Doug returned to walking around, looking for something.
I stood by the crib.
A big cat walked past my legs then jumped up on a few things and was next to me, perched on the crib.
The cat stared at me, making a really low purring sound.
From halfway inside a closet, Doug said, “Aw now that shithead wants your attention too. Man, Jesus. It’s all about you I guess, ha.”
By the crib I noticed a terrarium with newspaper ripped up in it.
“What is this,” I said. “What’s in the glass thing.”
“Tarantula,” my neighbor said. “He’s cool too. Roy.”
I looked at the baby, then the cat, then the glass cage where the tarantula hid.
I thought — These are the days when the tarantula stays hidden.
My neighbor put his head into the doorway to his bedroom and said, “All right man, be right back. Fuck. I gotta get to the grandparents’place, sheez. They wanna see him. They haven’t seen him. My wife’s Jewish. They’re all connected man. Her dad’s fucking rich. He has a plane or some shit.”
“Oh, a plane,” I said, looking at the baby — who’d begun pumping his legs up and down, lying in place on his back.
Hey, you’re a baby.
You little baby you.
Who’s a little baby, is it you.
“Yeah, a fuckin’ plane,” Doug said. “All right, be back. He likes that purple duck by you there.”
And he left, slamming the door and running down the stairs.
I stood there looking at the baby, then the cat, then petting the cat, then looking at the tarantula cage.
Where am I.
Felt like I just wanted to sleep on the floor and hope nothing bad happened.
I imagined myself getting down onto the floor and saying to myself, “Hope nothing bad happens,” then the cat lifts the tarantula out of the cage and feeds it to the baby — lifting the tarantula from its cage, the cat walks over to the crib on his hind legs, blesses the baby with the spider then feeds the spider to the baby, whole, putting his paws over the baby’s mouth to make sure the spider is eaten.
This is a cute baby — I thought.
I’ll give you that.
There’s someone in this room who’s a cute baby, and it’s not me.
Is it you.
Look at me, tell me, is it you.
I think it is.
I kept smiling at him and he kept smiling at me, pumping his legs up and down, his arms out to the sides in flying motions, lying on his back staring at me.
His hands were in complete fists except the smallest fingers, which he kept extended, and which were very small.
I picked up the stuffed purple duck by the crib and waved it over the baby.
He smiled.
Started laughing and squealing.
He didn’t have any teeth.
Just gums.
Look at you — I thought.
You don’t have any teeth.
Ridiculous!
The cat kept trying to get my attention too.
“And you,” I said. “You’re a shithead.”
I felt pretty happy.
Had the urge to pick up the cat and get in the crib for my neighbor to find us all angelically asleep together when he returned — but then I was worried I wouldn’t be able to sleep and I’d get caught peeking when my neighbor looked in on us.
I petted the cat’s head.
He was purring a lot and twisting his head against my palm.
“You silly bitch,” I said.
Then focused on waving the purple duck again.
The baby liked it.
He just stared and smiled at it for a long time.
Then his face became serious, and he kept pumping his legs up and down, staring at the purple duck.
The diapers made a sound as he pumped his legs and I created a drumbeat in my head to the rhythm.
I felt at peace with the universe.
No, I didn’t feel that.
I pinched the baby’s toe.
He kept laughing.
“Your toe feels weird,” I said. “Ew, no offense.”
Then I couldn’t stop laughing.
Uh, is there a little baby anywhere here, I’m looking for a little baby.
Is there a little baby anywhere around here, did you see one.
I’m looking for a little baby.
You little baby.
“Pardon me I’m looking for a cute little baby,” I said. “Has anyone seen one. Anyone.”
The cat looked like he was getting ready to jump into the crib.
“Ah, ah,” I said, loudly. “Fuck outta here.”
The cat meowed and looked at me.
My cat is better than you — I thought.
My cat is the only cat I like — I thought.
Which means, I don’t like you.
I stood there feeling so tired, waving the purple duck and pinching the baby.
Every few minutes, I checked the tarantula cage.
One time the tarantula was out, looking at me (seemingly) like, “Ey, fuck you, bitch. I’m Roy.”
My neighbor came back fifteen minutes later.
He put some shit away in the kitchen and came into the bedroom carrying a thin tinfoil pie tin.
He held it out and said, “Here man, take this. It’s pumpkin pie. My friend made it. Thanks for coming over and helping.”
He was paying me in pumpkin pie.
I said thanks and went across the hall.
I locked my door, ate two pieces of the pumpkin pie — holding the pieces in my hand like pizza — then went back behind the bedsheet into my room.
I was thinking something like — My life, it’s not terrible, I won’t be dramatic, but it’s something that, if offered, I’d say, “Nah,” and I’d be smiling a little but totally secure in my choice.
*
When I finished my sandwich I went out to look for jobs.
Took the Red Line to Addison and walked around shitty Wrigleyville — with all the bars and restaurants — half looking for dishwashing jobs, half just walking around.
I felt a little happier than usual though because of how much I liked the pants I was wearing.
Recently bought them at the Salvation Army.
They were really good.
They were grey and a little smooth, like sharkskin.
Soft and slick.
Cost me six dollars.
Felt such fulfillment.
Usually when I buy Salvation Army pants, I get home and they almost fit but then there’s like, a huge extra area of space (or lack of space) by one knee, or something else random, like tight thighs or something else I’d never think of.
But this pair fit so well.
The way they fit seemed to enclose my genitals and ass so nice as to be sexual.
Felt caressed.
Caressed in foul delight.
Such foul delight.
Oh North America, how I want to show you such foul delight!
*
When I was at the Salvation Army buying the pants, I folded them over my arm and walked around the store for a while — just to delay buying them, to prolong the feeling of anticipation, the sex.
And out from the toy aisle, an overweight homeless man walked up to me, smiling.
He was holding a few board games, each a decade or two old.
He was a foot shorter than me and had a huge stomach that hung out of the bottom of his shirt.
His shirt read:
“I
(image of heart)
America”
Only one side of his top teeth were present — and those angled off to the side, making his head look slanted.
Like his face had collapsed.
Like a house with a wall knocked out.
He had a cartoony voice too.
Made phlegmy sounds.
He pointed at my beard and said, “I yike how y’have dat. I yike ew beewd.”
“Oh, thanks,” I said.
“When y’have beewd-uh, don’t haffa cut ew face in duh mo’nin,” he said, and made a shaving motion with the hand not holding boardgames.
Smiling, he still hadn’t blinked.
Felt like he was giving me a “naughty” look.