Mr. President?

“I am the former President of the United States of America.”

Tattoo Boy laughs.

“They said let it go.” I look at the boy and the tattoos crawling up his neck and onto his face. “The weight of the world. That’s what they meant. It’ll wear you out.”

“And drive you crazy. Yeah, old man?”  Tattoo boy flashes filed teeth.

“I am not crazy.”

“Then tell me again who you are?”

I punctuate my speech with pregnant pauses, orator style. “I am the former President of the United States of America.”

Tattoo boy laughs with his whole body, bare gut jiggling beneath vest and ink. He waves others of his ilk over and gestures toward me. “Hey dudes, meet the President of this great nation.”

A cadre of misfits and addicts, skinny, scarred, toothless, and pierced, surround me.

“Hey Prez! Where’re my food stamps?”

Where’s my tax cut?”

“Where’s my $100,000 a year job?”

I cover my ears and slip away. So many dark alleys to hide in. So many doorways to lie in, drinking myself down the river Lethe.

With just a stroke of my pen, did I pull the trigger that killed so many young men and women?

I notice my hand. It’s dirty, the nails jagged, the cuticles torn. Didn’t I get a manicure twice a week? My clothes emit a sour smell. The sleeves of my jacket fray at the ends. I touch my face. The hairs bristle many days beyond a five o’clock shadow.

My shoulder slides down the glass door of a deserted store front, knees hunch to my chest. I’m not the President.

The doctor at the free clinic said delusions are common for those with my condition. He gave me a packet of samples and a prescription. I tried the pills, used every sample. But I never filled the prescription. The hands shaking, the head aching, I can take. But when my tongue felt like a roll of toilet paper and I bobbled like a caricatured doll on a Chevy dashboard, I’d had enough.

And maybe I wanted to think I’d been President.

I stand, yanking my pack higher on my back. My stomach growls signaling time for the Mission line.

Cops stop the dealers at the bus shelter ahead. I go around the block to avoid them, not remembering why they shouldn’t see me, but knowing everything changes if they do.

The big Indian, I mean Native American, Rafe, motions me forward. No one objects when I cut in line. He’s the boss down here.

“How you doing, sir?” Rafe grins. He nudges the shoulder of the younger man next to him. “Nev, meet my new friend.”

I’ve heard about Nev. There’s a street legend about him and a gang of feral cats. I don’t know the particulars, some legends are best shrouded in mist.

Nev turns “Holy shit!” He knows me. It’s in his eyes. “Mr. Pres?”

It comes in a flood, like a CNN news flash. Bodies with faces blown away and severed limbs. Hospital beds and wheel chairs inhabited by those who should be too young to need them. Coffins draped in flags. Bullets shot into the air as a final ironic salute.

My shivers become an earthquake pulling me apart from within. I struggle to stay conscious, although a part of me wants to slip away.

Nev touches my cheek. I raise my eyes to meet his. He has known shame and despair, as I have. “You have done good things. Remember those. Not just the bad.”

A bit of warmth nudges at the chill.

But it’s not enough. I veer away, fumbling for the flask in my breast pocket.

Image by Bennett Knight via Unsplash

Smart Birds

When I finally get up the nerve to ask him why he laughs, he smiles. It’s the smile I’ve seen on his face before. He doesn’t answer for a moment and I think I’ll have to ask again. But he says, “I know things no one else knows.”

I’m at a loss how to respond so I smile back. Not his kind of smile, the one so full of joy it doesn’t look human, but a lame near grimace. As I turn away, I half hope he’ll grab my arm to make me stay. Instead his whisper echoes across the plaza, “I’ll tell you more, when you’re ready.”

So what am I supposed to do with that?

I don’t see him for several days and figure he’s found shelter somewhere to get out of the rain and wind. Not like the birds, they don’t seem to care yet about the weather as long as they can find the crumbs that linger after the mobile breakfasts and lunches.

I try, again, to describe it to my guy.

“He’s this funny little dude. Not much taller than you.” He’s five foot seven in cowboy boots. “He’s really skinny, just a bit of muscle on bone. His hair and beard are both white and long, but not messy. And he always wears black leather. I think it’s the same pants and jacket but sometimes with different decals or chains-”

He interrupts. “You know way too much about this guy.”

“No, he’s the one who knows-”

“You are creeping me out.”

“But if you heard the laugh or saw that smile-”

“I don’t want to meet him. He’s some homeless bum you’re developing some weird fascination over.”

“I’m not obsessed. I talked to him for the first time yesterday.”

“You finally talked to him? Did you ask him out for an Appletini?”

“Oh, you’re real funny.” I’m sulking now. I know how much he hates that. “Let’s drop it.”

“Fine by me.”

“Fine.”

He pauses a moment before mouthing, “Fine.”

I shut up and let him have the last word.

******

I drink my coffee as I lean against the wall, soaking up the sunlight reflected in shades of pink from the bank tower. The birds edge up to within inches of my feet, feasting on their favored fare of muffin scraps. My thick brew is getting cold. I always order the venti with two extra shots. And it always gets cold before I finish it, cold and muddy. I drink it anyway, maybe I think that much adult caffeine should taste nasty. In high school and college, I’d get my morning dose by chugging a big gulp of Mountain Dew. Two on test days.

I tried that the first month or so, on the job, but then I burped through all my morning meetings. A burp is okay for a student but it’s not so cool in the great halls of business.

“Hey.” The balding guy from the cube next to mine dumps his paper cup in the garbage and points, indicating he’s going back inside.

I shake by head. “Later.” The sun is sneaking through the clouds more often than not. Maybe the laughing man will be back.

After about ten more minutes, I have to go back in.

I sit at my ergonomic chair later, after the big weekly meeting, as opposed to the little daily meetings. I go into the draw functions in Word. They say we don’t need any fancy programs, just the basics, enough to get the job done. A few minutes later I take more than a glance at the screen. It’s primitive, not much more than a cave drawing, but it’s the laughing man, complete with leather, long hair, beard, decals, and one silver chain dangling from a belt loop.

The Tooth Fairy

How can I refuse?

He doesn’t ask for much.

It isn’t like he’s wanting a million bucks. I don’t have that anyway. Never had, never will. And Barry’s my real friend- I don’t have many of those. Fair weather ones, yeah, I got plenty. Foul? I can count on one hand. And the weather around here is mostly foul. That’s a Pacific Northwest joke, get it?
I can’t say no, after all he does have a hot date for Thanksgiving dinner.

There they are at the front of the line. He’s playing gentleman, giving her his coat to protect her from the rain. And she’s drowning in it, just a little slip of a thing. Former tweaker Barry says. That meth will whittle you down to skin and bones. Skin stretched tight as an overdone turkey. I’ll bet she’s not been clean long or she’d have put on a few pounds. Mission food will do that if you’re not burning it off with crank.

I’m back more than halfway, holding up the dirty concrete wall. I’ll still get in before the food runs out. They sometimes even have enough for seconds if you want to wait around until everyone’s fed. Last year a waiter from a high class restaurant volunteered and wrapped the left-overs up in foil birds.

At least here I don’t have to pay for my grub by having some self-righteous snob try to stuff Jesus, Mary and Joseph down my throat with the cranberries. Like I wouldn’t just barf them up. Man like me has no room for the nicey-nice of religion in my life, even though Mom always hoped I’d be a preacher.
‘Rafael,’ she’d say, ‘you’ve got the spirit of God in you.’ God, no. Spirit, yes. I always did like spirit as long as it came out of a bottle of Jim Beam.

Even from here old Barry looks good. He’s smiling away like the cat that ate the canary. Or maybe the cat in that old cartoon where the girl goes down the rabbit hole. A little Disney on acid. That cat’s smile still haunts some of my dreams, part of my flashbacks the Vet counselor says. But on old Barry it looks good.

Me? I’ll have to pass on the turkey, stick to the potatoes, gravy, and the jellied cranberry sauce. Maybe some dressing if it’s nice and soggy.

Here it is two weeks later and I’m still gumming mostly potatoes, gravy, and Wonder bread. Barry and his little ex-tweaker split town. Maybe she wasn’t so ex. Or maybe that old warrant Barry used to brag had magically disappeared, finally reappeared, just like that Cheshire Cat and his grin. And the cops caught him by the tail.

Now I’m left wondering how I’m going to sweet talk the Vet dentist into springing for a new set of teeth.

Image by Becky Kjelstrom