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Arts and Entertainment > The Wino [1958]
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Article rating : 0.00, 0 votes. Author : Dennis Siluk
Standing in the middle of the sidewalk on a brisk Saturday in Fall, 1958, on a declining hill by St. Joseph’s Hospital (where I was born, ((Lee was born), where a tenant house was, where my friend, Mike Russet’s family had moved to, moved into, we stopped to peer down the street to look at what was happening, —still and sly as if something was in the makings: which would be to my surprise.
Both we boys had seen the wino but only one of us was thinking of a scheme, the other would follow—that of course is me. The wino was finishing up his last drink, he was even licking the rim around the top of the brownish glass bottle to get the last flavor of the substance out; it was a hot summers day.
He, the wino was watching everyone around him from the corner of his eyes, waiting to beg to a passerby for another coin: a client, one that looked merciful enough to feed him a drunk, that is a coin, but he’d use the money for drinking of course, we saw him do it before: ‘…yes, yes a coin to get rid of me,’ I’m sure he was thinking, ‘I’m worth that much’; it was a small bottle of something he had just polished off, thought Mike, as he looked on the ground, looking at a similar bottle a ½ pint whisky bottle—empty; now that I think about it, —Mike reasoned—diverse thoughts circled his perimeter, —then he noticed on the ground by him—by the wino down the block, about sixty-yards away, still looking about for a sucker—another brown whisky bottle similar, it was what he just polished off, drank up…small like the one he just saw, one likened to the wino’s bottle he just finished: he whispered something to me, I dare not say it yet.
Said I, with a grin and a nod to my head,
“He can’t hear us!”
“Yaw, I suppose,” replied Mike looking down at the wino, almost, just about ready to laugh but holding it back.
“You sure?” said questioned Mike, with a doubtful smile I put on my face, a frown that made his upper part of his face look pale.
At this point, Mike was not even looking at the wino, and had stepped along side of an extended porch so the wino or no one else could see us, unless they were walking up or down the sidewalk, and no one was. A car passenger could see if he went out of his way to check between two houses—but there was no reason for that, I think. But that was not the case either; it was secure, as Mike asked,
“Anyone coming?” asked Mike, and I replied
“No, not yet.”
Mike had filled the bottle up with some yellowish fluid [waist], half it, saying,
“Your turn…” with a smirk on his face that wanted to turn into a smile, but for the moment it was stern as it looked at me, trying to infer this was serious business.
This was symbolism at its height, symbolism saying, possible, saying: our friendship is at stake here. I looked deadly into his bold unfriendly eyes, said,
“I can’t cant do this…!”
[Sternly] “I’m not bringing it down there,” I told Mike. With a bit of charm and upper-lip sarcasm; he almost produced a laugh, but still he would not allow it, he: Mike started walking down to the wino the man-derelict.
Within a few minutes Mike had walked the sixty-yards back up the hill and we both watched the drunk unscrew the top of the bottle. Anticipation was in both our eyes. We could hardly hold our feet still, and I for one was not breathing, well—hardly breathing. My eyes were like Mike’s I do believe, as big as golf balls.
Said I to Mike, “It was like watching the face of Doctor Jeckle and Mr. Hide changing in front of you as he started to pour down the… [a pause came]…”
Then after the fact, when he realized it wasn’t what he thought it was, he became outraged—and lost for words, throw the bottle on the hard concert sidewalk like a madman, it’s glass and contents shooting in all directions, and his arms went flying in the air, his fists scolded us two figures up the hill, up the street: us two figures breathed into our nostrils new air. A crowed started forming around the middle-aged drunk: sympathy comes in strange ways.
I, himself was ashamed, I even watched it, participated in it, but it was only until now that reality of the moment took hold of me, of both us boys I suppose. And later on I’d feel kind of, let’s say, somewhat remorseful, that is I never did it again—he did say to Mike—stoutly, ‘never again’. But as soon as that moment passed, and it did pass quickly, you could noticed our faces together changing as they looked at the drunk and themselves, it was as if the winos humiliating experienced triggered the biggest laughter I ever experienced.
“Mike!” I said, “Stop it!” But for the most part it was all too late, the wino threw the bottle, his arms were flying in the air, people were looking up at the estranged two figures up the hill, and tears of laughter were coming, rolling off our faces, two kids, one eleven me, and Mike ten. I, or we, just couldn’t hold it any longer, especially Mike: I know I blame him more than me, a perhaps I shouldn’t—oh well; it is how I remember it, or want to. It was a total breakdown of the body into laughter; we were even stomping our feet like bulls, bulls, not sure of fear or courage, run or laugh, we were both under a fretful attack—almost frozen, paralyzed in astonishment.
As we witnessed the people by the wino pointing their fingers at us, we darted to the back of the building, a few of the guys started walking up the block at a fast pace towards us; we both jumped on our bikes racing town to the Robert Street Bridge. Then, once we arrived, we settled our bikes, looked over the bridge, caught our breath and finished their laughing.
The landing, or dock area was quiet as our eyes peered down onto the Mississippi. At the same time a dark cloud seemed to be circling our heads, as we insanely laughed, even to the point of holding our stomachs and trying not to look at each other.
“But he—“before he could finish his sentence, I responded with,
“He what—he asked for it, is that what you were going to say?” Mike shook his head ‘yes,’ and we both busted out laughing again. And I shook my head—as he nodded his head like before but with more swing to it, thinking what a crazy thing to do and get a laugh over.
[Tired and trying to catch his breath] “You know it was all done in fun, a joke Lee… [pause] don’t get so, you know, over it.”
“Sure,” I said, and the day went to something else.
Dennis Siluk website: http//dennissiluk.tripod.com
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