Day 11
Late once, which makes me late for everything.
Walking the first dogs of the day, the slight sunny part of early afternoon before it was to become overcast, and finally, rainy.
I had the puppies, #s1&2, and was trying to manage them both with one hand. My left arm has been mysteriously sprained for a few days. I have no idea why. It’s not like I’ve moved around a bunch of heavy objects or play racquetball or anything. More than one person has mentioned the catch-all explanation for unexplained pain: Maybe you slept on it funny. Yeah. The laziest way to sustain an injury.
It was windy. I had on sunglasses. The puppies were sniffing around the thin trunk of a young tree on 35th Street. I tried not to be impatient, because it was my own damn fault I was running late, but I wished they’d hurry it up. We’d been out for 20 minutes, and they only showed interest in a bunch of garbage bags outside a bar and piles of leaves near the park.
So I was steering them both away with my good arm, over to the next tree, when I was greeted loudly from halfway down the block.
“Hello! Double trouble!”
I turned slightly, glanced out from behind my sunglasses, and saw a man approaching.
He looked harried and flyaway, maybe homeless, or close to it. He was white, probably in his early 50s, not too unkempt, but wearing a slightly beat-up looking overcoat, sneakers grey with age, and carrying a couple of well-worn shopping bags.
Slowed by the ever-sniffing dogs, I couldn’t easily escape. I turned my attention to 1& 2 as the man strode slowly, steadily toward us.
“Double trouble.” He rasped again, a few feet away from us.
I’m used to being approached by the weirdos of the world. Unless I feel threatened, I don’t usually flat-out shun people. But sometimes I’m more in the mood to have strange conversation than others. It still felt like morning to me, even though I’d been up for three hours.
I gave him a smile/snarl in response.
“Hey…look at these two. Double trouble.” He said yet again. Of course the puppies stopped their sniffing in the face of attention focused solely on them, and began to wag their tails and sit up straight. I sighed and looked across the street, at two women speed-walking.
“Don’t give Mom any trouble, alright?” He addressed the dogs. I decided against telling him they weren’t mine.
“It’s okay, I grew up down the street.” He told me, as if his longtime proximity would allay me of any suspicions. It sort of did, actually, although not completely.
“I’m Patrick. What’s your name?”
For a second I wondered if I should give him a phony name, an old habit that I sometimes dust off for fools and drunks. I couldn’t remember the last time I’d done it.
I told him my actual name instead.
Then he asked me if the dogs were good dogs. I told him they were, and waited for him to go away.
“Come on, guys.” I said to the dogs, who were refusing to budge. We walked a maddeningly paltry couple of paces, with Patrick following. The puppies became immediately engrossed in a scent on the next square of sidewalk. Not complicit in my escape at all.
“Go with your Mom.” He told them.
I don’t know why I was engaging a conversation, but I told him they weren’t my pets.
“I just walk them. They don’t belong to me.” I said, noticing the unlit half-cigarette he held in one hand.
He became interested. “Really? You’re doing this for money? How much they pay you?”
I shrugged. “Ten bucks a dog.”
“Oh. It depends, huh?” Either he hadn’t heard me or he didn’t understand.
I just nodded.
“So,” Patrick said. “Why do you cut your hair like that? Why do you have those bangs?”
I was genuinely unsure of how to respond. I’d never been asked that. Why does anyone do anything to their hair?
“I don’t know. It’s just the way I do it.”
“Oh. You got sick of brushing your hair? You just want to let it go?” He asked, inexplicably.
I looked down at the dogs and thought: What?
And then I thought: Mental illness.
“Come on, guys.” I said again, tugging at the leases, vainly trying to speed our pace.
No dice.
Patrick then asked me something unintelligible, which I either shrugged or nodded in response to.
“Yeah? Well I used to be a drummer in a punk band years ago. We played everywhere, man. CBs, everywhere. And we got $225 a night, plus free drinks. We had roadies, we had cash.”
I looked up at his face. His eyes were very blue and confused. I was glad to be wearing sunglasses.
Against my better judgment, I was interested.
“What was the name of your band?”
“The Bladessss.” Patrick said, drawing the word out.
It sounded vaguely familiar, in the way that it seemed plausible that a 70s era punk band called that had existed. I really didn’t know, though. But I’m sure he wasn’t lying. I mean, that didn’t occur to me.
“So you do this for a living. Where did you go to school?”
“Purchase.” I said.
He had a way of asking questions that were, while not overtly uncomfortable, definitely disconcerting. I fleetingly wondered if I should flip into fuck off mode, pick the puppies up and walk away. I didn’t feel threatened, though. Just very aware that he was a person who didn’t adhere to widely accepted topics of conversation, and didn’t seem to comprehend social interaction the way most people did. I figured he was slightly schizophrenic. We were close to Bellevue.
He didn’t seem to know what I meant by Purchase.
“Art School.” I said, to clarify.
“My sister is a professor of biology at Plattsburg.” He said proudly, which made me feel sad for him, a half-bum ex-drummer carrying around a cigarette end and stinking of stale, drank gin at noon, describing long-ago glory days with a stranger on the street where he used to live.
I pulled hard on the leashes, ready to go. Dog 1 looked up at Patrick and slowly wagged his tail.
“Can I ask you a personal question?” Patrick stared at me. I weighed this.
“Well, you can ask me, but I might not answer.” I said.
He sighed. “What have you done with your eyebrows?” He began to laugh.
“Okay.” I said. “I have to go.”
The man made no sense. Either he was still drunk, and beginning to feel comfortable enough to drunkenly goad me, or he was surely crazy. I didn’t want to find out. I didn’t have time to find out.
I had to drag the dogs away.
“Hey. I’ll see you again.” He called after me.
The truth and certainty of that statement registered absolutely.
I wasn’t looking forward to it.