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GARAGE SALE, read the sign. I saw the chromium-yellow tagboard,
with its big black cartoony arrow, on my way back from the bus stop,
stapled to a much-stapled phone pole. The address on the sign was
dead between my building and the phone pole. Ever since de-zoning,
re-zoning, or whatever other catastrophe acceptable to the City Council's
bribed lackeys had befallen this former "neighborhood," the residential
blocks had been carved, sliced and diced to please the developers
until some bloated fat cat with a cigar in his mush, incipient cancer
and a string of embezzlement acquittals had pronounced it "good," like
Frankenstein's Monster sucking watery soup. Basically, wherever two
adjacent lots could be bought, the houses on those lots were demolished
to make way for cellblock-like apartment complexes, thrown up (that's
the correct term) with astonishing speed from cheap materials, featuring
security doors, electronically-gated basement parking, and all the
amenities suitable for isolating oneself from fellow creatures. Very
few people in my building knew anyone else in the building. Elevator
rides were endured in library quiet. Occasionally there was a half-hearted
attempt at a laundry-room courtship. Co-habitants--they really couldn't
be termed neighbors--nodded politely at the bank of mailboxes. All
this para-social nonsense added up to the pretension of civility
with which we deluded ourselves on a daily basis, just to get by.
Gradually, each street had mutated into a warren of such apartment
buildings, chockablock, of equal height, in differing colors, as
the few remaining houses were systematically leveraged and eliminated.
Generally, anyone could score an equal-opportunity apartment with
a splendid bathroom window's view of someone else's bathroom window,
about ten feet away, on the next lot. Very few houses held out--mostly
older residents, subsisting on Social Security, paying low property
taxes and seasonally fending off ever-more-lavish offers from the
developers who never stop needing to swallow up that last square
foot of unexploited ground. Usually the old residents cave in for
the money, or die, at which point their heirs cave in for the money.
Nail any of their offspring on the street after the realty sign goes
up and you'll usually hear a tale of woe about how they don't wish
to sell but "have to" because of debts, or other responsibilities
they've averred. It's not the sale I mind, it's the attitude. There
goes the neighborhood. Then guys like me move in because they can't
afford anything better.
Munster Drive was not a proper drive, more an avenue, named after
some forgotten city father or local booster who had no idea his name
and memory would be completely overridden by a hysterically bad television
show. The residence featuring the garage sale was one of only two
bonafide houses left on the block, in an honest-to-cinderblock garage,
packed to the rafters with old furniture and dusty cardboard boxes.
A vague, antique-shop smell hinted that there was at least one abandoned
rodent nest, somewhere way in the back. A terminally bored thirteen-year-old
girl was doing her best to beat a Gameboy. She was sitting on a metal
folding chair and wearing gigantic shoes with five-inch-thick rubber
soles. Her hair was lank and streaky blonde, there was a minor skirmish
of microdot pimples on her forehead, and her attitude broadcast that
she was dying for some stranger to notice her nipples so she could
tear into a him with choice, properly outraged invective. She popped
her gum as a way of acknowledging my presence; she was good enough
at that skill to produce a sound like a small-caliber gunshot in
the confined acoustics of the garage.
"Hi there."
"Hi."
"Mind if I have a look?"
She rolled her eyes, stark eyes, the kind of frank brown that look
really smart with blonde hair. Was I an idiot? Was she sitting here,
obviously under duress and protest, for her health? Couldn't I read
the goddamned sign? She crashed into some sort of scoring crisis
on the Gameboy, which began emitting distressing little noises, and
gave up on attacking me for ruining her afternoon. She inclined her
head to indicate I could enter the musty darkness. "Whatever." Then
she vanished into the game.
Old kitchenware. A blender that would look attractively retro if
it were polished and the cord replaced. A crippled rocker, much scarred,
probably broken by the growth of one or several kids. Maybe the gum-popper
had climbed on this chair as a tot. Maybe she could smile. A vanity
with no mirror and a missing drawer was haphazardly piled with books.
The books weren't arranged or turned spine-out so the titles were
perceivable; most bargain-hunters who had ventured this deeply into
the garage had been more interested in the vanity.
It was a sight you used to see in used book emporiums: Haphazard
interbreeds of cheap book club editions and savaged paperbacks; bargain
reprints of public domain masterworks in their billionth printing;
jacketless hardcovers, runaway library copies, outdated dictionaries,
useless travel guides. In every stack, everywhere in the world, at
least one copy of last year's best-selling blockbuster. I picked
up one. It was a paperback with a spine four inches thick. It still
smelled the way paper mills do, which isn't pleasant. Some of the
older books scattered in front of me smelled differently.
Because certain vintages exude specific bouquets, it is possible
to become a connoisseur of books. Foxed paper can possess pedigree.
And those hiding, deep within the convolutions of their brains, the
secret love, the almost-forbidden passion for books, can sometimes
rely on dead reckoning, on the magnetism books provide for those
who pause to be attracted. It's like a spiritual divining rod at
the moment it selects a direction. Bingo--a little red paperback
spine declared itself to my eye.
It was a copy of a Ray Bradbury book that had come out more than
thirty years ago, part of a uniform reissue of Bradbury's work. Golden
Apples of the Sun. It looked like it had survived a bombing.
It looked like an orphan. It looked like it wanted to go with me.
Most of my personal library had bitten the street years earlier,
in a charming bureaucratic tragedy I like to call the Great Shitcanning.
It involved credit card numbers and the storage locker into which
I had filed too much of my life for far too long. By the time I learned
that the locker was no longer under my name, and its contents had
gone for landfill or used-store credit at the hands of employees
unknown and untraceable, management of the storage establishment
had rotated its usual five or six times and the misdeed was buried
in ancient history, which was to say, more than one year ago. Along
with my clothes, which had become moth-riddled, and my kitchenware,
which had become obsolete, and my desk, which had grown senile from
rot, had gone all of my books. I had put them where they could remain
safe until I could decide about new living arrangements in another
state, and they had been mugged en masse while I was out of reach.
To rebuild was impractical, out of the question, absurd. I had already
invested effort and love into the books which had died, or been executed,
and my heart just wasn't into the idea of recapture until I opened
one of those books at the garage sale and the smell hit me.
The trim edge of the ravaged Bradbury was so soft that it invited
my thumb to ruffle the pages. It felt worn-in and comfortable. It
appealed directly to the tactile centers of my brain.
"How much for this?" I held up the book.
The young miss squinted sourly at it. "A penny."
It had to be a trick. "You mean a penny, as in one cent?" I could
go on about coppers and Lincoln heads, but that would make me a geek
trying lamely to play suave, or worse, a grownup trying to dazzle
her.
"You got it."
"One single penny?"
"Including tax. The whole box cost us like a dollar, so it's no
big." Her eye lent the book in my hand what I could only call less
than half of a once-over.
I guessed she meant a whole box of books, which had found their
way to a pile on the vanity back there in the darkness. "God, I don't
even know if I have a penny. People who have to give you four cents
in change usually just throw you a nickel."
"Yep, or you leave 'em in those little bins by the cash register,
you know--if you have one, leave one, and if you need one, take one."
"I don't think there's anything you can still buy for a penny."
"You can buy that book."
"Sold." There was exactly one penny among all the change clogging
up my pocket. Perhaps it had found its way there for a reason. All
my life I have preferred to believe minor superstitions like that,
trusting in their reliability and basic harmlessness. I'd picked
a penny from the sidewalk just yesterday. Perhaps this one.
She dropped the penny into a bustle of bills and change rattling
around inside of a cigar box. I thanked her but she said nothing
else.
Back inside my apartment, third floor, with a "balcony" about the
size of placemat providing a splendid view of the building across
the street, I got myself a drink, sat down with the paperback, and
finished reading it cover to cover in less time than it would take
to watch a movie. Sometimes, when you're starving, you eat like a
goat.
I work as a traveling senior process engineer for a company you've
never heard of called CortCom. I work with a lot of people who possess
a pile of important physics degrees, and basically we make sure the
metal plating process for microchips works the way it's supposed
to. If you've ever been near a computer, home or otherwise, CortCom
is a big invisible part of your life. Most of the books I see these
days are tech manuals, or bindered report folios. Not until I sat
down with the paperback from the garage sale did I stop to realize
I'd pretty much given up reading for pleasure--with the usual excuses
involving too little time and too many things on screens, begging
my notice.
This is difficult to explain rationally. I fell into that little
book. I was engulfed by it. It was like an old film I'd seen of a
writer, actually writing. The film had been digitally enhanced and
colorized, but it was clear that it had originally been in black
and white, and shot on actual film stock. Someone long ago had decided
to make a movie of a writer at work. Big mistake. In nearly ten minutes
of footage, the writer types out maybe a single line on his old manual
typewriter. The rest of the time, he sits with his back mostly to
the camera, staring at a blank sheet of paper rolled into the machine.
The fancified version I saw was a download from some now-forgotten
website, and the first time I saw it, I thought it was the most boring
waste of time I'd ever endured. But it got saved to one of my desktops
and eventually I watched it again. And it got more interesting, the
more I watched it.
The writer is a guy about 30 (I guess), wearing a white dress shirt
several sizes too big, but tucked in and belted as if that was the
fashion and not merely a haberdashery mistake. The way the shirt
moves and drapes, you can tell it's hot in the room. The light is
a single incandescent bulb in a hooded gooseneck lamp, very noirish,
harsh enough to form an occasional hot spot in one corner of the
frame. The man is smoking as he works. Rather, he's not smoking.
His cigarette burns in the ashtray the whole time he's staring at
the paper. The man--the writer--gets perhaps one puff off it before
it's dead.
He stares at that empty page, seeing something I cannot. It has
absorbed him, and elapsed time means nothing except the slow, sinuous
meandering of smoke toward the ceiling. No cursor prompts him. What
he does, with little motion, with exacting concentration, is burn
up enough energy to pop a sweat on his brow. It's not just the heat.
I can sense the closeness of that room, and wonder where it is, or
was. What you might see if you looked out his window.
It's not a commercial film; no brand names or product placement
are visible. If this were done today it would be simple enough to
optically insert the right merchandise in the right places, so the
idea of this film is not to sell anything. The frame for the image
itself referenced an internet link that no longer existed.
There's a calendar on the wall in front of the writer, to the left,
but the data is indistinct. The picture on it was a cityscape at
night, too vague for me to tell exactly which city. I blew up the
image and tinkered with the playback for clarity, and still couldn't
read the calendar. I sort of began to wish I had that calendar, which
you could tell had become like a tiny window for the writer. When
he wasn't gazing into the blank whiteness of the paper, he was looking
at the calendar, abstracting into the picture there, maybe imagining
himself somewhere else. That was when he took the only useful drag
on his smoke. He holds it in a long time, perhaps pretending that
the night skyline he sees is right outside his tiny room, maybe trying
to pick out stars against the urban upglow. The smoke trails out
of him contemplatively. Could be a city he once lived in, or aspired
to.
Sometimes I wished, more than anything, that I could read the line
this mysterious, unidentified character finally decided to write.
That longing, that unexpected and unexplainable emotion, was similar
to what I felt not as I was reading the paperback I'd just bought,
but after I had finished it. I put it on the mantel for my fake fireplace.
It looked absurd, like an armoire holding up a single inadequate
book. I returned to the garage sale the next day.
I did not take the book whose blurb proclaimed it to be by the best-selling
writer of suspense in all history; I tried later to find that author's
name on a database and all my searches returned zero hits. I wanted
the orphans, the obscure and lost books, and eventually selected
a weak-spined Book Club edition of a novel titled Mad Horizon,
by L. Clark Stevens.
It cost exactly one penny.
The chair was now occupied by a young boy, eleven-ish, who made
it abundantly clear that removing his headphones to speak to me was
a nuisance.
"Are all the books a penny?"
"I guess."
"Where's the girl who was here yesterday?"
"Keisha?"
"Is that her name?"
"What do you want to know for?" He narrowed his eyes; they were
the same color as his big sister's. "She's probably off getting pregnant
or something."
"Why are the books only a penny?"
"Because that's what they cost." He rolled his eyes.
"That's what they cost you, or that's what you're charging for them?"
"Can I help you?" A new voice joined us, in a stern tone
that indicated annoyance, possible danger flags, and that help was
a dishonest word to use. The woman who interceded had to be the mom;
she fulfilled no other stereotype.
"I was just asking your son why the books only cost a penny."
Now her eyes narrowed. They were algae green, and stormy with suspicion. "What
makes you think he's my son?"
I tried to force a conciliatory smile and it felt like fish-hooks,
reeling my lips back, all bloody. "I was just curious about the price."
Mom held her distance. She had a very militarized concept of personal
space. I swore that she was preparing to say, why were you curious,
but instead she looked around, as though assuring herself this was
no ambush, or a big gag featuring hidden cameras, then spoke more
personally, less like a tape cartridge was madly spooling off fight-or-flight
responses inside her skull. With a dramatic sigh, she said, "Them
books are a penny because Keisha asked me what to charge for them,
and I didn't have no idea so I says, just charge a penny because
nobody'll want them anyway. Hell, I just put them back there to make
that vanity look more, you know, attractive."
"You didn't think that was a real bargain price?"
She watched me, sidelong, like a creature of cold blood fancying
a strike. "No, I didn't think that," she said. "Who reads?"
I read Mad Horizon all at once. When I noticed my TV screen
was dusty, around midnight, I laughed out loud.
The following day being Monday, the sale signs vanished and the
garage was padlocked when I walked past it. On sheer impulse I decided
to knock on the door and make a pre-emptive offer to take all the
remaining books off Mom's hands. Through burglary bars, an aluminum-framed
door window, a dirty screen, and even dirtier scalloped drapes, I
saw the kid from the previous day recognize me. Instead of answering
the door he ran to fetch Mom. She stayed fortressed inside even though
she recognized me, too.
"Now, what could you possibly want?"
"I thought I'd stop by and ask about the rest of those books in
the garage. If it's not any trouble--"
She overrode me. "Mister, don't come around here. I ain't got the
time and I don't want to talk to you." Her eyes were distressed,
as though the world had horsewhipped her one time beyond the day's
limit, or perhaps she had merely lost the remote control to her TV.
She wheeled and stomped off as though I was a Jehovah's Witness.
It's the kind of rude you expect in the city.
The boy was watching me from a side window. When I turned to look
back at him, he vanished behind Venetian blinds. When I had walked
to the entryway of my building, I glanced back and caught him standing
on the sidewalk, still staring. He lit into his house.
Tomorrow, perhaps, I could catch him or the girl, Keisha, outdoors
and out from under Mom's fascist umbrella of influence. Most likely,
the entire remaining pile of books could be obtained for free, or
a pittance.
I did some work at the desk but my heart wasn't really in it. The
little icon for the strange playback of the writer, writing, beckoned.
I decided to re-read a little of the Bradbury when I was buzzed from
downstairs by someone identifying himself as Detective Weinstein,
who showed up at my door moments later in the company of a uniformed
officer. He asked if I'd mind a brief interview.
All of this struck me as weirdly, unnecessarily formal. Every cop
in the city possessed a code card that would grant them instant access
to buildings like mine, and since all the gun control hysteria the
police had rarely had to ask permission to do anything. The first
place I had ever seen cops wearing the exterior body armor--that
is, outside the blouses--had been in Mexico City, but it was a fashion
the LAPD was born to love. The armor came with all sorts of rigid
little nylon pockets and tabs and slots for pens and cuffs and a
special badge-mount and snaps to support the standard-issue sidearm
belt, which pulled a lot of weight off the policeman's waist.
Detective Weinstein's gaze went directly to the paperback in my
hand. "Doing a bit of reading?"
I shrugged. "That's not a crime, yet, right?" I forgot, as most
thoughtless people do, that levity with the police is always a
rotten idea.
"Lady up the street says her daughter is missing."
"Would that be a girl named Keisha?"
"Now, how would you know that? The mother gave her name as Victoria
Jasmine Marina Wilson."
"The girl told me her name was Keisha."
Weinstein strolled over to my so-called balcony, leaned out, and
pointed. "See that house?"
It was the garage sale house. "Is that where Mrs. Wilson lives?
I didn't know her name."
"She sure seems to know you."
"I don't see how. Other than being amazingly rude to me."
"Mrs. Wilson thinks that you may know something about the disappearance
of her daughter. She directed us to this address."
With the help of her piggy-eyed son, I thought.
The officer, whose nameplate read Sternberg, held up the copy of Mad
Horizon from my fake fireplace mantel. "Here's another one."
"Video it," said Weinstein. He pointed to the book in my hand. "This,
too." Sternberg recorded images with a little hand-held camera. Weinstein
squinted at the cover illustration. "Guy looks like the Devil. And
what's Mad Horizon? Sure doesn't sound like a bestseller."
"You actually read this shit?" said Sternberg, replacing the other
book as though it might have slimed his glove.
The need to be alone, and free of these two, rocked me like the
wave of disorientation that slaps a drunk who tries to stand after
one too many. No sane person wants the scrutiny of the police on
them for any reason. I tried to steer this abrupt little nightmare
back toward rational thought. "Okay, let me just get this in focus:
Mrs. Wilson finds her daughter has taken off and she aims you guys
at me."
"You were seen talking to the daughter day before yesterday. You
returned the following day, and again this afternoon. Why?"
"I got these books at a garage sale at that very house. I went back
to see if I could get the rest of the books since the sale was only
over the weekend."
"You went there three days in a row to get books, and you didn't
even know which books?" The acid in his tone could have dissolved
a tooth in a glass, overnight. "Pardon me if I say that sounds incredibly
lame." To Sternberg, he said, "Did you see any books at Mrs. Wilson's?"
"No sir."
"They're in the garage," I said.
"We looked in the garage," Weinstein came back. "Zero books."
"Well, then, she got rid of whatever didn't sell."
"Got rid of them how? Books like these, nobody would buy, so how
come we didn't find them in the garage, as you say?"
This was getting frustrating on a level that transcended mere aggravation. "Are
you looking for books, or for Keisha?"
"Why do you keep calling her that?"
"Because that's what she told me her name was."
"You two seem to have had quite an intimate little conversation.
Did you touch her or initiate any form of improper physical contact?"
"No, I--"
"Did you proposition her or make any sort of lewd commentary?"
Sternberg muttered into the mike Velcroed to his shoulder and came
back with, "Couple of jaywalking pops, one arrest when he couldn't
produce proper ID." I realized he was talking about my record.
"Look, I don't know what this crazy woman told you, but I saw the
girl once. I bought this book. The next day her brother
mentioned that 'maybe she went off to get pregnant or something.'"
"That's a peculiar thing to remember."
"That's why I remembered it."
"Sure it's not like a fantasy you had, about getting her pregnant,
maybe?"
"You're the one having the fantasy," I said, forgetting
that where humor is a bad idea, sarcasm is a catastrophe.
Weinstein's eyes went flat and metallic. "You better watch your
fucking mouth."
"Sir," Sternberg said. "Better have a look at this." He was standing
next to my computer. He had already clicked on the little image of
the writer, writing. I kept my lip zipped with the expected line
about private papers; Weinstein would no doubt ask, what papers?
Instead he just stared as though witnessing a live donkey act. "Now
what the hell is this supposed to mean?" He swiveled his scorn toward
me. "What, do you jerk off to this?"
Sternberg held up one of my business cards. "He's some kind of
tech guy."
"Oh, outstanding." Weinstein rolled his eyes. "Some internet pervert.
Here we got a local weirdo with a clear view of the subject residence,
ritually repeated contact at the same time every day, a house full
of books and some sick shit on the computer. Log it as a speed bench
warrant and search this dump and I bet you find a pair of binoculars
and some porno." He dropped both the books from the garage sale into
a plastic evidence bag whipped from of some inner pocket, like a
magic handkerchief.
Sternberg collected my wrists and I heard cuffs jangle. Brusquely.
"You get to take a ride with us," said Weinstein. "Seem more like
a fantasy, now? You're not going to make any more comments about
how you know your rights, or how you pay my salary?"
When the cuffs were snapped, I knew what I thought, and what I
might have said.
"Want to know what part of your story sucks?" Weinstein continued
as I was hauled away, and people who I didn't really know poked out
their heads to watch, most with relief. "That crap about your going
back to buy books, not bestsellers. Nobody actually reads those
other things, anymore."
They held me for three days and finally had to release me when
Keisha turned up as a runaway. Needless to say, my "evidence" was
never returned, and I was sprung on my own recognizance, which means
probation, which means doing the egg-walk. You can still find books
if you're willing to look for them--"books" being different from "bestsellers," as
Weinstein pointed out--and are prepared to weather the social stigma
of actually possessing them. It's like smoking used to be. It was
bad for you, but people did it anyway until it became illegal, and
they still kept lighting up after that, but fewer and fewer. That's
evolution.
Preparing to open another crumbling book, from a disreputable source,
will make me feel like I'm igniting something that will kill me.
But I'll probably open it anyway, wondering who is watching me as
I do it. At the computer I try to diarize my feelings into words
that peter out after a single, pathetic line:
How much longer before what I'm doing evolves from misdemeanor
to felony?
And before I slink back to my reading, I stare at the blank wall
of my apartment, visualizing the anonymous cityscape, trying to see
the stars.
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