Out In The Be-Bop 1950s Night- The Drifter Of No Known Trade
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
As the drifter of no known trade
(that is the moniker that he gave himself although if you look for a birth
certificate, driver’s license or, more importantly, through the police files
you will no such name. You will however find William James Bradley, Willie
Brads, William Lee, Billie Wills and at least one half dozen other aliases
depending on where you look and the town but “drifter” and keep in mind the add
on “of no known trade” will do here.) sat down on the windy day Boston Common park
bench he eyed a beat cop eyeing him. A copper ready, willing, and able to add
him to his resume, to his weekly quota. The drifter had that look about him, the
look, hell too these days maybe the smell of con. Funny the park was filled
with people, mothers or nursemaids with little children, a couple of young
lovebirds, a wino singing to himself , a couple of girls, with the look of
strictly trade about them, whom he sensed were walking the streets looking for
tricks and who were just then gathering themselves for the next push.
All that going on and that copper
only had eyes for him. He didn’t know the cop from Adam and since he was new in
town the cop didn’t know him either. But it was always the same story, the same
story since childhood, but more recently since he had been on the nod it seemed
every cop in every city had his number. Maybe they were right to take that
stare what with him in a “seen better days” trench coat, soiled and spattered pants
a size or two too big these days, worn-out shoes (worn from many miles of hobo
wandering and hitchhike standing on desolate two in the morning no traffic side
roads, needing a shave and a haircut and topped off with a soft fedora hat, fairly
new and of a Kelly green color ,that did
not in any way, shape or form, go with the rest of the outfit. But such are the
ways of the nod, and maybe such are the cop antenna that they sense the nod, or
at least in a park sense that some connection is about to be made and they
should keep on their toes. And as the cop started heading his way slowly,
feeling his way, the drifter started working his way back in his mind about how
it all had gone awry. When he thought such thoughts and they had not been often
that indicated that he was in need of some fix, some connection, although he
was only sitting on this bench just then to rest, to rest the rest of the
weary. And think.
He swore as a kid back in those
North Adamsville projects (the town located a short way from Boston and the
Common he was sitting in just then) to his corner boy gang that he would never
do a lick of work in his life, nine to five work, back-breaking work like many
fathers, including his, did and had the damn tumbledown project life to show
for their efforts. No that scene was not for him. He figured, figured almost right back then,
back in the mid-1950s that he could take his good looks (all the girls were
crazy for him then and he would give his “leavings,” his rejects, to his corner
boys after he was done with them), his good singing voice, and his, well, style
and make it as a rock and roll star with plenty of dough, girls and everything.
And he almost made it except a funny thing happened his voice changed, changed
to a gruff if manly voice that might have later made it as some sissy boy folk
singer but not as a rock star. So he had
to hustle, hustle like crazy to keep up with expenses and the like.
That is where he started
presenting himself under the moniker of the “drifter with no known trade.” One
day a guy came up to him, a guy who was interested (not a cop) to find out how
a guy with no known trade had such a “boss” car, some nice duds, a couple of
foxy chicks and plenty of dough. He replied that he was doing a little of this
and a little of that. End of story. Well not quite the end. See he was robbing
everything that was not tied down, first around North Adamsville then in Boston
and latter in Philly. And he was good at it, made some dough and planned big
heists, some that came off, a couple you might have read about that were never
solved, until she came along.
No, not a woman she, sister,
cocaine, snow, girl, although a woman was part of it. A young girl from Philly,
a society girl that he was trying to ply her for her society connections as
well as trying to ply her, Ellen, took him up as partner in snorting every line
put in front of her. She said she was bored with tea (grass, herb, marijuana
whatever you call it in your neighborhood) and wanted to branch out. He liked
it after trying it, liked that she liked it, liked that they got all sexy (for
a while before the hunt to keep connected, always connected, took the edge off)
and made endless bed time. Then the other shoe dropped. Her habit, and then
his, got him to take more risks, get “rum” brave and plan a big heist, heist
that went awry and which cost him to two to five (she, society girl she, got
off with five years’ probation, but he wasn’t squawking).
When he got out, the world had
changed a little, the dough wasn’t around, he had not been around, the cops
started looking his way more closely everywhere he went. So he moved again.
This time to New Orleans, New Orleans and graduation day. Cocaine, coke, was
not doing it for him anymore, he needed more of a kick and then some whore he
ran into on the street turned him on to boy, H, heroin. And the nod. A couple
more years in stir, give or take, for this and that, mostly drug dealing now and
then to keep even with his habit. And now a park bench, a cop heading his way
and maybe thirty days “vag.” Hell, maybe this time he would go cold turkey and
get well, real well, maybe even get a job, get a trade. Nah, he wasn’t built
for that stuff …
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