The police station is dangerous green, quaking paranoia leaking from pores. Coffee machine dictatorship as I see Ernie sweating it out at the city desk, preparing to identify a body. We nod to each other but passionless custodians of public power echo megalomaniacal oppressions and threaten violence with casual movements. I am ushered to a desk in a room where rats in cubicles type angry renunciations in dried out computer terminal shorthand. And it occurs to me, I've seen a lot of vultures circling lately for a reason.
"Now this is not a lie detector test," the detective, Swearingen, tells me
over black rotten fruit and cold piss coffee. "You will not be graded on accuracy. We are
merely here to understand the framework. The intention
is to bring down the top, you see?" and he makes the pyramid with his two
hands.
Cockroaches crawl over unwashed windows and I realize the sun didn't go down,
the earth had spun around.
"Now, look," Swearingen continues around a mouthful of purple-filled donut.
"We have almost all the information we need. We have eyewitnesses and we have
circumstantial evidence. What we don't have is facts. Facts can be a tricky
thing, don't you think?"
The H is beginning to wear off and I realize that drunken boozers think they're prizefighters, that I'll be locked in a cage with these animals, left to face withdrawal on my own. My only recourse is to get a doctor in to see me. I have to convince this man of my inherent need.
"I know what you're thinking," Swearingen goes on, picking up my mood. "You
think that this is formality in the large scheme of things. That the real
struggle is with the come down. Well isn't that what you wanted?"
I stare at him.
"Or did you have something else in mind? I want to know what you were thinking,
Josh. I want to know if you envisioned grimy crawling on the floor in filth,
vomitous, broken joint exhaustion; or if you imagined great golden copulations
in the sky. Which was it? Where did you think your life was leading?"
I mumble weakly that I didn't realize my life had started.
"That's just it," the detective says with a smile. "Did you get that?" he
asks the officer typing up the report. "Subject admits that he has no
sense of the future."
I look around the room, angry virulent climate of a hostile culture. Ernie
is being led away by his shackles, a lollipop held in his hand.
"That one of yours?" Swearingen asks, motioning towards Ernie. "Looks like
you two share an inside joke."
He reaches under the desk and pulls out a Bible. "Now let's think about this
for a minute. If I ask you to place your hand on this book, you are committing
to tell the truth under penalty of damnation." He pushes the Bible towards
me and asks, "How sincere are you, Josh?"
I tell him that I do not believe in the Bible. This satisfies him in some
obscure way and he asks that this statement be added to the report also.
"But going back to jokes," he says, "I've got one for you. What happens to
the junkie with the hot dose? He dies. What happens to the junkie that lies
to the cops? He dies. What happens to the junkie that stays out of jail? He
dies. What happens to the junkie that works for the cops? He dies. Do you
see what I'm saying?"
I offer, "That's not a joke, it's a theme."
This turns Swearingen's face to stone. "Stop typing," he instructs the officer.
"This guy's going up to the roof with me.
I struggle with my handcuffs but can't free even a quarter inch of myself.
On the roof, the sun is fully gone. There is a bird attacking a dead
rat's corpse in the far corner and Swearingen drags me towards it.
"Now what I was saying with the jokes, Josh," he tells me as we watch the
bird devour bits of the dead rat, "is that life has only one punchline. Let
me tell you a story about coming off the street. You see, I was once like
you. A head, no mind or memory, existing on borrowed sensory perception. I
had it boiled down to the few acts necessary. I didn't sleep in a cardboard
box like some of you guys, but I was there at the time. I was down on your
level."
He lifts his wallet from his pocket and flashes his badge at me. "This saved
me, see. It gave me something to hope for. There's hope for you too."
By now he's leading me towards the edge of the roof, a dead fish hand clamped on one of my wrists. All the time, he's going on with his marvelous rap, "Shooting fish in a barrel. Shooting, you see, is reserved for those with a serious habit. No one injects until they have to. My first shot of morphine, I felt like I could have been an astronaut. I bounced up, could have been going shopping for all I knew. You ever felt that pressure in your chest, that one that says to get out now? What am I saying, sure you have. I've seen your marks. You don't get a habit like that just turning the paper. I can take you in right now but I'm not gonna. I want to put you to work for me."
We're at the edge of the roof and he has me step up onto the brick ledge,
hand still clamping my wrist. "Now then," he says, "are you gonna jump or
am I gonna push you?"
I let the silence hang between us, too proud or ashamed to answer the question.
"That would be something, wouldn't it?" he asks, peering over the edge at
the street below. "Becoming a pusher after I've gotten this far in the force.
I'm not gonna push you and you're not gonna jump, Josh. I was testing your
mettle. Ice water in your veins, no doubt about it. I'm gonna cut you a deal."
He pulls me off the ledge and pushes me down on my ass. He begins to pace
back and forth.
"Thing like this," he's saying softly to himself, "gotta offer the guy something.
But then I've got my side to think about. Can't just throw him to the wolves, not when he's got knowledge that's worth something.
He could be useful. Oh yes, he could be useful. Let's give him time to
think. Solitary, five days. Sweat the junk out."
He turns to me and, though I've only heard about half of what he said and
none of it made sense, he asks, "So what do you say? Sound fair to you?"
I just stare at him and he starts laughing. I tentatively join his laughing,
at which point he immediately stops and says, "That's enough out of you, junkie.
That counts as your phone call."
Then he leads me back into the building, walking over crushed glass, until
we're in a basement holding cell with a single bare bulb lighting the cage.
"Don't let the bed bugs bite," he says, pointing at a centipede that's crawling
up the wall.
"I think I'm just gonna nod out here," I reply.
"Of course," he says in a motherly tone. "You do whatever you have to. You
sweat the stuff out and we'll work out an arrangement."
"Would it be possible," I question, "for me to see my doctor?"
"Your doctor's burned," he answers quickly. "Leaving the business. Too many
painkiller scripts until he couldn't get it
accepted at the pharmacies. Somebody saw red and broke both his arms. He's
off to Europe, maybe. Could be China. Nobody knows anything. I'm sorry to
be the one to tell you."
"Then another doctor, maybe?" I ask, really beginning to sweat.
"Doctors don't come down unless they know a guy. You can make an appointment
on the outside. But first you're going to hear me out."
I sit back, bracing myself for more attacks, but he merely turns and walks
away.
The idea that he's going to come at me again when I'm off the H and sober
fills me with terror.