It was drizzling last night, and cool, a Central Casting
mid-November day if ever there was one, with a mild Nor’easter doing its
damnedest to remove the remaining leaves from the remaining trees.
I was restless and had no stomach to watch yet another Republican
debate—it was blowing worse than the storm, so I decided to do what I do on
nights like these. I fastened up my ancient oil-skin, put on an old baseball
cap and accoutered Whiskey, my three-and-a-half year-old golden retriever, for a long walk along the river.
The weather being what it was I didn’t expect much company,
so I was surprised when I saw a gaggle of Puerto Rican men on the pathway
around 93rd Street, up where they’re, slowly, building the new
marine transfer station to bring New York sludge from garbage trucks to ships,
then out 12 miles to sea, where it’s dumped in international waters.
The three men were leaning on the cast iron railing, smoking
cigarettes and drinking ponys of Bud. They were speaking in rapid fire Spanish
and occasionally spitting into the upflowing murk of the East River, watching
the residue of their effluvium ride the tide toward Harlem.
“Buenos noches,” I said, carefully eliding my esses in
proper Puerto Rican enunciation..
“Buenos noches,” the oldest one returned.
It was then I noticed a thick strand of rope tied over the
railing, which indicated to me that they had a net in the water and were going
for late-season blue-claw crabs.
“You have caught anything?” I asked them.
“We have caught nothing,” the short one answered. “We are
not here to catch. We are here to talk.”
I wondered why they had chosen a rainy strip of concrete to
talk, not the incandescent warmth of a bar.
“We are here to talk to ‘El Triste.’”
Just then, one of the men pulled up their crab net. Inside
was a large crab with, if I can mix my metaphors, doe eyes. They released El
Triste from the netting, gave him the requisite chicken neck to gnaw on and let
him scamper on the sidewalk.
“Every night at this hour. We come to talk to El Triste.”
Whiskey sniffed at the crustacean who seemed not to notice.
“Buenos noches, mi amigos,” El Triste spoke.
“The Sad One speaks,” said one of the men.
El Triste left his chicken neck and scampered over to one of
the beaten wooden benches the homeless sleep on in the sun. He climbed and sat
on it, like a throne. This fairly spooked Whiskey and she began pulling me to
leave.
“Escuchar. El Triste habla.” Listen. The Sad One speaks. The
three men dropped their cigarettes into the viscous water below.
“Thoreau was right,” El Triste said. “And he wasn’t even a
crab, but a man. And a fresh-water man, at that. Most men lead lives of quiet
desperation.”
El Triste cleared his throat and one of the men spoke up.
“Y vaya a la tumba con la canción todavía en ellos.”
“Yes,” said the crab, “And go to the grave with the song still in them.”
With that, the crab leaped off the bench and scampered back into the water with a loud kersplash.
The three Puerto Ricans looked at the water then lit
their cigarettes again and drank their Buds. They spit, each in
sequence into the murk. Their way of saying gracias to El Triste.
Whiskey pulled again at her leash. I bid the men
goodnight.
And walked home with the song still in me.
And walked home with the song still in me.
No comments:
Post a Comment