Run With the Hunted: A Charles Bukowski Reader

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by Charles Bukowski


  black high-heeled shoes.

  no, I want them

  red.

  I watch her walk down the cement walk

  under the trees

  she walks all right and

  as the poinsettias drip in the sun

  I close the door.

  I made a mistake

  I reached up into the top of the closet

  and took out a pair of blue panties

  and showed them to her and

  asked “are these yours?”

  and she looked and said,

  “no, those belong to a dog.”

  she left after that and I haven’t seen

  her since. she’s not at her place.

  I keep going there, leaving notes stuck

  into the door. I go back and the notes

  are still there. I take the Maltese cross

  cut it down from my car mirror, tie it

  to her doorknob with a shoelace, leave

  a book of poems.

  when I go back the next night everything

  is still there.

  I keep searching the streets for that

  blood-wine battleship she drives

  with a weak battery, and the doors

  hanging from broken hinges.

  I drive around the streets

  an inch away from weeping,

  ashamed of my sentimentality and

  possible love.

  a confused old man driving in the rain

  wondering where the good luck

  went.

  the most

  here comes the fishhead singing

  here comes the baked potato in drag

  here comes nothing to do all day long

  here comes another night of no sleep

  here comes the phone ringing the wrong tone

  here comes a termite with a banjo

  here comes a flagpole with blank eyes

  here comes a cat and a dog wearing nylons

  here comes a machinegun singing

  here comes bacon burning in the pan

  here comes a voice saying something dull

  here comes a newspaper stuffed with small red birds

  with flat brown beaks

  here comes a cunt carrying a torch

  a grenade

  a deathly love

  here comes victory carrying

  one bucket of blood

  and stumbling over the berrybush

  and the sheets hang out the windows

  and the bombers head east west north south

  get lost

  get tossed like salad

  as all the fish in the sea line up and form

  one line

  one long line

  one very long thin line

  the longest line you could ever imagine

  and we get lost

  walking past purple mountains

  we walk lost

  bare at last like the knife

  having given

  having spit it out like an unexpected olive seed

  as the girl at the call service

  screams over the phone:

  “don’t call back! you sound like a jerk!”

  one for old snaggle-tooth

  I know a woman

  who keeps buying puzzles

  Chinese

  puzzles

  blocks

  wires

  pieces that finally fit

  into some order.

  she works it out

  mathematically

  she solves all her

  puzzles

  lives down by the sea

  puts sugar out for the ants

  and believes

  ultimately

  in a better world.

  her hair is white

  she seldom combs it

  her teeth are snaggled

  and she wears loose shapeless

  coveralls over a body most

  women would wish they had.

  for many years she irritated me

  with what I considered her

  eccentricities—

  like soaking eggshells in water

  (to feed the plants so that

  they’d get calcium).

  but finally when I think of her

  life

  and compare it to other lives

  more dazzling, original

  and beautiful

  I realize that she has hurt fewer

  people than anybody I know

  (and by hurt I simply mean hurt).

  she has had some terrible times,

  times when maybe I should have

  helped her more

  for she is the mother of my only

  child

  and we were once great lovers,

  but she has come through

  like I said

  she has hurt fewer people than

  anybody I know,

  and if you look at it like that,

  well,

  she has created a better world.

  she has won.

  Frances, this poem is for

  you.

  I saw Sara every three or four days, at her place or at mine. We slept together but there was no sex. We came close but we never quite got to it. Drayer Baba’s precepts held strong.

  We decided to spend the holidays together at my place, Christmas and New Year’s.

  Sara arrived about noon on the 24th in her Volks van. I watched her park, then went out to meet her. She had lumber tied to the roof of the van. It was to be my Christmas present: she was going to build me a bed. My bed was a mockery: a simple box spring with the innards sticking out of the mattress. Sara had also brought an organic turkey plus the trimmings. I was to pay for that and the white wine. And there were some small gifts for each of us.

  We carried in the lumber and the turkey and the sundry bits and pieces. I placed the box spring, mattress and headboard outside and put a sign on them: “Free.” The headboard went first, the box spring second, and finally somebody took the mattress. It was a poor neighborhood.

  I had seen Sara’s bed at her place, slept in it, and had liked it. I had always disliked the average mattress, at least the ones I was able to buy. I had spent over half my life in beds which were better suited for somebody shaped like an angleworm.

  Sara had built her own bed, and she was to build me another like it. A solid wood platform supported by 7 four-by-four legs (the seventh directly in the middle) topped by a layer of firm four-inch foam. Sara had some good ideas. I held the boards and Sara drove home the nails. She was good with a hammer. She only weighed 105 pounds but she could drive a nail. It was going to be a fine bed.

  It didn’t take Sara long.

  Then we tested it—non-sexually—as Drayer Baba smiled over us.

  We drove around looking for a Christmas tree. I wasn’t too anxious to get a tree (Christmas had always been an unhappy time in my childhood) and when we found all the lots empty, the lack of a tree didn’t bother me. Sara was unhappy as we drove back. But after we got in and had a few glasses of white wine she regained her spirits and went about hanging Christmas ornaments, lights, and tinsel everywhere, some of the tinsel in my hair.

  I had read that more people committed suicide on Christmas Eve and on Christmas Day than at any other time. The holiday had little or nothing to do with the Birth of Christ, apparently.

  All the radio music was sickening and the t.v. was worse, so we turned it off and she phoned her mother in Maine. I spoke to Mama too and Mama was not all that bad.

  “At first,” said Sara, “I was thinking about fixing you up with Mama but she’s older than you are.”

  “Forget it.”

  “She had nice legs.”

  “Forget it.”

  “Are you prejudiced against old age?”

  “Yes, everybody’s old age but mine.”

  “You act like a movie star. Have you always had women 20 or 30 years younger than you?”

  “Not when
I was in my twenties.”

  “All right then. Have you ever had a woman older than you, I mean lived with her?”

  “Yeah, when I was 25 I lived with a woman 35.”

  “How’d it go?”

  “It was terrible. I fell in love.”

  “What was terrible?”

  “She made me go to college.”

  “And that’s terrible?”

  “It wasn’t the kind of college you’re thinking of. She was the faculty, and I was the student body.”

  “What happened to her?”

  “I buried her.”

  “With honors? Did you kill her?”

  “Booze killed her.”

  “Merry Christmas.”

  “Sure. Tell me about yours.”

  “I pass.”

  “Too many?”

  “Too many, yet too few.”

  Thirty or forty minutes later there was a knock on the door. Sara got up and opened it. A sex symbol walked in. On Christmas Eve. I didn’t know who she was. She was in a tight black outfit and her huge breasts looked as if they would burst out of the top of her dress. It was magnificent. I had never seen breasts like that, showcased in just that way, except in the movies.

  “Hi, Hank!”

  She knew me.

  “I’m Edie. You met me at Bobby’s one night.”

  “Oh?”

  “Were you too drunk to remember?”

  “Hello, Edie. This is Sara.”

  “I was looking for Bobby. I thought Bobby might be down here.”

  “Sit down and have a drink.”

  Edie sat in a chair to my right, very near to me. She was about 25. She lit a cigarette and sipped at her drink. Each time she leaned forward over the coffee table I was sure that it would happen, I was sure that those breasts would spring out. And I was afraid of what I might do if they did. I just didn’t know. I had never been a breast man, I had always been a leg man. But Edie really knew how to do it. I was afraid and I peeked sideways at her breasts not knowing whether I wanted them to fall out or to stay in.

  “You met Manny,” she said to me, “down at Bobby’s?”

  “Yeh.”

  “I had to kick his ass out. He was too fucking jealous. He even hired a private dick to follow me! Imagine that! That simple sack of shit!”

  “Yeh.”

  “I hate men who are beggars! I hate little toadies!”

  “‘A good man nowadays is hard to find,’” I said. “That’s a song. Out of World War Two. They also had, ‘Don’t sit under the apple tree with anybody else but me.’”

  “Hank, you’re babbling....” said Sara.

  “Have another drink, Edie,” I said and I poured her one.

  “Men are such shits!” she continued. “I walked into a bar the other day. I was with four guys, close friends. We sat around chugalugging pitchers of beer, we’re laughing, you know, just having a good time, we weren’t bothering anybody. Then I got the idea that I would like to shoot a game of pool. I like to shoot pool. I think that when a lady shoots pool it shows her class.”

  “I can’t shoot pool,” I said. “I always rip up the green. And I’m not even a lady.”

  “Anyway, I go up to the table and there’s this guy shooting pool all by himself. I go up to him and I say, ‘Look, you’ve had this table a long time. My friends and myself want to shoot a little pool. Do you mind letting us have the table for a while?’ He turned and looked at me. He waited. Then he sneered, and he said, ‘All right.’”

  Edie became animated and bounced around as she spoke and I peeked at her things.

  “I went back and told my friends, ‘We got the table.’ Finally this guy shooting is down to his last ball when a buddy of his walks up and says, ‘Hey, Ernie, I hear you’re giving up the table.’ And you know what he tells this guy? He says, ‘Yeah, I’m giving it up to that bitch!’ I heard it and I saw RED! This guy is bent over the table to cue in on his last ball. I grabbed a pool stick and while he was bent over I hit him over the head as hard as I could. The guy dropped on the table like he was dead. He was known in the bar and so a bunch of his friends rush over but meanwhile my four buddies rush over too. Boy, what a brawl! Bottles smashing, broken mirrors.... I don’t know how we got out of there but we did. You got some shit?”

  “Yeah but I don’t roll too good.”

  “I’ll take care of it.”

  Edie rolled a tight thin joint, just like a pro. She sucked it up, hissing, then passed it to me.

  “So I went back the next night, alone. The owner who is the bartender, he recognizes me. His name is Claude. ‘Claude,’ I told him, ‘I’m sorry about yesterday but that guy at the table was a real bastard. He called me a bitch.’”

  I poured more drinks all around. In another minute her breasts would be out.

  “The owner said, ‘It’s O.K., forget it.’ He seemed like a nice guy. ‘What do you drink?’ he asked me. I hung around the bar and had two or three free drinks and he said, ‘You know, I can use another waitress.’”

  Edie took a hit on the joint and continued. “He told me about the other waitress. ‘She pulled the men in but she made a lot of trouble. She played one guy against the other. She was always on stage. Then I found out she was tricking on the side. She was using MY place to peddle her pussy!’”

  “Really?” Sara asked.

  “That’s what he said. Anyhow, he offered me a position as a waitress. And he said, ‘No tricking on the job!’ I told him to cut the shit, I wasn’t one of those. I through maybe now I’ll be able to save some money and go to U.C.L.A., to become a chemist and to study French, that’s what I’ve always wanted to do. Then he said, ‘Come on back here, I want to show you where we store our excess stock and also I’ve got an outfit I’d like you to try on. It’s never been worn and I think it’s your size.’ So I went into this dark little room with him and he tried to grab me. I pushed him off. Then he said, ‘Just give me a little kiss.’ ‘Fuck off!’ I told him. He was bald and fat and very short and had false teeth and black warts with hairs growing out of them on his cheeks. He rushed me and grabbed a hunk of my ass with one hand and some titty with the other and he tried to kiss me. I pushed him off again. ‘I got a wife,’ he said, ‘I love my wife, don’t worry!’ He rushed me again and I gave him a knee you-know-where. I guess he didn’t have anything there, he didn’t even flinch. ‘I’ll give you money,’ he said, ‘I’ll be nice to you!’ I told him to eat shit and die. And so I lost another job.”

  “That is a sad story,” I said.

  “Listen,” said Edie, “I gotta go. Merry Christmas. Thanks for the drinks.”

  She got up and I walked her to the door, opened it. She walked off through the court. I came back and sat down.

  “You son-of-a-bitch,” said Sara.

  “What is it?”

  “If I hadn’t been here you would have fucked her.”

  “I hardly know the lady.”

  “All that tit! You were terrified! You were afraid to even look at her!”

  “What’s she doing wandering around on Christmas Eve?”

  “Why didn’t you ask her?”

  “She said she was looking for Bobby.”

  “If I hadn’t been here you would have fucked her.”

  “I don’t know. I have no way of knowing....”

  Then Sara stood up and screamed. She began to sob and then she ran into the other room. I poured a drink. The colored lights on the walls blinked off and on.

  Sara was preparing the turkey dressing and I sat in the kitchen talking to her. We were both sipping white wine.

  The phone rang. I went and got it. It was Debra. “I just wanted to wish you a Merry Christmas, wet noodle.”

  “Thank you, Debra. And a happy Santa Claus to you.”

  We talked awhile, then I went back and sat down.

  “Who was that?”

  “Debra.”

  “How is she?”

  “All right, I guess.”

  “What did sh
e want?”

  “She sent Christmas greetings.”

  “You’ll like this organic turkey, and the stuffing is good too. People eat poison, pure poison. America is one of the few countries where cancer of the colon is prevalent.”

  “Yeah, my ass itches a lot, but it’s just my hemorrhoids. I had them cut out once. Before they operate they run this snake up your intestine with a little light attached and they peek into you looking for cancer. That snake is pretty long. They just run it up you!”

  The phone rang again. I went and got it. It was Cassie. “How are you doing?”

  “Sara and I are preparing a turkey.”

  “I miss you.”

  “Merry Christmas to you too. How’s the job going?”

  “All right. I’m off until January second.”

  “Happy New Year, Cassie!”

  “What the hell’s the matter with you?”

  “I’m a little airy. I’m not used to white wine so early in the day.”

  “Give me a call some time.”

  “Sure.”

  I walked back into the kitchen. “It was Cassie. People phone on Christmas. Maybe Drayer Baba will call.”

  “He won’t.”

  “Why?”

  “He never spoke aloud. He never spoke and he never touched money.”

  “That’s pretty good. Let me eat some of that raw dressing.”

  “O.K.”

  “Say—not bad!”

  Then the phone rang again. It worked like that. Once it started ringing it kept ringing. I walked into the bedroom and answered it.

  “Hello,” I said. “Who’s this?”

  “You son-of-a-bitch. Don’t you know?”

  “No, not really.” It was a drunken female.

  “Guess.”

  “Wait. I know! It’s Iris!”

  “Yes, Iris. And I’m pregnant!”

  “Do you know who the father is?”

  “What difference does it make?”

  “I guess you’re right. How are things in Vancouver?”

  “All right. Goodbye.”

  “Goodbye.”

  I walked back into the kitchen again.

  “It was the Canadian belly dancer,” I told Sara.

  “How’s she doing?”

  “She’s just full of Christmas cheer.”

  Sara put the turkey in the oven and we went into the front room. We talked small talk for some time. Then the phone rang again. “Hello,” I said.

 

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