Doing something for humanity
may be fine for humanity but
rough on the individual!
He had quite a rum-blossom on him
for a kid, I thought at first. But when he moved
closer to the light by the cash register to ask the
bartender for a match or something, I saw it wasn’t
that. Not just the nose. Broken veins on
his cheeks, too, and the funny eyes. He must have
seen me look, because he slid back away from the light.
The bartender shook my bottle of ale
in front of me like a Swiss bell-ringer so it foamed
inside the green glass.
“You ready for another, sir?” he asked.
I shook my head. Down the bar,
he tried it on the kid he was drinking
scotch and water or something like that and
found out he could push him around. He sold him
three scotch and waters in ten minutes.
When he tried for number four, the
kid had his courage up and said, “I’ll
tell you when I’m ready for another, Jack.”
But there wasn’t any trouble.
It was almost nine and the place began
to fill up. The manager, a real hood type, stationed
himself by the door to screen out the high-school
kids and give the big hello to conventioneers.
The girls came hurrying in, too, with their little
makeup cases and their fancy hair piled up and their
frozen faces with the perfect mouths drawn on them.
One of them stopped to say something to the manager,
some excuse about something, and he said: “That’s
aw ri’; get inna dressing room.”
A three-piece band behind the drapes
at the back of the stage began to make warm-up noises
and there were two bartenders keeping busy. Mostly
it was beer a midweek crowd. I finished
my ale and had to wait a couple of minutes before
I could get another bottle. The bar filled up
from the end near the stage because all the customers
wanted a good, close look at the strippers for their
fifty-cent bottles of beer. But I noticed that
nobody sat down next to the kid, or, if anybody did,
he didn’t stay long you go out for
some fun and the bartender pushes you around and nobody
wants to sit next to you. I picked up my bottle
and glass and went down on the stool to his left.
He turned to me right away and said:
“What kind of a place is this, anyway?”
The broken veins were all over his face, little ones,
but so many, so close, that they made his face look
something like marbled rubber. The funny look
in his eyes was it the trick contact lenses.
But I tried not to stare and not to look away.
“It’s okay,” I said.
“It’s a good show if you don’t mind
a lot of noise from ”
He stuck a cigarette into his mouth
and poked the pack at me. “I’m a
spacer,” he said, interrupting.
I took one of his cigarettes and said: “Oh.”
He snapped a lighter for the cigarettes and said:
“Venus.”
I was noticing that his pack of cigarettes
on the bar had some kind of yellow sticker instead
of the blue tax stamp.
“Ain’t that a crock?”
he asked. “You can’t smoke and they
give you lighters for a souvenir. But it’s
a good lighter. On Mars last week, they gave
us all some cheap pen-and-pencil sets.”
“You get something every trip,
hah?” I took a good, long drink of ale and he
finished his scotch and water.
“Shoot. You call a trip a ’shoot’.”
One of the girls was working her way
down the bar. She was going to slide onto the
empty stool at his right and give him the business,
but she looked at him first and decided not to.
She curled around me and asked if I’d buy her
a li’l olé drink. I said no and she
moved on to the next. I could kind of feel the
young fellow quivering. When I looked at him,
he stood up. I followed him out of the dump.
The manager grinned without thinking and said, “G’night,
boys,” to us.
The kid stopped in the street and
said to me: “You don’t have to follow
me around, Pappy.” He sounded like one wrong
word and I would get socked in the teeth.
“Take it easy. I know a
place where they won’t spit in your eye.”
He pulled himself together and made
a joke of it. “This I have to see,”
he said. “Near here?”
“A few blocks.”
We started walking. It was a nice night.
“I don’t know this city
at all,” he said. “I’m from
Covington, Kentucky. You do your drinking at
home there. We don’t have places like this.”
He meant the whole Skid Row area.
“It’s not so bad,” I said.
“I spend a lot of time here.”
“Is that a fact? I mean,
down home a man your age would likely have a wife
and children.”
“I do. The hell with them.”
He laughed like a real youngster and
I figured he couldn’t even be twenty-five.
He didn’t have any trouble with the broken curbstones
in spite of his scotch and waters. I asked him
about it.
“Sense of balance,” he
said. “You have to be tops for balance to
be a spacer you spend so much time outside
in a suit. People don’t know how much.
Punctures. And you aren’t worth a damn if
you lose your point.”
“What’s that mean?”
“Oh. Well, it’s hard
to describe. When you’re outside and you
lose your point, it means you’re all mixed up,
you don’t know which way the can that’s
the ship which way the can is. It’s
having all that room around you. But if you have
a good balance, you feel a little tugging to the ship,
or maybe you just know which way the ship is
without feeling it. Then you have your point
and you can get the work done.”
“There must be a lot that’s hard to describe.”
He thought that might be a crack and he clammed up
on me.
“You call this Gandytown,”
I said after a while. “It’s where
the stove-up old railroad men hang out. This
is the place.”
It was the second week of the month,
before everybody’s pension check was all gone.
Oswiak’s was jumping. The Grandsons of the
Pioneers were on the juke singing the Man from
Mars Yodel and old Paddy Shea was jigging in the
middle of the floor. He had a full seidel of beer
in his right hand and his empty left sleeve was flapping.
The kid balked at the screen door.
“Too damn bright,” he said.
I shrugged and went on in and he followed.
We sat down at a table. At Oswiak’s you
can drink at the bar if you want to, but none of the
regulars do.
Paddy jigged over and said: “Welcome
home, Doc.” He’s a Liverpool Irishman;
they talk like Scots, some say, but they sound almost
like Brooklyn to me.
“Hello, Paddy. I brought
somebody uglier than you. Now what do you say?”
Paddy jigged around the kid in a half-circle
with his sleeve flapping and then flopped into a chair
when the record stopped. He took a big drink
from the seidel and said: “Can he do this?”
Paddy stretched his face into an awful grin that showed
his teeth. He has three of them. The kid
laughed and asked me: “What the hell did
you drag me into here for?”
“Paddy says he’ll buy
drinks for the house the day anybody uglier than he
is comes in.”
Oswiak’s wife waddled over for
the order and the kid asked us what we’d have.
I figured I could start drinking, so it was three double
scotches.
After the second round, Paddy started
blowing about how they took his arm off without any
anesthetics except a bottle of gin because the red-ball
freight he was tangled up in couldn’t wait.
That brought some of the other old
gimps over to the table with their stories.
Blackie Bauer had been sitting in
a boxcar with his legs sticking through the door when
the train started with a jerk. Wham, the door
closed. Everybody laughed at Blackie for being
that dumb in the first place, and he got mad.
Sam Fireman has palsy. This week
he was claiming he used to be a watchmaker before
he began to shake. The week before, he’d
said he was a brain surgeon. A woman I didn’t
know, a real old Boxcar Bertha, dragged herself over
and began some kind of story about how her sister married
a Greek, but she passed out before we found out what
happened.
Somebody wanted to know what was wrong
with the kid’s face Bauer, I think
it was, after he came back to the table.
“Compression and decompression,”
the kid said. “You’re all the time
climbing into your suit and out of your suit.
Inboard air’s thin to start with.
You get a few redlines that’s these
ruptured blood vessels and you say the
hell with the money; all you’ll make is just
one more trip. But, God, it’s a lot of money
for anybody my age! You keep saying that until
you can’t be anything but a spacer. The
eyes are hard-radiation scars.”
“You like dot all ofer?” asked Oswiak’s
wife politely.
“All over, ma’am,”
the kid told her in a miserable voice. “But
I’m going to quit before I get a Bowman Head.”
“I don’t care,” said Maggie Rorty.
“I think he’s cute.”
“Compared with ” Paddy began,
but I kicked him under the table.
We sang for a while, and then we told
gags and recited limericks for a while, and I noticed
that the kid and Maggie had wandered into the back
room the one with the latch on the door.
Oswiak’s wife asked me, very
puzzled: “Doc, w’y dey do dot flyink
by planyets?”
“It’s the damn govermint,” Sam Fireman
said.
“Why not?” I said.
“They got the Bowman Drive, why the hell shouldn’t
they use it? Serves ’em right.”
I had a double scotch and added: “Twenty
years of it and they found out a few things they didn’t
know. Redlines are only one of them. Twenty
years more, maybe they’ll find out a few more
things they didn’t know. Maybe by the time
there’s a bathtub in every American home and
an alcoholism clinic in every American town, they’ll
find out a whole lot of things they didn’t
know. And every American boy will be a pop-eyed,
blood-raddled wreck, like our friend here, from riding
the Bowman Drive.”
“It’s the damn govermint,” Sam Fireman
repeated.
“And what the hell did you mean
by that remark about alcoholism?” Paddy said,
real sore. “Personally, I can take it or
leave it alone.”
So we got to talking about that and
everybody there turned out to be people who could
take it or leave it alone.
It was maybe midnight when the kid
showed at the table again, looking kind of dazed.
I was drunker than I ought to be by midnight, so I
said I was going for a walk. He tagged along
and we wound up on a bench at Screwball Square.
The soap-boxers were still going strong. Like
I said, it was a nice night. After a while, a
pot-bellied old auntie who didn’t give a damn
about the face sat down and tried to talk the kid into
going to see some etchings. The kid didn’t
get it and I led him over to hear the soap-boxers
before there was trouble.
One of the orators was a mush-mouthed
evangelist. “And, oh, my friends,”
he said, “when I looked through the porthole
of the spaceship and beheld the wonder of the Firmament ”
“You’re a stinkin’
Yankee liar!” the kid yelled at him. “You
say one damn more word about can-shootin’ and
I’ll ram your spaceship down your lyin’
throat! Wheah’s your redlines if you’re
such a hot spacer?”
The crowd didn’t know what he
was talking about, but “wheah’s your redlines”
sounded good to them, so they heckled mush-mouth off
his box with it.
I got the kid to a bench. The
liquor was working in him all of a sudden. He
simmered down after a while and asked: “Doc,
should I’ve given Miz Rorty some money?
I asked her afterward and she said she’d admire
to have something to remember me by, so I gave her
my lighter. She seem’ to be real pleased
with it. But I was wondering if maybe I embarrassed
her by asking her right out. Like I tol’
you, back in Covington, Kentucky, we don’t have
places like that. Or maybe we did and I just didn’t
know about them. But what do you think I should’ve
done about Miz Rorty?”
“Just what you did,” I
told him. “If they want money, they ask
you for it first. Where you staying?”
“Y.M.C.A.,” he said, almost
asleep. “Back in Covington, Kentucky, I
was a member of the Y and I kept up my membership.
They have to let me in because I’m a member.
Spacers have all kinds of trouble, Doc. Woman
trouble. Hotel trouble. Fam’ly trouble.
Religious trouble. I was raised a Southern Baptist,
but wheah’s Heaven, anyway? I ask’
Doctor Chitwood las’ time home before the redlines
got so thick Doc, you aren’t a minister
of the Gospel, are you? I hope I di’n’
say anything to offend you.”
“No offense, son,” I said. “No
offense.”
I walked him to the avenue and waited
for a fleet cab. It was almost five minutes.
The independents that roll drunks dent the fenders
of fleet cabs if they show up in Skid Row and then
the fleet drivers have to make reports on their own
time to the company. It keeps them away.
But I got one and dumped the kid in.
“The Y Hotel,” I told
the driver. “Here’s five. Help
him in when you get there.”
When I walked through Screwball Square
again, some college kids were yelling “wheah’s
your redlines” at old Charlie, the last of the
Wobblies.
Old Charlie kept roaring: “The
hell with your breadlines! I’m talking
about atomic bombs. Right up there!”
And he pointed at the Moon.
It was a nice night, but the liquor was dying in me.
There was a joint around the corner,
so I went in and had a drink to carry me to the club;
I had a bottle there. I got into the first cab
that came.
“Athletic Club,” I said.
“Inna dawghouse, harh?”
the driver said, and he gave me a big personality
smile.
I didn’t say anything and he started the car.
He was right, of course. I was
in everybody’s doghouse. Some day I’d
scare hell out of Tom and Lise by going home and showing
them what their daddy looked like.
Down at the Institute, I was in the doghouse.
“Oh, dear,” everybody
at the Institute said to everybody, “I’m
sure I don’t know what ails the man. A
lovely wife and two lovely grown children and she
had to tell him ‘either you go or I go.’
And drinking! And this is rather subtle,
but it’s a well-known fact that neurotics seek
out low company to compensate for their guilt-feelings.
The places he frequents. Doctor Francis
Bowman, the man who made space-flight a reality.
The man who put the Bomb Base on the Moon! Really,
I’m sure I don’t know what ails him.”
The hell with them all.
C.
M. Kornbluth