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Damn Evil Rats, All of Them
by Jan F. Drewniak and Don Drewniak

This is the second excerpt from The Junk Picker, published in 2012.

Setting: The Berkshires in Massachusetts during the Great Depression.

The characters in this episode:

Pinball (Pinball Johnny) — My father, Jan F. Drewniak, who was nineteen-years old and was in the process of rebuilding a large house and making a near one-mile lane passable from the nearest road. The house and a large barn were owned by the man for whom he had worked in a machine shop in Brooklyn for the two previous years.

Sparks — The nearest neighbor who was a friendly rival and sometimes foil.

Mrs. Sparks — Sparks’ wife.

Smokey — The nearest neighbor other than Sparks. A man with multiple skills, but down on his luck due a break-up with the love of his life. He was assisting Pinball with the rebuilding of the house.

Jack — Pinball’s boss.

Lil — Jack’s wife.

Wilson — The owner of the largest country store/hardware in the area. He was the person to whom most area residents sought out for the latest gossip.

* * * * *

I dug out a good-sized load of pea stones and trucked it off to Sparks’ driveway where I dumped it as sort of a peace offering. I went into his garage and there he was brushing himself off and swearing while looking up into the loft.

“What’s the matter, Sparks?”

“Matter? I could swear those damn squirrels up there throw gobs of dust at me on purpose. Damn evil rats, all of them.”

“Who are you kidding about being attacked by evil squirrels, Sparks?”

“I’m not, never fails. Damn vicious rats.”

“What’s up there?”

“Hundreds of them damn bastards hiding in old furniture, all covered. Dust settled on all of it, layers of dust from way back.”

“Then put up a ceiling. Why the opening?”

“Look, dummy, that was to get the hay up there. See that block and tackle? I used it to raise the heavy furniture up there.”

“Where’s it from?”

“My folks and grand folks and Mom’s grand folks. I knew I should have never put it there. I can’t clear it now.”

“Can I see it?”

“Sure you can, but be careful, I’ve had enough dust for the day.”

I went up the stairs and I saw a lone squirrel dash to the rear of the loft. The hundreds of others must have been on a lunch break. I was careful raising the coverings. It didn’t take long to find what I wanted to see.

Down I went and Sparks broke into laughter. “Pinball, look at you, less than five minutes and you are a sorry looking mess.”

“That bad?”

“Worse than bad. I never realized it had gotten that dirty up there. Find what you were looking for?”

“Yes, a table and four chairs.”

“What for?”

“For the rooms in the barn I’ll be living in.”

“You’re crazy. Jack said he’ll buy you all new in there.”

“Who’s going to live in there, Jack or me? Now, how much for the table and chairs?”

“Stubborn to the end, you are. All right, I’ll see how big a chicken you are. If you take one piece, you have to take it all. All or nothing.”

“Come on, you know how much you have up there.”

“Of course I do, as it was my poor back that put it there.”

“Hell, there must be at least six loads up there.”

“So what? All or nothing. You think I’m going to have people like you come in here and take a piece at a time? Hell, nothing doing. All or nothing.”

“How much?”

“I’ll make it easy on you as long as you clean out all of the dust along with whatever else is up there.”

“The whole loft?”

“The whole loft, pest.”

I stole a line from Wilson. “Anyone tell you you’re no good?”

“Only you and my wife.”

I told him Mrs. Sparks was a wise woman and again asked how much. “One dollar to make legal and all or nothing.”

I gave Sparks the dollar and told him I hoped he’d choke on the dust. Up and down the stairs I went. I left the big pieces as I planned to bring them down later with the block and tackle. He would look in at me and break into laughter each time I carried pieces to the truck. There was no question that indeed I must have looked like a sorry mess. I got the first load on the truck and secured it. Even when I drove away, he was clapping his hands in glee. I thumbed my nose at him and he laughed even more.

I was unloading the truck when Smokey came down from the house. He slapped his forehead. “Where the hell did you crawl out from?”

I started to swear and then told him how Sparks had pulled a fast one on me.

“He’s done no such thing, Pinball. For goodness sake, you don’t even know what you got there, do you? I’ve seen everything he has. I thought he had more brains than to get rid of it.”

“What do you mean?”

“Almost every piece you got is worth some money, so handle it all with care and don’t be tough on it.”

“Then what I have is good?”

“That’s what I’m trying to tell you. I thought Sparks knew that. What’s the reason?”

I told him about the dust and the squirrels.

“That’s Sparks for you. His mind gets fixed on one thing and he can’t think straight about anything else. Anyway, don’t tell him I told you. Just act sort of angry at him like you’ve been doing until you get it all out. Listen, there’s good money to be made with old furniture, but you’ve got to be able to tell the good pieces from the junk.”

“Thanks, Smokey, knowing this changes everything. I can’t believe my luck.”

“Not only that, I have all the information on how to refinish it and Wilson’s got everything that’s needed in his store.”

“You ever do any?” I asked.

“All I have in the house, every piece of it. Sometime when you’re up there, I’ll show you.”

“Now I hope he doesn’t try to change his mind.”

“He won’t as long as you don’t give it away. He thinks he’s pulled the wool over your eyes. Let him think so. You’d never have gotten it if he thought he wasn’t pulling a fast one on you.”

“Is that how he works?”

“Yes, and he’ll spread it all over the minute you carry out the last piece.”

I went back for another load and Sparks was still laughing. When I finished piling it on the truck, I told Sparks that I was too tired to get any more that day. That was telling him the truth. This made him laugh all the more.

“I won’t be around much of the day tomorrow, Pinball, so feel free to come and work as long as you want. Remember, all or nothing.”

As I pulled away, I realized that without Sparks in the garage, I might be able to move enough of what he was working on to allow me to drive the truck into the garage. Then I would be able to lower the furniture directly into the truck bed.

Jack and Lil finally made it the following Saturday and brought along another couple with them. Before they came to the property, they stopped to see Sparks. Jack began by asking Sparks what was new. Mrs. Sparks began to laugh.

“That’s your answer,” grumbled Sparks.

“Look at her laugh.”

“What did Pinball do this time?” asked Jack.

“When my folks and grand folks and Mom’s grand folks passed away, I put all their furniture up in the loft and then covered it as best I could. As the years rolled by, dust settled over everything up there. The damn squirrels used it for a home and used me as target practice with gobs of dust. Who comes along last week but your junk picker. I roped him into taking it all out.”

“Stuff any good?” asked Jack.

“Don’t know,” said Sparks, “and I don’t give a damn, but it’s the things he does to get you angry. I could have shot him and fed him to them damn rats.”

“What did he do?”

“At first he carries the small pieces down one by one, but then starts putting them in a burlap bag and lowering them with the block and tackle.

I’m under a tractor working while he’s doing this when I think the building exploded. Damn fool drops the bag on purpose. I broke a bolt and I got this goose egg on my forehead. Damn him. I’m now half dead, but I manage to drag myself out from under the tractor. Lucky I didn’t bleed to death.”

Pointing to my head, I yell up at the fool, ‘What the hell is this? Look what you done.’”

All the while that Sparks was telling his story, Mrs. Sparks could not stop herself from laughing.

“He says, ‘Hell, I’m not to blame. It parted.’”

“Then I ask him what the hell parted. The damn fool tells me it was my grandfather’s rope. I tell him it’s too bad his head wasn’t what parted and that is what I get for his stinking dollar. Then the bloody fool has the nerve to tell me that I can bag a lot of penny candies at Wilson’s with that dollar and he gives me that miserable grin of his. I tell him, ‘If I did, I’d ram them down that damn throat of yours. Now, be careful what you do. Next time holler timber if something is coming down.’”

“The damn fool tells me, ‘Yes, sir, and put some axle grease on that bump so that it doesn’t start to rust.’

“Damn fool.”

By now, Jack, Lil and the other couple were fighting to hold back laughter.

“A stinker, he is. Before that, on Sunday, I don’t work as I take the wife and kids out. I come back in the afternoon and the garage door is closed, but I can hear noise inside. Turns out he had the door closed while he was working because it was windy and he has your truck in there. Like a fool, I go in there wearing my Sunday best and I close the door behind me. I ask him how he is doing and he tells me that he is almost done for the day.

He finishes and trying to be helpful, I tell him to get in the truck and I’ll open the door for him. He starts the truck and I open the door and out he goes. The dust came flying out so hard from the back of the truck that I couldn’t even see the damn thing. I staggered into the house half blinded and the wife and kids near fall down laughing, that’s how bad I looked.”

“Did Pinball know what happened to you?” asked Jack.

“Don’t know for sure if he did or not, but if I know him, he must have. Dammit, but I should have known better and kept away from him. It don’t stop there. He keeps coming back during the week. Finally, he’s got all the furniture out, so I figure it’s safe and like a nut I go into the garage to wash out a part in kerosene. ‘Timber,’ the fool hollers. I drop what I was doing and slam my two hands around my head, but I hear nothing. I look up as he throws a handful of feathers out of a pillow.”

At this point, everyone in the kitchen except for Sparks was doubled over in laughter.

“So help me,” said Sparks, “I never swore like I did then.”

“What did he say?” asked Jack.

“The stinker sits down at the edge of the loft and says, ’Sparks, your hands couldn’t even cover those ears of yours. If they were another half-inch bigger, you could fly.’ Damn stinker. All for a lousy dollar.”

* * * * *

Here is the link to the first episode:

http://www.short-humour.org.uk/11writersshowcase/thegreatw.htm

During June 2016, The Junk Picker ranked number one in Kindle Historical Biographies for three consecutive days.