Read The Fan Man Page 7


  And now, man, I will answer, putting in a Horse Badorties Dalai Lama bass note:

  “BRAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAUUUUUUUUUUUUUMMMMMMMMMMMMMNNNNNN.’’

  The guard, man, is scratching his head. “How’s she doin?”

  “The pitch seems all right, man. I can’t understand the problem.”

  “Seems all right, does it?”

  “Operating perfectly, man. But I’ll just check it out on the oscillator.” Removing from my satchel, man, the Doctor Badorties army surplus stethoscope, man. Putting the rubber-tipped prongs in my ears, man, and applying the sensitive listening disc to the heart of the Great Fan. Oh, man, this is fantastic, man. This is the primal voice, man, singing into my stethoscope. I hear a thousand songs in there, man, and a couple of dinosaurs running around talking to each other with bass notes beyond belief, man. They have some dinosaur bones on the fourth floor of this pad, man, and I’m picking up their vibes. And I see by the label this fan was built by the Passaic Fan Company. Looks like I’m going to have to make another trip to New Jersey, man, and purchase one of these fans on long-term credit with a rubber check down.

  “The pressure of the sound waves is all right, man. Everything is checking out. The only thing I can suggest, man, is that perhaps some kid threw a hot dog down one of the ducts. “

  “You think so?”

  “It’s happened before, man. I’ll have to go back to the main office and get my duct-diving suit, man. Without it, the pressure would be too great. You see the suit I’m now wearing? I wrecked it only an hour ago, climbing through the fan duct at the Pan Am Building.”

  “It’s dangerous, is it?”

  “Right, man, I’ll be back in an hour or so. You might want to take this piece of chalk from my satchel, man, and go through the building, marking each of the vents with an X, so that when I get back, we can go straight to work.”

  “Will do.”

  And up we go, and up again, and out the side door of the museum goes fan-repairman Badorties.

  Chapter 15

  The Fan Man Gets the Shaft

  And now, man, I must proceed directly to NBC. Here comes a bus, man, must run. “HOLD THAT BUS, MAN!”

  Difficulty getting enormous umbrella in the door, it is caught in the driver’s wheel.

  “Watch that umbrella, will ya mac.”

  “I’m sorry, man … sorry. …” In the confusion, drop a few pennies into the coin box and continue on the way, riding for four cents downtown, bus moving jerking forward and I am careening backward to the back of the bus and accidentally strike strap-hanging man behind the knees with my satchel and he falls straight to the floor.

  “Sorry, man … terribly sorry … coming through… .”

  It’s hot on this bus, man. Time for further fanning. What is this, man, it is not working. The Central Park lake water has disintegrated the points of my fan. And it has also shrunk my suit, man, I can feel it getting tighter every minute. And there is Rockefeller Center, man, stop the bus.

  Dingle .. . ding….dingle.

  “Excuse me … coming through …”

  Bus jerks to a stop, satchel swings forward, strikes same man behind the knees and down he goes again, man, to the floor of the bus. “Sorry, man … excuse me… .”

  Leaping off the bus, man, and crossing the street, into the incredibly large lobby of Rockefeller Center, footsteps echoing, echoing. To the Information Booth, man.

  “Yes, sir, may I help you?”

  “Ace Messenger Service. I have a large umbrella for The Tonight Show. My instructions are to deliver it directly to the Director of Programming. It’s for the show tonight.”

  “Programming … that would be Mr. Reynolds, fourth floor.”

  And so forward goes Horse Badorties, man, to the executive elevator. Press number four button and up we go, man, up, up, up.

  Elevator opens onto long silent hallway. Here is a Men’s Room, man, I’d better just step inside and see that my appearance is suitable for this high-level conference, for which I had better brush my tufts of hair.

  Through the door, through another door, and into the shining spotless tiled head, man, and there is a mirror and there I am, man, oh no, man.

  Hair flying out, beard filled with twigs and stagnant lake weeds, my tie is on sideways and coming out of the sleeve of my jacket which has shrunk up to my elbows. The cuffs of my pants are up to my knees, man, and the entire ensemble is covered with Central Park muck and grime. The effect, man, is one of nightmare proportions. How can I discuss business in this condition? I look like I just fell down the elevator shaft. There is only one solution, man.

  Back into the hallway and walk along, man. Arrow on the wall and a sign saying

  Therefore, man, before I turn this corner, I must drop to my hands and knees, that’s it, man, and now I crawl along this corridor, toward the desk of that secretary up ahead. She sees me, man, she is getting up, looking astonished, and I am crawling forward, man, dragging my umbrella and satchel.

  Crawling along, man, toward her desk. She comes toward me, her face filled with concern. “Are you all right?”

  “… fell … down … elevator shaft…”

  “Oh my God!”

  “Floor above … door opened … accidentally … stepped through … I have an appointment … Mr. Reynolds … could you…”

  “I’ll call the doctor… an ambulance … .”

  “Yes, please … I may be … seriously … herniated big toe … but first, please … I have to see Mr. Reynolds … utmost urgency … my appointment.”

  “What is your name, sir?”

  “Badorties … Maestro Badorties, Resident Director of the Fourth Street Music Academy … fell twenty-five, maybe fifty feet, landed in puddle of water which had collected on top of the elevator … narrow escape… .”

  “Mr. Reynolds … there is a Mr. Badorties out here … he fell down the elevator shaft … he has an appointment.”

  The immediate sound of scurrying feet, man, and the Director of Programming bursts out of his office, man, toward my prostrate form.

  “What happened … good god, Miss Hodgekiss, the man is badly hurt … call the doctor … and then call the superintendent. That damned elevator has been on the blink for a week. Yesterday a delivery man was trapped in there.”

  “Yes sir.”

  “Mr. Reynolds … in my satchel… .”

  “Yes, what is it?”

  Director of Programming bending over, filled with concern, man, helping me open my soaking wet satchel, from which I am able to draw a single dry piece of music.

  “This is the music, Mr. Reynolds … which we will be singing on the show.”

  “Show?”

  “Didn’t my secretary … my appointment was for this afternoon.”

  “I don’t recall. …”

  “On the Lower East Side, Mr. Reynolds, in the slums, run-away teen-age chicks are singing church music … the concert is just two days away … I seem to have dislocated my head … Love Concert in Tompkins Square Park… .”

  “Run-away teenagers?”

  “Fifteen-year-old chicks … fracture of the kneecap, see it protruding … singing church music, man … one million sheets of the music you have in your hand have been distributed all over the city, we expect a considerable crowd… .”

  “Concert?”

  “The day and hour is written on that sheet … possible laceration of the greater fibula… .”

  “I think we’d better get you to the hospital, Mister …”

  “Badorties, Maestro Badorties of the Fourth Street Music Academy . . contusions of the … young girls who have run away from home come to live and sing at the Academy, which welcomes them with broken arms. If you could help me to my feet… .”

  “Yes, of course … can you walk… ?”

  “I will use my umbrella as a cane … a most important concert … I assure you it has news value, can you help me to the elevator …
I will go directly to my family doctor … over at Bellevue… .”

  Chapter 16

  Far Out, Man

  On the street once again, man, with satchel and umbrella, and I have gone to NBC, man. I have informed the network of the Love Concert. Now it is up to the gods, man, to make it happen. Look, man, it is quitting time, and all the secretaries and executives are on the street, man, hustling along. Everybody flooding into the subway, man, and Vice-president Badorties must descend into the darkness with the rest of the working class.

  Going through the turnstile, standing on the platform, and here comes the impossibly-crowded car into which not a single more person can fit, they are already hanging out the windows. It stops and a hundred more people get on and I am one of them, man, and my umbrella is another one, and we are inside, standing straight up, crushed together in the car.

  It is the middle of summer and we are packed stuffed wedged in the subway, and there is absolutely no air, man, to breathe. And I cannot get to my fan, man, my arms are pinned.

  Riding, riding, five hundred people in this car, man, all of them pissed-off, hate the boss, going nuts, dropping dead, fainting outright but supported by the crowd.

  Mumble mumble kill somebody fiendish energies collect down in this tunnel thrown off by countless workers every day. Kill the boss death push in front of subway car fart sweat foul. Can’t stand this subway, man, it overloads the brain, man, but I cannot get out, even when the doors open, I am jammed too much in the center and my umbrella is stuck up in a strap handle. Reading the subway ads, people getting off, getting less crowded, reading the subway ads, shrink your hemorrhoid, easy terms borrow needlessly when you must, our family makes this sauce for generations out of stenographers, you’ve come a long way, baby. A LONG WAY! Jesus Christ, man, where am I, I must be at the Lower East Side by now, man. It does not … Look familiar, man, as I step out of the subway car.

  Up the subway steps, man, walk up, see where I am.

  I am on Brooklyn Heights, man, there is the sea below. A wild wind is blowing and the sun is dropping toward the ocean. The water is gold and the tugboat goes through the gold.

  I am with you again on the Heights, man.

  Chapter 17

  The Elephant Dance

  I am sitting on a park bench, man, on the cliff-heights of Brooklyn, looking out across the water. How peaceful, man, I’ve got to get out of here, Brooklyn is the end of nowhere. Alright, man, I’m off the bench and walking. Lead weights in my brain, man. It is nearly impossible, man, to function with shrinking Japanese-Chinese shoes and my head on backwards. Carrying satchel and umbrella, flopping along the street. Horse Badorties coming apart, going along. When I was a little kid, man, I used to dig a hole in Van Cortlandt Park everyday and crawl into it.

  What is this I see, man, it is a toy store. Must go in, man, and look around. I’m in the store, man, a little old Brooklyn toy store, and I am buying not one, but two music boxes, man.

  “Thank you, sir, and your change.”

  Out of the store, man, before I buy more. What a wonderful purchase. Little music box, you are my little orchestra of steel men, man. Play same notes over and over, perfect coordination. Let me now wind up the box with this Japanese key–seems to be stuck, man. The motherfucker is stuck already. I am not five yards away from the store and the music box is jammed. I cannot take it back, man, that would not be playing the game. This is my music box, man. It’s a good thing I have another one.

  This other one is working, man, the two little figures on top of the box are dancing around, round and round and the little steel musicians are playing, plinka-plinka. This toy, man, will afford me hours of musical pleasure.

  Booooooiiiiinnnnnnnnggggggggggg

  What is that sound, boooooiiiiiinnnnnnnggggg, man, like a broken spring. It is a broken spring, man. What a tremendous deal I just made, man. Two Japanese music boxes that don’t work. Four figures waiting for the music. A perfect moment, man. Everlasting No-Play. Waiting for the dance. It’s nirvana music, man. Complete silence.

  Here is the subway entrance again, man. So much of my life, rnan, is spent underground. “One token, pleak.” Give token-lady freak-face, see her eyes pop, and I am going through the turnstile and here comes the train and I am on it and going all the way back to the Lower East Side.

  Here I am, man, getting out of the subway on the Lower East Side, man, climbing the steps, hitting the street once again, man, at Cooper Union and St. Mark’s Place, back to my people, man. Feel the filth and dust, man, blowing into my eyes and the stench of piss and shit and vomit and old beer cans, man, up my nose. We’re back, man, where we belong.

  St. Mark’s Place, man, with one headshop after another, man, where I will SELL A FEW FANS! Go into this weird psychedelic emporium, man, with rotating lights give me a headache and incense make my eyes water, how wonderful, man. Over to the counter, man, where the manager is sitting in a high silk hat.

  “Listen, man, what you need to stimulate sales is one of these fans, man, dig.”

  Hauling out fan, clicking the switch, nothing happens. “The batteries are dead at the moment, man, and it is filled with water, but anyway, man, you get the idea–for heads to cool themselves.”

  “How much you want for the thing?”

  “I buy them for one dollar and ninety-five cents and I sell them for one dollar and ninety-five cents. People ask me why. I’ll tell you why, man–they are holy objects, which make music, a little humming note, and that is why I cannot allow myself any profit on them.”

  “I’ll give you a buck and a half.”

  “Terrific, man, that’s even better for my soul, I’ll be losing money on the deal.”

  “How many you got with you?”

  “Just this one, man, and I’d leave it with you, but it’s my only sample. However, I have a tremendous shipment coming in any moment, man.”

  “I’ll take a dozen.”

  “Groovy, man. How much do you want for this special battery-powered back-scratcher in the showcase, man?”

  “Cost you one dollar and ninety-five cents.”

  “A necessary item, man, haul it out.”

  And now I have made another purchase and filled my already incredibly heavy satchel with yet another precious valuable object, a battery-powered back-scratcher with a long handle, man, and a little plastic hand on the end of it, which vibrates back and forth. Apply to third eye, stimulate visions. I will sell it as a chakra-massager, man, and that way it will be a holy object for which I will not be able to charge more than one dollar and ninety-five cents. Another Horse Badorties scheme, man, by which I can’t make any money. Get out of this store, man, before you turn into a saint.

  Across Second Avenue, man, and down the street to First Avenue, and further down–to Tompkins Square Park, man. And dig, man, there is the saxophone player blowing some notes on a park bench with a trombonist, man, and the trombone sounds like an elephant coming through the jungle, man, and the saxophone sounds like some weird prehistoric bird. Man, these are musicians.

  I must get this on tape, man, it is essential, sound like animals gathering around a waterhole, wild, wonderful, quite a crowd gathering around, man, and I am setting up my two tape recorders, and now, man, I am also taking out of my satchel my incredibly weird instrument, man, my moon-lute. It’s got a round thin sounding box on it, man, and four strings that go up a bridge shaped like the neck of a snake with a dragon’s head on top of it. The strings are tightened by four huge wooden knobs, man, which look like ears. It is the weirdest fucking instrument I have ever seen, man, and when you play it it sounds like you are choking a hundred Chinamen. The incredible moon-lute is tuned, man, with the saxophone and trombone. Saxophone smile, man, and the trombone slides open his eyes and smiles too, man, and now, man, we will play some music.

  Moon-lute rhythms, man, to drive you crazy. Intricate plinka-plinka, man, all those Chinese cats, man, in the moon-lute strings, dancing and ju
mping around screaming, man, plinky-plink.

  It is an incredibly weird sound, man, the likes of which no one in Tompkins Square Park has ever heard. It is so weird, man, it is driving me crazy to play it, but at the same time it is so perfectly beautiful, man, because I am master of every opening and closing rhythm pattern known to the mind of man, and in moments like these, man, when I am playing them all, I know, man, that music should be the only thing I ever do. Which is why I am going to become a used-car salesman instead, man. What a wonderful sound, man, the Horse Badorties omniscient musical genius moon-lute sound, I should be hiring a mechanic at this very moment, man, to fix my mail trucks when I buy them.

  Fingers going, man, fifty fingers, all over the strings, progressions, outward, upward, backward, downward, resolution of chords in unthought-of never-before-discovered hierarchies of Horse Badorties specialized musical perfections, man, how I wish I was eating a clam sandwich instead of fucking around with this blissful ecstasy, man.

  This is so beautiful, man, I have to split over to my pads immediately, someone might be trying to phone me about some carrots. Loveliness abounding, man, in superb musicianship of moon-lute, saxophone, and trombone, crowd standing awestruck, man. Man, these cats know how to play.

  Yes, man, Horse Badorties knows how to play, been playing since two years old, and now we are playing back two thousand years, man, back through the centuries, man, in musical excursion back through the ages, different lifetimes coinciding–I knew you there, man, when we played lyre and were thrown out of the gates of Athens, and further back, man, I used to bang an Egyptian piano while you played the dog-headed flute and you played the Etruscan bagpipe, man, and we ran through the woods with the Babylonian police after us.

  This is simply marvelous music, man, I’m so happy, I’d better stop now, man, I have to go and buy a submarine. Oh, man, how this little moon-lute performs, in petite figurations, first position second position barre chords of unearthly beauty learned in a Pompeian jail. And the trombone and saxophone are gut musicians, man, go anywhere, play anything, not afraid to leap around with their axes, man, they don’t give a damn, they’ve been shuffling around spaced-out for ages, man, the trombone sounds like an old hippopotamus, man, saying good morning