CHAPTER ONE
THE STAND-IN
1
Everything, Sam Peebles decided later, was the
fault of the goddamned acrobat. If the acrobat hadn’t gotten drunk
at exactly the wrong time, Sam never would have ended up in such
trouble.
It is not bad enough, he thought with a perhaps
justifiable bitterness, that life is like a narrow beam over an
endless chasm, a beam we have to walk blindfolded. It’s bad, but
not bad enough. Sometimes, we also get pushed.
But that was later. First, even before the Library
Policeman, was the drunken acrobat.
2
In Junction City, the last Friday of every month
was Speaker’s Night at the local Rotarians’ Hall. On the last
Friday in March of 1990, the Rotarians were scheduled to hear—and
to be entertained by—The Amazing Joe, an acrobat with Curry &
Trembo’s All-Star Circus and Travelling Carnival.
The telephone on Sam Peebles’s desk at Junction
City Realty and Insurance rang at five past four on Thursday
afternoon. Sam picked it up. It was always Sam who picked it
up—either Sam in person or Sam on the answering machine, because he
was Junction City Realty and Insurance’s owner and sole employee.
He was not a rich man, but he was a reasonably happy one. He liked
to tell people that his first Mercedes was still quite a distance
in the future, but he had a Ford which was almost new and owned his
own home on Kelton Avenue. “Also, the business keeps me in beer and
skittles,” he liked to add ... although in truth, he hadn’t drunk
much beer since college and wasn’t exactly sure what skittles were.
He thought they might be pretzels.
“Junction City Realty and In—”
“Sam, this is Craig. The acrobat broke his
neck.”
“What?”
“You heard me!” Craig Jones cried in deeply
aggrieved tones. “The acrobat broke his fucking neck!”
“Oh,” Sam said. “Gee.” He thought about this for a
moment and then asked cautiously, “Is he dead, Craig?”
“No, he’s not dead, but he might as well be as far
as we’re concerned. He’s in the hospital over in Cedar Rapids with
his’ neck dipped in about twenty pounds of plaster. Billy Bright
just called me. He said the guy came on drunk as a skunk at the
matinee this afternoon, tried to do a back-over flip, and landed
outside the center ring on the nape of his neck. Billy said he
could hear it way up in the bleachers, where he was sitting. He
said it sounded like when you step in a puddle that just iced
over.”
“Ouch!” Sam exclaimed, wincing.
“I’m not surprised. After all—The Amazing Joe. What
kind of name is that for a circus performer? I mean, The Amazing
Randix, okay. The Amazing Tortellini, still not bad. But The
Amazing Joe? It sounds like a prime example of brain damage in
action to me.”
“Jesus, that’s too bad.”
“Fucking shit on toast is what it is. It leaves us
without a speaker tomorrow night, good buddy.”
Sam began to wish he had left the office promptly
at four. Craig would have been stuck with Sam the answering
machine, and that would have given Sam the living being a little
more time to think. He felt he would soon need time to
think. He also felt that Craig Jones was not going to give him
any.
“Yes,” he said, “I guess that’s true enough.” He
hoped he sounded philosophical but helpless. “What a shame.”
“It sure is,” Craig said, and then dropped the
dime. “But I know you’ll be happy to step in and fill the
slot.”
“Me? Craig, you’ve got to be kidding! I
can’t even do a somersault, let alone a back-over fi—”
“I thought you could talk about the importance of
the independently owned business in small-town life,” Craig Jones
pressed on relentlessly. “If that doesn’t do it for you, there’s
baseball. Lacking that, you could always drop your pants and
wag your wing-wang at the audience. Sam, I am not just the head of
the Speakers Committee—that would be bad enough. But since Kenny
moved away and Carl quit coming, I am the Speakers
Committee. Now, you’ve got to help me. I need a speaker
tomorrow night. There are about five guys in the whole damn club I
feel I can trust in a pinch, and you’re one of them.”
“But—”
“You’re also the only one who hasn’t filled in
already in a situation like this, so you’re elected,
buddy-boy.”
“Frank Stephens—”
“—pinch-hit for the guy from the trucking union
last year when the grand jury indicted him for fraud and he
couldn’t show up. Sam—it’s your turn in the barrel. You can’t let
me down, man. You owe me.”
“I run an insurance business!” Sam cried. “When I’m
not writing insurance, I sell farms! Mostly to banks! Most people
find it boring! The ones who don’t find it boring find it
disgusting!”
“None of that matters.” Craig was now moving in for
the kill, marching over Sam’s puny objection in grim hobnailed
boots. “They’ll all be drunk by the end of dinner and you know it.
They won’t remember a goddam word you said come Saturday morning,
but in the meantime, I need someone to stand up and talk for
half an hour and you’re elected!”
Sam continued to object a little longer, but Craig
kept coming down on the imperatives, italicizing them mercilessly.
Need. Gotta. Owe.
“All right!” he said at last. “All right, all
right! Enough!”
“My man!” Craig exclaimed. His voice was suddenly
full of sunshine and rainbows. “Remember, it doesn’t have to be any
longer than thirty minutes, plus maybe another ten for questions.
If anybody has any questions. And you really can wag your wing-wang
if you want to. I doubt that anybody could actually see it,
but—”
“Craig,” Sam said, “that’s enough.”
“Oh! Sorry! Shet mah mouf !” Craig, perhaps
lightheaded with relief, cackled.
“Listen, why don’t we terminate this discussion?”
Sam reached for the roll of Turns he kept in his desk drawer. He
suddenly felt he might need quite a few Turns during the next
twenty-eight hours or so. “It looks as if I’ve got a speech to
write.”
“You got it,” Craig said. “Just remember—dinner at
six, speech at seven-thirty. As they used to say on Hawaii
Five-O, be there! Aloha!”
“Aloha, Craig,” Sam said, and hung up. He stared at
the phone. He felt hot gas rising slowly up through his chest and
into his throat. He opened his mouth and uttered a sour burp—the
product of a stomach which had been reasonably serene until five
minutes ago.
He ate the first of what would prove to be a great
many Turns indeed.
3
Instead of going bowling that night as he had
planned, Sam Peebles shut himself in his study at home with a
yellow legal pad, three sharpened pencils, a package of Kent
cigarettes, and a six-pack of Jolt. He unplugged the telephone from
the wall, lit a cigarette, and stared at the yellow pad. After five
minutes of staring, he wrote this on the top line of the top sheet:
SMALL-TOWN BUSINESSES: THE LIFEBLOOD OF
AMERICA
He said it out loud and liked the sound of it. Well
... maybe he didn’t exactly like it, but he could live with
it. He said it louder and liked it better. A little better.
It actually wasn’t that good; in fact, it probably sucked
the big hairy one, but it beat the shit out of “Communism: Threat
or Menace.” And Craig was right—most of them would be too hung over
on Saturday morning to remember what they’d heard on Friday night,
anyway.
Marginally encouraged, Sam began to write.
“When I moved to Junction City from the more or
less thriving metropolis of Ames in 1984 ...”
4
“... and that is why I feel now, as I did on that
bright September morn in 1984, that small businesses are not just
the lifeblood of America, but the bright and sparkly lifeblood of
the entire Western world.”
Sam stopped, crushed out a cigarette in the ashtray
on his office desk, and looked hopefully at Naomi Higgins.
“Well? What do you think?”
Naomi was a pretty young woman from Proverbia, a
town four miles west of Junction City. She lived in a ramshackle
house by the Proverbia River with her ramshackle mother. Most of
the Rotarians knew Naomi, and wagers had been offered from time to
time on whether the house or the mother would fall apart first. Sam
didn’t know if any of these wagers had ever been taken, but if so,
their resolution was still pending.
Naomi had graduated from Iowa City Business
College, and could actually retrieve whole legible sentences from
her shorthand. Since she was the only local woman who possessed
such a skill, she was in great demand among Junction City’s limited
business population. She also had extremely good legs, and that
didn’t hurt. She worked mornings five days a week, for four men and
one woman—two lawyers, one banker, and two realtors. In the
afternoons she went back to the ramshackle house, and when she was
not caring for her ramshackle mother, she typed up the dictation
she had taken.
Sam Peebles engaged Naomi’s services each Friday
morning from ten until noon, but this morning he had put aside his
correspondence—even though some of it badly needed to be
answered—and asked Naomi if she would listen to something.
“Sure, I guess so,” Naomi had replied. She looked a
little worried, as if she thought Sam—whom she had briefly
dated—might be planning to propose marriage. When he explained that
Craig Jones had drafted him to stand in for the wounded acrobat,
and that he wanted her to listen to his speech, she’d relaxed and
listened to the whole thing-all twenty-six minutes of it—with
flattering attention.
“Don’t be afraid to be honest,” he added before
Naomi could do more than open her mouth.
“It’s good,” she said. “Pretty interesting.”
“No, that’s okay—you don’t have to spare my
feelings. Let it all hang out.”
“I am. It’s really okay. Besides, by the
time you start talking, they’ll all be—”
“Yes, they’ll all be hammered, I know.” This
prospect had comforted Sam at first, but now it disappointed him a
little. Listening to himself read, he’d actually thought the speech
was pretty good.
“There is one thing,” Naomi said
thoughtfully.
“Oh?”
“It’s kind of ... you know ... dry.”
“Oh,” Sam said. He sighed and rubbed his eyes. He
had been up until nearly one o’clock this morning, first writing
and then revising.
“But that’s easy to fix,” she assured him. “Just go
to the library and get a couple of those books.”
Sam felt a sudden sharp pain in his lower belly and
grabbed his roll of Turns. Research for a stupid Rotary Club
speech? Library research? That was going a little overboard, wasn’t
it? He had never been to the Junction City Library before, and he
didn’t see a reason to go there now. Still, Naomi had listened very
closely, Naomi was trying to help, and it would be rude not to at
least listen to what she had to say.
“What books?”
“You know—books with stuff in them to liven
up speeches. They’re like ...” Naomi groped. “Well, you know the
hot sauce they give you at China Light, if you want it?”
“Yes—”
“They’re like that. They have jokes. Also, there’s
this one book, Best Loved Poems of the American People. You
could probably find something in there for the end. Something sort
of uplifting.”
“There are poems in this book about the importance
of small businesses in American life?” Sam asked doubtfully.
“When you quote poetry, people get uplifted,
Naomi said. ”Nobody cares what it’s about, Sam, let alone
what it’s for.”
“And they really have joke-books especially for
speeches?” Sam found this almost impossible to believe, although
hearing that the library carried books on such esoterica as
small-engine repair and wig-styling wouldn’t have surprised him in
the least.
“Yes.”
“How do you know?”
“When Phil Brakeman was running for the State
House, I used to type up speeches for him all the time,” Naomi
said. “He had one of those books. I just can’t remember what the
name of it was. All I can think of is Jokes for the John,
and of course that’s not right.”
“No,” Sam agreed, thinking that a few choice
tidbits from Jokes for the John would probably make him a
howling success. But he began to see what Naomi was getting at, and
the idea appealed to him despite his reluctance to visit the local
library after all his years of cheerful neglect. A little spice for
the old speech. Dress up your leftovers, turn your meatloaf into a
masterpiece. And a library, after all, was just a library. If you
didn’t know how to find what you wanted, all you had to do was ask
a librarian. Answering questions was one of their jobs,
right?
“Anyway, you could leave it just the way it
is,” Naomi said. “I mean, they will be drunk.” She looked at
Sam kindly but severely and then checked her watch. “You have over
an hour left—did you want to do some letters?”
“No, I guess not. Why don’t you type up my speech
instead?” He had already decided to spend his lunch hour at the
library.