A gray, decaying cocoon lies snug up against a Sunday plate-glass window. All that can be seen is the jeans-covered **** of some homeless person. Charity blankets never cover everything at once. At the edges of the chrysalis is a banner from some parade, wrapped like a royal-blue winding cloth. What emerges as the sun floats high, could hardly be called a butterfly. It is the old man who sits, nodding, by a square of cardboard, hand out for change. His unfurled banner lies, catching breezes nearby. His old gray blanket bleeds his stink into the street. He waits for the hour when he can can bind himself to his bottle, squirming back into his corner.
I see these people every day. They become background noise in a silent agony.