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A man on an adventure to help a friend finds out
a little about himself. |
Paolo and I were hanging out in his room discussing women. It was the only topic he cared about at all and his dream was to be a photographer for Playboy. Our Japanese housemate Koji came running in frantically telling us how his friend’s landlord was beating the crap out of her. Without hesitation, Paolo rummaged through one of his camera bags and got out a gun. We’d just eaten dinner. It was Paolo’s birthday, so we'd drunk way more wine than usual. My tongue felt thick and everything around me seemed to be happening more quickly than I could react to it. Koji had made progress but his English was still rudimentary. He needed me to go along to speak to this man, as his friend’s English was very poor. Now I had an alternative if the speaking broke down. Koji watched all this transpire, but ignored it as if it were an unbelievable but necessary unpleasantry. That shocked me more than the gun itself. I’d grown up around guns. They were long barreled and black and you took them into the woods to kill birds and deer. They weren’t small and silver, and you never looked through them. They had presence. I could tell Koji was in over his head. He was a quiet man who spent most of his free time reading Japanese pro wresting magazines, cleaning his room, and going to Heathrow to watch the Concorde take off and land. I doubt he’d ever considered assault and battery and concealed weapons charges in his life. This was all too much for him and he kept drawing hard on his cigarette. He excused himself and went downstairs to get his jacket. Paolo didn’t volunteer to go along. He sent his weapon as proxy. He showed me how to insert the clip and cock the gun. “You got it?” he asked. “Yeah.” “Okay, you do it. I pulled back the top of the gun to cock it. Then, very carefully, I let the hammer down so that it wouldn’t fire. Paolo grabbed the gun back and pressed the lever on the side, popping out the clip into his waiting hand. Then, he shoved it back in. He gave me an extra clip, fully loaded, as if I might need it for the extended gun battle, crouched down and reloading behind one of the low brick walls that border the sidewalk in front of nearly every London house. He put the gun on safety and gave it to me for good. It was already warm and slightly damp to the touch. I shoved it into my jacket pocket and stood still in the middle of the room. The liquor had risen warmly inside me and the air itself felt soft, with the floral prints on Paolo’s walls fading into blur at the corners. I stood and waited for some last minute encouragement. Paolo just sat back with his photo magazine and tapped his ashes into an empty film canister. “See ya,” I said. “Yes, ciao.” I marched downstairs to Koji’s room. He was seated on the edge of his bed staring at the doorway, and got up immediately when I appeared. We went out into the damp night air. The tube station was five blocks away and I needed the walk. My drunk was not yet at high tide, and the mist on my face slowed the rising waters enough for me to try and take hold of the situation. “What did she say?” I asked him, trying to comprehend the circumstances a little more. “Uh, as a matter of fact, she said there was a conflicting…” “A conflict? A confrontation?” “Yes, yes. A con fron ta shun.” “Do we need to take her to the hospital?” “Hospital?” “Yeah. Is she cut up and stuff?” “Cut up?” “Injured? Wounded?” He was silent for a moment, digesting all of the words. “Perhaps. She did not say.” We passed under the small glowing bulbs of streetlights. The thick air made me sweat inside my jacket. House after house was dark, gates closed up. We passed our sparsely populated local pub. I felt a great urge to drag Koji in and calm him down, but he was walking too fast. By the time we got to the station, he had to piss. We bought our tickets at the machine and walked down the stairs to the platform. We were the only ones, surrounded by ads for musicals and the national lottery. Color emerged from the gray night, and I stared at the tube map as Koji relieved himself in the bushes. He handed me a cigarette when he came back, and we sat down to wait for the train in silence. I rubbed the gun with the tips of my fingers and stared forward. My head lightened from the smoke and my heartbeat pulsed through my hand and into the gun. Koji kept shifting around in his seat. I was sure he was going over scenarios that would have been impossible for him to take from his head and put into English. My mind was clear for a moment, as if I had reached the broad plateau of my buzz. There was silence, broken by a pigeon flying upward on the other side of the tracks. I was quite calm. The train appeared, the white headlight and rhythmic clanking growing in the distance. We got on the empty car and sat down next to each other as we had been on the platform. We kept smoking, sharing cigarette after cigarette until we got to the city center. The swaying of the train lulled me down from my drunken heights and I too began to picture scenes in my head. I sat arrogantly, knowing full well the other guy wouldn’t have a gun. I clearly had the upper hand. If he chose to challenge me he’d probably fall in one shot. I’d never get to pop out the clip and reload. I wasn’t going to shoot it out with the police and create some kind of scene with negotiators and all. A pool of blood, but no struggle. I’d empty the gun. Set it down, wait for the cops. We made two station stops but took on no passengers. The momentary glow began to leave me and implications began to crowd my head. I’d have to see some lawyer from the embassy. He’d be some arrogant bastard who wouldn’t understand that I knew from the word go every step I took was a wrong one. He’d be slightly balding, wearing English business casual. I’d have gotten him out of bed, of all things. Then I’d go back to prison and there wouldn’t be a soul to feel sorry for me. They’d all say I should have been there in the first place since I was a con from America hiding in their city. I’d lose my girl Sally forever. We got to the central city to change trains and walked a long cement tunnel, clear all the way to the end. The air smelled old and worn after the long day and it sickened me. Koji was sweating. He kept wiping his brow with his handkerchief. We wound around, took one flight of stairs, and arrived at out terminal. The Northern, the black stripe on the map, would take us where we needed to go. I kept my hands stuffed deeply in my pockets as we stood waiting. I got a little paranoid and looked around for any cops. I thought getting caught before the act would be worse than begin arrested after. There would be too much to try and explain. Koji walked back to the wall and leaned against it. I turned to him, hoping to make small talk, but he was far ahead of us already. A groaning grew from the black tunnel and our train arrived in a rush of dead air. We got on. We got out at Camden Town and began to hike north. Her street wasn’t far, but keeping up with Koji’s pace was difficult for me. I grabbed him and held him still for a second and he seemed to understand. We walked more slowly then, a deliberate and nervous gait. When we got to her street corner we turned and began to climb a long hill. The cement embankment next to it was filled with graffiti, but the streetlight was out and all I could see were shadows of spray paint. I felt like a gangster for the first time in my life. I held onto the gun in my pocket as we walked. One finger on the safety, powerful, ready to go. Walking up that street, suddenly sober, I knew I was playing a role. The real me was sitting in the room with Paolo talking about nude women. However smoothly I slid into this new me I’d have to return to face the consequences as my old self. I might end up in a horrible place, but that happened. The street lifted to us and we walked together with quick paces. Koji began to look at the numbers on the houses and motioned to me that it would be on the next block. The road had a small bend to the right. He threw down his cigarette and stepped on it. He wanted to run, and as he quickened to a trot I followed. He’d been patient this long, but now the proximity was killing him. As we crossed the street and entered the next block I took out the gun and held it down by my side. We’ll kick down the door, I told myself, and it will be time. That was when she called out to us. She stood up on the stairs, dressed entirely in pink, and waved a gloved hand at Koji. We slowed to a walk one house from her and I shoved the gun back in my pocket. We approached and stood in front of her expensive, neatly stacked luggage. She greeted Koji in bright and energetic Japanese. He replied and began to ask her question after question. She answered in short sentences. I couldn’t grasp what I was seeing. I paced back and forth behind Koji. I’d gotten myself so pumped up I couldn’t shut down. Heart pounding, I looked up at a face that was smooth and delicate, perfectly made up. She began to talk and Koji nodded at her every pause. Her tone was matter of fact, nothing to suggest trauma. She just needed help moving all her shit to a new apartment she’d found. Koji looked relieved. She went inside. He turned to me, eyes looking downward. “Perhaps there has been exag…” “Exaggerating?” “Yes.” “Fuckin’ a right.” “Pardon?” I stood silently and took my hand off the gun. It had grown rigid in anticipation and ached slightly. My arrogance was rapidly deflating. “As a matter of fact,” he said, “possibly she is a bit rotten.” “Rotten? You mean spoiled? She does this cause she’s a spoiled brat?” “Brat?” “Shit. This is shit.” “Perhaps.” Koji was silent for a moment. “She has found new residence.” “So she calls you to be the lackey?” “Pardon?” “Nothing. Fuck it. Forget it.” I turned around and faced the street, looking across the way at the darkened houses. I could see a few faces in windows, trying to figure out what the commotion was. My role had evaporated and suddenly I felt lost and very sober, the pawn of some elite Japanese London. I sat down on the curb and got out a cigarette. She came back out with more bags and quick talk to Koji. He was jumping at her commands, organizing. After she went back inside he tapped me on the shoulder. I turned around to face him. He held out a twenty-pound note to me. “Perhaps there are more cigarettes at the pub?” “Yeah, you bet.” I took the money and started walking down the hill. “We will come to you. Short time,” Koji said to my back. I felt the gun in my pocket and hated it. I wanted to chuck it somewhere, but I knew Paolo must have had a reason for possessing it in the first place and needed it back. A light mist fell on me under the glowing streetlights. There was worn green carpeting in the pub. The paneled walls looked warped beneath the chipping white plaster ceiling. The bartender was watching a game show. The sign on the door said the restroom was for patrons only, so I went straight there. Not that I had to go. My arrogant feeling was almost gone and I didn’t want it to end. Most of the time I was lost in fears and impossible dreams and this clearinghouse of all logic felt good for a while. I looked in the mirror at a man who had briefly known power. I washed my face. Leaned against the sink. Waited. The bartender was staring at me when I came out and looked surprised when I approached the bar and ordered a stout. He drew it and said nothing. Some men at the end of the bar were talking about a rugby game. A man and woman were seated at a table not looking too thrilled about being together, but interested in being out anyway. A couple of guys were playing pool. It was a smoky place and when I lit up a cigarette it almost felt like I was back in Farwell. Everyone killing themselves with beer and cigarettes and greasy food while talking football and watching game shows. My arrogance was gone. I was sickened by myself and every detail of my surroundings. A pain flared up inside of me and I realized that for a short time it had disappeared. The newspaper on the bar was open to a story about another IRA bombing. My fingernails were dirty. To reminisce was to remember blatant and inexcusable self-destruction. I downed my pint quickly and ordered another. The bartender watched TV as he drew it and overflowed the beer onto his hand. He flicked the foamy liquid onto the floor and handed me the drink. My head quickly grew light. The brown tones of the place began to emerge, and the crisp glow of the lights became soft and round. The bartender laughed at the screen, grabbing my pint and wiping off the bottom with a stained rag. Koji came in on my fifth drink. I downed it and followed him out to an old black taxi that was packed to the gills. He shoved me into the back seat next to sacks full of shoes. We drove off. Akiko, in the front seat, would talk but not turn around. She spoke in a steady stream and Koji replied with one word every now and then. I wanted to grab a shoe and beat her on the head, but started laughing at the thought. My insides felt warm again and I felt safe. Armed and drunk, I wanted to lean forward and tell the cabby he had nothing to fear from the street on this ride. I didn’t. I sat back and watched the lights go by, realizing at some point that this was my first cab ride in London. We took a twisting road around a large park and ended up on Baker Street. Nighttime London sparkled from the inside of a cab. I felt in touch with the city. I wanted to cab around London forever. We passed the Sherlock Holmes pub. “Fucking Baker Street!” I blurted out. Koji leaned around a fan to look at me. “Ha,” said the cabby, “a yank.” “Yeah, you bet.” “The yanks. I love the yanks. Shoot ya for the change in your pocket. But all in all, good chaps.” I laughed as he continued. “Florida, Miami. Now there’s a place. Beats the fucking Costa del Sol any day.” “Koji, this is our man.” “Pardon?” Akiko started to speak rapidly and Koji directed the cabby where to turn. It was onto a narrow side street. We stopped in front of a large brick apartment building. Akiko and Koji got out. I sat for a second, numb, catching up. “Don’t leave,” I told the cabby. “You bet mate.” Akiko walked to the front door and talked through the intercom. The door popped open as I staggered out of the cab. Koji told me to begin unloading, but I leaned a little and had a cigarette before I grabbed some bags. We took everything out and stacked it next to the door. Koji paid the driver and I nodded at him to stay put. He leaned back and adjusted the radio. I didn’t have enough to pay for a cab ride all the way back to my room at Mrs. Powell’s, but I knew tonight someone was going to pay for me. The world changed into pastels and textured walls when we began to carry the bags up three flights of stairs. Everything was posh. I began to sweat inside my jacket again. Akiko, now shoeless, took the bags from us when we delivered them to the apartment. We carried up the last bags on the fourth trip. I was dripping in sweat and ready to leave. “Koji, get cab fare. Let’s split.” “No. We go inside.” “What the fuck for? She can’t unpack?” “We need have polite for Akiko’s host.” “Polite?” “Yes, maybe? For in tro duc shun.” “Nah, nah. We’re gone.” “Is very important. I’m asking for you please.” I couldn’t handle Koji begging. It was too pathetic and it pissed me off. I sat down in the hall and unlaced my boots. My socks were dirty and the fact that this now mattered made me furious. The place was clean to the point of anal. A small Japanese man shook hands with me and led me to a leather sofa. Spread around the room were pictures of the English man who was clearly his lover. He asked if we would like something to drink. “Whiskey,” I said. He paused for a moment and looked at Koji, who nodded politely in agreement. “Neat?” “Yeah.” Koji nodded as well. Akiko came out from the room she was going to occupy and sat across from us. She looked around the room and spoke to Koji every once in a while. Modern art, most of it metal, surrounded us. In every nook and cranny there was some rusty piece contrasting with the ivory walls and cream carpet. The man came back with crystal tumblers and a half empty bottle of whiskey, which he showed to us. It was the most expensive whiskey I’d every seen. He poured us each two fingers. Sitting down across from us he looked really pleased. He spoke in rapid Japanese to Akiko and Koji and the three of them had a small laugh. “What’d you say?” I asked. “I told them it has been quite a while since I have had the opportunity to speak Japanese. With my work I am surrounded by the English. I told them I may be rusty.” I understood at that point I was supposed to ask him what he did, and then probably compliment his articulation and fine digs. But I wanted to get out. I kept my coat on. “Where’s the bathroom?” “Down the hall and to the left.” I got up, drunk and unsteady, and followed his directions. The toilet spun as I stood over it. I heard them speaking joyfully in bursts of Japanese. They fell silent as I walked back into the room. I was ready to leave. “Koji, tell her to give us cab fare.” Koji stared down at the table. “But you must stay for a while,” said the man as he stood up. “I have very many questions about America.” He cupped my arm and tried to lead me back to the sofa. I slid my arm away. “Nah. Time to go. Koji, get the fare.” Koji sat still. The man grabbed my drink and thrust it at me. “But please, you haven’t even touched your drink.” I took it from him and drank it in one swallow. It was watered down, weak. Barely warm in my throat. I threw down my glass. “Goddamn it! Trying to fuckin water me down?” In the next instant I had the gun out pointing right at him. I felt a pain in my back and my legs gave out. Koji and I fell forward and his tackle propelled us onto the glass coffee table. There was a loud crack as we broke through the yellow tinted slab and another as the gun went off into the carpet. I could see the black spot so clearly, the melted fibers around it curling up and smelling like burnt hair. I wish I could have watched the whole scene from above. Akiko screamed and began yelling hysterical commands at Koji. He jumped up and dragged me across the floor. I was cut on the leg and a red streak colored the carpet in my wake. Akiko screamed some more and then began to talk to her host. I looked up at him as we went through the door. He was pale, as if he might faint. There was nothing at all behind his gaze. “Go,” said Koji above me, pointing down the stairs. He grabbed shoes and boots and rushed me down to our cab. He shoved me in the back seat and jumped into the front. I still held the gun, trigger pulled on an empty chamber. “You boys in a hurry?” asked the cabby, startled from a nap. “Cab fare!” I screamed. “Yes, you best have that.” Koji ran back in and came out with twenty pounds. He was spinning. “More. Get more. Get a hundred.” He went back in, oblivious, and came out with the money. “Go now. Please.” He said to the cabby. We went. Neither one of us told him where to go, so he just drove. Koji looked back over the seat at me. He leaned back and grabbed the gun from my hand, shoving it into my pocket. He got out his handkerchief and told me to put it on my cut. Then, with shaking hands, he got out a cigarette and smoked it. We were silent for a time. The inside of the cab seemed to be rocking back and forth. I couldn’t tell if it was my drunk or the motion of the car. I sat up, and the light of the city rocked back and forth, ever so slightly. The cabby began to talk about Florida. He talked in circles, a lonely monologue that needed no answers. His voice soothed me. I listened and let the cab rock me. For the first time since we left the house I felt relaxed, cradled in the warmth of the car. From Florida he talked of Europe and then kings and queens and old wars and colonies. The colonies led to settlements and then nations and then vacation spots. I sunk deeply into my seat and watched the city go by. He drove and talked. Koji sat silent next to him and smoked. “Give me one,” I said. Koji looked back at me, into my eyes, and held my gaze. Then, he tossed me the pack and the lighter. The cabby got to the topic of British character and insisted we accompany him to his local pub, which we just happened to pull up in front of at that very moment. Inside, he said, we would learn more about this wondrously elusive topic. |