Dispatch

Stakeout

Sheila Heti

In the fall of 2005, Sheila Heti spent a day in a diner in Toronto observing the enormous EUCAN electrified garbage can at the corner of College and Bathurst. The EUCAN cans, known to detractors as Monster Bins, carry advertising and have been condemned by citizens’ groups as environmentally unsound. Three hundred and eight cans have been installed on Toronto sidewalks as part of a pilot project scheduled to end in 2007.

0835 hrs

Six peo­ple on bikes wait at the cor­ner, seven, eight, nine. Traffic moves.

A man stand­ing near the garbage can hails a taxi and gets inside. People are lined up on the con­crete island in the mid­dle of College Street, wait­ing for a streetcar.

A woman with a cof­fee cup passes the can but does not throw her cof­fee away. Her scarf is bright orange because it is October.


Three peo­ple walk past the can.

When the light turns green, the traf­fic moves. A man throws some­thing into the can. The can is as wide as three peo­ple stand­ing shoul­der to shoul­der. It is as tall as a man and a half. It is as fat as the man who threw some­thing in, swerv­ing toward the can, glanc­ing, toss­ing in his trash. It looked less dis­gust­ing than with the older cans, where you have to touch the flaps.

A group of teenagers moves north across the street. A man in a motor­ized wheel­chair dri­ves along the bike lane. A man in a yel­low sweater veers toward the can but does not throw any­thing in. 

Is that Matthias?

A man wear­ing an orange jacket sweeps the street. He sweeps around the peo­ple wait­ing at the cor­ner to cross. A man check­ing his change crosses ahead of the light and enters the diner. “How are you?” he says to the woman behind the counter. “Good,” she says, and pours him a cof­fee to go. 


A woman with a stroller passes by the can. A girl in a green coat passes by the can. Three peo­ple wait on their bikes to cross. A girl crosses ahead of the light.

If I am here, and across the street is there, then across that street is the can.

A man gets off his bike as it glides along the side­walk. A boy wears a hoodie that reads “Yankee 9.” The garbage can reads “New.” There are four Beck cabs in my view. A big woman dressed in white doesn’t throw any­thing into the can.

A man in a black coat throws noth­ing into the can. A man with a red bag passes by the can and glances at the can. No one else looks at the can.

There is a place for cig­a­rette butts in the garbage can, but this woman smok­ing prob­a­bly won’t cross the street to put her cig­a­rette in the can.

Where are all the clients of the garbage can? It is less a can than two upright bill­boards sand­wiched against a can. 


It is eas­ier to watch a can all day than to watch tv. Only now do I notice that the tv is on. It makes me feel less alone. People always inter­pret this as a good thing, but it’s not.

Where are all the patrons of the can?

A small Contracted Vehicle oper­ated for the City of Toronto blows by on the side­walk, suck­ing up a few leaves in its hose, like an elephant’s trunk or a nozzle.

The motor­ized vehi­cle is now on the other side of the street. It doesn’t appear to have picked up any trash. On the perime­ter of the empty patio, out­side the win­dow of the diner, lie a plas­tic wrap­per, a party flyer and a flat­tened pack of cig­a­rettes, right where the motor­ized vehi­cle drove by. Perhaps the vehi­cle was deposit­ing trash.

In the first busy hour of a Monday morn­ing, one per­son has used the can. The hot-dog man opens up his black-and-yellow tent on the south­west cor­ner of College and Bathurst, three metres from the can. He unfolds a fold­ing table and pulls a bungee cord down.

No one approaches the can.

0930 hrs

A police car waits in the mid­dle of the inter­sec­tion. The hot-dog man is sweep­ing out his tent. No one touches the can.

A man throws some­thing into the can! Now he is stand­ing on the cor­ner, look­ing into his hands. Like the first man who threw some­thing into the can, this man car­ries a white plas­tic bag. It was easy for him to use the can.

A bird eats crumbs off the green pic­nic table out­side the win­dow. Its feet slide on the wood. It has a hair caught in its mouth. It shakes its head vio­lently, like any of us would. 


The con­tracted vehi­cle moves by here again. I think it must be blow­ing leaves; it has noth­ing to do with the trash. On the other side of the street, peo­ple swerve slightly to avoid the mas­sive can, which juts out onto the sidewalk.

A woman in a yel­low jacket throws noth­ing into the can. Another woman with hair from a hair com­mer­cial, all auburn and bounc­ing down her back, is on the wrong side of the street to throw any­thing into the can.

A woman with some­thing in her hand walks past the can. A man strides con­fi­dently past the can.

A man with a dog move slowly past the can. He has a gui­tar on his back and his sun­glasses are red. 


An old woman walks past the can, like a pen­guin in a pen­guin movie. A girl cycles past the can. A street­car turns east onto Bathurst. 

I sit on the north side of the street, in the win­dow of a diner. My teapot has been refilled with hot water. A tiny girl with a dough­nut hops by on the end of her mother’s hand. She is nowhere near the can.

The diner is empty except for me, the woman at the counter and the peo­ple on the tv. The woman looks into the mir­ror behind the counter, undoes her hair, shakes it out and clips it back up again.

This man smok­ing a cig­a­rette in front of the win­dow prob­a­bly won’t cross both streets to deposit his butt in the can.

The sky is clearing.

A man in a blue sweater picks up news­pa­pers lying in the gut­ter. He holds a cig­a­rette in his hand. Perhaps he is the oper­a­tor of the now sta­tion­ary, city-contracted vehi­cle. No, the oper­a­tor is the man in the yel­low vest with an X across the back. He climbs into the machine, a Madvac. 

The bird has returned. It’s on the ground with a french fry. Now it’s on the table, now it’s on the bench seat, now it’s on the next table. It hops onto the bar sep­a­rat­ing the patio from the street and then hops off. It eats a leaf. 


Of three peo­ple who pass the can, not one throws any­thing in.

The sky is mostly clear. Now there are shad­ows where there weren’t before. A bum appears, hold­ing two shoes in one hand and a pair of bananas in the other. 

A new street sweeper walks past the win­dow. The peo­ple in the street have sun­light on their faces. The street sweeper sweeps up the leaves. His col­lec­tion bag is very full. He does not avoid the garbage around the patio or inside the patio. 

Now he drops his broom and sack, shakes open a bil­lowy, trans­par­ent blue garbage bag, trans­fers the waste, ties the bag and throws it in front of a tree. He con­tin­ues sweep­ing up.

A man I hoped would throw some­thing into the can does not. The man with bananas picks up a butt. Lucky for him it wasn’t in the can.

A home­less man bends over and looks into the can, then moves around to the other side. I stand up, but a black mini­van blocks him from sight, then I see him walk away. The most atten­tion the can has received all morn­ing, and I missed it.

1030 hrs

An old lady walks past the can. It is less a can than a bill­board, big­ger than a man, with recep­ta­cles for trash on either end. I hear a home­less man shout. 

The 506 High Park car stops and peo­ple get on. People get on the sec­ond 506, which has just rolled up behind it, and the 511 Exhibition, which pulls up behind the first two. “Detour on Route” reads a black-and-yellow sign in its front win­dow. The first car bears an ad for Spongebob Squarepants, which was the favourite show of the boy at the wed­ding last night. 

A sign on the side of the garbage can explains how it works. Recyclables on top, cig­a­rettes beneath that, waste beneath that. Twin girls in match­ing green out­fits pass the win­dow on the ends of their father’s arms. 

A tall man walks past the can. 


Garbage col­lects in the street. There’s more yelling from the home­less man, who sits out­side the diner. The tv and the radio, on at the same time, are caus­ing some­thing beau­ti­ful to hap­pen. The clouds move steadily across the sky.

Five cabs move through the inter­sec­tion, six. A man strides by the can. A woman waits by the garbage can. Because of the sub­tlety of her ges­tures, I can’t tell whether she’s throw­ing some­thing into the can.

The garbage on the patio includes a plas­tic cup, four wads of paper, the foil from a cig­a­rette case, cig­a­rette butts and a banana peel. I can count eight cig­a­rettes from where I sit. If I lean my head into the win­dow, I can see a sty­ro­foam cup and one cig­a­rette butt more. The city work­ers lean out of the way and let the street­car pass. They are brush­ing leaves from the street­car tracks. Dust bil­lows brown in the road.

The leaves are being dug from the tracks like dirt from under a fin­ger­nail. The city work­ers get in their trucks and drive away.

I feel like I was a lit­tle irri­tat­ing last night.

No one throws any­thing into the can.

1130 hrs

At Sneaky Dee’s across the street, a man starts set­ting up patio tables. The woman behind the counter sways to a song on the radio. A tv ad asks, “Satisfied?” A man strides pur­pose­fully past the can.

The sound of a whis­tle. The tele­phone rings. “Piccadilly,” the woman says. Two cabs wait by the light.

A young man in a Maple Leafs sweater walks by. I miss the city work­ers, the street sweeper, the oper­a­tor of the Madvac, all gone. A small, wispy feather rests on the edge of a plas­tic cup, aban­doned on the patio, stuck to it by stick­i­ness or per­haps a light wind. The cup wavers, then rolls over com­pletely. The grey-and-white feather is still there.

A girl with a red bal­loon walks past the can. The 506 street­car picks up three pas­sen­gers. I hal­lu­ci­nate a per­son putting some­thing in the can. I have not slept much in the past two days.


A man with a sty­ro­foam cof­fee cup seems to be look­ing for a can. He crosses the street to the street­car island. Will he fin­ish cross­ing the street, then cross Bathurst to use the can? He stands on the street­car island and places the empty cup in his ele­gant shoul­der bag.

Two peo­ple pass by the can. A baby hangs off the front of her mother. The mother pulls a cell­phone from her purse. The 511 Exhibition car stops, and picks up the mother and the child and another woman.

A man, then a sec­ond man, then a woman in a yel­low coat all walk past the can. Three birds fly off the patio.

A woman approaches the counter and com­plains that “Homemade Pie” is writ­ten on the win­dow. The chef says he ­didn’t write it. 


The chef com­plains about the peo­ple from the bank: all they do is come over and com­plain. No one walks past the can. A man in black, bun­dled up to the nose, runs past the can. Someone bikes by the can.

I am going to the wash­room now. Two peo­ple walk past the can. I can’t leave my post. Who will watch the can? 


One’s face is no more inter­est­ing than a garbage can.

A lady puts noth­ing into the can.

No one puts any­thing into the can.

The cup rolls slightly in the light wind. The feather quiv­ers as it’s rocked back and forth. More peo­ple pass by the can.

A youngish man with a walker pauses and smiles up at the writ­ing on the win­dow above my head. Cars go through the inter­sec­tion. Two bikes wait for the light. No one puts any­thing into the can.

Two peo­ple pass by the can, three, six. Two more peo­ple pass by the can. A man blows his nose, looks at the can, but does not deposit his tis­sue into the can.

These cans are being tested for their effec­tive­ness. For sev­eral months they will sit on street cor­ners and side­walks. On the can near my home at Dundas and Dufferin, over the poster that explains the can, the Toronto Public Space Committee has put up a notice that reads, “This will be an ad.” The cans will be illu­mi­nated at night.

A man hands off his cig­a­rette to another man, who smokes it. My old friend Juno just walked by, look­ing happy, with a tall man who was single-handedly walk­ing a bike.

A woman in a white jacket walks past the can. The chef is work­ing the grill. 


I am not grow­ing sym­pa­thetic to the can, nor have I detected a sin­gle emo­tion in me about the can. The cup rolls around and around in the sun like a lazy, happy cartwheeler.

There are ten cus­tomers in the diner, includ­ing me and a baby in a carriage.

No one approaches the can. A woman my age, walk­ing by the win­dow, watches me, as I am watch­ing the can. Two peo­ple walk past the can.

I got fright­ened. My heart rate is up. But the feather that flew past the win­dow was not the feather from the cup. The feather from the cup is still there.

Two peo­ple walk past the can.

Is it the fault of the cans that no one wants to put any­thing into them? I do not know if peo­ple are avoid­ing the can, do not under­stand the can or sim­ply have no garbage for the can.

The mid­dle of the day wants things from you. By the mid­dle of the day you ought to have some­thing to offer the day. 


A child laughs to see his teacher in the diner. “Mister!” he cries out. “I was here yes­ter­day,” the man replies. The boy pushes him against the wall. “Give me your money,” he laughs.

It is only a guess that the man is his teacher. Sometimes I can­not see the can, as when a mini­van waits at the lights. I do not men­tion every per­son who walks by the can. “I like bug­ging teach­ers out­side school,” the boy says to his teacher.

A boy ped­als his scooter across the road. The teacher thanks the chef, call­ing him Jeff, and leaves. 


“Keep your eyes on the road. We’re all pedes­tri­ans,” reads the ad on the street­car. The sun shines onto these pages. I can feel the sun on my eye­lashes now.

The Bathurst car glides ele­gantly along the rails, curv­ing around the bend onto College Street. Of the five peo­ple who have passed the new garbage can, not one has put any­thing in.

The leaf blower is back.

The hot-dog man sells a hot dog from his tent.

No one puts any­thing into the can. A kid passes by, eat­ing per­haps peanuts from his hand, like a hooli­gan. “Stand By Me” plays on the radio.

The trunk of a cab pops open.

1230 hrs

Some­one pass­ing the bin looks back, per­haps at the can, per­haps not. Pedestrians pass; no one deposits any­thing into the can. 

Midday forces you out­side your­self. There is no real intro­spec­tion at noon.

The cup with the feather remains. Four youngish peo­ple look around. For a can? Nobody rec­og­nizes this thing as a garbage can, or nobody has any garbage.

Somebody throws some­thing in. How much I would like to write that.

“What are you look­ing at?” the tv asks. Sensing dan­ger, I glance at it.

A woman stops her bike by the can and but­tons up her coat. She looks at the can, but does she under­stand it? A young man leans against the can. Two men approach. Will they have some­thing to give the can? They do not.


Some men gather near the can, though it is not really a can. They smoke by it. One points. A taxi par­tially blocks my view. The cars go. The young men are still gath­ered there. Will some­thing happen?

The men depart. The can stands alone.

Two peo­ple pass by the can. Neither throws any­thing in. The light is green and the cars cross Bathurst and con­tinue along the street. A fruit fly in the win­dow casts a divert­ing shadow on my gloves.

Either the feather has gone from the cup, or it’s on the under­side of the cup.

Can a woman help want­ing to attract men? Does a garbage can feel like a garbage can if it does not attract garbage? Someone stands, stops and looks at the garbage can head-on. I wait. He deposits noth­ing and moves away.

Here comes a man in a green win­ter hat. A woman exits a blue truck; he enters. “Some say love, it is a river,” plays on the radio.

“Life’s too short,” I hear some­one say behind me, or else I hal­lu­ci­nate it.

1330 hrs

“I have been watch­ing that bin all day, and only three peo­ple have put any garbage in it,” I fan­ta­size say­ing to the woman behind the counter. “Why do you think that is?” My tea is sweet and I drink it.

Finally I take off my coat. The sun con­tin­ues to shine all over me. At the start of some­thing there is beauty and clar­ity, but as it goes on, it grows mud­died. Or is this the dif­fer­ence between eight-thirty in the morn­ing and half past one?

I check for the feather but can­not see it. A white van blocks my view of the can. A school bus enters the inter­sec­tion, then a sec­ond one, like the bus we took from the wed­ding last night, with Cary hang­ing over the seat.

A man walks past the bin. Watching the can is mak­ing me sad. Three peo­ple pass it by. 


The feather remains stuck to the cup.

As I talk to the chef about the garbage can, a woman in a short coat steps gin­gerly up to the can and drops some­thing in. “I think it is because they don’t know what it is,” Jeff says. “It looks like a phone booth.”

Three peo­ple pass on this side of the street. The light fac­ing me is red. I am get­ting very sleepy, in the win­dow, in the sun.

No one works well at this hour. How long can a per­son pay atten­tion to a garbage can? “It’s a good story,” says Jeff, the chef, but I don’t know if he means it.

It is a mis­take to think that one can work after noon. The brain gets caught up in the activ­ity of the world around twelve, then grows tired. From the stim­u­la­tion or from the same­ness? I know that boy rid­ing by on that bicy­cle. No one stops by the can. 

People in the diner have started to drink beer. 


Interrupted by a long con­ver­sa­tion I ­didn’t want to have with a man who’s killing half an hour. By mid-afternoon there is no hope of recap­tur­ing the still­ness of the morn­ing, the promise. Three peo­ple pass by the can.

Nobody puts any­thing into the can. The radio is tense with sta­tic. The sound of a speaker phone on auto­dial. The beat of the song is up, up. There is no keep­ing any­thing as it was. The street is a sta­tic sur­face now; what­ever moves is part of that sta­tic. Picture: the street­car, peo­ple wait­ing for the street­car, the trucks turn­ing past each other in the inter­sec­tion, as beau­ti­ful as bal­leri­nas, the cyclist rid­ing through the green light, the feather waver­ing in the wind on the cup and the new garbage can pro­claim­ing itself as new. The fact of move­ment does not mean no static.

1430 hrs

Would it be noble to stay for­ever in this diner, watch­ing that bin, for the sake of expe­ri­enc­ing its grad­ual change over time, as peo­ple deposit more of their garbage into it? 

A TiVo ad on the set: We will never have to sit through the bor­ing parts again.

No one approaches the can. A man walk­ing down the side­walk swerves to avoid it. A fly flies by my eye.

I am nos­tal­gic for the morn­ing, before I knew what I now know about the can, when I was still opti­mistic, and felt the still­ness of the world, and every detail inter­ested me. 

“Is that the best you can do? Is fear the only weapon you have?” she asks. “No, but it’s the best one,” says the soap opera actor. “I don’t want you to fear me,” he says. No one approaches the can.

There is no rea­son to doubt what I want, or to feel I should want what I don’t want, for the sake of flex­i­bil­ity, or to broaden my nature. I should do what I want and get on with it.

Two peo­ple walk past the bin, three, four, five. A fly flies by my nose. Everyone was in love with the brides­maid last night, but every­one loved the bride. 


At three o’clock one’s focus returns. The day begins draw­ing to an end. How much time have I wasted? Between one and three, we for­get we are going to die. Nobody approaches the bin. A girl in a black coat runs by it. A lady with a child at the end of her hand strides by. A man walks past the win­dow with an iPod on. Two cabs wait by the light.

“Half and half,” Cary said last night. “I’ll take respon­si­bil­ity for my half, if she’ll take respon­si­bil­ity for hers.”

The bird has returned; now it’s in the shade. I can see the feath­ers on its neck, then it hops to the ground. It moves toward the french fry, past the fold­ing side­walk sign, away from the bill­board, I mean can, which that man ignores, and that woman ignores, and no one emp­ties their refuse into.

The woman who com­plained about “Homemade Pie” has returned to the diner.

A big dust goes up as the street­car stops.

Someone runs past the bin. 


“They are crooks, they shit me,” says the man at the counter. No one passes the bin. A man in rollerblades with head­phones on takes a dig­i­tal pic­ture, though not of the can, spins in a cir­cle and rolls off.

It’s pos­si­ble that some­one put some­thing in the can while I was down­stairs peeing.

A street­car turns left onto Bathurst Street. Someone is vis­it­ing the can! A woman with frizzy brown hair has deposited her trash in the can, in the recep­ta­cle that faces the street, not the one fac­ing the park­ing lot. When it hap­pens, it doesn’t live up to the antic­i­pa­tion of see­ing some­one put some­thing in the can. 

A Honda turn­ing right blocks my view of the can. I eat my blt.

A crowd of peo­ple pass by the bin, but no one uses it. A woman in sun­glasses, pass­ing by the win­dow, is press­ing her nose with her finger.

“I just called to say I love you,” sings the radio. Two chil­dren rush by, one with a yoga mat in her knap­sack. A man glances at the can. 

Did some­one just put some­thing into the can, or am I hallucinating?

No one approaches the can. 


The girls wait with their back­packs on, on the street­car island in the mid­dle of College Street. “I’m gonna getcha if it takes all night,” sings the radio. 

A girl with red hair, who gives off a tremen­dous impres­sion of well-being, ped­als by the win­dow. I am com­pos­ing an email in my head, but I intend not to send it for sev­eral weeks.

The sun shines out over the bin, low­er­ing in the sky. The shad­ows on the table now fall in my direction.

Two young peo­ple throw some­thing into the can. I can­not see the plas­tic cup. It and its feather are gone.

A woman in green regards the bin. A sec­ond woman hur­ries up to the 511 Exhibition car. Two boys run for the street­car behind it.

A per­son ruins things with exaggeration.

A pass­ing man regards the bin. 


A fat lit­tle boy in an orange ski jacket ped­als his scooter up to a group of grade-school girls. They ignore him at first, then one accepts the flyer that he is offer­ing, then they all do. I am stand­ing, try­ing to see if the man who seemed to be fin­ish­ing some­thing on a paper plate will throw his plate into the bin. A maroon mini­van is block­ing my view. Inconclusive.

How to wind down?

No one approaches.

Still no sign of the cup. A Ford truck blocks my view of the bin. Aretha Franklin sings on the radio. I am look­ing for­ward to the imme­di­ate future. 

A cloud of brown dust goes up in the mid­dle of the road. The street is for a sin­gle moment remark­ably free of cars.

A teenage boy in a red wind­breaker passes by the win­dow, try­ing not to smile to himself. 

How many peo­ple could have put garbage in the bin while my head was down writing?

My stom­ach hurts. The day of fin­ish­ing some­thing long now comes to a short end.

I feel like I have wasted so many years think­ing, but maybe that’s unfair. The traf­fic report plays on the radio. Star Trek plays on the tv. Men sit at the tables drink­ing beer or orange juice or cof­fee, but most are drink­ing beer.

More peo­ple pass by the bin. A pigeon hops off the side­walk and into the road.

In the wan­ing min­utes, all this feels rou­tine, rehearsed. No one approaches the bin.

For the first time today I feel tired, but I was tired before, but in a dif­fer­ent way, but not in a less authen­tic way. The weather report comes on: “Downtown Toronto is beau­ti­ful. Fourteen degrees.”

The music on the radio swells. The street goes by. It’s like the end of a movie, and only I can see the credits.

A man in dark sun­glasses walks past the bin, then walks back. I check for the cup.

A man walk­ing slowly past the bin puts noth­ing into the bin. Nor does she. Nor does he. It is 4:31. It’s time to stop. But who’s going to watch the bin when I am gone? And as for me, I feel a dis­in­cli­na­tion to start some­thing new.

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Sheila Heti is the author of The Middle Stories and Ticknor, and the cre­ator of the Trampoline Hall lec­ture series. Visit her online at sheilaheti.net

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