My parents came home last night, and they took me clothes shopping. I got more threads than a tapestry factory. I got more threads than a 50x50 American flag. I am now the best dressed man since Morrissey. It's a good thing, having parents. I doubted it before, but damn if they didn't buy me more outfits than are in the army. Shame I couldn't smoke in front of them, though. By 8 pm I was getting a splitting headache from lack of nicotene. I began to have hallucinations of cigarettes. I would close my eyes and see smoke curling into knots and drifting off to attack a nun. By nine, my stomach started to revolt. I could swear its grumbles were saying, "Hey, man, what do you think of Joe Camel?"
My parents retired at midnight, and I went to my room and listened to my $2.99 copy of I (thanks Scott for having Dustin sell me a demo. I don't think I tell you you're cool enough. You're really cool). After about a half an hour of waiting for my parents to fall asleep, I got my cigarettes and went for a walk.
By the time I had gotten to the bridge at the end of Main Street, I had smoked at least six cigarettes but I still wasn't satisfied, so I continued walking. A man approached me from behind and asked if I wanted to walk with him. He fumbled witht the cork on his bottle of wine and only managed to break it, so he got a pen out of his bag and pushed the cork in. We kept walking, passing the bottle, and he began to talk incessantly. He took me for a musician, because of my sterling Malkmus hair, I suppose, and asked if I knew any of his friends.
"You don't know Bobby Dent? You look like the kind of guy who would know him. How about James Trenton? No?"
He told me about getting beat up on the streets of Baltimore, first by two guys who were pissed at him, and then by the cops who came by to break it up. They put him in jail for five days because they thought he was on acid, he said. He told me about being the only member of his family to graduate college, which he had just done at the age of 27; about his truck driving Republican father; about how all the women in his family had been raped; about his plans to move to England and teach at a school for retarded six year olds; about how he was writing music that would properly fuse rock and hip hop, "not like that Limp Bizkit shit . . .". We were getting into Catonsville, so I told him I had to turn around.
It took me about forty minutes to get back to Main Street. After the shops, as I started heading back up the hill, four guys passed me going the other way. "Hey man, you're a fast walker. We passed you about twenty minutes ago." I grunted and kept on going.
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