As a fiction writer, Zev Bagel is about five
years old. As Warren Redman, he has been a youth worker, counsellor, life-coach
and leadership trainer. He has also published 17 books of non-fiction,
including Recipes for Inner Peace, Emotional Fitness Coaching and a
Canadian Award Winner – The 9 Steps to
Emotional Fitness.
Now, Zev Bagel has completed or has in
progress six novels, and has just been offered his first contract by a
publisher for one of them: Bernie Waxman
& the Whistling Kettle. In addition, he has been published in journals
and newspapers as well as two anthologies from the Breach House Gang, including
short stories, poems and excerpts from his novels.
He lives in Shediac, NB and is president of
the Writers’ Federation of New Brunswick.
Bernie Waxman & the Whistling Kettle
Excerpt (Chapter One)
a novel
by Zev Bagel
My grandfather
invented the whistling kettle. Some say it was Sholom Borgelman, who ran a
sheet metal plant in Whitechapel; but it was my grandfather, who lived at 52
Linthorpe Road, Stamford Hill. My father used to take me there on occasional
Sundays. We’d sit in his cold, draughty kitchen. My grandfather always wore the
same light brown dressing-gown stained with blobs of past meals and covered
with ash from the perpetual cigarette that bobbed up and down from his lips as
he spoke.
“Now who is this?” he’d ask as we
entered, lifting his chin high and drawing out the ‘who’ until it rose into the
air like the whistle from the steam kettle that he’d invented. He meant me. He
addressed my father, but he looked at me out of the corner of his eye. My toes
curled inside my socks until I felt the wool scratch the soles of my feet. My
face burned. My voice squeaked inside my chest and barely made it out of my
mouth. My father’s hand propelled me forward so that I stood with my knees
touching the rough cloth of his dressing-gown, my feet rubbing against the
gaping flaps of his slippers in which his toenails lurked.
“I’m Bernie.”
He’d stare at me, his eyebrows
raised, the matching toothbrush bristles of his moustache quivering.
“Bernard,” I’d add, by way of greater
clarity. But it was never enough.
“Bernie? Bernard? Bernie who?
Bernard whoom?” The shoulders lifted almost up to his cheeks, the elbows
clamped to his sides, the palms of his hands outstretched in utter
incomprehension.
“I’m Bernie Waxman.”
“Which Bernie Waxman would that be?”
Now his face came within inches of mine. Droplets of sweat shimmered among the
stubble on his face; nicotine-stained teeth gripped the cigarette. By now my
chest was heaving.
“I’m your grandson.”
“But I have so many grandsons.” The
‘so’ was another drawn-out steam whistle hovering around the room wraith-like
until it insinuated itself into my shivering body. The shivering was partly the
damp, chilly atmosphere of Grandpa’s kitchen, partly the agony of the
interrogation into my identity.
I couldn’t think of any other
grandsons. Were there others I didn’t know about? And how could there be
another one called Bernie Waxman? All I knew was that this happened every time,
stopping only when he rasped out a laugh that sputtered smoke and spittle into
my face.
Once my grandfather had tired of tormenting me
with his questions, he regaled my father and any of my uncles who happened to
be visiting with long rants that were either beyond my capacity to understand,
or were overshadowed by my shame at not being able to identify myself.
But I do remember the rants about
Sholom Borgelman.
“That momzer Borgelman,” he’d shout.
“He stole my idea, and then he applied for the patent, and can you believe what
he did? He fired me. Do you think I’d still be living in Stamford Hill if that
momzer hadn’t stolen my idea? Every household had one. I’d be a millionaire.
Like my brothers; my good-for-nothing lucky momzer brothers.”
That was usually the cue for Grandma
Waxman to tear into the kitchen and screech like a demented parrot.
“Meyer,
Meyer, stop swearing in front of the boy. Bernie, go upstairs and find your
Uncle Gerald. He has a new accordion. Go and play with him.”
Uncle Gerald wasn’t really an uncle.
For a start, he was twelve and still wore short trousers. Also, he was my
father’s half-brother, so he was only half an uncle. And he was disgusting.
It was 1946. I’d hardly seen Grandpa and Grandma Waxman, or the half-an-uncle Gerald in the previous six years, which was my entire life. Now I was getting far more than I wanted. Blasts of information hurtled around the room, especially when the rest of my uncles, the real ones, were crammed into the kitchen in Linthorpe Road. The brief forays into the whistling kettle held my attention; but as well as my grandfather’s perorations, the stories, dramas and intrigues that bounced about like ping-pong balls at a country fair must have clung to me as though I wore sticky tape on the outside of my brain.
The scene is Meyer
Waxman’s kitchen.
Nicotine-coloured paint flakes off
the walls. The wooden boards skirting the floor match the dark green picture
rail that crawls around the room. One print hangs from it, a lopsided view of a
distant field. Other than that, a few picture hooks still dangle like small
black crows perching on a branch. The ceiling is high. A flex hangs from its
central rose, one light bulb suspended from it, its yellow lampshade splaying
out the beam onto the lower halves of the walls. From the lampshade a strip of
sticky flypaper holds onto the corpses of flies, while live ones circle to try
their luck.
Four
of Meyer’s sons and one grandson (that’s me) are present. There is a sporadic
incursion by his wife, (who is not my real grandma). The sons are Sammy (my
father), Archie, Larry and Charlie. Harry, who’s the eldest, is missing. Archie
is in a wheelchair, and his wife Harriet sits just behind him on a wooden
chair.
Meyer Tell me Sammy, why didn’t you bring
the boy’s mother, your lovely wife?
Sammy It’s
Hannah, Dad. She’s very busy. We have a lot to do at the shop to get ready for
next week. We’re opening Saturday. I can’t stay long; I must get back soon.
Meyer Get
back? Get back? You just got here. How often do you get together with your
brothers? You’re getting like your uncles. Money, money, money. Don’t forget
family, son. Don’t forget the most important thing a man can have.
Archie Now
don’t go starting on that, Dad; you’re going to set me off.
Meyer Ach,
anything sets you off Archie. But let me tell you, if I’d had my chance I’d
have had all my boys with me. All my family. You think it was easy? You think I
had choices?
Archie Of
course you had choices.
Larry Okay, okay, Archie; don’t let him
rile you up. I want to know more about your shop, Sammy. Last I was there it
was quite a wreck. It must be coming along well.
They kick the ball around like this
a lot. Grandma puts her head, encased in a scarf that transforms her into a
grotesque rabbit, around the door. The voice is not of a rabbit. It is the
squawking of the loudest cockatoo at London Zoo, mixed with the deep-throated
grunt of the wild boar. Come to think of it, she looks more like a wild boar
than a rabbit.
“Bernie,” she coos, “Go up and see
Gerald. He’s waiting for you.”
I climb the stairs to the next
torture chamber.
Thank you Zev for sharing your work on the Scribbler. We wish you the best of luck at the Atlantic Book Awards with this intriguing story. You can find out more about Zev by visiting his web page here
Please drop by next week and meet guest author Lydia Branch of Moncton NB.
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