Saturday, November 19, 2011

First story I've written in a while.


New Start
Ray Timmins

Charlie and I played video games for a while. It was a good way to pass the time during this miserable period of my life. After a while I went out on his porch to smoke a cigarette. He stayed inside. I couldn't concentrate on the video game anymore, my mind was racing. Everything and nothing pulsing, screaming in my head. Charlie was pretty laid back in general, he wouldn't understand. He might even laugh and then I'd get serious, maybe yell or freak out in some way. He didn't deserve that. I had this etching tile he gave me and the tools were out there. I began carving into it, not sure where it was going. I pricked my finger with the tool and it began to bleed. The lines I was etching seemed random, just messy. And the blood poured. I watched it. I felt a little better. Bleed the freak indeed. I wiped my cigarette on my finger and painted it with my blood. I smoked it. I breathed it in so deeply, puff after puff, and I felt calmer. I etched more lines. Smoked more of my blood. And more lines. I grabbed a bottle of ink and covered the tile. I pressed it on a piece of paper a few times. I couldn't make it out and put it aside, but at least the chaos in my mind was dead for the time being.

I knew I wouldn't be able to crash there that night. That his wife wouldn't allow it. And of course I couldn't go back to where I had been staying. I wasn't any longer sure what the argument with Deanna had been about. She was pregnant, she didn't need the stress. But still, it's as if she had just turned on me. Though I had yelled. Loudly. And I had never done that to her. I never really yelled at anyone, let alone a friend. But the day before, at that cute store clerk. I'd had a silent crush on her for the longest and then I let go on her. Not sure why. I mean the change was wrong, but only a few cents off. She seemed distracted by her phone. Texting. People are always fucking texting. Can't even get decent service at a convenience store. One pack of cigarettes. The same ones she always rang me up for. But still. The accusations, whatever they were—just crazy shit as far as I can remember—and the yelling. I remember the sound of my quaking voice. From then and with Deanna. Some deep fear was wrecking my brain.
 
And then I had no place to stay. Even a day later the memories were fuzzy, and much the vaguer now, a few years later as I write this.
 
Deanna's roommate let me keep my stuff in his room. We were old friends, I could get it all back once I got settled. But where? Was I crazy like my friends had been saying? Like my family had suggested? Did I need psychiatric attention? Fuck no, they were all fucked and dead and dull for some reason. There was something going on with me that's for certain. I was becoming me. The whole me. Slowly and albeit with some strange skips here and there. But I heard the music, I was confident in me. And soon everyone else would be too.
 
Sleep though. If I could just find a way to get some real sleep. Deep sleep. It'll come, damnit, I know it will. I'd barely gotten four hours a night, and some nights none at all, for nearly a month.
 
Charlie was still in there playing video games. He bought me lunch, he let me chill out there, we played video games and drank beer. I still had half of one left. I took a sip, thinking about my next move. Ralph. Didn't want to, shit was hard enough for him as it was, but I needed a place to stay that night. Get my head together. Get up North and stay with Uncle Bill. If that's even still in the cards. Needed to call him and see what was going on. Until then I had my backpack, laptop and a few bucks from Dad. Where had all my money gone? My job? The girls I loved, the friends? My life? All small portions then, that's all anyone could stand of me. And I really had no idea why.
 
Back inside:
 
“Want to pick up this game?” Charlie asked.

“No man,” I said, draining my beer. “Can I use your phone?”

“Yeah, here.”

I dialed Ralph's number.
 
“Hello?”

“Ralph?”

“Hey. What's up?”

“A lot. You gonna be home a little later?”

“I ain't got shit to do outside this house, you know that. Playing WoW all night. Same old shit.”


“I may stop by.”

“What's going on?”

“All kinds of shit. May crash there if it's alright.”

“I probably won't sleep tonight, but yeah whatever.”

“Cool. Later.”

“Yeah.”
 
My sister had bought me a bus pass and a phone card. Wouldn't let me stay more than the night, but I got the pass and phone card at least. She seemed worried. Or angry. I couldn't tell. Both her and Dad. Turned on me, just turned their backs. I was fucking homeless, didn't they care? Dad dropped me off at a psych hospital. Once there, the admissions lady asked if I wanted to hurt myself or anyone else. Such stupid shit, of course I didn't. I never had. So they wouldn't take me in. Good. I had no place to go but I didn't want to stay there. They recommended a homeless shelter. I told them thank you. They even fed me breakfast in the morning after having stayed in the lobby all night. And a number for the homeless shelter.
 
These were all my choices, Charlie had pointed out earlier during lunch. And he was right, of course. I knew this. I had chosen to get off my medication. And it was withdrawals I was experiencing it seemed to me at the time. Though my family seemed to think it was an episode I was having and I needed to get back on meds. All this shit. I never should have gotten on those fucking pills to begin with! But what to do till the smoke cleared and I could show everyone that I was just fine?
 
Ralph? Fuck, but yeah, I decided to plead my case to him. Could never tell with him. Dude was fucking nuts. Real crazy. Stayed up for days on end playing Warcraft. Christ and he kept trying to get me to play. Maybe I was a little crazy, but I wasn't fucking insane! Too much to do, to see, to experience. He was going dumb and blind with that damn game and it had just spiraled out of control since he had lost his job. Hell, his life began seeping into the ground even before he had lost his job, which is why he lost it. Anger issues. It didn't occur to me at the time that I had been in a similar boat lately.
 
At least Ralph owned his house. But I knew his bills had been piling up. He'd told me all about it whenever we talked. I felt for him, but I had shit of my own to deal with. The whole thing had been dependent on Uncle Bill. He told me I could have the spare room and that I could even work with him as his assistant plumber. And he just kept putting it off.

“Fuck, Uncle Bill, pull through for me soon. I can't live like this anymore!”
 
Dad had always told me Uncle Bill was no good, that he was unreliable. I thought it was just sibling rivalry bullshit. But I knew Uncle Bill would get me up there. Just needed to keep my head above water until then.
 
I sat down next to Charlie. He paused the game and I handed him his phone back.

“Know what you're doing tonight?” he asked.

“We'll see. Can't stay here I suppose?” I felt so humiliated asking, so desperate.

“No, Katie won't want that. She doesn't want any visitors.”

“Or she just hates me.”

“No man, it's not that. She just likes her privacy. Don't take it that way, Dell.”

“Alright. A friend I used to work with, Ralph, said I could crash there. But he's fucking nuts. Hopefully Uncle Bill will pull through.”

“Want a ride to Ralph's?”

“No man, but a ride to the library. Gonna get online for a while. Pass the time and try and call Uncle Bill.”

“Want to call him now?”

“No, I tried a little while ago. I have a calling card, I can call him from a pay phone.”

“If you can find one, haha.”

“Yeah, pay phones are rare these days. And they're always broken.”

“Still, it was nice of your sister to get you that calling card.”

“Would be nicer if she let me stay there.”

“Yeah, maybe. I don't understand why your family won't take you in.”

“They think I'm nuts. Say I don't want to help myself by checking into a hospital.”

“But the hospital wouldn't even take you in?”

“No. Because there's nothing fucking wrong with me. I mean, my life has been in shambles lately, but I just need to catch a break ya know?”

“Yeah,” he said, turning his head away.

“Uncle Bill will come through soon. He's just busy dealing with his wife. She had a heart attack and is in the hospital.”

“Yeah?”

“Yeah.”

“Well, Katie's going to be home from work soon. I can take you to the library if you want.”

“Thanks.”
 
Charlie dropped me off in front of the library. He stuck out his hand. “Take care, man. Call and let me know when you're settled with Uncle Bill.”

“Should be soon. Thanks for everything, Charlie.”

We shook hands, I grabbed my backpack and got out of the car. Into the library, I sat on a comfy chair and pulled my laptop out. I connected and checked my email. I opened up my chat program and saw that Frank was online, an old childhood friend who moved to Minnesota after high school. Hadn't spoken in a while so I decided to say hi.

We chatted a while. Caught up. He had just broken up with his girlfriend. They had been dating for three years. He told me the whole story and it was just nuts. She had faked a pregnancy to keep him at one point. Then at another time she did get pregnant and aborted it before even telling him about it. She hadn't wanted him to get mad, she'd said. He was still quite upset over the whole thing and had sworn her off just a couple months ago. But still she persisted in keeping him roped into her drama.

“Going on a date tonight. No attachments for a while. If ever,” he said.

“Can't blame you there.”
 
I told him my sad story, just the highlights and he said that if I could find a way up there I could stay in a spare room of his. If the thing with Uncle Bill didn't work out, I told him. I thanked him and kept it in mind. Which reminded me that I needed to call Uncle Bill.
 
There were two payphones in the lobby of the library. I took the escalator down and saw that someone was on one. I tried the other but it had no ringtone. Fucking payphones! At least I knew the other one worked. I walked outside and pulled out a cigarette. I sat on the grass. The lawn was filled with people. Mostly homeless people it seemed. I wasn't the only one. But I was different. This was temporary. A little hiccup in my life was all.

It was hot, but there was a nice breeze and I was in the shade of a tree. There was a persistently tweeting bird up in it. I looked up at the bird, stared for a moment and it flew away, giving chase to another another bird on a telephone line, which launched away in the opposite direction, fleeing.
 
“Got a light, brother?” I heard someone say.

I looked up and there was a man, presumably homeless, standing in front of me with a cigarette in his mouth. I handed him my lighter.

“Mind if I pop a squat?”

“Sure.”

“You on the streets, man?”

I looked down at my dirty shirt and ripped shorts and figured along with the backpack and my dreary countenance that it must have been a dead giveaway.

“Yeah. Just temporary though. Waiting for my uncle. He's letting me stay with him up North.”

“Up North? Where?”

I didn't like this guy's questions. “Maryland,” I said.

“Oh yeah, what city?”

“I forget the name,” I lied. I wasn't sure where he was gong with these questions or if I was just paranoid, but I didn't want him knowing anything about me.

“I gotta use the phone. Later, man.”

“Yep.”
 
I started walking toward the library, he shouted to me, “If you need a hot meal, go to West 9th and 12th Street around 6:00 tonight.”

“Thanks,” I said and hurried to the payphone.
 
I dialed in my phone card number, typed in the confirmation number and then called Uncle Bill.

“Hello?”

“Uncle Bill! Been trying to reach you. How are you doing?”

“Ah! Dealing with this bitch!”

“Huh?”

“Gloria. She didn't have a heart attack. Just a panic attack. The doctor gave her a prescription and sent her home. She's been doing nothing but laying into me, Dell. Not a good time to come up here. I need to deal with this fucking drama queen. Keeps accusing me of cheating, and wanting to kill her. Hell, she may even be right on that last one. Not worth it of course. Damn, this fucking bitch!”

“Sorry to hear that. Listen Uncle Bill. I won't be much of a bother if you could just give me a room, I can keep out of your hair. I'm kind of desperate.”

 “What do you mean?”

“I mean I'm on the streets. Dad won't let me stay with him. Says he's still getting over losing Mom and that he has no room for me. That the condo association wouldn't like it.”
 
“What an asshole. He's your father for Christ's sake. I'll talk to him. What happened to your place? You were staying with those friends of yours.”

“Long story Uncle Bill.”

“Well? I'm not sure what you want me to do. I said I might have a room for you, but like I said, now's just not a good time.”

“But Uncle Bill!,” I began to sob.

“Sorry, Dell. I just can't do it now. I never promised you anything right now. Just that maybe in the future . . .”

“But you said this month would be good! I depended on you, Uncle Bill!”
 
“No. Don't do that shit! I'm sorry you have no place to stay now but that has nothing to do with anything we talked about. I might be able to get you up here soon, just give me some time. Call around. You have friends, don't you? And I'll talk to your father. What an asshole! You gotta take care of yourself, don't ever depend on anyone, Dell. Are you alright? Still on your meds? I can pay for them if you need me to.
 
I need a home! Dad was right about you!” I screamed into the phone, slamming it down.
 
I walked out of the library and sat down underneath the tree I had been sitting under before. I looked off into the sky, at the birds, the buildings, the clouds. I stared at the sun. Into the sun, a game I played as a child because I had been told that I shouldn't. Life was like that lately: like staring into the sun. The rays fell away and I could see the fiery ball. I looked away and closed my eyes until the black spots went away. I opened them and I was still there, on the library lawn with all the other pitiful homeless souls. A loser at life. What the fuck was I going to do? I remembered Frank's invitation. But how the hell would I get up there? Walk? And maybe Uncle Bill would come through. Wasn't holding my breath anymore as far as that went though.
 
It was a long way to Ralph's and it would be getting dark soon. I could take a bus part of the way. I made my way to the bus stop at the corner. There was no one else waiting there, which was good. I didn't want human contact. Not even proximity. Fuck the world. No one cared, why should I? I wondered what kind of mood Ralph would be in when I got there. I put it out of my head and soon I could see the bus coming down the road.
 
For some reason I thought about Mom while I was on the bus. Our family just hadn't been the same since she died. I definitely wasn't. That came up a few days ago with my sister. She was saying that Mom wouldn't want to see me this way. That I needed to get on my meds and get my shit together. And the last thing I said to my sister and Dad when they told me I couldn't stay at their places was that Mom would never turn me away like they had. Maybe that hurt, and I hoped it had. They both reiterated my need for medication and left me standing outside the library with my backpack. I got lost in books for a while, browsing only, reading paragraphs out of this book and that, perusing in a variety of sections. I crashed on an old friend's couch that night but had to leave the next day. Bert. Said he wasn't sure what he could do to help. I said let me stay another night. He said he couldn't, that he was hanging out with his girl that night. I said “fuck you!” and left.
 
Walking from where the bus had dropped me off to Ralph's I watched the sun setting. Finally, an end to the hot Florida day. Though it was October, the heat was still up into the upper eighties and it was just miserable being outdoors. I perked up a little as the daylight receded and picked up my pace to Ralph's.

When I got there, Ralph was sitting on his front porch with his neighbor, Jose. I could smell the joint they were passing when I stepped through the gate.
 
“Hey,” Ralph greeted me and I smiled for a change. He passed me the joint and I hit it, passing it to Jose, who smiled and said hello to me. I had only met Jose once before, but he had seemed alright.
 
“So, what's the hell's going on with you lately?” Ralph asked.

“Too much,” I said hitting the joint again, “but I'm in between places right now.”

“Well, you can spend tonight here, but I can't put you up for long. Where have you been staying, you look dirty.”
 
“Here and there. Heading up North with my Uncle Bill soon,” I said, though my heart sank upon saying this.
 
Maybe the atmosphere and the time of day set my mood somewhere near normal for the time being. Neither of them were giving me the odd looks most others had been. I wasn't blathering on like I had with my family and a few others.

“You can take a shower if you want. Have any clothes? Where's all your shit?”

“Still at the old place. Gary's taking care of it. Can't go back though. Deanna's pissed at me.”

“What's the matter, you wouldn't put out, huh?”

“Not exactly, but weirdly I do wonder about that sometimes. She did have a crush on me that I never could requite.”

“Haha, hit this.”

I did and as soon as the joint was done Jose was rolling another.
 
Not playing Warcraft I see.”

“Need a break.”
 
Jose lit the next joint and Ralph ran inside and grabbed some beers. I hadn't been expecting this to turn into such a joyous occasion, but it was a nice change for certain. I felt good. The sun had just set, Ralph turned on the radio. Mostly Jose and Ralph talked at first, but after the joint and a couple more beers I opened up as well.
 
Jose left eventually and Ralph started playing Warcraft. I tried conversing but he was way into the game and hardly listening. I was babbling anyway, so it equated I figured. I excused myself and went and sat in his backyard under this huge Banyan tree.
 
I had not opened Facebook for a while. Life was too depressing and it had just become utterly meaningless to me. I decided to take a peek though. I pulled out my laptop, picked up Ralph's wi-fi signal and logged in. Nothing very interesting. Bland status updates, bad music posted. Farmville shit. But I saw one thing that caught my attention.
 
My first girlfriend from high school, Julia, posted that she had just moved back into town. Excited, and also a bit stoned, I wrote her a message and asked what had brought her back and that maybe we could see each other. Not sure what I was thinking, I was in dire straits and had no hopes of impressing her with my present state of affairs. Something in me disregarded all reason though. I had a place to stay tonight. I could shower and change into clean clothes. Maybe I was just wanting an escape. Have lunch with her, catch up and forget about my misery for a little while. We had remained close for a few years after we had broken up. In the back of my head I may have been thinking she would help me out in some way. She was married and had a child, though she was separated.
I kept Facebook open for a while waiting to see if she would respond right away, though her status update was a couple of hours old.
 
I heard nothing from her that night. I stared at the stars from underneath the Banyan tree most of the evening, then crashed dead asleep on the couch as the sun began rising. My energy completely spent. I could still see the light on in Ralph's computer room, and the clicking of his squeaky mouse button as I drifted off to sleep.
 
Staying with Ralph proved to be trying. He accused me of stealing food and poisoning his cat. I remember having a rambling conversation with him where I was talking on and on about a plausible future where our consciousness could be saved onto a hard drive and we could live forever in an eternal digital world. My enthusiasm for the subject was matched with his vengeance. He screamed “Bullshit!” over and over again, as if I were guilty of spreading some awful doomsday scenario lies. He muttered a few things about God and how he wouldn't make it possible, or that we'd be soiling his creation by bypassing his laws or something. He screamed at me to get out out of his house and chased me onto the front porch where I sat for about twenty minutes until he came out apologizing, offering me food and pot. As broke as he was he always managed to have some pot lying around.
 
I wasn't sure how much more I could take, or how much more he could take of me being there. All my shit was kept packed away, except my laptop. I kept to myself for a few days but we still got into it a few times and he chased me onto the front porch again. Eventually he said that I couldn't shower because I took too long and that he had to pay for water and I was wasteful. And then the food stopped. Except for bread and an old jar of peanut butter he didn't like. Which satisfied me just fine.

Ralph began berating me, calling me a bum and a loser and that I would have to find some other place to stay, that he couldn't afford to keep me and that he wouldn't take care of my pathetic ass anyway even if he did have the money. It was time to go indeed. I had long worn out my welcome. Longer than I had anticipated however. I would have to think of a new plan. Every plan I had come up with fizzled eventually. I wasn't in the position for any kind of long term planning. It was just short term survival at this point. And it was awfully depressing, though I really had no other way out that I could see. I wasn't checking myself into a hospital, that just wasn't in the cards.
 
I had planned on going up North, with Uncle Bill, and if that wasn't going to work then I had to find a way to Frank's. I couldn't stay in Florida anymore. The place was fucking haunted. I'd never be able to see past these horrible weeks of drifting. I'd never be able to smile again living here.
 
I had heard back from Julia and she said we could get together Saturday. By that time it was just too much and I pleaded with my Dad. He said I could spend a night there, eat and shower, but that I had to leave the next day. No questions asked.

Friday night I took the bus to the library, spent a few hours there reading and made my way to Dad's as nighttime approached.
 
My funds had gotten low and I bought the last pack of smokes I could afford. Little cigars, which were stronger and cost a lot less than regular cigarettes. They did the trick. I lit one up as I walked down Maple Street, toward Dad's.
The street seemed so different now. I used to drive down it when visiting my parents. When things were different. My life, everything. Mom had been alive and my situation was not so desperate. I'd visit for dinner on a Friday night or just go by to visit on the weekend and it was always a good time. Never exciting, but always comforting and happy. They'd ask how things were and we'd talk, watch TV or eat. I never could have imagined the present state of things in my wildest imagination. This wasn't my life, this was someone else's. I looked down at my feet, taking each step along the sidewalk, and knew that this was my life and that it was completely fucked up. And I had no one but myself to blame. And no one could even help. I started to tear up, but caught myself, smiled and walked on.

Dad asked me how things were. I told him about staying at Ralph's and other places I had been. He hadn't heard from Uncle Bill. My sister was upset with me still and so was Dad. He preached endlessly about my need to get help. I tried talking about Mom, sympathetic things, emotions about her loss, but he resented me bringing it up, told me to stop trying to change the subject. I couldn't help it. Whenever I saw saw Dad or my sister, all I could think about was her. It had been two years, and the feelings were still raw.
 
We were civil at dinner. I told him about Frank's offer. He said he had no money and that I'd better concentrate on getting help.

There was just no talking to anyone. Everyone had poor advice that just didn't apply to my situation. It was clear that there was little sympathy for someone who had lost everything, that everyone was too busy hanging on to what little they had. Me included of course. Just surviving.

After dinner Dad watched TV and I excused myself to sit by the pool, smoke and think for a while. It was beautiful that night. There was a full moon and a sweet breeze. No one was around and it was perfect. Just me and my thoughts to accompany me. At least they wouldn't judge me, scold me. I was nervous about seeing Julia the next day. I had no idea what I would say.

After a few smokes and some peace I went back inside. Dad was getting ready for bed. We said good night and I curled up on the couch to sleep. I couldn't get to sleep and went outside and smoked a couple more. Finally I fell asleep and when I woke up, Dad was already awake.

He gave me a few bucks and told me again to go to the hospital and get help. He seemed sympathetic. He then told me to take care of myself and I walked away. I walked to the library, enjoying the fresh air, with a spring in my step anticipating my meeting with Julia that afternoon. Thinking back, I may not have had any reason to be so happy, but I was. The day was nice and I was looking forward to the rest of it. Though I had no idea where the hell I'd end up by the end of it. I gave more consideration to the homeless shelter. I had exhausted all my resources. No friends would put me up, I had utterly no place to go anymore. I pulled the slip of paper out of my pocket and looked at the number for the homeless shelter. I quickly put it back in my pocket, put the evening out of my head and marched to the library.

I read for a while. Checked my email. Nothing. Even opened up Facebook. Nothing interesting there. I went downstairs and called Julia. We were still on for lunch and it was about time to be heading there. I had told her I was low on funds and maybe we could meet for fast food. She wouldn't have it and insisted on paying. I started making my way to Amigos Buenos, a Mexican restaurant a few blocks away from the library. I was cleaned up and even though I carried my heavy backpack, I could pass for a student I figured.

We met in the parking lot. Julia took a look at me and smiled. We hugged and she told me to store my backpack in her car. We went inside. I have to admit I felt a bit more respectable without lugging that damn backpack in with me.

She knew there was something amiss and immediately asked, “So what's going on with you?”

“What do you mean?”

“What's in that backpack?”

I couldn't hide what was going on. My skin had been burnt from the days out in the sun, my complexion ragged and, I'm sure, my eyes seemed distant, lost. Indeed I was lost. I began tearing up and confessed all. She smiled and took my hand. I felt comforted.

We ordered our meals and went back to talking.

“Do you still paint?”

“Not lately, but I have kept up with it over the years.”

“I want you to paint me something when you get settled in with Frank.”

“Have no idea how I'm getting up there.”

“Don't worry about that. I get good discounts on airfare and I will arrange it.”
I cried again. Our meals came. I ate heartily, it was delicious.

After the meal we went to the library and she used my laptop to buy a ticket. I used her cell phone and called Frank. We hadn't spoken on the phone in over two years. I kept it brief, told him when the plane would land and he agreed to pick me up.

I couldn't believe my fortune. Things had finally started to turn around for me. The plane didn't leave for three days however and I would have to find a place to stay until then. Julia was living with her parents with her daughter and couldn't have me there. She suggested pleading with Dad to let me stay until the day of my flight. I didn't see much chance in that, he was against my leaving, but I told her I would.

She had to pick up her daughter from school. We pecked on the lips and hugged warmly. It was nice and she was still as beautiful as ever.

“Call me or email me when you get settled in. And I expect that painting too.”

“Absolutely.”

I curled up with a book on a cushioned chair for a while. I got chilly and headed outside for a smoke. No one bothered me, there was a nice breeze. When I was done smoking I called Dad and told him I had a flight leaving in a few days. He said nothing at first, then finally:

“If that's what you really want to do.”

“I do. It's the only thing I've got.”

“Dell, you need help. You need medication. For me and your sister, get some help when you get up there.”

I told him I'd think about it. I asked if I could stay until my flight left and as I figured he refused.

“You got yourself into this, you can get yourself out of it,” he said and hung up.
I cursed him and made my way back to my spot under the tree to meditate on my situation. There was only one course now: check into the homeless shelter for a few days.

I called the number I had and they gave me instructions on how to get in that night. Apparently I had to meet a van that would be coming near the bus depot and they would provide me with a waiver, a meal and a bus pass. My bus pass had expired, so that would be helpful. The waiver indicated which home you were to go to. There were different shelters involved in this whole “meet the van” gambit. I didn't fully understand the situation, but thanked the person on the other line and checked the clock in the library. I had an hour to meet the van and it was about a ten minute walk. I sat under my tree and stared at the sea of homeless faces milling about the library lawn. I saw nothing I liked and a bit of fear crossed my heart. I was afraid of the shelter, what was ahead of me, but clung on to the hope that my flight would bring: a new start.

I bought cigarettes and a Mountain Dew with the money Dad had given me. When I arrived at the spot where the van was to come there were a couple dozen others also waiting. Finally the van came, along with another car. The man from the car passed out Wendy's hamburgers, I got two of them, and though I was still full from my meal with Julia I chomped them down along with everyone else.
A line formed at the van and when it was my turn up I told them I needed a place for a couple of days until my flight left. They gave me a waiver and a bus pass and told me which bus to catch.

I made my way to the bus depot and waited. The bus arrived, I boarded. It was about twenty minutes to the shelter. I felt eyes upon me the whole time. They could sense I was pitiful, without a home, without anything. I kept my head down and got off at my stop without looking at anyone. I crossed the street and into Viceroy Home. I saw an old cop car parked in front, as though it belonged to the home. It had the number eight on it, which I took as a good sign, it was my mother's life path—in numerology it is all the digits of your birthdate added up. I wasn't sure how much I believed in numerology, but I still took it as a good omen. And that was a theme to everything lately. Though I believed in nothing really, I took in many good omens, because they added a little meaning to my shitty situation. I paid attention to more details than I had used to. I had all the time in the world to do so then and I needed anything good that I could get.
After about an hour or so of processing, I was tasked with cleaning up. I did so, quietly. About half the people there were even more lost than I was. They mumbled to themselves, argued with each other over useless things.
“That's mine!” I heard someone scream and the screaming didn't subside for a few minutes. I swept the halls of the shelter and eventually mopped. We had dinner and me and the new arrivals slept on mats in the cafeteria. I fell asleep right way.


The next day I was told to keep guard on the floor. I sat in a chair for six hours or so and in the meantime a few people greeted me. One offered me pills, said he could get anything I wanted. I told him I only smoked pot and he said “give me a few days.” I told him I would be leaving soon and he just smiled and walked away. Maybe that was a story everyone used. I was told by several people that they had been there for weeks or months. I felt sorry for them, still clinging to the idea that this was just a temporary setback for me. Which of course, it was. There was one girl, I was convinced, who was being pimped out by her boyfriend. I saw them going in and out of rooms throughout my shift and she seemed embarrassed whenever I would see her in the hall. She was really cute too, but so fragile looking. Not hard like most homeless people appear. As a matter of fact, most people there had seemed softer, more broken than the lot you find living on the streets. Of course the missing element from the homeless outsider was that these homeless were institutionalized. I wondered if I would have been better off sleeping in the park for a few days.

I spoke with Dad on the phone and told him where I was. He seemed a little sorrowful and even a bit angry at the news, but finally he said that the night before I could stay with him and that he would take me to the airport the day of my flight.

I had some of my old prescription, antipsychotic medication, in my bag. I offered it to the nurse when she came. I told her it might help others there. She thanked me, and when the front desk lady noticed this she gave me a pack of cigarettes. I was beaming, since I had smoked my last one an hour before.

I sat out in the patio area where there was a television. Some action movie was playing. A dude walked up to me and asked for a smoke. I told him I only had a couple left. He grumbled and walked away. He sat down in a corner and stared at me until dinner was ready and I left for the cafeteria. I saw him a few more times that night and he kept giving me dirty looks. I swore that if he had had a gun he would have shot me for not giving him one of my cigarettes.

I worked through the next day until about three. I told them my dad said I could stay with him and that he would be bringing me to the airport the next day. The lady at the front desk didn't seem to believe me but told me I was free to leave whenever I wanted. I asked if I could get a bus pass and she said they didn't have any. So I left.

It was a long way back to Dad's. I had spoken to him on the phone before I had left the shelter and he said he would pick me up at the library at seven that night.

I began walking but got turned around when the road I was on led to a highway only. Not wanting to risk a cop stopping me as I walked on a highway road, I would have to turn around and walk almost all the way back to where the shelter was and take another road. It would be hours before I would make it to the library. I had no money for bus fair but I had my calling card. I called Charlie. He was on the road making deliveries and said to wait at the gas station and that he would give me a lift to the library.

I thanked Charlie over and over again and told him of my plans. He smiled and seemed happy for me. We shook hands at the library, I got out and went inside. I wandered around looking at various books. My mind was racing so bad I couldn't concentrate on any one for more than a minute or two. I did this for a while and finally went outside and sat under my tree. According to the clock in the library I had about forty-five minutes until seven. It was bright and hot outside, but I had my little shelter under the tree. I smoked my last cigarette.

Dad arrived and I walked over and got in his car. He stopped at McDonald's and we ate. He then stopped and got me two packs of my cheap smokes. We had a long talk beginning at McDonald's and ending at his condo. He brought up Mom and there were tears in his eyes. I was somewhat lucid during all this and we managed to have a decent conversation. He again pleaded with me to get help once I got up to Minnesota and I said that I would. And I was serious. I would at least see a therapist I thought, though I was still opposed to the medication route, even if everyone seemed to think it was the only choice I had.

I barely slept that night but there was peace in my heart. I had a place to sleep tonight, and after tonight, I had a place to stay and get my life back in order. I emailed Julia and thanked her again, and emailed Frank my flight information. I slumbered for a couple of hours and Dad woke me. My sister came over and gave me fifty dollars to help me on my way. I thanked her and Dad and I left for the airport.

The flight was uneventful. I was tired but couldn't sleep. I half-expected Frank not to show up at the airport, that something was just bound to go wrong. But he did. It was a couple hours drive back to his place. We caught up. It had been years since we had seen each other, but it seemed like little time had passed. He had his own house. It was two stories and I had the guest room upstairs. He uncorked a bottle of wine and broke out a couple of cigars. We drank and smoked and played some video games.

He told me that he would introduce me to some people and that I could get some rest and get my head straight.

“That medication will just fuck you up more,” he said.

“Don't I know it. I've been on them for years, my mind isn't used to being on its own. It'll adjust back.”

“You know what I've done to keep me sane?”

“What's that?”

“I've made my life into a video game. Constantly checking my stats, my supplies, my weapons. Understand?”

“Sort of, haha.”

“It works I tell ya!”

“Will keep it in mind,” I said and excused myself. I showered and went upstairs to my room. I lay down and opened the curtain. And where it had been in the upper eighties down in Florida, late October in Minnesota I saw the most amazing thing. Snow had started falling. A overwhelming peace came over me. I thought about my harrowing adventure over the last month or so and it was all a blur. I wasn't sure how I had gotten from one day to the next but somehow I had managed to survive the ordeal.

I still had a way to go to get my life back in shape, but at least, now, I had a starting point in which to make that happen. I stood up and watched the snow fall. It started covering the street and the cars. I looked beyond the houses and the trees and watched the snow drift far away and looked up into the darkness of the sky from which it was falling. I thought about what Julia had said, about wanting me to paint her something. I would have to get my art supplies back from Gary, but I knew what I wanted to paint for her. I wanted to paint hope, clearly illustrated in the snowy street scene before me. A new life, an extra life as Frank may have put it, was just beginning.

Monday, May 16, 2011


Be (for Pajama Girl)
one of the most difficult lessons
I’ve had to learn is that there is
a clear difference between what is,
what could, should or what might be--

except when it comes to you.

you are not only what is, should, could
and might be, but also what
will be.

and though I know what will be is what is,
the most difficult lesson has now
become accepting the fact that because of
you, all these things can be.
May 16, 2011


Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Little Synchronicity
Ray Timmins


Been three months now on unemployment. Don’t get a lot, but every two weeks I’m there at the mailbox to collect my meager earnings from the state. With a few cutbacks I can just get by.

Should be a check in the mail today, which means I have to make a trip to the check cashing store. But first, breakfast.

I head to 7-11 after picking up my check at the mailbox and pour a large coffee. I also get a granola bar and head for the register to pay for them. Some basic nutrition and a little caffeine boost is what I need today.

The cute girl at the counter rings me up and I’m off to the bus stop to wait for the 33.

I sit at the bus stop, happy to be alive for a change. Much of the time I’ve had lately has been spent in sadness and boredom, but today feels like a good day. The sun is shining but it’s not too hot. There’s a nice breeze, as a matter of fact. I feel it sweep through my hair and a subtle shiver consumes my body as if the wind has passed right through me.

Today I woke up somewhere around eleven, watched Headline News for a little while and took a shower. Being unemployed, I can work the day at a leisurely pace. This is what it must feel like to be retired.

Sure, I should be looking for a job, but there’s plenty of time for that.

I’ve lost thirty pounds in the last three months due to my low calorie diet.
The coffee keeps me going. I’ll hold on to the cup and when I get back home from the check cashing store I’ll refill it for a dollar.

I can see the bus coming. I finish my granola bar, take a sip of coffee and stand up. I pay my fare and take a seat in the middle of the bus. From here I can sit sideways and take in a view of the whole bus and all its varied passengers.

In the back corner is a kid rocking and bobbing to his iPod. A couple also sits close to the back, holding hands, staring straight in front of them. The girl sees me looking at them. I look away.

There’s an old lady with groceries sitting in the front rifling through her purse for something. And sitting directly across from her is an old man talking to a young woman, in her twenties, dressed in black with heavy black eye makeup.

It’s not too far to the check cashing store. I ring the bell and get off the bus. I cash my check and make my way to the bus stop on the opposite side of the road. I have about a fifteen minute wait. I light up a Camel and wait.

A guy walks up to the bench and sits down next to me.

“Hey, could I get one of those,” he says.

I hand him a cigarette and lighter. He lights it up and hands back the lighter.

“Thanks,” he says, smiling.

Now I’m nervous that he might want to talk. I’m not in them mood to talk. I just want to smoke and drink my coffee—I’m still a little sleepy and don’t think I can keep up with a conversation with a stranger right now.

“Man, it’s a nice day,” he says.

“Yeah, it sure is,” I say.

There’s a moment of silence and I decide that that wasn’t too bad. It is, after all, a nice day.

“Man, when I get home I’m gonna smoke me a nice, fat blunt,” he says, out of nowhere.

“Sounds good,” I say, sipping my coffee.

“You smoke?”

“Not in a while. Been unemployed. Not much money.”

He opens his backpack, which I hadn’t seen till just now.

“Man, you’re gonna make me cry. Here, take this.”

I couldn’t believe my fortune. He gave me a nice little bud from what looked like an ounce in his backpack. I put it in my cigarette pack. I hand him another cigarette. He puts it behind his ear.

“Take this too,” he says, scribbling on a scrap piece of paper. It was his phone number. “Call me if you ever want to hook up. I get this stuff all the time. It’s good shit.”

“Thanks, man.”

“James,” he says.

“Dell,” I say.

“I like my weed,” he says, “I like my booze. I was in the Mideast during the Gulf War and we used to get some good shit. Man, tell you what. Fucked up over there, though. Lost a lot of friends. Fucked up,” he says staring off into the distance.

“That must’ve really fucked with your head, seeing all those people you know die.”

“No shit, man. After all that I decided that you gotta have a good time as often as possible. Now, I party whenever possible. I spread cheer and mirth, man.”

“Cool.”

“So, how long you been unemployed?”

“Three months.”

“Getting unemployment?”

“Yeah, but not much. Ya know, just enough to get by.”

“Yeah, I know. Just found a job recently myself. I’m a cook at Boscoe’s.”

“Oh, I like that restaurant. Good steaks, man.”

“Yeah. When you get a job you should come by. Call me before you come, I’ll fix you up something sweet.”

“Cool.”

“Ooh, the bus.”

The bus overshoots the stop by half a block. James and I run to catch it and board. We pay our fares and sit down in the front of the bus.

“Enjoy that,” he says.

“Believe me, I will.”

The bus arrives on my block, I shake James’ hand, thank him and get off the bus. I jog to the 7-11 to get my coffee refill.

Feeling plucky, I get the dark roast with a little Irish Cream-flavored cream and go up to the register. I then remember the weed in my cigarette pack and decide to get lunch now so I don’t have to come back all stoned to get it. I have some food at home, but I probably won’t feel much like cooking when I’m high. I grab a microwave burrito—a green burrito—and a Chipwich.

I dart across the street after a couple cars pass and walk up to my door, key ready. I put the burrito and ice cream in the freezer, skip to my bed and plop down. I take out my cigarette pack and pull out the nice bud. I grab a random book from my bookshelf, it’s Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, and start to break up the bud. I have papers, but decide to use my bowl instead, to conserve what little I have. I figure I can get high twice, maybe three times, since my tolerance lately is so low.

I pack the bowl and take the first hit—a long, slow hit. This is good shit, I decide, already feeling it. I take one more hit and decide that it’s enough for now. I turn on the TV and flip through the channels, trying to find something good. I can’t find anything. After going through all the channels twice, I turn off the TV. I go to my computer and queue up a beefy playlist. I randomize it a few times, till I’m satisfied, and click Play.

Morphine plays—I get lost in the somber tones, sinking into my pillow, staring at the ceiling fan whirring above me.

I hear a knock at the door and I already know who it is by the uneasy sound of the knock. It’s Hanna. Hanna’s crazy. Hot as hell, but crazy. I met her on the bus last week when I was going to cash my check. She immediately took to me and started telling me all about her life. How she had taken a bus down here from New York to get away from her psycho ex-boyfriend. She was going to the grocery store nearby and asked me if I’d meet her there after I cashed my check, that she was afraid to be alone. I promised I would, so after cashing my check I walked the block to the grocery store and found her in produce, where she said she would be. I did some shopping too and we walked to the bus stop and caught the bus. Turned out she lived about a block from me and I was surprised that I had never noticed her before. She’d said she’d been in town for a few months, though she had spent most of her time inside till the last couple weeks.

I answer the door and, indeed, it is her. She pushes past me and plops down on my bed, seemingly exhausted.

“I ran all the way here!” she says, panting.

“What’s wrong?”

“There’s a cannibal living next door to me!”

“What?”

“It’s true! I saw him eating a giant piece of raw meat in his doorway when I came home from the beach this afternoon. I went inside my place and prayed. Dell, he was smiling as he chewed the meat, eyeballing me. What if he wants to kill me, hack me up and eat me?”

“Calm down, Hanna. Are you sure he was eating raw meat?”

“There was . . . sinew and gore and blood dripping from it. It was so gross, oh my God!”

“There’s no way you know that it was human flesh though.”

“I know what I saw, Dell! I saw an elbow!” she screamed hysterically.

“Alright, Hanna. I’m sorry. What are you going to do?”

“You have to let me stay here for now. But I need some stuff from my place. I need you to take me there, so I’ll be safe. But not now. He goes out at night, probably cruising the beach bars for women to take home and hack up. We’ll go after dark.”

She starts to calm down and I take a seat next to her on my bed, feeling sorry for her. Murder by Numbers starts.

“Holy shit! I’ve had this song in my head all day. Ever since I saw that guy eating the raw meat in his doorway. That’s just weird.”

“There’s a lot of Police songs on this playlist.”

“But why this one, huh? This is the first song that’s started since I’ve been here. I came in the middle of the last one and then a new song starts and it’s this one and I swear, Dell, it’s been in my head for hours.”

“Well, nothing terrifying about a little synchronicity,” I say, laughing a little, “which is also somewhere on this playlist.”

“One or two?”

“Both.”

“Cool!”

She seems at ease now, which puts me at ease.

“Is that pot I smell?”

“Yeah. Want some?”

“Hell yeah! I haven’t smoked in months. Not since I split up with my psycho ex. He was a huge pothead.”

“Couldn’t have been that bad then.”

“You don’t understand. He was psycho!”

I hand her the bowl and she hits it, offering it back to me. I decline, tell her I’m already stoned and she hits it again.

“He would just snap for no reason sometimes. Like we’d be maybe kissing and it’s getting hot and heavy and he would just shove me away and tell me that he knows what I’m up to, that he could smell other men on me and that he knew I was fucking around on him. Then he would break down at times and confess that he’d never dated someone as beautiful as me and what was I doing with him. Sometimes he’d accuse me of using him for his money and that I was used to living off Daddy’s money so that’s why I was with him.”

She takes one more hit and puts the pipe down.

“But I really did love him. I worked part time at a shoe boutique and I’d see him driving by every now and then just to check that I was working. Sometimes he would come inside and talk for a while, which was alright, but many times I’d just see him driving by.”

“That kind of possessiveness can get old after a while.”

“Tell me about it! One day we hired a guy, a fag actually—his name was George. He was really cool and we hit it off right away. So, Desmond, that was my ex’s name, came in and we were all talking. Now George was very obviously gay. He didn’t spell it out for Desmond but he really didn’t need to, ya know? And when I got home that night, my ex was waiting for me in the dark with just a single candle flickering on the coffee table—it was so creepy! He accused me of fucking around with George and I laughed because the whole idea was absolutely absurd. He slapped me and began screaming at me, calling me a whore. That was the last time I saw him. I packed some things and left. I went to my dad’s and stayed there for a few days till I bought a bus ticket down here. I wanted to take the bus to see the country, ya know? Although, in retrospect, a train might have been more comfortable.”

“So, you haven’t heard from Desmond?”

“No. Sometimes I miss him, but it’s for the best. I’m better off without him. Though he made me feel safe. Part of me hated that he would stalk me when I was at work, but another part of me liked that he was looking out for me. I dunno, sounds kinda crazy, I suppose.”

“I see where you’re coming from. But you are better off without him.”

“Besides, I have you now.”

Jesus Christ, what did that mean? Although she’s calm now and opening up, I still can’t get past the cannibal who lives next door to her. And how she’s moving in. Am I some sort of boyfriend now? No, I don’t want to be, but I don’t have the heart to turn her away. I mean, she’s a damsel in distress and is legitimately afraid to go home.


After dark, we leave for her apartment. Along the way, she sees “the cannibal” walking down the opposite road. She hides behind a bush and pulls me back there with her. When he’s out of sight, we emerge from the bushes and continue on to her place.

“Didn’t he just look evil?” she says.

When we arrive, she slowly unlocks the door and heads inside. I follow her. She grabs some clothes, a few CDs and some things from the kitchen, packs them in a large shopping bag and darts toward the door.

“Let’s go,” she says, “I’ve got everything I need.”

We walk back toward my place. She needs to stop at the gas station for a pack of cigarettes. I wait outside with her giant bag of shit. I see steaks in the bag and think that this might not be so bad. Hell, I haven’t had a steak in I don’t know how long. I remember the bag of potatoes at my place. Some guy on a fancy, bright yellow motorcycle pulls up to the gas pump near me. He begins fueling up. Hanna comes out, talking to the guy who works inside who’d followed her out. The stuff is heavy, I set it down while she blabs with the dude. The guy on the motorcycle calls to me.

“Hey, that your wife?” he says.

“No, just a friend.”

“She’s beautiful.”

“Yeah.”

He hops on his bike and flies away. Hanna starts walking toward me, holding up her pack of Marlboros.

“That guy is so nice,” she says, referring to the kid who works the gas station.

We cross the street to my building and walk up to my door. The next door neighbor is sitting on his stoop. He looks at me and winks, smiling. I open the door and we go inside.

“What was that all about?” she says, worried.

“Guess he was sort of tipping his hat to me for bringing home such a beautiful woman.”

“Really? You think I’m beautiful?”

“Very.”

She beams. She puts the steaks in the fridge—saying that she will make them later—and the rest of her food away. I start packing the bowl with what’s left of the pot. She sees me and her eyes widen as she makes her way toward me and sits down next to me.

“This is the rest of it,” I say.

“Can you get anymore?”

“No money. Some guy gave this to me.”

“That was nice of him.”

“Yeah, sure was.”

“Hey, I’ve got some money. Dad’s credit card, actually—I can get a cash advance. I’m sure he won’t notice, he doesn’t really check. I’ve had his card since I was sixteen.”

“So how many years has that been?” I ask, trying to find out her age.

“Oh, a few.”

“Well, it’s up to you,” I say, handing her the bowl.

She hits it.

“We’ll see tomorrow. I don’t want to go to the ATM after dark, even though I have you. That guy is out there.”

“Oh, yeah, the cannibal.”

She slugs me on the shoulder: “It’s serious!”

“Sorry.”

“Besides, we have some for now.”

“True.”

We smoke till we’re high and save the rest for later.

“What’s this?” she asks, referring to the music.

“Frank Zappa.”

“Oh, so now I finally hear him. Have heard about him for years but never actually heard him.”

“Hearing one song is barely a glimpse into what he’s done, though.”

“Oh, yeah?”

I nod.

“I need to take a shower,” she says, rifling through her bag. She pulls out a towel and a T-shirt. “Is it alright?”

“Yeah, sure.”

“I just love taking a shower stoned.”

“Go for it.”

She goes into the bathroom, I hear the shower turn on. I’m not really paying attention to what’s playing, just entertaining the thought of her naked in my shower. If only she weren’t crazy. Ah, but we’re all crazy in our own way, I suppose.

She comes out in a towel, curly brown hair hanging wet upon her neck and shoulders.

“Steamy in there,” she says, smiling, sitting down on the chair next to the TV.

“So, how was it?”

“Sublime!”

“Good.”

Suddenly, she stands up, drops her towel and says “What do you think of my ass,” showing it to me.

“Gorgeous.”

“Desmond used to say it was sublime—that’s what made me think of it, when I said that.”

“Yes, sublime would also be a good description.”

She puts her towel back on and walks into the bathroom. She comes out in a large T-shirt. It’s white and I can see that she wearing nothing underneath.

“All clean?”

“Oh, yeah,” she says, lying back on my bed, exposing her thighs.

I play with her hair, running my fingers through it and she begins to giggle softly. She reaches up and grabs the back of my neck, pulling me in closer to kiss me, which she does, upside-down. It’s a short, simple, but passionate kiss.

Her shirt pulls up, exposing herself but she doesn’t cover up. She just lies there smiling. I kiss her on the forehead and she closes her eyes. I run a hand down her shirt over her breast and she giggles.

“Stop that!” she says.

She pulls up her shirt.

“I have such small tits.”

“They’re very nice though. Well shaped, that counts for a lot.”

“Really?”

“Really.”

She grabs the back of my neck and kisses me upside-down again. This time I put each of my hands on her breasts and stroke them. She squirms and giggles as I lightly pull on her nipples. She sits up, taking off her shirt and lunges at me. Pretty soon, I’m undressed and we’re having sex on my bed, Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds playing on my computer.


I wake up and she’s gone. It’s morning, just after 8. I get up and go to the bathroom. As I’m pissing, I hear the door open. I finish and go back out into the living area. It’s Hanna.

“Went and watched the sunrise. Haven’t seen it since I’ve been here. It was beautiful. And I picked up some breakfast, too.”

We eat breakfast: pancakes, eggs, bacon, hash browns and toast. It is delicious. As I eat, I think about the sex we had last night. It was wonderful and I’m hoping for a repeat performance today. But the more I think about it, the more it seems like a fluke, that it’s never happening again. She sits across from me on the bed eating her pancakes with the innocence of a young girl. She thinks there’s a cannibal living next door to her. I start to feel sorry for her, so far from home and so lost. She has stepped through the looking glass. I reach my hand out and caress her cheek. She smiles at me with a mouthful of pancakes.

I call up James later and he makes a delivery. We all hang out for a while, smoking, till James has to leave. Hanna makes those steaks with some potatoes, which is wonderful. We make love again that night and it's even better than the first time. She stays the next few days, each night we make love is better than the previous night. I can’t believe my fortune. The way this crazy girl just appears out of nowhere, buys me pot, makes me steaks and gives me the best sex I’ve ever had in my life. This seems to good to be true, I keep telling myself. Hanna’s strange. I’ve spent every moment of the last few days with her and I know nothing about her childhood. She tells lots of stories though, I know just about everything that has happened to her in the last few years. She seems to like aggressive dickheads, which makes me wonder what she sees in me.

She lies on the bed now as I sit at my computer. I watch her sleep. So beautiful and serene. She begins to wake up, her eyes slowly open, she sits up in bed and runs her hand through her curls. The blanket around her falls away and she is naked. She gets up and gets dressed—the whole process is breathtaking. I like watching her get dressed almost as much as I like watching her get undressed.

Almost.

After spending a good half hour zoned out to the TV, she says, “I wanna get drunk today.”

I look over with an inquiring look.

“I want to drink today—vodka.”

“Vodka?”

“Vodka.”

“If I give you money will you go get it for me?”

“Sure, I guess.”

She gives me two twenties and tells me to get as much Absolut as I can. I walk across the street to the liquor store and buy a liter. When I get back, I hand her the change and the bottle.

“Any shot glasses?”

“I have two.”

“Get them.”

I do, setting them down in front of the bottle. She fills them both.

“Let’s go—grab your shot glass.”

I do, we toast to never ending happiness, and we drink. She pours two more and we drink them. She pours two more, immediately, but I hold out.

“In a little while. I don’t want to get wasted this early in the day.”

“I do,” she says, taking down three more shots. “Pack the bowl,” she says, and I do.

We smoke. I ask her what she wants to do with her life, if she wants to go to school or what have you.

“I want to live with gorillas.”

“Like Jane Goodall?”

“Exactly. She’s my hero!”

“So you plan on going to school?”

“Yeah, I suppose. I mean, yes, definitely. Just not the right time, ya know?”

“Why not, I mean, won’t your Dad pay for it?”

“Yeah, but I feel . . . restless. It’ll wear off, I guess. I dunno. I don’t know what I’m thinking one day to the next. I probably need medication. I just get so excited and have all this energy sometimes. I don’t even know if that cannibal thing was even real, at this point. I’m not sure. But I don’t want to go back, just the same. I like it here with you. For now.”

“For now?”

“Yeah, I mean, like I said, I don’t know what I’m thinking from one day to the next.”

I’m a little hurt, suppose I was starting to get a little attached. But we’re living in a fantasy—no jobs, no prospects, just wrapped up in each other like we have been. Deep down, I knew it wouldn’t last long.

She gets drunker and drunker, taking shot after shot, till she’s barely able to walk. And yet, she won’t sit down. She stumbles around, picking up random objects, a sock or a pen, and waves them around at me.

“You know what I think?” she says. “This is the first time you’ve been laid in a long time. I can tell.”

“Oh?”

“All the detail you put into lovemaking, oh, it’s been building up for a long time.”

“Yeah, perhaps.”

“You know what your problem is?”

“What?”

“You gotta take what you want. Even when we met, I started talking to you. And earlier when I told you that I wouldn’t be around forever you should’ve said something, but you didn’t. You just accepted it. Don’t you want me?”

“Yeah, but not if you don’t want me.”

“God!” she says, grabbing her purse. “I need cigarettes!”

She walks out the door, leaving me alone in my now quiet room. The playlist I’d had queued up ended a few minutes ago, I decide to queue up some more. I listen to a couple songs before I begin to wonder what’s taking Hanna so long. I walk outside, to the front of my building, and look across the street to the gas station where she buys her cigarettes. She’s just outside, talking to that guy I saw there a few days ago with the yellow motorcycle. I think about walking over there, but decide I have no real reason to. I find that I’m more annoyed than jealous and go back inside to listen to music.

I’m listening and singing along to Fairies Wear Boots when she walks in. She starts packing her stuff in her shopping bag, saying nothing at first.

“What’s up, Hanna?”

“I’m sorry, Dell, I gotta go. We could never be, you know that.”

I have just this moment now—she wants me to try and stop her, but I don’t think it would help anyway. Plus, I kind of want her to go. She’s just too much, all at once. I miss my privacy. I miss my sadness. The last few days have been exalting but nerve-racking at the same time. She sucks the life out of me. When it comes down to it, I just can’t keep up with her.

She’s done packing quickly and heads for the door.

“I’ll always remember you,” she says and it’s so cheesy and Hollywood but it gets to me.

The door closes and I sit there for a moment. I have privacy now, and sadness. I curse them and make for the door. I run outside, to the front of the building, to see the fancy yellow motorcycle speeding away, Hanna on the back. Maybe I could have made her stay, but I still wasn’t sure whether or not I even wanted to be with her. Never wanted to be with her to begin with, but things just sort of happened. I may have even fallen in love with her. I watch the motorcycle disappear in the distance, turn around and walk back to my empty room. The Doors are playing: “. . . don’t you love her as she’s walking out the door?” I remind myself what I had told her about being terrified by a little synchronicity. As usual, my own reasonable advice seems useless when applied to myself.