"Yes sir," Andy says, as we drive through the respectable neighborhood in a respectable American brand rental car. "I need it." I give him the pipe and he passes it back and I pass it back. The windows are rolled up and it is a flavorful weed with a nice texture, an even draw. We're inhaling and exhaling, me in my slow compressed chest posture, hunched in breath with a pumping heart. Andy's head up, looking about, easing the steering wheel past a little kid, standing in the street with a blank, bored, gaze; a haircut for his head of black hair that gets him no trouble. The passing car, the street, his boy scout house behind him, drifting away a short afternoon. "I'm holding it in. I'm holding it in." Andy says, squeezing his words. My window is cracked and I've had enough, "good," I say. He takes one more hit, timely sunglasses, exhales and feels like he's grown five times bigger. "Wooh, hah" he yells, rolling down his window, aerating the dim cloud. "I'm an addict," he says loudly. Then he barks, "And I'm Back On!" breaking all sound in the car, firing it out like a cannon to the backyards and driveways. "I'm Back ON!" He can be heard three blocks in any direction. "Back On!"
Andy wants them to know, wants them to hear, that the crack has hit the street, that he's 6 foot 5 and has been a bully all of his life and he's not from here and he's bringing them his home town act. It's America, baby.
"I need it, Duane," he says seriously. "I feel like I'm going up."
"This is Humboldt," I say, "straight from California, brought up in flour sacks." We're heading down the hill, passing houses, green lawns. A little dog stands in the road, like the kid back there, with no curiosity for the slow moving car, no fear of rolling tires; standing half-asleep in his familiarly marked lawns, groomed curly fur. Without any build up, Andy barks like a mad doberman, cornered, raising the hairs on the back of my neck, showing the little dog, who's who. The dog steps backwards, with a few timid barks back, but Andy's bark was so fast and loud and from the jaws of a human, that the little dog doesn't know what to do. Two men and a woman are standing on a porch. A tall, well dressed, older man, is saying his goodbyes but is in the middle of some story so that the men don't give the barking dogs any play or space in their time. The middle-aged woman in the doorway looks away from the conversation. And I can see her trace over the open front window, past Andy's slack jaw hanging fresh from a growl, to the mirrory glass of the back window, wondering, "is there a dog in that car?"
We drive on. After a 36 hour dry stint of Andy rubbing palms in suits, faking everything for a job, he has let loose, found his form, and is introducing himself to the community.
Andy wants them to know, wants them to hear, that the crack has hit the street, that he's 6 foot 5 and has been a bully all of his life and he's not from here and he's bringing them his home town act. It's America, baby.
"I need it, Duane," he says seriously. "I feel like I'm going up."
"This is Humboldt," I say, "straight from California, brought up in flour sacks." We're heading down the hill, passing houses, green lawns. A little dog stands in the road, like the kid back there, with no curiosity for the slow moving car, no fear of rolling tires; standing half-asleep in his familiarly marked lawns, groomed curly fur. Without any build up, Andy barks like a mad doberman, cornered, raising the hairs on the back of my neck, showing the little dog, who's who. The dog steps backwards, with a few timid barks back, but Andy's bark was so fast and loud and from the jaws of a human, that the little dog doesn't know what to do. Two men and a woman are standing on a porch. A tall, well dressed, older man, is saying his goodbyes but is in the middle of some story so that the men don't give the barking dogs any play or space in their time. The middle-aged woman in the doorway looks away from the conversation. And I can see her trace over the open front window, past Andy's slack jaw hanging fresh from a growl, to the mirrory glass of the back window, wondering, "is there a dog in that car?"
We drive on. After a 36 hour dry stint of Andy rubbing palms in suits, faking everything for a job, he has let loose, found his form, and is introducing himself to the community.
