Charles Bukowski - Short Stories Collection - LightNovelsOnl.com
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He leaned over and spit into his filthy spitoon, then worked at his wad again, drawing his cheeks in over his toothless mouth.
"What do I do?" I asked.
"You'll be tole what to do!"
"I mean, what is it?"
"Railroad track gang, someplace west of Sacramento."
"Sacramento?"
"You heard me, G.o.d d.a.m.n it. Now I'm a busy man. You wanna sign or not?"
I signed the list he had on the clipboard. I was # 27. I even signed my own name.
He handed me a ticket. "You show up at gate 21 with your gear. We got a special train for you guys."
I slipped the ticket into my empty wallet.
He spit again. "Now, well, look, kid, I know you're a little goofy. This line takes care of a lot of guys like you. We help human-ity. We're nice folks. Always remember old - - - - - - - - - - lines and put in a good word for us here and there. And when you get out on those tracks, listen to your foreman. He's on your side. you can save money out on that desert. G.o.d knows, there's no place to spend it. But on Sat.u.r.day night, kid, on Sat.u.r.day night-"
He leaned to his spitoon again, came back: "Why h.e.l.l, on a Sat.u.r.day night you go to town, get drunk, catch a cheap b.l.o.w.j.o.b from a wetback Mexican senorita and come back in feeling good. Those b.l.o.w.j.o.bs suck themisery right out of a man's head. I started on the gang, now I'm here. Good luck to you, kid."
"Thank you, sir."
"Now get the h.e.l.l out of here! I'm busy!-"
I arrived at gate 21 at the time instructed. By my train were all these guys standing there in rags, stinking, laughing, smoking rolled cigarettes. I went over and stood behind them. They needed haircuts and shaves and they acted brave and were nervous at the same time.
Then a Mexican with a knife scar on his cheek told us to get on. We got on. You couldn't see through the windows.
I took the last seat in the back of our car. The others all sat up in front, laughing and talking. One guy pulled out a half pint of whiskey and 7 or 8 of them each had a little suck.
Then they began looking back at me. I began hearing voices and they weren't all in my head.
"What's wrong with that sona b.i.t.c.h?"
"He think he's better than us?"
"He's gonna hafta work with us, man."
"Who's he think he is?"
I looked out the window, I tried to, the thing hadn't been cleaned in 25 years. The train began to move out and I was on there with them. The train began to move out and I was on there with them. There were about 30 of them. They didn't wait very long. I stretched out on my seat and tried to sleep.
"SWOOs.h.!.+"
Dust blew up into my face and eyes. I heard somebody under my seat. There was the blowing sound again and a ma.s.s of 25 year old dust rose up into my nostrils, my mouth, my eyes, my eyebrows. I waited. Then it happened again. A real good blast. Whoever was under there was getting d.a.m.ned good at it.
I leaped up. And I heard all this sound from under my seat and then he was out from under there and running up toward the front. He threw himself into a seat, trying to be part of the gang, but I heard his voice: "If he comes up here I want you fellows to help me! Promise to help me if he comes up here!"
I didn't hear any promises, but he was safe: I couldn't tell one from the other.
Just before we got out of Louisiana I had to walk up front for a cup of water. They watched me.
"Look at him. Look at him."
"Ugly b.a.s.t.a.r.d."
"Who's he think he is?"
"Son of a b.i.t.c.h, we'll get him when we get him out over those tracks alone, we'll make him cry, we'll make him suck d.i.c.k!"
"Look! He's got that paper cup upsidedown! He's drinking from the wrong end! Look at him! He's drinking from the little end! That guy's nuts!"
"Wait'll we get him over those tracks, we'll make him suck d.i.c.k!"
I drained the paper cup, refilled it and emptied it again, wrong Sideup. I threw the cup into the container and walked back. I heard: "Yeah," he acts nuts. Maybe he had a split-up with his girl friend."
"How's a guy like that gonna get a girl?"
"I dunno. I seen crazier things than that happen."- We were over Texas when the Mexican foreman came through with the canned food. He handed out the cans. Some of them didn't have any labels on them and were badly dented-up.
He came back to me.
"You Bukowski?"
"Yes."
He handed me a can of Spam and wrote "75" under column "F." I could see that I was charged with "$45.90" under column "T." Then he handed me a small can of beans. "45" he wrote down under column "F.
He walked back toward the front of the car.
"Hey! Where the h.e.l.l's a can opener? How can we eat this stuff without a can opener?" somebody asked him.
The foreman sw.a.n.g through the vestibule and was gone.
There were water stops in Texas, bunches of green. At each stop 2 or 3 or 4 guys leaped off. When we got to El Paso there were 23 left out of the In El Paso they pulled our traincar out and the train went on. the Mexican forman came through and said, "We must stop at El Paso. You will stay at this hotel."
He gave out tickets.
"These are your tickets to the hotel. You will sleep there. In the morning you will take traincoach #24 to Los Angeles and then on to Sacramento. These are your hotel tickets."
He came up to me again.
"You Bukowski?"
"Yes."
"Here's your hotel."
He handed me the ticket and wrote in "12.50" under my "L" column.
n.o.body had been able to get their cans of food open. They would be picked up later and given to the next crew across.
I threw my ticket away and slept in the park about two blocks from the hotel. I was awakened by the roaring of alligators, one in particular. I could see 4 or 5 alligators in the pond, and perhaps there were more. There were two sailors dressed in their whites. One sailor was in the pond, drunk, pulling at the tail of an alligator. The alligator was angry but slow and could not turn its neck enough to get at the sailor. The other sailor stood on the sh.o.r.e, laughing, with a young girl. Then while the sailor in the pond was still fighting the alligator, the other sailor and the girl walked away. I truned over and slept.
On the ride to Los Angeles, more and more of them jumped off at the waterstops. When we reached Los Angeles there were 16 left of the 31.
The Mexican foreman came through the train.
"We will be in Los Angeles for two days. You will catch the 9:30 a.m. train, gate 21. Wednesday morning, traincoach 42. It is written upon the cover which goes around your hotel tickets. You are also being issued food-ration coupons which can be honored at French's Caf+, Main Street."
"He handed out 2 little booklets, one labeled ROOM, the other FOOD.
"You Bukowsko?" he asked.
"Yes," I said.
He handed me my booklets. And added under my "L" col umn: 12.80 and under my "F" column, 6.00.
I came out of Union Station and while I was cutting across the plaza I noticed 2 small guys who had been on the train with me. They were walking faster than I and cut across to my right. I looked at them.
They both got these big grins on and said, "Hi! How ya doin?"
"I'm doin' all right."
They walked faster and slid across Los Angeles street toward MainIn the caf+ the boys were using their food coupons for beer. I used my food coupons for beer. Beer was just ten cents a gla.s.s. Most of them got drunk very fast. I stood down at the end of the bar. They didn't talk about me anymore.
I drank up all my coupons and then sold my lodging tickets to another b.u.m for 50 cents. I had 5 more beers and walked out.
I began walking. I walked north. Then I walked east. Then north again. Then I was walking along the junkyards where all the broken-down cars were stacked. A guy had once told me, "I sleep in a different car each night. Last night I slept in a Ford, the night before in a Chevy. Tonight I am going to sleep in a Cadillac."
I found a place with the gate chained but the gate door was bent and I was thin enough to slide my body between the chains and the gate and the lock. I looked around until I found a Cadillac. I didn't know the year. I got into the back seat and slept.
It must have been about 6 a.m. in the morning when I heard this kid screaming. He was about 15 years old and had this toy base ball bat in his hand: "Get out of there! Get out of our car, you dirty b.u.m!"
The kid looked frightened. He had on a white t s.h.i.+rt and tennis shoes and there was a tooth missing from the center of his mouth.
I got out.
"Stand back!" he yelled. "Stand back, stand back!" He point ed the bat at me.
I slowly walked toward the gate, which was then open but not very far.
Then an old guy, about 50, fat and sleepy, stepped out of a tarpaper shack.
"Dad!" The kid yelled, "This man was in one of our cars! I found him in the back seat asleep!"
"Is that right?"
"Yeah, that's right, Dad! I found him asleep in the back seat of one of our cars!"
"What were you doing in our car, Mr.?"
The old guy was nearer to the gate than I was but I kept moving toward it.
"I asked you, *What were you doing in our car?'"
I moved closer to the gate.
The old guy grabbed the bat from the kid, ran up to me and jammed the end of it into my belly, hard.
"oof!" I went, "G.o.d o mighty!"
I couldn't straighten up. I backed away. The kid took courage when he saw that.
"I'll get him, Dad! I'll get him!"
The kid grabbed the bat from the old man and began swinging it. He hit me almost everywhere. On the back, the sides, all along both legs, on the knees, the ankles. All I could do was protect my head. I kept my arms up around my head and he beat me on the arms and elbows. I backed up against the wire fence.
"I'll get him, Dad! I'll get him!"
The kid wouldn't stop. Now and then the bat got through to my head.
Finally the old man said, "O.k., that's enough son."
The kid kept swinging the bat.
"Son, I said, *That's enough.'"
I turned and held myself up by the wires of the fence. For a moment I couldn't move. They watched me. I finally let go and was able to stand. I limped toward the gate.
"Let me get him again, Dad!"
"No, son."
I got through the gate and walked north. As I began to walk, everything began to tighten. Everything was beginning to swell. My steps became shorter. I knew that I wouldn't be able to move much further. There were only more junkyards. Then I saw a vacant lot between two of them. I walked into the lot and turned my ankle in a hole, right off. I laughed. The lot sloped downwards. Then I tripped Over a hard brush branch which would not give. When I got up again my right palm had been cut by the edge of a piece of green gla.s.s. Winebottele. I pulled the gla.s.s out. The blood came through the dirt. I brushed the dirt off and sucked against the wound. When I fell the next time, I rolled over on my back, screamed once with pain, then looked up into the morning sky. I was back in my hometown, Los Angeles. Small gnats whirled about my face. I closed my eyes.
All The p.u.s.s.y We Want Harry and Duke. The bottle sat between in a cheap hotel in downtown L.A. It was Sat.u.r.day night in one of the cruelest towns in the world. Harry's face was quite round and stupid with just a tip of a nose looking out and you hated his eyes; in fact, you hated Harry when you looked at him, so you didn't look at him. Duke was a little younger, a good listener, with just the slightest of smiles on when he listened. He liked to listen; people were his biggest show and there wasn't any admission charge. Harry was unemployed and Duke was a janitor. They'd both done time and would be in jail again. They knew it. It didn't matter.
The 5th was about one-third finished and there were empty beercans on the floor. They rolled their cigarettes with the easy calm of men who had lived hard and impossible lives before the age of 35 and were still alive. They knew it was all a bucket of s.h.i.+t but they refused to quit.
"See," said Harry, taking a drag, "I chose you, man. I can trust you. You won't panic. I think your car can make it. We split it right down the middle."
"Tell me about it," said Duke.