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Fifth Street Memoirs, ( first draft )
She . . . sits in a rotted folding chair
at the entrance to the “Tuesdays Free Soap Laund-ro-mat”, staring out at
nothing. A young boy crouches in the
street along the curbside. He is busy
grasping fistfuls of pebbles and stones, carefully plucking out the smallest to
save the largest stones in his hand. A
five year olds past time, they are released just a few seconds later, only to
be retrieved once more from the pavement.
Retrieve the stones, inspect and release, grasp, inspect, and release,
over and over again, while he waits for his mother’s laundry.
He . . . stands on the street corner,
ruddy red faced, happily holding his dog’s leash, watching each passer-by with
intense concentration, yet speaks not a word.
Every day, at all types of hours, he stands his guard. From across the way he seems a pleasant
enough sort with his short pear shaped body, stubby legs and large generous
hands. Yet, upon closer proximity, just
before your own eyes reach out to say a silent “Hello”. The warmth has suddenly
chilled. His smile does not waiver, it’s
pasted to the corners of his mouth but not quite able to reach his eyes, just
not able, to fill their emptiness with joy.
He is the clown man.
She . . . pokes the barren, plastic
covered box spring with the toe of her shoe.
The floor is littered with trash, stained with drippings left to ferment
on the tiles, her nose crinkles. “There
will be roaches flying into your room tonight!”
Roaches?
You mean . . . cockroaches?
He . . .
turns the corner to enter his room and low undertones of murmurs follow
as he begins to close the door. She sits
on the bed, peeking around to catch a quick glimpse before the door is shut and
locked. What a pretty young girl, long
black hair smooth and shiny with tiny ringlets at her backside, wearing slim
pants and a matching coat of black nylon and goose down. Sometime later, the door opens and the man
emerges, pulling up his pants, while trying to clasp his belt. Rage boils up and fear for the girl hits the
back of the throat. “You can’t make a
living on your knees or on your stomach for the rest of your life!” One of the maintenance men in the building is
heard yelling through the door the next day.
“If you don’t have a hundred dollars, it’s time to go. “
She . . . shrieks and runs, leaving the old man in a
heap on the box spring. The men pack his
belongings in heavy duty plastic bags, grumbling and complaining of the mess. While the old man slumps against the wall
repeating. . .
“Where did
she go? Doesn’t she know I love her?”
Sirens
blare loud enough to wake the dead.
Where is the fire station?
Raising the thin white blinds with a yank, I squint down four flights to
the street into the blackness. A
flashing blue and green neon sign announces Corona and Bud Light available in
the ‘Bella Villa Billares’ below.
The shrieking persists, echoing off the
surrounding buildings. Where is the
fire? Slowly, the rhythm of the neon
light overpowers the alarm in my head.
No red and yellow warning lights appear to confirm the sirens, only the
blue and green, the blue and green soothing the senses.
It is my
first night here in my new, tiny, little, Itty- bitty, microscopic room. It is yet to be seen why I’ve come to reside
here. The rooming house is in the very
heart of the city, is this a city? I
forget. It doesn’t matter, I have enough
to worry about with two bars beneath me, and I and not a drinker have a low
tolerance for drunks. Which most people
end up being by the end of the night at bars, I would assume, yes?
Nope, I haven’t been a very social animal
lately at all, come to think of it.
I’ve moved.
Or shall I say? I have been
thrown? Into the lion’s den, an
extremely crowded one in my opinion, but I’ve recently been informed that most
cities are just that, crowded. Is
Chelsea considered a city? I remember it
lost the privilege of that title many years ago when I was just a child. It’s a black top jungle out there from what
I can make of it.
Welcome to
its memoirs.
Hopefully,
the days of talking to the walls are over.
People who are alone for extended periods of
time do just that, talk.
Continuously, to a wall . . . or another human being makes no difference. Not in my case anyway. It feels sort of unhealthy. So I’ve made a decision.
Continuously, to a wall . . . or another human being makes no difference. Not in my case anyway. It feels sort of unhealthy. So I’ve made a decision.
Let me put
it this way. I had a very animated
discussion, on my capacity to have a worthwhile conversation. It wasn’t that I was talking to myself, I
just happened to be alone at the time.
The outcome came as quite a relief. It was decided without a doubt that
I happen to be great company, the life of the party, so what gives?
The
first introduction of one of the only male Caucasians in this rooming house
came with a knock on my door. “Corinne,
I’d like to introduce you to your closest neighbor. “
“Hello” he said, “I have a vacuum cleaner.”
“Hello” I responded “yes, that’s nice, my name is Corinne, and yours?”
“If you need it, I have a vacuum cleaner.” Came his reply.
“Oh do you have a rug?”
“NO!” He glared back at me as if
offended.
“Okay, and your name is?” Slam,
his door echoed shut in an instant, I stood there amazingly confused. “Nice intro Murph, he really wants me to use
his vacuum cleaner is there something wrong with my room? Am I too dusty? Is it the cigarettes?”
“No Corinne, he was just trying to be nice.”
“Oh, okay then, thanks.”
Later, I was to be made aware that Murph
had a tendency to sniff doorknobs in his spare time, (maybe once or twice every
few hours,) and go through the trash barrels on each floor.
Meanwhile, my closest neighbor is a male
prostitute in the Boston area, whom enjoys Heinekens and living in a rooming
house with his rent paid in advance. My
decision to break out of my shell and be more sociable creature had to be
greatly revamped. Now was not the time
or place to make new friends. Still I
tried.
She . . . adjusts the strap of her bra from her shoulder. It’s black satin edges dig red marks into
her ashen skin. She pays no notice. Her eyes wonder, downcast, matching the expression
on her lips. And so it goes, night
after night, same young girl, same stoop and the same lost expression. No one stops to talk to her, not even the
dates that parole the street all hours of the day and night. It gives one pause, and the question
emerges. Why is she exempt from the game?
He. . .leans against the mailbox as if
guarding its contents. A job each drug
dealer gets the privilege of depending on the day, time frame, or his
availability. They all look-a-like: baseball hat, shirt with matching shorts,
some wear socks, most do not. Not one
of them is “white.” And if someone of
the white persuasion were to talk to them, instant suspicion engulfs their eyes
almost tangible in its ferocity.
She . . . stands in front of the burger
joint, hoping to catch someone with an extra square. An older man calls from across the
street. She crosses over to him in hope
that he smokes a regular brand.
“So how bad is your habit?” he blurts out, unabashed.
“What?”
“Your
habit,” he laughs. “You’re a heroin
addict.”
“What the? How the hell? Who says
I’m a?“
“Your
standing with four heroin addicts, birds of a feather flock together.”
“I’m not standing with anyone, I’m just standing in front of the store
hoping to find a cigarette.”
“Well
I’d watch where you stand.”
He. .
.waits by the door front watching where she stands.
She . . . is found days later, throat
slashed, slumped against the door sill.
Someone mentioned as they passed how she resembled a pile of desserted
clothes left along-side the closed doors of Salvation Army. No one mentions the blood. No one mentions her family. No one knew her real name.
I have to jot down my chicken dinner experience. It’s just too much to bear alone, someone
tell me. How does a blind couple bake a
chicken? Sincerely, how do they know if
it’s cooked? Especially chicken, it’s a
dangerous food to eat raw, in any form.
Yet, here I am, confronted with a blind couple’s chicken dinner. Um, do I eat it? It’s about all the control I can muster not
to ask one of them their culinary secrets.
I have a hard enough time already trying to stop this fantasy of an
enraged chicken flying down my corridor in route to a daring escape. Do not ask Corinne, Do not ask. Graciously accept their chicken and smile. It doesn’t mean you have to eat it.
See why I
have this perpetual need to double check with myself?
And while
I’m at it, what the heck is really going on with the gay mans fixation to his
vacuum cleaner?
Or Murph’s
dire need to stay up all hours of the night, walking the halls and jingling his
keys like a dinner bell on the old farmstead?
Who the
heck is Cuba? Isn’t it a continent? And,
why is his name called from dusk to dawn?
Which only makes one wonder . . .
Where the
hell are the doorbells? Or, more
importantly why don’t we have any?
How about mail? Are we allowed mail? I
haven’t received even junk mail for two months.
Is the
blind couple the only ones who speak English in the neighborhood? And if so?
Isn’t it a damn shame neither one of them can read it?
Why do
they seem to be the only people in the building who receive mail?
And the
questions continue, the list grows helplessly longer, with no sign of relief,
tune in next time when one hears the blind man ask. . .”Do you like pork?”
It wasn’t
hard to recognize a couple of international travelers. The first moment I entered the front door
African masks and roughly hewn faces on totem poles stared back at me in mock
severity.
Paintings of acrylic and oils
dwarfed the walls. Massive book shelves
stuffed with books. Their side tables
topped with atlases, some old, some new smelled of antiques. It was a museum of the couple’s
lifetime. I felt priviledged to stand in
the foyer mouth agape, eyes wide, just itching to touch each book, dying to ask
a billion questions.
I came there hoping to tutor
computers, by the looks of things I was to be t heir pupil. Travel was not my forte. I’ve had the experience of seeing my
homeland. The interior of the United States and parts of Canada and, I knew the
changes of textures and climates, the changes in soil, the gradual shift in the
size and shape of wildlife and their environments. But to see Paris! Or climb the cliffs of Dover! The computer keyboard became a fading
memory. Here sat a treasure only a mile
from my little room on Fifth Street.
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