Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Two loons and a chainsaw

I've decided to write one of the many true stories I have of this house. This is my neighborhood now and my Grandma lived here in Guntown, so no matter what other places I was forced to live in, this was home and this house was part of it. It's was owned by one Bertha California Bloomfield, a very nice lady who everyone in the neighborhood liked. And we all called her Bertha California, because that was her real name and we all liked it. It was exotic. Beside this house sat an enormous Victorian monstrosity in disrepair know as Myrtle's Grocery. Behind the grocery was a bunch of crappy cabins Myrtle rented out to the unfortunate. And behind the cabins sat my Mother's house. The cabin and the grocery have been torn down now. No one was sorry to see the cabins go, but, everyone still bemoans the loss of Myrtle's,where everyone had a charge account and you could indulge all of your addictions until welfare day with little penalty. Myrtle was fair.
*
She was a hugely obese old woman with a fondness for evil looking Minor Birds which sat on top of their cages by the ancient brass cash register with the little scrolls all over it, giving customers the beady black evil eye and a good cussing as need be. Myrtle rarely moved from her chair behind the register, which was well because she refused to wear underpants and wore a mumu like house dress to work. On the rare occasions she was forced to move to look for something she traumatized many a child when that mumu would ride up as she reached for a dusty over priced box of light bulbs someone's mama had sent them in for. I think every Guntown kid's first real sentance was "Put that on Mama's charge account." She had this ingenious way to get herself free bread. She would always take one piece of bread out of every bag she sold and put it in an old bread bag she kept for that purpose, sealing the new bread back up and putting it on the sale shelf. No one minded, everyone understood her cheapness. She lived through the Depression, you know. She had this adorable curmudgeon she was married to for ages named Joe. He looked exactly like Uncle Joe from Petticoat Junction, but, this Joe had a mouth so foul many people likened him to a drunken sailor. On several occasions since I've grown up I have actually encountered drunken sailors and let me tell you, they had nothin' on Joe. We all liked him though, he gave all the little kids free penny candy and never asked them to do anything weird for it. He'd just say "Here's some candy, ya fucking little bastard." He was a nice guy.
*
Joe and Myrtle hated each other with a passion. They hated everything about each other, the way they talked, they way they ate, the way they looked, the way they breathed. Listening to them fight was a daily event that many enjoyed, they even put a bench outside on the store porch so people could get a cold sody and rest while they enjoyed the latest argument. The eternal Minor Birds would pick up Joe's language and imitate his voice and long after he passed away it was unnerving to hear them yell "God Damned stupid fucking old woman!", with old Joe long buried. Myrtle gave me one of my first good paying jobs. She'd let me take her big new Cadillac out of the garage where she hid it and drive her to the gambling casinos in the city. She didn't see well enough to drive and she loved gambling. She said I was a responsible kid. That meant I'd never stolen from her. Not that she knew of, anyway. I hated that big car, but, she paid me well. I was 14 when that started. Myrtle said I didn't need a drivers license and it was legal if I didn't get caught. I never did, so I guess she was right.
*
But, this isn't Myrtle's story, though I have plenty of hers. This is Jack's story, one of hundreds of Jack stories I have stored in my head. Jack was the drunken son of Bertha California Bloomfield. Sigh. She loved him, but, she knew he was ner'do well and often referred to him as "no good." Jack's claim to fame was winning bar fights in the 1950's and starring in a black and white porn film from the same era. He'd somehow gotten one still grainy photo from it he carried in his wallet and it did no one any good to tell him it wasn't obscene. Them was fightin' words to Jack. He was a porn star, dammit, and likened himself to John Holmes which no one in Guntown had ever heard of back then, so we had no clue what he was bragging about. The truth of the matter was never known to me. I wasn't that curious.
*
Everybody liked Jack even though he was no good. He was funny and talked to anyone anyplace. We were used to him. Oh, sure, there were times he'd go on a bender and keep the whole neighborhood up all night long singing on peoples lawns and dancing a waltz with their mailbox, but, in general we all understood that everyone has problems and demon alcohol was Jacks. He never hurt anyone and he had a mother with an exotic name. They added spice to the pot. Myrtle liked Jack because he charged all his beer there and Bertha California would make sure his bill was paid. If she hated alcohol, she hated unpaid bills worse. Myrtle got so she'd keep whiskey, rum and vodka under the counter for Jack even though she was too cheap to get a liquor license. She'd cackle that Jack paid for her Cadillac. Maybe he did.
*
Jack had this habit of calling people "sonsabitches." He didn't mean anything by it, but, one day he called my brother that. My brother was never right in the head and he snapped. At that time we were still teenagers. He was living with my Mom and I was living in one of Myrtle's cabins with the other unfortunates. Myrtle said I was the only teenage girl she ever had that always paid her rent. I didn't remind her the Cadillac trips paid my rent and then some. Anyway, my brother, Bobby went off like a cheap light bulb when Jack called him a sonuvabitch and started screaming that Jack had called our Mother a bitch. He was so mad he was jumping up and down and the veins in his head were bulging. I reminded him that our Mother IS a bitch, and he said "Yeah, but, Jack aint callin' her that. We're the only one's who get to call her that. It's the law." He knew a lot about the law back then. I told Bobby to knock it off, that Jack could be our next Daddy. I was trying to get Jack and Mom together because he was someone who didn't scare me. I knew there'd be another Daddy eventually and I wanted to pick one I liked. She wasn't having it though, Jack was willing, but, Mom said she wasn't marrying another drunkard. She did though, but, that's yet another story. She said she wouldn't have Jack Bloomfield for all of Bertha California's Green Stamps. And that was saying something back then because Bertha California had furnished her whole house with those Green Stamps and everyone thought it was right classy.
*
Bobby was so angry he pitched a fit his brain couldn't get him out of. He went in the house and got an electric chainsaw, an unheard of modern weapon back in the 70's and he plugged it in and chased Jack up on the roof of his house. Right up there where that brick chimney is. The chainsaw cord and the one extension he had on it only went to the edge of the yard and Bobby was so mad. He cussed the cord and then got an idea in that poor head of his. He went in and got all the money he had stuffed under his dirty mattress and asked Jack if he'd wait for him. Jack obliged, like I knew he would. He went and got a six pack and a fifth of whiskey and took it up to the roof to wait for Bobby to come back and finish the fight. It was honorable. Bobby took his old hearse that he kept because it freaked our Mother out and she wouldn't go near it, that's where he kept his glue and pot stashed and he knew she'd never look inside for fear of the Reaper. He took that hearse and he drove it up to the square and he bought all the extension cords the hardware store carried.
*
When he got back, Jack was well into a toot and we were all worried he'd fall off the roof and break his fool neck. Bertha California was crying for her son to come down and instead he began a roof waltz with the empty whiskey bottle. It was quite graceful and I was surprised. My Brother plugged in all the cords and announced he was now ready to saw Jack's "fuckin' dumb head" off. Jack yelled, "Come on ya sonsabitches!" Which was how the whole damn thing started, but, drunks have short memories. I was afraid Bobby would cut off his fingers and then he couldn't work on old car motors any more and since that was the only skill he had, it was terrifying to me.
*
I had my toddler on my hip and I yelled "Bobby you stop this, you're scaring the baby!" The baby began to laugh, calling me a liar. Bobby began to climb the trellis which led to the roof. Bertha California was livid then screeching "Don't yall break my rose trellis or I'll kill both of you deader than a hammer!" That's really dead in Guntown talk. Myrtle came out just as Bobby reached the second floor and thew in her two cents. "Bobby Harbin, don't you dare kill Jack, he owes me for that whiskey!"
*
Jack, by this time, knew Bobby was serious, even in his drunken stupor. Jack began to pull some bricks out of the crumbling chimney and pitch them at Bobby's head. His aim was way off because of the whiskey, but, it made Bertha California even more upset. "My chimney! You sonsabitches!" I'd never heard her cuss before, but, apparently it was an inherited trait.
*
As Bobby was hauling himself onto the roof with the buzzing chainsaw in one hand the cops pulled up, sirens screaming and lights a whirling. The towns one fire truck behind them. My little boy clapped his hands and said "Wook, mommy, big twuck, yay!" Yep, big truck. Happy family memories. As they put my brother in the squad car they touched the back of his head and he let them. That surprised me. Most everyone in the neighborhood was afraid of my brother, even then, but, I never was. He wasn't really mean at all. They didn't know he still slept with his kitties and cried when one got ran over. Bobby looked at me through the cop car window and grinned a lopsided grin, like, I showed them. I grinned back and he yelled "Bring me a joint in jail! It's in the hearse!" Which wasn't his brightest moment. I ended up doing it though. Which wasn't my brightest moment.
*
As they pulled away, I said "Wave bye bye to Uncle Bobby, he's going on vacation. " Eric laughed excitedly, waved his chubby hand and said "Bye bye, Bobby, bye." They took Jack away too, for public intox and for accidentally hitting an officer with a stray brick. As they hauled him away Jack yelled, "I want you cops to be pall bearers at my funeral. It'll be the last time you sonsabitches pick me up!" He was famous for that line. Jack had to stay in the Sheriff's basement room at his house, because they couldn't put the two of them in the same jail. After that Jack bragged that he got The Hilton and better food. Bertha California was mad for years about her trellis and chimney. You can't buy a chimney with Green Stamps. But, Jack never did call my brother a sunofabitch again, not even when he was falling down drunk. Jack is dead now and I kind of miss him sometimes.
*
Note: No names have been changed to protect the innocent, because there were none. Except little Eric who wouldn't mind and who talked about the big twuk and pwice car go vroom, for months afterward. I even had to by him a toy fire truck. Luckily Myrtle had a dusty one on a high shelf and I had a charge account.

50 comments:

Unknown said...

Pat, that is a great story recap!! More than ever you should put all your memories in a book. I was picturing the roof incident, the chimney bricks, the sonsabitches, the mumu tangled in Myrtle's ass. And Little Eric proving you wrong. Got a good laugh out of it!

Dirty Disher said...

It's all true. I have lived a strange life, but, it's been mostly a good one.

MuserMommyinPA said...

Pat, all your stories are great! I agree, imagine the books that you could put together and all the stories you could tell. Instead of a list of books, YOU are my summer reading. The imagery is so good I can picture it as if I were there myself.

I haven't commented much, but I wanted to tell you that your blog is wonderful and I am glad I found it. Thank you for sharing all your stories. It may be good for you, but I also feel a little lighter after reading all your stories old and new.

Anonymous said...

Pat,
great story. I felt like I was a bystander, seeing all for myself. What a wonderful book of short stories you could publish! This post reminded me of the writings of Jean Shepard (?sp)and the stories he told (the most famous-A Christmas Story). "In God we Trust, All Others Pay Cash" was a hoot.
'nuff said

Ali said...

love, love this story, keep 'em coming, DD! I had to muffle my LMAO's cuz i am in a conference room with my project team and if they realize i took a break from work to ready your site, they would think it was ok to check their facebook! I did not know your son but he must have been between 2-3 at that time 'cuz his behavior sounds a lot like my 28 month olds, he loves big tucks adn pwice cars, and fivre tucks! Ditto on what MuserMommyinPA said! I think if a project ever takes me to your part of the world I wanna' come over and have you read my cards!
Have a good day!
ali

Nina said...

Pat,
I am a very greedy woman. I loved this story but it was a mere tease of what I REALLY want. Which is about 300 pages of this stuff. Well maybe I'd like closer to 600 but I'm willing to cut you a break, it being a first book and all.

Reading on the computer is fine but having all those words in a compact volume to carry around and curl up with in cozy spots is much better.

You are a gifted story-teller. You've lived through times and experiences many will never know or could even begin to imagine.

You have the ability to take those experiences from your mind and translate them to words on a screen/page with all the talent that a master painter creates visions on canvas.

Many folks can write but only a select few can actually bring worlds to life on the page. You ARE one of those few, rare and talented writers...

Dirty Disher said...

Thank you for letting me practice on you guys.

Anonymous said...

Pat, you have a many gifts and one of the most capitivating is your writing. This had me laughing (much needed these days) and left me wanting more. Pat's right; a collection of these delicious stories would be awesome. Please ma'am, may we have some more?

Dan Zinski said...

I wanted him to cut the guy up with the chainsaw. Oh well.

Dirty Disher said...

I don't think my brother would have really done it. I was afraid he would kill Jack by accident though. So was Jack. My father would have done it. He did do it and spent his life in prison. My brother is so not like him though.

iambriezy said...

I'm in agreement with everyone here (except Crabbie, sick bastard). I just LOVE the way you tell a story. My grandma used to tell stories like yours and I've missed hearing them. I'm so glad I found your blog, you have the gift.

Anonymous said...

So vivid, watching it all play out in my mind.

Connie

Eric in San Diego said...

Thank you, Pat! I honestly felt the pathos and emotion in that scene as if I was there! Rare talent, lady, extremely rare. Most hacks today merely put words on paper or screen, but you put the entire experience out there for us to share. The sadness is palpable, but also the reality of having lived through it and come out the other side. Please, Patricia!! The time has come for you to write the entire book! DO IT!!

frimmy said...

More!!!

Dirty Disher said...

I forgot to add that Jack yelled his famous line when the cops hauled him away. "I want you cops to be pall bearers at my funeral. It'll be the last time you sonsabitches pick me up!" I have to add that in. He was famous for that line.

TVsnark said...

I enjoyed that crazy story!

Thanks for sharing.

Alanna Smithee said...

Please write a book. Please. I envision something like the David Sedaris book "Dress Your Family in Cordoroy and Denim". Each chapter is a different story about his life. The first part about his childhood, the second part about his experiences in art school and Europe.

Kiki said...

DD Everyday I visit your blog since June and
I have begun to sound like a parrot repeating
to myself how much I love the stories you tell.
Pat please write your memoires for Lissa
and dedicate the book in Eric s name. Kiki :)
I would be first in line to buy it in Canada.

Anonymous said...

I've been following this blog for about 2 years...and this is by far my favorite post. It reminds me of the stories my father tells of growing up in Oklahoma...I agree, you should compile these stories in a book, I'm sure there'd be dog-eared copies from coast to coast.

Xianli

Heidi said...

Great story. I cannot wait to read the next one!

Anonymous said...

Oh wow. You are a great storyteller. You really should write a book.

Everyday Life said...

I want to hear more and more! I love love love this blog.

Matilda said...

Damn funny story! You have me hooked!

Nina said...

ALL these people love it and agree that your book would be a success...jus sayin....:)

miss tia said...

very vivid...you can paint a picture with words....

Noelle said...

oh boy! I knew Jack but not until he was old, pickled, still mouthy. I was a young bartender and would cringe when driver (who was it mother's husband?) would drop him off. He would sit next to the other old fart who would order "whiskey sour no ice no tail" No tail means no straw. embarrassing to learn for the first time. ha

Jack was ok. Drank whiskey that he would order double and you poured light otherwise he would never make it out the door. He would call me beautiful and get all personal about your love life. He would slowly become the center of attention lots of times repeating a story about being the tough guy in some unjust that had gone on in the world.


Afternoon in small town tavern. same stories would go on for weeks. like who has walnuts to shuck, or where to find the stolen lawn mower that the neighbor actually borrowed.

I know you did the same little bar-tending stint. Remember how insane the monotony.

I have seen that house look better.

did you go to his funeral may have been a cop carry him

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Vicki said...

Pat, you have a gift for writing.
Please write the book. It would
sell and I could see a great movie
being made from the storyline.

Nadine said...

and the lady says she "can't write a book"..... I say Bullllllllllll ... Pat move your butt and start writing a few pages a day... I KNOW the inspiration will just flow out of you..... go for it woman!!!!

A-Gran said...

Woooooooow. More!

Nissa said...

What an awesome story! I thank you for sharing it as I enjoyed reading it:) I cannot wait to read more!

Laurajean said...

I agree with Vicki, you have the potential for not only a book but a screenplay as well, please do it.

Corina 1.0 said...

Thanks for this story; I really "saw" everything that happened!
I love your blog, and I admit to being disapointed when I check for new stories and there aren't any, yet. Thanks for the laugh..and I vote book too!

coffeebean said...

So, there was your first chapter. That is great, I was laughing the whole time. Just compile all your stories from your posts and there is your book. I feel lucky getting to read for free. :-)

Anonymous said...

Wow. That was great Pat. Please keep going. I want to know more, good and bad, all with your tone. I could read stuff like that four hours and days. Write a book! Write a book!

Unknown said...

Great story DD. Your making me late for work...lol Couldn't stop reading though.
K

Major Majormajor said...

So when is the book coming out?
I saw where you had posted this in the morning and I wanted to wait until I was "settled" in before reading it. Without any interruptions. It was worth the wajt.

Dirty Disher said...

Thank you all and I will continue with the stories since everyone seems to like them.

Noelle, your comment tickled me pink, because I KNOW you knew Jack and I aint lyin'..he was pistol. Ask Scott about the time he was going to punch Jack in the nose for talking bad to me. He might have been too toasted to remember it, but, it was very brave because Jack could be mean. He'd started that "Patty, don't abuse my love" shit and I told him to take his drink and sit down and he got all nutty. Scott jumped right in. I just stood there with my mouth open. You know me, I'm rarely shocked. LMAO!

Dirty Disher said...

And "no tail" is what Jack got for the last 20 years of his life. BWAAAAA HA!

bella said...

thanks Pat...awesome read!! the best part was that it was a whole story and a nice long post. I often feel like your posts are just teasers cuz they're so short. I hope you write some more soon!

btw - the big dog is STILL gassy since the wonder bread incident. poor guy...

Corina said...

fabulous writing! I can SOO imagine you standing by with Eric on your hip watching this event go down. You must have TONS of stories like that living in your town! I love it! :)

And PS - thank you for letting me know about the baby deer and their need for milk. My dad's boss is bottle feeding a fawn now, so i'll have to see what he uses. I didn't see them tonight, but tomorrow i plan on leaving a dish of watery canned milk out for them. :)

Bayou Jane said...

Pat,
About how many aunts, uncles, cousins, etc. were living in Guntown? (I still want to know why it was called Guntown? There's got to be a story there.) The reason I ask is because my mom grew up like that and when one moved, they all moved. Didn't matter why they moved, they just did. All the relatives on my Mom's mother's side---it was like the men didn't matter. Thre were some very strong women then holding those families together!

Jen said...

Just what I needed. Thank you!

lia said...

WOW!!!!!!!!!! you are one hell of a writer. i was in thrall.

Dirty Disher said...

Corina, I'm so glad you're helping the fawns, those pics were heartbreaking. Thank you. I knew you'd do it. Heh.

Dirty Disher said...

Bayou, yep, one moved, they all moved. Men were the most important thing on Earth and they treated them like Gods, at first..then like their hired help.

Anonymous said...

This is great--I'm with everybody else, Pat--keep writing!

10G (Gina)

Anonymous said...

a "of mice & men" moment.

lisa k said...

I never read and the only time I did was when in school and was forced to. I just can't sit still to save my life...but I read this and enjoyed it very much. If you were to write a book...I would read it and be content with it. It takes a great story teller to grab my attention and you did DD...It was great!

Anonymous said...

Pat,
Not only could you write, with you artistic abilities, you could also illustrate your writings.

'nuff said