287 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
287 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
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EZ WORK
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by Gay Bost
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Her feet hurt. Her back hurt. She had a severe case of sinusitis,
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which she was sure had been precipitated by the rain of typical LA
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basin summer sun, a semi-solid substance composed of billion-year-old
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snark dust. The thought of putting on that damned Spandex outfit and
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hitting the twilight streets of hell turned her empty stomach.
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She sagged, a bag of bones and aching calves, into an equally sagging
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sofa her son, James, had just recently purchased with his hard earned pay.
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Poor kid. He worked so hard, such long hours, for what little he made,
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and then he spent it on a soft spot for his mom to rest her weary
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bones.
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The thought of him, out on those filthy streets after school everyday,
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moving other people's furniture, revitalized her enough to look at the
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suit she'd nicknamed "EZ Off". That had been Capia's idea, that ridiculous
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woman! Her crazy old neighbor had looked at the grainy black scrawl on
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her front walk, shook her head at the spelling of 'Hoe' and said, "This
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here city is an oven! Out of it comes half-baked spelling that spills
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all over the walls! What we need is an oven cleaner!"
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Two days later Gloria had found herself sitting on the worn linoleum
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in her kitchen, a can of oven cleaner in her hand, staring into the
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depths of her own private piece of hell. She'd looked at the can in
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her hand and started laughing.
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A week after that she'd found herself staring at two bolts of Spandex,
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one black, one yellow, wondering if there was a needle in her sewing
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machine.
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The whole thing didn't seem so funny anymore. Tonight, with her corns
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throbbing like "The Beast That Ate Detroit," she spoke to the blank screen
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of her 10 year old television. "What we need is a self cleaning oven!"
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She grunted as she heaved her body out of the depression she'd made in
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the cushions. It helped, somehow, to make those sounds.
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* * *
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She was back on the streets just like when she was a kid. Except
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she wasn't a kid and her feet hurt. "And that, Mama," she said to her
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reflection in the store front window, "is why you got to have a good
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pair of shoes." She looked down at the bright white Nikes that threw
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her whole outfit off and made her feet look like size 12s. "If this
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job paid any money, I could have two pair of tennies; one for Gloria P.
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Jones, and one for EZ-Off, Grime Fighter!" She jumped and posed before
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the window, legs spread, knees bent, a threatening crouch contemplating
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itself, on the deserted late night street. "Um, um, um,!" she commented,
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momentarily coming to her senses.
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The figure staring back at her from the window was, she had to admit,
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not your average-middle-aged, lower-middle-class, church-going, coupon-
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clipping, working-single-parent. Bright yellow Spandex covered her from
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throat to ankles, clung snugly to her well muscled arms and molded to
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her over-developed calves. Black Lettering read "EZ-Off" against a red
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and blue background spread in a diagonal lightening bolt pattern from
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her right shoulder to her waist. She noticed a loose thread at the tip
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of the bolt and willed her self not to pull on it.
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"Those shoes gotta go!" she reiterated, shaking her head from side
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to side. "Pitiful! Just pitiful, girl!" She hefted her tote bag
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over her shoulder and strode off down the darkened sidewalk, eyes
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cutting down allies and into shadowed doorways, an automatic response
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as set as putting one foot in front of the other to get somewhere.
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She cut through an empty lot that had once been a parking lot; was now
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weed choked at the edges and in large cracks from poorly poured cement;
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the cracks filled with broken glass shards and styrofoam ghost tatters.
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Something low-built and fast flattened itself against a stucco wall
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at the limits of her vision. She hoped it was a small cat, 'cause she
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sure didn't want to think about what else it could be. She shifted
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the weight of her tote and picked up speed. Headlights angled at one
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end of an alley ahead, throwing chain link fence into sudden relief.
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The beams scuttered across a wall and disappeared. She slipped into
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the alley and broke into a trot. At her age she wasn't good for long
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runs, but a quick sprint once in a while got her where she was going.
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The neighborhood park, tonight. There was work, there, waiting for
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EZ-Off.
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A few years ago the city had put up a fence, hoping to give the
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illusion of safety to the people who utilized the small park, which
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acted as a boundary line between the run down residential area and the
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local businesses.
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Another fence had gone up to enclose the basketball courts and keep
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the balls where they belonged. The gates had come as an afterthought.
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The locks had never come. Gloria trotted around to the only truly
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solid structure in the park, a retaining wall that protected the
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toddler's sand box from skate boarders and the thundering hoards of
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wild kids that ran the city streets. Years ago someone had started a
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mural. An attempt at black history had begun, cut short and ragged
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by who-knew-what real life event. Maybe the artist had been killed
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in a street fight. Maybe he'd gotten smart and taken himself somewhere
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else. Maybe he was painting pictures on a wall in a jail somewhere.
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The real time result was a huge blank surface that begged to be
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filled. Over the years it had been, time and time again. Even she'd
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given up on the side of the wall that faced outward into the city.
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The other side, the side that faced inward, the side that the toddlers
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saw as they built their tunnels in the sand and wiped gritty snot
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across their faces . . . that side was kept clean. It had been, at
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least -- until recently.
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If there had been an unwritten law, cherished deep in the childhood
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memories of the toughs and punks who'd grown up here, it had been
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broken. She had her work cut out for her, several nights worth, at
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least.
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She set her tote down and removed two spray cans of oven cleaner.
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"These children just can't spell!" she exclaimed, finally figuring
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out what one line of lettering must mean. "I don't think that's
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anatomically possible, anyway." She bent to retrieve a pair of bright
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yellow Playtex gloves, thinking she should have stuck to small patches
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of graffiti on random buildings. A can in each hand, she began the
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weary job of removing the filth from the wall.
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She was humming, industrious, making surprising progress on the east
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end of the wall, when they came around the corner and saw her. Three
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jean clad kids in stylishly ripped T-shirts and crusty tennies. They
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howled and hooted, "EZ...EZ...EZ, we come to off-you, mama!" Two of
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them dropped and rolled in the sand, overcome with themselves. The
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third propped himself against the wall and grinned. That one she'd
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watch.
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"Ain't you a little old for sandboxes?" she asked, reaching for a
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fresh can. She popped the lid and faced them.
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"Ain't 'choo?" the one against the wall said. He pushed away, then,
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and took a couple of steps toward her. "We heard about you. Heard
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about some crazy old woman runnin' the streets like some big yellow
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bird. What's wrong with you?" He seemed sincere in his query, angry
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brow a dark shadow against darker skin. "Don't you know what you look
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like, runnin' around with your black-self in that . . . that . . .
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thing?"
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"Your racial pride hurt, Boy?" she taunted.
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The two in the sand sat up and menaced her from their ludicrous
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position. Their eyes cut to their leader. One began to pull
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himself up into a crouch. The leader's torso shook in a silent
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chuckle.
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"I'm not talkin' racial pride with no crazy old woman. That," he
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jabbed a finger at the wall, "is a statement."
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"So's this," she replied, holding aloft a can of oven cleaner.
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"You ever look at the other side of this wall? You ever see anything
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on the other side of this wall but your bad-self and your attitude?"
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"Old woman, there ain't nothing, on either side of this wall, I give
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a Damn about!" There was nothing but hate on his face. She'd honestly
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thought, for one moment . . . .
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The two in the sand sprung, then, muscled young legs propelling them
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across the distance. One on either side of her, they reached and grabbed,
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laughing. She raised her can and filled the open mouth of the one on her
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right with oven cleaner while she brought her right knee up and planted
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it in his groin. Surprise delayed the one on the left long enough for
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her to throw her upper body weight into a fore-fist thump to his xyphoid
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process, effectively taking the wind out of him. He doubled-up while his
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partner dropped to his knees and spewed burning foam onto the sand.
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She turned to run, ready to abandon tote, wall, and the dangerous
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situation she had gotten into. If she survived, EZ-Off would be a
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target. Either way, tonight was the end of her crusade. The leader
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was on her before she got three steps, crouched before her with feral
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eyes gleaming. This one was deadly.
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"You old cow! It's your turn!" he said.
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She backed up against a section of the wall she'd just sprayed,
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praying the fabric of her suit would shield her skin from the lye
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based compound. This one was coming in close, knife wavering back and
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forth between agile fingers.
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"What?" She stalled for time, or tried to. It suddenly occurred to
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her that if she died before she made her usual call to the parks
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department and warned them about the caustic substance and possible
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lawsuits, some innocent might get burned. "What?"
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"I said, `Off the couch. It's my turn.' Your break's over, Gloria.
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"What?"
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"We just got two newborns in from OB and I think one of them's a
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cocaine baby," Sharon repeated.
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Gloria blinked. Fluorescent light filtered through her sleep-heavy
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lids. She blinked again, her eyes straining to focus. Sharon Jefferson
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loomed over her, all five-foot-three balanced on the balls of her feet,
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peering sideways at a super-hero comic book in her co-worker's lap.
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"What?" Gloria repeated, still half in the dream. "Where . . . ?"
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"Work. Break is over. Get out of that couch. My feet hurt." Sharon
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continued to smile, anticipating at least thirty uninterrupted minutes
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of nap for her dinner break.
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"Work. Yeah. I'm on it." She flung the comic book at the break table
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and straightened her tunic.
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* * *
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Gloria gowned and scrubbed while she peered into the nursery through
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the nurses observation window at three babies; one wrapped in blue,
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the other two in pink. The new girl, Kathy "something-or-other",
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Gloria would make an effort to remember her name if the girl stayed
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more than two weeks, stood next to the first incubator, her gloved
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fingers resting on the domed cover.
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"Hey," Gloria said, by way of greeting, tugging her own gloves over
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the cuffed sleeves of her smock as she moved across the room on brand
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new Nike street shoes.
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The girl turned suddenly, shaken, whether by Gloria's silent approach
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or startled out of her own thoughts, Gloria couldn't tell. She looked
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a little gray around the eyes.
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"Its mother's an addict, " the girl said, scorn written in the frown,
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the confusion, the pain on the pale freckled face. "The urine report
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just came back on the baby. The mother's still lying about it and her
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own blood test says she must have used in the last 48 hours. I don't
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understand . . ." her head moved from side to side, angry tears welling
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up in her eyes. "Don't these people care? Somebody has to do something.
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We have to do something! We have to . . . ."
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"Look, honey. We ain't' here to save the world. We ain't here to wipe
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out drugs and we ain't here to clean up every hooker and dope head on
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the street." Gloria took the girl's hands in hers, gently, trying to
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calm her. "They got programs for pregnant addicts, they got programs
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for mothers, they got programs for the kids . . . ."
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"What does this baby have to live for?" the girl wailed.
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"This baby can look forward to a life of neurological disorders;
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seizures, abnormal sleep patterns and learning disabilites. This baby
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is ultra sensitive to stimulation. This baby don't need no screaming
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nurse trying to resolve her social conscience while it's trying to
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sleep!" Gloria hissed the last out. "Right now we have to keep it
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quiet, we have to watch for respiratory distress, we have to be alert
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to tremors and we have to be ready to deal with all that blowing loose
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at once. They're going to ship it. It's standard procedure on a positive
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drug test. Reservations have been made. This one's going to spend some
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quality observation-time uptown."
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Kathy looked from Gloria's face to the infant's. The tremors had
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started. It's legs had stiffened within the confines of the blanket.
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The sweet little rosebud mouth had drawn into a puckered quiver. A
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shrill cry quavered, seeking the eeriest sound pattern it could find
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and settled on merely nerve jarring. Kathy's stomach must have heaved.
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She grabbed at her abdomen, turned, slammed into a door-facing and
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stumbled out of the nursery, heading for the restroom.
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"Hug that porcelain god, honey," Gloria said, to herself. "Hug it real
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tight. Say your prayers. Then get your butt back down here and go on to
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the next one."
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The high pitched wail stopped. A chill went up Gloria's back. She turned
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to find the cocoa and cream face already turning ashen. She grabbed the
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handset off the wall and called a respiratory code.
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Then she went to work.
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# # #
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---------------------------------------------------------
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(For further information on Perinatal Addiction contact
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National Association for Perinatal Addiction Research and
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Education (Napare) at 312-541-1272 or write to Napare at
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200 North Michigan Ave, Suite 300; Chicago ILL 60601.)
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----------------------------------------------------------
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Copyright 1994 Gay Bost
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--------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Gay is a Clinical Lab Tech with experience in Veterinary medicine. From
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NORTHERN California, she's resided in S.E. Missouri with her husband and an
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aggressive 6 year old boy, since 1974. Installed her first modem the summer
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of '92 and has been exploring new worlds since. Her first publication, a short
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horror story, came when she was 17 years old. The success was so overwhelming
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she called an end to her writing days and went in search of herself. She's
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still looking. Find Gay's great stories in the best Electronic Magazines.
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===========================================================================
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