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At 104th street a great bulk of igneous rock heaves itself from Central Park— wet black-green in halide streetlight like a breaching submarine. I hadn’t seen this place before; still, I passed, all a funk, mind inside itself (a typical brood), moving past with just a sidelong look. By a low stone wall at the foot of the cliff, a man (black parka, pants too long, high-top shoes) leaned as if in muttered collusion with the ground. He spoke to someone as I passed (I figured he was drunk). “Fella,” I heard him say, as if to me. I stopped, and looking back, saw from across the wall, crouched on the side of the cliff a raccoon, black-masked, capacious gray coat, tiny hands. It sat there watching me, or rather, just watching, attentive to some attraction I didn’t see. And then another. And another. And all along that black expanse must have been twenty raccoons (I didn’t think they could be so varied) quietly foraging, awaiting, I came to understand, the man in the black coat. He threw bread to them like the old pigeon lady in Mary Poppins and five or so gathered nearby on the other side of the wall not minding his humanness, only eating. “I come out here every night,” he explained. “I don’t got a girlfriend anymore, so I come out here and feed them to **** time.” He tore a piece from a half-gone baguette and threw it to a little one. “There’s like fifty of them now,” he said. “There were twenty when I started; they have four or five babies every spring. Nobody knows they’re here except me.” As he spoke, a baby raccoon climbed up a sapling by the wall, extending its sharp black nose toward the man who held a scrap of bread. The raccoon took it unreluctantly. I flinched at the thought of tiny raccoon teeth missing their mark on my index finger. But habit was fixed and easy here between man and raccoon. “They’ll come up and sit on my shoulder...” he said at last and then trailed off. I stood and watched for several minutes— this assembly of raccoons along the black cliff and the man who called them “fella” and “baby.” At last he said with satisfaction, “They call me the raccoon man.” Deciding he had said his bit, I gave a soft, enthusiastic whistle between my teeth as if to say, “Well done.” At 105th street, I felt remorse for not having said more to the man who drew his nocturnal congregation every night right there on Central Park West. And in a gesture of regret, I turned slightly back as I walked to the see his black form bent over the low wall dispensing bread.
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Dec 6, 2017
Dec 6, 2017 at 12:19 PM UTC
Raccoon Man
At 104th street a great bulk of igneous rock heaves itself from Central Park— wet black-green in halide streetlight like a breaching submarine. I hadn’t seen this place before; still, I passed, all a funk, mind inside itself (a typical brood), moving past with just a sidelong look. By a low stone wall at the foot of the cliff, a man (black parka, pants too long, high-top shoes) leaned as if in muttered collusion with the ground. He spoke to someone as I passed (I figured he was drunk). “Fella,” I heard him say, as if to me. I stopped, and looking back, saw from across the wall, crouched on the side of the cliff a raccoon, black-masked, capacious gray coat, tiny hands. It sat there watching me, or rather, just watching, attentive to some attraction I didn’t see. And then another. And another. And all along that black expanse must have been twenty raccoons (I didn’t think they could be so varied) quietly foraging, awaiting, I came to understand, the man in the black coat. He threw bread to them like the old pigeon lady in Mary Poppins and five or so gathered nearby on the other side of the wall not minding his humanness, only eating. “I come out here every night,” he explained. “I don’t got a girlfriend anymore, so I come out here and feed them to **** time.” He tore a piece from a half-gone baguette and threw it to a little one. “There’s like fifty of them now,” he said. “There were twenty when I started; they have four or five babies every spring. Nobody knows they’re here except me.” As he spoke, a baby raccoon climbed up a sapling by the wall, extending its sharp black nose toward the man who held a scrap of bread. The raccoon took it unreluctantly. I flinched at the thought of tiny raccoon teeth missing their mark on my index finger. But habit was fixed and easy here between man and raccoon. “They’ll come up and sit on my shoulder...” he said at last and then trailed off. I stood and watched for several minutes— this assembly of raccoons along the black cliff and the man who called them “fella” and “baby.” At last he said with satisfaction, “They call me the raccoon man.” Deciding he had said his bit, I gave a soft, enthusiastic whistle between my teeth as if to say, “Well done.” At 105th street, I felt remorse for not having said more to the man who drew his nocturnal congregation every night right there on Central Park West. And in a gesture of regret, I turned slightly back as I walked to the see his black form bent over the low wall dispensing bread.
jim-hillyt
Written by
Saratoga Springs, NY
Dec 6, 2017
Dec 6, 2017 at 12:19 PM UTC
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