Sam and Matt are regulars at Pete's - a seedy bar for drinking and not much else. Trains pass every half hour on the three sets of tracks behind the building. Occasionally a crew parks a locomotive near and have a drink, the rumbling engine shaking the building the whole time.
They are into the third whiskey of afternoon, just a few other men not making much conversation at the other end of the bar, when a new fellow walks in with a bit of a limp and an empty sleeve. He might have been lost. He sure didn't seem like the typical customer here - a little dirtier, a little more down and out.
"Cheap whiskey," he calls to the bartender.
It was a good thing since there aren't many other drinks served other than a cold draft beer without a brand. He takes a stool alone, shifting his well-worn Wrangler jeans until his bottom is firmly on the worn red vinyl of the seat. The long sleeve doesn't move as he leans the other elbow on the bar before drumming his fingers nervously a few times.
"You're new," the bartender quizzes, sitting the glass close to the guys hand.
"Yeah, looked like a fine place to have a drink." He chuckles, hefting the glass to his lips and sipping.
"Good one. You got a name." He flips a dirty white bar towel over his shoulder.
"Conrad. And you are?"
"Max."
He turns slightly and introduces Sam and Matt, because they are closer. He ignores the others and they ignore the introductions. After rinsing another glass, he wipes it for a few minutes as if trying to wear it out. He had seen his share of amputees - veterans, drunks, homeless. Even a few that had tangled with a train.
Conrad finishes the drink and sits for a moment staring at Max and the other two men. "Another," he says, wiping his lips with the back of the hand.
The bartender refills the glass and stands gripping the bottle resting on the well-worn bar. "Live around here?" He pushes away the money offered for the second drink sensing the man's lack of employment.
"Just passin' through." He sips the new drink. "Know where I can find a woman?"
"Maybe." Max begins drying another freshly washed glass.
"Hook him up with Sally," Sam says, and then laughs.
"What's wrong with her?" Conrad quizzes.
"She wears a hook," Max says with a bit of a chuckle. "Sam's got a twisted sense of humor."
"Good one." Conrad chuckles then sips again. "I wouldn't mind." For the first time he moves the arm stump flipping the empty sleeve. It appears the arm might end above the elbow. Finally, the sleeve becomes still.
"Tuff luck." Max groans. "Your leg too?"
"Uh-huh...above the knee. It's okay."
"I won't ask." He scribbles on a notepad and hands Conrad the page. "She's not a raging beauty, but she's good. If you get my drift."
"Expensive?" Conrad forces the paper into his shirt pocket the finishes the drink.
"No fixed price. She'll work a deal." Max stares at the empty sleeve. "For you, maybe free."
"Free is good." He stands and wipes the hand on his jeans, staring a moment at Max. "Thanks. I'll probably be back another day."
Conrad walks from the darkness of the bar into the bright sunlight, it had been overcast with a little drizzle. Shielding his eyes with the hand, his eyes gradually adjust. The broken sidewalk makes it difficult to walk as he goes towards the river to kill time. Since losing his job, time is something he has plenty of these days. The flophouse is the last place he wishes to be, but that is better than a cardboard box under a bridge, even if showers cost extra.
"Baby, you want a date?" the black hooker with little fabric over large breasts asks.
"Got no money."
"I hear ya," she sings turning away, the long black legs extending from pink hot pants wrapped around chubby hips.
He walks a short distance puzzling over how bad business must be to proposition him. Since the arm amputation, he had not been with a woman and he misses the warm feel of someone next to him. It was unexpected that women would shun him. Not at all, as he imagined. Then the economy crashed and his six-figure lifestyle fell out from under him taking everything - nice apartment, nice car, television - everything. He had lived beyond his means, but the trip overseas and the surgery had been important.
The large oak tree with tended lawn often provides refuge for him and he returns once again to watch the large ships passing from wherever going to someplace better than here. He imagines panhandling for money to pay Sally - 'Twenty bucks for hooker with a hook'. He laughs, lying on his back trying to get comfortable in the shade.
He didn't speak the language over there very well, but the women had been beautiful. Several were missing limbs, mostly one leg though a few were missing an arm. He should have stayed. Living was cheaper. That was before the job and his life vanished. Thoughts of taking a tramp freighter back and lounging on the brown sands along the ocean fill his mind. Irma had treated him well with her chocolate skin and ample breasts. The short stump of her right leg was very nice as well. She had enjoyed his missing leg. That was before the arm came off. He'd wanted to find her on the second trip. He knew she was dead.
The kick of a boot in his side wakes him. He looks around to find the owner of the boot. "Can't sleep here," the cop says gruffly. "At least look like you're awake." He grunts then walks away, probably to roust another homeless person. At least the cop didn't arrest him. It wouldn't have been the first time. Jail was worse than being homeless.
He fingers the cover of the passport thinking of taking a long voyage. How can he put it together? There is no way for a man missing an arm 'and' a leg to work on a ship. These days, the lines for every job warp around the city. There isn't even enough food at the soup kitchens. His money nearly gone, the room at the flophouse will go next - again.
His shirt pocket is thick with the note from the bartender with the address of the corner where Sally hangs out waiting for customers. He only has a buck fifteen, saving that for tonight for a dollar meal at the burger stand. Maybe they could team up and hook together. He quickly dismisses that thought, brushing the grass from his pants.
The neighborhood is less seedy than around the bar or the flophouse, but still seedy. There are rundown warehouses in between businesses that have faded signs with illegible letters. How anyone could know what is inside these places is puzzling, but people do go in and out of a few. Maybe they are workers. He trudges along trying to ignore the pain caused by the ill-fitting socket of the prosthetic leg. His gait is worse with each step forcing him to sit on a bench at the bus stop for a moment.