Sam turned to look out the windows behind Silve’s stove. It was the best view in the city. It was no different from the dining room, four steps down, but it was still better in the kitchen. Elliott Bay lay below in darkness like ink spilled between the hills. Two ferries, each lit like a carnival, were about to pass each other farther out in
Puget Sound
. Lights traced the shorelines, near and far, in this hour before dawn. On the city side, the lights were bright, denying darkness altogether, but across the Sound there were fewer lights and not so bright, with wide stretches of darkness between them. It was still too dark to see the
Olympic Mountains
, but they would appear at first light, catching the sun before
“It’s chilly this morning,”
“Yes sir,” Silve replied, turning his back on the stove and joining
Sam agreed, but he was not sure what Silve meant. Did the change in the air have anything to do with them? Many times he had waited here with Silve for the morning, standing beside him with just the right degree of distance and closeness, imagining that no one else could come in his place. That wasn’t true, but he imagined it anyway.
“Do you ever get tired of owning this place?”
“Every day I think about quitting,” Silve said. “But what would I do? I don’t set an alarm in the morning. I wake up without it. If I didn’t have work, then I would lay there and look at the ceiling. It’s enough to look at the ceiling on Sunday when I’m closed.”
“It’s good to have a place to go.”
“Yes sir,” Silve said. “Coffee is ready. I left the morning paper on the table. All politics. Nobody agrees on anything.”
Sam walked down the steps to the dining room composed of six booths against the windows and four small tables on the opposite wall. He poured himself coffee and slid into the booth closest to the kitchen stairs. He unfolded the newspaper on the table and stood his portable radio out of the way beside the window. There seemed to be a lot going on everywhere, page after page in the newspaper and closer to him, calls dispatched by Radio. He felt lucky to be left alone, to sip fresh coffee in his isolated booth, and to listen to Silve at work up the stairs.
After reading the front section and the sports page, he put the paper back together the way he had found it and pushed it away. He unfastened the brass button of his shirt pocket and pulled out a folded sheet of paper. He smoothed it out on the table and read the title handwritten in ink, “
Softly, he read the words aloud, crossing out some and changing them with his pen. The voices from the radio drifted away, and the chopping sound of Silve’s knife and the periodic commotion of pans became a backdrop for his words. Words in the air. Words on paper. Words coaxed like prisoners from his mind that made him forget for a while the newspaper, and the radio, and the scavengers and predators and lost souls out on the street.
Nate the Breadman
Birdlike, he whistles endlessly his toneless single note
as hewalksshuffles
through the
openMmarket,
his goat feet swollen in short black shoes.
When strangers hear his whistle they stare
He whistles his coming, and strangers part and secretly stare
atNate the Breadman.the strange man
who passes, pushing a cart
full ofburdenedstacked carefully with
bread.
The fruit vendors and tT
hose who sell vegetables and fruit,
those who pile high the fish and ice it down,
those who
sweep the old wooden floors and
remove the trash,
those in blue shirts who keep the peace
or disturb it
call out to Nate the Breadman.
Hehas purpose andis not easily distracted.
His
warm,
strangled eyes stare straight ahead.
But all who have received hisglanceacknowledgment
in the cold morning air
listen for the coming of the Breadman
andcallcry out
for hisblessingbenediction.
There had been a time when he thought the words he wrote were important. He had even published a small book of the poems, a novelty that provoked interest among a few for a short time. Now without the illusion of importance, he tossed the new poems onto the others in the cardboard box in his closet. His one remaining book was buried there beneath the new words that covered it.
Silve came slowly down the stairs holding up his apron so that he would not trip.
“You write on the paper this morning.”
“Yes.”
“Maybe I should do that, too.”
“You would have interesting things to tell.”
“Yes. I tell my grandchildren stories, but know what they say? Papa, will you buy me a candy bar? That’s the story they want to hear.” He laughed loudly and more coffee spilled from his cup. When Silve laughed, he was likely to forget everything else.
“You should tell them what it was like in the
Philippines
.”
“They don’t want to hear about that. I should get them a candy bar. Put it on the table. Then they would listen.”
“That’s a good idea.”
“How is the coffee this morning?”
“It’s good, thanks.”
“You remember when your friends tricked me about the coffee?”
“I remember. It was a dirty trick.”
“No, it was a good trick,” Silve said. He was laughing again. “I spit it right out on the floor. They tell me, ‘Silve, there is something wrong with this coffee.’ I taste it and spit it on to the floor. I think maybe they will arrest me because there was something wrong with it, like poison. Then you told me what they did. You told me they put
Tabasco
in it because I gave them coffee left from the night before. I like that joke. We have fresh coffee now. Your friends don’t come so much anymore. Maybe they think my coffee is not good.”
“That’s not the reason. I like coming here alone.”
“You work on the paper then.”
“Yes, a little.”
“When I don’t bother you.”
“I would rather talk to you. If we don’t talk, then I have nothing to write down.”
“There’s nothing to write from what I say.”
“Sure there is,”
“Twenty-five years. I had another restaurant across the street before this one. But here I have been twenty-five years. It used to be just that little space up there.” Silve frowned and pointed past the wall that separated the kitchen from the dining room.
“There was a counter around the stove and eight stools. You ask, ‘How can you make any money with that?’ But there was just me, and my son comes on Saturday. The rent was nothing. What I make, I get to keep. Now there is all this.” He gestured to the dining room. His hand seemed small without the knife.
“They said if I stayed, I needed a bigger place. They rebuild this whole building. They brought me the plans. I thought, ‘Okay, I still have the restaurant.’ But now my old friends, if they want to talk, they have to stand in the kitchen or I come down here. It’s not the same.”
“I wish I had been here before,”
“Yes. Then you would know what I mean. They showed me plans what it would look like, but I don’t see it. Just a bunch of lines. My son said we should do it, but where is he? He doesn’t like to get up so early. He says we should make the adobo the night before. My old customers, they will taste it if I make it the night before, like your friends with the coffee. So he works somewhere else. There is no more money than before. It comes in but it goes for the rent, the loan, and the help when they show up. Everybody has the hand out. None of this can you see on their paper.”
The old man’s coffee grew cold as he sat in his restaurant thinking about the way it used to be.
“Excuse me, sir,” he said as he rose from the chair and picked up his cup. “I don’t mean to complain. Where would I go if I did not have this place? Now I must check in the kitchen.”
Before he left, the old man poured more coffee for
Sam sat for a while longer looking out the window. More cars were passing on the two-tiered viaduct below him. Alki Point was emerging across the bay like an apparition among the lights.
Radio announced that it was 0530.
“Time to go, sir?”
“Yes. Thank you for the coffee.”
“I see you later maybe,” Silve said. “Good oxtail today.”
Sam sniffed the rich smells from the kitchen—the meat simmering and the adobo sauce with its paprika and garlic. He was hungry already.
“Maybe so,”
“I think so,” Silve said. “I am ready if it comes. I hope your business is bad.”
Outside the door Sam waved once and headed up the ramp to Pike Place. He did not feel the chill of the air until he reached the top of the ramp. By then the warmth of Silve’s kitchen had left his skin. Daylight was coming close over the Market buildings.
Pike Place
remained deserted. His car was still alone on the street.
He knew there would be activity around the block on
First Avenue
. That street was never empty. A few weeks ago
Alberta
might have been walking to work down the street. Where would the baby have been? It did no good to think about them after they were gone.
He retrieved his jacket from the backseat of the car and walked slowly down
Pike Place
to the corner where it met
Pike Street
. Remaining close to the buildings on the north side, he found a dark spot in the shadows behind the columns of the Re(a)d and Green. It was a type of store only found in the Market, one that combined books and organic flowers. The columns were a favorite place to mount posters for the current week’s radical causes. He turned his radio off and from behind the posters looked across the street at the Donut Shop.
Three boys and two girls, teenagers, milled in front of it. They pushed and shoved each other like kids waiting for school to start. They were not waiting for school. They smoked and shivered and looked at slow passing cars but did nothing else. He turned the volume up on his radio and was about to return to his car when he noticed a boy standing alone on the opposite corner from the group of kids. The boy waited for the light to change. There were no cars, but he still waited. He wore an orange baseball cap and a blue windbreaker with the collar turned up. When the kids saw him, they drifted silently down the street away from him.
The boy crossed
Pike Street
when the light turned green. He went to the door of the Donut Shop and turned his back on it without trying to open it. He stood there for a while with his hands stuffed into his pockets and moved his legs to keep warm. He seemed to be waiting for someone. After three or four minutes, he left the door and started to walk back across the street the way he had come. The light changed to red, and the boy went back to the corner to wait. Such a very good boy,