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Accidental courier
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It's all about speed and
it's never fun, this endless race around downtown
Now Magazine, December 15, 2005
By Gary Morton
I love the sunshine and the day light. So after failing at poverty and
telemarketing, I was drawn to a job ad for a bike courier.
Sure, it's December and getting quite icy, but the dim light does
filter through the bare branches for a few hours. Birds sing in flocks,
the world still runs on a gritty track. Get out there and make a few
bucks riding through snow flurries, like good old Santa and all the
other fake forces of goodness taking a sleigh ride through our
ad-soaked subconscious.
I roll down to the courier office, and the guy says, "We need someone
to start right away. You gotta get pumped up, get out there and make
money on the bike."
And of course I ask how you make the money. He tells me you make 60 per
cent of this and that, and it works out that due to different distances
and orders and lengths and numbers of runs, only people at the office
can really ever calculate what you actually earn.
So will they sell you on the short side? They do hold back your first
two weeks' pay and expect you to keep a record of every delivery number.
Certainly, I want to avoid eviction from my home, so I take the job
immediately.
I go out on the road, riding an endless race around the downtown. It's
never fun, just a run through filtered sunlight and gloomy speculation
about how I ended up having to sprint into all these offices to deal
with people in no way any brighter than myself but well set up.
It gets to be 80 days around the world. Here, there, in the
merry-go-round and the traffic and the smog, entering every building
where people are blowing clouds of cigarette smoke out front.
I mention lunch and maybe a break, and the boss crackles, "You'll lose
money. You gotta go and go and go 8:30 am to 5 pm without a break. Then
maybe when you've made dollars, you'll think about a rest and how
you've made money."
Which would've gone over, except that even by my most generous
calculations I will be making substantially less than the minimum wage.
So how to improve, speed up and get more tickets done?
But that's a plan that failed. I speed out on Bay from the sidewalk
only to find that a bus is fast approaching. The driver curses me as he
slams on the brakes, and cars hit their horns. I hit the pedals and
bounce back on the sidewalk. A motorist roars up beside me to tell me I
could've been killed.
Embarrassed, I take a cowardly right turn and head down side streets. A
TTC cop car slows and starts tailing me. When I think I've ducked him,
I lock the bike on Adelaide and head for the delivery address.
People are jaywalking, but I confidently take the crosswalk and am most
of the way across when a car zips in and brakes as it hits me. Luckily,
I lean into it and bounce off the hood, come back up on my feet and
only have slight bruising on my left leg. The driver emerges from the
car shouting, "He wasn't on the crosswalk!"
I say nothing as I walk the rest of the way without looking back. I
drop the package at the building and leave, knowing that recording
accidents or stopping to argue about them will decrease my profits.
My boss is on the phone with a go, go, go message, and I get to Citytv
before I notice the TTC cop still following me. Four bike cops suddenly
appear to converse with him.
I head through Grange Park to the north and do some alley work.
Finally, I roll my bike through the back door of a building and watch
the cops pass in the alley.
The escape works, but my legs are starting to fail. Calling in, I get
my last job of the day, which happens to be near the courier office.
I finish it and head home. The cellphone rings it's a guy telling me
about another job. Janitor in a slaughterhouse, he says. I'll think
about it, I say. I got a real good job now, but I might consider
leaving it if you've got something better.
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