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The All Seeing Alley Where God Spills The Drinks (standard:other, 4599 words) | |||
Author: Raindog | Added: Mar 18 2001 | Views/Reads: 3505/2225 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
An outsider's vision of San Francisco, from the eyes of the author to the minds of its forgotten and displaced inhabitants. | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story take me to the airport and he's writing down the number in my diary, telling me his parents run a Limo business. I look at my diary when he hands it back: 'Ridgeway Limo' and a number. I try to comprehend this when - slip! The first hit wears off, reality sinks in and I tell him we should get out of here, we're not welcome, "Yeah, you’re right," he agrees quietly, but not before he manages to knock his beer across the bar with his shaking hands and I notice his nails are as black as tar. "Look at me, I'm spillin' beer here like an idiot!" he announces to the bar, smiling grimly, trying the harmless addict charm on 'em - but nobody is impressed. Now I'm getting the Fear and "I'm leaving," I say, and he says, "Well man, put your beer in a to-go cup!" and I say "What cup?" and he pulls a plastic tumbler from over the bar and tips my drink into it and smiles, so I pick it up and we're walking away but the barmaid barks that, "You boys can't take beer that outta here!" so I leave it on the bar, get confused, thinking I bought another beer and drop another dollar tip on the bar and then we make it quick out onto the street. We stop for another hit inside someone's doorway, for God's sake, and mid-operation the woman who lives there comes home and finds these two awful degenerates clogging her entrance, both out of their heads, one an obvious junkie, the other looking like some attempt at a rock star, all black and white Hawaiian shirt and reflective sunglasses. I'm trying not to breathe any smoke out and fucken near choking. Seamus is trying his addict charm again, asking politely if she minds if we sit there and she says, "Just don't make a mess," and goes inside. "Probably calling the law. C’mon, let's walk" he says, gathering his stuff. Now I'm thinking "I'm doomed." I can hear the police radio crackling out our description in my head, the panic sets in again and the hit exacerbates it. We turn another corner and an SFPD cruise car sidles by us in the other direction and I'm starting to completely lose it and I'm saying, "Let's get out of this district entirely, we'll go back to Chinatown and drink beer!" but - too late. He's pulling me onto a bus. So we head out to the Lower Haight and hang out with the hippie remnants, smoking cigarettes and looking in shops, taking the occasional quiet hit, more often him than me I notice, then we catch a bus back to ... where? And warning beacons start pulsing, because I realise that I don't know where we're going, much less where we are, only that we're high up in the San Francisco hills and Seamus is playing tour guide: "Awesome view to your left, dude" and I look left and it is awesome - a huge, sharply dropping hill which opens out onto the entire city and the bay is in the distance, and that’s all well and good, but where the fuck are we? The bus trundles down steep inclines and levels out ... and oh God, sure enough, we're back in the fucken Mission! We swing out of the bus and I notice that never paid for a ticket, he always went in through the rear door. Now everything's hanging off Seamus. We're walking faster and faster and he's spewing out a string of available drugs and contacts we can get our hands on, like a child’s skipping rhyme: Speed and coke and grass and heroin I know a guy on twenty first Gotta room there Getchya some powder Pep ya up nice and fine The last of the dose is wearing off him rapidly and the next issue on his list is to score again, and Jesus, this could go on all afternoon and all night and all the next day! Christ this is his fucking job, this is what he does, scoring and smoking crack, and am I going to bankroll this entire exercise? And now the dealers fucking know us! Within two hours they know us, up and down the strip! And we're eight blocks from where we got the first score! And they are actually walking up to me when they never did before, like I’m wearing a sign that says "Sell Here!" and openly displaying handfuls of crack and, "You boys wanna buy?" they're drawling, smiling that evil, ratty, dealer-sneer. "No, we're good, we're good!" I'm blathering at them, waving my hands and they're laughing at me, saying, "You boys gonna be back, you boys gonna be back, ah yup, ah yup" as they saunter off. Then to my left I hear, "Where's mah bread, nigger? Damn, I give this fool 10 dollars to buy me some bread rolls a mutherfuckin' hour ago and nigger comes back wit nuttin'! Where's yo head at, fool? Damn, what's up wit dat shit?" and I look over and a huge black apparition is berating his associate for not coming back with his bread rolls, or was it really bread rolls? I'm almost laughing from the Fear and holy shit what's this? Seamus is now speaking fluent Spanish to some deranged dealer, the street is full of people and I think the entire district is ridden with smoke and junk disease and I'm about to have a goddamn coronary, right there on the corner. And more SFPD cruisers are drifting by, and the cops are looking straight ahead, what the fuck? What do they care if these people depopulate themselves and the surrounding area? Save the cops doing it! And I think I can hear and see the cop in the cruiser radioing his newly found street wisdom back to base ... "CRACKLE! We will maintain law and order in the ‘socio-economic regression zones’ by doing nothing, Chief, repeat nothing and let them do away with themselves! We’ve got the clean hands chief and so does the mayor and it's a sure thing for the Governor, too. We bang up a dealer once in a while and stick him in rehab for 30 days, not that dealers need rehab, ha ha ha Chief! And then we send him the fuck back out here! It’s a beautiful thing! ... and I start to hate them and City Hall even more than the crazed lunatics around me and I wonder why nobody helps anybody out here unless its for a fix and how a whole district can run on its own agenda of addiction and death and misery and nobody cares and the tourist guide books tell you not to come here and now I know why. I see what they're hiding. I'm getting blind with smoke and afternoon sunlight so I tell Seamus I'm going back to my hotel. "I gotta get back to Chinatown! Call me in two hours!" I spill out, blindly waving my phone at him, reeling backwards, remembering I gave him my mobile number in that lesbian bar but that he couldn't get to it without dialing internationally, but oh God, he'll find a way! I'm thinking about some hot won ton soup and Chinese tea, to rid this foul drug from my guts, and Seamus gets upset - because he suddenly realises that his supply has now been cut - but he doesn't get angry about it and instead eventually smiles glumly, shakes my hand, fist over fist, and wishes me good luck as he turns and walks away. I run like a bastard, against the red lights, sweat pouring off me - down the steps and into the 24th Street subway station and I get the fuck out of there and I never go back. And every day after that, every cigarette I lit tasted like the little white cube and the taste reminded me of Seamus and his sad, glum face and those crow black fingernails, so I smashed the lighter to bits one night, outside Mr Bing's Cocktail Bar, in Chinatown. II THE ALL SEEING ALLEY In a by-the-week-no-questions-asked boarding house in Chinatown, a boy of 21 going on 60 sits cowered and glaring on the edge of his bed, chewing noisily and spilling pizza down his shirt as he watches CNN on a TV he picked up for 20 bucks from Hamish the grocer. The television makes everything else in the room too dark, throws too many shadows around. At his feet, the eye of folded aluminium that lies empty next to his glass pipe glints, wickedly watching every mouthful. He dumps the pizza in the plastic bag that hangs from the door handle and leans against the wash basin, grinning at himself crookedly in the mirror. A trail of blood seeps from his upper gums. "I was leaving anyway," he drawls thickly to himself, "I said good night and that’s politeness for you." He notices the blood and wipes it away dismissively. "So I say goodnight," he begins, his voice rising slowly, "and off I fuck, into the street and I get some pepperoni pizza to go. The guy sees me coming and practically has it in the fucking oven before I get into the shop and I think I hear him say 'Drinkin' again, son?' so I nod and smile and tip him, though there’s no need if not being served and getting pizza to go in a greasy joint, it was stupid, but it made him smile and Jesus how many smiles do I have left? When I'm so sick! I can’t understand anyone in this stinking town. They’re all gutter snipes and hustlers!" he hisses. His voice pitches against the basin, rolls in it and bounces back a metallic reverberation, rising in line with his fury. "Last night ... I went blindly up the all seeing alley, the one where God spills the drinks, but not even that helped me understand, it only left me hanging upon a midnight handle of misery and rottenness. But it bought it anyway and I smoked it down without so much as a wheeze. And then I gleamed, haughty as a fuckin’ lord, looking out of the window at the street below where I could hear them pointing to the window of the hotel room and screaming, 'Behold! The vicious bellow of the traitor! He lies between foreign teeth and eats the bread that is not his to eat! He breathes filthy smoke into the crisp night air and dares to dream what others fail to care!' So I go back downstairs, to find the fuckers screeching at me, and I get a smack in the face for no good goddamn reason and then they apologise and put a few bills back in my wallet and buy me a fuckin’ drink! So it just goes to show how useless anger is, because much more can be won with a dollar on the bar!" Satisfied and spent, he pushes forwards against the basin and lets the inertia carry him back. He collapses onto the bed and lets his arm hang lightly down the side. Grasping the oily remote, he turns up volume of the TV, just enough to quiet the ringing noise in his head and let him get a few hours of sleep. "Not much to ask on a hot afternoon," he mumbles as he sails into sleep. III JOE'S LAMENT Joe the cab driver drinks at the Lost and Found Saloon, but the barmaid claims she knows all the cab drivers and she’s never seen him. Furthermore, Joe doesn't just drink there, he drinks there heavily. At this particular moment, he's seated at the end of the bar, waving his cigarette angrily in the late afternoon dim and beating the bar with his fists, spilling his shots of bourbon as he laments the fall of the city to his neighbouring drinker. "They ain't never seen the fuckin' sun like I seen, stuck up there in their fuckin' penthouse apartments those lousy fucks and I'm a goddamn cab driver!" His neighbour is nodding, saying nothing, hoping Joe will shut up because now his chances of getting another goddamn shot are gonna be ruined and Lord, how he knows it. Christ, just look at that fat assed owner lulling back there like Buddha himself! Hell, he's ready to kick 'em both out now, and look at Joe, reeling on his stool and losing the plot in increasingly bizarre ways. He becomes obsessed with the phrase, "Godammit, I'm a cab driver!" and he keeps repeating it, beating the bar with his fist, wraparound sunglasses shaking almost comically on his little white face. And each time the words switch places and take on new emphasis: "I'm a goddamn cab driver!" BANG! "I drive a goddamn cab!" BANG! "Goddammit, it's a cab I drive!" BANG! But this time there's a thud too, because Joe's fallen right off his perch and slammed his boozed up frame against the floor. Now everyone's had enough. Discontent is hindering the numb alcoholic serenity and the patrons are getting restless. The owner is marching down to haul Joe's "sorry cab drivin' ass" out the front door, but his neighbour placates the situation by getting Joe out of there and on top of this, leaving the bar himself as the barmaid calls to the owner, "Hey, ya date just left!" and the fixtures of the bar erupt, relieved, into great bales of mirth, slapping their thighs and ordering more bourbon and beer all round and spilling tips onto the bar in pure glee as Joe shambles off up the street. "Ya date's just left!" the barmaid squeals again and everyone screeches like banshees. They all saw Joe about an hour later, sunglasses still on in the cool evening dusk, playing a sad and out of tune melody on a harmonica as he stumbled back past the bar. They didn't laugh that time, they just murmured softly, shook their heads and turned to look down into their drinks. IV GETTING ALL GODDAMN TEARY EYED Sometime in the late evening, somewhere in a bar in North Beach, Harry keeps the last stained dollar tucked away in his jacket’s inner pocket, like some tired memento of the night. He grins, a little too ugly and sneering, at the assorted flotsam and jetsam, cliché upon general maxim rolling in his head, because he can’t find the phrase to describe his loneliness without getting all goddamn teary eyed about it. Shit, what’s left for him now? Just uniforms, dusky brass buttons and stale photographs that don’t fit right in frames. Nothing but hollowed out shells that once landed smoking, to no purpose, or lay buried beneath the rim of the earth to take out some poor, innocent fucker, who went out one day with the admirable notion of sowing a vegetable garden. He sits and stares at 'em all lined up - the soldiers of his personal army. Major Ouzo, Lieutenant Hennessey, Wing Commander Corona, Private Heineken, Machine Gunner Guinness, Rear Admiral Remy Martin ... all good men, and true. "Everywhere I go, it’s all drinks and plastic muzak." He sighs to himself. He’s almost mumbling his thoughts inaudibly now, but it’s clear enough for the barmaid to detect. They have radars, you know. But it’s not like they really want to hear. It’s a curse. "Take the cash I don't need it anymore, why would I, when I've got an overpriced cocktail served by a pissed off waitress? Jesus, that's enough for me! I’ll just sit here and listen to the voices all around!" He gives a quick glance left and right and in a conspiratorial tone, whispers, "Hear how they flood and flow, riding on the nictoine trails? Listen! what’s that ... tired? G'night! ... save a kiss for me you can kiss my ass! ... like that when I miss you ... if you’d called her ... she ain't there ... a black and tan and a shot on the side ... love the way you play!" Harry looks at the barmaid, all eyes and lashes and pathetic sodden smiles, but she isn’t interested. Jesus, what is there to be interested in when you’re just providing service for the sick and quietly hoping they’ll die? She’s the good old Night Nurse, that’s all she is. She sits down and lights up, so very tired, her aching feet stretching down in between all the drinks and tips. She stubs out the straight and stands, she flips the lights off and on, a Morse code signal that spells "H O M E" and breathes deep before announcing "Last Call!" Her streaked blonde hair falls lazily around her shoulders and drifts indifferently to the curvature of her breasts beneath the white apron ... well, you know, in differing circumstances she might ... but no, because someone is close to Harry’s ear and it’s not lovely Ms Night Nurse whispering sweet somethings, but a gruff male voice ordering him to leave. "I'll see ya!" the voice barks cheerfully, sliding an arm around his shoulder and guiding him door-wards. "I’ll see ya later!" it comes again as he trips out the exit. And as he staggers off along the uneven street the voice calls, "Have yourself a nice night, you fuckin’ loser!" V THE BALLAD OF THE WHISKEY PRIEST The whiskey priest sat at the SFO Airport Bar, nursing a double Jack Daniels on ice. Some foul bastard had managed to slip on a soundtrack of cheap 80's love songs. They dripped down the walls of the bar, and one by one they sidled into the spaces between the stools where they lingered ... niggling, insistent. The whiskey priest sighed, deep in his selfish repose, hording the space around him. The bar was slathered in formica surfaces and fake marble. It swirled before his eyes as he peaked his fingers and narrowed his eyes in concentration. Doctor Banshee, a man with in possession of more frequent flyer points than brain cells, stalked in and demanded that the TV be turned on for the live telecast of a major sporting event. "Nah. No good. It's busted." the bartender sneered, his foreign accent thick and unwavering in the heavy heat. "Thanks be to God!" thought the priest, as the good Doctor turned angrily and stormed out, cursing "that gypsy bartending bastard!" He made a chapel of his fingers again, giving thanks, and drained his glass. To his right was a small, bent Chinaman, cowered over his brandy like a man possessed of intense desires. But there was no fight left in him. All he did was stare at the drink as if willing it into his rotten liver by osmosis. The priest raised his empty glass to the bartender. "If ya gonna screw me on these prices, ya might as well put less ice in here!" he rasped. The bartender smiled with the vague hatred and ambivalence that airport bartenders wear so well with their uniforms and poured another double, adding more ice than ever before. The priest had had the shakes for the last half hour, and this was the only cure he could think of. Airports gave him the Fear, like hospitals and that scent of disinfectant they carry. There was death threatening to leap out and strike everywhere he looked. He felt as though parts of his very soul were being burnt to a crisp by the turbine engines that spewed fumes over the tarmac. The priest ordered yet another double Black Jack and counted the fly droppings on the counter. "How can an airport bar be so ridden with disease?" he grimaced internally. "Why, I’ve been in shit house dives wouldn't pass inspection by a corrupt Mexican health official hooked on junk and this is by God a hundred times worse!" He scowled at the bourbon in front of him and wondered how it was possible. In a place of leaving and of beginning, of arrivals and departures, he felt as if in the arms of the Eternal Wheel. Health and sickness. Life and death. All that really important shit. Could all of the sad tale of human existence be boiled down to this? The priest was, of course, thinking of alchemy and the subtle way in which ancient rites and beliefs never died, just regenerated into newer forms of self deception. Alchemy, machinery and technology. What would be the next magic oracle, and who would be left behind? The priest looked around and about him slowly. Lonely, transient booze hounds was all he could see. "These sad remnants," he thought, "I could have time to save them before I leave!" But his ear was suddenly jarred by a particularly penetrating, syrup coated note from a saxophone solo. "Jesus," he gritted his teeth, "this horrible, fucking music!" he thought - or said - it was becoming increasingly unclear which was which. The whiskey priest rifled through his wallet, dropping dollar bills all over the bar and crying out, "Your tips, you scurvy bastards, take them! I'm tipping everyone in here!" He stood suddenly, sending his drink flying and his stool rocking back and falling, a towering inferno of mad, rotten drunkenness, seeing double of his enemies in every bottle, each block of thick ice melting on the bar throwing his fallen image back at him, one thousand times over. "I can't see a thing and I can't save anyone! I'm about to cry like a child ... and I have a fucking plane to catch!" he bellowed. The contents of the bar looked up and looked down in unison, trying to avoid his whirling gaze - all except the Chinaman who cackled insanely and rocked back and forth on his stool, nodding. The priest turned, a tragic figure, mourning quietly. Out the doors he went, cursing all the way through the tax free havens, through the boarding gates and onto the plane. That night, the fog was thicker in San Francisco than ever before. Ash, mounds of it, dropped like bad shit over the tips of the skyscrapers in the financial district. It fell into cups of tea in Chinatown. It poisoned the drinkers in North Beach. The whiskey priest, well ... he wasn't much of a man - a crab’s shell. But he left a mark on the city that no fistfuls of green bills could ever scrub away. _____________________________________________________________________ Copyright (C) Andrew Keese 2001 e-mail: ikeese@zeta.org.au web: http://www.zeta.org.au/~ikeese/andrew/ Tweet
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