The Guardian, Dec. 4, 2014
By Juan Montoya
It had been
months since he had graduated from South Texas High School and Joe E. Sebato
could not find a job. Everywhere he applied, he was met with the same response.
“Sorry, son, but
I need someone with experience,” the potential employers would say.
It irked him to
hear that and he would argue with himself as he walked to his home on Monroe
Street gesticulating with his hands as if engaged in debate.
“How the hell do
they want someone to have experience if they won’t give him a job?,” he would
mutter to himself. “Can’t they understand that? Don’t they remember when they
got their first job?”
Thoroughly
convinced in the sheer injustice and righteousness of his position, Joe would arrive at his home to
find his mother and father sitting on the porch shaded by the large ebony trees
from the still-hot evening sun. His demeanor left no question in his father’s
mind that he had not found a job.
“Who’s
going to give a long-haired hippie a job?,” his father would tell his mother, a
point he had repeated endlessly to her in the past. “People want a
decent-looking guy working for them, not some hippie wearing his hair like a
girl. Now that I’m retired I need someone to help me. If he doesn’t want to
work, what can we expect from him?”
It was usually
at this point that Joe’s mother would intercede on his behalf.
“Ay, Mauricio,”
she would start, “My son is a good worker, but if he can’t find a job it’s
because there’s no one hiring.”
Although Joe
appreciated his mother’s defense and her running interference for him with his
father, he detested the recurring argument and he would withdraw to the
relative safety of his room. He could hear them on the porch as the
conversation deteriorated into a full-fledged argument about the pros and cons
of his work ethic and about his obligation to help out with expenses on the
home front.
“When I was his
age I was already working and helping my dad to put food on the table...” he
could hear his father begin. And on and on and on.
To drown out the
arguing, he would turn up his record player. At the time, his favorite was Jimi
Hendrix and soon, the psychedelic strains reverberated through the
neighborhood.
This time the
argument was too brief and he was suspicious when he heard the hesitant steps
of his mother on the wooden floors of their home directing herself toward his
room. His father’s car revving in their driveway and heading out in the road
meant he had gone out in a huff to nurse his penas at the Palm Lounge.
“Mi’jo,” she
said looking at the floor, “your dad is very angry and he told me to tell you
that unless you get a job, you may have to leave the house and fend for
yourself.” She wrung her hands and looked at the floor helplessly.
“I think this time
he means it,” she said, almost crying.
The thud of the
afternoon newspaper broke the gloomy silence that followed and Joe went out to
retrieve it. Quickly, he scanned the want ads and what he saw made his pulse
quicken.
There, in black
and white, was his salvation: “Wanted, zoo keeper for the Gladys Porter Zoo.
Apply in person starting tomorrow.”
He quickly
grabbed all the change he had in the Prince Albert tobacco can and counted out
enough to get a haircut.
At the Triangle
Barber Shop, the barber, Mr. Treviño, looked up surprised as Joe walked in. His
mouth dropped as Joe sat heavily in the swivel chair and asked for a haircut.
Sideburns to the middle of the ear and clear sidewalls, Joe told him.
Mr. Treviño went
to work with gusto. After years of having watched the neighborhood kids growing
their hair below their shoulders, he savored the feeling of chopping the bangs
and tresses off one of them. Seeing that getting this haircut was hurting Joe
only made him enjoy his job even more. He was circumspect and made no small
talk, afraid Joe might back out now that he had him where he wanted him.
No, he said to himself, it’s not every day I
get my hands on one of these hippies. Let’s not spook him.
The job was done
in less than 10 minutes and when Joe looked himself in the mirror he saw a
stranger staring back at him. Mr. Treviño held a hand mirror behind Joe’s head and made approving
noises.
“Ok, Joe?,” he
asked.
‘Yeah, sure,”
Joe murmured and handed the money to Mr. Treviño. He walked out into the hot
afternoon and felt conspicuous without the shock of hair hanging around his
head and neck. He felt a certain lightness and unconsciously tossed his head
expecting the weight of his tresses to weigh on his neck. Nothing happened.
He purposely
delayed getting home that evening until it was dark enough for him to enter
unnoticed into the house.
Early next
morning, he was dressed and gone before 8 a.m. He arrived at the zoo gates and
headed straight for the vestibule and presented himself to the attendant.
“Yes? May I help
you?,” she asked.
“I’m here about
the zoo keeper job,” Joe said and unfolded the newspaper.
“Oh, I’m sorry,”
replied the girl leafing through a thick black loose-leaf folder. “That job is
already taken.”
Joe was stunned.
“But its only a little after 8 in the morning. How can the job already have
been taken?”
“Someone came in
at 7:30 and got it,” she answered. “I can check again just to make sure.”
She leafed
through the binder and confirmed it. “Yep. Job’s gone. Sorry.”
“Oh, man,” Joe
said. “I really needed that job. Now what am I going to do?”
The attendant
shrugged her shoulders and made sympathetic noises. She closed the binder.
Joe looked
quickly at the black folder and asked, “Is that the list of jobs you have
available here?”
“Yes,” answered
the attendant absent-mindedly.
“Have you got
anything else there?,” he asked hopefully.
The clerk opened
the binder and looked through the rows of listings. “Mmm, no, no. Oh, here’s
one. But I don’t think you’d fit this...”
“What is it?,”
asked Joe. “I’ll take anything.”
“We have an
opening for a biologist, a reptile specialist, and no, no...” she spoke under
her breath as she looked. “Oh, wait, you’re about the right size, but no...”
“What is it?
I’ll take anything. I’ll sweep the cages and clean the stalls.”
The clerk looked
around. Since the zoo didn’t open until 10 am., no one else other than Joe was
around the gates. She leaned close to the glass and talked in hushed tones.
“Well, there
is a job, but it’s for a chimpanzee,”
she said looking around again.
“A what? A
chimpanzee? You mean a chango?,” Joe asked disbelievingly. “You want me to work
as a monkey?”
“Not any kind of
monkey,” said the clerk. “A chimpanzee. You see, chimps are very expensive and
hard to buy on the world market. Sometimes the zoo just doesn’t have the money
to buy the chimps and bring them all the way from Africa...”
“But what are my
parents going to say when they find out I work as a chimpanzee at the zoo? They
would think I was crazy,” Joe protested.
“Oh, we wouldn’t
want anyone to know about this,” she said hurriedly. “You’d wear a zoo keeper’s
outfit home and to work. You’d change into a chimp’s outfit when you get here
and get to the exhibit through a service tunnel. That way no one would be the
wiser.”
Still
incredulous, Joe looked at the woman and squinted his eyes. “You wouldn’t be
pulling my leg, would you, m’am? I’m serious about getting a job. You shouldn’t
joke with me like that.”
“Oh, I’m
perfectly serious,” said the woman. “We’ll have to make you sign a form where
you promise no one else will know about this arrangement.”
“And just how
much does this job pay?,” Joe asked, now finally starting to believe the clerk.
“Same as a zoo
keeper,” the woman responded. “Interested?”
“Well, yeah, I
guess,” Joe said.
“Fine. When you
come in tomorrow morning go to the dressing room behind the gorilla cages and
put on the outfit. There’s zoo keeper outfit's there, too. I’ll need you to sign
some income tax forms and you’ll be on your way. You can take an extra uniform
home if you wish,” she said. “Sign here.”
Joe couldn’t
resist putting on the spiffy khaki uniform with brown trimming and wore it home
that very morning. He pranced down Ringgold Street and turned left at Palm
Blvd. He turned right on Monroe and walked into the house.
His mother was
visibly pleased as he walked in with this smartly creased pants and shirt.
“Mi’jo,” you got
a job,” she said drying her hands on her apron and giving him a hug. “Look,
Mauricio,” she called out to her husband, “Joe’s got a job!”
His dad came out
from the bathroom and into the living room and looked at Joe grudgingly.
“About time,” he
said, although he could not contain a hint of pride in his voice.
His mother
quickly made him breakfast and went outdoors to hang the wash. She couldn’t
wait to tell her next door neighbor Doña Berta about Joe’s new job. The word
soon spread through the neighborhood clotheslines network as if by telegraph.
“I knew my son
was a good worker,” his mother had told Doña Berta. “You should see him in his
uniform.”
Joe started
working the next day and after a few days the daily routine became commonplace.
He would go to the zoo, take off his zoo keeper’s uniform, slip on the
chimpanzee outfit, and slip into the monkey moat through the tunnels used to
carry water and food to the beasts.
For the first
week he got along famously with the rest of the chimps. Stretched out on a low
tree limb, he would munch on bananas and stare back at the tourists when they
came by the simian exhibit.
“They look so much like humans,” some would
say and throw peanuts at him.
When he got his
first paycheck, Joe took his beaming parents to eat at a local cafeteria. At
the cash register, he peeled off a crisp $20 bill and paid for the meal. He
puffed expansively as his proud mother stood by his side.
It was toward
the third week of working at the zoo that the incident occurred. Things were
going great when he heard the chimps and other monkeys screeching and running
pell-mell in the trees and up the ropes. Looking up in surprise, he saw that a
lion had managed to leap over the moat separating the exhibits and was running
directly toward him.
He didn’t have a
chance, and before he knew it, the huge cat had a paw on his chest and roared
loudly as Joe struggled to free himself.
Scared, he began
to scream.
“Help! Help!,”
he shouted. "Ayuda! Ayuda!"At the far end of the walk, a few tourists half-turned to see what
the commotion was about.
The lion, with a
deep roar from above him, suddenly turned down toward Joe and a human voice said,
“No hagas pedo. (Shut up!) Yo tambien cameo aqui! ( Don’t mess it up for all of us. I work here, too.”)
3 comments:
On the contrary, Chimps say that Judges are not Human too.
Is that Da Mayor slurping his bone? No, it's the Chimp disguised as Da Mayor,
Excellent!
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