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What about the other kids? she faxes back.
Tell them they're also the best kids, I fax back.
From Janet's Separate Area comes the sound of Janet pounding on something repeatedly, probably her desk, presumably with her fist.
Next morning in the Big Slot is no goat. Just a note.
From Janet: Not coming in, it says. Bradley lied about the tooters and bought some you-know-what. Big suprise right? Is in jail. Stupid dumba.s.s. Got a fax last night. Plus my Ma's worse. Before she couldnt get up or her lungs filled with blood? Well now they fill with blood unless she switchs from side to side and who's there to switch her? Before Mrs Finn was but now Mrs Finn got a day-job so no more. So now I have to find someone and pay someone. Ha ha very funny, like I can aford that. Plus Bradley's bail which beleve me I have defnitely considered not paying. With all this going on no way am I caving it up today. I'm sorry but I just cant, don't narc me out, okay? Just this one last time. I'm taking a Sick Day.
She can't do that. She can't take a Sick Day if she's not sick. She can't take a Sick Day because she's sad about someone she loves being sick. And she certainly can't take a Sick Day because she's sad about someone she loves being in jail.
I count out ten Reserve Crackers and work all morning on the pictographs.
Around noon the door to her Separate Area flies open. She looks weird. Her hair is sticking up and she's wearing an I'm With Stupid sweats.h.i.+rt over her cavewoman robe and her breath smells like whiskey.
Janet is wasted? Wasted in the cave?
"What I have here in this alb.u.m?" she says. "Baby pictures of that f.u.c.king rat Bradley. Back when I loved him so much. Back before he was a druggie. See how cute? See how smart he looked?"
She shows me the alb.u.m. He actually does not look cute or smart. He looks the same as he looked the other day, only smaller. In one picture he's sitting on a tricycle looking like he's planning a heist. In another he's got a sour look on his face and his hand down some smaller kid's diaper.
"G.o.d, you just love the little s.h.i.+ts no matter what, don't you?" she says. "You know what I'm saying? If Bradley's dad woulda stuck around it might've been better. Bradley never knew him. I always used to say he took one look at Bradley and ran off. Maybe I shouldn't of said that. At least not in front of Bradley. Wow. I've had a few snorts. You want a snort? Come on, live a little! Take a Sick Day like me. I had three BallBusters and half a bottle of wine. This is the best Sick Day I ever took."
I guide her back to her Separate Area and push her sternly in.
"Come on in!" she says. "Have a BallBuster. You want one? I'm lonely in here. You want a BallBuster, Senor Tighta.s.s?"
I do not want a BallBuster.
What I want is for her to stay in her Separate Area keeping very quiet until she sobers up.
All day I sit alone in the cave. When the quality of light changes I go into my Separate Area and take out a Daily Partner Performance Evaluation Form.
When I was a kid, Dad worked at Kenner Beef. Loins would drop from this belt and he'd cut through this purple tendon and use a sort of vise to squeeze some blood into a graduated beaker for testing, then wrap the loin in a sling and swing it down to Finis.h.i.+ng. Dad's partner was Fred Lank. Lank had a metal plate in his skull and went into these funks where he'd forget to cut the purple tendon and fail to squeeze out the blood and instead of placing the loin in the sling would just sort of drop the loin down on Finis.h.i.+ng. When Lank went into a funk, Dad would cover for him by doing double loins. Sometimes Dad would do double loins for days at a time. When Dad died, Lank sent Mom a check for a thousand dollars, with a note: Please keep, it said. The man did so much for me.
Which is I think part of the reason I'm having trouble ratting Janet out.
Do I note any att.i.tudinal difficulties? I do not. How do I rate my Partner overall? Very good. Are there any Situations which require Mediation?
There are not.
I fax it in.
Next morning in the Big Slot is no goat, just a note: A question has arisen, it says. Hence this note about a touchy issue that is somewhat grotesque and personal, but we must address it, because one of you raised it, the issue of which was why do we require that you Remote Attractions pay the money which we call, and ask that you call, the Disposal Debit, but which you people insist on wrongly calling the s.h.i.+t Fee. Well, this is to tell you why, although isn't it obvious to most? We hope. But maybe not. Because what we have found, no offense, is that sometimes you people don't get things that seem pretty obvious to us, such as why you have to pay for your c.o.kes in your fridge if you drink them. Who should then? Did we drink your c.o.kes you drank? We doubt it. You did it. Likewise with what you so wrongly call the s.h.i.+t Fee, because why do you expect us to pay to throw away your p.o.o.p when after all you made it? Do you think your p.o.o.p is a legitimate business expense? Does it provide benefit to us when you defecate? No, on the contrary, it would provide benefit if you didn't, because then you would be working more. Ha ha! That is a joke. We know very well that all must p.o.o.p. We grant you that. But also, as we all know, it takes time to p.o.o.p, some more than others. As we get older, we notice this, don't you? Not that we're advocating some sort of biological plug or chemical constipator. Not yet, anyway! No, that would be wrong, we know that, and unhealthy, and no doubt some of you would complain about having to pay for the constipators, expecting us to provide them gratis.
That is another funny thing with some of you, we notice it, namely that, not ever having been up here, in our shoes, you always want something for nothing. You just don't get it! When you p.o.o.p and it takes a long time and you are on the clock, do you ever see us outside looking mad with a stopwatch? So therefore please stop saying to us: I have defecated while on the clock, dispose of it for free, kindly absorb my expense. We find that loopy. Because, as you know, you Remote Locations are far away, and have no pipes, and hence we must pay for the trucks. The trucks that drive your p.o.o.p. Your p.o.o.p to the pipes. Why are you so silly? It is as if you expect us to provide those c.o.kes for free, just because you thirst. Do c.o.kes grow on trees? Well, the other thing that does not grow on a tree is a p.o.o.p truck. Perhaps someone should explain to you the idea of how we do things, which is to make money. And why? Is it greed? Don't make us laugh. It is not. If we make money, we can grow, if we can grow, we can expand, if we can expand, we can continue to employ you, but if we shrink, if we shrink or stay the same, woe to you, we would not be vital. And so help us help you, by not whining about your Disposal Debit, and if you don't like how much it costs, try eating less.
And by the way, we are going to be helping you in this, by henceforth sending less food. We're not joking, this is austerity. We think you will see a substantial savings in terms of your Disposal Debits, as you eat less and your Human Refuse bags get smaller and smaller. And that, our friends, is a substantial savings that we, we up here, will not see, and do you know why not? I mean, even if we were eating less, which we already have decided we will not be? In order to keep our strength up? So we can continue making sound decisions? But do you know why we will not see the substantial savings you lucky ducks will? Because, as some of you have already grumbled about, we pay no s.h.i.+t Fee, those of us up here. So that even if we shat less, we would realize no actual savings. And why do we pay no s.h.i.+t Fee? Because that was negotiated into our contracts at Time-of-Hire. What would you have had us do? Negotiate inferior contracts? Act against our own healthy self-interest? Don't talk crazy. Please talk sense. Many of us have Student Loans to repay. Times are hard, entire Units are being eliminated, the Staff Remixing continues, so no more talk of defecation flaring up, please, only let's remember that we are a family, and you are the children, not that we're saying you're immature, only that you do most of the ch.o.r.es while we do all the thinking, and also that we, in our own way, love you.
For several hours Janet does not come out.
Probably she is too hungover.
Around eleven she comes out, holding her copy of the memo.
"So what are they saying?" she says. "Less food? Even less food than now?"
I nod.
"Jesus Christ," she says. "I'm starving as it is."
I give her a look.
"I know, I know, I f.u.c.ked up," she says. "I was a little buzzed. A little buzzed in the cave. Boo-hoo. Don't tell me, you narced me out, right? Did you? Of course you did."
I give her a look.
"You didn't?" she says. "Wow. You're even nicer than I thought. You're the best, man. And starting right now, no more screw-ups. I know I said that before. But this time, for real. You watch."
Just then there's a huge clunk in the Big Slot.
"Excellent!" she says. "I hope it's a big thing of Motrin."
But it's not a big thing of Motrin. It's a goat. A weird-looking goat. Actually a plastic goat. With a predrilled hole for the spit to go through. In the mouth is a Baggie and in the Baggie is a note: In terms of austerity, it says. No goat today. In terms of verisimilitude, mount this fake goat and tend as if real. Mount well above fire to avoid burning. In event of melting, squelch fire. In event of burning, leave area, burning plastic may release harmful fumes.
I mount the fake goat on the spit and Janet sits on the boulder with her head in her hands.
Next morning is once again the morning I empty our Human Refuse bags and the trash bags and the bag from the bottom of the sleek metal hole where Janet puts her used feminine items.
I knock on the door of her Separate Area.
Janet slides the bags out, all sealed and labeled and ready to go.
"Check it out," she says. "I'm a new woman."
Out I go, with the white regular trash bag in one hand and our mutual big pink Human Refuse bag in the other.
I walk along the white cliff, then down the path marked by the small yellow dot on the pine etc. etc.
On the door of Marty's doublewide is a note: Due to circ.u.mstances beyond our control we are no longer here, it says. But please know how much we appreciated your patronage. As to why we are not here, we will not comment on that, because we are bigger than that. Bigger than some people. Some people are snakes. To some people, fifteen years of good loyal service means squat. All's we can say is, watch your d.a.m.n backs.
All the best and thanks for the memories, Marty and Jeannine and little Eddie.
Then the door flies open.
Marty and Jeannine and little Eddie are standing there holding suitcases.
"h.e.l.lo and good-bye," says Marty. "Feel free to empty your s.h.i.+t bag inside the store."
"Now, Marty," says Jeannine. "Let's try and be positive about this, okay? We're going to do fine. You're too good for this dump anyway. I've always said you were too good for this dump."
"Actually, Jeannine," Marty says. "When I first got this job you said I was lucky to even get a job, because of my dyslexia."
"Well, honey, you are dyslexic," says Jeannine.
"I never denied being dyslexic," says Marty.
"He writes his letters and numbers backwards," Jeannine says to me.
"What are you, turning on me, Jeannine?" Marty says. "I lose my job and you turn on me?"
"Oh Marty, I'm not turning on you," Jeannine says. "I'm not going to stop loving you just because you've got troubles. Just like you've never stopped loving me, even though I've got troubles."
"She gets too much spit in her mouth," Marty says to me.
"Marty!" says Jeannine.
"What?" Marty says. "You can say I'm dyslexic, but I can't say you get too much spit in your mouth?"
"Marty, please," she says. "You're acting crazy."
"I'm not acting crazy," he says. "It's just that you're turning on me."
"Don't worry about me, Dad," the kid says. "I won't turn on you. And I don't mind going back to my old school. Really I don't."
"He had a little trouble with mean kids in his old school," Marty says to me. "Which is why we switched him. Although nothing you couldn't handle, right, kid? Actually, I think it was good for him. Taught him toughness."
"As long as n.o.body padlocks me to the boiler again," the kid says. "That part I really didn't like. Wow, those rats or whatever."
"I doubt those were actual rats," says Marty. "More than likely they were cats. The janitor's cats. My guess is, it was dark in that boiler room and you couldn't tell a cat from a rat."
"The janitor didn't have any cats," the kid says. "And he said I was lucky those rats didn't start biting my pants. Because of the pudding smell. From when those kids pinned me down and poured pudding down my pants."
"Was that the same day?" Marty says. "The rats and the pudding? I guess I didn't realize them two things were on the same day. Wow, I guess you learned a lot of toughness on that day."
"I guess so," the kid says.
"But nothing you couldn't handle," Marty says.
"Nothing I couldn't handle," the kid says, and blinks, and his eyes water up.
"Well, Christ," Marty says, and his eyes also water up. "Time to hit the road, family. I guess this it. Let's say our good-byes. Our good-byes to Home Sweet Home."
They take a little tour around the doublewide and do a family hug, then drag their suitcases down the path.
I go to the Refuse Center and weigh our Human Refuse. I put the paperwork and the fee in the box labeled Paperwork and Fees. I toss the trash in the dumpster labeled Trash, and the Human Refuse in the dumpster labeled Caution Human Refuse.
I feel bad for Marty and Jeannine, and especially I feel bad for the kid.
I try to imagine Nelson padlocked to a boiler in a dark room full of rats.
Plus now where are us Remotes supposed to go for our smokes and mints and Kayos?
Back at the cave Janet is working very industriously on the pictographs.
As I come in she points to my Separate Area while mouthing the word: Fax.
I look at her. She looks at me.
She mouths the words: Christ, go. Then she holds one hand at knee level, to indicate Nelson.
I go.
But it's not for me, it's for her.
Ms. Foley's fax appears to be inoperative? the cover letter says. Kindly please forward the attached.
Please be informed, the attached fax says, I did my very best in terms of your son, and this appeared, in my judgment, to be an excellent plea bargain, which, although to some might appear disadvantageous, ten years is not all that long when you consider all the bad things that he has done. But he was happy enough about it, after some initial emotions such as limited weeping, and thanked me for my hard work, although not in those exact words, as he was fairly, you know, upset. On a personal note, may I say how sorry I am, but also that in the grand scheme of things such as geology ten years is not so very long really.
Sincerely, Evan Joeller, Esq.
I take the fax out to Janet, who reads it while sitting on her log.
She's sort of a slow reader.
When she's finally done she looks crazy and for a minute I think she's going to tear the cave apart but instead she scoots into the corner and starts frantically pretending to catch and eat small bugs.
I go over and put my hand on her shoulder, like: Are you okay?
She pushes my hand away roughly and continues to pretend to catch and eat small bugs.
Just then someone pokes their head in.
Young guy, round head, expensive-looking gla.s.ses.
"Bibby, hand me up Cole," he says. "So he can see. Cole-Cole, can you see? Here. Daddy will hold you up."
A little kid's head appears alongside the dad's head.
"Isn't this cool, Cole?" says the dad. "Aren't you glad Mommy and Daddy brought you? Remember Daddy told you? How people used to live in caves?"
"They did not," the little boy says. "You're wrong."
"Bibby, did you hear that?" the dad says. "He just said I'm wrong. About people living in caves."
"I heard it," says a woman from outside. "Cole, people really did use to live in caves. Daddy's not wrong."
"Daddy's always wrong," says the little boy.