Read What Matters Most Is How Well You Walk Through the Fire Page 14

at the University of Utah!”

  “traffic can only move one way,” said the cop,

  “turn your car around and go to the stadium.”

  “look, I’m reading in 15 minutes. I’m Henry Chinaski!

  you’ve heard of me, haven’t you?”

  “turn your car around and go to the stadium!” said the cop.

  “shit,” said Betsy who was at the wheel,

  and she ran the car up over the curb

  and we drove across the campus lawn

  leaving tire marks an inch deep.

  I was a bit tipsy and I don’t know how long we drove

  or how we got there

  but suddenly we were all standing in a liquor store

  and we bought wine, vodka, beer, scotch, got it and left.

  we drove back,

  got back there, read the ass right off that audience,

  picked up our checks and left to applause.

  UCLA won the football game

  something to something.

  a touch of steel

  we had the nicest old guy

  living in the back—

  tall, thin, stately

  with an open direct stare

  and an easy smile.

  his wife was squat

  bow-legged,

  wore black

  looked down at the sidewalk

  and mumbled.

  she didn’t comb her hair and

  was usually drunk.

  they’d walk past us as we sat on

  the porch.

  “he’s a real nice old guy,”

  my girlfriend would say.

  “sure,” I’d agree.

  they had a daughter with aluminum

  crutches who wore a white

  nightgown and blue bathrobe

  when she watered the

  small brown patch

  of lawn out front.

  one day the daughter came out

  on her crutches and started

  screaming.

  someone went inside and the man

  had knifed his wife.

  the police arrived and handcuffed

  him and walked him

  out to the street and

  then the ambulance came and

  they rolled her out

  on a stretcher with wheels.

  the daughter went back inside

  swinging on her crutches

  and closed the door.

  —which proves what I’ve

  always said:

  never trust a man with

  an open direct stare

  and an easy smile

  especially

  if he smokes a pipe.

  (I never saw

  the nice old guy in back

  smoke a pipe

  but the way I see it

  he must have.)

  brown and solemn

  the dog jumps up on the bed

  crawls over me.

  “are you the Word?” I ask him.

  he doesn’t answer.

  “are you the Word? I’m looking for the Word.”

  he has brown and solemn eyes.

  “I’m waiting for the Word,” I tell him,

  “I’m walking around like a man

  in a large hot

  frying pan.”

  he wags his tail and tries to

  lick my face.

  “listen,” she says from the bathroom,

  “why don’t you get out of bed

  and stop talking to that dog?”

  my parents didn’t understand me

  either.

  time

  one collapses and surrenders

  not out of choice

  or lack of intelligence

  or bad teeth

  or bad diet

  one surrenders

  because that’s the BEST MOVIE

  around.

  once I was so disgusted

  with the working of things

  that I dialed the time

  and listened to the voice

  over and over again:

  “it’s now 10:18 and 20 seconds

  it’s now 10:18 and 30 seconds…”

  I didn’t like the voice

  and I didn’t care what time it was

  yet I listened.

  satisfied now

  I’m glad somebody stole my last watch

  it was so difficult to read

  satisfied now

  I’ve got a new one

  it has a black face and

  white hands

  and I sit there and watch

  the second hand

  the minute hand

  the hour hand

  as outside

  caterpillars crawl my walls

  and finally fall

  like empires

  like old dead loves

  and new loves

  fall.

  night’s best

  with my black-faced watch

  with white hands.

  nobody knows the trouble I’ve seen

  stupefied after a week’s drinking and

  gambling bout

  I am in the tub at 10:30 in the morning

  shaky

  depressed

  when the phone rings

  and it’s this young girl who sings

  folk songs;

  she’s quit with her man

  thrown his clothes out, she tells

  me.

  I tell her how those things work—

  you’re together then split

  together then split

  over and over

  again.

  yeh, she says, wanna hear my new

  song? sure, I say, and she sings it to me

  over the telephone.

  now I am sitting on the edge of the couch

  naked, wet,

  listening, thinking, damn I’d like to stick it

  into you, baby,

  and I laugh, the song is funny,

  and I say I like it, and she says,

  I’m glad.

  and I say, look, I’ve got to shape up and

  make the track. keep in

  touch.

  I will, she says.

  then I have a couple of Alka Seltzers

  and an hour later

  I leave, and 6 hours later

  I have lost

  five hundred dollars.

  when I get in

  I walk over to the phone

  pick it up

  then put it back

  down.

  nobody wants to hear your troubles,

  I think, and that young girl doesn’t want

  an

  old

  man.

  I turn on the radio

  and the music is very gloomy.

  I turn it off,

  undress, go to the bedroom

  pull down the shades and turn out all

  the lights

  and get into bed

  and stare at the blackness,

  stone cold crazy

  once again.

  the way it works

  she came out at 9:30 a.m. in the morning

  and knocked at the manager’s door:

  “my husband is dead!”

  they went to the back of the building together

  and the process began:

  first the fire dept. sent two men

  in dark shirts and pants

  in vehicle #27

  and the manager and the lady and the

  two men went inside as she

  sobbed.

  he had knifed her last April and

  had done 6 months for that.

  the two men in dark shirts came out

  got in their vehicle

  and drove away.

  then two policemen came.

  then a doctor (he probably was there to

  sign the death certificate).

  I became tired of looking out the

  window and began to
>
  read the latest issue of

  The New Yorker.

  when I looked again there was a nice

  sensitive-looking gray-haired gentleman

  walking slowly up and down the

  sidewalk in a dark suit.

  then he waved in a black

  hearse which

  drove right up on the lawn and stopped

  next to my porch.

  two men got out of the hearse

  opened up the back

  and pulled out a gurney with 4

  wheels. they rolled it to the back of the

  building. when they came out again he was in a

  black zipper bag and she was in

  obvious distress.

  they put him in the

  hearse and then walked back to

  her apartment and went inside

  again.

  I had to take out my laundry and

  run some other errands.

  Linda was coming to visit and

  I was worried about her seeing that

  hearse parked next to my porch.

  so I left a note pinned to my door

  that said: Linda, don’t worry.

  I’m ok. and

  then I took my dirty laundry to my car and

  drove away.

  when I got back the hearse was gone and

  Linda hadn’t arrived yet.

  I took the note from the door and

  went inside.

  well, I thought, that old guy in back

  he was about my age and

  we saw each other every day but

  we never spoke to one another.

  now we wouldn’t have to.

  bright lights and serpents

  oftentimes I can’t separate the

  people from bright lights

  and serpents.

  in the supermarket

  I see them standing and waiting

  or pushing their carts.

  I see rumps and ears and eyes

  and skin and mouths, and

  I feel curiously detached.

  I suppose I fear them or

  I fear their difference and

  I step aside as they

  pick up rolls of toilet paper,

  apricots, heads of lettuce.

  today I saw a man

  less than 3 feet tall.

  he was shorter than his

  shopping basket as he

  stood angrily in the aisle

  looping steaks into his shopping

  cart.

  for a moment I felt like

  touching him and saying,

  “so you’re different too?”

  but I moved on as the

  lights glared and

  serpents abounded.

  my total at the register

  was $46.42

  I paid the cashier whose

  teeth kept watching me.

  without warning

  a bolt of lightning

  flashed past my left ear

  and flickered out in the fresh

  egg section. then

  I picked up my bag and

  walked out to the parking

  lot.

  mean and stingy

  oh, we don’t give enough parties,

  I just love to dance,

  we never see anybody,

  where have we gone lately?:

  to one poetry reading.

  you go to the racetrack

  and you only make love to me

  when you feel like it

  when you’re not hung over

  when you’re not tired from the

  track.

  it’s the same thing over and over

  again.

  I’m afraid to invite people

  here because you’ll insult them.

  you’re supposed to be the greatest

  poet in East Hollywood

  but you’re mean and stingy,

  you claim we have a great relationship

  you claim you like my kids,

  but when I lost $75 at the track

  you didn’t reimburse me.

  you give me very little.

  we don’t see anybody

  it’s just the same thing over and

  over again,

  don’t you know that life can be

  interesting? I’m so bored, bored,

  bored, bored, I’m about to go

  crazy!

  o.k., I say, and hang up.

  now she can get un-bored.

  I wonder who will un-bore her

  first?

  probably a bore. an unemployed actor

  with asthma who likes the

  3 Stooges.

  what she doesn’t realize is

  that—usually—only boring people

  get bored.

  and before you do

  I’ll hang up this

  poem.

  $100

  the old woman with the dog

  on the rope leash

  asked me about the

  room

  her dress was shapeless,

  filthy and ragged at the hem

  and her dog was frightened

  stunned

  shocked

  quivering.

  I told her the landlord was

  not home

  and that the room was

  in the back on the

  2nd floor, and was

  $100.

  $100? she asked

  yes

  I

  said.

  she said

  oh…

  can I pet your

  dog?

  I asked.

  she said

  yes.

  the dog would not

  trust me

  it ducked and pulled away and I stepped

  back.

  they walked away together down between the

  bungalows

  down the steps and

  off

  toward

  Western

  Avenue.

  her dog’s

  eyes

  were more lovely

  than those of any woman I have

  ever known.

  this particular war

  gutted:

  sunk like the German navy

  the Japanese fleet

  gutted:

  no air power

  no reserves

  no recourse

  gutted:

  as a mouse runs across the floor

  gutted:

  as I watch a useless blue telephone

  cord

  25 feet long

  gutted:

  again

  the roads are muddied

  banked with dirty snow

  as everything continues:

  fry-cooks

  traffic signals

  somebody now pounding a nail

  into a wall.

  gutted:

  the whole thing no more than a decimal point

  as she now sings her old song to her

  new lover.

  German bar

  I had lost the last race big

  somebody had stolen my coat

  I could feel the flu coming on

  and my tires were

  low. I went in to get a

  beer at the German bar

  but the waitress was having a fit

  her heart strangled by disappointment

  grief and loss.

  women get troubled all at once,

  you know. I left a tip

  and got out.

  nobody wins.

  ask Caesar.

  floor job

  she has a new apartment

  and I stretch out on the couch

  smoking

  while she scrubs the floor

  kneeling in her blue jeans

  I see that beautiful big ass

  and her long hair falls almost to the floor.

  I have been in that body a fe
w times

  never enough times, of course,

  but I consider my luck sufficient.

  I no longer want to make her totally mine,

  just my share will do

  and it’s a far more comfortable arrangement:

  I have no need for exclusive possession.

  let her have others

  then she’ll know who’s best at heart.

  otherwise she’ll likely consider herself

  unduly trapped.

  but what a show now:

  those blue jeans so tight

  there’s nothing so magical as a woman’s ass

  (unless it be some other part).

  I don’t want to die just yet

  so now and then I look away

  at a curtain or down into the

  ashtray or at a dresser.

  then I look back

  and all the parts

  are still there.

  I hear soft sounds from the night outside

  and I am happy.

  the icecream people

  the lady has me temporarily off the bottle

  and now the pecker stands up

  better.

  however, things change overnight—

  instead of listening to Shostakovitch and

  Mozart through a smeared haze of smoke

  the nights change, new

  complexities:

  we drive to Baskin-Robbins,

  31 flavors:

  Rocky Road, Bubble Gum, Apricot Ice, Strawberry

  Cheesecake, Chocolate Mint…

  we park outside and look at the icecream

  people

  a very healthy and satisfied people,

  nary a potential suicide in sight

  (they probably even vote)

  and I tell her

  “what if the boys saw me go in there? suppose they

  find out I’m going in for a walnut peach sundae?”