Life for all of This
{Audio and commentary linked below the story.}
A lot of ex-cons and drunks lived in the building. My room was the corner spot on the 3rd floor. The old man in the room next to me was deaf. The girl in the room across from me was a diagnosed schizophrenic. She almost never wore clothes. She was maybe 25. The government gave her 500 dollars a month. She kept her door open. Big black men walked in there and shut the door. It was a shitty place to live. The bathroom was never occupied when I had to use it. I was the only one in the building who showered regularly. But the toilet was well used. Every time I walked in there I came face to face with a bowl full of dead shit and sometimes a syringe on the floor. The bathrooms on the other floors were worse. I had a sink in my room. I pissed in the sink late at night. I was the youngest tenant, and the only one with a job. I had to walk past the landlord’s office to get up to my room. I’d walk in and deal with him.
“How was workin’ tonight, young man?”
“It was work.”
“Anybody asks you anything about this building you tell them you don’t know.” “Right.”
“Don’t tell them my name, neither.”
“I’d rather die.”
“And don’t bring no girls up there, neither.”
“Alright, Dave.”
“Fact, don’t bring nobody up there.”
“Got it.”
It was almost the same scene every night. I’d get in my room and shut the door. Then he’d knock. “It’s Dave.”
He’d sit on my bed. Dave was tall and slim and black. Dave smoked menthols. He was fifty. He had the job and nothing else. I never saw him laugh. The world was out to get him. He sat down and lit up. I leaned on the desk. “Feels like I just saw you, Dave.” He nodded to my typewriter. “You writin’ stories ‘bout me an’ this hotel?”
“No.”
“See to it you don’t.”
“Let me have a menthol, Dave.”
“Can’t do it. I have one every hour. I have the pack timed.”
“Bullshit. You’re on your second smoke since I walked in.”
“Still can’t do it.”
I lit one of my own, “Dave, and don’t take this personally, you need to get out of the building once in a while. This place is getting to you.”
“Can’t leave. One a you might try somethin’ on me.”
“Like what?”
“Sneak somebody in, move out without notice. I run a tight ship here.”
“The place is fucking destroyed, man.”
“You have any stories about me here?” “Seriously, Dave. Take a walk down 23rd or something. Ease your mind.”
The front buzzer sounded. Somebody had walked in downstairs. He jumped up and ran out of the room. I locked the door, closed the blinds and laid in bed. I listened to the street and the wind, the hours taken by the jobs and the rain, the repeating day and night varied only by a new tenant getting the boot or a new story that I would start and maybe finish. The winter and the cancer air of the hotel had become a morbid process, and my job was another tumor that had grown from it. I closed my eyes and thought about hot sand.
My manager was worse than my landlord. Her name was Shelly. Shelly was 6 feet tall. Once I called her Michelle. She told me she wasn’t a Michelle. I’d see her in Chinatown once in a while with her boyfriend. Her boyfriend worked in the kitchen. They lived together. She had to have a spotlight shining on her. She’d walk back into the kitchen with her long bird legs and long black straw hair.
“I wish these guys would leave me alone! I keep telling them: I HAVE A BOYFRIEND!”
Which she never did. She never told them. Her boyfriend was short and muscular. I didn’t like him. His brain was propelled by jealousy. He threatened me every other day. “Hey, man, when you talk to Shelly you keep it professional.”
“Give it a fucking break, Manny.”
“You just keep it professional.”
There was nothing professional about the job. I was either sick from the food or I was dodging the old gay men who lived in the smoking section. One time a professional basketball player stayed at the hotel. Shelly was on fire. She was going to his room and bothering him. She came into the kitchen. I had just turned in an order. Manny took the ticket.
“What the fuck’s this word?”
The word was Benedict.
“The word is Benedict. Eggs Benedict.”
“You sure?”
“Poached eggs over English muffins with hollandaise sauce.”
“Don’t tell me how to do MY job, motherfucker.”
Shelly came in around the corner. Her face was weak and crazy. A film of sweat formed tiny beads on her make-up. She was playing with her hair.
“Manny, can you handle things down here for a minute?”
Manny’s eyes lit up. He looked around and pressed his tongue against his cheek, “Yeah, I can handle it, baby.”
“Good. I’m taking Jamal Dupree a fruit basket. His team lost the game. I want to make sure he stays here next year.”
Manny was horrified. “Why the hell you doin’ that? He’s just a big dumb ape. He’ll get over it.”
She tossed her hair behind her shoulder. “Manny, I don’t appreciate your tone right now. We are working. I am the manager. I am trying to secure this account. You have nothing to worry about.”
She took off. Manny went to work. Half an hour later Shelly hadn’t returned. I walked into the kitchen and folded napkins. Manny was on the other side of the wheel. He talked to me through a skillet. It hung there between us.
“Don’t you say a fuckin’ word, prick. You so much as give me one of those smartass looks of yours and I’ll break your fuckin’ nose.”
I’d been putting up with him for two months. I never said anything to him because I didn’t want to lose my job. But the job wasn’t worth it anymore.
“Tell you what, you sorry sack of shit, after your girl gets done screwing that big black cock I might even take a shot at her.”
“Your fuckin’ order’s up, dead man.”
But after work he had a fight with Shelly. I was waiting for him by the back door. He walked by in a huff. “Your lucky day, motherfucker.”
I never got to fight Manny because he had narced me off to Shelly about what I’d said to him. Shelly kept me after work. I sat across from her in her little office downstairs. “We need to talk about what you said to Manny.”
I lied through my teeth, “Shelly, I only said that to get to him. I don’t think you would fool around like that. Manny’s just worried that I’m going to try something with you. I would never do something like that.”
Her face changed entirely. It was pathetic. “Why not?”
“Well, for one, you’re with Manny. For two, you’re my boss. And for three, let’s face it, you’re way out of my league.”
Her eyes lit up like Manny’s. They both had dull and dumb eyes.
“I was going to fire you. I called you in here to let you go.”
She raised an eyebrow at me. I sat back and lit a smoke. It wasn’t worth it. Her and her long bird legs and long black straw hair. But it was mostly her face, the way she needed attention. She would dry up and blow away without it. But sitting there facing the end of my job it occurred to me that I didn’t want to look for another one. It also occurred to me that I would have sex with her, if I had met her in a bar and I was leaving town the next day, some circumstance like that. For a second I thought of walking in Manny’s shoes. I’d rather eat a bullet.
She crossed her bird legs and smiled at me.
“I never knew you felt that way.”
“I’m just saying.”
We heard the back door open. A pair of shoes came running down the hallway. There was a slip, a grunt, and then walking. I shook my head at the desk. Manny peeked his head around the corner. She stared at him. “Sit down, Manny.”
He sat down next to me. She cocked her head at him, “I don’t want any more trouble between you two. Shake hands.”
I smiled at Manny and put my hand out. “I ain’t shakin’ his fuckin’ hand, Shelly.” “Manny, shake his hand.” He did it. It killed him. She told him to wait in the car. She had to tell him a few times. He left. I asked her, “How’s Dupree?”
“Oh, he’s fine. We had a good talk...”
I put out my smoke. “I guess I’ll be leaving.”
She uncrossed her bird legs and sat forward.
“I should go, too. Listen, you were wrong about my being out of your league. I want you to know that.”
“Thanks, Shelly. See you on Monday.”
She watched me leave. I walked down Burnside and bought a coffee. I walked the river and sat next to a sleeping bum. There was another bench empty, but it was covered in bird shit. A boat hauling a barge floated by. The bum shifted and made a loud honking sound. I got up and walked into downtown. I bought a drink and watched the people on the sidewalk. It had been a short summer. There was a week of frozen streets. It was getting ready snow again. I walked into Chinatown and ate a cheap lunch. Down on the street two cops were walking up on an old man with a string of shopping carts. He had the carts tied together. One of the cops nodded to him.
“This your train?”
The old man lit a rolled cigarette and smoked through his long beard.
“It ain’t no fuckin’ train. But, yeah, it’s mine.”
I heard them going back and forth behind me. Portland was soft but it was hard. I didn’t know anybody anymore. I had been there six years. There was sometimes a flurry of people, then it would die off, then there was a girl here and there, and she would die off. I hadn’t had a girl in almost a year. I mostly stayed in my room.
I opened the drapes and wrote about the job, the building, Dave and the schizophrenic. For some reason, I laid down and jacked off thinking about fucking Shelly. I had her on her desk and her bird legs were wrapped around my waist, her thirsty hair soaked with sweat. It was a good one. I shot over my shoulder.
The phone rang. It was her. “Hello, Kurt.”
“Hello.”
“It’s Shelly.”
“I know.”
“This is awkward. Listen, Manny just put his fist through our living room window and walked out. Apparently he was lingering by the door after he left and heard everything I said to you. Pretty low, if you ask me.”
“Oh, he’s a fucker.”
I wiped off with my sheet and pulled my shirt back down.
She sighed. “You really threw me for a loop in my office, what you said to me.”
“It’s alright, Shelly. No need for me to go back there.”
“Thank you, Kurt. I really appreciate that. Listen, why don’t I stop by for a little while?”
I hung up. It rang back and I unplugged it. I heard Dave knocking on the door across from me, yelling about someone being in her room after ten pm. It had cost me next to nothing to live there, but next to nothing is what it was. I sat up and found my sweater and pulled my duffel bag from under the bed.