“God, that’s cruel, Sam.”
“Harold, you’re not impotent. Take my word. And you’re not going to end up in a rubber room like your mother. But I might end up there if you keep using me for your shrink. Now if you only wanna wake up with a hard on, then ask the captain to put you on the morning watch. When you’re out there at about sunrise, waking up in a radio car, after trying to sleep with an upset stomach from the crazy hours and the greasy eggs you ate at two A.M., and the nervous sleep in some alley where you’re worrying about a sergeant catching you and you’re longing for all the normal things people do at that hour like being flaked out in a warm bed with a warm friendly body, you know what? You’ll wake up with the hardest diamond cutter you ever had. Try it if you don’t believe me.”
“Morning watch, huh? Don’t think I’d mind that. How about it, will you go with me?”
“No, I think you’d be better off going it alone with a new partner. Who knows? Maybe you’ll catch one with an MS in abnormal psych.”
Harold Bloomguard thought it over for five seconds and said, “I think I’ll stick with you, Sam. We’ll just have to come up with another solution for my impotency.”
Then they received a routine radio call to the south end where a black man had thrown a pot of hot soup on his teenage daughter and beaten the mother over the head with the pot lid. But since he was gone and the girl had already been removed to the hospital by ambulance there wasn’t much to do but take the report from the mother and phone the hospital for the treatment information on the child.
After dark they received another routine call, this time on the north end to a small house inhabited by a disheveled white woman, who was barefoot in a torn dress, with three small children literally hanging on her clothing. She lurched from dragging the weight but also from the pint of bourbon she had consumed that afternoon.
Sam Niles let Harold Bloomguard handle it since somehow Harold always did anyway, excitedly jumping into a conversation with a distraught married couple or the victim of a burglary with every sort of advice, wanted or otherwise. Harold’s notebook bulged with the addresses of referral agencies that ostensibly provided a remedy for any malaise Los Angeles had to offer.
The tired eyed woman had called them to report that her teenage daughter had threatened to run off with a forty-nine year old piano tuner who lived next door. Harold Bloomguard promised to arrange an appointment with juvenile officers at Wilshire Station the next morning, then he advised the mother to try to help police ascertain if she had been taken advantage of by the older man.
“If she been what?” the woman asked as Sam Niles turned on his flashlight and prepared to descend the porch steps.
“Taken advantage of,” Harold said as Sam was halfway down the walk heading for the radio car.
The woman nodded dumbly and Harold said, “Well, I’m very glad we could be of service. I certainly hope we can help the young lady get back on the track tomorrow, ma’am, and if there’s any way we can expedite matters prior to your appointment, you just call us back and we’ll be here at once.”
“Ex-pee-dite?” mumbled the woman as the lassitudinous Sam Niles, hands in his pockets, hoped the little bubblegummer’s keys had been well pounded by the piano tuner so she could get out of this house, even to go to the home for unwed mothers.
“So long, ma’am,” Harold said cheerfully as he took off his hat and opened the door of the radio car, turning back to wave at the stooped woman who now had no less than seven children flocked around her on the sagging wooden porch in the dim light of a naked bulb. “By the way, wherever did all these children come from?”
“From fuckin,” yelled the woman, wondering how the little policeman could be so stupid as not to know that.
“Now you know where they came from, Harold,” Sam said as he drove away.
It was always like this with Harold Bloomguard and always had been. Yet for reasons impossible to explain Sam could not rid himself of the clinging little man any more than the weary woman could rid herself of the clinging children.
But I didn’t fuck to get him, thought Sam Niles. I just got fucked the day I accepted him into my fire team in Nam. And then Sam Niles felt the fear sweep over him as he thought of Vietnam and for a second he actually hated Harold Bloomguard. It always came this way: first fear at the memory and then a split second of incredible hatred which he assumed was for Harold Bloomguard who knew the secret of the cave. And relief for Harold’s never having revealed the secret to anyone, for never having mentioned the secret even to Sam Niles.
If he’d just bring it up once, thought Sam Niles, but he never did. And that was perhaps the reason he could never rid himself of Harold Bloomguard.
“You know, Sam, I think it’s time I got married,” Harold suddenly announced, interrupting Sam’s fearful reverie.
“Anybody I know? Ora Lee maybe? Or Carolina?”
“Don’t be silly Sam.”
“If it’s Ora Lee be sure to rent her out to us once a week for choir practice.”
“I’m serious, Sam,” Harold said as Sam Niles winked his headlights at an oncoming car and cruised west on Beverly Boulevard, glancing in store windows, most of which were darkened by now.
“So who’re you going to marry?” Sam asked, not truly interested.
“I dunno. I haven’t met her yet. I wonder what she’ll be like?”
“Just like the girl that married dear old dad,” said Sam Niles, thinking it would be rather difficult to find one like the mother Harold described to him, who up until the day he went overseas had twisted the tops off the catsup bottles and pried the lids from the cottage cheese containers, replacing them gently so that Harold would not strain himself when getting something to eat.
But she was never there to care for him again, after a certain summer afternoon when Harold was in Vietnam and her psychiatrist was on vacation in Martinique and Mrs. Bloomguard decided she was Ann Miller and did a naked tap dance in front of the Pomona courthouse and had to be taken to the screw factory to get rethreaded.
As they patrolled the nighttime streets and Harold complained that perhaps he should never get married because his mother’s insanity might be congenital, Sam Niles was reminded of his own fifteen month marriage which had just been finally dissolved last year.
His ex-wife, Kimberly Cutler Niles, was a tall athletic student he had met in a college night class. She was a blonde tawny cat of a girl with daring amber eyes that looked inquisitively and boldly at you. She was bright, articulate, personable. She said Harold Bloomguard was a doll and asked Sam to invite him home to dinner often. And incredibly enough she could cook. Not like a twenty-two year old student wife can cook but like a cook can cook. She was tidy and their little apartment was always immaculate. Harold Bloomguard loved her like a sister. He was ecstatically happy for his best friend, Sam Niles. Kimberly was darling. Sam Niles hated her guts.
But he didn’t hate her at first, that came later. They were probably married three weeks before he started to hate her. But he didn’t know that he hated her after three weeks, he just knew that she made him terribly uncomfortable. She was as terrific in the sack as he knew she would be the first night they met in class. She had introduced herself by shaking hands smoothly and firmly and saying, “I knew you were a Taurus. I just love bulls.”
And moments later she was chatting glibly about tennis which interested Sam, saying, “You’re a pretty good sized boy but I’ll bet you could get into size thirty-three tennis shorts. My brother left some at my place when he went away to school. Want them?”
“Sure, I’d like to play with you,” Sam said with a hint of a smile so he could withdraw gracefully but she delighted him by saying, “You could probably get into much smaller tennis shorts given the opportunity couldn’t you, Sam?”