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08.16.2002
Dog Boy Jenkins, having
known for quite some time that he didn't like the idea of spending
his whole life working, didn't do anything about it until after
his 33rd birthday. His co-workers had thrown him a big party
the night before (like most people, Dog Boy's friends were his
co-workers; he didn't like them very much but it was difficult
to cultivate new ones) and he had had a lot to drink, as had
everyone. He liked to drink a lot. He passed out at around 2:30
AM and awoke six hours later to find his house unpopulated, cluttered
and reeking of malt liquor. The television was on and every channel
was repeating news of some hurricane in the south. Dog Boy Jenkins
was supposed to be at work in 22 hours, but he decided he would
take the week off instead.
Dog Boy Jenkins' first
name was Keith, but no one had called him that for many years.
His parents were both dead and maybe if he'd had a wife she'd
have called him Keith but he didn't even have a girlfriend. The
nickname originated in grade school. A greasy, malevolent child
who was a de facto bully due to rank fatness and a seeming inability
to touch people without knocking them overhaving tagged him thus
in reference to his canine grin, yelping laugh and habit of snarling
when angry or threatened. From there, the nickname spread like
a virulent contagion: he never used it himself, but schoolmates
who followed him into junior high carried the virus. From hated
high school he joined the service and was untainted by the name
until a stint in the Middle East, where the navigator on his
tank crew turned out to be a teammate from his awful youth basketball
team, and soon everyone from the cookie to the CO was calling
him Dog Boy. A standard four-year tour of duty, some shrapnel
in his right shoulder, ever-increasing amounts of alcohol and
dissatisfaction later, and he was back in Chicago to work in
a car mall as an electronics jockey, fixing minor switching problems
in cars he could never hope to afford. Over a year passed with
no mention of the hated name, but who eventually came in with
a routing error in the suspension system of a garishly outfitted
Lexus but his Fort Leonard Wood bunkmate, newly rich from a personal
injury settlement. A brief back-slapping reunion in front of
his co-workers and he was Dog Boy Jenkins once again. Eight years
later, he had even come to think of himself that way, and even
introduced himself as such. "Keith" was now a foreigh-sounding
artifice he only used when filing official documents. At his
33rd birthday party someone gave him a vanity plate for his beat-up
GM junker that read "DOGBOY" but he thought it was
stupid, and one of the first things he did on waking up was to
throw it away. He hated vanity plates.
He spent the first part
of the day in bed, getting up every now and then to eat food
and get rid of it again, stretching and turning, staring at the
bedroom door or the ceiling, finding himself short of even the
barest willpower needed to leave his room. When he finally got
up he wandered onto the front porch to pick up his newspaper,
but after reading the headlines he decided he was better off
in bed. He checked his mailbox automatically, even though he
knew it was Sunday. Having already decided he was going to take
the week off, he spent much of the day in a sort of low-grade
worrying haze, rehearsing excuse-laden conversations in his head,
constantly refining and perfecting his story. He ate some scrambled
eggs, watched television, read some old letters from an ex-girlfriend
he found in a closet, and took a long hot shower, all the while
going over the discussion that would take place when he called
in sick the next morning. He found himself actually wishing that
Monday would come as quickly as possible so he could get it over
with and enjoy the week. In this way, he thought, work dominates
your life even when you aren't doing it. Finally after his shower
he picked up the phone and decided to call in early. It was 7:34
PM. He got the answering service.
"Uh, I'm not gonna
come in tomorrow," he said. "I quit." Dog Boy
looked at the ceiling as if in deep concentration, gathering
the strength to continue.
"Fuck all y'all,"
he spat. "I don't like none of you. Don't try and call me
either." He hung up the phone and as an afterthought, made
an obscene gesture symbolizing male masturbation.
"Please do not use
me as a reference," he giggled dementedly, his voice falling
into his doglike bark. In a show of commitment to his decision,
he hauled his service pistol out of the closet and shot the phone.
He shot the TV as well. If he had stopped to think about what
he was doing, he wouldn't have gone through with it at all. Who
would? But he didn't think about it, and so he stuffed several
clips of ammunition into his jeans pockets and went out into
the garage. He stuffed a few rags under the garage door and fired
up the car, expecting to suffocate on the fumes within a few
minutes. He had already sat in the back seat when he remembered
that it was an electric car. He reacted with the sort of extreme
annoyance and anger that always accompanies having done something
laughably stupid, so he emptied the remainder of the clip into
his car. The sound of the pistol discharging in the confines
of the garage temporarily deafened him. He let the empty clip
drop from the pistol and sat on a pile of newspapers, loading
a new one. His head felt like a church bell clapper. He considered
at this point shooting himself, but he noticed an article in
a grease-stained old copy of Time magazine about the opulent,
hemmed-off walled estates of the very rich in southern California.
"I'd like to live
in one of those houses with a private beach," he said out
loud, unable to hear himself. "That'd be cool."
He sat in the garage until
3:18 AM Monday morning, doing nothing more than reading old copies
of Sports Illustrated, Time and Motor Trend. Then
he went back inside and got a US atlas, a bottle of drugstore
Scotch, a White Sox baseball cap, a small tool kit, an old Korean
camera with no film in it that he thought might be broken, and
a blue windbreaker that read "Mechanics Local 308 Bowling
All-Stars" across the back. He put the cap on backwards
and the rest he tossed into a tote bag. Then he set fire to his
house and walked off into the night.
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