FRESH
YARN presents:
First
They Came for the Dogs, But I Was Not a Dog
By Albert Stern
I
heard the dog howling downstairs on one of those sticky midsummer nights
in New York City that feels like an air conditioner is in your window
backwards. If you happen to be too stubborn or, like me and most of my
neighbors on West 107th Street back in the mid-1980s, too poor to cool
your apartment, home is where the hot is. On that type of summer night
in that type of neighborhood, tempers flare, tepid grievances boil over,
and the only response to a new affront that might seem to make sense was
a decisive spasm of violence. It was the kind of night that a person might
decide he'd had enough of that goddamn dog, trick it into thinking it
was being taken for a walk, and then leave its sorry ass outside to fend
for itself.
At least that was my theory of what happened to the obviously large animal
out on the street six floors below my bedroom window. At about three in
the morning, its cries -- as determined as they were distressed -- roused
me from fitful summer slumber. The dog seemed fixed on the entrance to
my building, perhaps because it was accustomed to that door always opening.
Now the door would not open, and the dog did not know enough about the
world to go anywhere else, say, to a friend's apartment. Really, where
else would a dog think to go except home?
After less than a minute of nonstop barking, I heard the first canine
rejoinders, the ululations of outraged yip dogs. Then the bigger dogs
chimed in. Within minutes, seemingly every dog on the block -- and there
were dozens -- was at a window and howling. Then, the first shouted obscenity,
indicating that my neighbors had been roused to action. Now we had a situation.
Back then, West 107th Street between Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue was
gentrifying out of its incarnation as a largely Hispanic enclave. If you
took the long view, it wasn't hard to see the promise -- the Upper West
Side was moving uptown, Columbia University was moving downtown, and Riverside
Drive to the west was solidly affluent. But there were problems from the
east. Around the corner from me, Amsterdam Avenue was dotted with storefronts
that openly sold nickel and dime bags of marijuana, marked outside by
signs that read "School Supplies" and lined inside by black
light posters depicting the signs of the zodiac and positions of gymnastic
Afro-love. The illegal betting parlors operating on the avenue for some
reason all had hair dryers and other grooming products in the windows.
There were at least two red-and-yellow awning bodegas per block doing
brisk business selling big bottles of cheap, strong beer and sub-Hostess
quality snack cakes.
Things started to change after a turf war arson attack left the biggest
(and, truth be told, the best) marijuana shop a burnt out shell, and two
murders were committed on West 109th Street. In one night, the police
raided all the pot shops, part of a larger effort to isolate the crack
bazaar that had started to flourish two avenues east on West 107th near
Manhattan Avenue (a corner given the moniker "Crack Street"
in the CBS Reports documentary that alerted the nation to the burgeoning
rock cocaine menace). With this type of action a part of daily life, a
denizen of West 107th Street could not help but become accustomed to small
and ugly "situations" like the one unfolding downstairs with
the dog.
The economic, social, educational, ethnic, and psychopharmacological barriers
that divided the residents of my block made intermingling problematic.
The closest thing to a block party was the Fourth of July, always the
biggest night of the year, when the locals would conduct their own explosives
show that made children weep and sent dogs and cats scurrying under beds
and into closets. Even the cops passing by knew to keep their windows
rolled up tight to deflect the M-80s hurled at them from inside the buildings.
It was a sign of how downtrodden the area had become that my sallow white
face could have been construed, as I was told it was by some, as a harbinger
of better days. I moved to the block because Columbia University, New
York's third largest landlord, refused to provide housing to transfer
students, effectively exiling me from the student life that I needed to
immerse myself into, as it was also one year after my mother died. I did
not have the money, heart, or imagination to decorate a big one-bedroom
apartment, and after a point, only the absence of a hanging tire swing
distinguished it from a zoo monkey's habitat. I would abandon it as soon
as I could imagine the existence of a life unbounded by claustrophobic
bleakness. I would put down no roots. I would not become part of a community.
I would gentrify nothing. I would even have disappointed a dog.
Case in point, the dog howling downstairs. Although its cries were becoming
increasingly desperate as the din of barking and shouting intensified,
the thought of trying to help never entered my mind. The next day, the
excuses I formulated revolved around the late hour, the abruptness of
the incident, and my feeling that I've always been more of a cat person.
But the real reason was the New Yorker's reflexive cop out -- the dog
was none of my business and someone else would take care of it, or someone
wouldn't, but whatever happened, the unfortunate situation unfolding below
my window would soon be over and, in that case, all's well that ends.
For most of us living in this city, squandering opportunities to advance
one's karmic standing is a matter of habit and self-preservation, to some
a point of pride. So maybe it wasn't realistic to expect more compassion
from the residents of West 107th Street on a hot summer night, though
unto us a dog was barking.
For the most part, the people living on my block simply coexisted, protected
by the great walls New Yorkers erect to prevent sensory and emotional
overload, and practiced in pretending that hosts of human beings existed
only hypothetically. Just because we were indifferent, however, did not
mean we were not alert and ready to act. Consider the time I had a Swedish
houseguest, a woman who would later go on to become one of Key West's
most popular ecdysiasts. A take-it-all-off sort even then, she walked
naked into the living room, and I went into the bedroom she had just left.
The shades were wide open, and I noticed four men in the building across
the street at their windows - one was watering his plants, another shaking
out a mat, one was having a smoke, and the last just enjoying a breath
of fresh air. As I came into view, all four heads snapped toward me and
then simultaneously turned away when it was clear I wasn't the naked blonde.
Those
fellows were part of the faceless mass that comprises the majority of
one's New York neighbors. Some neighbors, though, get one step closer.
You may be aware of them, but you don't know who exactly they are -- for
example, the couple whose bloodcurdling arguments resonate in the airshaft,
the fellow who regularly messes up the garbage room, or the enraged individuals
screaming at a yelping dog in the middle of the night. Though this type
of neighbor mostly stays anonymous, sometimes, if the opportunity presents
itself, they might intrude on your life more directly. For me it happened
one year after my tax refund was late. When I inquired about it to the
IRS, I was informed by mail that my refund had been paid; attached was
a copy of the canceled check, which was endorsed by Sidney Stern. I went
straight to the phone book and looked up Sidney Stern. He lived two entrances
away in the same block of flats.
So I called him up and said: "Sidney -- it's Albert Stern. The guy
down the block whose IRS check you cashed."
"I don't know what you're talking about," said Sidney, who did.
"Sidney," I said -- I don't know why, but it was fun saying
'Sidney' -- "you've got my money and I want it."
"I don't know what you're talking about," he repeated. "If
you call me again, I'm going to call the police." Click.
So I tore out the page from the phone book, highlighted Sidney Stern's
name, wrote a brief explanation to the tax auditor of what I thought happened,
and sent the material off to the IRS. In a few months, I got a check.
Sidney, I assume, got some grief. For years after, I would sometimes walk
down West 107th Street wondering whether a man I passed might be sneaky
Sidney Stern.
Then there are those neighbors about whom you glean one or two things
that are not obvious and maybe products of your imagination. Like the
bearded guy whom I had never seen with another person. One day, I entered
the garbage room and found it stacked from floor to ceiling with pornographic
magazines -- literally thousands of them. In a few days, I noticed that
the bearded guy was in the company of a pretty middle-aged Asian woman
who, it became apparent, was living in the apartment with him. In time,
they became one of the jolliest couples I have ever encountered. My fantasy
was that she was his mail order bride, and I still cling to it only so
I can say that I have in my repertoire a happy story about a lonely wanker
made joyful by a mail order bride from the Far East.
And finally, there are the neighbors who will not be ignored. Foremost
among them was Mrs. Weissman, the jewel of block, who, along with her
husband, represented the last of the Eastern European immigrants who once
predominated. Her people's era on West 107th long since past, Mrs. Weissman
had no fondness for the coarse new crowd, and in truth, was a kind of
pitiable figure -- a yenta who had lost her nosiness. Seeing her walk
without interest down the block (despite being surrounded by all sorts
of goings on that were none of her business) was sad, sort of akin to
seeing Gene Kelly in the film Xanadu or Willie Mays in a Mets uniform.
Mrs. Weissman, desperately wanting me to be a nice Jewish boy, took me
under her wing. "Take orange to eat!" she'd enjoin me if we
happened to pass as she came back from the market; "Come upstairs
for tea and cookie!" if she encountered me walking alone. She spoke
five languages (English, Yiddish, Hebrew, Russian, and Polish), often
in the same sentence. "And then
and bedziemy twoja rodzina na zawsze in the ."
I remember her saying, "Yeah and makheteyneste so I
over there. Furshtaisht? You understand? Because they are vildeh
chayehs." Wild animals. Those were the words she kept coming
back to as she'd point at the lightly-parented urchins, the young men
and women with all the time in the world to hang out, and the council
of elders who sipped beer from 8-ounce cans outdoors from April through
October. "All a bunch of vildeh chayehs -- vildeh, vildeh,
vildeh chayehs."
A person like Mrs. Weissman would not have been surprised by the neighbors'
furious reaction to a cast-off dog's barking in the middle of the night
-- "Look with your own eyes at what goes on with them," I could
imagine her saying, "then tell me what you'd expect." Mrs. Weissman
survived Nazi persecution and fled Eastern Europe in the mid-1950s, and
might have shared an attitude toward neighbors that I learned from Mr.
Schwartz, who lived next door to me when I was growing up in Miami Beach.
He made it out of Auschwitz, and his attitude about neighbors could be
summed up as: "Neighbors are the people who are dividing up your
possessions in their heads as the police are taking you away." Actually,
he never said anything of the sort -- his wife, who hadn't been in a concentration
camp but acted like she had, was the one who actually voiced those sentiments.
But I'd always felt that she had them on good authority.
The message drilled into me as a child was that even if you don't know
your neighbors, you can be pretty well certain that they're up to something.
Watch yourself. Mrs. Schwartz also sometimes mentioned that her husband
would never own a dog because of the way he had seen them tear apart prisoners
in the camps. At the command of their human handlers, those dogs performed
good or evil acts indiscriminately -- and as long as they were fed, they
were just as happy. So don't trust dogs, either.
The
canine demographic on West 107th Street was as starkly differentiated
as that of the human residents -- the gentrifiers' dogs seemed largely
to be spoiled, lovable nimrods of all sizes, while the locals kept Pit
Bulls, Rottweillers, Dobermans, and mongrels that were some conglomeration
of the three breeds. Bedecked in chains and leather studded collars, their
ears hacked down to nubs, these dogs served as accoutrements in the young
locals' tireless cultivation of their personal menace. The hounds were
working animals, occupying the same function as a six-shooter on the hip
of a Wild West gunslinger.
As the men got older, a woman's influence sometimes softened at least
the canine profile, usually via a cute lapdog to complement hubby's Cujo.
Case in point was my building super. He owned a behemoth named Wolf, a
massive Doberman with the miles-away stare of a soldier who has seen too
much, while his wife doted on Floffy, a white toy poodle with a skin condition.
In one of life's ready-made ironies, Floffy was a vicious heel nipper,
while Wolf was a soulful creature who would commiserate with me every
time I came down to do my laundry, nuzzling his head into my lap while
I succumbed to the irresistible charms of the gentle giant and fretted
over the safety of the future generations.
In and of itself, the idea that one of these monsters might be crying
like a helpless puppy six floors below me beggared the imagination. All
dogs go to heaven, sure, but hearing one of these inbred thick-necked
behemoths genetically engineered to maim having its doggie heart broken
left me uncertain about how to feel. It was as if I'd just found out something
like, I don't know -- that Stalin was extremely ticklish. But if my heart
didn't quite go out to the poor creature, neither did I think there was
a point in cursing it at the top of my lungs. Like my neighbors did on
that hot summer night.
The din of howling dogs was joined by the chorus of outraged apartment
dwellers, their obscenities hurled scattershot at the dog downstairs,
the dog owners who couldn't keep their animals quiet, and the people yelling
for everyone to shut up. The malice of their invective was unsurprising
-- after years of passing by my neighbors on the street and catching repetitious
snippets of their conversations, I was convinced that many of them had
as little choice in expressing themselves by saying "fuck" as
their dogs had in saying "woof." And so the cacophony built,
dogs and neighbors screaming at the street and at each other; throughout,
I could hear the plaintive "rooooooooooooooooooooooo!" of the
dog downstairs.
Then the first bottle broke. It registered as sharply as a slap, and shocked
the human voices silent. But only for a second. The shouting started again,
but this time intermingled with sounds of laughter. Then the second bottle
broke. Then the third and the fourth. And then bottles started to rain
down from the open windows toward the front entrance of my building. For
over minute, I could hear nothing but shattering glass and rageful human
screams, the noise drowning out the canine howling. At least two or three
of these screams were deep, guttural, and sustained -- opportunistic eruptions
of explosive rage.
When there were no more bottles to be thrown, laughter echoed on West
107th Street, along with the sounds of dog owners admonishing their pets
to be quiet and get back to sleep. The dog downstairs was silent.
Groggy from lack of sleep, I emerged from my building the next morning
and looked for bloodstains on the sidewalk. I found none, just shattered
bottles surrounding the huge turd just outside the vestibule. I barely
missed stepping in it. The shit was piled up high in a shapeless heap
rather than a tidy sausage shape, and stood like a stele marking the dog's
betrayal and terror.
As I returned with a cup of coffee about five minutes later, the morning
sun shone on the shards covering the sidewalk after the night's barrage.
The light at that angle made the glass sparkle, transforming West 107th
between Broadway and Amsterdam into the embodiment of an immigrant like
Mrs. Weissman's dream of America the goldeneh medinah, a land where
the streets are paved with treasures. Another image was of a German streetscape
on the morning after Kristallnacht, only this time the rabble had
turned against a dog -- but I was not a dog and I said nothing. The glittering
path ended at the shit pile that, in the time I was gone, had been parted
in two by a footprint. It was a dead center hit -- the foot must have
gone heavy into the pile, and right up to the ankle.
And I thought, good for you, doggie -- you made what you could out of
your Kitty Genovese moment. Good luck with the challenges ahead. I certainly
let you down, leaving you to the wild animals like that.
I looked up at the buildings lining my block. In the quiet morning hours,
the street was de Chirico empty. But inside were my neighbors, without
question all up to something.
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