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Gerard Kessel. 32. Unattractive.
I type that into my profile before hesitating and removing the last bit. Too risky, these types out here donāt have a sense of humor. They donāt know how to relax, too uptight, every armrest gripped by pale white knuckles, all the neckties in a stranglehold. No, no place for humor in this industry. Humor left my cold dead shell a long time ago.
Iām sitting in the middle of the room and itās a balmy 98 degrees. This is, ironically, passable in Pueblo, although to me it feels like a slow and unrelenting dip in the lava dungeon. Even the papers in the stack are reacting- crinkling, slightly, their inherent properties unable to withstand the horrible onslaught. No air conditioning, I didnāt ask for any because I didnāt know Iād need it. Too late to opt in now.
I stand up abruptly, go over to the window and shove it open with a visible effort, heavy frame with an old-fashioned design but it works OK. Probably dates back decades, it hasnāt been cleaned and thereās a thick coat of dust on top. Draw the shades back. There we go. Sun isnāt really blaring in my face per se, only halfway because itās around 3 P.M. and my new office faces westward. But soon Iāll need to turn my desk around.
Pace back and forth, wring my hands out like laundry, stretch with my arms curved up behind my head. Deep breath. Rinse and repeat. I feel as if Iām 5 years old, sitting in the waiting room at the dentist and looking at all the posters with the friendly anthropomorphized teeth.
This is a pretty good spot, I remind myself. Decent commute, barely any traffic- but then there never is around here- quick jaunt along Interstate 50, straight shot like a pointed arrow along all the rows and rows of strip malls, obsolete fast food chains, bankrupt small businesses, and the wind farm. And then I dip under the overpass, past the median, the slanted granite walls which open wide as if to welcome visitors into this forgotten world, and Iām all set.
I donāt really like it here, I remind myself. No matter how thick into the weeds I get, professionally, I need to remember that Iāll be moving back to Denver someday, come Hell or high water, Iāll reach a breaking point here and Iāll need out.
Pueblo is a forgotten city, a relic of the past, one of those places that never seems to change either because it doesnāt want to or is physically incapable of doing so. Truckers chatting via CB radios at the Carlās Jr., regional radio blasting over the loudspeaker. Stopped there for a quick bite to eat on the way in, coffee and hashbrowns, a welcome sight. I was reminded of how low the ceiling was, how the eyes were glaring at me from every booth. They wanted to know who I was, and I stoically refused to tell them and kept right on chewing.
And you think about how it could have been, if we gave a damn, how Pueblo could set an example for other places, build something for itself, something to be proud of, you could come from Pueblo and leave a legacy. No. Pueblo languishes in the dust, unspoken of by all except the haggard wanderers who line its barren avenues, broken brown cottages built in the ā70s with artificial naugahyde, stone-lined pathways and rectangular basements lined with shelves of board games and cathode tube TVs. Thatās Pueblo.
Comforting, I think, eyeing the tree-lined boulevard which runs beside the lab. Thereās something noble in it. One of the trees is of a species I canāt begin to describe, its weird branches clawing at the heavens, a variety of desert holdout with a mean streak. It looks resentful that I even bothered to notice it, beckoning at the pale blue clouds beyond its leafy shroud as if to tell me that I should leave well enough alone.
I open the little bottle Iāve been prescribed, pour out two little white tabs, down them with the last of the horrible coffee, which somehow has lasted all this time. I ate breakfast at 10, but the coffee has stayed with me, two foul swigs from the dregs and then I crumple the withered plastic and throw it with disgust into the trash can. Lousy taste. Iāve never even preferred caffeine, but I felt it was a special occasion.
When I got here, the receptionist- aging brunette with eyeliner and manicured nails, smelled vaguely of some cleaning solution, bouffant hairdo- pointed down the hall, told me to start processing forms. That it would be necessary to prove my worth to the Bureau, show them Iāve got the chops and the willpower. She didnāt have much fortitude herself.
I donāt think I look bad, but I really have no idea. Probably should have shaved more, Iāve got a patchy complexion and Iāve noticed people making remarks about it. Bags under the eyes, too. Result of naturally supple skin, gravity causes everything to drop down. Lips, cheeks, the whole 9 yards, and youāre left with someone whoās a sack of marbles.
Iām just about at my breaking point, almost to the extent of leaving and calling in tomorrow, wondering if heās out on some important meeting or cruising in the Bahamas or sipping cranberry daiquiris atop some celestial palace overlooking Glenwood Springs, but sure enough, like clockwork, at 3:45, the agreed-upon time, the latch opens and heās all smiles.
Bradford is too energetic for his age, walks with the gait of a circus animal, and the corresponding stature- heās been trained, sharpened, by years of service to a very specific cause, a particular station in life has reduced him to the most basic element of a man, a portly 5ā8ā well-dressed walrus at 75, slacks and a polo, ankles exposed and covered in a rug of gray hair.
āJerry! Howād you find the ride over here?ā He has a prominent brow and two of the teeth on his left side are skewed forward at an angle. He knows I donāt prefer being called Jerry.
āIt was OK,ā I respond dryly over my shoulder, my face hidden behind the branch of a potted fern. āAbout twenty minutes, give or take. Nice vistas.ā He strides forward, notices Iāve opened the window, shuts it promptly.
āCanāt do that,ā he says. āLets the bugs in.ā
āThereās a screen,ā I point out.
āNot good enough, they get in through the holes regardless.ā I reflect on the irony of an office which hasnāt been updated in years, one where the filing cabinets display a sheet of assembled mildew atop them, and the illusion of cleanliness Bradford attempts to project. Heās grime down there, churning in a vat of condescension and smug privilege. Heās the worst type of man, a parasite, a leech who takes without giving anything substantive in return.
I see something of myself in him.
Two weeks prior, Iād taken a video call with the codger. I figured I had Bradford down pat considering how he appeared on my monitor- he looked sort of like Ted Knight, I could envision him out all day putting on the wide-open greens. Here, now, in person, it dawns on me that he has more than a few tricks up his sleeve, heās seen fresh meat like me before and can smell fear.
āSo youāre from Denver, eh?ā he puts his hand on my back, caressing me, if his fingers were any warmer theyād be ironing my shirt. Weāre walking out around the rear of the building, it looks as if it were built during the height of the Carter administration, has that clean cut EPA texture with the sheer tan walls and the jutting prominences.
āYes, Sir,ā I reply. āDenver, but New York originally. Moved to Denver about ten years ago.ā
āAh,ā he smirks. āNew York. Whyād you move to this shithole?ā
āNovelty,ā I respond. āYou get claustrophobic in the larger areas like that. I needed- well, I guess thatās why I decided to take up this position. Iām attracted to smaller areas. Peace. Quiet.ā Iām perspiring heavily. Thereās a soda machine in the lobby but it only takes quarters and I have none on me.
āMakes sense,ā he responds nonchalantly. āMakes sense.ā
āYouāll see how I processed those forms,ā I beam. āWell-versed in Excel and Word, got a Masterās in Neuroscience from CU Denver, five years back- Iām a little rusty with it but Iāve kept up through a paramedic role at Swedish. Everything you asked for.ā
āYes, of course,ā he swallows a lump down his aged throat. āWouldnāt accept anything less. Youāre a fine worker, your record speaks for itself. You have any questions on pay?ā
āNo, none at the moment. $12,000 a month, correct?ā
āYeah, as stated in the ad,ā he goes on, his loafers descending at an angle toward the cracked pavement as we sojourn arduously forth. āThatās twice the average. Damn good offer Iām making you here, plus paid leave in the winter and summer. And a 401k if you ask. Our benefactors here are more than willing to play ball.ā
āWho are they?ā
āNobody you need to worry about, Son.ā
āI mean- what is it we do here? Process forms?ā
āSomething like that. Iāll show you the real meat and potatoes in a couple weeks. Until then, you stay in, just mind your time, fill out whatās on the line and youāll be more than satisfied. And, of course, we pay for your house in Pueblo West. The one you chose from the brochure.ā
āWhere do we get our funding from? The Coloradan government?ā
āWhat?ā he says, looking genuinely confused. āNo, itās a private industry. Look, Iām sorry for not telling you this beforehand, I should have been more upfront. We have virtually no ties to any federal or state-level bureau. We get our funds from a corporate office. Thatās all you need to know. If you donāt like it, I can serve as a reference for you, somewhere else-ā
āNo, thatās fine, really. Iām not going to get as good an offer anywhere but here. I like it. Suits my needs just fine.ā
āPeachy, huh? Shake.ā He puts out his right arm, expensive watch at the wrist, platinum dials spinning around multiple orbs. I grasp it and he encircles every digit with a weird fervor- jolting my muscles up and down, as if a current passed through us. Iām not used to such enthusiasm, it has no place in a transaction like this. It appears entirely genuine.
āHey, you have a wife, huh?ā he glances at me with a raised eyebrow.
āYes. Sheila. Sheās great. You havenāt met her yet but Iāll bring her around one of these days.ā
āNo need to,ā he says, grinning ear to ear. āYou can come over to the estate sometime! Hey, you know. Weāll make it a cookout- I can get prime rib and champagne sent in from Omaha- like you wouldnāt believe, I tell you what- how about next Tuesday?ā I consider the logistics. Itās Wednesday.
āYou mean this upcoming Tuesday, or the Tuesday after that?ā
āWhichever youād prefer.ā
āTuesday after that,ā I reply. āI would have to give her a little advance notice. She has to call in specifically if thereās anything to keep her from the emergency room, theyāre short staffed as it is from how she describes it and sheās adjusting as much as I am.ā
āSure!ā he belts. āNo, I get where youāre coming from. After next sounds fine!ā
āThank you,ā I say. āSeriously. This is a great position and Iām going to love it here, and pretty soon Iāll prove my worth. Once I get adjusted to it.ā If I get adjusted, more like. If. Thereās a vast chasm between being in an environment and comprehending it.
āYouāre going to have a wonderful time here, Jerry,ā Bradford chuckles, pulling a ring of keys from his pocket and jingling them around before settling on the correct one. He approaches a supply entrance in the back, weaving his way around an old white van with tinted windows, deftly scales the two sun-bleached steps and slides home.
āAfter you,ā he says, his arm gesturing into a darkened hallway within. I can hear the air-conditioner going off in this section. I make a note to ask for it. He can do it, he must not have many other options at his disposal, and Iāll bleed him dry for everything heās got.
The instant I step inside, I feel a cold, nervous twinge, as if something is vaguely off. Could just be the fans blowing overhead, circulating coolant in tubes, turning this particular section of the facility into a refrigerator. But thereās something about how heās walking forward, how he hides his face next to the wall, as if heās embarrassed to be seen here, in this particular nook. Up ahead the light of the row of offices beckons, and I donāt want to stay back in this unsettling alcove. I race to join him.
āIām heading home now,ā he says. āNothing left on the docket today. Youāll want to get here around eleven, leave around five, so long as you process those forms correctly youāll be in good company. If you have any questions, ask Carla-Jean out there, sheāll let you know anything.ā He goes over to the rack, retrieves his checkered cap, which barely covers the silky pattern of threads combed into something approximating a pancake on his benign scalp.
āWill do.ā
āWelcome to the family.ā And like that, he climbs into his slick Mercedes and takes off along the Puebloan avenue towards his property on the outskirts. I sigh. Itās going to be a long couple of years up ahead.
Upon returning to my office I immediately open the window, let a cool breeze grace my forehead, and make note that the sun has indeed lowered to that point where it becomes impossible to look ahead, the point at which all drivers on any highway will curse the fact that their rearview mirror doesnāt fold out a few inches further. Under considerable strain, my blue long-sleeved shirt soaked in perspiration, my feet aching from the tour, I lift the legs of my desk up and swivel it around 180 degrees.
Now Iām staring straight ahead, right at the door, and Iāll know whenever he steps inside the confines of this sanctum. Hope Iāll have enough time to close the window so he doesnāt catch it. If he asks, Iāll tell him it increases productivity, and heāll laugh in that inimitable way of his and Iāll continue down the golden path.
I fear the onset of night.
This is a good bit of characterization right here.
I type that into my profile before hesitating and removing the last bit. Too risky, these types out here donāt have a sense of humor. They donāt know how to relax, too uptight, every armrest gripped by pale white knuckles, all the neckties in a stranglehold. No, no place for humor in this industry. Humor left my cold dead shell a long time ago.
Have you written any more of this?