Tuesday
colder than a witch's tit. "I told that son of a bitch
Lester to kiss my ass," Ronnie MacKenzie told Ferreira and the
other two as he walked into the break room, tossing his muddy gloves
in the middle of the table. Joey leapt to his feet, brushing past two
other groundsmen and darting across the room with surprising
quickness for his bulk.
"Jesus
Christ, watch out for my donuts, man," Joey grabbed the
cellophane box off the table and retreated to his corner, glaring.
"That's my lunch." He merged back down into the tattered
beige couch and the whole pile sighed and burped, picking crumbs off
the top of its belly. The others went back to pouring coffee and
unwrapping sandwiches, trying not to bump into each other. Half hour
for lunch, then back out in the snow. Joey had not even taken off his
boots and snow pants, just stretched out with the big white
headphones clamped on.
"It's
fucking age discrimination," Ronnie Mack said, "I told
Lester he'd be in front of the labor board and the EEOC and the
fucking Herald. He looked like he shit himself."
"Shit
his bag you mean," chortled Ferreira. "That motherfucker
hasn't taken a honest shit in years now, I wish he'd just kick it and
get it over."
Ronnie
Mack slumped over the table. He had the sandwich Leenie made him but
he needed to sit a while, working his neck and fingers to get the
numbness out, while the younger guys chomped on their food like dogs,
staring at porn on magazines or the desktop. You guys'll see how it
feels someday, he thought, to drag your sorry ass out of bed to do
this shit every day. Or else you won't. He squinted at the massage
advertisement on the back of Norm's Hustler, trying to figure out if
that was a woman or a man in a fucking leotard, and then his knees
and shoulders started complaining and he felt like he had to piss,
but he knew he really didn't because nothing goddamn works anymore.
"It's
a raw deal, though," Ferreira said. "You gave them what?
Twenty some years? Snow days, heat waves, commencement, you name it.
We make this place run and then they toss us in the trash."
"Twenty
six actually," Ronnie Mack said. "Lester said it wasn't his
call, it came from upstairs." The others snorted.
"It
always does," Ferreira said. "Shit rolling downhill."
"Not
for nothing," Eddie Junior said, "My dad said that Lester
was the biggest fuck off on grounds crew until he made supervisor.
Didn't work three hours in a day."
"That
guy had more beds around campus than a MASH unit," Ronnie
Mack said. Norm's crew-cut head, small and square atop a neck like a
four-by-four from weightlifting and steroids, swiveled from Ronnie
Mack and back to Eddie Junior. The whole conversation would be back
in Lester's office by the end of the day, they knew, and the
supervisor would bring it up again when they went in to ask for
vacation. Eddie Junior and Ronnie Mack glanced at each other: fuck
'em.
"Can't
you guys relax and eat for once!" shouted Joey suddenly, lifting
his head slightly like he was waking from a dream, then plopping
down, blunt features screwed up in a scowl.
"Poor
bastard," muttered Ferreira. The men eyed the couch, which Joey
had dragged in from an alley one overtime night, while the thumping
bass from his headphones reverberated softly. There was talk about
throwing the thing into the river so he couldn't find it and drag it
back in, because its air of mold and piss mixed in the close room
with the vapors of coffee, sweat, cigarettes, mud, mulch, oil, farts
and antifreeze, not in a good way; one day soon they would do it.
He groaned, lurching to his feet. Joey sitting there like mickey the dunce. Ronnie Mack slapped Joey's boot sole and
the kid's eyes snapped open again, watery and feral.
"Gotta piss like a racehorse," he said, "meet us at the bobcat in fifteen minutes." Ronnie Mack straightened his hunched shoulders, wrapped in two layers of carhart. Although the the new hires were required to wear university overcoats, he didn't care to; he was grandfathered. For the most part they're good kids, Ronnie thought, just don't know their ass from a hole in the ground. Joey was the weakest link, likely to dump a tub of fertilizer, or to grab his nearest co-worker for a rambling, self-pitying story that took a half hour if you let it, but the others weren't far off. Their worry's not me, he thought, it's that one of them's going to get stuck driving with Joey. Mostly good kids; Norm though, Ronnie Mack wouldn't piss on if the guy was on fire.
"Gotta piss like a racehorse," he said, "meet us at the bobcat in fifteen minutes." Ronnie Mack straightened his hunched shoulders, wrapped in two layers of carhart. Although the the new hires were required to wear university overcoats, he didn't care to; he was grandfathered. For the most part they're good kids, Ronnie thought, just don't know their ass from a hole in the ground. Joey was the weakest link, likely to dump a tub of fertilizer, or to grab his nearest co-worker for a rambling, self-pitying story that took a half hour if you let it, but the others weren't far off. Their worry's not me, he thought, it's that one of them's going to get stuck driving with Joey. Mostly good kids; Norm though, Ronnie Mack wouldn't piss on if the guy was on fire.
In
the break room, Norm lowered his magazine and turned to Ferreira.
"Did he really tell the old man to fuck himself?"
"The
hell do I know, I wasn't there," Ferreira snapped. He fished a
clot of tobacco out of its bag and tucked it under his drooping gray
moustache, his dark eyes a blank.
Norm
jerked his head toward the snoozing Joey. "Who gets him?"
Ferreira shrugged. The crew filed out quietly, careful not to wake
the kid; he would sleep until he was pushed outside by Lester, who
would hunt him out and yell until the old man's face glowed red.
Everyone
knew about the voluntary buy out offers going around to the older
guys. Supervisors muttered that taking the buyout was strongly
encouraged; that next would come the involuntary buy-outs for less
money, like they did us in 89. The witch of the west is swinging the
axe, not my fault it's your turn for an ass fucking. The university's
endowment dropped fifteen percent mil thanks to Bernie Madoff
etcetera, they said. Not that he would mind leaving so much, hasn't been too bad though actually. The people than the job. Working the system.
The
grounds crew had only twenty-two members left, to clear snow and
landscape and maintain the athletic fields and lawns on the sprawling
campus, which used to be done by fifty or so way back when, by Ronnie
Mack and Lester and a few other geezers who worked when the monks ran
the place. A lot of the work was done nowadays by crews of Mexicans
and Laotians who hopped off a truck in shirt sleeves and gym shoes to
shovel mulch or pressure wash bird shit off the steps; now the
college was buying out even more of the crew. Fucking immigrants
gonna wreck this country, said Ferreira, who came from the Azores in
1971. Back then we got in line, he carped to Andres, a two-year man
from someplace else they don't speak English, and the two new hires,
Tibetans or Sherpas or wherever the hell they came from, who never
talked to anybody and worked double time, didn't even fucking wear
gloves. So you want I kiss your ass? asked Andres.
Like
I said, Ferreira told him, get in line.
Eddie
Junior was waiting for Ronnie Mack at the clock, shifting on his
feet. Looks like the old man, who took the buyout before last, only
bald and four inches taller; he's too fucking smart for that place,
Ed Senior had said to Ronnie Mack up at the Eagles, but just try and
tell a kid anything. You and me, growing up around here we thought we
died and went to heaven when we got in at Saint Francis. Set for
life.
"You
gonna ask me to dance?" Ronnie Mack said.
"Sorry
to hear you're on the list," said Eddie Junior. "Are you
taking the money?"
"I
don't know, to be honest. My ass is in a crack but what are you gonna
do?"
"Well,"
the kid glanced around, lowering his voice. Ed was right, he kind of
doesn't talk right for the place, precise and quiet, but the kid
works hard anyway. Doesn't kiss anybody's ass. "Me and Ferreira
were talking, and I was talking to my cousin with the union. My dad
said you guys were against that before..."
"Long
time ago."
"Well,
maybe we could do something," Eddie Junior shrugged. "I
don't want to go through the same thing in five years, nobody does."
"I
don't think so, kid," Ronnie Mack said, "I'll work
something out on my own, thanks."
That's
something new anyway, he thought on the drive home. When I started
here we didn't speak unless somebody asked a question. Which they
didn't. Lester who was drunk half the time, even then, but knew how
to brown-nose drunk or sober; Mike the mechanic, who must have
showered once a month; and the big white-haired quiet guy whose
brother was a state assemblyman, what was his name, he'd served
fifteen years out west for gunning down two Italians in a truck
hijacking. Like to see what would've happened if I talked to that guy
about a fucking union.
"OK
day?" Leenie called from the living room. His heart lifted a
little to hear her out bed, talking instead of getting up to slam the
door. Nobody could blame her for any of it; like to see somebody try.
His daughter is on a reclining chair in front of the TV with a blue
blanket pulled up to her chin, watching the doorway he pokes his head
through.
"How's
the cold hun?"
"Won't
kill me, how's work?" She has this new, clipped way of speaking,
like she picked it up on some cop show; for all he knows it's how all
the ninth-graders in Saugus talk. "Everybody still busting
balls?"
"Hey,
language!"
Leenie
giggles. "It's such a gender normative phrase."
"In
English?"
"Nothing,
dad. Can we get Chinese, I don't want any more spaghetti. We eat too
much wheat, did you know it contributes to global warming? I mean,
that wheat cultivation is like the second biggest contributor or
something to global climate change, actually crisis, to global
climate crisis?"
"Don't
I have to drive the car to Mandarin Kitchen, how does that help save
the planet?" She's a sharp kid, reading all the time, watching
TV all the time but at least it's history, science, lions hunting
water buffalo; the cruel beauty of nature or whatever.
"I'll
drive. That work?"
"You're
sick, remember?"
"Dad,
for real. I'm tired of it."
"Yeah
OK OK, you wore me down." The thing is she's taking sick days
all the time now, one or two days a week in the fall. After her
mother died she was out of school the rest of that year but the past
two were more or less OK, the usual shit, not a big surprise when the
a kid has to move from the Cape to the North Shore, down the street
from bowling alleys and tiki bars, to live with her dad who she'd
heard practically her whole life wasn't the sharpest knife in the
drawer. Other choice stories too, no doubt, some true.
"Laugh
about it if you want, it's really a problem," she said later
with her mouth full of chow mein. "An ice shelf the size of
Rhode Island just fell off of Antarctica, melted and fell off into
the ocean. It's moving so much faster than anyone predicted five
years ago, by the time I'm your age the weather is going to be
completely unrecognizable. The political irresponsibility is really
unforgiveable." She looked like a little kid, cheeks bulged
chomping out of her heart-shaped face, long hair pulled back so he
couldn't see the bleached streaks. Christ Almighty, it goes fast.
"Ah
hun, there's nothing we can do about that sitting here. They're not
gonna let Boston and New York go under water, they'll figure
something out."
"Or
else they won't," she shot back, his own snappy answer to her
complaints about not getting the car, the shoes she wanted, about his
curfew; I'm not going to have any friends left! My social development
will be impaired! Sharp kid. Gifted they said. By who?
Wednesday a hard freeze, the kind where your snot and breath form a
mat of ice on the front of your jacket collar and the students in the
coffee shop stare like fucking sasquatch just lumbered in after
chopping the ice off their driveways and sidewalks for two hours. A
group of the groundsmen retreated to the loading dock to drink coffee
and wait for the supervisors to figure out where they were, and
cajole and drive them back them back outside to put antifreeze down
on the stairways.
"I
never saw Joey move as fast as he did yesterday," Ferreira said
to Andres and Ronnie Mack, "Rescuing his donuts."
"I
did once," Ronnie Mack said. "So one day last August
Lester's up in the office, fucking shit faced, and he thinks it'd be
funny to call me on the radio and put me and Joey in the number six
loader. 'RacKenzie! Ru rutherfuckers rop the road a rand on the
riamond!' Three thirty in the afternoon. And I already put in like
five work orders on the number six truck and he threw them all in the
trash."
"Bad
brakes, right?" Ferreira said.
"Bad?
That piece of shit had no fucking brakes at all. So he busts my balls
by assigning me drive it on the field at three thirty, he knows I
park in the east lot so I got to go all the way back to the garage,
walk across campus, and hit rush hour by the time I get out."
"Why
he always fuck around you like that?" Andres asked.
"He's
gotta prove, I don't know, something. He sits up in that office all
fucking day watching the weather channel, drinking," Ronnie Mack
said, "So by that time of day, he's shit faced. So I say OK,
boss, and tell Joey, hey kid, whyn't you give it a try. 'Me?' he's
like, 'I ain't supposed to drive on account a my medication.' I tell
him, just back it up, slow and easy. That poor bastard jumps in,
fucking guns the engine, rams it into reverse, and BOOM."
"The
fence?"
"The
fucking pitching machine. That motherfucker cost eighty grand, and he
just levels it, doesn't even try to stop. But Joey's got his
headphones on so he doesn't hear it, runs over the machine and THEN
hits the fence, then he tries to brake but he can't, because number
six has no brakes, so he runs over the fire hydrant."
"It
a flood, man," Andres's shoulders shook with laughter. "I
run to the truck and Joe is looking, what? what? Lester run out and
start scream at Joe. The baseball coach run to Lester and tear a new
asshole."
Ronnie
Mack shook his head. "So I go on over and say to them, I was
afraid something like this would happen with those brakes, I'm pretty
sure there's a couple work orders in already. I mean, Joey's not
gonna get in trouble anyway, right?"
"Who
cousin is he?" Andres asked.
"Nephew,"
said Ferreira. "The witch of the east."
The
university is a thirty minute drive, on a good day; if you get on the
road at rush hour, it could be three hours. Ronnie Mack hired on when
the place almost doubled in size, buying a piece of industrial land
from a shuttered company to put up a medical school. It was a good
job at the time, when his friends were all re-enlisting, or driving
truck or unemployed. He should have gone for his plumbing or
electrical license, he knows; should have gone to school on the GI
Bill, should have given it a shot down south maybe. But there were
his parents, sick and aging, there his wife, who'd fucked his brains
out for a while in a two-story, with a yard, not too bad a deal there
for a while; there Leenie.
"Getting
warmer out there," he said to Leenie that evening. "Maybe a
nice day for school tomorrow."
"Wow,
great," she said with fake cheer. Like her mom, that time,
sarcastic; she had known it bothered him and would usually catch
herself and give him a little sideways look, a conspiratorial
pale-eyed smile: you and me.
"It's
been a cold winter though." He hated this feeling, when she
mumbled, didn't meet his eyes, poked dully at food; looking at a
wall. "So this global warming thing," he said, "You
see any chance of it kicking in any time soon?"
"It's
not a joke, OK? I couldn't even sleep last night. It could happen
like that, you know? Everybody talks about it like it's going to take
fifty years, or a hundred or whatever and a little hotter each year,
but the climate is a mystery and your industries are just like
messing around with it."
"Whoa,
my industries?"
"The
stuff you all built, the power plants and like cars or whatever, I
didn't do it. Everything might change all of a sudden, in like a
month or whatever. Did you ever think of that?" He hadn't.
Leenie shut the door to her room, not slamming it at least, and
turned on music. Emo, she'd said when he'd asked her. Crybaby music,
Norm had said one day in front of the campus center, as black-clad
students walked by; oh poor me, my life is sooo hard, I have to sing
all about it in my Emo band. I don't see how they can sing at all
with their pierced tongues and lips and shit.
Same
way you can talk so much to Lester with his prick in your mouth
maybe, Ronnie Mack had said, which got a laugh. Ferreira told him
later, I believe you're off that boy Norm's Christmas list this year.
Weather broke Thursday. By ten water dripped off the eaves of the
buildings and at noon a storm sewer backed up, flooding the street.
The crew cleared ice around the sewer for an hour before the city
crew came in to snake it, while lab assistants in white coats stared
down from the building's windows. They're cloning people up there,
said Joey, jerking his head toward the windows; people. By the time
they got back to the garage everybody was clustered by the clock,
poised to punch out.
Ever
since the buyout offers came around, he'd avoided the sympathetic
looks and the questions and waited for the others to leave, strolling
around back to smoke instead. He nodded to a tall, stooped man
already dragging on a cigarette outside the garage's back door.
"When
are you going to quit that shit?" Ronnie Mack said. Without
turning, the creased, ragged face focused one bright eye, and the
claw not clutching the cigarette jabbed its middle finger upward. "I
thought you were gonna get the patch."
"Oh,
I got the goddamn patch," said Lester, exhaling a column of
smoke. "Makes me dizzy when I smoke is all."
"Bad
for you."
"No
fucking shit, what isn't. I'm sure they got a pill for it, I'm
already taking one for my cholesterol you know, one for my ass, one
for my prick, one for my depression. A couple others I can't even
remember what for. What's another pill."
"Nice
day." The western sky was streaked with purple, orange, and
bright blue, another storm on the way probably. From back here you
could see the tops of the old textile buildings by the river, where
Lester's and Ronnie's and everybody else's dad worked, and the
university mostly uses now to store files, heavy equipment out of
season, and all kinds of useless crap. They had all lived jammed up
by the plant's fenceline, Lester around the corner from him, Ed three
blocks away.
"That
Canadian system's coming in this weekend you know, we're gonna get
dumped on," Lester said. "So I heard you told me to go fuck
myself."
"That
didn't take long."
"Norm
couldn't wait to run back up here and let the cat outta the bag."
"Did
your stoolie get the conversation more or less right at least?"
Ronnie Mack asked.
"Pretty
much." Lester shook his head. "Every department's getting
fucked now you know. Take the money, MacKenzie, that's my advice.
We're all just standing around with our dicks in our hands, hoping
the witch of the west isn't gonna come and chop 'em off." Lester
shuffled off and after a minute Ronnie Mack followed. The damp day
had left his clothes sodden and heavy. He couldn't even get warm in
the car and sat there shivering in the parking lot, staring at the
foggy dash. What would he do next month? Hokanson, who Ronnie Mack
ran into sometimes at Dunkin Donuts, went out in the last round of
buyouts and now he played golf, took computer classes at the
community college, and drained out his 401-k. Playing out the string,
Hokie said, but what are you gonna do? Some of them did contract
work, he knew, for shit money; one sold dope out of his house in
Revere. Ferreira pulled his truck up alongside and beeped.
"Everything
OK there?"
Ronnie
Mack cleared his throat. "Too fucking old is all," he said.
They squinted at each other for a moment. "Eddie Junior talk to
you?" he asked Ferreira.
"Yeah.
That union shit don't got such a great reputation where I come from,
but. Seems like, I dunno." Ferreira peered at him, like always
with that half-smile. "Kinda your call."
"Lemme
sleep on it," Ronnie Mack said. But that night he sweated and
rolled, grinding his teeth. He half-dreamed that the house was filled
with men in suits and police, shuffling through stacks of his papers.
I paid my bills, he told them. But you didn't pay your wife's bills,
a cop said, did you deadbeat?
Friday
dawned bright and clear. High up you could see the lines of wispy
clouds moving in, ahead of the front that was predicted late that
night, accumulations of six to eight inches. Ronnie Mack would make a
pot of coffee that night and stay up watching TV with Leenie,
watching the first snowflakes swirl into the backyard light and
settle on the crabapple tree, and waiting for the phone call telling
him to get his ass in to work and get on a plow.
He
coasted through the morning, letting Joey do the lifting, taking a
lot of smoke breaks. They picked trash around the administration
buildings, the modern glass tower where sat the president and the VP
for administration and finance, the wicked witch of the west,
counting up the college's losses and hunting for non-essential
personnel. One day soon they would summon the VP for facilities from
his east campus bunker, he knew, and the witch of the west and the
witch of the east would declare, bring me the head of Ronald J.
MacKenzie. See if you can't get him to carry it over here himself.
"Fuck
'em," he told Joey. The kid pushed his outsized headphones out
of place, so it looked like he was wearing a cockeyed beanie, a
confused cartoon kid with a question mark for a mouth. "All of
'em," Ronnie Mack added. He told Joey to go play video games in
the campus center and called in a page to Ferreira, Andres, Eddie
Junior and a couple of others: lunch at Surdyk's.
"You
buying?" Ferreira asked when he walked into the steamy little
diner. The five men around the table eyed him curiously, Ferreira,
one of the Tibetans, Eddie like an altar boy, the new kid with the
glass eye, blank-faced Andres, who once told him he'd quit school
when he was twelve; cut sugar cane sunrise to sundown; lost half his
family in a hurricane. Well now they're going to laugh at you, Ronnie
Mack thought, or tell you to fuck yourself, or give you some happy
horseshit about how they're with you all the way, or just turn away
and feel bad for the guy who bet all his money on the wrong dog. Or
else they're not.
"What
up, poppa?" Andres said.
“So I wanted to talk to you guys,” Ronnie Mack said, "You know, or else everybody has to piss in the soup to say it tastes good." What has he not talked to them about, and they talked to him, almost every goddamn day, and
everybody knew pretty much what was going to get said next. But still
listened basically. After his wife, and now Leenie, didn't want to
hear about it any more. His dad, a tight lipped old bastard who
always got the last word, had the same conversations in the old days.
Not for nothing, thought Ronnie MacKenzie, the old man, sitting here right now, would shit a brick.
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