Bill expects to get paid, but does not. |
Billfold Bill, nicknamed Dental because when he smiled teeth commanded his countenance, worked like a Tasmanian Devil in Jen’s yard, uprooting bushes, raking soil, transplanting coleus and edging in geometric neatness. If laziness was the moss beneath sandstone slabs, then Bill was a sunflower reaching for the sky. Levon, Levon likes his money, Bill hummed an Elton John song, subbing Billfold for Levon, maintaining a flush- free face—I will get paid for my work, Bill asserted to himself as A.M. sun blazed, and beads of sweat flowed like salty jet-skiers down and across his aquiline nose. Bill’s confidence dug in deep, like the tined rake on black mulch. He mind-counted money he had not yet received, then leveled mounds of mulch to an evenness allowed by such clumpy material. Bill grinned sinfully; even the sun blinked. He hauled two granite stones from a faraway flower bed to accentuate all the coleus and mulch. Then he was done; his fingers itched, his hamstrings whined as Bill gnawed gum tree bark then spat it out, all the while trekking through wet grass. His rubber boots flopped and rubbed heels the wrong way. He pulled a green cart which carried tools and yellow bucket. Bill laughed, ignored sore; sang Levon. But he received no money that day—not for his work, nor for the mulch. Instead, he got hot dogs, baked beans and sunflower seeds. His smile absent, Billfold Bill burned, basically. Driving home, he began to sing Rocket Man. 40 Lines Writer’s Cramp 6-29-19 |