Waiting For The Sleeping Pill To Kick In
There are times at night, lying in bed waiting for my evening sleeping pill to kick in, all the flotsam and jetsam of memories past float in at random and I remember some things I had hoped I had tossed away forever. Things I had done and things I had left undone.
Bzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
The 1930's began with the death of my mother and ended with Hitler invading
It was just a question of time before we got involved in the war. What was the sense of trying to do anything about my life. Before I could even think about it, I had a draft number, relatively safe for a while. Then, one Sunday in December I was coaching a basketball team in
I volunteered for the army on January 1st, 1942, with the understanding that I qualified for Officer Candidate School (OCS) but I needed about three months as a private, then a sergeant before I could apply. By the middle of March, I had passed all the requirements and was on the way to
I need to slow down here because lots of stuff was going on. I was going to be married on March 21. My father showed up and he insisted that we have lunch together before the wedding because he wanted to tell me something important.
My father remains a shadowy figure in my life. I never really got to know him. I do know that he went through a lot of money being rich, then poor, then rich, then I really don’t know. My basic feeling was being an abandoned child. In any case, we went to an Italian restaurant in
So, we nibbled on some ravioli with sauteed chicken liver and onion in an olive oil and tomato sauce that was the specialty of the house. My father had some boilermakers (whiskey with beer on the side). He had a funny, twisted smile on his face, but said nothing. I waited. What was so important? What was he about to reveal to me? What family secret for life? Nothing forthcoming. After another drink, he seemed ready to talk. “Be a good boy,” he said. That was it. I drove him back to Edith’s house in
Before leaving for OCS in
Jackie Barnett:
In the late 1980's I was in southern
It was Sunday morning and I got there on time, but Jackie had to open a locked gate to let me in to the boat landings. We did the
I don’t know what kind of boat I expected a
There was a football game on each of the TV’s. One of the phones rang just as we got into the boat. Jackie excused himself and answered the call. I could tell it was all about gambling on one of the games. He said he was putting two bills on the Rams to lose. Then, he hung up. He asked about my family and I asked about his. He excused himself as he watched the TV. He picked up the phone and said that he was going to put “nickel’s worth” on the Bears. It was Jackie’s third divorce that he was just finished with, he told me. Another phone call came and he made some more bets. How is your sister I asked for I remembered he had one and he called her a Yenta.
He went to a small refrigerator and took out a coke and a thick, fatty pastrami sandwich (talk about a heart attack on a plate!) and asked if I wanted any. I declined, but thanked him. I asked if this diet was okay with his heart doctor. He munched and spoke into the phone several more times, but never answered my question.
I managed to get to talk to him a little. I know that there had been rumors that Jimmy Durante had gotten mad at him because Jackie had hocked a diamond studded ring Jimmy had given him, supposedly to get some cash to cover a bet in
It was getting to be the time for me to leave. We embraced and as I was leaving, he asked a curious thing, “Tell me, was I a happy child?” I looked at him and told him that as far as I remembered he was surely a fun-loving guy. I left.
We were both about eleven years old when we met. His family lived in an apartment house on the corner of
We had a friend in common, Donny Markowitz, who lived a couple of houses to the east of the apartment house. Donny kept pigeons in a coop he built in yard at the rear of his house. The three of us spent a lot of time watching the pigeons mate, have eggs, hatching chicks in time. Afterward I would walk home with Jackie along side. He was short, had black curly hair, and a nice face. He could do impressions of movie stars and celebrities. I’d say, “Do Edward G. Robinson,” and it sounded just like him (“Listen here, kid”). He had James Cagney (“Take that, you punk”) and Wallace Berry (“Aw, shucks, kid”) in his repertoire and could trot them out on command. But, best of all, he did Jimmy Durante. He knew every song that the Schnoz sang. He was funny. Years later, Mr. Durante saw Jackie perform in a small nightclub in northern
Jackie was a member of our Spartan Club, and once, in a close election, he managed to make me the president. He did this with the flair of a theatrical trickster. He held the hat for the votes to be dropped in, and he palmed one of the votes that he knew was against me and had put an extra vote for me concealed in the hatband which he dropped into the hat. The votes were counted, I was the presumed winner, and the opposition called it a foul as they reconstructed their votes. Jackie just laughed at them and said the count was right. I was mortified, but being president of the Spartans was pretty important to me at the time. So much for a career in politics.
When we were about sixteen years old, a bunch of the guys we knew would gather in the cellar of Eli Selman=s house where the family billiard table had been converted into a craps table and a former round dining room table was used for poker. There were only soft drinks allowed. Most of the guys smoked . Eli was more than a year older than us and he was big. He would go from table to table taking his cut, about a dollar from each pot. Nobody complained. If you didn’t like it, don’t come back. He was also a numbers runner.
Jackie was hooked on craps. He knew every possible betting combination and the game had honest odds. He had a fistful of dollars and he got all revved up on just the rush the game gave him. He would say to me, “Hey, this is fun.” He had a nice smile.
Eli was a good host and provided sandwiches (for a price) for the players. He would say to Jackie, “Want somethin to eat?” Jackie would always say, “How about a nice big pastrami on rye!”
The boy is father to the man.
1 comment:
So much here to comment on, we should break it up into separate posts! Looking forward to your Edith posts for obvious reasons...didn't know she was in a sorority! Bootleggers and pastrami sandwiches and the Jersey City mafia and what happened during your summer in the Catskills?
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