"...we lived on the same page. We shared a certain olfactory bent." - ibThe man hovering in the doorway resembled Henry Chinaski in a suit borrowed from the C.I.A.. An invisible pork pie hat.
The rain spat into empty flowerpots on the balcony behind him.
The boys bickered down the hall.
I don't mean several rude acquaintances deep in a game of cards. I mean my boys. The five-year-old and the teenage delinquent Waffen-SS tank commander rumbling in their turret.
The Chinaski character pretended not to hear.
He held onto the demeanour of someone who sets store by tact. A civil servant, for instance, moonlighting for the Agency.
In less than a month or so all residue of it would have evaporated. Leaving in its place a caustic observance of protocol merely, a standing on ritual chewed up, masticated, coaxed into a line delivered out the side of one's mouth.
He held out a laminated badge. Pinned to the pocket under his jacket lapel.
"Good morning, sir."
Ipsos MORI, the blue and green square announced. G-Man.
"Shoot," I said.
2 comments:
Here they just function through the guise of telemarketing. If they'd come to my door, I might be more inclined to give them what they deserve.
I had my hand on the claw hammer, when the G-Man, having been invited in, uttered these words:
"I haven't read much Bukowski, but "Factotum" is one of my favourite books."
He even mispronounced the name as I am want to do. Leaning instead on the Eastern inflection. That part of Poland swallowed up by Germany.
He wound up the interview. I felt like I'd been date raped.
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