
At the party
they had this watermelon that had been spiked with
vodka. I ate several pieces and didn’t
think anything of it. You really couldn’t taste
the vodka at all — though I suppose that was the
point. Of course, after that, I was trashed. I had been
drinking beer all along and continued to do so.
I met this girl and started
making out with her on the couch. She must have been
a brunette, because, if she had been a blond, I think
that would stick out in my memory. It sticks out in
my memory that she was fat. We kissed for a while, and
I managed to grope a tittie, and grab a good handful
of ass, but that was about all. Suddenly, my head was
swimming and I was about to be sick.
The girl may have been good looking, but it’s
doubtful, given the extent of my impairment. Anyway,
I definitely thought so at the time, so I was pissed
off at myself for being so stupid. I disengaged myself
and started cursing a blue streak: “God damn that
motherfucking watermelon!”
Finally the girl got sick of my shit and went upstairs
to bed: it was clear I wasn’t going to perform,
but was just going to continue to curse until I puked
or passed out. Not her idea of a good time, apparently.
But I neither puked nor passed out. Instead, my head
stabilized — relative to my earlier condition
anyway — so I popped open another beer. Drunk
as I was, I still would have been too embarrassed to
visit the girl in her bedroom, so there was no reason
to stick around. I swiped a twelve pack, or half of
one anyway and headed out.
To give you an idea of how drunk I was, when I left
the party I wanted to do something to mark the house
so I could find it again, since I intended to come back
the next day. There was no chance of my remembering
the address. So, what I did was, I threw my lighter
in the front yard. Senseless, I know: as if no one would
come by and pick it up; as if I was just going to be
able to comb the neighborhood and find it; as if I would
have the courage to show my face there again: as if
the girl would even want anything to do with me if I
did.
Worst of all, what the hell was I supposed to light
my cigarettes with?
I staggered down the street chugging a beer, twelve
pack swinging at my side. Now I’ve always had
a shitty sense of direction, and when I’m drunk
it’s almost non-existent. At that point, not even
a compass would have done me any good. As I walked along,
I was feeling angry and frustrated, and it didn’t
help that I had no idea where I was going. Soon, I was
hopelessly lost.
The houses were getting shittier and shittier, more
ramshackle. At one of the houses there were some long-haired
redneck guys hanging out on their front porch. They
were older than me, probably in their early thirties.
There were three of them and a fat redneck woman.
They looked friendly enough, so I figured I’d
ask them for directions. But in my drunken state, stumbling
up into their yard, I chose an ill-advised greeting:
“Hey you guys, got any reefer?”
The men just sat there, expressionless, but the woman
jumped up and screamed at me, hysterically, “No!
Get out of here!
That seemed downright inhospitable. I decided to
take my revenge on her by hanging out there for a while. “I
wasn’t even talking to you, lady,” I said.
Then, addressing the man nearest me, the only one with
a beard, I said, “You probably got some reefer,
don’t you, man.”
“No,” he said.
“Well look, I got lots of beer here. Any of
you guys want a beer?”
“No.” They all shook their heads.
Sitting the twelve pack and my open beer down beside
the steps, I took out a cigarette. Of course, I had
no way to light it. “Anybody got a light?” I
asked.
“Nobody’s got a light!” the woman
screeched. “There’s nothing here for you,
you drunk! Go away!”
I ignored her, and said, “Who the hell you
guys think you’re fooling? I can just look at
you, with your long hair and shit, and tell you’ve
got some reefer, and plenty of other drugs besides!
Now fire up a doobie!”
The guy with the beard stood up: “Fuck off
asshole. “Get lost.”
“Get lost yourself,” I said.
“Get out of here or I’ll kick your ass!”
I never had much appreciated this kind of talk. My
philosophy was, always strike first. I jumped the guy
and got him in a headlock and wrenched him around to
the ground.
“Kick his ass, Jimmy!” Jimmy’s
friends yelled.
We rolled around in the grass for a while. It was
a pretty lame-ass fight, neither of us trying that hard
to hurt the other. No punches were thrown.
The yard was bathed in blue, and we both jumped up
and tried to act like nothing had happened. But the
others were screaming at the cop to arrest me even before
he got out of his car.
“Shut up!” the cop told them. Then, taking
me aside, over by the squad car, he asked, “What
the hell’s going on here?” He was a big
boy, about twenty-five.
The wrestling match had straightened me out somewhat.
And the presence of cops always put me on my best behavior.
I calmly related my story:
“Well, Officer, I was just walking down the
street minding my own business when these people called
me a sissy college boy and a fag. I know I should have
just ignored them, but they kept taunting me. So I replied
in kind.”
“You mean you called them fags too?”
“No sir, I called them rednecks.”
The cop raised an eyebrow at me. He was probably
a redneck himself. “Then what happened,” he
asked.
“Then one of them attacked me — the guy
with the beard. I’m sure glad you came along when
you did.”
“You haven’t by any chance been drinking
have you, boy?”
“Uh, two beers. About an hour ago.” I
had already anticipated the second part of the question,
you see, having learned from experience. “Perhaps
the beer impaired my judgement,” I added, “Usually
I would have just walked away from such provocation.” I
was starting to lay it on a bit thick, but luckily the
cop swallowed my bull. He told me to wait by his car
while he went to talk with the rednecks.
“This boy says he was just walking down the
street when you boys called him a fag.”
The rednecks went nuts, all of them screaming different
things, all at once. It was the best reaction I could
have possibly hoped for. The woman was the most shrill,
and it was her voice that sounded above the others:
“He just came into our yard and asked us to
sell him drugs! And then when we said we didn’t
have any, he just kept demanding!”
Sounded pretty farfetched, that’s for sure.
I had to stop myself from chuckling. Clearly, the cop
didn’t believe a word they said.
He came back over to me, and said, “They claim
that you approached them and demanded drugs.”
“Well, sir, I really didn’t want to mention
it, because I didn’t want to get them in trouble.
But that’s what started the whole thing. They
tried to sell me marijuana.” Boy was I on a roll.
“Where do you live?” the cop asked.
“Over on Aylsford Avenue,” I said.
“Well, you run on home now. I’ll take
care of these people.”
But then I made my misstep: “Uh, just one thing,
could you point me in the right direction?”
“What?”
“I’ve become a little bit disoriented
by this whole ordeal. Could you just give me directions
back to my house?”
The cop grabbed my arm, whipped me around, and slammed
me against the hood of his car, then slapped the cuffs
on me. All very smoothly and professionally: he was
good at his job.
They threw me in a cell with about twenty or thirty
other prisoners. It was grimy, painted piss yellow,
and the walls graffitied. The toilet was a metal job
without a seat. It was filled almost to overflowing
with toilet paper and shit, and the stench filled the
cell.
Two of the walls were lined with benches, but all
the seats were taken. Plenty of people were standing:
nobody dared sit on the nasty floor. By this point I
was tired, and wanted to rest, and I still had a strong
mean streak running through me. There was some guy stretched
out with his feet up on the bench, taking more than
his share of space. I grabbed his feet and slung them
violently off the bench. The rest of him almost tumbled
off too.
Then I plopped down on the bench.
This treatment didn’t sit well with the man.
Once he’d recovered from the shock, he screamed
in my face, “Motherfucker! What the hell is your
problem?!”
“You were taking my seat,” I said.
“You’d better get your ass out of that
seat in about two seconds!”
“Fuck you.”
Then he smacked me good across the face — not
a punch, a smack, open handed. I jumped him and got
him in a headlock, wrestling him to the floor. This
technique seemed to be working pretty well that night.
Same scenario as before, only instead of grass we rolled
around on the filthy jail floor. Eventually I pinned
the guy, and sat on his chest, holding him down by the
shoulders. “There,” I said, “I got
you.”
“What are you going to do with me now that
you got me?” he sneered.
Well, he was asking for it. I pummelled his face
with my fist.
Three cops came in and broke up the fight. They didn’t
seem too concerned, and I got the feeling that this
was an everyday occurrence. They threatened to throw
us all in the drunk tank — everyone in the whole
cell — if we didn’t settle down. I didn’t
see how the drunk tank could be too much worse than
the cell we were in — but the other prisoners
assured me that it was.
For some reason, beating this guy up made me quite
popular with the other inmates. Some huge old guy, with
tattoos and big sagging arms, came and put his arm around
me: “I like you, boy,” he said.
I don’t know if this was some sort of come
on, or what. I never got the chance to find out. A cop
called my name, and when I got up to the bars he handed
me a form to sign. Like a fool, I tried to read the
damn thing.
“Don’t read it, sign it!” the cop
said, predictably enough.
“But what is it?” I asked.
The cop snatched the paper back from me, called me
a stupid asshole, and walked away. Soon after that another
cop came and got me. I was finger printed and led to
a small room where I was commanded to strip down. There
was some shriveled old bum in there with me, his skin
yellow and wrinkled. “I’m glad you taught
that asshole a lesson,” the bum said, as we stood
there naked. “I hate his goddamn guts.”
“Yeah, well, he deserved it,” I said.
To kill time while I hung out naked, I went up to
the counter and looked around. There was a comic book
sitting out on the counter. It was titled Helga:
The Girl Who Loved The S.S., and there were swastikas
all over the damn thing. Helga was a buxom blonde babe:
on the cover she was shown leading a parade of Nazis,
holding aloft a Nazi flag. I picked the book up and
thumbed through it. I’d never seen anything so
fucked up in my life. In fact, the only way I could
take it was as some sort of a joke. So I laughed my
ass off. “Where the hell did you get this?” I
asked the cop behind the counter.
“Oh, it’s from our library,” the
cop said. He was laughing too.
“You must have one hell of a library.”
“You better believe it.”
But once I considered the matter, I began to wonder:
why had they sat the book there, in plain view of everyone
who came through? To intimidate Jews and minorities?
Perhaps that was just their ordinary reading material
and they didn’t think anything of it, didn’t
imagine anyone could find it offensive, or else simply
didn’t care.
After that, some pig looked up my asshole. What a
job. I hope it was dirty enough for him. Maybe he had
a small flashlight that he held in his teeth, or maybe
I just saw that in a movie. But it seems reasonable:
I imagine my asshole to be a pretty dark place.
They put me in the overnight lockup, a large room
with rows of bunk beds. Since I was one of the first
in the door, I managed to get a top bunk, which seemed
reasonably safe. I was worried that the guy I had fought
would come and slit my throat as I slept. In fact, I
sort of worried that I wouldn’t be able to get
to sleep at all. But I needn’t have been, I was
so drunk that I went out like a light. There were no
mattresses; I slept face down on cold steel.
I awoke early, even before dawn. Most everybody else
was up too. The lights had never gone out.
Nobody had slit my throat, I noticed with some relief.
I saw a cop walking by and went up to the bars. “Please
let me make a phone call,” I said. “I have
to be in class at nine this morning.”
“Bah, ha ha!” the cop burst out laughing. “It’s
Saturday, you idiot!”
“Yes sir, I know that. I have a class on Saturdays.”
“Bah, ha, ha! You lying sack of shit!” he
said as he walked away.
They didn’t let me out until that evening.
I had felt fine in the morning — maybe still a
bit drunk. But as the hours wore on, the hangover and
the depression set in. Nothing much happened. Some people
played cards — maybe they were used to jail — but
most weren’t up for it. We talked at first, but
once everybody had told what they were in for, there
really wasn’t that much more to say. So we just
sat around and waited: defeated, powerless, at the mercy
of the state.
That’s what I associate most with jail: the
monotony, the boredom, the depression. Yeah, that and
the goddamn Nazi book. —Ed
Hamilton