Nobody's Fool
fastidious, could distinguish between the smell of shit and that of daisies. The downside was that Rub couldnât smell himself either, and when he was ripe his own personal odor greatly resembled what he stood in. Still, the smart thing to do would be to go get Rub, station him in the muck. That way Sully could stay up in the dry bed of the pickup and stack the blocks as Rub handed them up to him. He guessed four or five loads would do the trick, and with Rubâs help they could be finished by early afternoon.
Since this was the only sensible way to proceed, Sully decided against it. Rub wasnât expecting work so soon, and it might take Sully an hour to find him if he wasnât home or at Hattieâs or the donut shop or the OTB. Then heâd have to listen to Rub chatter all day, and later theyâd split the money. Sully didnât mind splitting the money, but he hadnât worked in three months, and he wanted to see how things went. Alone, he could work at his own pace, and if his knee couldnât take it, he could just quit and not owe anybody any explanations. Next week heâd just go back to school.
So he backed the truck up close to the pile of concrete blocks, got out, lowered the tailgate and tested the footing, which wasnât good. I should definitely go get Rub, he thought. Instead he planted half a dozen blocks in the mud for a makeshift walkway between the pyramid and the truck. Then he began, carrying blocks in each hand at first, then a stack of four balanced against his chest, piling them in rows on the truck bed. The hard part was climbing up onto the truck. The only way was to sit on the tailgate, swing his legs aboard, get his good leg under him, then the bad one. Surprisingly, his knee didnât feel too bad. In fact, it felt pretty good. If it held up, maybe heâd use the money he earned today to buy a couple new radials for the truck, whose tires were bald from running back and forth to Schuyler Springs every day to study philosophy. It was as if the young professor had disproved the tread on Sullyâs tires along with everything else.
It was when he thought of all the things the truck was going to needthat he got mad about the money Carl Roebuck wouldnât pay him. The pickup had been pretty long in the tooth when Sully bought it. It had needed new tires a month ago, along with a rebuilt carburetor. The valves needed grinding too. In another month the truck would need all of these repairs even worse, and the month after that it would need them so bad heâd have to make them. And pay for them. New shocks, too, Sully thought, as the truck groaned beneath the weight of the concrete. The three hundred Carl Roebuck owed him would have paid for the tires or the valves or the shocks, whichever Sully decided to fix first. Not that he would necessarily have used the money on the truck if he had it in his pocket that very minute. Sometimes when he got money ahead he gave some to Miss Beryl as advance rent, a hedge against the scarcity of winter work. Sometimes heâd give Cass a hundred so that if things got skinny heâd be able to eat on account for a while. Other times he gave money to Ruth to hold on to for him, which was one way of ensuring that the OTB or the poker table wouldnât get it. The trouble with Ruth was that once he instructed her not to give it back to him unless he really needed it, then it was up to her to decide his need, and sometimes her judgment was a little too refined. And one time her no-good husband Zack had stumbled onto her stash and spent Sullyâs money, thinking it was his wifeâs. The more Sully thought about it, the more it didnât seem like such a bad idea to be owed the three hundred. Letting Carl hang on to the money for a while might actually be the safest thing. When Sully needed it most, money had a way of first liquefying, then evaporating, and finally leaving just a filmy residue of vague memory.
And so, as Sully fell deeply into the rhythm of his work, he had the luxury of knowing that his money was safe without in any way diminishing his righteous anger at Carl Roebuck for refusing to pay up, anger that swelled like music in his chest to the distant beat of his throbbing knee. Smiling, he imagined Carl Roebuck tossed out his office window, his arms flapping frantically, his legs wildly pedaling an invisible bicycle as he fell. Sully didnât allow him to hit the ground. He just tossed
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