Read New Poems Book Three Online
Authors: Charles Bukowski
GAME DAY
this lady was always after me about this or
that:
“what are those scratches on your back?”
“baby, I dunno, you must have put them
there.”
“you’ve been with some whore!”
“what’s that bite mark on your neck?
she must have been a
hot
number!”
“huh? baby, I don’t see anything.”
“there! there! on the left side of your
neck!
you musta really turned her on!”
“what’s this phone number written inside this matchbook?”
“what phone number?”
“this phone number! it’s a woman’s hand-writing!”
“damned if I know where that came from.”
“I’m going to call that number, that’s what I’ll do!”
“go ahead.”
“no, I’m going to tear it up, I’m going to tear
up that whore’s number!”
“you made love to that neighbor woman in our bed
while I was at work!”
“what?”
“another neighbor told me! I was told she came
right into this house!”
“oh, that. she came by to borrow a cup of
sugar.”
“a cup of sugar, my ass! you screwed her
right in this house, right in our bed with the
dog watching!”
“she just wanted a cup of sugar, she wasn’t
here but two minutes!”
“a quicky! you gave her a quicky!”
later I found out she had screwed a guy in
the back of his delivery truck
and she had screwed an appliance salesman
in the crapper in the mens’ room,
in a stall for the handicapped.
and there was something or other with a
meter reader, a blow job, I think.
she had completely outfoxed me with her
smoke screen of accusations
while she had been unfaithful on almost a
full-time basis.
and when confronted, her answer
was a
“
SO WHAT
?”
I moved her out.
we flipped for the dog and she won.
and the next time the neighbor lady
came by to borrow a cup of sugar
she stayed longer than a minute or
two.
GAS
my grandmother had a serious gas
problem.
we only saw her on Sunday.
she’d sit down to dinner
and she’d have gas.
she was very heavy,
80 years old.
wore this large glass brooch,
that’s what you noticed most
in addition to the gas.
she’d let it go just as food was being served.
she’d let it go loud in bursts
spaced about a minute apart.
she’d let it go
4 or 5 times
as we reached for the potatoes
poured the gravy
cut into the meat.
nobody ever said anything,
especially me.
I was 6 years old.
Only my grandmother spoke.
after 4 or 5 blasts
she would say in an offhand way,
“I will bury you all!”
I didn’t much like that:
first farting
then saying that.
it happened every Sunday.
she was my father’s mother.
every Sunday it was death and gas
and mashed potatoes and gravy
and that big glass brooch.
those Sunday dinners would
always end with apple pie and
ice cream
and a big argument
about something or other,
my grandmother finally running out the door
and taking the red train back to
Pasadena
the place stinking for an hour
and my father walking about
fanning a newspaper in the air and
saying, “it’s all that damned sauerkraut
she eats!”
MYSTERY LEG
first of all, I had a hard time, a very hard time
locating the parking lot for the building.
it wasn’t off the main boulevard where
the cars all driven by merciless killers
were doing 55 mph in a 25 mph zone.
the man riding my bumper so
close I could see his snarling face
in my rearview mirror caused me
to miss the narrow alley that would have
allowed me to circle the west
end of the building in search of parking.
I went to the next street, took a right, then
took another right, spotted the building, a blue
heartless-looking structure, then took
another right and finally saw it, a tiny
sign:
parking
.
I drove in.
the guard had the wooden red and white
barrier down.
he stuck his head out a little window.
“yeah?” he asked.
he looked like a retired hit man.
“to see Dr. Manx,” I said.
he looked at me disdainfully, then said,
“go ahead!”
the red and white barrier lifted.
I drove in,
drove around and around.
I finally found a parking spot a good distance away,
a football field away.
I walked in.
I finally found the entrance and the elevator
and the floor
and then the office number.
I walked in.
the waiting room was full.
there was an old lady talking to the
receptionist.
“but can’t I see him now?”
“Mrs. Miller, you are here at the right time
but on the wrong day.
this is Wednesday, you’ll have to come
back Friday.”
“but I took a cab. I’m an old lady, I have almost
no money, can’t I see him now?”
“Mrs. Miller, I’m sorry but your appointment
is on Friday, you’ll have to come back
then.”
Mrs. Miller turned away: unwanted,
old and poor, she walked to the
door.
I stepped up smartly, informed them who I was.
I was told to sit down and wait.
I sat with the others.
then I noticed the magazine rack.
I walked over and looked at the magazines.
it was odd: they weren’t of recent
vintage: in fact, all of them were over a
year old.
I sat back down.
30 minutes passed.
45 minutes passed.
an hour passed.
the man next to me spoke:
“I’ve been waiting an hour-and-a-half,” he
said.
“that’s hell,” I said, “they shouldn’t do that!”
he didn’t reply.
just then the receptionist called my
name.
I got up and told her that the other man had
been waiting an hour-and-a-half.
she acted as if she hadn’t heard.
“please follow me,” she said.
I followed her down a dark hall, then she
opened a door, pointed. “in there,” she said.
I walked in and she closed the door behind me.
I sat down and looked at a map of
the human body hanging from the wall.
I could see the veins, the heart, the
intestines, all that.
it was cold in there and dark, darker
than in the hall.
I waited maybe 15 minutes before the door
opened.
it was Dr. Manx.
he was followed by a tired-looking young lady
in a white gown; she held a clipboard;
she looked depressed.
“well, now,” said Dr. Manx, “what is it?”
“it’s my leg,” I said.
I saw the lady writing on the clipboard.
she wrote
LEG
.
“what is it about the leg?” asked the Dr.
“it hurts,” I said.
PAIN
wrote the lady.
then she saw me looking at the clipboard and
turned away.
“did you fill out the form they gave you at
the desk?” the Dr. asked.
“they didn’t give me a form,” I said.
“Florence,” he said, “give him a form.”
Florence pulled a form out from her
clipboard, handed it to me.
“fill that out,” said Dr. Manx, “we’ll be right
back.”
then they were gone and I worked at the
form.
it was the usual: name, address, phone,
employer, relatives, etc.
there was also a long list of questions.
I marked them all “no.”
then I sat there.
20 minutes passed.
then they were back.
the doctor began twisting my leg.
“it’s the
right
leg,” I said.
“oh,” he said.
Florence wrote something on her
clipboard.
probably
RIGHT LEG
.
he switched to the right leg.
“does that hurt?”
“a little.”
“not real bad?”
“no.”
“does
this
hurt?”
“a little.”
“not real bad?”
“well, the whole leg hurts but when
you do that, it hurts more.”
“but not
real
bad?”
“what’s real bad?”
“like you can’t stand on it.”
“I can stand on it.”
“hmmm … stand up!”
“all right.”
“now, rock on your toes, back and
forth, back and forth.”
I did.
“hurt real bad?” he asked.
“just medium.”
“you know what?” Dr. Manx asked.
“no.”
“we’ve got a Mystery Leg here!”
Florence wrote something on the
clipboard.
“I have?”
“yes, I don’t know yet what’s wrong with
it.
I want you to come back in 30 days.”
“30 days?”
“yes, and stop at the desk on your
way out, see the girl.”
then they walked out.
at the checkout desk there was a long
row of bottles waiting, white bottles with
bright orange labels.
the girl at the desk looked at me.
“take 4 of those bottles.”
I did.
she didn’t offer me a bag so I stuck
them in my pockets.
“that’ll be $143,” she said.
“$143?” I asked.
“it’s for the pills,” she said.
I pulled out my credit card.
“oh, we don’t take credit cards,” she told
me.
“but I don’t have that much money on
me.”
“how much do you have?”
I looked in my wallet.
“23 dollars.”
“we’ll take that and bill you for the
rest.”
I handed her the money.
“see you in 30 days,” she smiled.
I walked out and into the waiting room.
the man who had been waiting an hour-and-
a-half was still there.
I walked out into the hall, found the
elevator.
then I was on the first floor and out
into the parking lot.
my car was still a football field
away
and my right leg began to hurt like hell,
after all that twisting Dr.
Manx had done to it.
I moved slowly to my car, got in.
it started and soon I was out on the
boulevard again.
the 4 bottles of pills bulged painfully in my
pockets as I drove along.
now I only had one problem left, I had
to tell my wife
I had a Mystery Leg.
I could hear her already:
“what? you mean he couldn’t tell
you what was
wrong
with your
leg?
what do you
mean
, he didn’t
know?
and what are those
PILLS
?
here, let me see those!”
as I drove along, I switched on the
radio in search of some soothing
music.
there wasn’t any.
BE COOL, FOOL
you have to accept this
reality.
whether you
sit at a punch press all day or
whether you
work in a coal mine or
whether you come home
exhausted from a cardboard box factory
to find
3 kids bouncing dirty tennis balls
against the walls of a
2 room flat as
your fat wife sleeps while
the dinner burns
away.
you have to accept this
reality
which includes enough nations with
enough nuclear stockpiles to
blow away the very center of the
earth
and to finally liberate
the Devil
Himself
with his
spewing red fire of liquid
doom.
you have to accept this
reality
as the madhouse walls
bulge
break
and the terrified insane
flood our
ugly streets.
you have to accept terrible
reality
AN UNLITERARY AFTERNOON
Roger came by with his well-trimmed beard and puffing his
little pipe.
he taught in the English Dept. at a prestigious university.
Roger was literary in the old-fashioned sense: almost every time he opened his mouth you would hear
“Balzac” or “Hem” or “F. Scott.”
I was drinking with Gerda who was also on speed.
Lorraine was passed out in the bedroom but I don’t know
what she was on.
Roger sat down with his little smile.
I gave him a can of beer and he drank that and I gave
him another and he began talking away:
“did you know that Céline and Hemingway died on the
same day?”
“no, I didn’t know that.”
“did you know Whitman might have been a fag?”
“don’t believe everything you read.”
“hey, who’s that babe in your bed?”
“her? that’s Lorraine.”
after a while Roger got up and
walked into the bedroom and climbed into bed with
Lorraine, shoes and all.
Lorraine didn’t seem to notice.
“hey … baby!”
Roger reached into her dress and grabbed one of her
breasts.
Lorraine leaped out of bed. “
hey, you son-of-a-bitch! what
do you think you’re doing
?”
“oh, I’m sorry …”
Lorraine ran into the front room.
“WHO IS THAT SON-OF-A-BITCH? THAT SON-OF-A-BITCH
MOLESTED ME
!”
Roger came out of the bedroom, “listen, I’m sorry,
I didn’t mean to offend you!”
“YOU KEEP YOUR MOTHERFUCKING HANDS TO YOURSELF, YOU
FUCKING HUNK OF SHIT
!”
“yeah,” said Gerda, throwing an empty can of beer on the
rug. “go play with yourself!”
Roger walked to the door, opened it, stood there for a moment,
closed it behind him and was
gone.
“WHO WAS THAT PERVERT?
” Lorraine asked.
“yeah? who?” asked Gerda.
“that was my friend Roger,” I said.
“YEAH? WELL, YOU BETTER TELL HIM TO KEEP HIS HANDS TO
HIMSELF
!”
“I will,” I told Lorraine.
“I don’t know where you get your fucking friends,”
Gerda said.
“neither do I,” I replied.