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It was damn cold. My entire body was shaking and I could feel
my back spasm with each shudder. I tried to lift my head, and
pain shoot down my spine. I lay back down and tried to open my
eyes. There was light, but not oppressive light. Slowly, my focus
returned, and I glanced unknowingly at my surroundings. The
light was coming through an assembly of cardboard and wood
surrounding me. One side looked to be a pallet that had a series of
flattened cardboard boxes woven through its slats.
I had a torn green blanket over me. I tried lifting my shaking
hands, but more pain shot across my back. The blanket smelled
foul, like the inside of a wet sneaker. I raised my head enough to
see the white stains, obviously bird waste, speckling the blanket. I
choked at the thought and tried again to move. The pain was too
much so I collapsed on the hard surface making my bed. I was
lying, slightly inclined, on cardboard sheets. I suspected there was
unyielding cement beneath them.
My shaking was getting worse. I was soaked from head to toe,
and the water was foul. Maybe it was I who smelled so bad. The
bridge drifted back into my mind. The events leading up to it and
then, Amber. Grief flooded back as the uncontrollable shaking
continued. I couldn't even fall off a bridge properly. It would be
slow, but I was going to freeze to death. I could feel my fingers
going numb and my lips weren't moving right. I closed my eyes,
they say it is just like falling asleep. Amber was there, in my mind.
Something was missing and I couldn't figure out what it was. My
memory wasn't perfect. I knew it was her, but something was
off. It didn't look quite right and I struggled, shaking, to bring back
the perfect image and things got worse. I was losing her. I hated
myself.
Footsteps, walking through loose gravel, echoed into my
cardboard tomb. I opened my eyes, and turned my head toward
the sound. The steps left the gravel and became quieter as they hit
a harder surface. I realized this must be the person who unsaved
me.
A small section of the cardboard cocoon was pulled away to
reveal a cloudy, dismal day. I could make out some large concrete
supports and the brownish iron underlying a portion of the
bridge. An old black man, his hair graying on both his face and
head, grinned at me. His teeth would furnish a dentist with
months of work.
"You're up," he said with eyes brighter than his weather-beaten
face. "They call me Houser. I pulled you out the water." He tossed
a bundle into the tiny shanty and it landed on my chest.
"Should have left me," I chattered, not realizing talking would be
difficult.
"This side's mine," Houser stated firmly, "you want to die, go to
the other side." He used his head to gesture along the bridge to
the other bank. "Them's dry clothes. They ain't the finest," he
smiled again, "but they's dry. Got them from the shelter so they's
clean." He crawled into the hovel and reclosed the opening. He
didn't smell any better than I did. I tried to sit up and a sharp pain
put me back down.
"Just roll me back into the water," I groaned. Houser laughed. It
was a halting laugh that didn't speak well of his mental state.
"You missed most of the rocks, but found a few. Houser
chuckled. "Bet you're real sore about now." That's all I needed,
some homeless guy laughing at me about my failed suicide. I
took a few deep breaths and cried out as my muscles protested. I
forced myself to sit up. The dirty blanket fell forward onto my lap
and my upper body felt even colder. I sat shivering, trying not to
move much. My lower back would have preferred I lie back
down.
"Give me your shirt," Houser demanded. I took a couple of deep
breaths, trying to give my back time to get used to the new
position. It wasn't fast enough for Houser. "The shirt or you leave.
You have to go somewhere else to die," he said, while holding out
his dirty hand. I was in no condition to leave and I guess he had a
right to demand I didn't die in his home, as crappy as it was. I
tried to unbutton my shirt with my shaking hands. The mixture of
the cold, and the shooting pains as I moved my arms made it
very slow going. I couldn't feel much in the tip of my fingers
which made it difficult to shove the button back through the wet
hole. Houser started laughing again. "Maybe you don't miss the
rocks next time." He barely got it out before resuming his
inappropriate laughter.
"My fingers are too cold," I stuttered between shakes.
"I'll do it, but don't get no ideas," Houser stated as he, and his
stink, moved forward. I tried to give him my 'are you out of your
friggin mind' look. I don't think I fully managed it. He deftly undid
the buttons and quickly scooted back again. It was agonizing
pulling the wet shirt off my shoulders. I must have really bruised
my back. The air hit my wet skin sharply, and my shuddering
increased. Houser quickly took the wet shirt and handed me a dry
one he had liberated from the pile in my lap. It was only an old t-
shirt, but it was dry. Pulling it on was another slow, agonizing
process. Houser handed me a worn flannel shirt that buttoned
down the front.
"Layers, I learned that my first year," Houser spouted proudly.
There was more pain putting my arms in the arm holes. The shirt
smelled clean. I truth, it didn't smell at all and that was clean from
where I was sitting. I was able to get the shirt buttoned myself,
much to Houser's relief, who seemed overly concerned about his
virtue. The dry clothes started warming my chest quickly. The
shivering didn't stop, but the severity receded, and I had more
control over it.