Part 21 (2/2)
I look over at his tidy row after row of Johnson & Murphy shoes, neatly hung Hickey-Freeman suits, stacks of cashmere sweaters, and rung of custom-made Thomas Pink s.h.i.+rts. ”You're one to talk.”
He sits down heavily on the edge of the bed. ”Now we know better. We've learned an expensive lesson.”
I join him. ”I just hope we didn't learn it too late.”
I fear we've made a terrible mistake.
We've moved to the frigging barrio. I knew we should have checked this place out in daylight. Yes, our apartment and landlord are decent, but that doesn't change the fact that except for my building's tenants, no one here speaks English.
NO ONE.
Which is probably why I've never heard of this neighborhood before. I don't speak any of the languages in which I may have heard it discussed. All the signs are written in Spanish or Polish, and there are six lavanderias within walking distance. Not Laundromats: LAVANDERIAS. The shop around the corner sells Pollo Vivo, which translated means live chickens. I have no idea where I can buy a cup of coffee around here, but if I need access to an industrial-strength clothes dryer or want to kill my own dinner, I'm all set. The cas.h.i.+er at the local McDonald's even tried to take my order in Spanish. Excuse me, but am I not smack in the center of the United States of America? Unless I need to order a beer or tell someone I have a pencil, I'm screwed. Perhaps I should have paid more attention when Bill was discussing ”urban renewal.”
When we looked at this place, the new construction next door must have blinded me to the tenement two doors down. There are at least fifteen fresh-off-the-boat immigrant families squashed into a building made to hold four. I can't walk the dogs down the strip of gra.s.s bordering their property because of all the food they leave out, ostensibly for the birds. In the past two weeks, I've seen moldy tortillas, loaves of bread, cans of tuna, and a large sandwich with all the tr.i.m.m.i.n.gs. Since when do sparrows eat beefsteak tomatoes? Yesterday the dogs almost yanked my arm off when we ran into a rat feasting on the tenement's offerings; the rat slipped into a big crack in the side of the building as soon as it saw the dogs. That place has to be totally infested.
Today was the kicker. We were taking our a.m. potty run, and I stumbled across a pile of pancakes. Who leaves an entire short stack out for the birds?? I imagine the people inside, throwing their hands up and crying in Slavic accents, ”Vy ve haf so many rats?” I feel like shouting back at them, ”Because you feed them Continental breakfasts!”
One of us has to find a well-paying job soon because we simply CANNOT stay here.
Since our neighborhood doesn't have an official name, we've settled on ”Sucktown.” We've been in Sucktown three weeks and we've yet to meet any of the building's other tenants. I'm pretty sure I won't like them. Bill's going to have to paint lines in the parking lot because none of the residents can figure out how to park their cars on an angle without a guide, so half the time we're stuck leaving the Caddy on the street, which is SO not acceptable.
I'm particularly concerned about the people downstairs. They have tapestries on their windows and Grateful Dead stickers on their door, so I fear they may be hippies. Plus they crank up their music every time our dogs trot across the floor, so I wonder if their ceiling isn't properly soundproofed. What am I supposed to do, crate them like veal? Dogs run sometimes; deal with it. Ya lives on the first floor, ya takes your chances, you know?
The dogs and I are thundering down the stairs for our evening const.i.tutional when I finally b.u.mp into Hippie #1. We introduce ourselves and make inane small talk, which has nothing to do with what we're both thinking.
”Hi, Bobby, I'm Jen. It's a pleasure finally to meet you!” So you're the jacka.s.s who pays half the rent I do and yet still hogs up my parking s.p.a.ce.
Bobby gives me an insincere, fishy handshake. ”Nice to meet you, too. How do you like living here?” Jesus Christ, do you people keep a herd of water buffalo up there? What's with the noise?
”It's great, thanks. Oh, this is Maisy and Loki. We've really been trying to keep them quiet. Hope they don't bother you!” HA, HA, HA, MOTHERf.u.c.kER! Keep parking in my s.p.a.ce and SEE how much louder we can be.
”Oh, no problem, we love dogs.” You enjoy that loooong walk back to the house from your parking s.p.a.ce down the street? Why don't you bring the noise level down a couple of thousand decibels and maybe I'll move my car?
”What do you do for a living?” What kind of job allows you to smoke so much pot that I get a contact buzz every time I walk into my den?147 ”I'm a bartender and my girlfriend, Holly, is a poet.” Did I mention that we hate yuppie sc.u.m like you?
I guess Holly's unemployed, too? While reining in the dogs to go outside, I say, ”I guess they're ready to go. See you later!” Hope you like show tunes 'cause I'm buying tap shoes.
”Nice to finally meet you!” Vengeance is mine, sayeth the downstairs neighbor. When he opens his door, I catch a glimpse of the six-foot bong in his living room. Nice.
The dogs and I wend our way down the street and, because another dog is coming toward us, veer off to walk by the tenement. As we pa.s.s, a flock of birds scatters. I look down to inspect this evening's treat and see they were gathered around a pile of chicken bones, which means...the birds in this neighborhood are cannibals!!
Seriously, that's it. We can't stay here.
It's time for drastic measures.
To: Sandy Case From: Date: March 8, 2003 Subject: Senior Account Manager Sandy, I see that Birchton & Co. is looking for a new Senior Account Manager. If you recall, I was set to interview for this exact job on 9/11/01. When weighing the events of the day, I chose to cancel our appointment rather than risk the unknown by going downtown.
Because of the cancellation, you decided against giving me another shot at an interview. A year and a half later, I look back on that day and am confident I made the right choice. I took the most sensible, prudent action I could based on the information I had at the time. I stand behind my decision.
Now you're faced with a choice, Sandy. You can simply delete the email from the pushy girl, or you can interview the woman who'll make the same kind of discerning and savvy judgment calls when it comes to your clients.
Should you choose the latter, I can be reached at the contact information below.
Best, Jennifer A. Lancaster ***
Holy s.h.i.+t, I got the interview.
”How'd it go?” Fletch asks from his spot on the couch. Next to him are a pile of mini candy bar wrappers and half a gla.s.s of bourbon. I swear I don't know how Adult Protective Services has not yet intervened in our lives.
”Pretty well, I think. Sandy wants me to come back later in the week to talk to another one of the partners.” I toss my briefcase onto the kitchen table and flop into the chair next to the television. ”At one point, though, I knocked her socks off. Literally, I'm talking socks FLYING across the room.”
”What was the question?”
”The usual 'Where do you see yourself in five years?' foolishness. What Sandy doesn't know is that I just finished reading an article by Peter Drucker in the Harvard Business Review on Managing Your Career.148 Instead of giving the road map of career progression from point A to B to C like everyone else does, I totally took Drucker's words out of context and said, 'It's rarely possible to look ahead more than eighteen months and still be reasonably clear and realistic. Instead, I choose to focus on where and how I can achieve results that will make a difference in my present position within a year and a half time frame. After that, I'd be open to whatever change and growth these results presented.' I'm telling you, she sat there with her mouth hanging open before she finally said, 'That's the most articulate answer I've ever gotten to that question.'”
”She have any idea how full of s.h.i.+t you are?”
”Not yet. So what's been happening around here?” I eye his c.o.c.ktail. ”Are you celebrating something?”
”I am. I got a call from that ISP, and they want to fly me out to New York for a second interview.”
”That's fantastic!! When?”
”Probably Friday.”
”How great would that be if we both got offers in the next week? We could be out of Sucktown and back in a normal neighborhood before summer.”
”Amen. I just hope we're gone before one of the members of the Russian Army dies on the job site.”
Oy. The Russian Army. Not the real one, mind you. We're talking about the ones next door doing construction. Actually, I think they're Polish, but Fletch says he's heard them speaking Russian. We've taken to calling them the Russian Army for simplification purposes because we discuss them A LOT.
The Army is building an $800,000 home next door to us, which will be nice. This neighborhood needs to be gentrified, like, yesterday, and expensive real estate will help. However, I'm not sure we're going to survive the building process, as I'm concerned this may be their first job ever.
I've always lived in city neighborhoods on the rise149 so I've seen an awful lot of construction in my time, but I've never witnessed a project like this one. First off, no one wears hard hats-unfortunate because they drop stuff ALL THE TIME. Bricks, beams, pallets, you name it, it comes cras.h.i.+ng down with frightening regularity.
Last week I had to put my hood up when walking down the breezeway to my mailbox. Their welding created a virtual blizzard of falling sparks. And when I got to the front of the house I noticed my LAWN WAS ON FIRE. Later, I smelled singed hair and saw their foreman yelling and hopping around, clutching the back of his head. Call me a jerk, but when I spied his bald spot, I laughed out loud.
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