THE ROTO-ROOTER
By Michael Priv
© 2017
Michael Priv. All Rights Reserved.
Life sucks and then you die—trite but true. My house is
dark and neglected. My laptop is fossilizing under a layer of dust. My TV died,
just like my garbage disposal. Nobody, namely me, cooked anything in ages—or
took out the trash for that matter. Time froze; life stopped.
I don’t want to
think, but thoughts keep worming their way through my skull as I if I am buried
alive. Unpleasant imagery, isn’t it? I grab another beer.
After twenty years
of a reasonably happy marriage, my wife dumped me for a younger man who apparently
went to the gym a lot in between his successful legal practice and his mountain
climbing expeditions to Kilimanjaro. Probably hung like a donkey, too.
She took the kids, obviously, since I don’t have a job
at the moment—well okay, for the last ten months—not for the lack of trying, I
assure you. The kids simply went with her, no drama. I thought I loved my kids.
Not so sure at the moment.
To say I am hurt, or insulted, or devastated would be
accurate but still a misnomer—an accurate misnomer. I am dead. I am buried in a
cold, dark place—the place of silence. Nobody here but me and the worms of my
thoughts.
She left; I stayed behind. She is happy; I am not. She
has him, the mountain climbing dick; I have no one. She has a future; I have
nothing but past. She has a new life; I have a new… what? Death, I guess.
Death? I am too much of a coward for that. Although I
heard slitting one’s wrists in a bathtub of warm water wasn’t that bad. That’s
it then? The end? Finita la comedia? Just
the thought that five minutes from now I wouldn’t feel the pain is refreshing,
the ultimate panacea. What am I doing here? Who needs me? Nobody, not even the
kids. Not even my parents. Death beckons: the beautiful seductress. Something
to think about. I shuffle to the bathroom to think about it right there at the
bathtub, at the epicenter. Five minutes and whew, no pain . . .
The horror unfolding in the bathroom stops me dead in my
tracks. I suppose first I am swatted by the stench and only then struck by the
sight. With disgusting gargling, gagging, and sucking noises the bathtub is
filling up with sh . . . I beg your pardon, excrements, the raw sewage.
Unbelievable! I can’t even die right. One time I almost
make a decision and bam! Just once . . .
Got to call Roto-Rooter now. Disgusted with myself, I comb
through all the horizontal surfaces in the house in search of my cell phone
comforted by the thought that it is probably easier to find things here in my modest
home, than, say, in a huge house of that donkey-dick lawyer—a small consolation
of sorts. Small, ha! Average size… God!
The doorbell interrupts my search for the phone. A young
guy in work uniform is at the door, all pierced and tattooed.
“The Plumber,” he announces cheerily, attempting to squeeze
past me with no invitation. “The Plumber” his nametag reads. How do these
people get through metal detectors at the airports with so many piercings?
“Name’s Al,” the kid introduces himself.
“The plumber?” I ask.
“That’s us,” Al nods. “What’s the emergency here, Brian?”
How does he know my name?
“I didn’t call a plumber . . .”
“The Plumber,”
Al corrects me. “There,” he nods toward a van outside with the words THE
PLUMBER, #1 IN THE #2 BUSINESS stenciled on its
side in large, cheerful letters.
“Seriously? #1 in #2? That’s your level of . . .
whatever?” I look at the guy accusingly.
The guy rolls up his eyes and spreads his arms in a “Hey,
what do I know what those marketing dicks are doing?” manner.
“You see, I was just looking for my phone when you rang,
so I couldn’t have called you with no phone, do you understand? And I wanted to
call the Roto-Rooter anyway, ‘cause your slogan is not exactly . . . Plus I don’t trust you kids, the millennials.
Go snap some selfies or hook up at an after-party or something.”
“You found your phone, remember?” Al reminds me
patiently.
What do you know! I distinctly remember now that I did
indeed find my phone. Yes, there it was on the kitchen table as expected, and then
I called them, the Roto-Rooter. Wait a minute… The Roto-Rooter or The Plumber?
I look up and find myself staring at an elderly, cleanly shaved plumber, his
thin gray hair carefully combed, with a nametag “Roto-Rooter” on his dark blue breast
pocket and his name “Al” on it.
“What the hell? What happened to the young guy?” I ask
Al, bewildered.
“What young guy?” the plumber raises his eyebrows in
surprised. “Young guys don’t want to do plumbing. Easy childhood and participation
trophies ruin character. All they are good for is snapping selfies and hooking
up, you know? Think they don’t have to work, neither, they’ll all be millionaires
before thirty. What seems to be the problem here, Brian?” Al is all business
now.
A quick glance through the open entrance door reveals a
Roto-Rooter van parked in my driveway. Oh, yes, now I remember calling the
Roto-Rooter. What happened to the other van? Silly me. There never was any
other van.
“I just called a minute ago. Pretty quick, aren’t you?”
I ask as I let the older guy in.
“Don’t forget to mention me in the survey you’ll get in
the email,“ Al nods amicably. “Customer satisfaction is our number one concern.”
“You’ve come to the right place, Al. Customer
satisfaction is what I desperately need right about now.” I usher Al into the
bathroom and allow him to behold the horror in silence.
“Yep, as a customer you are missing out on a lot of
satisfaction at the moment,” Al finally declares. “And this,” he points at the continuously
arriving horror in the bathtub, “violates one of the three major laws of construction.”
“What law?”
“That shit flows downhill. You have shit flowing uphill
here, Brian. That’s a no-no. How did you do that?” Al glances at me in an accusing
sort of way and shakes his head in disapproval.
“And what are the other two laws?” I ask, feverishly figuring
out how much extra they’ll charge me for the violation of a major law. Can I
even afford this dude now?
“The other two are ‘If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it’ and
‘payday’s on Friday,’” Al explains with a grin.
I stare at him. “Joking at a time like this?” I ask.
“Lighten up, man! On this job I wouldn’t last past the
first seven days without a sense of humor!”
“You’re here to work. So work!” I snap.
“Just full of negativity, aren’t you? All this crap just
keeps on oozing from the depth of your sub-consciousness, doesn’t it?”
“What?!” Rage is
pounding in my head, threatening to kill me with an apoplectic fit.
“Yeah, yeah, I know,
I’m here to work . . . Okay, let’s see . . .” Al gets on all four and starts
poking in his tool bag, the inevitable plumbers’ crack showing. I never noticed
he even had a tool bag before. Al is muttering something under his breath as he
is searching through his bag. I hear “Half-inch . . . five-eights . . .” He
finally extracts a smallish plunger out of his bag.
“What kind of a
goddamn plumber are you?! You can’t fix this with a plunger!” I shout,
enraged.
“Fix this?” Al
points at the bathtub and raises his eyebrows in surprise. “Oh no, I’m not
going to fix this. This is just a symptom, a consequence of your mental state.
You are full of crap, I’m sorry to say, and that’s official. No need to bother
fixing the consequence unless we address the cause,” he explains in a
reasonable tone of voice. “You tracking?”
My breath catches in
my chest. I am so infuriated, I can’t say a word. Out of many things that I
want to say or do at the moment, including but not limited to proactively
strangling the bastard, the only thing that finally comes out is, “Then why the
hell do you even need a plunger?!”
“Here, let me
demonstrate.” Al is suddenly and inexplicably right next to me, jamming his
plunger to my forehead. I want to scream but I can’t. Paralyzed with terror, I
can’t move. Al starts making pumping motions with the plunger, muttering
something about needing a new half-inch protoplasmic coupling under his breath.
I feel something is happening in my mind, not altogether unpleasant.
“Calm
down,” Al says. “Remember, you called us. Your life is full of crap, not mine.
I’m here to help. Okay?”
“Get off of me!” I
want to scream but can’t.
“Trust me, I’m a professional,” Al says in a soothing voice.
“Or trust yourself. It adds up to about the same thing.”
I suddenly feel my anger evaporating. I feel better,
lighter.
“Yep, we hit
something! An obstruction,” Al’s face is alight with satisfaction of the job
well done. The plunger unsticks from my head with a pop. “You have a question?”
“Yes, I do, Al,” I
reply, calm now. “Could you explain this phenomenon in a little more detail?” I
point at the bathtub with the bubbling feces. It seemed the level subsided a
bit.
“Certainly,” Al
readily agrees. “Thought is the cause of everything. You are what you think. What
you think is all you are and all you have in your life and all you’ll ever have.
Judging by this,” he points at the bathtub, “we are dealing with unfulfilled
promises galore as well as lies, words left unsaid and unbecoming acts that you
are not proud of. You tracking?”
“I was always good
to her! I loved her dearly for twenty years. She dumped me for that long-dick
mountain climber! I didn’t leave her! So fuck you and your unbecoming acts!” I
yell, enraged again. “Why me? Why?!” The gargling noise from the bathtub is
louder. The sewage is threatening to flood over the edge.
Al glances at the tub nervously. “Of course you were
good to her!” he hurriedly agrees, “Now stop asking why this is happening to
you and start thinking more in the direction of what this experience is for.
What does it teach you?”
“That all women are
no good?” I ask. “The ungrateful bitches. They stab you in the back every time!”
The crap in my bathtub reaches the very top again.
“What does it teach you? Not her. Not interested in her at
the moment. Not interested in your excuses or explanations, either. Honest
now.”
“Why are you not
interested in my excuses? I have some good ones.” I feel that I really do.
After all, she left me, not the other way around.
“Are you sure she
left you and not the other way around?” Al asks as if I spoke my thoughts
aloud. Or have I? “Are you sure you didn’t leave her first but pretended to still
be there when you weren’t?”
I thought about it.
In a way I did leave her first—in spirit, not physically. Well, physically,
too, I suppose.
Al nodded his
satisfaction. “That’s better. Remember, nobody is interested in your excuses, ever.
You are the only one listening to your own excuses. Imagine being a passenger
on a bus which flies off an overpass and kills you, but turns out the driver
had an excuse. Would you be interested to hear what it was?”
I shake my head.
“’Course not. So get over it. No more excuses. Now,
think. What is the lesson you are learning here?”
I thought about it.
“Well, I did leave her in a way. I could probably improve on a few things.” I
notice that the crap level in my tub came down some.
“A few things? Like
what?” Al asked.
“I could’ve thought more
about the family instead of feeling sorry for myself, wallowing in my own crap,
you know? I could be there more for them or even be there at all.”
“And then she
wouldn’t have left?”
“How would I know?”
“You know, Brian.
Honest now.”
“Honest? I suppose
if I lived up to my own expectations, she probably wouldn’t have left.” That is
the truth. Damn. I’m such an idiot. What have I done? I run my trembling fingers
through my thinning hair.
“Why do you think
she fell in love with you to begin with?”
My mind takes me
back to when we were twenty.
“I made her a part
of all my plans, I suppose. I accepted her as a major part of my life long
before we got married. That and a sense of adventure. I used to race ATVs and
bikes, did white water rafting, parachuting, you name it. She loved the
adventure.”
“So what happened? Where did you amble off the straight
and narrow, you oaf?”
“I hated the manager’s job. I was okay as a salesman but
not as a manager. Honestly, I hated being a salesman, too. I always wanted to
have an ATV repair shop. Fix them up and sell them, trade them, organize races,
classes, picnics, things like that.”
“So why didn’t you?”
“Come on, seriously? With three kids? Hobbies don’t pay
the bills.”
“Where are your kids now? And who is paying the bills?”
Al chuckles. “Brian, you got to get honest with yourself. And remember as you
think so you are. I want you to really get it. You think it doesn’t pay the
bills so it doesn’t. You are always right. Always.”
“I betrayed her,” I finally mumble.
“You betrayed
yourself first. Join the human race, man! The funny breed. You people think you
are not angels but you really are. Boy, are you confused!” Al slaps me on the
back. “Now look,” he points at the tub.
The gleaming, pristine
white surface of the tub shimmers in bright LED lighting of the can fixtures in
the ceiling. Where the hell did those come from? I wanted to remodel this
bathroom for ages but never had the money. I stare at the fancy tile job around
the tub. Holy shit!
“Hey . . . ?” I turn
around but Al is gone. I didn’t even thank him. I run to the entrance door to
see if his van is still there but find my wife’s SUV in the driveway instead.
Here she is, walking
toward me.
“Hi, hon!” my wife waves at me, smiling, as if nothing
happened. How much would I give to see that smile every day of my life? All I’ve
got, that’s how much.
I startle her with a
huge bear hug. She nestles at my chest. “Listen, hon,” I start, “did you really
dump me for that mountain climbing donkey-dick lawyer?”
My wife pushes me
away, making big eyes, and gives me a long stare.
“You’re not making
any sense. What dick? You need rest, hon. I understand you’re super-busy with
setting up that international ATV competition but . . .”
“Yes, I agree. Hey, princess,
you wanna fool around?” I interject, offering my hand. “Ah? Wanna wet your
whistle? What are your plans for the next hour or so?”
“You mean right now?
You're so full of it, Brian! An hour? More like five minutes!” Her eyes crinkle
as she laughs happily, taking my hand. “Ten minutes, tops.”
“So is my ten
minutes okay with you?” I ask.
“Perfect! Wouldn’t
have it any other way, hon. Come on!” laughing, she pulls me toward the house.
From the corner of my eye, as we are entering the
house, I see a Roto-Rooter truck unhurriedly lumbering by. I don’t see the
driver but I wave and smile just in case.
You never know.
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