The Dead Janitors Club (34 page)

BOOK: The Dead Janitors Club
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    Since we had not won the cleaning contracts on any of the lesser properties that I had spent days documenting, Dirk and I came to the conclusion that we were the Public Guardian's go-to guys for really nasty jobs. When normal companies didn't cut it, you had to call in the superstars. And this property required superstars.
    Gordon Chow had been the janitor of an elementary school that was roughly nine yards away (the Jeff Klima measurement of front lawns, not the football unit). With a name like Chow and living on the outskirts of Koreatown, he'd be Korean, you'd probably guess, sight unseen. But you, like me, would have been dead wrong.
    Ol' Gordon was a heavyset white guy in his eighties who'd been found dead in his bed of natural causes. Gordon was being taken care of by a woman from across the street, so even though he died alone, he didn't have a chance to rot. But just because Gordon wasn't musty, decomposing, and filthy when he was discovered, that didn't mean his house wasn't.
    Whereas the majority of hoarder houses I had come across were more in line with general disarray, largely just a collective of heaped trash, Gordon's house reflected that he was a bona fide collector. Where the Sewer House had a mountain of empty beer cans, Doritos bags, receipts, leaves, and other refuse to climb over, Gordon had records. Pressed vinyl recordings of every band you've never heard of, slipped from their crates and forged by time into a large mountain of musical waste. It was like someone had prepped an anti-disco bonfire, and all that was needed was a lit match.
    The smell made for a bad work environment. The house, with its ill-working plumbing, had long since spewed water into the walls and floorboards, covering the surface areas with a grainy black mold. Black mold is the really bad kind, the kind that does major damage to your health under prolonged exposure. Worse still, it had begun to creep from the fixed surfaces out onto the trash layers, giving everything a soggy, filmy texture. As a result, all the records were ruined.
    In oblivious homage to Raiders of the Lost Ark, the house was filled with dangers and booby traps, orchestrated accidentally by Gordon's insanity. The spiders were everywhere, and shelving, weighted under impossible loads of cheap, bubbly carnival glass gave way with the slightest change in atmosphere. Towers of inferior still-in-the box stereos stretched to the ceiling, their exteriors being devoured by the mold. In hindsight, it would have been smarter to drop that lighted match after all.
    Donning paper painter's masks, my crew foraged their way into the mess, determined to blaze a path back out or collapse trying. They were an expendable bunch. I was mostly there for supervisory purposes, because I was unwilling to once again risk my back by hauling out box load after box load of the structure's many curios. As such, I had the task of once more setting up my chair on the front lawn and acting as neighborhood liaison.
    The usual chattering oddballs made their way across to watch and offer commentary, but with their being mostly people whose first language was something Asian, I could typically only nod and smile agreeably. One neighbor, an obese white man on his electronic Rascal scooter, zoomed over early to welcome me to the neighborhood. His was the house with the twenty-five-foot antenna looming over the backyard, and he told me conversationally that his neighbors didn't like it, but fuck them.
    As self-proclaimed mayor of the neighborhood, the guy, whom we'll call "Rascal Fats," was quite opinionated about everything we were doing. Rascal's daughter had been Gordon's caretaker, he informed me, the orange pennant flag raised above his backseat flapping in the wind.
    "She's supposed to get the house," Rascal continued, jabbing a sausagelike finger in my direction. "If you guys find a will in there… disregard it. Gordon promised that my daughter could have his house. That will is old…It promises everything to a sister out in Florida who never even visits him. My daughter deserves everything."
    "That's for the courts to decide," I said, raising ten defensive sausagelike fingers of my own.
    "I should get to pick through the trash there and see what I want to take…My daughter took care of that man, so it's practically her stuff. She's the only other person who had a key to his place…She's the only one Gordon trusted…"
    Rascal started his stupid scooter toward the pile of salvageable merchandise on the front lawn, and I jumped quickly in front to block him, casting out my palm as something akin to that guy standing up to the tank in Tiananmen Square. Rascal didn't like that, but he stopped short all the same.
    "Why should you guys get to steal all his stuff? We're his neighbors."
    "We're not stealing anything," I said angrily, though my anger might have been directed at myself. I had had my eye on a surroundsound speaker system that would complement my room at the frat house nicely. "Anything of quality goes to the Public Guardian's office, and they auction it off. The money then goes back into the estate…so if your daughter is the one who gets the house, she'll get the money, too."
    I didn't believe that necessarily, but Rascal's piglike eye sockets narrowed greedily. "Have you guys found the will yet?" he asked, suddenly friendly.
"Nope," I shook my head. "But if it's in there, we will."
    Having complete freedom on the first day under the unwatchful eye of Billy was a liberty we took for granted. It was his duty to search the house for that aforementioned will as well as any other valuables. The bag of money from the mobile home had caused quite a stir in the county office.
    Instead of working, though, Billy decided to flirt with Kim, grinning that loutish grin of his and making what he thought were cleverly seductive comments. Kim, ignorant, babbled on about her impending engagement and how she'd recently cleaned up a decomposing body.
    Meanwhile, Dirk and the gang were inside the house scouring for cash. Dirk had made the unbelievably stupid mistake of clueing in our coworkers that if they found any cash, they were to keep it secret from Billy, and the lot of us would split it. I could see why he would tell them that. He was paranoid that they'd pocket it themselves or do the honest thing and report it to Billy, and Dirk would lose out completely. He was hedging his bets, believing that many eyes searching would yield that humongous payoff that would tide us all over nicely.
    I was furious at Dirk for doing that, not because I was suddenly above stealing, but because it was a stupid way to do it. The sort of people who willingly came in and cleaned out houses infested with mold, spiders, and the potential for raw sewage were not the brightest people on the planet. It especially didn't help that it was a crew full of chatterboxes.
    All I needed was an ignorant dumbass like Doug to go foolishly spouting to Rascal that we were secretly splitting up any money we found. It was like that old saying about how three people can keep a secret if two of them are dead. With a team of idiots tearing through the house in pursuit of ill-gotten gains and a snoopy neighbor poking around, I should have known that the job was one giant disaster waiting to happen.
* * *
The second day on the job saw my crew returning to the house without Dirk. They had failed to find their financial windfall the previous day, and Dirk, tenured position with the sheriff's department or not, couldn't keep missing work. Everybody else on our side happily returned, though, their feelers buzzing like metal detectors circling pay dirt. They hadn't been in on the last score, and they honestly believed that all the bags full of dirty twenties, fifties, and one hundreds had gone to the county. They had seen that money, though, and its possibility was potential enough.
    Billy also hadn't shown up for work that day, even though he had the keys to the house. Wanting to make the most of the workday, I instructed the crews to start working the sheds at the back of the house.
    Judging by the content of the sheds, Gordon had two true loves in life—colored yarn and ceramic tile. I didn't know what sort of zany business scheme he had ventured into that could possibly have combined the two, but it was fucking ridiculous.
    The first shed, poorly constructed and rotting from the inside out, was full of several tons worth of tile. Literally several fucking tons of tile were in that shed. Boxes upon boxes had long since collapsed the shelving inside, and rain had decimated the cardboard, leaving a horrendous collection of odds and ends. The crew spent the first hour and a half just moving shredded, pulpy boxes of the square, ceramic counter tile, nearly filling the day's allotment of dumpster without even venturing into the house.
    Billy still hadn't shown, and I knew something would have to change. I contacted Dirk at the police station, my voice a familiar one to all the operators there. He then did the dual tasks of contacting the Public Guardian's office and posting an ad on craigslist offering "free tile" to anyone willing to come and collect it.
    The Public Guardian's office said that they would have someone right on it, but nothing seemed to come of that. But as for the craigslist ad? We were swarmed. People will climb over smaller people at the opportunity to receive something free. I would just be happy to see it all gone. Truckloads of people showed up, each clamoring to get their hands on as much tile as they could.
    Of course this is America, so I was also swarmed with bitching, complaining assholes whining that it was too much work to receive free tile and that they didn't want to have to carry it all to their cars. But they all took what they could and drove off, the truck beds scraping the grounds under all the tonnage of tile, the wheel houses collapsing on straining tires, moving out much slower than they'd come in.
    And yet there was still more tile, a lot more. Most of the people claimed they would be back once they'd unloaded their cars and trucks, but I knew they wouldn't. No sane person needed that much tile.
    Equally as depressing, though easier to deal with, was the yarn. It rivaled the tile in quantity, leading me to wonder, "What weighs more, a ton of bricks or a ton of feathers?" What Gordon wanted with that much yarn, I could only speculate…but I didn't think the moon needed a sweater. No, Gordon doubtlessly had something much grander and far crazier in mind.
    Another phone call to Dirk, and another ad went up on craigslist for "free yarn." Several carloads of women showed up, and none of them complained. They took all they needed, and still there was lots more yarn. Eventually, so many cars came through the property that Rascal took it upon himself to scoot on over.
    "Have you found the will yet?" he complained, by way of introduction.
    "Nope," I said, not even wanting to give him the courtesy of my attention.
    "Just what in the Sam Hill [I didn't think people actually talked like this, but they do!] do you think you're doing giving away all that tile and yarn? Don't think I haven't seen you, cuz I seen you. I'm always watching." He rolled his scooter back and forth in short, lurching spurts as if that somehow showcased his ability to watch me. "I oughta call the county folks on you and report you…"
    "The county is the one that authorized us to do it," I bluffed, finally looking at him and seething with irritation.
    "It's technically my daughter's house…she should have the right to all that stuff."
    "Listen old-timer," I said, regretting the term as I said it. "If you want any of that yarn or tile, feel free to load it up on your little scooter and haul it away. Cause I want it gone." Instead he gave me a selfsatisfied little grunt and zipped away.
    When the county boys finally arrived, I realized how much of a shit storm had been brewing in their absence. Several official-looking men showed up in vans and cars, and a team of government lackeys suited up in biohazard suits to comb through the wreckage.
    Suddenly we in our paper painter's masks and work gloves didn't look so terribly professional. Billy had "no called, no showed" for several hours and then finally called his boss to complain that he was sick and, therefore, staying home that day. The Public Guardian's office reacted by unloading a mass of workers to tear through the house and find all valuables and the elusive will.
    I attempted to play foreman on behalf of my crew and get us access to work, but I was summarily dismissed with looks of disdain from several of the county jerks. To save face, I had my crew continue working on the backyard while the government invaded the house. I stayed out front to shoo off the women returning for more yarn.
    Nearing two o'clock in the afternoon, the county men emerged from the house, having knocked over every standing box, cleared off every surface, and emptied all trash onto the floor. They'd emerged with a grand total of thirteen thousand dollars, mostly in small bills they gathered off the dining room table.
    Later, when I told Dirk of the money's location, he kicked himself for having neglected to look there. It wasn't his fault entirely; that house was filled to the brim with trash. Still, no will had emerged, and the county men were certain they'd done their job to the fullest and that no will had, in fact, ever existed.
    Pulling off their biohazard garb, which they left for us to clean up, the men took the now-enveloped money as if it were the Ark of the Covenant, dropped the house keys off with me, and departed. As far as the suits were concerned, the house was empty.

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