Joe's Black T-Shirt (2 page)

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Authors: Joe Schwartz

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My ex loved guns, liquor, and kicking my ass. It was a blessing when the police picked him up driving drunk with a loaded shotgun in the passenger seat. He got five years, and I got a no-fault divorce by a sympathetic judge.

His brother came by and collected his few belongings. He left behind anything he knew he couldn’t sell for beer money or trade for truck parts. Had he bothered to open the ladies shoebox at the bottom of the closet he would’ve been happier than a sissy with a new dick.

I pulled out the pink and white box and set it on the bed next to me. Its lid off, I suddenly felt a bit perverse. Bright red shotgun shells and long silver rifle cartridges lay in a disorganized puzzle but among the chaos was a neat three-by-six rack of gold bullets ready for use. I took one out and examined it. The acronym ‘9MM’ was clearly stamped into the flat, circular base.

I discharged the empty magazine from the gun and re-loaded it full back into the gun’s handle. The change was significant. A surge of potency overcame me as I swung the loaded barrel towards the mirror and faced myself. I remembered why in the hell I was doing all this and the thrill evaporated. Edgar.

There was no doubt as to his stealing. The police found our chop saw at First Star Pawn with the ID tag still attached. Posthole diggers, the tamper, and a gas-powered hedge trimmer all suddenly disappeared in conjunction with Edgar getting keys to the shop.

One morning after all the trucks mysteriously wouldn’t start, it became clear all the gas had been siphoned. Edgar called in sick that morning and the following day. He had swallowed more than he had stole and had the balls to claim he had the flu although it was the middle of August. It wasn’t any skin off our noses though. We figured that given enough rope, it was only a matter of time before he hung himself.

With Edgar though, it was always something. Maybe half your lunch came up missing or your new work gloves that you bought last weekend were nowhere to be found. It made us mad as hell, but we let it go. Sometimes we would get even by deliberately putting him on the trash run in the rain or lending him out to other units in the area for general labor. More often than not, though, he couldn’t or wouldn’t apply but the most minimal effort. After six months, his reputation preceded him and no other unit except ours would tolerate him. Most days we left him on shop duty where he either watched TV or slept. As long as he didn’t bother us, didn’t interfere, we were willing to accept it.

That is until Big Mike, the finest heavy equipment operator I had ever known, accused him of stealing a bottle of cologne from his locker. We could all smell the expensive scent on Edgar, but he firmly wouldn’t give in. When Big Mike took hold of him by the collar and drug him like a dog outside, we silently followed. There on Edgar’s truck seat, you could plainly see the clear bottle we all recognized as Big Mike’s, yet he would not confess. First he said he found it. Then he said it was always there. Finally he told Big Mike he could kiss his ass. The accumulation of lie upon lies compounded into a boiling frustration with which we were all too familiar. Big Mike did what we all had wanted to do many times and punched the little weasel square in the nose. Blood gushed out and stained his shirt. Without a word, Edgar got in his truck and peeled rubber out of the lot.

Half an hour later, celebrating over beers, Edgar’s battered pick-up returned accompanied by a police cruiser. Big Mike was arrested, charged with assault and hauled off. A week later the charges were dropped on the stipulation Big Mike immediately resign his position. That’s when we quit talking to Edgar. You would think such a collective cold shoulder would shame a man into quitting but not him. He seemed even happier.

The winter passed without many incidents. Occasionally he would come in reeking of the disputed cologne trying to taunt us somehow into another altercation. None of us dared. We all had families and there wasn’t a one of us who could replace this kind of money. We were trapped, waiting on the elusive golden rule of eighty. That was when your age plus the time on the job equaled eighty years. If you could make it, sixty percent of your paycheck was yours for the next twenty years, no questions asked. We were in effect marking time and trying to make it as pleasant as possible.

When spring came, we were all eager to escape the drudgery of the shop. With the April showers and the May flowers came the community service workers. Generally, college kids caught driving drunk or smoking pot or both. I was always glad to see them. Most were polite, called me ma’am until I told them otherwise, and were damn good workers. In my entire career, I never saw one two seasons in a row.

It was a rainy morning when Cindy showed up on our door, soaked to the bone, wearing a black tank top tucked into Daisy Duke shorts, and paper-thin thongs. She couldn’t have been less ready for a hard day’s work if she were nude. Our supervisor was a born-again believer who didn’t have a judgmental bone in his body. He decided that she could work until lunch with Edgar at the shop. Certainly she could sweep and mop. Edgar, in a rare display of conscientiousness, assured him ‘the young lady would not be shown any special privileges.’ The matter settled we walked single file out the door.

When we pulled back into the yard for lunch, the rain had turned into a mist that was cool to the skin but left you dry. Rainbows shimmered in the oil slicks and made the charcoal asphalt beautiful. Cindy looked like she had been crying. I sat down next to her with my paper sack lunch, asked her if she wanted half of my pb & j but she shook her head no. Edgar sat on a bucket in the corner with that smile of his on full blast, staring at her.

The next day, she came in wearing enough layers for snow removal. Call it woman’s intuition or simply the experience of living with bad men for far too long, but it was clear to me. Cindy’s eyes that had danced with the light of life were now nothing more than extinguished remains. When Edgar deliberately bumped into her, I thought she might scream.

Before the supervisor could speak, I insisted that I was in terrible need of a helper, probably for all week, and that Cindy suited my purposes. Edgar almost objected, then saw how serious I was.

I let Cindy sit in my truck all week, bringing extra cigarettes for her and in general letting her be. Sometimes I would look over and she would be crying or praying or screaming with the windows rolled up. Sometimes I think it was all three at once.

At the end of the week, her hours completed, she surprised me. Arms wide open, she covered me whole and hugged me with more compassion than I have ever felt. She whispered in my ear, “Thank you.” I cried all the way home thinking about it.

 

 

***

 

 

July Fourth was on a Monday that year. The supervisor had left the week prior for a mission trip, and the shop was ours to do with as we pleased. It was decided the Friday prior to the holiday that we needed a break. After the necessities of trash, bathrooms, and general appearances were performed, we would have an old-fashioned pig roast. We invited all the other area units and by lunch the maintenance yard looked like a convention.

I deliberately stayed sober, enjoying the company, listening to stories I had heard many times before, but mostly to keep a watch on Edgar. He had consumed most of the two thirty-packs of beer I had brought in before they had a chance to get cold in the ice chest. I waited with a cat’s dedication to catch a mouse for him.

Round about five o’clock, all that remained of the pig was gristle and bone. By tomorrow morning, even that would be lost to the raccoons. The men’s car keys jingled with drunken delight as they tried to unlock and start their personal and company vehicles alike. Some would stay on the back roads and hopefully get home without killing anybody. Most would crawl into the driver’s seat, turn on the radio, and sleep it off here. I had kept myself busy cleaning up paper plates and aluminum cans, waiting until I was certain everyone was either passed out or gone.

Edgar was comatose, sitting at a picnic table, beer still in hand, and with his head lolled back as if deeply interested in astronomy. I came over to him with a fresh beer, the top already open and woke him.

“Edgar!” I yelled and shook him until his eyes opened.

Disorientated he asked, “Wha’…what ja’ want?”

“The party ain’t over ‘til it’s over,” I said as I put his arm over my back and raised him upright. I set the new beer to his lips. It was like nursing a newborn calf. Nothing much required of me except to let nature take its course.

He belched in my face before he yelled, “Party!”

Without any resistance I led him to my car, taking particular care to fasten his seat belt.

“Safety first,” I said to him as he looked questioningly about my concerned actions. It was our company motto. A mantra that we said aloud to each other anytime we had to follow an asinine rule in flagrant disregard for common sense.

Drunkenly, he repeated after me. “Safety first,” and promptly fell asleep.

I drove slow and cautious to the rat hole trailer park where he lived. It was common knowledge among the meth set that this place was paradise.

As I unloaded him from the car into the trailer, he popped in and out of consciousness. Finally able to deposit him on to the couch, I went back to get my purse from the trunk. When I came back in, I was shocked to see him sitting up, fully awake, and holding a fresh beer. The kind that was triple the size of a normal can, what my ex called the breakfast of champions.

The can fell to the floor with a thunk, spraying the beer across the arm of the couch. He laughed, giving a half-hearted salute to his fallen comrade. When he looked up at me clutching my purse, his laughter stopped, and that damned smile grew on his face like mold. Edgar loosened the top of his blue jeans and unzipped his fly, exposing himself to me.

“C’mon baby,” he said. “If ya didn’t want this, ya wouldn’t be here.”
“Is that what you told Cindy.”
I reached in my purse and pulled out the gun.

In a moment he was up. He lunged for me, but his open pants considerably slowed his attack. On his knees, he looked up at me, laughing again as he looked straight into the Beretta’s barrel.

“Stupid cunt,” he cursed me as I pulled the trigger over and over again.

 

 

***

 

 

I stared into the twelve pairs of eyes as I finished my story. I couldn’t read them. Some were emotionless, some full of empathy, but most were in shock.

I saw Cindy sitting in the gallery, crying quietly into a tissue. Next to her my two boys with my ex. He had been awarded temporary custody pending the outcome of this trial.

Now that I had said everything I could remember, his honor excused me from the stand. I watched the seven women and five men leave to deliberate my judgment, to decide, as I had, on the merit of another human being’s intentions. Regardless their decision, I had no regrets.

 

 

###

 

 

 

 

Good Intentions

 

 

I push my way through the double glass doors of Bailey, Taylor, Shipman, Shipman, and Davis. The sign is erroneous, and I make a mental note, as I have every morning for the last nine months, to have the first Shipman removed.

Marvin is currently in the federal slam serving an eight-year sentence. Due to the nature of his crime, he spends twenty-three hours of every day in ‘protective custody.’ That’s code for solitary confinement with television. His amazing mind for jurisprudence trapped, useless and dormant, by the futility that is prison life.

I remember when the feds broke into our offices like boot-heel Nazi thugs. Their automatic weapons drawn as they generally terrorized the shit out of middle-aged secretaries whom hadn’t so much as jaywalked in their whole lives.

The leader, a guy dressed in a pin-stripped Brooks Brothers’ suit that fit him well fifty pounds ago, handed out the search warrants. He had the foresight to make sure there were enough copies for each of the partners, the associates, and even interns. The warrant was more seizure more than search. They wanted computers, every one Marvin was known to have used at any time, whether at work, home, or otherwise. By the time they left, the only computer that remained belonged to the file clerk.

Marvin was a pedophile. Not the kind grabbing kids from school bus stops, but without guys like him, shit like this would cease to exist. He was charged with the purchase, possession, and distribution of pornographic images of a minor under the age of ten years. To be more succinct: kiddie porn.

His wife of twenty years divorced him before he was sentenced. She took her fifty percent, as prescribed by law, and the court took the remainder to be held in a slush fund called the ‘victims reimbursement program.’ I suspected it was the cost of doing business. A tax levied upon the offender, guaranteeing his life outside of bars to be so miserable that if he didn’t kill himself, he certainly wouldn’t be of any significant trouble in the future.

I loved my brother, in spite of what he had done, and faithfully represented him. I was able to get him a plea-bargain, that saved him fifteen years, with the usual caveats. He could never practice law again. He would have to register as a sex offender. He would have to surrender his passport. He couldn’t be stopped, standing, or otherwise, within fifteen hundred feet of any school. All standard and reasonable clauses, that was always demanded and completely pointless toward rehabilitation. I wished we could have opted for castration. That, at least, would have been a reasonable solution for everyone involved.

“Morning, Warren,” my secretary chimed.

My voice percolated inside my throat. The normal grunt sounds I used to communicate my thoughts when words seemed too troublesome.

She handed me a stack of pink notes, mostly missed calls from clients. One in particular though struck me odd enough to find my voice.

“What in the hell does he want?” I asked myself.

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