I work in a town on the water in a bar where my job is to serve alcohol to people that come in and give me money in exchange for drinks. Sometimes there are other transactions, sometimes I receive more than just money, but this is the same at any bar—you will find me there, serving you the same drink you order here.
There are two types of people that come to the bar, that I see and that I stand across from while they sit across from me. There are the people who will ruin my night, and the people whose lives I am ruining.
You have your assholes, and you have your regulars, but these two groups are not mutually exclusive. I take money for the register and tips for myself, and I fill their glasses to ruin my own night or theirs.
A guy comes in, gives me hard time. Asks for a Jack and coke, and tells me I short poured him; tells me I’m short, that I don’t know how to pour. I top him up and leave him to it, without saying a word. Three of my regulars are halfway down the bar, halfway done, a few stools between them. I take their change and fill their beer glasses. They lick the foam from their lips and chins, the edges of their grey beards, and when the rocks glasses they sip their harder drinks from are empty they suck what alcohol they can from the ice and the orange peel. Jack and coke calls me over.
– This my first drink in ten years, he says.
– You know, the last time I had a drink I tried killing myself.
– Got close. Ten years ago, he says.
In my bar guys like this appear like clockwork during the hours that I spend here. No matter what time of day the digital clock on the microwave in the back says, they seem to find themselves in the right place at the wrong time. Or me, the other way around. I sigh. Take his glass away and top him up, on the house. I take a five from my pocket and put it in the drawer. He nods, takes out a mess of singles and leaves them in a ball on the bar. This I acknowledge with a thankful nod.
Down the other end I ask one of the others to tell me a joke, because I need cheering up, but no one remembers any; or can but gets the punch line confused. None of us laugh, all of us drink.
After two more, I go back to Jack. I take the pour cap off the bottle and leave it open in front of him. A dare. I take his glass, dump it in the sink, and refresh his ice.
He smiles, and I pass him the bottle and tell him whatever is left is left for him. My regulars look on, unimpressed—as much from jealousy as the questionable moral and real life repercussions of my generosity.
Someone remembers the part of the joke they’d been forgetting, and we gather around and nobody laughs, and we all know that we’ll be back again tomorrow. Me first, to open—to sweep and mop; to remove the chairs from the tables, restock the shelves and small plastic trays of napkins, umbrellas; of olives and cherries and slices of lemon—them second, to fill the chairs, and start the day, and take their time getting drunk on mine.