460 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
460 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
|
s$
|
|||
|
$$ .d""b. .d""b. HOE E'ZINE #1046
|
|||
|
[-- $$""b. $$ $$ $$ $$ -- ------------------------------------------- --]
|
|||
|
$$ $$ $$ $$ $$ss$$ "Another Profitable Life Experience"
|
|||
|
$$ $$ $$ $$ $$ by Kreid
|
|||
|
$$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ 03/22/00
|
|||
|
[-- $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ $$ -- ------------------------------------------- --]
|
|||
|
$$ $$ "TssT" "TssT"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
- Chapter One
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I turned on the TV. It said, "PREVENTATIVE ACTIONS MUST BE TAKEN
|
|||
|
IN ORDER TO NULLIFY THE COLLABORATIVE AND DATA-DRIVEN EFFORTS OF
|
|||
|
AFRICAN-AMERICAN DRUG DEALERS." Then, gradually, a man with white hair
|
|||
|
came onto the screen, and his lips were moving along with the speech.
|
|||
|
CNN. Channel 9. Naturally, I took no offense when I realized that he
|
|||
|
wasn't talking to me or to any of the people I knew; he was talking to a
|
|||
|
crowd. Then there was some clapping from the crowd, and I changed the
|
|||
|
channel. Channel 10. It was a documentary on bats. Fuck yeah!
|
|||
|
Cough.
|
|||
|
Upon that last thought and that last cough, I snapped out of a
|
|||
|
haze that I didn't know I was in before. Oh, this again, I thought, and
|
|||
|
I was awake. Then I spied the remote resting on the floor and I stepped
|
|||
|
on the POWER button. Off. Bats indeed.
|
|||
|
The loud fans in the room blasted white noise into the air and I
|
|||
|
took notice.
|
|||
|
Switch, switch, off, off. The light was off to begin with, so
|
|||
|
that left nothing on in my room but myself.
|
|||
|
"Om. Ohhhhhmmmmmm." Uhm. I looked around the room for something
|
|||
|
to do. Didn't find much, though. The inflatable chair I sat on looked a
|
|||
|
little deflated so I sat down on the floor to blow some air into it. It
|
|||
|
felt good to breathe the air inside that chair. It tasted like rubber.
|
|||
|
When I was done with that, I walked out my front door and into the
|
|||
|
town. It looked to be about 9:00 PM.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[-----]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
- Chapter Two
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I was singing to myself as I walked on the sidewalk on my way
|
|||
|
downtown: "Hey, man, you gotta joint to sell me?" Couldn't remember the
|
|||
|
next line of the song by the time I met up with Black.
|
|||
|
"Hey!!" He signaled me from across the street.
|
|||
|
"Hey!" I walked up to him.
|
|||
|
"What's up? Uh, three."
|
|||
|
"Okay, three. Here. Thanks, dude, I'll see you."
|
|||
|
"Thanks man, see ya."
|
|||
|
Now, don't misunderstand me here. I don't call him Black because
|
|||
|
he's black, I call him Black because his name is Black. He's a black man
|
|||
|
named Black. I was walking home. I sang to myself: "Walking home--"
|
|||
|
Too routine. It sure was cold out. I stopped at the liquor store
|
|||
|
on the way home and bought wine. When I got home, I snapped out of a
|
|||
|
haze I didn't know I was in before. "Oh, this again--"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[-----]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
- Chapter Three
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I poured the red wine and turned on the television, reveling in
|
|||
|
something. The news was on. I tried to watch it, but couldn't. I didn't
|
|||
|
want to listen. TV is a waste of time, anyway.
|
|||
|
Across the floor I saw the phone lying off the hook, as it had
|
|||
|
done for the last few months. No noise blew through the ear piece anymore.
|
|||
|
It had been shut off. Somewhere in my garbage, there were many empty
|
|||
|
phone bills and a few notices of my account being terminated. No one
|
|||
|
would have ever called me, anyway.
|
|||
|
Just then, Madeline walked in.
|
|||
|
"Hi Dave."
|
|||
|
"Mad."
|
|||
|
"You're mad." She smiled at me, as if to indicate that she was
|
|||
|
joking, which she was. I had heard this joke many times before.
|
|||
|
"Eheheheh."
|
|||
|
Madeline and I spent some quality time together in my room. And
|
|||
|
before long, I realized that I was hungry. As my routine went, I hadn't
|
|||
|
eaten all day. Starvation causes suffering, suffering causes happiness;
|
|||
|
or at least, I was testing that theory out. So Mad and I went downtown to
|
|||
|
get some dinner. She got some fried chicken and I got some mashed potatoes
|
|||
|
and gravy and we took it home and ate it all with the wine. Very filling.
|
|||
|
Filling.
|
|||
|
Later on that night, Madeline introduced me to heroin. She had
|
|||
|
bought it in town from a Hispanic man named Freedom. We snorted it. For
|
|||
|
a few hours, I felt like nothing mattered except the two of us. Of course,
|
|||
|
this is how I usually felt before I ever tried heroin. We both laid around
|
|||
|
for a while and vomited a few times. We both did a second line, and then
|
|||
|
right afterwards I did a third line of heroin while Mad did a line of
|
|||
|
coke. She was up much later than I was that night.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[-----]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
- Chapter Four
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When she wasn't awake at 2:00 PM, I left Madeline lying there and
|
|||
|
walked out my door. I had been awake since 10:00. Spent a few hours just
|
|||
|
touching her on the shoulders, trying to stimulate her. I really tried.
|
|||
|
Maybe she appreciated it, unconsciously. She sure was out cold.
|
|||
|
I noticed that morning that someone had spray-painted "COCK" on my
|
|||
|
front door. Fair enough. I wonder who did that.
|
|||
|
It was Monday. Around 2:07 PM, I arrived at my place of
|
|||
|
employment. I was pretty sure I could show up there at my leisure; but I
|
|||
|
hadn't talked to the boss in so long, I wasn't sure. That was a good
|
|||
|
thing for both of us. My first customer neared only moments after a cop
|
|||
|
car turned onto the street. The customer was a young white kid cruising
|
|||
|
by in an American-made sport utility vehicle. It was the first time I had
|
|||
|
ever seen a cop car in Paterson.
|
|||
|
"Yo!" The kid was screaming out at me from across the street. I
|
|||
|
froze up. The police car got nearer. The kid's car idled as he stared at
|
|||
|
me. He didn't seem intimidated by the cop, and why should he be? We were
|
|||
|
in Paterson. This was a perfectly civilized town.
|
|||
|
"Yo!!" yelled the kid. The cop pulled up behind him. What the hell
|
|||
|
was going on here? I walked into the second nearest store, a McDonald's.
|
|||
|
The nearest store was a headshop. I decided not to go in because those
|
|||
|
stores always make me nervous, and I was already nervous. I didn't know if
|
|||
|
I could handle myself; and if all went wrong, I lacked the energy to
|
|||
|
outrun a cop. He was a young-looking cop.
|
|||
|
I woke up from my hazy state of disarray and smelled the poison
|
|||
|
inside McDonald's. The scent made me feel like I was dying of hunger, so
|
|||
|
I looked at the pictures of the food and bought the biggest-looking
|
|||
|
burger, the Big King, and a lemonade.
|
|||
|
"We don't have lemonade," said the cashier.
|
|||
|
So I looked at the pictures of the beverages that were printed on
|
|||
|
the menu, and I picked the only that didn't have caffeine, Sprite. Both
|
|||
|
the burger and the Sprite tasted horrible. The Sprite was far too bubbly
|
|||
|
for some reason, but I liked that. Swallowing all that air made me burp a
|
|||
|
lot, purging my stomach of old beer fumes and whatever other poisons that
|
|||
|
were lingering in there. The kid from the sport-utility vehicle came and
|
|||
|
sat down next to me while I ate my burger and soda. When I realized this,
|
|||
|
I almost panicked, but after scanning the restaurant and the street
|
|||
|
outside and seeing no cops, I calmed down.
|
|||
|
"Yo."
|
|||
|
"Yo, I got cash for seven, can you throw me eight?"
|
|||
|
He was looking at me as if I recognized his face. I didn't. But
|
|||
|
I was always willing to cut a deal. The poison I dealt out wasn't worth
|
|||
|
jack shit to me, of course, and I made out very well by selling it. I
|
|||
|
handed him eight little white bags and gave the friendliest smile that I
|
|||
|
could conjure. Our conversation had ended. The kid threw his cocaine
|
|||
|
into his coat pocket, ran out to his car, and rolled away. "Thanks," he
|
|||
|
mumbled to himself.
|
|||
|
"No problem," I mumbled back to myself on the way back out into
|
|||
|
the street. And all it happened again and again and again and again, only
|
|||
|
with much fewer complications and much less variation. Then it rained and
|
|||
|
I walked home.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[-----]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
- Chapter Five
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"COCK." I opened the door and came through the threshold, soaked.
|
|||
|
Madeline was in bed, watching a movie and waiting for me to come home. I
|
|||
|
think she didn't work Mondays back then, but she didn't have to; we were
|
|||
|
getting by very well on our salaries. She hadn't gotten dressed yet.
|
|||
|
As soon as she noticed that I had walked in the door, Mad lit a
|
|||
|
cigarette. This meant that she had been up to something. "Dave," she
|
|||
|
said, "I think we have to start over with this relationship."
|
|||
|
I was glad that she spared me enough time to ask, "What? Why?"
|
|||
|
"Well, I think that I made a lot of mistakes over the past few
|
|||
|
years, and things have just ended up all wrong. I want us to re-discover
|
|||
|
each other."
|
|||
|
I didn't really feel like she sucked the life out of me by saying
|
|||
|
that. It was more like she was informing me that I never had life at all.
|
|||
|
Like she was putting me on. Everything was wrong? I hadn't realized.
|
|||
|
What a piece of shit I was!
|
|||
|
"What a piece of shit I am," I said. "I'm sorry. I know you
|
|||
|
deserve someone much better than me."
|
|||
|
She smiled, as if I had just given her a great compliment. Then
|
|||
|
she frowned and said, "I just need a little time to myself. A couple of
|
|||
|
weeks, maybe. I still love you." Then she kissed me. Then she started
|
|||
|
making out with me.
|
|||
|
I was positive that this making-out was not going to lead
|
|||
|
anywhere. I broke away, weakly, and said, "Okay. I love you too. I
|
|||
|
guess you can have this place until the rent runs out. I'll tell the
|
|||
|
landlady that you're the new owner, okay?"
|
|||
|
"Okay," she said. I cleaned the place up a little, making sure I
|
|||
|
didn't leave enough coke behind to last her past one night. Then I took
|
|||
|
my money, my drugs, and myself out the door. I remember being in a very
|
|||
|
thick haze and needing to get high in a bad way.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[-----]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
- Chapter Six
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
For the first time in a long while, I had no safe place to go.
|
|||
|
It occurred to me to go see one of my friends, but I had none to go see.
|
|||
|
Moving into Paterson, New Jersey was a terribly antisocial gesture. I had
|
|||
|
begun to see the negative side of this: I had burned all the bridges of my
|
|||
|
high school friends, and I really didn't make any friends in College.
|
|||
|
There had just always been Madeline. With her, I didn't want any friends.
|
|||
|
I refused to go anywhere without her, I refused to spend a dollar if it
|
|||
|
wasn't on her. And while my friends all got their own places in the
|
|||
|
suburbs, where they grew up, I opted for a cheaper and more isolated life
|
|||
|
in Paterson. Now, the carpet has been pulled up from underneath me, and I
|
|||
|
was fucked. Had this been my idea?
|
|||
|
I really needed to get high. It was about 6:00 and drizzling.
|
|||
|
The sun was setting. I went to the only guy I knew.
|
|||
|
"Hey!!"
|
|||
|
"Hey, Black, I don't need nothing but a place to hide out for a
|
|||
|
while. Cops hanging out on my corner."
|
|||
|
"Don't you got a place to stay, dude?"
|
|||
|
"No. Girlfriend kicked me out."
|
|||
|
I was surprised and proud to see the sympathy in Black's eyes.
|
|||
|
It was honor among thieves. Very touching. Black took an unusually long
|
|||
|
time to think about this predicament. "All right, dude, you hang out at
|
|||
|
my place. Number 13 on 9th. The key is underneath the doormat."
|
|||
|
Amazing! This guy dealt pot on the street and he kept his key
|
|||
|
under the doormat. It was also pretty amazing that he was letting me hang
|
|||
|
out there for a while. "Thanks, man. You saved my ass."
|
|||
|
He shook my hand after that. "Forget it."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[-----]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
- Chapter Seven
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Black<63>s key was not under the doormat, but the window was left
|
|||
|
open a crack, so I entered through that. He had a lot of nice shit in
|
|||
|
there. Two bedrooms, a kitchen, and a living room with long couches and a
|
|||
|
television. And it reeked of pot. I saw a hookah and a bong semi-hidden
|
|||
|
in a couple of corners. I assumed it appropriate at that point to spark
|
|||
|
one up, out of my own piece, of course. I ended up smoking everything I
|
|||
|
had left. I felt even more bewildered than I did before, only less
|
|||
|
responsible for it.
|
|||
|
I had no idea what time it was when Black walked in. I was
|
|||
|
sitting on his couch and very slowly reading a book I found at his place:
|
|||
|
Naked Lunch. Sure to be in the library of any literate drug dealer. I
|
|||
|
had read it a million times before, but only once from cover to cover.
|
|||
|
An old friend of mine once told me that it read more like a bible than a
|
|||
|
novel. For instance, right now, it was going so slowly<6C>
|
|||
|
"Hey!"
|
|||
|
"Hey, what's up?"
|
|||
|
"Shit, dude, I had a huge day. I made a shit load. Stayed out
|
|||
|
there in all that rain, too."
|
|||
|
"Yeah, I noticed. You made money in that shit, too? On Monday?"
|
|||
|
"Monday is when I get half my business, dude--"
|
|||
|
"My name's Dave, by the way."
|
|||
|
"Shit, don't you think I know that?"
|
|||
|
"Sorry."
|
|||
|
"Forget it. Like I was saying, all the white kids get together
|
|||
|
and buy their shit for a whole week's worth of smoking. Didn't you used
|
|||
|
to do that shit, smoking in the parking lot at lunch and after school?"
|
|||
|
I almost forgot. I used to smoke and drink with my friends in
|
|||
|
high school all the time, and I ate mushrooms or acid on Fridays. When I
|
|||
|
thought back to that, I imagined that those were the best days of my life.
|
|||
|
It made me feel a lot shittier than I did before. "Were there really cops
|
|||
|
on your corner today?" "Ah, no," I said, "I just really needed to get high
|
|||
|
somewhere." "Yeah, it sounded like bullshit. Would have gotten scared
|
|||
|
myself if I didn't know better." "Yeah." "Smells like someone's been
|
|||
|
smoking some nigger shit in here," said Black. "Just the stuff you sold
|
|||
|
me, man. Hope you don't mind." He just smiled at me. "Put that book away,
|
|||
|
dude." As I put the book back in Black's library, he got out his hookah
|
|||
|
and started packing its enormous bowl full of bright-green herb that I
|
|||
|
could smell from across the room. I was pretty sure that I was not going
|
|||
|
to be able to handle that much smoking, especially given the amount I had
|
|||
|
done already that evening. Then Black took out his razor blade and a chunk
|
|||
|
of red opium. As he dragged the razor blade across the opium, little
|
|||
|
dark-red flakes came to cover the bowl of green leaves. "This is how I
|
|||
|
unwind after a hard day's work." Black handed me the second hose of the
|
|||
|
hookah as he inserted a plug into the third one. Holy shit. I did not
|
|||
|
deserve this.
|
|||
|
He lit the bowl up with a cigar lighter, which melted and burned
|
|||
|
at the drug salad. As the flame took hold, we both inhaled deeply. I
|
|||
|
exhaled a giant cloud of strangely delicious smoke. Black did the same.
|
|||
|
Everything was suddenly perfect. Then we took hold and sucked down the
|
|||
|
rest of the smoke. The bowl was not done with for twenty minutes.
|
|||
|
"Don't worry about that girl no more," said Black. I was amazed
|
|||
|
that he even had the power to speak. I couldn't even move my lips, but I
|
|||
|
was smiling. Black seemed omniscient enough to accept my gratitude, even
|
|||
|
though I could not utter it. I no longer felt the pain of being free.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[-----]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
- Chapter Eight
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Black talked to me a lot that night, and I listened. We smoked a
|
|||
|
lot more, first just pot, then opium on top of much less pot. The next
|
|||
|
morning, I tried to sort through what I had retained. I wasn;t sure.
|
|||
|
Things were still very confused.
|
|||
|
Black and I walked to work together. We said 'hi' to Freedom and
|
|||
|
his crowd on the way. He ended up selling me a bag of heroin. Black's
|
|||
|
crowd was waiting for him too. I was the only white boy there. I looked
|
|||
|
around at my co-workers and wondered what it was that kept me alive in
|
|||
|
this town for all this time. In this town of Paterson, ignored by its own
|
|||
|
insignificant police force even since I was a kid, there was justice.
|
|||
|
Nobody fucked with me because I was an honest guy.
|
|||
|
"Watch yourself on that shit," said Black.
|
|||
|
"I know. I just need a little mental health for a while, man."
|
|||
|
Black knew immediately that I didn't know what I was doing.
|
|||
|
"Hey, someone get this dude a needle, okay?"
|
|||
|
A sealed paper bag with a syringe came into my hand after a few
|
|||
|
minutes.
|
|||
|
"You're wasting your money on that shit unless you shoot it.
|
|||
|
Know how?"
|
|||
|
I did know how, but only from observation. I shrugged. Then
|
|||
|
Black walked me into the bathroom of a Dunkin' Donuts and made sure I
|
|||
|
didn't fuck anything up. Everything went very well. I sat down on the
|
|||
|
toilet seat.
|
|||
|
"I need to rest for a while, okay?"
|
|||
|
"See you on the corner." He left me sitting there.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[-----]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
- Chapter Nine
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I was high as a kite. After some time, I collected myself and
|
|||
|
made it to the corner by 2:30. I cut a lot of deals that day. Business
|
|||
|
was never big on Tuesday. Ended up with a couple of hundred in profit.
|
|||
|
I was off the street at 5:30 because I had to get to my real job.
|
|||
|
Like many drug dealers, I worked a few hours every Tuesday and
|
|||
|
Thursday so that the cops couldn't get me on tax evasion. Like I said, I
|
|||
|
was an honest man. Most of us were. Work was great. Slow business on
|
|||
|
Tuesdays -- a perfect day to take a couple of shots in the bathroom.
|
|||
|
That was the first day in a long while that I didn't smoke any
|
|||
|
pot. I realized what it really was to be high, I guess. Pot seemed to be
|
|||
|
coming to an end in my life. I admit that I made some mistakes in our
|
|||
|
relationship. Things just ended up all wrong between us, but no matter.
|
|||
|
All it took was a day or two to find a new life-partner.
|
|||
|
How fucking idiotic!
|
|||
|
Regardless of how it seemed, all the feelings that I had were
|
|||
|
authentic and pure. I made eight dollars in tips before the restaurant
|
|||
|
closed that night. A fair reward for what I had done. What was "service
|
|||
|
with a smile" worth to the people of Paterson, anyway?
|
|||
|
After work, I was unsure about where I could sleep that night.
|
|||
|
When I knocked on Black<63>s door, he answered and greeted me like a friend.
|
|||
|
He even let me use his shower. Then he put on some Jimi Hendrix. I was
|
|||
|
flattered that he put on music suitable for Caucasian-listening. We
|
|||
|
lounged on his couches and shot heroin all night. Then Black let me sleep
|
|||
|
in his second bedroom.
|
|||
|
This was too much for me. I took my junk and walked out Black<63>s
|
|||
|
front door. The sun was rising outside. I headed back to Madeline<6E>s
|
|||
|
place and passed out on the inflatable couch with the television on.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[-----]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
- Chapter Ten
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When I was very young, five, I think, I had an episode. I stayed
|
|||
|
up late one night, until about midnight, and woke up around noontime,
|
|||
|
feeling curiously filthy. I had the thought that a layer of slime had
|
|||
|
covered me as punishment, because I had disobeyed my parents; I had
|
|||
|
changed my routine. So, naturally, because I felt dirty and because it
|
|||
|
was part of my daily routine, I went straight to the shower.
|
|||
|
I scrubbed myself furiously that morning. I made sure no single
|
|||
|
part of my body escaped washing. I went from my chest to my neck to my
|
|||
|
face; and so struck this episode of mine. For the first time in my life,
|
|||
|
I got soap in my eyes; and it really got in them badly. I felt such a
|
|||
|
fear and pain that I collapsed to the floor of the shower, and briefly, I
|
|||
|
howled. But when I heard my own voice screaming, it scared me more, and I
|
|||
|
clenched my teeth and whimpered, nestled into a corner of the cold shower
|
|||
|
wall.
|
|||
|
Even more clenched than my teeth, of course, were my eyes, as they
|
|||
|
were at the core of all my pain. After a few moments of whimpering and
|
|||
|
nestling, I found the courage to turn my head at the water and let it wash
|
|||
|
the soap away. It was a little too hot and it scalded my face, but it
|
|||
|
soothed. I was relieved of my pain in a few minutes.
|
|||
|
When I got out of the shower, my eyes were still closed. They
|
|||
|
felt numb inside, and I was scared that when I opened them that I would be
|
|||
|
blind, the stinging soap having melted away my sight. I stumbled out of
|
|||
|
the bathroom, through the hall naked, and finally into my room where I lay
|
|||
|
down on my bed. At that point, the episode was about over.
|
|||
|
I don't really feel very traumatized by it at all, but it sticks
|
|||
|
in my memory more clearly than all my birthdays and Christmas' combined.
|
|||
|
I consider that day a turning point in my life, although it didn't change
|
|||
|
me all too drastically. From that day on, I washed my face a lot less
|
|||
|
frequently, and I suppose that triggered my personal hygiene plummeting in
|
|||
|
many other ways. Beside that small detail, I exhibited no reaction to my
|
|||
|
trauma.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[-----]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
- Chapter Eleven
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When I woke up, there was no one home. I couldn't tell if
|
|||
|
Madeline had moved out or not, because like me, she would have left
|
|||
|
without taking any of our shit with her. I was not expecting to be alone
|
|||
|
that morning. Lately I had been having some incredible luck. I
|
|||
|
attributed that to the amount of unspent semen that was building up in my
|
|||
|
loins.
|
|||
|
So I took a shower, shaved, got some fresh clothes, and ate a
|
|||
|
breakfast of bread and wine that I had stolen from my restaurant on the
|
|||
|
previous night. I felt like a king, so I went to see the landlady and
|
|||
|
paid the rent for next months, then left a note for Mad to let her know.
|
|||
|
2:00 rolled around and I headed out to the corner.
|
|||
|
"Yo!!"
|
|||
|
"Yo." A girl in a mid-1980's American sedan pulled up the side
|
|||
|
street next to me, knowingly. When I looked in the car, I saw my best
|
|||
|
friend from high school, Gregory, sitting in the passenger seat next to
|
|||
|
his high school girlfriend. The three of us used to come to Paterson years
|
|||
|
ago to buy pot and coke. Then Greg and his girlfriend, who I never liked,
|
|||
|
by the way, got hooked on coke for a year or two and we lost touch. He
|
|||
|
ended up on the right side, though. He took control of his life, dropping
|
|||
|
out of college, quitting coke, and breaking up with his girlfriend. When
|
|||
|
he did that, I gained a lot of respect for him, but still haven<65>t seen him
|
|||
|
since I sold my car three years ago.
|
|||
|
Greg's girlfriend gave me a familiar smile and said, "uh, four?" I
|
|||
|
got into the car.
|
|||
|
"You guys hungry?"
|
|||
|
"No," said Greg.
|
|||
|
"Me neither. Want to go get some coffee?"
|
|||
|
"We were just about to."
|
|||
|
Greg's girlfriend took off. Within a minute or two, we were back
|
|||
|
on the highway on the way back to the diner we had gone to. The girl's
|
|||
|
knuckles were white and wrapped around her steering wheel.
|
|||
|
"So what's up," I asked Gregory.
|
|||
|
"Same old, same old--" I took out four bags and gave them to him.
|
|||
|
He didn't seem surprised, as he had always gotten things free from me; he
|
|||
|
had always been poor, especially when he was on coke. "--you still with
|
|||
|
Mad?"
|
|||
|
"Not lately. We still live in the same place, though." We were
|
|||
|
barreling down the highway. I took out my gear and took a shot in the
|
|||
|
back seat. They both looked at me, aghast.
|
|||
|
"So you're a junkie now?"
|
|||
|
"Yeah, lately," I murmured.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[-----]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
- Chapter Twelve
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
We were sitting in the diner. Greg and his girlfriend had just
|
|||
|
blown four lines in the car and were now waiting for their coffee. I was
|
|||
|
not. I have never been able to enjoy or justify taking stimulants, unless
|
|||
|
you count orange juice.
|
|||
|
"So how's Ben," I asked, genuinely interested in hearing how my
|
|||
|
only other best friend had been.
|
|||
|
John started to smirk and replied, "He grew a moustache, man."
|
|||
|
We both exploded with laughter. Suddenly I didn't want to hear
|
|||
|
about Ben anymore.
|
|||
|
The coffee came. Both of them drank it black, just as they always
|
|||
|
had. We sat in silence for a little while. I was dreading the moment
|
|||
|
where one or both of them would start running their mouths. People always
|
|||
|
say the same things over and over again when they're coked up.
|
|||
|
The quiet lasted. I felt for some reason that I was the only one
|
|||
|
comfortable with it. I Remembering my old high school temperament, I said
|
|||
|
something completely off- base to break the silence: "In the future, all
|
|||
|
the rocks are gonna be igneous rocks."
|
|||
|
Greg caught on immediately. "That's just one of three ways of
|
|||
|
looking at the future."
|
|||
|
His girlfriend spoke up: "I think it's more likely to be all
|
|||
|
metamorphic rocks in the future." Greg and I stared at each other, knowing
|
|||
|
how completely wrong she was. "If I were a rock, I would definitely be a
|
|||
|
metamorphic rock." Wrong again. Greg looked embarrassed, but not really.
|
|||
|
She was the one paying for the stimulants, among other things.
|
|||
|
They each drank four cups of coffee and smoked four cigarettes.
|
|||
|
The girl went to the bathroom after each cup of coffee. She had always
|
|||
|
done that. Weak bladder. Greg went once after the check was paid. I went
|
|||
|
to the bathroom with Greg and puked. Away went my bread and wine. We
|
|||
|
didn't spend half as much time in that diner as we used to. It seemed
|
|||
|
that we were all far more businesslike in our adulthood. Afterwards, we
|
|||
|
sat in the parked car getting our heads refilled.
|
|||
|
"So how about we all head down to Texas?" Greg and his girl were
|
|||
|
really enthusiastic about that suggestion of mine for about ten minutes.
|
|||
|
It had been our fantasy to drop out of high school, move to Alaska and
|
|||
|
open up a gas station. We all heard the phrase, "You'd be surprised how
|
|||
|
little you can get off of a salary like that," enough times to have never
|
|||
|
forgotten it. But if we owned the station, and all slept in the office,
|
|||
|
then what? We would never give it a chance, because we all had planned
|
|||
|
our real futures out long before we even met. And there was nothing
|
|||
|
fantastic about our futures. Everything had come true so far. Or had it?
|
|||
|
"Hey Greg, how do you pay the rent these days?" "I'm a carpenter." Yes,
|
|||
|
it had all come true.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[-------------------------------------------------------------------------]
|
|||
|
[ (c) HOE E'ZINE -- http://www.hoe.nu HOE #1046, BY KREID - 3/22/00 ]
|