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Bittersweet (standard:drama, 740 words) | |||
Author: GXD | Added: Jul 27 2007 | Views/Reads: 3377/0 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
Sometimes, even the memory of proud accomplishments is not powerful enough to alter the realities of now. | |||
BITTERSWEET I went to the shoemaker but my shoes weren't ready. There was plenty of time, so I crossed the street and sat down in the ice cream shop. It smelled of chocolate and coffee and cinnamon, twinkled with strawberry, misted with lime. Under me, a rickety bent-wire chair squeaked as I put down my briefcase. I took off my hat and gloves, resting my cane against the ancient radiator. Outside, the cool day had already grown darker -- it was mid-afternoon -- and bright speckles of rain were bursting into beads and rivulets on the windowpane. Millions and millions of drops, falling, coalescing, flowing over the curb and down the storm sewer. The menu recommended orange sherbet today. "Top it with bittersweet syrup and a couple of mints," I told the waitress, a sweet young thing who wore a black satin mini-dress, a snap-back pencil and a smile. "Coffee, too?" she prompted. "Why not," I agreed, "Black, with sugar". She swished her mini-skirt and went off to fill the order. Seven years had passed, and my big job -- the biggest I ever built -- was holding up fine!. It was more than a decade now, since I pulled together a crew of architects, engineers, laborers, excavators, pipe-fitters -- all told some two hundred workers -- and led them, step by step, through a complete redesign and rebuild of the entire sewage and storm drain system for this half of the city. Three years, it took. Three years. And nobody goofed up -- nothing failed. We rejected any cracked pipe and X-rayed the bell joints to make sure they were sealed. Each level grade was laid out by surveyor's transit, then every slope had to pass the ball-bearing test again before we covered up the pipe. We used check valves at interlocks between sewers -- that way, rats got trapped uphill and flushed out after every storm. To keep roots out of the pipe I brought an idea from Portugal: a high pressure air blast to blow out clogged drain lines. It would burst open all the balled-up plastic bags, foam rubber cushions, plastic pails: anything. Each terminal was designed to link onto a future extension, so expansion of the sewers and drains would be as easy as pie. This system was utterly unique -- a model for our day and age. It would last a hundred years, maybe more. Only one hitch: the city never paid me. Construction went ahead faster and faster, but the payments got further and further behind. Meanwhile, the bank got more and more generous with its loans. When we were all done, the city had nine million dollars worth of sewers and I had fifty dollars cash, with a seven-million dollar loan hanging over my head. The city never got around to paying me the sum I contracted for. The day we set the last manhole cover, my two lawyers were killed in an expressway accident. Their papers were never found. A couple of nights later, five account books recording the entire project were blown to shreds (along with the night watchman). They said a gas leak caused the explosion. I carefully examined the faded, acid-burned pages and decided to keep my mouth shut. Very little had changed in the past seven years. Sometimes the bank manager buys me lunch. My loan is still on his books. Once in a while I go down to City Hall and talk with the young kids who took over for the erstwhile City Fathers -- my good old buddy-buddies who authorized the sewer job. The kids are really polite. I love to watch them grinding their little axes while I wait. Sometimes I think they take too much for granted. Remembering my shoes, I made a note to come back tomorrow and pick them up. The waitress brought my orange sherbet swimming in a hot, dark brown liquid. The jelly-mints were melting and congealing in lumps around the smutty orange mound. Oily clumps of chocolate fudge were dissolving in the hot moat around the ice-ball. The whole concoction looked inedible -- a conflict of clashing flavors. I asked her: "What is this?" "Coffee" she said, radiating her sweetest smile and giving a curtsey. "Isn't it great? You've got a peachy idea there, grandpa. I never would have thought of adding coffee. Can you taste the bittersweet?" I took a spoonful. I could taste the bittersweet. *.*.*.*.*.* Tweet
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