I saw people die. I saw people who would die soon.
Anne would come to my un-air conditioned upstairs apartment to sleep
in safety. She would show up about every five weeks or so when she
could no longer stand the meth induced paranoia.
I don’t even know how it started or where we met. For all I know she
just showed up one day, followed me home like a stray cat. She would climb the stairs give me a nod as she stared at the floor, “Hi,”
and then flop down on the twin bed cot in a side room by the large double-hung window held open by a small two-by-two that took the place of a long-time broken counter weight cord. I would slide the curtain across
the doorway and leave her alone.
I would come and go in what was a normal life back then as she slept -
usually off and on for about three days. If I was there when she got
up, I would make sure she had some real food before she left. Sometimes
I would come home and she would be gone - no note, but the bedding was folded.
That was the extent of our relationship. Thin with death-pale skin
and cheek bones showing, Anne cropped her dark black hair short. She
didn’t tell me where she was from, but a South Dakota accent is hard to
affect.
Anne belonged to a loosely knit group of speed freaks. A very, very
odd fringe of the already strange drug culture. Little food, many
cigarettes, no sleep for days created fear and conspiracy plots galore
that fed on themselves and grew as the talk escalated. Parked cars
meant surveillance; a click on the phone was a tap; crowds meant being
tailed, strangers were not tolerated.
I came to a quiet thought on a stifling hot day while watching the
wasps fly around the un-screened gap at the top of the window in the
side room, that Anne hadn’t shown up for a long time. I couldn’t get
too worried about the unpredictable, but I couldn’t shake her out of my
mind either.
I remember my friend Jake tell me that he thought Anne and her mischief lived in a
two-story house close to the center of town near the Italian Village
Restaurant, but cautioned me never to go there: “Those people are
jumpy and afraid of their shadows. You might as well poke a bumblebee
nest. They have weapons and the cops have no need of them, and they expect the same.”
I was over that way to buy a used text book and curiosity got the
best of me. I went up to the porch that looked like what Jake described and got not just a little bit
scared. The faded blue wainscot with blistered and cracked paint was bulging down
from the porch ceiling as though it was holding water, but that did not
seem out of place for the times and the neighborhood. I knocked and a
thin young man with face-gaunt of experience way beyond his years answered
the door with a Camel unfiltered hanging from his lips. A smoke stained
hand was holding the screen door from losing its bottom hinge. The
lines of his face were accentuated by a heavy dark black three-day
beard like empty winter trees define the mountain ridgelines.
He looked both ways down the street, checked for parked cars, then looked at me. "I suspicion ya'll don't live in this neighborhood?" he questioned with a slight sign of cautious trust in his eye tempered with that southern instinct to suspicion human nature.
“Hi, I’m a friend of Anne’s and I wondered if she was OK.” I managed to say trying to look over his shoulder as he moved to block my view.
“Ya'll ain't from this neighborhood, I can see. You Jim?” he answered back.
“I’m Jim.”
“Come on in. Smoke? All I's got is Camels. They's the only ones that keeps people from bummin' from me. And they smoke good.”
His low country dialect and language struck a few matches. Some of the country locals in Southern Illinois picked up the bias of the Chicago and other northern city students and took clear advantage of that to make fools of them. Rather than use the standard Mid-Northern English they had learned to pass with when they had to, they would affect their own English to corroborate the city-thinking of them as unsophisticated and stupid.
With that stage set, negotiations would always fall to the locals' advantage. Their "aw shucks" bumpkinisms allowed the unsuspecting to let their guards down, apply the safety, and holster their best weapons.
With my guard up and weapons ready (never learned where the safeties are), I continued with caution.
“Sure, thanks,” I said as we went into the old kitchen and sat. You
could tell that the house came furnished, like most of the student rentals on
this end of downtown. The stuff was expendable crap at the time - today mid-century modern priceless. The inside was dark -
the windows were curtained with multiple layers of those thin, patterned Indian sheets that
were sold at the import shop where the hippies bought their brass knickknacks.
Surprising clean - no dirty dishes, uncluttered counters, the yellowing of the vinyl due to age, not dirt. Contrary to some current Southern writers, meth addicts can get compulsively active.
“Anne spoke some about you. You were kind to her - she trusted you.
You should feel special about that. Those that hang around here see narcs and haints around every corner. Yeah, she about trusted nobody, but she never said where you lived. We all appreciated the care she said you gave
her and never asked about you.
"Anne had Type 1 Diabetes and she spent times not taking her medicine shots. She comaed for a month and died two weeks ago. Her parents came down and took her back home. It’s weird, Man, we don’t sleep much around here and there she
was, in a coma.”
It was no use asking for his name. Either it was one of those dumb
monikers that hippies herds used, or some other fake name. He smoked his
Camel down to about 3/4 of an inch and stuffed it into a freshly cleaned ashtray.
“The cops don’t even check these things out anymore. They suspicioned we
cleaned the house out before we called them. They tested for dope in
her system, but they know it’s hopeless trying to bust anybody. Sometimes I think they wished we would all end up like 'at - all dead, and stuff. Take the worry and effort out of it.
“Monk and French left after that. I’m the only one left and the others don’t come around here anymore - speed freaks are nervous enough without they see dead people.”
“What was her last name?" I asked starting to put my guard down.
“Beats me, I ain't even sure her first name was Anne. The cops found her parents somehow - you might want to check with them. She started out in schooling for a degree down here. Could be she has records.
“Be needin' some crank…? For the studyin'…” nodding to the used blue Norton Anthology of English Lit I just picked up.
I stood up to leave, put my smoke out. “No thanks. Thanks for the smoke… and the info.”
"Here. It's just some green and yellows, not electrified crystal. Makes learnin' interesting. It's the least I can do for your helpin' Anne and all."
"Alright. Thanks." The unlabeled prescription bottle ended up in my pocket.
The twenty minute walk back seemed short as I was thinking. About the others that died or disappeared, the soon to die and the miracle survivors. And I thought about God Who surrounded me like a cloak. Without authority I spoke, "Not now. Maybe later. I'm not ready." My thoughts had no range, no echo, stopped short a few feed away. Talking in a padded room.
I never went to the cops or the school and tried to forget about Anne and her
friends. I wouldn't have known what to say to her parents, if I found them. And I looked like somebody they could easily blame for her death. I know now what to say, but it's too late.
I think about her, now whenever I read about the marijuana
stores popping up in the West. I know I couldn’t have done anything to
save anybody from the lives and deaths they led, or prevented them from
getting to that point of no return, and Anne was just one of many horrors I experienced in that dimension beyond sight and sound.
Suicides, faces scratched bloody from the quinine itch, skeleton bodies, weak bones, vacant eye sockets, insanity, family estrangement, and lots of hepatitis. A Hieronymus Bosch world of pain, poverty, sadness. It's the room in No Exit, except there are no other people - just yourself.
It can't be explained very well how the adventure of marijuana use becomes tolerated by the psyche to a level that the pursuit of greater drug adventures becomes risk-less. This rarely happens with alcohol - where you just get drunker and try a fruit flavored vodka.
Alcohol removes the fear of the danger to act; while marijuana, inhibiting the action, removes the fear of the adventure of the drug itself. Mentally surviving a session of extremely powerful pot, makes the idea of something even stronger less fearful. Once you enter the sad world of recreation drug use, you are then put into contact with people who tempt you with those adventures.
The horrors that will escalate as a
result of universal access to marijuana are far more terrifying than the horrors that
we are experiencing as a result of the illegal drug trade. And generally, the horrors of the illegal drug trade are given to those who we could not care less about, while the horrors of drug progression are placed as temptations to our kids, friends, and family.
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