Showing posts with label Rebar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rebar. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

The First Day a chapter from my novel Willie


Willie
            Life is hard.  My father tried to protect me from the world, but also knew that one day I would have to stand up and fight.  My life up to that point was one of swimming pools, ice cream and ponies.  I was thirteen years old and the hardest thing I had ever encountered was not being chosen for basketball or loosing at monopoly. 
            I was sitting in the living room on the big brown couch with my father watching television.  Most of my friends had paper routes and always had pocket money.  I wanted a summer job.
“Dad”
“Yes son”
“I was wondering if you might have some work for me?”
“Well, we could use someone picking up the wire down at the fab yard.”
            My father owned a rebar fabrication yard in South Phoenix.  Rebar is, sort of, the skeleton of a concrete building or structure.  In the office, detailers take the architectural drawings and figure out what load and stresses will be on the various components of the building.  They design a rebar frame that is engineered to meet that load.  They create a set of plans and cut sheets that list the quantities and various lengths or shapes needed to build the columns, beams or floors in the high-rises, bridges, dams, power plants or whatever is being built.  The fab yard then takes stock lengths of rebar, cuts and bends it into the required lengths and shapes.  It is then loaded onto trucks and shipped out to the construction site. 
            I remember thinking ‘how hard could that be?’
I said, “Thanks dad, that would be great!”
            “Okay Joey, get some sleep and I’ll wake you up.  We leave at four.”
            “Four!”  I had never got up that early.  “What time do they start?”
            “At five, it gets hot early”
            The next morning while we were riding to work, he gave me a little talk. 
“Joey these guys are real men, they don’t screw around.  They don’t want to be your friend; they just want to get the work done.”  He went on, “It’s been my experience that in life there’s always a whip.  It will either be in your boss’s hand or in your own head.  Trust me it’s a lot easier if you hold the whip.”
            We got out of the car, on the oil-covered dirt road, in South Phoenix’s old industrial district.  I was sticky and sweating and the sun wasn’t even up yet.  There’s a smell in that part of town, chemical, steel, iron, dirt, sweat, and the smell of years of men working on the same piece of sun-baked ground.
            A few minutes later an old truck pulled up and a short unassuming man in his mid-forties got out.  He was wearing a faded yellow cowboy shirt and had a friendly little smile on his face.
Yawning and stretching he mumbled, “Morning Joe” 
“Good morning Chuck, Joey this is Mr. Reeves.
“Good morning Mr. Reeves.”
“You can call me Chuck, Joey, It’s nice to meet you”
Then my dad asked if I had any money.  I said, “no”. 
“Well, here’s a few bucks, A truck will come around at nine and then again at noon.  The foods not too bad.  Don’t eat too much in this heat, it will make you sick.  I’ll pick you up at two.”  He knew I was a little nervous and added, “Just do what Chuck tells you… you’ll be fine!”  Then he got back in his car.  Chuck and I watched as he drove down the street to the old two-story, red brick house that served as his office.
As soon as he was out of sight, Chuck turned to me.  The kindly look on his face had disappeared.  With more anger than I had ever encountered, starring a hole right through me, he screamed, but he did so without raising his voice.
“Listen to me you little mother fucker, your daddy might have gotten you this god damn job, but he can’t keep it for you.  Where are your fuckin hand shoes?” 
“What?” I squeaked out. 
“Your hand shoes… your gloves goddamn it.  You little son of a bitch, you show up on my time without your fucking tools.  Ya know, I don’t give a rat’s ass… when your hands look like raw fucking hamburger go whine to someone else.  Are you going to stand here bullshitting all day or are you here to work?” 
I tried to answer but before I could he went on,
“I want every fuckin piece of wire in that yard in that dumpster before the end of the day.”
In the fab yard they received up to ten trucks loaded with forty thousand pounds of steel each, every day.  The bundles are tied together with rusty wire called bundle wire.  It’s as thick as a pencil, so thick I couldn’t even bend it.   All this wire is cut off the bundles and tossed into piles, after the cutting and bending the rebar is retied into smaller bundles and shipped to the job site.  Wire is the lifeblood of a steel yard.  Needless to say it would be impossible for one person, let alone a thirteen-year-old boy, to keep ahead of the piles and piles of rusty wire generated everyday. 
I had no idea what I had done to make Chuck so mad, and I didn’t want to find out. I started picking up wire as fast as I could.  The bundle wire looks like big spiders about a foot across and the tips of the legs are razor sharp.  They get all tangled together and I had too pull as hard as I could to get them free.  On the second or third bunch, as it broke loose it sliced deep into the palm of my hand.  The blood oozed, and I howled, “I’m cut, I’m cut… Chuck help, help!!!  I’m cut.”  Chuck came running over.  “Let me see… Well shit boy you aren’t hurt, what kind of a pussy are you? You aren’t fuckin lucky enough to die… Get your ass back to work!”  I was crying, scared to death and quite sure I would need stitches, when the biggest man I had ever seen walked over and handed me a brand new pair of White Mule leather work gloves. 
            He was about six two, two hundred and fifty pounds, not a drop of fat with reddish blond hair, a sunburned face and steel grey eyes.  He stuck out his huge hand and as he grabbed mine he smiled and said “Hey kid, give those a try… my names Willie!”

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Out a chapter from my novel "Willie"




Today is my father's birthday.  He died four years ago on July 4th.  I'm working on a novel about my days as a rod buster.  I thought dad would like this chapter.  Happy Birthday dad!

 Out
A chapter from my novel "Willie"
Joe Daigneault  


I show up, as usual, twenty minutes before the rest of the crew.  The sky to the east is just starting to lighten a bit.  It’s still too dark to see.  I go over the sheets, layout the rigging, set up the torch and check the wire.  Today we’re finishing a six-barrel, box culvert in the desert just outside of Whitman.  As the crew shows up I drink that last cup of coffee and pop four 500mg Tylenol. 
 Kenny, an ex-bull rider turned-Christian-speed-freak, who is now the Super, wonders over.  “What do ya need, Joe?”
“When’s the pour?”
“At one.”
“Well, I could use two men and three punks.”
“I’ll give you black Howard and two new skins.”
“How fresh?”
“Right out of the box… just came off the rez yesterday and Joe, don’t kill em we’re short on help.”
“Okay but we’ll be chasing it, see if you can’t get me a few more.”
“Billy T called and said the office was sending out some new guy and they said he was only to work with you!”
“Call those assholes back and tell them, if they want me to baby-sit, they need to tack 50 cents an hour on to my check and send out a few cases of Pampers.”
“Either way, it’s gotta pour, so it’s assholes and elbows!”
“Amen to that.”
Kenny walks over to an old truck.  Two young Indians get out.  He points me out; they put on their brand new, tool belts and walk over quickly.
I say, Yah teh hey apena, denez (Good morning, Navajos.)
The older one replies, Yah teh hey, hostein (Hello Boss.)
About the same time, Howard, a huge, scary, midnight black, man, with a two inch wide scar running across his face, walks over, and growls, “Good morning, you fat, white, piece of dog shit”
“Morning fudge blossom!  If your all done with the sweet talk, why don’t you get these guys loading in that bottom and I’ll lay it out.  Oh, and Kenny says if you break em, you buy em.  So play nice.”
Howard walks over to the iron pile and starts shaking out the rods.  I tell the Indians “Just do what that big black guy over there tells you, keep your hands on the Rebe, don’t slow down and you’ll be fine.”
The older one says in broken English, “Wha happen to his face?”
I’m tempted to lay some bullshit story about a knife fight in the ghetto on them, but decide against it.  “Well, when He was twelve, down in Morenci, he and his little brother stole the limo at his sister’s wedding.  Shit, they were just two little black kids that had never seen a Cadillac that big before… going for a fucking joy ride. They made it about a mile before Howard wrapped the car around a big old oak tree.  Howard went through the front window.  His little brother was crippled for life.  He’s every bit as mean as he looks… so I’d leave it alone.” Nodding my head toward the iron I say, “Get to it!”
Howard picks up four of the 35 pound, number seven hook bars.  They are 12 feet long, with a six-foot tail.  Howard is tall enough to rest the bars on his shoulder as he carries them out to be placed in the box.  Unfortunately, the Indians are only about five feet tall, so they hold the bars over their heads as they walk.  Both try three bars and make it about ten feet before their arms give out.  The bars go tumbling to the ground.  Howard storms over and starts screaming.
“You clumsy, gut eating, cock-suckers.  Are you fucker’s lazy or just plain stupid?  That’s a good way to end up in the hospital.  If you’re too fucking short to carry these by yourselves then team up. I don’t want to see you carrying less than five of those ‘Chingaderas’ all fuckin day… And don’t let that fat, white, son of a bitch over there run out of iron, I don’t want to hear it!”
As Howard and the Indians pack the rods in I set them into place.  Working as fast as I can I tie the bars together by wrapping the wire around them, where they come together.  Then I cinch them tight by pulling and twisting the wire at the same time with my hands.  Another quick twist with my pliers then I cut the wire short.  There’s no time to be careful, so about every five minutes I accidentally run my knuckles or forearm across the razor sharp wire.  After twenty minutes, my arm drips blood and will do so for the rest of the day.  I’m so use to getting cut that I don’t even flinch anymore.  If it feels too deep, I just check quickly to see if it needs stitches. 
Around nine, an orange Toyota pickup pulls up.  An old Mexican, wearing thick prescription sunglasses, gets out.  He’s the field superintendent. 
He asks me, “Hot enough for ya Joey?”  I’m hot and sweating. it’s around 110°. 
“Hey Billy T… no, but don’t worry we’re suppose to hit 118° this afternoon.  How’s that A-C been treating you?” At 118°the average guy will make it about twenty minutes before he starts puking.  When it’s that hot, people die from heat exhaustion.
“The A-C’sFine… just fine.  Come on up out of there I need a word with you.” 
“Look, I got a pour at three and my ears work fine, so just speak up.”
“Hey… get you ass out of that hole NOW!… I need to talk with you about this guy the office is sending out.”
I’ve worked around Billy T all my life; he has a look of concern on his face that really grabs my attention, so I tell Howard,  “Hey, take over.”
When I get up top, Billy T. says, “Do you remember a huge con that worked down at the yard. The FBI came in and scooped him up one day about eight years ago?”
“Yeah, I remember him.  His name was Willie.  I used to work with him when I was a kid… Why?”
“He’s out and coming here. Apparently, they were so afraid of him down at Florence that he’s been in solitary for the past six years.  I guess he beat three guys to death… three guys with knives!”
“So why’s he out?”
“No one left to testify, but he did the did the rest of his time in the box.  They let him out for one hour a month to walk around in a cage in the sunlight, wearing shackles with two armed guards watching. Your old man gave him a job, so he made parole.  No General population for him.  They took him out of solitary this morning and put him directly on the bus.  He’s a little spooky.  The office told me to give him to you… keep a fucking leash on him.  There’s a tool belt for him in the back of my truck.  Tell him I’ll take it out of his first check.”
“Will do.”
Billy T drives away and I get back at it. 
Around eleven, I look up from the hole and there he is in brand new, Levis, boots and a white tee shirt.  Just as big as I remember, except he’s as white as a ghost from being indoors… no sunlight.
“I’m looking for Joey Daigneault,” he says.
“Well Willie, that would be me.  How the fuck are you?”
He smiles that big, shit eating, Willie grin and says. “Fine as frogs hair, boy… I’ll be, look at you.  You grew up!