Miguel Street by V. S. Naipaul
Author:V. S. Naipaul
Language: eng
Format: mobi, epub, azw3
Tags: Bildungsromans, General, Literary, Boys, Historical, Fiction, Port of Spain (Trinidad and Tobago)
ISBN: 9780375713873
Publisher: Vintage International
Published: 2002-11-14T10:00:00+00:00
XI
THE BLUE CART
There were many reasons why I wanted to be like Eddoes when I grew up.
He was one of the aristocrats of the street. He drove a scavenging cart and so worked only in the mornings.
Then, as everybody said, Eddoes was a real ‘saga-boy.’ This didn’t mean that he wrote epic poetry. It meant that he was a ‘sweet-man,’ a man of leisure, well-dressed, and keen on women.
Hat used to say, ‘For a man who does drive a scavenging cart, this Eddoes too clean, you hear.’
Eddoes was crazy about cleanliness.
He used to brush his teeth for hours.
If fact, if you were telling a stranger about Eddoes you would say, ‘You know-the little fellow with a tooth-brush always in his mouth.’
This was one thing in Eddoes I really admired. Once I stuck a tooth-brush in my mouth and walked about our yard in the middle of the day.
My mother said, ‘You playing man? But why you don’t wait until your pee make froth?’
That made me miserable for days.
But it didn’t prevent me taking the tooth-brush to school and wearing it there. It caused quite a stir. But I quickly realised that only a man like Eddoes could have worn a tooth-brush and carried it off.
Eddoes was always well-dressed. His khaki trousers were always creased and his shoes always shone. He wore his shirts with three buttons undone so you could see his hairy chest. His shirt cuffs were turned up just above the wrist and you could see his gold wrist-watch.
Even when Eddoes wore a coat you saw the watch. From the way he wore the coat you thought that Eddoes hadn’t realised that the end of the coat sleeve had been caught in the watch strap.
It was only when I grew up I realised how small and how thin Eddoes really was.
I asked Hat, ‘You think is true all this talk Eddoes giving us about how woman running after him?’
Hat said, ‘Well, boy, woman these days funny like hell. They go run after a dwarf if he got money.’
I said, ‘I don’t believe you.’
I was very young at the time.
But I always thought, ‘If it have one man in this world woman bound to like, that man is Eddoes.’
He sat on his blue cart with so much grace. And how smart that tooth-brush was in his mouth!
But you couldn’t talk to him when he was on his cart. Then he was quite different from the Eddoes we knew on the ground; then he never laughed, but was always serious. And if we tried to ride on the back of his cart, as we used to on the back of the ice-cart, Eddoes would crack his whip at us in a nasty way and shout, ‘What sort of cart you think this is? Your father can’t buy cart like this, you hear?’
Every year Eddoes won the City Council’s award for the cleanest scavenging cart.
And to hear Eddoes talk about his job was to make yourself feel sad and inferior.
He said he knew everybody important in Port of Spain, from the Governor down.
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