I was tired.
Spent. There was an ache behind
my eyes. The guy at the bar to my right
kept at it, telling stories about Guatemalan whores, government hit squads, and
the strange medicinal properties of a Central American root and herb
mixture. He used an old time expression
for it. A preparation. “Mr. Phelps oversaw the preparation, and
after that I was 100%!” The stories
drifted from one to another, not really making much sense. He was probably on Molly, or what he thought
was Molly, most likely a lethal mix of meth, caffeine, and goat
tranquilizers. The Belgian Ale he
slopped around in his goblet had no apparent effect, which seemed impossible
given the cherubic monk on the bottle. I
had learned years ago that the more harmless the character on the bottle, the
more deadly the contents. Those Belgians
had a sly sense of humor.
I walked into the main room.
She walked up to me unsteadily either due to inebriation or the
uncertainty of new heels. She had a
syrupy quality to her speech that indicated Georgia or Alabama. It was the slow sweetness Southern women
presented before draining your bank accounts and running off with the man their
Daddy wanted them to be with all along.
“Darlin’. Yew know how wonderful
I think yew are?” It meant nothing. My hand rested on the table. She tapped it with her hand as she spoke, in
an effort to emphasize her interest in me at the moment. Her eyes were deep and green. Her face betrayed the beginning of lines that
would in the blink of an eye make her look surly. Makeup built up in those crevices. I couldn’t stop looking at the tiny particles
of powder. “Where do yew think ahm
from?” she asked. I answered
Alabama. It was a 50/50 shot. “Oh mah gawd!
How did yew know?” She touched my
back and suddenly launched into a coughing fit.
A productive cough they would call it.
Her face creased into the ugliness that age would bring as she
hacked. Her friend led her away without
any explanation or apology, almost like a servant tending to the house
matron. Miss Alabama would pass along
that horrible disease to some other unsuspecting man later tonight in her small
apartment. I was no longer the target.
The concrete steps that led outside were worn with age and
wear. When opening the door to the
street it was like leaping onto a new stage set. By chance the Ethiopian had been standing
right next to the door smoking a strange cigarette. He moved over two steps to the left to allow
me entrance onto the sidewalk. He nodded
to me. He was staring across the street
at the sinewy black man in tattered clothes that was screaming at traffic. In the past that homeless man would be called
a hobo. The word fit. The wind played with the hobo’s words
allowing us to hear only bits and pieces of his speech. “…the CIA man....never gonna let….all the way
to Panama…if you think…mind control…no fucking Doritos…” He spoke with an urgency that captured our
attention despite the fact he was obviously mad. The Ethiopian finished his cigarette, nodded
to me again, and then ducked back into the specialty restaurant next door. The traffic hissed by in both
directions. The hobo kept yelling. I jammed my hands in my pockets and walked to
the van.
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