Attaining
Plumber’s High on Martha’s Vineyard
There are myriad ways to “get high” on Martha’s Vineyard, some
of them perfectly legal. I know all of them because I have been sojourning
there since my ill-spent youth in the 1960s.
Today I
am a semi-respectable taxpayer, owning half of a modest cottage, or “camp” in
local parlance, in the town formerly known as Gay Head (They changed it to
Aquinnah ten years ago, and I’m still learning how to spell it.)
Up-island,
as our Vineyard “hood” is known, there are sunsets to die for, BYOB restaurants
oozing ambiance, fresh fish to buy right off the boat from crusty anglers, and
minor celebrities milling about hoping to be recognized. Before my left knee
gave out, I got my annual runner’s high at the Chilmark Road Race, a hybrid
event that is two parts social soiree, one part athletic tiff.
But I
can’t think of a single Vineyard “rush” that compares with the one I
experienced this very August. A week later I’m still decidedly elevated. To
appreciate my euphoria, you have to grasp one of the island’s legendary Catch
22s. If you don’t have a plumber, you can’t get a plumber. And if you have a
plumber, try getting him to show up when he’s installing twelve bathrooms in
the latest 10,000-square-foot, one-percenter atrocity being built smack dab on
the ocean.
How the
primordial island plumber and the antediluvian homeowner first got together is
a conundrum on par with the “chicken or the egg” controversy.
We had a
plumber, but he has waxed elusive of late. This time his phone just rang and
rang and rang, no answering machine. So I screwed up my courage and began
cold-calling tradesman willy-nilly. My hopes were not high, but the basement
was getting moist. My message (No self-respecting Vineyard plumber picks up a
ringing telephone.) was shaky, to say the least: “Hi, this is David – actually,
you can call me Dave. We’ve never met, but I’m so looking forward to making
your acquaintance, I truly am. My partner and I – he’s my business partner and
friend, but that’s all, we both have children, and wives – we’re up here in
Aquinnah, or Gay Head if you prefer, not that there’s anything wrong with
either name. I know, I know, way up island, end of the earth, so to speak.
Look, we have this pinhole leak…actually it’s the mother of all pinhole leaks
by now, you know, hissing like a snake you tripped over...and we were just
wondering…”
I left at
least a dozen such groveling appeals. I think it’s safe to conclude that if all
of the recipients had replayed my messages at the exact same moment, the sound
of their convulsive horselaughs would have caused a Homeland Security alert in Woods
Hole.
I
uncorked a velvety Merlot and put the whole business out of my mind, the way
you clutch a fistfull of raffle tickets but never expect to hear your number
called. Chris called back within minutes. My initial thought was this has gotta
be a hoax, or some perverse joke. Who else knew I was calling plumbers? Chris
said he could come by in the morning. Now I was really suspicious. I began to
grill him: “You must be new here. Are you coming from off-island? What’s this
going to cost me?”
Well, he
came, he plumbed, and he charged an eminently reasonable fee. For the sake of
his professional standing in the island’s wrench-wielding fraternity, I won’t
mention the amount or his last name. So far, none of his colleagues have
returned my calls. But the basement is dry as a bone, and I’m still higher than
our widow’s walk.
David Holahan
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