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Hellhole By Christopher Denham "One point three million for a one bedroom?" Sam and Martha Rathbone stood still in the vacant apartment. As if any sudden movement would further reduce the square footage. "That''s just the asking price," the Broker said. "Two bids came in at one point eight. Cash." "It''s one bedroom," Sam said. "And there are three of us. Three people." "Technically, two people," the Broker said. "One child." "Technically, the child is a person." "A small person." Martha said, "I think our son needs his own room." Sam checked the stairwell, where their six-year-old son, Max, was coloring in his coloring book. Max made a funny face at his dad. Sam made the face back. It was their face. "Everybody wants to be in Brooklyn," said the Broker. "At your price point, Williamsburg is out of the question. Williamsburg is for Alexander Wang models. Greenpoint is for trust funders. Carroll Gardens is colonized by shortlisted novelists. And Bushwick has been bought up by boys in bands. At your price point, you''re going to have to go off the grid." "Can you please stop saying ''price point''?" Sam turned to his wife. "Maybe we should just stay in Manhattan. Keep renting." "Renting is just throwing our money away," Martha told him. "It''s time to leave the Lower East Side. It''s time to buy. Before the interest rates balloon. Everybody''s buying." "How can anybody afford this?" The Broker broke up the domestic disturbance: "Brooklyn does go beyond the first three stops on the L train. Do you want to be followers? Or do you want to be pioneers? Stake your claim in terra incognita. This isn''t just real estate, folks. This is manifest destiny." "It''s our destiny to raise our son in a studio," said Sam. "You''ve showed us ten places and every place is totally undersized and totally overpriced." "Well," said the Broker, "I do have one more place to show you." They shared a cab from Williamsburg. Sam, Martha, and Max in the backseat and the Broker up front. Looking out the window, Sam watched the pageant of epicene hipsters in genitally challenging pants drinking forties up and down Bedford Avenue. Sam and Martha used to spend more time in Brooklyn. Back when they used to get tattoos. Back when Sam used to have gallery shows and drink his weight (160 pounds) in Styrofoam Budweisers at Rosemary''s Tavern. The drinking days were done. The days of skateboarding across the BQE with seven cans of Molotow and spray-painting rubyliths across the viaduct, pretending to be some gutterpunk Basquiat. Pretending he didn''t have a BFA in painting from RISD. Sam didn''t do street art. Not anymore. He repaired furniture. He refurbished divans. Hell, they had bills to pay. They had a child. And they were about to have a mortgage. "Dad?" Max asked. "Where''s that flag from?" Max pointed at the faded blue, yellow, and red flag decal adhered to the taxi''s Plexiglas partition. Sam said, "I don''t know, Mad Max. I sucked at flags in school." Martha said, "Honey, why don''t you ask the driver?" The taxi driver had a cleft palate scar on his upper lip and was listening to very loud, very foreign music. The music, Sam thought, sounded weirdly pastoral. Incessant tambourine. Russian? Belarusian? Gypsy music. Max asked for Martha''s cell phone and googled national flags and found, on Wikipedia, the corresponding ensign that matched the peeling decal. "Romania," said Max, "the driver is from Romania." Max opened Google Translate. It was his favorite app and he would spend hours translating random languages. Sam and Martha thought it was a better heuristic hobby than all those books about boy witches. Max typed in a few words and an automaton voice translated into Romanian: "Numele meu este Max! Sunt vechi de sase ani!" (My name is Max! I''m six years old!) The driver spewed out a spate of foreign declamations and fist-bumped Max: "Baiat bun!! Baiat bun!!" From the front seat, the Broker turned and said, "Welcome to your new neighborhood." Crown Heights was not a neighborhood they had considered. Too dangerous. Too far for Martha''s daily commute to Manhattan, where, as an advocacy lawyer, she made no profit working for a nonprofit. Sam, Martha, and Max bundled up against the winter wind and followed the Broker across Nostrand Avenue, whose concrete median segregated the Hasids on one side and the Caribbeans on the other. Kosher bakeries. Check-cashing joints. Family Dollar."Trust me," said the Broker, "Crown Heights is a diamond in the rough. It''s where everybody who is anybody will be in two years." Just off Franklin Avenue, they passed a sketchy windowless bar/social club from which a man in a tracksuit emerged and mumbled Eastern bloc obscenities about Martha''s ass. "It''s not exactly SoHo," said the Broker, "but there are plenty of places to eat and drink." "My dad doesn''t drink," Max told the Broker. "My dad went to rehab." "Okay, Max," Sam said, taking his son''s hand. "Thank you for sharing." Sam locked eyes with the West Indian employees inside a bodega. They sold blunts and pirated DVDs. And, judging by their derisive faces, the locals didn''t just see Sam and Martha as speculative homeowners. They saw Pilgrims on the shore proffering smallpox blankets, the harbingers of an impending invasion of craft beer and artisanal cheese. The Broker also attracted his share of sideways glances at his coiffed fauxhawk, skinny tie, and androgynous gait. Impervious, he led the charge past the parkway, past Empire Boulevard, and down Midwood Avenue, a residential side street flanked by ill-maintained, boarded-up, turn-of-the-century row houses. "You''ll notice the gabled roofs. Casement windows. Transoms. All the original mullions." Martha said, "I bet this block used to be beautiful." "Yeah," Sam muttered. "When it was built in the last century. Now it''s just crack dens." "What''s a crack den, Dad?" "It''s a place where plumbers live and you see their butt cracks all the time." "Are you ready?" said the Broker. "This is the place." They stopped outside 223 Midwood. A decrepit brownstone. Sagging gutters. Graffiti sprayed across the plywood in the windows. A foreclosed sign staked into the moribund grass. Martha said, "It looks like it''s seen better days." "It looks like a monster, Mom." The Broker unlocked a chain lock, pushed aside the plywood, and led them inside. Sam was stunned at the state of disrepair. The banisters were barely held in place by loose spindles. The high ceilings had water damage, wreaking havoc on the plaster moldings. Sam had his doubts about the structural integrity of the vaulted hallways. The bathrooms were shellacked with rust. "You''ll notice the fireplace," said the Broker. Sam unlatched the flue and the fireplace rumbled an inchoate epithet. "Santa might get killed coming down this." Martha, on the other hand, saw potential in the mahogany floors. The dust-covered cast iron stove. She fell in love at first sight with the copper claw-foot bathtub. She saw children''s names and heights sketched onto the door frame: ciprian 4''11". dragos 5''7". rodica 5''4". This house had a history. This house had been a home. A place where a family lives. A place Martha, raised by a single mother in a series of single-bedroom apartments, had never had. "Built in 1946," the Broker said. "Can''t you just feel the history?" "I can smell the asbestos," Sam said. Martha asked, "Who used to live here?" "It was a foreclosure, so it wasn''t disclosed," the Broker said. "It''s a great bargain." "It''s definitely a fixer-upper," Martha replied, "but my husband definitely loves power tools." "That''s right," the Broker said. "Remind me, Mr. Rathbone; you build stools or something?" "Furniture. Not stools exclusively. But this might be a little above my pay grade." "My mom makes more money than my dad," Max told the Broker. "Thank you for sharing, Max." The Broker led them into the dark basement. "This is huge!" Martha gushed. "It''s totally perfect for your studio, Sam." "It''s totally unfinished," Sam said. "We''d need to insulate. Plus, I bet we''ll be sinking money into a sump pump. This place would need a lot of work." "This place has a lot of potential," Martha said. "Did you see that claw-foot bathtub?" "Do you hear that furnace? The radiant coils are rusted." The Broker said, "For the square footage, you''re not going to get anything close to this at your price point." "What''s the list price?" "Two hundred and twenty-five thousand dollars," said the Broker. "It''s a steal. I have ten other clients seeing this house. Someone will be buying it today. It should be you. C''mon, Max, I''ll show you the backyard. You have a dog, right?" The Broker led Max upstairs, leaving Sam and Martha alone in the basement. "I think this might be it," Martha said. "Uh. I think it''s a hellhole," Sam said. "It''s a money pit." "It''s the best our money can buy," Martha said. "It''s exactly what we need. It''s not just a place to live, Sam. It''s a new start." He knew she was right. She deserved a clean break.
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