“The Broken Dumbwaiter”
The
dumbwaiter broke for the ninth time that month.
This meant that Arnie would have to run the family’s trash down five
flights of stairs, depositing it on top of a row of garbage cans to the left of
his building. Arnie hated the chore but
his sisters were too young for such a responsibility. He flung his jacket with the New York Knicks
insignia over his shoulder and grabbed the bag from his mother.
“Goddamn
dumbwaiter,” hissed her mother, “we don’t have enough around here with
sickness, we need filth, too!”
Arnie
looked up at her and shivered. It had
been a long time since he could remember her smiling or when her voice wasn’t
sharp, angry at him. He wondered why her
behavior was normal only when she communicated with the tall skeleton lying on
the living room couch.
She
hates me, thought Arnie, just because I hate this stinkin’ garbage. When Daddy gets better things'll be good
again. He’ll help out with the garbage and
everything will be fine.
The
garbage cans overflowed, spotted with vermin.
Arnie threw the bag onto the pile and watched with a smile as three days
of his life spilled onto the sidewalk.
The crashing of baby food jars as they rolled from the sidewalk and into
the street made Arnie cry, and he quickly covered his face with his
jacket. He did not want any reminders of
his mother spoon-feeding his father from those jars.
Ever
since the hospital released his father following his third stomach operation,
life had become crazy. Daddy was like a
six-foot three-inch child, and Arnie a four-foot seven-inch adult. “Like a stupid midget,” sighed Arnie. His mother depended on him to do everything
and he was rewarded by her snapping at him like the turtles he caught up at the
lake when his father was healthy.
Five
weeks had passed since the hospital dumped his father into the four-room
apartment with the broken dumbwaiter.
Sometimes his speech could be understood, but his existence was mostly
incoherent phrases and the sucking of air between gnawed teeth, swallowing
pain.
Arnie
was sitting in the chair opposite the couch, reading, when he heard his father
mumble. He looked up from his
illustrated Grimm’s Fairy Tales.
“What
Daddy?”
His
father slowly turned his head until he could peripherally see his son. “Soup,” he whispered.
Arnie
begrudgingly closed his book and stood up as mother scuffed into the living
room and smiled down at his father. She
tugged at the back of Arnie’s hair, propelling him into the kitchen.
“You
do what your father wants and fast, understand me?” she whispered angrily. “Are you such a stupid little fool that you
don’t know he’s going to heaven soon?”
Arnie
slipped out of his mother’s grip and hurried out of the apartment. He raced down five flights of stairs trying
to outdistance his thoughts, but failed.
The past months were not spent waiting for his father to get better, to
go back to work, or go back to the hospital.
Going to heaven? Heaven is for
skeletons? Hell is full of skeletons,
not heaven.
Arnie
bought the soup with his own coins. He
was walking up the tenement stoop when a movement by the garbage cans caught
his attention. The nine rusty cans for
five floors of families were completely buried by torn, greasy bags. It smelled the same way Arnie felt. He walked closer to the noise, careful of
rats.
Suddenly,
a large head covered with red blotches, chewing on the remains of a day-old TV
dinner, popped up out of the garbage.
Arnie jumped back and froze.
“What’s
the matter, pal? Never seen anyone
enjoyin’ their lunch before? Want some?”
Arnie
pulled the can of soup out of his pocket and cocked his arm defensively.
“Soup. Well, you are a good lunch companion. Oh dear, it’s mushroom. Doctor says I can’t eat mushrooms. I have a tendency to hallucinate, but I do
appreciate the gesture,” he smiled, rising up from the rubbish heap and
stretching to his full height, a head taller than Arnie.
Arnie
giggled and pocketed the can. “What’s
your name?”
The
man blew a fly off his nose and scratched under his eye with a long, jagged
fingernail. “People call me Decay
Dan.” He extended his hand as Arnie
withdrew a step. The man laughed.
“You
look good in garbage,” giggled Arnie, pleased at being able to retort with an
adult.
Dan
nodded in agreement, walked over to the curb and squatted. “Garbage has been good to me, too.”
“Why
are you called Decay Dan? Sounds like a
toothpaste commercial.”
“Because
I give hope to people,” replied Dan.
“You’re
crazy,” said Arnie.
“Naturally. But to get back to your question, I’m called
Decay Dan because I offer the promise of life after death.”
“Say
what!” exclaimed Arnie, his fingers tightening around the can in his
pocket. “You tryin’ to tell me that
you’re God or something? I look stupid,
huh?”
Decay
Dan shifted on his haunch and squinted at the boy. Arnie noticed that Dan’s ankles were swollen;
his shoes housed sockless feet. “What
I’m saying is that garbage is important because everyone makes it. When people see garbage they’re disgusted
because it makes them think of their own slowly rotting bodies and the death
that awaits them. Understand?”
“I
think so,” said Arnie, “but why do people get hope from you?”
“Just
a second,” answered Decay Dan. He walked
over to the garbage, rummaged through some bags and returned to the curb with a
soggy, half-smoked cigarette. After a
frantic search through his tattered shirt and pants pockets, he found a book of
matches and tried to light the cigarette.
It was too wet. Decay Dan grumbled and ran the flame under the
cigarette, slowly rotating it at the filter.
Thirty seconds later he tried to light it again. A brown stained smile recorded his success as
he filled his lungs with smoke.
“What’s
your name, boy?”
“Arnie”
“Arnie,
the way I have it pegged is that when folks see me scrambling around the
garbage they get comforted ‘cause the only life usually found in garbage are
maggots. A human being rising out of the
decay makes them think of the resurrection of the flesh. Understand?
Decay is not the end. It’s the
supper. And as you can see by my gut,
not the last supper, either.”
Arnie
stared at Decay Dan and shrugged.
Although he wasn’t sure what the man was talking about, he felt a
certain comfort from his tone of voice, an old familiar comfort, like when his
parents used to explain the reasons why it was important for him to excel in
school.
“My
mother told me that my father’s going to heaven soon.”
“Is
he now? Well, I suppose it’s a damn
sight better than living in garbage.”
The
two sat in a prolonged silence.
“My
mother is upset and angry at me all the time for nothing. I haven’t done nothing.”
“Your
old man’s pretty sick, huh?”
Arnie
nodded. “Cancer.”
Decay
Dan was about to put his arm around Arnie’s shoulder but retracted the
motion. “It’s the decay, boy. Don’t worry.
It’s not you, it’s the garbage of disease. She’ scared, that’s all.”
Arnie
glanced down at Decay Dan’s swollen ankles and then looked into his eyes. “You don’t sound all that crazy. Why are you in garbage?”
“Because
there’s so much of it and nobody fights me for it. Now mind you, I’m only talking about American
garbage with its bright sanitary packages and Grade A meats.”
“I’d
like to do something for you, Decay Dan,” said Arnie.
Decay
Dan smiled and spit. “You can,
Arnie. Next time your mom forces you to
eat something you don’t want and she tells you about all those starvin’ people
all over the world, just smile and agree with her. When she leaves think about old Decay Dan and
scrape your plate into the garbage, okay?”
“Deal,”
grinned Arnie and the two shook hands.
A
scream pierced through their new friendship and they both looked up at the
fifth-floor window where Arnie’s mother’s face was pressed against the window
grill.
“Arnie! Arnie!
Stop talking to yourself and waving your arms around like an idiot! Get the hell up here, now! Your father’s been waiting for that
soup! Hurry up! Run!
Now the neighbors will know I got mental sickness to put up with,
too! Get off that curb! Now!”
She slammed the window shut.
Decay
Dan winked at Arnie and scampered away.
Arnie
climbed slowly up the stairs. He paused
at each flight to run his hand over the banister and think. His mother had not seen Decay Dan even though
Dan was right next to him when she shouted down at him. There’s going to be trouble, big trouble,
thought Arnie.
He stopped in front of the muddied
welcome mat outside his door, drew a breath, and
clicked the key in the keyhole.
Mark Blickley hails from the Bronx and is a proud member of the Dramatists Guild and PEN American Center. His latest book is the text-based art collaboration with fine arts photographer Amy Bassin, Dream Streams.
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