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"Is he alive?"
"Yes, yes, I heard his voice; the ambulance is coming - he was alive when I left, and that was five minutes ago."
He looked down at me, the child at his knee.
"Hmm," he said, as if he'd wanted to say something else and stepped on it. "Would you stay here until my clothes are dry and then take them back to my house?"
He reached into his pocket and pulled out a key. "It's 23 Pasadena," he said, "and Fritz won't be there; he's in Philadelphia this week."
Fritz Epstein was another one of our Executive Committee members who'd reportedly never been laid. He wouldn't have picked up a gun, either. I wondered if Samuel had.
"Would you do that?" he asked again, sharp, and I realized I hadn't answered him.
"Yeah, sure," I said, looking past him. "Which dryer is it?" I finally asked, but Samuel was gone and had taken his paper with him.
The kids had left, too, and the last old lady was walking out the door, struggling with her cart. I went over to help her, and she looked a little jumpy, like she'd rather I didn't.
The door shut behind her. Even though it was so loud in there, with both dryers groaning, it was finally still - no more wash cycles. I could see Samuel's socks flipping in circles through the plate gla.s.s of the front loader. I sat down on the orange chair that faced his dryer and watched them spin a few revolutions, like I was watching the most interesting television program that ever aired.
And then I saw that my reflection was part of this program - Susie and the Flying Socks. My hair was crazy, falling out of its ponytail, and my gla.s.ses were half c.o.c.ked, like they'd been since I mended them with tape. Maybe that old lady had been freaked because, without my jacket, it was obvious I wasn't wearing a bra. My face looked weird, but I couldn't see it well enough in the dryer gla.s.s to figure out why.
I rubbed my eyes. I felt something sticky on my face, and I wondered what time it was. It was twilight outside. Michael had my coat, Hugh had Michael's shirt, and I had all these socks - what? To fold?
I found a pillowcase someone had abandoned and piled all Samuel's laundry into it. I pressed it to my chest. It felt wonderful, the most wonderful warmth spreading across my heart. Samuel lived across the street, just a few steps away. I walked out with the hot pillow in my arms, not feeling the cold at all, and crossed Woodward against the light.
Relocation
Marty was still in the hospital, but he was stable. Seventeen stab wounds to the chest, and he never lost consciousness. His wife told me that when she got him out of there, she was getting out of the IS for good. I wondered if she'd have any trouble convincing him.
We were supposed to get "back to business." Every morning, we'd begin with a meeting, and after we stopped donating blood, we weren't supposed to talk about Marty anymore. Move on; don't look back. I was a malingerer.
The morning meetings began at Larry's Diner downstairs, with the coffee and doughnut order. Red, another comrade from East Oakland, would ask me for money for a doughnut.
"Why are you asking me?"
"You look like a rich white girl."
"You are high."
"Always, always, sugar pie -" Then he'd hit up Hank. And then Chili, and then Steve P. Finally, one of them would give in. I couldn't figure it out, because Red made more money dealing that all of us put together. He just didn't believe in paying for himself.
Michael ignored him. Red never asked Michael for a doughnut. And I don't think I saw Mikey ever eat anything as strong as coffee or doughnuts. He would order a gla.s.s of hot milk and a piece of toast. When I asked him about his diet, he just shook his head.
"Ulcers."
"You're nineteen; there's no such thing as ulcers." But maybe Michael did have a special ulcerated intestine that affected only young men who looked like they hadn't had a carefree moment since they were in diapers.
Whatever happened at Larry's, set the tone for the group criticism to come. It followed us right up the stairs to our big room overlooking the original Ford plant. In bad weather, you could watch the rain fall right onto the old shop floors. All the factory's windows were knocked out.
"How come they don't open the Ford factory for tours or something?" I once asked. "I mean, it's historic!"
"People here are trying to get out of factories, Sue, not into them," Chewy said. He always had a stern word for me.
Sure, everyone in Detroit was dying to get out of the factories and move to California, except for demented communists like us who were trying to get in.
You didn't count for s.h.i.t in the IS until you got an shop-floor union job. But none of our comrades could help me get a job, because they were all known "agitators." The last thing a company was going to do was hire another one of their little pinko friends.
Without friends, how did you get work? I showed up in job application queues that circled for a mile around the block and was turned away. I was too young to pull it off against local folks my parents' age.
So far, I had a night shift at McDonald's, and a part-time nonunion factory job making carburetor parts in Royal Oak. Hot oil and metal filings settled into the pores of my hands, as if I were a caricature of the Incredible Hulk.
"How many newspapers did you sell yesterday?" Chewy held up a clipboard inches from my face. Why did he always volunteer to "supervise" us? He was older than my dad. In Los Angeles, no "grownups" came to our Red Tide meetings to manage us.
"Ten."
"Where's the money?"
"I already turned it into Steve P."
"How many schools did you get to; did you get to the four we outlined?"
"I got to Mumford, Cooley, and Ca.s.s before the third bell."
"You gotta get there before the second bell; where's your contact list?" Chewy's gla.s.ses were falling off his nose. His shirt looked like it hadn't been changed in a week.
I pulled out a piece of paper with the names of all the kids I'd met who'd given me their phone number.
At the top was Alicia - she was so cool; she wanted to go to L.A. and become a big star. She had almond eyes with lashes as long as Maybelline's. She asked me if she had the right att.i.tude for making it, and I told her, "Colossal." She had slender, articulate hands that looked like they should be waving from a Rose Parade float.
Alicia told me to come back after school and tell her everything, everything she had to know about Hollywood. I promised her I would.
"Who is this?" Runninghorse held up my contact sheet like it was bad evidence. I stared at the b.u.t.ton on his beret - Free Gary Tyler! - instead of his face, so I didn't have the urge to smack it.
"I told you," he yelled," if you can't get the last name of the contact, don't bother doing it at all!"
"I'm not going to interrogate some ninth-grader for her last name, Hank; this isn't the Gestapo, we're supposed to be making friends."
"Yeah, well, Sue, you spend all day 'making friends' while other people are dying, other people who need some discipline among comrades -"
"Shut up, Hank."
"Little Miss Friendship can just take her pet.i.t bourgeois a.s.s and have a tea party!" Runningmouth cackled, and he brought his face down to mine to slide out his tongue.
I screamed and dropped my pen, bringing my hand straight up to connect with his cheek.
Chewy grabbed me. "G.o.ddammit, if you two can't behave yourselves, I'll send you home." He looked right at me.
My mouth dropped open. Runningmouth took out a piece out of me every morning, and they treated him like he s.h.i.t gold bricks.
Michael came back through the door with a stack of newspapers for the afternoon shift. He looked so disappointed. He knew me; he knew I'd never hit anyone in my life. What had happened to me? Hank could turn a daisy into a killing machine, he really could.
"Sue, I'm going to need you for this detail," Michael said. "Hank, where do you drive to next?" He gave a long look to Chewy. Stay out of it.
It wasn't that Hank Runninghorse couldn't recruit. He could recruit young men looking for a daddy, a serious daddy. He could con young women into his bed - but only the most patient martyrs would stay. Then he'd start beating them.
I wish I could make him pay. He had the whole Executive Committee snowed. They accused everyone of not "trying" with him, and you wondered just how many of their wives he'd have to f.u.c.k, punch up, or insult before they wised up. He was their little bulldog.
I made up my mind at the end of that week. I decided to move to the IS Louisville branch. Chewy, our "nanny," wouldn't have a clue; Hank would be thrilled to think I'd left with my tail between my legs. Michael would understand; Sammy and Sheila encouraged it. All of us who were fed up with the leadership in Detroit were quietly making our move.
Louisville was an alarming destination choice for an organizer - it was h.e.l.l down there; anyone with the most milquetoast liberal agenda found themselves right up against the KKK. But I swore Kentucky would be like Paris in springtime compared to the crew on Woodward Avenue.
I called up the Louisville branch organizer, Luke, to tell him that I'd like to move there in two weeks. He said he'd loan me one of his shotguns.
"What am I supposed to do with that?"
"Well, if I were you, I'd sleep with it."
The comrades in the South didn't care what my motives were - they were so demoralized from the racial onslaught down there. Busing had turned Louisville, like South Boston, into a mini-race war. They couldn't imagine what bureaucratic inferno I was leaving behind. A nice warm gun to cuddle up to at night might just be a tonic.
It was hard for me to keep my moving plans a secret. But I knew I couldn't just leave "of my own accord" - I'd be treated like a traitor.
The worst was coming right up. I had to stage a little farewell plea; I had to get an audience with Hugh. As he reminded everyone in his bulletins, "The National Secretary must approve all relocations."
I wasn't a very good actress - you could see everything on my face. But I was counting on Hugh's weaknesses, his famous ego, to let me go - because by his definition, I was already damaged goods. He'd s.e.xually appraised and rejected me a good year ago.
How did the IS ever end up with Hugh? He was our very own British pretender to the throne. He was rumored to have run an OTB office in his past life - not to mention a carny, a card player, and a wh.o.r.emonger. A Brian Clough wannabe. Whatever his resume, he'd created a Queen of Hearts, atmosphere where everyone was primed for a kangaroo trial or a casting couch.
The previous Sunday night I'd printed ten thousand red, white, and blue flyers for him, with the headline "Justice Means 'Just Us,'" atop a caricature of a white foreman holding a black employee in a headlock. The ill.u.s.tration had become my own private insignia.
It was odd to make an "appointment" with Hugh. On our first - and last - occasion to speak in private, he'd been the one to make an appointment. He had called round to be wined and dined and f.u.c.ked. I had still been in L.A., in the middle of my affair with Stan, and had just dropped out of high school.
Hugh was touring all the U.S. branches, and he was dying to see Malibu. Stan got kind of queasy when I told him Hugh had "called" for me, after Temma wasn't available. But Stan didn't stop it.
I could tell Hugh considered my a.s.signment - being his date, his chaperone - to be a great honor for me. My curiosity got the better of me. I'd never played geisha before. My lovers were my friends, not men who called long distance with a list of their likes and dislikes.
It all went wrong with Hugh. I took him to Topanga Beach at sunset, and he stared at it like it was nothing but a cold pile of sand. I took him to a spaghetti restaurant that everyone at Uni High thought was fancy, and he p.r.o.nounced it rotten. I barely had enough money to cover his bar tab.
I hoped that the s.e.x of the evening would save it, but it was not to be. He was barely in my apartment before I accidentally sat on his leather coat and he lost his temper.
"You f.u.c.king c.u.n.t, you've wrinkled it!" he said.
My eyes watered, and he was quiet for a moment.
Then he asked me if I had any early Rod Stewart. What a face-saver. It was a good thing I had a decent record collection, because we both had to concentrate on something while we screwed each other. The needle thankfully didn't skip. I don't remember his p.e.n.i.s inside me at all. "Maggie May" was a tranquilizer.
Now, a year later in Detroit, I had my second appointment with the great man. In Hugh's office, that same blond leather jacket of his was hanging on a wooden hanger on the back of his door.
"So what is today, luv?" He put his feet up on the desk, as if we had cozy chats like this all the time. I don't think that I'd ever been alone with Hugh in his office. No electric mandolin to help us out this time.
"I came to talk to you because things haven't been working out for me here," I said. "I'm too old for the high school stuff. I'm eighteen now, and I haven't been able to get a job in auto or Teamsters -"
"Yeah, it hasn't been your year, has it?" he interrupted.
I had to get to the point quickly, before he became too interested in running down my character.
"I'd like to move to Louisville. I talked to the comrades there - you know they're being hammered by the Klan, and they're desperate for some new blood."
That was a stupid way to put it. But if Hugh was the butcher I thought he was, he'd appreciate my meat-related metaphor.
For a second he scanned me up and down. I thought his paranoia might prevail. He'd yell, "You're wearing a wire, you f.u.c.king c.u.n.t, aren't you? You've come to do me in!"
But I gave him too much credit; I always did. He kicked back off the desk and said, "Yeah, you look like s.h.i.t. You've been useless here. I'll tell Louisville you're coming; see what you can do for them."
This was the point where I was supposed to say, "Thank you, Mr. Fallon," like a dutiful daughter. I hated him so much.
"You can't leave until you train Marguerite on the press, though," he said, saving me from the impossibility of feigning grat.i.tude. He pointed to some camera-ready copy on the corner of his desk.
"We need six thousand of these by" - he checked his gold watch - "five o'clock, so let's get going, eh?"
He got up to open the door, keys in his hand, ready to lock it behind us. I realized he couldn't wait for this to be over. Some other lucky c.u.n.t must be waiting outside.
I left the office to go downstairs to the party store for a Baby Ruth, and called Sammy and Sheila's house from the pay phone. I bet they'd be a little sad to see me go.
"He believed me!" I shouted into the phone. "I just have to scrub a few more floors with my bare hands, and then I can go!"
Sammy laughed like a pleased Santa. I could tell he had a drink his hand. "You did alright; I knew you would. See, this is going to work out." I could hear Sheila yelling in the background that she was going to kiss me all over.
"Yeah, I'll come home as soon as I finish these flyers. Tell Michael when you see him that it went through."
I had to re-ink the mighty AB d.i.c.k printing press a half-dozen times. It took forever to print six thousand back-to-back in red ink: No Contract, No Work. I did feel like a traitor now, the ink stains all over my arms, legs, and face. The first time I had ever turned on the machine, six months ago, Chewy had shown me into the press room, hauled out a mountain of goldenrod 8" x 14", and said, "Turn straw into gold." That's how he left me.
Sammy and Sheila couldn't say enough about Louisville when I got home. They were living vicariously through my imminent escape.
"The handsomest men in this whole organization are in Louisville," Sheila said with authority. She was so good-looking herself, with her t.i.tian hair, you had to take her at her word. "If it wasn't for Sammy, I'd be on a train myself."
I'd seen the comrades she was talking about at an anti-apartheid conference the previous March, and it was true. All of the Louisville comrades, women and men, were better-looking than average. Maybe they just slept at night.
I'd been entertained in Louisville one weekend. Jimmy J. and Cary R. had taken me to Churchill Downs, not when the horses were running, but on a slow day, to admire the place.
They took me to the Winner's Circle and put a wreath of roses around my neck. We all posed for a picture, the two of them on either side of me, their arms encircling my waist. Jimmy had been an English teacher before he started driving trucks for Rykoff. Cary was a photojournalist, an old ballplayer from the minor leagues, and he posed me in front of his granddaddy's Oldsmobile. I never stopped laughing except to put some barbeque in my mouth. It was a beautiful day.
I told Sheila about our day at the races. "See, I told you so!" she said, petting my hair. She was one of the only ones I could talk to about a day off, who wouldn't look at me like, What do you mean, you fiddled while Detroit burned? She knew I needed a pleasant memory to pack my bags and move somewhere where I really didn't know anyone at all.