'll heat up a bad brandy for you,” and he says “Come around again your place I got to be doubly nuts than I just said before. Talking to you now even I'm nuts and so shouldn't. I will though, talk. They go so far to bother you and me with taps, they nuts.”

“Who?”

“Who? Ha. That's who. You nuts or stupid or both those two? The name. Our private garbage pals, your friends and mine. They phonecall me, understand? And say deal off to buy my trash trucks if. If what if what I say and they say to me back not to pick your garbage up anytime now. If I do they don't buy my trucks and make sure nobody does and on that threat I think they win and if they do I be all the way out to space and broke. Okay, I told and hope they not be tapping. You say one word though—oh hell, should have said nothing to you, nothing, for now I worry.”

“It's all right. I won't tell anyone.”

“It's not. People shoot off mouths. Best of them shoot off—my wife, God bless her, everybody, not purposely, a disease. But they really into you, Shaney. Maybe next only to squeeze you slow-wise where you got garbage piled miles high. I hope not. City stinks like it is. But boy they got ways nobody does and when they tell very firmly me lay off, Eco, I must. Hey, I see you, baby, and swear has to be last time for a year everything me to you sight and sound, so so long.”

I call most of the private carting companies in the city and each tells me he can't pick up my garbage because that's Eco's territory. I tell them Eco's going out of business and they say something like “That so? Didn't know. What happened?” and I say “I think Eco himself got sick of the city or something or just sick. But Stovin's who's taking over Eco's customers won't handle me,” and I get answers like “Maybe they've good reasons…. Eco might have told Stovin you don't pay your bills, so why should we chance it?…That's their concern and much as I'd like to and can always use the extra cash coming in and thank you for thinking of me, I can't, sorry,” and a few of them just say “Sorry” right after I tell them Stovin's won't handle me, and hang up.

I bring the filled garbage bags to the basement and carry the loose garbage in boxes to a corner trashcan a block away. What I carry is about a tenth of my garbage and fills up a whole city can. While I'm jamming it into the can a man says “You shouldn't be doing that. That's for public trash alone.”

“I know and I'm sorry but must.”

“Then if you know, stop, please, have some civic pride and decency. Take what you put in out and put it in the cans in front of buildings or stores where it belongs. Continue stuffing it in, mister, and you're in trouble.”

“You're right, sorry again,” and I walk away with some of my trash and stick it in a public can on the next corner a block away. Same man's there when I turn around and he says “Now I warned you. Two times in two minutes is too much in one day. What's your name? I'm calling a cop.”

“James Blackmore. I've nothing to hide. I live in that building there, second floor, window with the flowerbox is mine. All our cans were filled so this is what I was forced to do to both get the smells out of my apartment and keep the sidewalk clean,” and I cross the street, go in the building I said was mine, through the vestibule door watch the man look around for someone or maybe he was just faking me. Anyway, no cop comes and he looks up to what I said was my window, gives one of those disgusted looks and walks away. I go back to the bar, serve customers, an hour later lock up and return to the first trashcan with two boxes of empty condiment bottles, a big roastbeef bone and broken barware and such. When I get back to the bar I'm beat and have to take a few aspirins and rest for an hour on two chairs. Then I open up again. At least I got rid of the loose heavier trash and broken glass that would've ripped the bags. Later I'll think of ways more.

Most regulars stop asking after my head and start bitching I'm too slow. “My manager's coming back to the shoestore in a minute, Shaney. Bad head and all and much as I sympathize for you, try and hustle it up?” I try to as I want to keep them but it's tough.

Al comes around eleven, does some odd jobs for me and then I close up and we carry several plastic garbage bags to the first trashcan I was at this morning. It's gone, though my boxes with trash are still there, and we at my suggestion start walking to the trashcan a block further away when he says “Why not just put them in front of any building with garbage?”

“Good idea. My head hasn't been thinking the same since it got hit,” and we leave the bags in front of some buildings.

Back at the bar I give him a couple of bucks and drinks and have one with him with more aspirins and while he walks me to my hotel he says “Ever think of selling the bar, with all the problems you got with it?” and I say “What would I do if I did?”

“Bake in the sun down south someplace or on one of those tropical foreign isles or keys.”

“And after the first day with a burnt-up back, to do what?”

“Apply lotion to it, rest off the burn and get a new one a week later.”

“And after that and after that? That's what I'm saying.”

“Golf, fish, swim, sail, tennis or learn any or all of them. Or meet a young lady or one closer your own age, but get laid, gamble, play the ponies, eat well and drink.”

“Oh fun fun fun and after the first month of dying of boredom or liver disease, what?”

“Open a bar down there and call it Shaney's.”

“I don't know anyone there at any of those places. All my customers and what you might call friends are here. I'm a city boy, born, raised and worked here almost all my life, even if that is a city under the southern sun you're talking of where you want me to be. Worse, I don't like that much sand, sun and palm trees or really any trees. I like them in the park, even if I only get to see them if I go out of my way when I walk to work. Also pavement, sidewalk, whatever the hell materials the streets are made of I mean. But real life, seasons, snow and getting snowed on and trudging through drifts and shoveling it if I'm not sick like this. And biting rains, freezing colds, noise, lots of noise, a madhouse, old and new tall buildings going up and torn down, car and people congestions and rushes—even grimy streets in a way if they don't get too unclean. Besides, my memories are all here—my parents' and sister's graves.” “I didn't know you had sisters.”

“One. Long ago. Maybe nobody does. We were very close. She died when I was a kid, but I remember her.”

“Then come visit them once a year to pay your respects and lay flowers. With a jet and cab you can probably be at the gravesite in three hours.”

“Who'll take care of my southern or foreign bar?”

“An assistant. Someone you know who can make drinks and sandwiches and trust.”

“You must be the only regular left I didn't tell this yet. I never had an assistant who didn't steal me blue in the face and blind. They've always been one step ahead of me and I also want everything to be run exactly my way, so I'm a lousy boss.”

“So I'll come down and work for you and won't steal and I know the business and got nothing to gain standing here and my wife can wait your tables.”

“I told you about Stovin's?”

“All I need to know I suppose or so you thought.”

“What I say? I forget—my head.”

“All that you didn't want to do what they wanted you to and for it you got brained.”

“Then you can see why should I be so sure you're not working for them too? Trying to get me to sell out cheap and save them the inconvenience of beating my butt in again and maybe this time one of them getting caught with no excuse.”

“Hey. You know me how long before you ever heard their name, so I can almost take what you say as an insult.”

“I've got to be extra careful.”

“It could still be one.”

“I'm sorry but so far it's not in me to rely on any one person I know.”

“I'm what I say I am, honestly. Total your register, work out whatever shadowing system you have, then put me behind the bar for as long as you like and you'll see. Not a penny will slip into my pocket that's not a tip for me and even that if you don't want it to and my wife is even worse.”

“Anyway, nobody will buy my bar except for the oldtime fixtures and liquor stock, so how can I invest in any place new? I just have to stick at what I still got.”

“Here's your hotel. You were going to walk past. Hey, these talks have been swell,” and we shake hands.

“Al, I'm kind of sorry I never spoke to you as much before. But maybe, as you know, if you did work behind a bar—”

“I did, what are you going on for?”

“Then you know that after a while almost everyone on the other side of the bar gets to look and act alike to you, but you're all right.”

“I don't know. Working the bar even twelve hours straight never turned me off to people or them to me.”

“You're lucky. Goodnight,” and I go inside. “How you doing?” I say to the nightclerk and he says “What's this? You haven't my bottles? That a way to treat your helpmate?”

“Damn it, I forgot,” and give him five dollars.

“What's this? Bribery now?” Puts it back in my hand. “Bottles, not money. Two quarts like you promised and it'll be worth twice as much to me as that five.”

“Tomorrow.”

Next day under my bar's front door is a summons from the Sanitation Department for leaving trash on the street. I phone the Department's summons section and say “What trash where did I leave? My sidewalk was clean when I left it last night and clean today.”

“Inspector's report says you left it in front of private dwellings and storefronts not your own.”

“What? Streets as dirty as they are and sidewalks with ice and still unshoveled snow on them for people to fall and this inspector has the time to untie every trash bag in town to see what's inside really belongs to the people in the building it's in front of?”

“Our office got a phonecall.”

“Who from?”

“Someone. Maybe a landlord or storeowner, maybe a passing citizen. In such complaints when you're so completely infringing on the law, the courts say you don't have to know who are your accusers. Want a hearing, I'll put you down for one. You'll have to pay your fine first, which you'll get back with interest if you win, though next June do you? For that's how far we're backed up. But from now on if you can't afford private carters, don't go leaving envelopes and things with your name and address on them in the bags you leave at places where you shouldn't.”

“Many thanks.”

“For what?” and hangs up.

That night Al and I rip up all the address labels and bill envelopes and stuff before sticking them in with the rest of the garbage and distribute the trash bags and garbage cartons in front of buildings and stores three and four blocks from the bar. When we get back I give him a few bucks, tell him to help himself behind the bar and pour me a tall scotch with rocks, lock up and he walks me to the hotel and says looking at the sky “Nicer night tonight isn't it?” and I say “They're all the same.”

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