Authors: Stephen Dixon
“But I'm serious.” And she said “And so am I. Wouldn't I look spectacular? Now, eat up.” And to that five-month-old thing in her belly: “You, too, mister, and don't be letting me know if you think the dish is too hot.”
The eggs weren't very good, too bland, which not even salt would improve, which surprised me, with all the different herbs, spices and ingredients she put in it. When she asked how it was, I said “Great, fine, though still not as good as one of your plain cheese omelets or fried egg marinara, so maybe this should be the last time we have it, okay?”
“I like it. The sautéed pepper I could do without, but I like it.” She ate all her eggs and, without asking me or anything, spooned half of my eggs onto her plate, while I just sat there, thinking about how I was going to get the berries to the street tomorrow before the manager or Finerman got wind of what I was doing.
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I got to work a little earlier than usual and cleaned up the produce section a half hour before the store was to open at nine. The window from the bombing the day before still had wooden planks and tape over it and the store still smelled some from the fire, even though we had used several cans of bathroom spray. One of the girl food clerks said that just before she left work last night, the manager told her the company wasn't going to replace the window till the weekend, just to show the agitators that we didn't think a broken window was going to lose us much business and to also show the neighborhood how difficult it was providing them with the wide selection of food products we thought they wanted. I told her I thought a broken window was sure to lose us trade, not only because it looked bad but also because it reminded customers that more agitation might come if the dispute wasn't settled and, worse than that, of Nelson's near death.
“How is he, you know?” she said, and I said I'd been thinking of calling the hospital; in fact, would do it right now, since I had a few minutes before the store opened, and went to the office.
“Good morning, Kevin,” the manager said. “Everything straightened out up front?” He said this almost every time I saw him and he meant was the floor swept in my section and was I getting the more perishable items that wouldn't last the week right up on top for everyone to see or at least working with Finerman ordering replacement produce, since the company prohibited markdowns on its fruits and vegetables. This was really his office, he made us very aware of that; made us feel uncomfortable whenever we had to use just one of the three desks in it. And he red-circled the check-in numbers of our timecards if we clocked in three minutes late more than once a week or two minutes late more than twice a week and even complained to our department superiors if he thought we were spending too much time in the washroom, which happened to be within seeing distance of his desk overlooking the store, as I guess everything else was, except the stockroom in back, where the staff took their breaks. That was why I was a little jittery and maybe too hesitant when I asked if he'd mind my using the phone to call about Nelson. He said I needn't bother, he had called himself last night and the hospital said Nelson's doing satisfactorily and it wouldn't know of any improvement in his condition for two days. “He has those kinds of burns.”
“I'd still like to call, if you don't mind, and find out if he just might have improved overnight.”
“I never knew you and Nelson were that close.”
“We weren't, exactly. I mean, Nelson liked me and me, him and we had lots of respect for each other, as we were both on the company softball team that made the league playoffs two years ago, Nelly at short and me at second.”
“It's also that the company's been complaining to me recently about the excess calls from this phone, and on both exchanges. That they're completely out of proportion to the excess calls of their other stores. They even sent me a notice to post on the bulletin board, which I haven't done, because I thought a brief mention of it at our next staff meeting might serve as well.”
“I'm sure they could make an exception with this one.”
“I'm sure they could, too, if this were the only exception. But I can't be explaining to them why each excess call of my employeesâor at least the calls I find out about, because I'm not always in this officeâis an exception. I'd be explaining to them all week, if that were the case.”
So he wasn't going to let me use the phone. He didn't care about Nelson, except that he had to be replaced by a less efficient man at the register and that might lower the day's profits a fraction of a percentage point andâgood God!âhow was he ever going to explain that to the company. He didn't care about the pickers or even his own employees. And if it had been me burned and Nelson who wanted to call the hospital, it would have been the same excuse: excess calls. I said Thank you,” I don't know for what, and called the hospital from the pay phone in back. Nelson was doing satisfactorily, a woman there said, though chances of his complete recovery wouldn't be known for at least another day.
“You see the TV cameras?” Mary Sarah, another food clerk, said when I got back to my section. They're setting up outsideâtwo of them from different stations. What're you think they're for?”
“Probably to film the scene of yesterday's bombing.”
“And the paper today? There was a picture of our market, real as life except for the boards, and another of Nelson, all bandaged up, waving from his hospital bed, although he looked so grim and weak, it seemed maybe strings were making his fingers move. My hubby, Mike, and I talked about it and couldn't decide what all that degree business meant. Though because third sounds so much the worse over second, we almost agreed it wasn't, because that would have been too obvious, so we wouldn't have even considered the question in the first place. Do you have a clue?”
The store bell rang, everyone got to his post, the doors opened and the usual early-morning surge of customers, eager to get what they believed were daily-delivered fresh produce, bought grapefruits, oranges, peaches and tomatoes and raspberries that had been in the boxes and bins out here, or in the refrigerated cases in back, for a few days.
“It's getting so exciting outside,” Mary Sarah said, coming by after the early rush had ended and squeezing and thumping a melon to see if it was ripe enough for dinner tonight. “Could you put this away for me?” she said, which I did. “And the newspaper article said it was all because of those thingsâthose berries there,” and she pointed, to the four crates of different kinds of berries that in a half hour I was going to dump into the street and destroy. I'd already figured out how I was going to do it. I'd wait till Finerman went in back for his every-half-hour-on-the-half-hour smoke, and then I'd stack the crates on one another and carry them outside.
“Morning, Kevin.” It was Mrs. Blau, another morning regular. For six months in the cold season, she bought nothing but anise, artichokes and apples; and during the warmer months, it was plums, peaches and carrots with their tops. “You shouldn't be selling those things,” she said, meaning the berries.
“I know that, Mrs. Blau.”
“I should be boycotting your store for selling them, because by having them, you only encourage people to buy. Haven't you seen the television reports?” I told her I hadn't and she said the educational network last week devoted an entire hour to the plight of the berry-pickers and the cynicism and greediness of the growers. The pickers are the most underprivileged and underpaid workers we have. Because of that, they're forced to live in hovels and have too many children, thereby causing even more future problems for them and the world. I shouldn't even be in this store, do you realize that? And maybe I won't,” and she handed me the plums, peaches and carrots I'd weighed for her and bagged, clipped and marked, said “I'm sorry for putting you through so much unnecessary work, Kevin,” and left the store.
It was nearly ten. The cameras were set up and a couple of policemen were keeping pedestrians away from the equipment and newsman, whom I recognized from a local evening news show as one of the most well-known television reporters on the city scene. People were trying to get his autograph while he held a sheet of paper up in front of him and was practicing his report to an unmanned camera. Suddenly, Mary Sarah was right on top of me, excited and out of breath and saying “You know what Paul Dougherty of WYBT just said outside about you, Kev?” And Larry, the youngest food clerk, said “What, Mary, what?”
“He said that you, Kevin Wilmer, have just smashed all the grower-grown berries that hadn't been picked by union-member pickers, as an act of protest against the growers and as a form of allegiance or something to the boycott movement, though I don't know if he was talking about you or the pickers, now, Kev.”
“What's all that about?” Finerman said, his cigarette pack and matches already out of his pocket and in his hands, as he was on his way to the stockroom for a smoke.
“What's all what about?” I said, stacking a crate of raspberries on a blackberry crate.
“What Mary Sarah said.”
“Paul Dougherty said you dumped and smashed berries outside,” she said. “But you didn't do that, did you Kev? I would have seen it from number six, or at least heard about it.”
That's true, you would've.” I had three crates stacked now, lifted them up, told Larry to put the fourth and last crate on top of the three I held, and started for the door.
“Where you going with those?” Finerman said. “Now, put them down and explain to me, Kev.”
I would have, the situation was getting too unsettling and scary for me now, but everything had been arranged, which I had agreed to, and I'd feel even worse and more stupid having had all those television men come out here and set up their equipment for nothing. “I've got to put these berries away, under manager's orders,” I said.
Then you're going the wrong way, if that is what you're doing,” Finerman said. “Storeroom's in back. Kevin?
Now, you come back here this instant, Kevin.”
I was walking through the door. Finerman, as I'd thought, didn't try to stop me physically, though by now he must have known what was happening. Larry, Mary Sarah and all the delivery boys followed me outside, mumbling to one another that something fantastic was about to happen.
“Okay, fellas,” Paul Dougherty said, and the cameras began shooting film of me. Paul Dougherty was reporting off camera that I was leaving the market to demonstrate my solidarity with the pickers' movement for higher wages and better living and working conditions. Behind me, Mary Sarah said “Now I get it; now I understand,” and Larry said “Oh, Jesus, and I was the one who put the last crate in his hands. You think I'll be fired?”
I looked around for Blackspot, but there was a whole slew of ordinary-looking pedestrians grinning and smiling as I almost never saw them do on the street. I walked to the curb, set down the crates, lifted the top crate and was about to turn it over into the street, when one of the three boys standing beside me and hamming it up for the cameras said “As long as you're going to throw those away, can we have some?” I said no, though I honestly didn't know what to say. I hadn't planned for anyone to bring up what I could see was a perfectly legitimate request, and when he said They're just going to go to waste, anyhow,” I told him “All right, but only one basket apiece, understand?”
They took a basket each from one of the crates on the sidewalk and then it seemed that everyone in the crowd other than my coworkers and the television people and one unhappy, ungrinning, very ordinary-looking man except for a purple birthmark the size of a glass coaster in the middle of his forehead began grabbing baskets of berries out of the crates and carefully sticking them into their shopping bags or just eating handfuls of berries right on the street, as the three boys were doing. The crowd emptied the three crates in less than a minute and were grasping for the berries in the crate I was holding away from their reach, when I threw that crate to the ground and quickly stepped on and smashed the berries rolling every which way and then almost everyone in the crowd joined in stepping on the berries with me.
“We're pressing wine,” someone said. “Down with the illegal growers,” Blackspot shouted at the cameras.
“Up with the C & L fruit men,” a woman said, and that was the cheer the crowd liked best. “Up with the C & L fruit men,” people shouted. They give away free berries for nothing.”
The cameras picked up on all this. Paul Dougherty was reporting the story as if a last-ditch game-winning touchdown had just been scored. It was almost a surprise to me not to be hoisted to someone's shoulders and paraded around and hip-hip-hoorayed to.
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Later, Jennie and I sat down for the evening news.
I'd told her something special was going to be on that we should watch, as I hadn't mentioned what had happened at work today. She said she better see how the chicken was doing in the oven, but I said “Sit tight, just for a second.”
There were a lot of reports about Vietnam and Africa and the UN and our country's gold crisis and the city's impending school crisis and then the store I was in. “Oh, gosh, I can't believe it; you were right,” Jennie said. I told her to can it, I couldn't hear. Off-camera, Paul Dougherty, while the screen showed me leaving the store, was telling a different story from the one he'd begun to recite when the incident actually took place. Now he said that what had started out to be one individual's protest against the major city supermarkets' nonadherence to the ras-, black-and loganberry boycott turned into a major neighborhood fun-in. “Kevin Wimer was the principal figure in the demonstration. But the neighborhood, a polyglot of race, creed and culture, wouldn't let Mr. Wimer have his protest without them eating it, too.” The television showed the loud frantic activity of people stealing the baskets and popping berries into their mouths for the benefit of the cameras, and Paul Dougherty said it was like a “modern-dress Cecil B. De Mille-presents scene of Bacchanalian Rome.” The last shot showed me walking back to the market with the empty crates and Paul Dougherty, in the foreground, and for the first time on camera, saying “So what began as a plucky individual's protest against a segment of the giant corporate structure ended up as the best gesture of neighborhood goodwill and all the free publicity that accompanies it that a supermarket chain could hope to get. I guess you can say âBerry sweet is revenge.'”