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The owner of my building who knows my face

The owner of my apartment building knows my face. He's a lawyer. He has a small law office adjacent to the building lobby which also doubles as a place to deal with tenant issues. I've always thought it was a strange location for a law office, as if this was a pocket of residential activity merely hidden away behind the corporate comings and goings, where the big boss goes to have let's call it "R 'n R" with his aide-de-camp, making people feel a little dirty every time they skulk into their unmarked doors. Whenever I walk past Jessie the Doorman I have to quip: "That whole Engel, et al. v. Vitale et al., thing is a real ballbuster" and Jessie nods wearily.

The owner of my apartment building knows my face because one morning when the elevator wasn't working, I marched down to his office to complain, and he wasn't there. So I snooped around while waiting, running my fingertips along all of the mahogany and plush leather. And after more than a few minutes passed, I got so bored that I pretended to hold a business meeting, repeatedly slamming shut a thick tome of Illinois statutes to drive my point home. The owner stood right behind me at the end of my speech's climax, of course, and when I blushed and frantically tried to remember my reason for coming into his office, he just looked at me coldly, studying my face intently for future reference.

In addition to the weirdly-located law office in my building, there's a dusty old gym on the Second Floor that creeps me out. There's a punching bag that swings even when no one is punching it. Even scarier is out in the dimly lit hallway where rusty pipes coil under and above the ceiling. Sometimes this hallway looks like it's one or two burnt fluorescent light bulbs away from being lit solely by the crimson glow of the EXIT signs. There's a graveyard for burnt fluorescent bulbs, by the way: stacked up against the scariest part of the hallway wall, there around the corner on the short leg of the L, with the heavy wooden doors that lead into blackness and the complex phone wiring that looks like the innards of some futuristic fish after being cleaned and hung from a steel hook.

A couple nights ago I went down there and my clothes were still wet (the washer and dryer being the only reason for anyone to visit the Second Floor) and to kill time I picked up one of the bulbs and brought it into the Scary Gym and swung it around like a lightsaber, since, for most of my life, every time I look up and see a long, cylindrical fluorescent light glowing up there, raining down headaches, I think: That looks sort of like a lightsaber. So I'm swinging it around in the Scary Gym even though really the effect is lost since the bulb is not active and glowing, and then, of course, the inevitable happens and I smash it against one of the concrete supports. I'm not entirely convinced it was accidental. Thing is, I didn't really smash the bulb all that hard, and yet it pretty much disintegrated. There were shards of glass scattered everywhere, sure, but it seemed like if you assembled those shards they'd only add up to maybe a third of the total length of the fluorescent light. It's like the thing just popped out of existence.

Then a piercing panic hit me: What if the Owner Of My Building Who Knows My Face found this broken glass? Of course he'd suspect foul play. So I stomped on the glass until it was shining powder there on the floor, and then I dragged a light blue ab workout mat over the crime scene. My fingerprints were all over the goddamn place.

Today when I came home from work, I walked straight past Jessie without saying hello. The Owner Of My Building Who Knows My Face happened to be talking to a maintenance guy near the row of mailboxes, and as soon as I walked by the OOMBWKMF stopped mid-conversation, looked at me, and said, "Hello... Peter." Not Pete. Peter. The name listed on my lease.

I managed a phony, "innocent" smile that the OOMBWKMF has probably seen countless times in over a thousand courtrooms, then I stepped into my elevator and pressed the CLOSE DOOR button many times, but of course, it wasn't working. Again.

Thursday, May 8, 2008

20 Comments

#1 Lennie

you are fuckin nuts...i dont know if i will be able to sleep tonight from all that i laughed while reading this

May 9, 2008 01:20 AM
#2 Steve

Looks like the Owner of Your Building Who Knows Your Face is now also the Owner of Your Building Who Knows Your Name!

May 9, 2008 07:44 AM
#3 Brian Radke

You panicked and made mistakes. Why not just sweep up the mess and then wipe up your prints? You're going to need a good defense attorney now. Tsk.

May 9, 2008 09:03 AM
#4 Brendan

Lesson learned: don't touch anything that doesn't belong to you!

May 9, 2008 09:19 AM
#5 Anne

LMAO!! You're such a kid.

May 9, 2008 10:15 AM
#6 Joanna

Nice. This blog post had a little bit of everything--haunted gyms, intimidating owners, paranoia, awkward situations. All that was needed for it to be perfect is your over-pluralizing mother.

May 9, 2008 10:26 AM
#7 Darin

You can just blame it on the ghost in the gym.

May 9, 2008 10:52 AM
#8 Lisa

So what happened after you walked out of the broken elevator and couldn't hide? Did you get in any trouble? Evicted?

May 9, 2008 10:57 AM
#9 Will

If there's a hidden security cam down there, you are so screwed.

May 9, 2008 11:13 AM
#10 Chris

Hey Pete, lawyers are not police officers.

May 9, 2008 11:25 AM
#11 Tasha

Ha! Sorry Pete, but Chris's comment made me laugh harder than your actual entry. Props Chris

May 9, 2008 11:58 AM
#12 Jon

i think it's a fair trade. the elevator doesn't work and the laundry room is in a scary hallway, therefore you smash light bulbs. hopefully he gets the message.

May 9, 2008 01:21 PM
#13 Evan

Hahahahahaha!

May 9, 2008 02:02 PM
#14 Felecia

I guess all it takes is 1 or 2 minutes with nothing to do to make you bored enough to get into trouble. You're worse than a kid in need of Ritalin.

May 9, 2008 02:22 PM
#15 Zelda

wow you crack me up!

oh and you do realize that you basically wrote your confession to the "crime" here don't you?

May 9, 2008 03:11 PM
#16 Melanie

lol... That is one of the funniest stories I have ever read... especially because it's such a Pete thing to do.

May 9, 2008 04:23 PM
#17 Grant

One should never allow a burnt out fluorescent lightbulb go to waste.

May 9, 2008 04:43 PM
#18 Danielle

LOL this is classic

May 9, 2008 05:30 PM
#19 Stacy

Elevator close buttons don't always work. I would say that they don't work, but that's just my opinion.

May 11, 2008 01:28 AM
#20 Photo Phil

Hey Pete, just don't put a bottle of shaving cream in the dryer, ok?! (Stevenson ;))

May 12, 2008 12:48 PM