Mornings are the worst time to sit down. Animals are everywhere demanding feed and
attention. And I understand why there’s
some good writers out there who never get published; all-be-it getting their
money in other ways.
My buddy, Charney
was like that. They called him,
Laddy-buck. It was a name, Capone gave
him. Yes, Al Capone.
Charney was born in
early nineteen-hundreds, in New York.
Close to his Mom; they’d always had a special bonding and equal respect,
he was a ladies man, and I admired him as he’d pampered his wife during their
lifetimes together.
Typical of that
day; leading into the Great Depression he was the atypical boy. Father died when he was young; but the two of
them, Laddy and Mom went about their ways.
Mom was a wrapper (paper) at a large department store, which specialized
in clothing. People back then did
anything they could for city survival.
Anyway, he was
precocious and matured quickly. Like
many (boys) who sold paper (newspapers) he’d started early – age twelve, as was
the custom. Half past five (a.m.) each
morning, they’d met (the guys) picking paper loads for distribution. Laddy started selling papers near the train
station, where he knew there’d be people waiting with nothing to do but read news. Thus began his hustling job. By age sixteen, he’d gotten a job on a train
running between Saint Louis and Chicago, and it was there he met, Scar Face. He – now working as a valet, took and
deposited Al and his buddies’ bags overhead, above the seats and windows.
That was the story
he’d told me, many years later. The way
he’d told it; Scar Face – that’s what they’d called him – asked him, “Do you
know who I am?”
Laddy was quietly
composed, and somberly replied, “Yah.
You’re the man.”
Then, Capone asked
another question. “What’s the biggest
tip you ever got?”
“Fifty bucks”
Then, Capone
handed him a One-hundred dollar bill.
Laddy made a
meager living, selling guns; mostly to farm boys along the train route.
The World Fair was
also coming on the train to, Chicago.
Laddybuck, as he was then called, ever since Capone knick-named him (and
the name stuck) got gig there. He’d met
somebody important enough to listen to his Lincoln idea.
Now in his
twenties, he created a unique exhibit; there, at the World Fair. A relative of the late Lincoln, a Lincoln
volunteered for a poultry sum, and some gratuity as well – the deal never
completely explained to me, to simply recite the, Gettysburg Address. That wasn’t easy. The guy was barely literate. But, Laddy took time to explain proper etiquette;
the meaning he’d learned in his lexicon (he read lots of books, and seemed to
retain things – as he had a good mind), and he took time and patience, teaching
grammar to an otherwise illiterate woodsman.
That was an
exhibit of his first successful venture.
His legacy continued throughout life.
An ordinary man supporting his family, he purchased a printing press and
began his self – tutor –edge, putting his words on paper, with lead letters and
some ink. One of the first independent companies,
The Laddybuck Papers, prospered as, Capone fans scooped up news of the
underworld. It was another success that
he retired to do.
I met Laddybuck
while he was in his late eighties; still spry, I’d taken him for a
young-sixties; and we did a gig together for a while, while I sold books I’d
authored through him. Thus, we had a
brief career until he suddenly died.
While sitting at
the family funeral, the priest requested me to be a pallbearer. I guess I looked out of place; atheist amongst
church goers, barely setting foot into one, let alone being sprinkled by holy
water, while he blessed the coffin (the priest). But, he got a good sending off, and would
have enjoyed it, in spite of his dilemma.
Late Laddybuck
left me with a book he’d written but never published. It was a fantifical (part fiction and fantasy)
story about the great lakes, and the
ships sailing on them. He put humor into
tragedies, and otherwise sobered some who read the script. It was one of the best books I ever read, and
the first I read, cover to cover.
I’d wondered about
great authors who’d died poor. There were
more than I could name; and he was only one person, I got privileged to read
amongst archives of outdated books and virtually unpublished authors. Laddybuck never left me anything, but
memories of escapades we once shared during his twilight years, while walking
along the lakeshore, sipping coffee at the numerous city coffee and Gerkan
houses, or chatting by the fireplace where he preferred lounging; and where I
sometimes slept, if nowhere else to go.
Years of book
collections, my only flaw (according to my wife), and I got to read many truncated
manuscripts and books. While wandering
in a flea market, I stumbled upon his only book; the book he never told me
about and most will never read. It cost
me a dollar. There were a thousand pages
to browse and absorb, and I wasted no time; completely absorbed for most of the
entire novel, that showed me another side of the man I’d admired. Anyway, after reading it, I realized that I now
knew more about the man than he could have told me in his words we wasted
during our brief time together; and another story. But his only book is still on my shelf, along
with many other treasures.
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