The Hermit's Story Rick Bass (popular books to read .txt) š
- Author: Rick Bass
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Wilson is driving. Heās got a new truck with leather seats. He doesnāt have a car phone, even though he sells them. Heās read that they cause brain cancer, and so instead all he has is a digital pager, which records the number of messages coming into his answering machine back in Houston. Wilson bought a computer program that pointed out to him that, based on last yearās data, each incoming phone call brings himāon the averageāanother $152.18 of business.
The pager is hooked to the sun visor of his truck, and each time it goes offāa rapid series of beeps and clicksāall three men whoop and tally the total: Dave counting with true gusto, elated for his little brother, and Artie sick with green envy but happy at the thought that at least somebody, somewhere, is getting gouged.
Itās a lot of work for Wilson to go out and answer each of those callsāto drive out and fix whateverās wrong with the system or to install a new oneābut he does it. He has no employees. Heās a one-man show. He wonāt even be twenty-nine for another ten months. It makes him seem richer than he already is, though in his mind, itās a little bit like heās drowning, or gasping for airālike he canāt quite get enough airāand he doesnāt like that feeling, and heās trying not to worry about the business so much.
Fishing trips, such as this one, with his brother, help.
ā¦
Even though it is still an hour before daylight, the pagerās going off about every ten minutes. If the pager gets too fullāit will hold only a certain number of messages, depending on their lengthāWilson can stop and get out and make a few calls from a pay phone, but he hopes that doesnāt happen today.
As they drive, all Artie talks aboutāsitting in the back seat and watching the digital glow of the pager, waiting for its red light to blink in the dark, waiting for the beeping to go off againāis his and Daveās work. Even though they saw each other on Friday, they go over it again, shooting the shit about each employee in the officeātalking about their work in the familiar but also exploratory manner of raccoons crouched by the side of a creek, fishing for mussels in the night: turning them over with their paws, feeling every ridge, every bump. There is the one who is getting fired, and the one who does not get her reports in on time. There is the good-looking one and the plain one. There is the asshole and the brown-noser, and they laugh and talk about the brown-noser for a while.
Then they talk about the handsome one, whom they dislike intensely because he is arrogant, and finally, after several miles, they settle on the scapegoat, the gullible one, Clifford.
They savage Clifford; it is as if he is meat and they are eating him. It is as if they are cutting him up and swallowing him. Every week there is something new that Cliffordās done, or which theyāve done to Clifford, some small thing to share and to revel over. This morning Artie is telling Dave about how he bad-mouthed Cliffordās new truck, a Chevy, as not being nearly as strong as Artieās old truck, a Dodge.
āOh, he was hot!ā Artie hoots. āHe started stuttering and saying that all his friends who had horses and who trailered them out to the country each weekend used Chevys, and I interrupted him and said, āWell, yeah, theyāre okay trucks for little weekend pullers.āā Artie imitates the brush-away hand-waving motion heād given Cliffordāand Dave laughs, too.
āWeekend pullers,ā Dave says. āThatās a good one. Him and those damn horses.ā
Clifford, who is slightly ahead of them in hierarchy, though not a real boss, has been going out to the new racetrack by the airport and has been buying the bargain horses, the ones that are not quite fast enough.
āItās like a compulsion,ā Artie says. āHeās bought about fifty of them so far, and he doesnāt show any fucking sign of stopping.ā
āI could kill him,ā Dave says, from out of the blue.
Wilson looks at his brother in surprise. Artie laughs a mean laugh.
āI had to go over to his house for a barbecue once, while you were out of town,ā Dave tells Artie. āSome bullshit office party. He had just been out to the racetrack that day and had brought home two more horses. He had them in his back yard and was feeding them apples and hay and making everyone touch them,ā Dave says. āHe kept making everyone pat their flanks, their rumps. āFeel that,ā heād say, āFeel how hard that is.ā Iād never seen such sad pieces of shit in all my life. He says heās going to sell them as polo ponies. He thinks that because they almost ran races, theyāre some kind of super-horses, and always will be. He thinks almost is real close, instead of real far.
āWhen he comes in my office to ask me something,ā Dave goes on, āthe first thing I ask him, right away, before he can say anything, is āHow long are you going to be in here?āā
āYou tell him that?ā Artie says.
āHell yes,ā says Dave. āHe doesnāt like it, but thereās nothing he can do. Just because heās above me doesnāt mean he can fire me. Besides, he doesnāt know shit. Heās always asking people to help him fill out his reports. Heāll ask the same question five days in a row.ā
āHe does that, doesnāt he?ā Artie says. āAsks the same question twice.ā Artieās speaking slowly now, and where before he had a kind of cocksure glittering anger in his dark eyes, doubt is now starting to seep in, and it comes into his voice, too, a change that is so noticeable that Wilson, driving, looks in the rearview mirror to see whatās going on.
āHey,
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