Prolonged
anxiety has a tendency to make me sleepy, and I was in the midst of a
troubled mid-afternoon nap when I heard the doorbell ring. I
stumbled off my futon, which rested on the floor underneath a mound
of blankets. As I staggered to my feet, the doorbell rang twice
more, sharply, like the report of a shotgun. I lived in Chicago in
an apartment building that a group of sadistic urban planners had
erected directly beside a busy el station. To compensate for this
disadvantage, and to encourage the occupancy of responsible renters,
the building's owner had remodeled the apartment to within an inch of
its life—including track lighting, two huge and fully functional
stone fireplaces, and an island kitchen that faced the tracks. For the past
two months, I had shared the apartment with two men, Dirk and Ken,
neither of whom interested me even remotely as romantic prospects.
Dirk was a wood-worker, house painter and drunk, who would have been
more at home in the wilds of Arkansas—except for the fact that he
had been raised by wealthy parents in Wilmette—and Ken was an
alcoholic high school buddy of Dirk's. Although Ken seemed
incredibly stupid, he had a surprising affinity for Miles Davis, and
owned every commercially released recording that Miles had ever made.
He often stayed up past the break of dawn in a stupor, drinking and
intently listening to “Bitches Brew.”. Occasionally, his
attention was diverted by a sudden urge to grope drunkenly at me or
some friend of mine, but these efforts were always met with derision.
The
most horrible thing about Ken was his treatment of his two stunted
white German shepherd puppies, who had spent most of their young
lives barricaded in the kitchen. Ken's drinking schedule kept him
busy until at least 6 AM, after which he collapsed into bed until
roughly 3 in the afternoon.. During this extended sleep period, his
two dogs—imaginatively named “Whitey” and “Snow”--spent
their time in the kitchen, with a limited amount of food and water,
and no access to a yard. We didn't really have a yard—our back
door opened directly underneath the el tracks. Dirk and I had
tripped on mushrooms behind our building two months beforehand, after
Dirk had scored a fabulous rent deal on the apartment. We sat in the
snow at two in the morning, and waved at people as they climbed the
stairs to the platform, welcoming them to our yard. Most of them
found it funny, or so it seemed through our psilocybin goggles. All
three of us were in our mid-twenties; we had no need for a yard
anyway.
The
doorbell rang three more times before I reached the front door. I
knew exactly who it was; the very source of my anxiety. The door had
a couple of locks on it, and a curtained window—through that
window, I could make out the gaunt form of my mother, a cigarette in
one hand, and a dark, bulging garbage sack in the other. “Hurry
UP!” she implored me through the glass. “It's fucking cold out
here! How in the hell can you live in weather like this?!”
Polly
was conveniently forgetting that she had spent her first forty-eight
years in the Midwest, until a series of cataclysmic events—including
the suicide of my stepfather—had caused her to flee for a warmer
climate. Though her decision to move to Mexico after Gil's death had
seemed insane on the surface, it actually made a certain amount of
pragmatic good sense. With her monthly social security check and VA
benefits, she was able to rent an attractive hacienda with maid
service in San Miguel de Allende. Still, once the money was spent,
it was gone until the first of the following month, and there could
be a long stretch of time in between, when cash was scarce.
My
mother sought to bridge that gap with the contents of her garbage
sack, which she triumphantly hauled into my living room as soon as
the door was open. She hurled the sack onto the floor as if it were a
dead antelope. “Two pounds”, she announced. “Extremely
fresh—harvested just last week. Cured in crème de menthe.”
She opened the sack, which had not been secured by so much as a
twist tie. “Smell” she commanded me.
I
took a quick, apprehensive sniff. Sure enough, I could detect an
overpowering odor of mint, mixed with the trademark, herbal scent.
“There's hardly any seeds” my mother announced proudly, as if she
had just given birth to the contents of the sack. “And there are
nine more sacks just like them, waiting outside in the spare gas
tank.”
My
mother had warned me a couple of months earlier that I should expect
such a visit from her, but I honestly thought she was joking.
Although her entrepreneurial drive was undeniably strong, her ability
to act upon her schemes was spotty, at best. Even when she announced
that she had purchased an old Chinook camper, with a handy spare gas
tank, I felt certain that she intended to use it for camping. My
mother was a terrible camper—she camped with the family out of a
grim sense of maternal obligation, combined with a stubborn refusal
to spend money on a motel—but I still did not believe that she actually intended to haul twenty pounds of high-grade marijuana across
the Mexican border.
Three
days earlier, she had called me from a pay phone in Laredo, Texas,
announcing that she had made it across the border, without so much as
a second glance from the guards, and was headed in my direction.
Could I call all of my friends, and let them know she was on her way?
Did I know anyone who was interested in a few pounds of killer
Mexican pot?
The
question, of course, was not whether I knew anyone who was interested
in a few pounds of pot—all of my friends would be extremely
interested—but whether I knew anyone who could afford to buy more
than a dime bag at one time. I stared at the garbage bag, and tried
to mentally calculate how many months it would take us to sell even
the contents of that container. There were sixteen ounces in a
pound; I remembered this from grade school. Therefore, half a pound equaled eight ounces, and a dime bag was slightly less than a
quarter of an ounce. Of course, I would have to multiply everything
by two. My mind began to bend over backwards upon itself; I was too
terrified to be able to calculate. Math has never been my forte
anyway.
“Where's
your roommates?” my mother demanded. “I'm gonna need some help
bringing those bags inside.” As if on cue, Ken's bedroom door
opened, slowly at first, then with increasing velocity as he took
note of the new addition to the living room. It had been a late
night for Ken; he had finally made it to bed around 8:00 AM, and,
although it was already dark outside, he had just awakened. Ken
tottered slightly on his knobby, oversized feet, and pushed a hunk of
greasy hair out of his eyes with his fists. He blinked, and then
blinked again. “Is that what I think it is?' he asked, gaping at
the open bag.
Ken was
so astonished that he did not indulge in his usual waking ritual of
staring into the kitchen at the numerous excretions left by his dogs.
This ritual always made Ken profoundly unhappy, since the kitchen
floor was coated with a layer of feces and urine. The
dogs, upon hearing Ken's voice, ran to a corner of the kitchen and
cowered there, anticipating their master's hangover-fueled rage. Ken
was prone to disciplining his dogs violently, while screaming such
phrases as “I can't BELIEVE it! Piss and shit—every day!”
This would have been hilarious if the scene weren't so hideous. The
beatings would continue unabated until either Dirk and I put a stop
to them by yelling, “Ken! That's ENOUGH, man!” Ken would then
drop whatever dog he'd been working on, and stare at us with a
sheepish expression on his face.
The
dogs whimpered in the corner and then began to thrash their tails
around wildly, amazed by the fact that they had miraculously escaped
a beating. For once, Ken was focusing his early-evening attention on
something other than retribution. “Jesus”, Ken said, still
rubbing his eyes. “That's the most reefer I've seen in my entire
life.” He did not look happy. “There's nine more bags”, my
mother said, loudly. “You're a strong man, right?” Her eyes
darted around the apartment for a frantic moment, then she asked,
“You got an ashtray? I wouldn't want to get ash on the floor. Not
that it would matter. It might actually be an improvement.” I
easily located an ashtray, and shoved it in her direction. Relaxing
slightly, my mother continued, “You've got another roommate, right?
Where's he? The job will go faster with two guys.”
From
long experience, I knew that when my mother ordered a person to do
something, that individual would almost always comply. It was easier
than listening to a long diatribe filled with a strange mixture of
gutter-level profanities and bizarre literary allusions. My mother
had never finished college, but she possessed an imperious certainty
that she was intellectually superior to everyone—a trait I both
loathed and admired.
“Dirk?”
I called out, tentatively. “My mother is here. She wants to meet
you.”
Dirk
pushed open his door and entered the living room. I had warned him
of my mother's imminent arrival, and he was neither pleased nor
surprised. Dirk was also nursing a hangover, but unlike Ken, he
possessed gainful employment, and usually arose at a reasonable hour.
To facilitate his timely awakening, Dirk had requested the bedroom
closest to the el tracks. Every morning, his alarm clock rang
promptly at seven-thirty. It continued to ring, punctuated by the
shrieking sounds of the el train rounding the curve outside his
window, until I pounded on his door and screamed at him to get his
ass out of bed. This process usually took no less than half an
hour—I had a job in Evanston, working as an intern at a Montessori
school, so I was always up early. Often, I functioned on less than
three hours of sleep, but I possessed a grim, Germanic sense of
responsibility, which made it possible for me to drink beer until
four in the morning, and still be up by seven.
“You
must be Polly”, Dirk said laconically, extending a filthy hand.
Dirk had been enmeshed in his woodworking project, a bust of a rather
demonic-looking troll. “Leah has told me so much about you.” He
snickered slightly, and my mother stared at him, trying to gauge the
reasons for his amusement. “I'm sure she has” she said, dryly.
Polly
paused for a moment, tossed her cigarette into the ashtray.
“Gentlemen, I have a problem” she announced. “I have eighteen
pounds of marijuana in my truck. It needs to be brought inside—now.
The truck is parked underneath the el tracks; I'm not sure whether
that is legal.”
What a
skewed sense of reality my mother had—she had driven two thousand
miles, across two nations, with more pot than most people buy in a
lifetime, and she was worried about having to pay a parking ticket.
I waited for Dirk and Ken to snap into gear; they did not. It hadn't
quite dawned on them that they were being recruited to haul garbage
sacks out of my mother's truck, in full view of the evening's
commuters, and house the bags in our apartment for an indefinite
period of time.
Both
of them wandered, in a daze, out the back door, towards the camper.
Another couple of minutes later, the first four sacks arrived, and
then four more, and finally, my mother herself entered the apartment
again, carrying the last bag. The sight of ten garbage bags stuffed
with buds in the middle of my living room floor filled me with a
strange combination of glee and fear. “I can't believe you got all
of those sacks inside the spare tank”, I said. I was being invaded
by a growing horror. I knew no one who would have the faintest idea
what to do with the contents of those sacks. It was preposterous, as
close to the exact opposite as it could possibly be from my usual
state of affairs, drug-wise. This was the first time in my life that
I'd ever seen too much pot, accustomed as I was to scraping for dime
bags of the cheap stuff. Chicago was a very financially-stratified
city, and I was not in touch with anyone who made significantly more
money than I did.
Off
the top of my head, I was only able to think of about ten friends who
were in imminent need of marijuana, a group whose combined worth was
about two hundred dollars. Of those ten, two lived under the same
roof as I, and the others were unlikely to be home at 6 PM on a
Friday, even if it was the dead of winter. I ran to the phone and
began dialing frantically.
The
first person I called was Pete, a friend from Artist in Residence, a
building I had recently vacated in favor of my current living
arrangement. Often referred to lovingly as “Alcoholics in
Retirement”, the AIR building housed some of the most interesting
people I had ever met, including Professor Eddie from the Mighty Joe
Young blues band, Bethany, a former Miss Chicago (who, close-up, had
a severe acne problem), and a transvestite named Trevor who performed
in local clubs with chains and garbage can lids.
Pete
was a budding pianist, who would often play the theme from Snoopy
when we were hosting parties in the downstairs performance space.
This was appropriate, because his personality was quite similar to
Schroeder's—he was melancholy and sarcastic, traits that never fail
to attract my interest.
“She
really did it” Pete declared. “Well, I might be able to spring
for a half ounce—just to help you out. And to meet your mom. I
think it might explain a lot of things about you.”
I did
not care to delve too deeply into the similarities between Polly and
me. Such a distinction had been made many times, although it was
usually followed by the statement, “Well, you seem calmer and more
reasonable.” The fact was that my mother had such an overpowering
personality that it was impossible not to have it rub off on you. I
had spent most of my early adulthood attempting to purge myself of my
mother's influence, and I resented her for it. It didn't help any that she expected my idiot roommates and me to be accomplices in
her drug trade.
Pete
assured me that he would be there in an hour. I furiously dialed my
other friends, most of whom still lived at the Artist in Residence
building. My old next-door neighbor, Brad, told me that it would
take him a couple of hours, and he would only be able to spring for a
dime bag. This was typical of him. We'd had an affair the
previous summer, which started one night when we drunkenly began to
enact a scene from “Cat's Cradle”--a book neither of us had
actually read. We were intrigued by the idea that people could make
love by pressing the soles of their feet together, and finally,
having lusted after each other every night for a week, we decided to
see what would happen if we tried boko-maru for ourselves. The
results were surprisingly positive, and I had hoped for much more,
but Brad already had a girlfriend.
Brad
also had a hot Camaro that I secretly admired, since I was more of a
Volkswagen van sort of gal. Dirk had a Volkswagen van, which he
could barely drive, but this held no interest for me at all. I had
ridden beside Brad in his Camaro only a couple of times, but it was a
thrilling experience. Brad was accustomed to driving his own
automobile, so the experience definitely had more meaning for me than
it did for him. This precisely summed up the balance of power
between the two of us—he had what I considered to be an unfair
advantage. The last time I had seen Brad had been only a month
beforehand, when he made a surprise appearance at my twenty-fifth
birthday party. I asked him for a birthday ride in his Camaro, but
he refused, saying that he had to get up early in the morning for
work. I wasn't sure what had prompted him to show up in the first
place, despite long, frustrating experience in trying to second-guess
his motives.
Pete
arrived in forty-five minutes. He must have left his apartment
seconds after hanging up the phone, and his jaw was agape before I
even opened the door. “I can smell it” he announced as he
entered the apartment. Wordlessly, I gestured towards the living
room, and the sacks. One of the sacks was bursting slightly at the
seams—it was just like my mother to try to save money by
purchasing cheap garbage bags for her drug haul. A huge clump of
buds had disgorged itself from the hole, and rested on the floor. I
estimated that the clump represented at least three ounces, which
would be more than enough for all of my cheap-assed friends. “I've
never seen anything like it” Pete exclaimed, with such awe that it
was as though he was standing before a work of art.
My
mother stepped forward. “You must be Pete” she said. “How
much do you want?”
Pete
was unflustered by her directness. “Well, I'd like at least a
pound, but I'll settle for half an ounce” he said coolly, pulling
some bills from his wallet. My mom snatched them from his
outstretched hand without so much as a glance at him. She grasped
the bills in one hand and rifled through them quickly like a
syndicate moll, counting out loud. “You owe me five bucks” she
announced. Pete hesitated for a moment, and then silently extracted a
bill from his wallet and handed it to her. My mother reached down
into the exposed pile of marijuana, grabbed a large handful, and
stuffed it into a small baggie. “That should about do it” she
said.
Pete
stared at her. “You don't own a scale?” he asked tentatively.
Pete realized intuitively that he needed to tiptoe around my mother
as if she was a minefield loaded with caps of nitroglycerin. However,
my mother was in a forgiving mood. She gave a dismissive shrug. “I
know what a half-ounce looks like” she said.
“No
complaints” Pete said, unzipping his backpack. My mother looked
at him for the first time, appreciating his lean frame and purposeful
movements. “Nice-looking man” she said loudly. “Really, Leah,
you could do worse than him.”
The
doorbell rang, and I sprinted from the room. I knew who it was before
opening the door—Brad, who smiled lewdly as soon as he saw me.
Brad seldom let more than a couple of seconds pass before
complimenting me on my appearance, but today he had more important
things on his mind. His gaze shifted immediately from my breasts to
the pile of sacks on the floor. “Holy mother of God” he said.
Brad was Catholic. “No, this is the work of my mother” I said
briskly.
Polly
stepped forward. “You said you just wanted a dime bag?” she
barked. She reached down to the pile, and extracted a small fistful
of buds. To my eyes, it looked as though my mother was being
uncharacteristically generous, perhaps as a gesture of goodwill
towards my closest friends.
Brad,
however, immediately begged to differ. He accepted the bag, and
stared into the contents with a vague sneer on his face. Pushing one
forefinger into the plastic interior, he prodded the buds. He shoved
his nose inside the bag, inhaled deeply and then
re-surfaced, looking very unhappy. “There are seeds in here” he
finally whined.
Pete
glared at him with such contempt that Brad was taken aback. “Well,
man, sometimes you have to take the bitter with the sweet” Pete
said venomously. Brad wordlessly handed a ten dollar bill to my
mother, and shoved his purchase into the rear pocket of his jeans.
My eyes traveled to Brad's ass appreciatively for a moment, but then
Brad broke the spell. “I have to go” he announced. “Nice
seeing all of you.” He strode to the front door, flung it open,
and was gone.
“What
a dipshit” my mom said dismissively. “Do you know him well?”
I shrugged. “Sort of” I muttered, looking at the floor. Pete
placed a comforting hand on my shoulder. “Some people just want
more than they really need” he said.
The
evening limped on, and a few other people from Artist in Residence
showed up with small bills. After several hours, the three ounces
that had spilled onto the floor were completely gone, but the garbage
bags remained full. My tiny bedroom was saturated with the heavy
smoke of marijuana and my mother's cigarettes. I pried open a window,
which caused blasts of arctic wind to waft into the room, rippling
the bags slightly. “Is that it?” my mother demanded. “I'm
afraid so” I whimpered. “You don't know anybody else?” she
persisted. I shook my head. “Jesus Christ, Leah” my mother
exploded. “What the hell am I going to do with these bags?”
It was
a terrifying query, and I stammered an answer, without thinking. “I
suppose I could call my ex boyfriend Alec tomorrow. He's the only
person I know who has the ability to traffic in this much pot. He's
not really a dealer, but he knows dealers, and I think he could
unload the stuff rather quickly.”
As
soon as the words were out of my mouth, I knew that I had made an
awful mistake. “Ex boyfriend” was a more grandiose term than
Alec deserved. It was more accurate to say that we'd had sex for
about three months, and then he dumped me for Melody, another woman
who lived in the AIR building. I had repressed my emotions about
this betrayal with copious amounts of alcohol. Finally, one
especially drunken evening, I burst into Alec's apartment with a six
pack, bent on reconciliation, but instead I encountered Melody, who
was in the process of disrobing. At this point, I flew into a
shrieking, whiskey bottle flailing rage, which culminated with the
arrival of two policemen. Alec had called the police himself, which
was ironic, because the previous week he had decorated his walls with
original cartoons of the CPD, festooned with the thick necks and pig
ears that were typical of such artwork. I pointed out Alec's
drawings to one of the cops, who shrugged dismissively. “Yeah,
sure, everyone hates the cops” he said. He had the stereotypical, nasal accent of a working class guy from the Bridgeport neighborhood.
“Come on, now, you need to leave, or we'll have to arrest you.”
The
cops led me downstairs to my own apartment. “What do you do for a
living?” the other policeman asked. “I'm a.....preschool
teacher” I managed to sob. The two men looked at each other,
raised their eyebrows, and shook their heads. “You can do better
than him” the second cop insisted. “I mean, the guy draws on
his own walls.” Even in my disturbed, inebriated state, I knew he
had a point, and I nodded. The cop snickered mirthlessly. “But
you love him, right?” he said.
After
I entered my apartment, the police retreated, warning me that there
would be dire consequences if they had to return. There was no way I
was going to go back to Alec's apartment, I was utterly broken. As I
stumbled towards my futon, I noticed that Dirk was passed out on my
floor, wearing one of my skirts. Earlier in the evening, several of
us had dressed him up in some of my clothing, and then giggled when
he suddenly collapsed onto the floor and lost consciousness. He had not
moved since then.
I
knelt on the floor and shook Dirk until he awakened. It took a long
time, and I was awash with tears by the time he finally opened his
eyes. “It's Alec, isn't it?” he asked. I nodded. “I'm sorry”
Dirk said, throwing his arms around me. He rocked me back and forth
on the floor as I sobbed. “It really hurts, doesn't it?” Dirk
asked. It was one of the most compassionate gestures I had ever
experienced from anyone. I would never have thought that Dirk was
even capable of such empathy.
Two
weeks later, Dirk announced his plans to move out of the building,
and the same month, Alec and Melody exited as well, for a basement
apartment in Humboldt Park. I had not spoken to them, but tales of
their debauchery had reached me through mutual friends. The two of
them were unemployed, they were drinking every day, and there were
rumors of frequent cocaine and even heroin use. This behavior was
not unusual for Artist in Residence alumni, but it had reached epic
dimensions which caused me to feel rather glad that Alec had dumped
me. I was in no mood to see him, however, and now it was too late for
me to rescind my offer.
“Well,
let's hope THAT leads to something” my mother said. “I mean, I
can't just take this stuff back to Mexico.” She glanced around at
my room, with its minimalist crash-pad decor, as if seeing it
for the first time. “I can't sleep here” she said, to my immense
relief. “I'd better just go and stay in that hotel on Sheridan.”
My
mother was referring to the Sheridan-Chase Motel in Rogers Park, a
squalid dump whose in-room televisions, when turned on, immediately
belched out the grunting sounds of people having sex, since they were
always tuned to porn stations. Other channels existed, of course,
but were rarely watched. These were the days before pay-per-view,
when porn channels were offered for free by enterprising motels of a
certain caliber. My mother liked the motel just fine, because it was
inexpensive. I had the impression that actual nightly rates were
beyond the comprehension of the management, accustomed as they were
to an hourly clientele. Therefore, when put on the spot for a
nightly rate, the bewildered desk clerks would simply blurt out
whatever number popped into their heads, and this figure was always
open to negotiation.
I
sighed with relief when my mother left the apartment, promising to
return the following morning. After her retreat, I locked the door
and returned to my bedroom. The sacks of marijuana remained on the
floor. Pete was sitting on the edge of my futon, staring at them
intently, as if anticipating their escape. He appeared to be
permanently dazed. “I still can't quite take it in” he
whispered. “Are you hungry? You want to order a pizza?”
The
ingestion of THC had failed to have its usual appetite-enhancing
effect upon me, and I wasn't hungry at all. Still, I nodded
vigorously, as if pizza was what I wanted more than anything in the
world. I wandered back into the living room, dialed the number of a
local delivery place, and went back to my own room to wait. It was
almost midnight, and I was tired. I placed my head delicately on
Pete's shoulder, and he put his arm around me. “I guess you're not
too thrilled about talking to Alec tomorrow” he said with
characteristic understatement. I shook my head. “I'll do what I
have to do” I said grimly. “If I don't get rid of this pot, I'll
never get rid of my mother.”
Pete
stroked my face tenderly with his free hand, removing a small hunk of
hair from the corner of my mouth. “This has to be difficult for
you” he acknowledged. His hand traveled slowly to my shoulder, and
then to the top of my left breast. “I can't even imagine it” he
said soothingly. He removed his other arm from my shoulder and
started to massage both of my breasts, eyes downcast.
“So
frustrating” I said, as though nothing unusual was happening. Since
the incident with Alec, Pete and I had spent almost every day
together, cooking stir-fries and drinking beer and listening to
music, but neither of us had broached the topic of sex. We had an
unspoken understanding that sex would ruin our friendship, and so we
shied away from discussing it openly. Perhaps Pete was just showing
compassion by caressing my breasts, but I was inclined to doubt it.
With
impressive deftness, Pete unbuttoned the tiny buttons on the front of
my peasant blouse, and my breasts fell out into his hands. I had
large breasts, and I didn't wear a bra, so my breasts were always
spilling onto something. Pete inhaled sharply, then composed himself
and stuck his tongue into my mouth. He sucked on my tongue while
gently squeezing my breasts, and I felt peaceful for the first time
that evening.
Suddenly,
I heard the sound of maniacal laughter, and my bedroom door burst
open, revealing the drunken, swaying forms of Dirk and Ken. In one
hand, Ken grasped a oblong box, which dripped a small amount of
grease onto one of the garbage bags. “Your pizza's here!” Ken
yelled. This caused both men to collapse onto the floor in fits of
laughter. “You owe me ten bucks” Dirk said, almost
apologetically.
I
reached into my purse, pulled out a ten dollar bill, and handed it to
him. “SO sorry to interrupt” Ken yelled. He stumbled to the
door and exited, leaving the door open. Dirk stared at my breasts, a
curiously benign smile on his face. “Enjoy your pizza” he
snickered. He staggered from the room, slamming the door behind him.
I was
livid, but Pete was undeterred. Pushing me onto the futon, he
pressed his groin against me. I shimmied out of my shirt and moaned
as his hands found my breasts again. Pete grabbed my hand and pulled
it towards the bulge in his pants. I always loved it when guys did
that, and I began to rub his member through the fabric. Quickly I
unbuckled his belt, then tugged on his zipper, freeing him from his
jeans. Pete's dick was long and slender and eager-looking. It had
been my experience that men's penises often echoed their body types.
Pete's member, thankfully, was no exception to the rule.
I
shimmied out of my underwear, and Pete pushed his dick into me,
moving quickly until I suddenly had an orgasm. It seemed to come out
of nowhere; I had never climaxed from coitus before, and didn't
understand why my body had chosen that particular moment. Perhaps my
senses were heightened by the emotional intensity of the evening.
Pete seemed to be in his own world; his eyes were closed and he moved
as though he had a train to catch, somewhere other than in my room.
Finally, he collapsed onto me and smiled. “That was a nice
surprise” he said.
I
didn't have a handy response. As far as I was concerned, the
experience had not been surprising at all. It had been,
simultaneously, disappointing and profoundly erotic. This duality
was to be a hallmark of many of my future erotic encounters, but at
the age of twenty-five, I was just beginning to grasp its complexity,
and I did not have any words to describe it. I was too exhausted for
thought, and rapidly fell into a deep sleep.
When I
regained consciousness, I saw that Pete was already awake. He lay on
one side, facing away from me, staring at the bags with a disoriented
expression on his face. I reached over to touch him, and he sat bolt
upright, as if suddenly terrified. His right foot kicked the
previously untouched pizza box, causing an odor of rancid grease to
rise suddenly into the room. “I think I'm already late for work”
he said. He glanced at his wrist. “Oh shit, I am. I'd better go.”
Swiftly, he rose, leaped into his pants, and strode across the room.
“It was nice seeing you” he said, tentatively. “I'm certain
that we'll see each other soon.”
I had
a strong intuition that it would be at least a few days before we saw
each other, but I didn't say so. My hands were full with my new
responsibilities as an associate marijuana saleswoman, and
undoubtedly Pete would be a distraction. The innocence of our
friendship was forever sullied, and neither of us had the faintest
idea what the new rules might be. It was best for us to avoid each
other for a while.
Pete
bent down, kissed my forehead, and raced out of the room. I rolled
over to face the wall, desperately trying to will myself back to
sleep. It wouldn't be long before my mother would be at my doorstep,
Benson and Hedges cigarette blazing away in her right hand, demanding
that I get my ass out of bed.
To my
amazement, it was nearly noon when my mother appeared at my door.
She stomped on the porch for a couple of minutes to dislodge the snow
from her cheap Sears-Roebuck sneakers, then rang the bell, but only
once. “I rented a studio apartment for you” she announced as
soon as I opened the door. “You can't possibly continue to live in
this hellhole. Besides, the bags of pot won't be safe around Dirk
and Numbnuts.” My mother had ceased to refer to Ken by name,
preferring the moniker “Numbnuts”, which was fine with me.
Shaking her head, she wandered over to the stereo and plucked Ken's
copy of “Kind of Blue” from the pile of records. “I just can't
understand it” she said, shaking her head. “How can someone so
stupid have such good taste in music?”
This
had always been a mystery to me, and I had no explanation. Even more
inexplicable, however, was my mother's sudden act of generosity,
which had involved an expenditure of cash that must have set her back
several hundred dollars. This was a woman who had once stood next to
a cash register at Denny's, refusing to leave even when the police
arrived, because the cashier had shortchanged her by ten cents.
“Where is this apartment located?” I asked tentatively. “Oh,
just up the road from the hotel” Polly answered breezily. She
jammed a cigarette into her mouth, inhaled, and then exhaled
explosively. “It's right on Sheridan” she explained. “I was
driving around and saw the for rent sign. It's a month to month
lease, I forged your signature. The owner didn't seem to mind.”
My
doubts about the questionable legality of this arrangement were
overshadowed by a tremendous sense of relief that I would be no
longer be subjected to Ken's dog training rituals and marathon
drinking sessions. The few objects that I possessed would fit in the
back of my mother's camper, facilitating an easy move. “Have you
called Alec yet?” my mother demanded. I sprang immediately to
action, found the number on a matchbook cover that Dirk had tossed
beside the phone, and dialed furiously. Alec picked up the receiver
on the sixth ring. His voice was groggy and hostile, as if he had
just awakened, and deeply resented the intrusion.
“This
is Leah” I stated flatly. “I'm not calling to chat, so don't
worry. My mother has twenty pounds of high-grade Mexican pot. I
want to bring it over, and see if you can help us unload it. There
will be some money in it for you, of course.”
There
was a long silence. Finally, in an overly casual tone, Alec said,
“That's a hell of a lot of reefer. There might be a few people I
could call. Could you bring it here right away?” He gave me an
address on Humboldt Boulevard, and I hung up, promising to be there
in an hour.
Forty-five
minutes later, my mother and I pulled up in front of a dingy two
flat, with four of the bags in tow. In her infinite wisdom, Polly
had determined that it was best to start small, with only eight
pounds of marijuana, rather than overwhelm Alec and Melody with the
task of unloading the entire bundle. Humboldt Boulevard was teeming
with street life. Clusters of young Puerto Rican men sat on the
stoops, even though the temperature was only in the mid-twenties.
The boulevard had long been a hotbed of gang activity. The
predominant gang was the Latin Kings, whose ornate graffiti adorned
the sides of many of the boulevard's residences and business
establishments. The Latin Kings' supremacy was constantly being
challenged by the Insane Unknowns, a rival gang who claimed nearby
Wicker Park as their turf. These disputes were often settled with
gunfire.
Ignoring
the appreciative whistles of a couple of males who couldn't have been
more than sixteen, I strode to the door of Alec's basement dwelling.
There was no bell, so I rapped on the door, with as much velocity as
I could muster. My mother stood behind me, clutching one of the
garbage bags. We waited patiently as Alec
rustled around the apartment, had a brief coughing fit, and then
opened the door.
It was
the first time since the cop incident that Alec and I had been in the same room, and we stared at each other for a long, uncomfortable moment.
Alec was dressed in his trademark outfit—ragged jeans with long
underwear protruding from the knee rips, a sleeveless tee shirt
bearing the snarling visage of Sid Vicious, and black motorcycle
boots. Alec had never actually ridden a motorcycle, but he didn't
need to do so. He was the sort of man who could appear regal and
composed even when dressed in rags, at least as long as he didn't run
out of cigarettes.
My
mother and I stepped into the apartment. A strong odor of unwashed
dishes permeated the air, mixed with the smell of ashtrays and
spilled beer. I shoved a pile of clothing from one end of the couch
to the other, and sat down carefully. At that moment, Melody emerged
from the bedroom, looking terrified. Refusing to look at me
directly, she smiled at my mother. “You must be Polly” she said.
Her eyes traveled to the sack on the floor. “I guess this must be
the goods, huh?” She giggled nervously.
Melody
was prone to nervous giggling, which, all by itself, was enough to
make me dislike her intensely. She was slightly over five feet tall,
with a tiny waist, enormous breasts, and a unruly head of dark hair
that made her look strangely like Betty Boop. She had a tendency to
lean perpetually to one side, as if she was in danger of toppling at
any moment. Several months earlier, when we had all been friends,
Alec had told me that Melody had been born with various internal
abnormalities. The most notable was the fact that she originally
emerged from her mother's womb with three kidneys. One of them was
surgically removed, and the other had simply expired, leaving her
with only one functional kidney. It was a wonder, really, that she
was still alive.
“I
brought three more bags” my mother announced. “They're in the
camper.” Melody's eyes became huge. She and Alec glanced at each
other quickly, and then leveled their gaze on my mother. “Eight
pounds” Polly explained. “Extremely fresh. I just brought it
across the border from Mexico two days ago.”
Alec
strode across the room and peered into the bag. He had a way of
moving that was at once both feral and languid, as if he could pounce
on something and devour it, if only he could find the energy to do
so. “There's really two pounds in here?” he asked. My mother
nodded. “I think I can unload it. Let me make a few calls. It
might take a couple of days for me to reach everybody, and for them
to come up with the money. But I'm sure that at least one of the
people I know will be very interested in this.”
“There
will be a twenty five percent cut for you” my mother announced.
She tossed her truck keys to Alec. “Bring in the other three bags,
and we'll be on our way.” Alec sprang suddenly to action and strode
to the door. A minute later, he returned, smiling slightly,
clutching the other three bags. “That was easy” he said.
Back
in the truck, my mother suddenly became pensive. “I do hope he can
sell the contents of those bags” she said fretfully. “I really
don't want to hang around Chicago in the meantime. It makes me too
nervous, and this is costing me a lot of money. I think I'll drive up
to Grandma's for a couple of days.”
Polly
was in the habit of referring to her own mother as “Grandma” for
reasons that I did not entirely understand. There was nothing even
remotely grandmotherly about Mildred, a woman so formidable that she
often reduced my mother to a mute, quivering puddle of acquiescence.
Mildred was several inches shorter than my mother, but she was
capable of commanding an entire army. She had made decisive gains in
the material realm, marrying a wealthy dentist in Racine, Wisconsin
shortly after the Depression ended. Mildred had been Harry's
receptionist, and the combination of her Danish looks and her drive
for financial supremacy attracted his attention. Harry was actually
Mildred's second husband. My mother's biological father was a charmer
who was never at home, preferring to roam the highways of the United
States and Mexico in an ancient, dusty car, smuggling contraband
goods and impregnating women. My grandmother certainly was never
going to make that mistake again, and her later life was a testament
to clever planning and the restrained enjoyment of wealth. During the
summer, she tended to her enormous flower garden, allowing herself
exactly one hour of leisure in her outdoor pool when all of her tasks
were completed. In the winter, she stayed busy with indoor duties.
Her house was filled with artifacts from her international travels,
including many chairs that were off-limits for actual sitting. My
grandmother often proclaimed that the reason why she had possessions
was because she took care of them. There was no denying this, and the
best response was always to smile meekly and agree. Obviously,
Mildred felt that both my mother and I were extremely deficient when
it came to caring for our belongings, and because of this, we would
come to nothing.
It
puzzled me that my mother wished to subject herself to Mildred's
scrutiny, but I wasn't about to argue. Undoubtedly she would
construct an elaborate excuse for her visit. Perhaps, for a moment,
Mildred would believe that her daughter's devotion was so strong that
she was willing to drive to Wisconsin from Mexico in February on a
mere whim, just to be in her presence. None of it was any of my
concern, of course. I was just glad to be rid of Polly for a few
days.
The
next four days passed swiftly and pleasantly. I spent my mornings at
my preschool job and my evenings selling dime bags to Artist in
Residence occupants. My avocation added a new dimension of
strangeness to my life, one to which I adapted readily. Brad called
at midnight one evening to request that I come to visit him,
emphasizing that he would make it worth my while. I told him that I
was preparing to go to bed, but I would be happy to have him visit
me. Brad balked at my offer, explaining that he had scored a good
parking spot in front of the AIR building, and he didn't want to
leave it, since it would surely be gone when he returned. I hung up
the phone, telling him to find himself a blow-up doll.
Possessing
nearly twelve pounds of pot had filled me with a strange arrogance,
which enabled me to choose my friends according to whim. The power
was intoxicating, and I used it to its fullest advantage. I turned
down an offer from an ex-neighbor named Erik who called to request a
dime bag and a back rub. He had recently dislocated his shoulder
while skateboarding, and wanted me to help him with his pain. I
laughed loudly, both at his pain and his request, and slammed down
the receiver. Erik had undoubtedly burned through his stable of
women at the AIR building, after impregnating one and chasing another
down the hall with a knife. He was both an idiot and a sociopath,
and I had never understood his popularity.
The
strangest call came from a fellow named Joseph, an old high school
buddy of Brad's, who had lived down the hall from us. He was engaged
to be married, and the wedding was only a week away. Joseph wanted
to come right over and buy some pot from me. He also wanted to watch
“Reefer Madness” which was scheduled to air at two o'clock in the
morning. I told him that I didn't own a television, and he promised
to bring one with him when he came to my apartment. Four hours
later, at 1:45 AM, Joseph appeared at my door with ten dollars and a
tiny black and white television. We plugged the TV into a wall
socket, fired up a joint, and stretched out on the floor in front of
the screen. As the images flickered, we passed joints back and
forth. When “Reefer Madness” ended, Joseph collected his
television and his marijuana purchase and left my apartment, as
mysteriously as he had arrived. I strongly suspected that he had
promised himself a final fling before marriage, and for some reason,
I had come to mind. When faced with an actual opportunity, he was too
terrified to follow through. This was fine with me, since I had
barely noticed him when I lived in the building. I was certain that
sex with him would have been both guilt-ridden and mediocre.
The
one person who did not call was Alec, but I assumed he was busy
rounding up connections, and I didn't want to pressure him. Finally,
on the fourth evening following our delivery visit, my phone rang
suddenly. I was in a jovial mood, even when I discovered that it was
Melody on the other end of the line. “Hey, it's good to hear from
you” I said expansively. “Any luck?”
“I
have terrible news” Melody said in a tiny, choked voice. “I
don't know how to tell you this, so I am just going to say it.
Someone broke into our apartment this afternoon. All of the pot is
gone. We weren't able to sell any of it. Alec and I don't have any
idea who might have done such a terrible thing. I'm so sorry.” She
choked abruptly, as if suppressing a sob. “Oh God, it's so awful.
You don't know how bad it makes me feel to tell you this.”
For
some reason—perhaps it was the barely concealed hysteria in her
voice, or a genuine note of contrition in her tone—I immediately
knew that Melody was telling the truth. The possibility existed, of
course, that she and Alec had simply sold the pot and kept the money,
then made up a tale about a robbery—but somehow I realized she
wasn't lying. Alec was an excellent liar, but Melody was a poor
one—she was too nervous and transparent for subterfuge. If there
was a lie to be told, Alec would surely have been the one to call.
“All of it is gone?' I managed to ask. “All of it” Melody
affirmed. “We'll be asking around, of course, and we'll try to get
the pot back, but I don't hold out much hope that we'll find it.”
I was
in a panic when I hung up the phone. My mother was due back from
Wisconsin in a couple of hours. Though the situation was not my
fault, I felt somehow responsible, and knew that there would be hell
to pay. I paced nervously around the apartment, then wandered over to
my refrigerator and opened the door. Since the move, I had been
storing the pot in my refrigerator, hoping that it would stay fresh
long enough for me to sell it. There was no additional room in the
refrigerator for food, so I had been eating all of my meals in
restaurants, paid for by the proceeds from my ill-gotten spoils. The
bags appeared to be just as menacingly large as they had looked when
I first saw them. It was going to take a long time to unload them at
my current rate of three dime bag sales a day.
An
hour and a half later, my mother pounded on the door. I opened it
tentatively, fearing that she would pounce on me before she even
heard the bad news. Polly was tired from her drive, and intent upon
serious relaxation. In one hand, she held a six pack of Schlitz malt
liquor; in the other, a cigarette that had burned down to her
fingers. “Anything to report?” she demanded.
I felt
certain that she already had grasped the bad news by means of
telepathic divination, a method of communication at which she
excelled. I shook my head, looked directly into her eyes, and said,
“Yeah, there's plenty to report, and the news isn't good. All of
the pot is gone. Someone broke into Alec and Melody's place today
and stole every bit of it.”
There
was a long silence, during which my mother gaped at me with an
expression of incredulous fury. Finally, she broke the silence.
“BULLSHIT!” she sputtered, slamming the six pack onto the floor.
“You don't believe that, do you?!”
There
was no way for me to explain my utter certainty that Melody had been
telling the truth. My conclusion was intuitive and faith-based
rather than logical, and I didn't understand it myself. “I'm....not
sure” I stammered. “She sounded so upset. I think it really did
happen. They live in a terrible neighborhood, you know.”
My
mother emitted a high-pitched wail of frustration, collapsed into the
apartment's only chair, then buried her face in her hands. “You
certainly are naive” she said bitterly. “Jesus Christ, you've
always been such a sucker for a bogus sob story.”
This
was an immutable fact, there was no denying it. My mother ripped the
top off of one of her beer cans and took a huge chug. She glared at
me and shook her head in fury, then abruptly burst into tears. “I
don't know what I'm going to do now” she sobbed. “I put all the
money I had into purchasing that stuff, and now almost half of it is
gone. I don't know what the hell I'm even going to do with the other
half.”
I
stared at my mom, and for the first time, I allowed myself the luxury
of compassion. The poor woman was in her mid-fifties, and possessed
neither the grim patience of her own mother, or the entrepreneurial shrewdness of her father. She had been a failure as a wife, and a
worse failure as a mother, having given birth to four children, none
of whom were able to tolerate her existence. Now, she had failed at
marijuana sales, a field which had appeared to be a slam-dunk, given
the popularity of the drug. There was nothing left for her except a
life of social security checks and squabbling with the Mexican street
vendors over the price of bruised avocados.
My
sympathy, however, was short-lived. My mother was just warming up
verbally, and she lit into me with everything she had. It was all my
fault, she claimed. I had been a disappointment to her from the very
beginning, since she had thought I was somehow special, and destined
for wonderful things. With this in mind, she had given me everything
she could, but I was not appreciative. I hadn't even bothered to clean
my room before she arrived in Chicago the previous week, that's how
little I thought of her.
None
of it was true, of course. I'd had a miserable, Dickensian
childhood, filled with deprivation and abuse. Despite frequent
attacks of pneumonia, my mother had spent the majority of her money
on beer and cigarettes. I had often gone without Christmas or
birthday presents, and both of us knew this.
Finally,
after Polly tucked into her fourth beer, she excused herself and went
into the kitchen. I heard the refrigerator door open, and then slam,
followed by the flushing ot the toilet. A minute later, the toilet
flushed again. A high-pitched wail arose from the bathroom. My
mother was simultaneously weeping and yelling, a terrifying
combination that I had experienced many times during my childhood.
“What a terrible mistake” she sobbed. “I'm just going to get
rid of it. I don't even care any more.”
Suddenly,
I was invaded by an awful suspicion. I tiptoed into the bathroom and
stood near the doorway, peering at a scene of carnage that left me
paralyzed and incredulous. My mother upended one of the garbage
bags over the toilet, and marijuana cascaded into the bowl and
onto the floor. Polly paused to scoop up some spilled buds. She
tossed them into the swirling toilet water and flushed again, sobbing
louder as they disappeared.
I felt
a strange, calm detachment as I watched the clumps of marijuana make
their way into the building's ancient plumbing, where they would be
treated with chemicals and swept from our lives forever. This
detachment was tempered with the knowledge that I still had half a
pound stashed at Dirk and Ken's place, awaiting my return. For some
reason I no longer remembered, perhaps a unconscious intuition, I had
placed some of the pot into a smaller bag and stashed it in the
closet of my old bedroom, shortly before I had moved. The contents of
the bag would ensure that I would be able to pay the rent on my new
place, at least for the next couple of months.
“Are
you sure you want to do this?” I asked my mom. “I'm absolutely
sure” she stated calmly. Then, quite suddenly, she was overtaken
by a new wave of hysteria. “It was all just bad karma” she
sobbed. “I'm getting rid of the bad karma.” She snatched another
bag from the floor, and resumed her ritual of dumping and flushing.
The
concept of karma was never one that my mother had explored in much
depth, and I wasn't entirely certain that she was able to grasp it
now. “You're going to be sorry you did this” I said simply, and I
left the room. It was her pot, after all, she was entitled to do
whatever she wanted with it. I had merely been her reluctant
accomplice.
After
several minutes, the flushing stopped, and my mother staggered back
into the main room. “Now I really have no idea what to do” she
sobbed. I stared at her without expression. “What do you think I
should do, Leah? This is all your fault.”
With as
much calmness as I could muster, I replied, “You can leave my
apartment immediately, get in your camper, and go back to Mexico. I
don't want to hear any more of your diatribe, and I certainly don't
want to concern myself further with a problem that is not of my own
making. I'm sorry, but I no longer have time for this discussion.”
My
mother heaved herself to her feet and grabbed her remaining two beer
cans by the plastic ring. She gathered her purse from the floor. “I
knew you were just the kind of ungrateful piece of shit that would
say something like that” she stated. She sounded almost calm, but
with a deadly undercurrent that I remembered from childhood; it was
the same sort of calm that usually preceded a physical attack with a
hairbrush or other small object. “I don't ever want to see you
again” my mother said. She sounded oddly haughty, as though I was
an ex-lover who had dropped in on her unexpectedly. “As far as I
am concerned, I am no longer your mother.” She strode to the door,
drew herself up forcefully to her full six foot height, and then was
gone.
This
wasn't the first time my mother had said something of that nature,
and I had no reason to believe it would be the last. If Polly's and
my argument bode poorly for our relationship, I was unconcerned. She
would go away for a few weeks, and then one of us would call the
other and pretend that nothing had ever happened. It had always been
that way, the rules of our interaction were set by a director who
would permit no variation. In the meantime, the Chicago winter was
blisteringly cold, and I had to get through it with a half pound of
marijuana and my minimum wage preschool job. I sank wearily into
bed, and fell into a deep sleep.
Fortunately,
the following day was Saturday, and I was able to sleep for a full
eight hours, for the first time in many days. When I awakened, I
dialed Dirk and Ken's number and waited for one of them to stagger to
the phone. Ken answered on the eighth ring. He sounded surprisingly
sober and well-rested. “Yeah, the reefer's still here” he
assured me. “I'll be around all day. You can come by for it
whenever you want.”
An
hour later, I stood on the stoop of my old dwelling and rang the
bell. The dogs barked briefly, and Ken yelled at them furiously to
shut up. I could hear him shuffling to the door in his bare feet.
He fumbled with the locks, swearing under his breath. Then the door
abruptly flew open, and Ken stood above me, leering in a friendly
manner.
I
greeted him briefly, and strode into my old bedroom. Throwing open
the closet door, I peered inside anxiously. To my immense relief,
the garbage bag was right where I had placed it, several days
beforehand. In an organizational fit borne of emotional distress, I
had divided the garbage bag's contents into eight more-or-less
equally sized freezer bags of pot. Each bag contained roughly an
ounce. I plucked the eight freezer bags from the larger bag, and
placed them into the pockets of my down coat, four in each pocket. I
owned an absurdly huge and puffy winter coat that fell to my knees,
with a hood so large that it almost covered my eyes. There was no way
of telling that my pockets were stuffed with marijuana.
Ken
stood beside me as I prepared for my departure, shaking his head.
“I'm sorry things didn't work out for us” he said, sounding
genuinely contrite. “Really, in spite of everything, I don't think
you were a bad roommate at all.”
Ken's
sense of reality was as skewed as my mother's—he had convinced
himself that I was at fault, but since he was in a magnanimous frame
of mind, he was willing to forgive me for everything. I wasn't in the
mood for argument, so I just smiled. “Yeah, I feel the same way,
Ken. Thanks. If you don't mind, I'll be going now.”
Ken
shook his head. “You're going on the subway with your pockets full
of marijuana?” he asked. He sounded genuinely concerned. “I
don't think that's a good idea. Let me drive you home. It's the
least I can do.”
I
pondered for a moment, weighing the risks of subway travel against
the perils of Ken's driving, which I had experienced on only one
occasion. Ken owned an ailing twenty-year-old Buick, but he drove
as though he was auditioning for “Death Race 2000”, weaving in
and out of traffic while honking his horn and laughing maniacally.
My new apartment was five miles away, however, and my subway
transfer had expired, which meant that I would have to scrounge in my
wallet for my last dollar. “All right” I said. “Can we go now?
I'm in a hurry.”
“No
problem” Ken assured me, smiling broadly. Five minutes later, we
climbed into his car, which was parked in the same illegal spot where
my mother's camper had once stood. Ken turned the key, and the
engine sputtered briefly, then roared to life. Ken pulled into the
alley with a squeal of tires and accelerated through the stop sign
onto Sheridan Road, narrowly missing a van that was unloading a
shipment of groceries. “What's your address, again?” he yelled.
I
calculated that we had nearly forty blocks to go before I would reach
the safety of my own apartment, blocks that would seem interminable,
despite our speed. “It's right on the border of Evanston and
Rogers Park” I said nervously. “Could you slow down a little,
please? I'm not in THAT much of a hurry.”
Ken
emitted a scornful, dismissive laugh. “I have everything under
control” he assured me. He swerved in front of a small foreign car
and surged forward, causing the needle on his ancient speedometer to
jump to sixty. The speed limit was 35, but it was not rigidly
enforced. I gripped the edges of my seat and stared grimly at the
road in front of me. At the rate we were going, it wouldn't be long
before I would be home, and Ken would be out of my life forever.
Suddenly,
Ken began to pump the brakes frantically. His face assumed an
expression of abject terror. “Oh my God, it's the Feds” he
managed to choke out. “Look at the car next to us. We're in big
trouble now. I'm going to have to pull over.”
I had
no idea how Ken knew that the car next to us contained agents of the
federal government, so I swiveled my neck for a closer look. In the
left hand lane, a medium- sized navy blue car had pulled up so that
it was directly adjacent to ours. The car twitched slightly, as if
the driver was throwing a fit and could barely hold the steering
wheel in his hands. There was a second passenger, a man who looked
to be in his mid-thirties, with short-cropped hair and a furious
expression. He pressed an open wallet to the window glass, revealing
a large, star-shaped FBI badge. His face contorted with rage as he
yelled at us repeatedly to stop the car.
Ken
pulled to the side of the road and cut the engine. Both the passenger
and driver doors of the agents' vehicle flew open, and two men raced
over to Ken's car. The driver yanked open the door on Ken's side and
pulled Ken from the seat, hauling him onto the sidewalk. Ken fell
heavily onto the concrete, but the agents heaved him to his feet.
Then they threw him up against the hood in a no-nonsense manner that
I recognized from cop shows on television. “You worthless little
asshole” the driver said, running his hands down the sides of Ken's
grimy trousers. “Who the hell taught you to drive like that,
asshole? Your senile mother?”
The
badge-wielding man was on a mission of his own. He popped the hood
latch, ran around to the rear of the car, and threw the contents of
the trunk into the street. Returning to the front of the car, he
groped behind the seat cushions, but found nothing of interest.
Finally, he reached around my knees and tore open the glove
compartment, shoving the contents around furiously while cursing
under his breath.
It was
obvious to me that the agents were in search of two things—guns and
drugs. Up to that point, for reasons I couldn't fathom, they had
acted as though I wasn't in the car, but that wouldn't last forever.
Finally, the driver let go of Ken, came around to the passenger side,
and stared at me for a long moment.
The
two agents had unconsciously saved the best for last, because I was
the one who had half a pound of marijuana in my pockets. I
envisioned a stiff prison sentence, with iron beds and pale,
malnourished women fighting over institutional food. If I wanted to
avoid this fate, I would have to speak fast. “I'm so sorry that we
gave you this trouble” I said, as calmly as I could muster. My
voice seemed to come from somewhere outside of myself, as if it was a
wise, disembodied entity that was inexplicably intent upon saving my
foolish ass. “Ken isn't really a bad person. He's just very
irresponsible.”
The
agent stared at me quizzically. He looked almost sympathetic, so I
continued, “I used to be his roommate—not his girlfriend or
anything, just a roommate. I was reluctant to get into the car with
him, because he's a terrible driver, but it's so cold outside, and he
offered me a ride home.”
An
expression of calm relief flooded the agent's face, then he smiled.
“It's okay, miss” he said. “We'll let the two of you go on
your way now.” He turned towards Ken and resumed his former, stern
expression, but only for a moment. “You watch your driving, son”
he barked. Ken nodded mutely. The two agents climbed back into
their car, pulled into traffic, and were gone as suddenly as they had
arrived.
Ken
paused for a moment, then strode to the side of his car. The contents
of his trunk remained in the gutter, half-submerged in a filthy
snowbank. Ken tossed his possessions back into the trunk and returned
to the driver's seat. Shaking slightly, he pulled his vehicle into
the traffic. “That was a close call” he mumbled. “I could
have gotten into a lot of trouble. Good thing I knew how to handle
those guys.”
I
stared at him incredulously. “What the hell are you talking about,
Ken?” I hissed. “I got us out of that mess. I have half a
pound of marijuana in my pockets, so I'm the one who would have
gotten into trouble.”
Ken
snickered. “Well, you have a point” he said. He jammed his foot
onto the accelerator, and the car roared forward. It picked up speed
quickly. Ken gunned past the cars in the left-hand lane, tore
through a light just as it turned red, and continued on his way at
sixty-five miles per hour.
It was
impossible for me to fathom the depths of arrogance that would cause
a man to resume the same behavior that had attracted the notice of
the Feds only minutes beforehand. “Ken, what are you doing?” I
cried. “You almost got nailed by the FBI, man! Why are you still
driving like this?”
Ken
seemed astonished that I would even ask him such a question, when the
answer was so very obvious. He turned his head and looked directly
at me, narrowly avoiding a parked school bus. “Well, they're gone”
he said calmly. “They won't pull me over a second time.”
Suddenly,
all of the events of the past week welled up inside me, and I came
dangerously close to losing control. The velocity of my emotions was
so great that I felt as though I was in danger of being propelled
from the car, so I took a deep breath instead. “Ken, pull the car
over right now!” I screamed. “I'm not riding with you for
another minute.”
Ken
continued to gape at me with amazement. “Why not?” he asked.
“There are still about three more miles to go before we get to your
apartment.”
“I
don't care!” I shrieked. “I'd walk to Topeka now if I had to.
Let me out of this goddamned car.” Shaking his head sadly, Ken
jerked the vehicle to a stop, and I threw open the door. I slammed
it furiously and stormed onto the sidewalk, which was, fortunately,
completely devoid of other pedestrians. Without looking back at Ken,
I began the long walk to my apartment. I could hear the sound of his
engine revving, and then receding, as he drove away.
It had
been a long cold season, but at least it was half over. February was
a short month, and March would bring the spring thaw, which always
made me feel grateful that I had managed to make it through another
Chicago winter. I still had half a pound of pot, and three remaining
months of employment as a preschool teacher before the school year
would come to an end. Despite my obstacles, my luck could easily
have been worse; I could've been on my way to federal prison, rather
than making my way up the sidewalk on a sunny winter afternoon. I
reached into my pocket and squeezed the bags of pot, just to make
certain that they were still there. Only three miles to go; then I
would be home, where I would finally have the luxury of relaxation,
and the opportunity to think about what I was going to do with the
rest of my life.


No comments:
Post a Comment