a beacon of misery shining his light on the neighborhood selling his wares on dark curbsides or servicing customers in broad daylight a 24 hour drive thru the projects never sleep good at his trade but hit houses and hos dip into merchandise and revenue he had to keep his day job
they roamed the streets in search of landscapers scoping unattended pickup trucks and snatching whatever they could power mowers, blowers, spades and rakes they called themselves garden snakes fencing their ***** on Slauson Avenue their profession requires reliable transportation so every now and then would find him rolling in a new stolen car
caught in a police chase once “Finally got him”, they thought the projects campus is a two way street only one lane in and one lane out his criminal genius spied a window of opportunity a silver haired angel was stopped in the exit lane he entered the two way and screeched on the brakes drifting up next to her car at an angle put it in park, jumped out and ran effectively blocking the entrance the poor old lady didn’t know what hit her intimidated by flashing lights and sirens she froze like a mannequin not having the presence of mind to get out of the way my friend disappeared, blending into the ghettoscape
we were going to the movies one warm summer night he showed up at my door with eyes like fire flies a gray sport coat draped his forearm to cover up the fresh track marks didn’t seem to realize his long sleeves were already doing that I enjoyed a movie that he couldn’t remember shown at a theater he couldn’t recall
tired of the trappings of addiction the violence of every-day-dealing the disloyalty of his gangsta boys the threat of being caught the bad hits and three day highs the smell of living in stolen vehicles or finding some strawberry to shack up with he tried to clean up enrolled in a residency program way out in the mountains they called it Warm Springs afterward he started attending meetings going to church holding his palms up in praise and supplication praying in tongues he gave it a good honest effort but he lacked the skills and temperament for real life I watched him slowly, steadily decline rolling back downhill like a Sisyphus rock with ***** hair and smelly shoes didn’t see or hear from him for a while then one day he drove up in my driveway music blaring in an older, blue Cadillac flashed some bills at me fanning through them like a deck of cards “Congratulations”, I said “You made it all the way back.”