domingo, 31 de mayo de 2009

Nas 2012: Imagine That


Are you a progressive democrat regretting all your hard work in the 2008 campaign? Angry that Obama betrayed the left from Iraq to marijuana reform to torture photos and transparency? If so, it's time to imagine a candidate that will go in raw and tell his right wing detractos to hate him now instead spewing a bunch of garbage about compromise and bipartisanship; to imagine the first black president, for real.
It's time for Nas.

The Platform: God's Son Speaks Out
On Drug Laws
"Imagine smokin' weed in the streets without cops harrassing..."
Instead of misleading our bong toting citizens with a bunch of campaign talk all like "of course I inhaled", Nas promises to put his Philly where his mouth is and legalize the blunts. Finally, imagine a president who gets it, who blows "trees for breakfast."
On Prison Reform
"I'd open every cell in Attica, send 'em to Africa."
With one brave stroke, President Nas will simultaneously solve the problems of American prison overcrowding, and African underpopulation.
On The Economy
"Gimme one shot, I'll turn trife life to lavish..."
Instead of falling short with a boring stimulus bill full of highways, biways, and pork projects, Nas will send people to work putting together benz stretches. With Nastradumus at the helm, it won't be long before all Americans are tricking six digits on kicks and still holdin'
On Guantanamo Detainess
"Political prisoners set free, stress free, no work release purple M3's and jet-ski's."
If the notion of terrorists detainees set free makes you uncomfortable, just remember that President Nas has promised purple (BMW) M3's and jet-ski's in the same sentence.
On Women's Rights
"It sound foul, but every girl I meet will go downtown"
Controversial, but he should win Clinton supporters with this stance.
On Family Values
"More conscious of the way we raise our daughters."
See also, Women's Rights
On Housing & Urban Development
"The Villa house is for the crew, how we do."
On Transparency
"Open they eyes to the lies history's told foul"
No more hidden memos, deceptions or lies. President Nas invited you to imagine law with no undercovers.
On Culture
"Imagine everybody flashing, fashion
Designer clothes, lacing your click up with diamond vogues"

Forger Michelle and all her frumpy mom sweaters from J Crew. America's first real black president has style. Read Nas' lips: "And when I dress, it's nothing less than Guess."
On Diplomacy
"Trips to Paris, I civilized every savage"
On Race Relations
"The way to be, paradise like relaxing black, latino and anglo-saxon
Armani exchange the reins
Cash, Lost Tribe of Shabazz, free at last
Brand new whips to crash then we laugh in the iller path"

On The American Dream
"Cause you could have all the chips, be poor or rich
Still nobody want a nigga having shit
If I ruled the world and everything in it, sky's the limit
I push a Q-45 Infinit"

No more disowning the truthtellers, the Rev. Wrights. President Nas tells it like it is.
On Political Appointments
"I make Coretta Scott-King mayor the cities and reverse themes to Willies"
Forget tired old appointments like Leon Pannetta and that player hate Tim Geithner, let's get Coretta Scott-King in the house.
Of course, Pres. Nas would also have members of the Wu-Tang Clan in his cabinet.

Heard Enough? If not, check out Illmatic. But don't wait too long, it's time to get this campaign underway.
"Better find out before your time's out, what the fuck??"
NAS 2012"Imagine that, if you(r vote) could be mine, we'd both shine."

"I love em love em baby..."

viernes, 29 de mayo de 2009

An Open Letter to Mike Tyson

Iron Mike,

My sincerest condolences for the tragic loss of your daughter Exodus on Tuesday. I was saddened by the news. Though I'm not qualified to hold this opinion, I think you are probably a good and loving father, and loved in return.

Growing up, you were my favorite boxer. Truthfully, I wasn't really a fan of the sport; but I was a fan of yours. I liked watching your fights to try to discern the meaning of your tattoos. You made me dust off the Britannica and look up names like Mao Zedong and Arthur Ashe.

I liked your story, that you'd grown up poor and alone on the mean streets of Bed-Stuy and had to fight your way out.

Some of my friends used to make fun of your voice, but I thought it was cool. I liked the dichotomous pairing of the small voice with the big punch. I doubt they would have poked fun if you were around. I speak softly, and though I've never punched anyone, growing up I liked to think I packed the same firepower (perhaps intellectually or rhetorically).

Mostly, I liked your post fight rants. Watching you speak always carried the possibility that you would launch into an intense lyrical trash talk about your next opponent; often these were as laden with historical allusions as your body art. You were the original battle rapper, with an emphasis on battle.

This is a dumb gag, but, I had an older brother named Alex. Whenever my mother would call for him by his full name, I would wait for him to respond before interrupting in my best Tysonesque falsetto:

"You think you Alexander? I'm Alexander!"

Of course, like all boys who grew up when I did, I loved Mike Tyson's Punch Out on Nintendo.

As I progressed into my teenage years you continued to guide me towards the experience of new art and culture through your involvement, such as the James Toback film "Black & White" or the rapper Canibus. While your contemporary star athletes were pushing McDonalds and Nike, you lent your presence to projects of substance and intellectual rigor.

We met once. I doubt you would remember. It was the late 90's and I was in high school. I've never much cared for autographs or meeting celebrities, but we literally ran into eachother walking down the street in Miami. It's always stuck in my head.

I remember that, even though you'd walked down red carpets in Armani and prison halls in starchy jumpsuits, that day you were just walking down the street like a normal person. I do recall that you were wearing a platinum chain. I think it said "Mike 2000".

I was with my buddy Alfred, and you had two friends with you whose names I didn't learn. I remember how friendly you were. After we recognized you and introduced ourselves, your friends looked bored and walked off to talk with some girls. But you stuck around and spent a few minutes with us.

I can't recall what we talked about, only that you took the time to answer all our questions and asked us questions in return. I remember that you kept calling me "player."

Through all the less than stellar press coverage you've gotten since, that day is usually that first thing that comes to mind when I hear your name. I've always considered it a rule that, no matter what nasty things you may hear about someone, if they treat you respectfully then thats how they should be treated in return. I'll bet that most of the people who have really met Mike Tyson hold him in much higher regard than those who have merely read the news stories.

Speaking of those news stories, Mike. I recently read a quote somewhere where you said you think your life has been a joke. I hope you don't really feel that way. I'm sure that the tragic loss of Exodus has you re-examining, and that this process can be excruciatingly tough.

Perhaps you're not Alexander after all, but Job, and your life until now has been a test of your loyalty that will pay off in blessed latter days.

Hang in there player,

Moses M.

Lord, Deliver Me!

A couple weeks into my second semester of college, I realized that the $200 my parents wired into my bank account every month just wasn't cutting it. My appetite for weed, pokey sticks, Shafer light, and 3am chicken & cheese biscuits far exceeded my budget. It was time to get a job.

The problem was, I was 18, unqualifed and barely motivated in a town that was flush with 20,000 others just like, all demanding $15 an hour to do a half-ass job. So I bullshitted up the resume, made an inventory of my resources, and browsed the classifieds. I'd worked a couple part-time jobs in high school for friends of family- references, check. I was literate- but so were all the other college assholes. And I owned a car- a mid 1990's two door Ford Explorer that smelled of rotten spicy chicken sandwiches and swisher sweets.

I'll spare you the details of all the fruitlessly faxed resumes and applications filed. I've developed a theory about getting jobs (at least non-career type jobs), and in this case my theory proved correct. The theory posits: One either gets a job because you know someone at the company, or you walk in and they hire you on the spot. My high school jobs were the former; my stint at Domino's began as the latter.

Maybe it was that college hoops were in full swing and the Heels game that night was making everyone hungry for pie. When I walked into the store, workers were milling about in a hundred different directions and shouting at each other. I waited my turn in line, and was almost too embarrased once I got to the front to inquire about a job. I almost just inquired about a large pepperoni.

Here's how my interview went:

Domino's: (yelling at me across the counter while making pie) Got a car?

Me: Yeah

Domino's: Got a license?

Me: Uh, yeah.

Domino's: Come back on Monday at noon and you're hired.

So I came back on Monday. It was that easy. For my first night at work, I actually shadowed another driver. That is: we both rode together in his car, and both strolled up to the front door and gave people their pizza. You've never seen confusion until you see the face of someone who has opened their front door to discover two delivery men holding their pie.

"I ain't tipping both of you."

My mentor driver's name was Frank and he was racist. All night he kept telling me I'd "learn real fast about people around here." As in, who tips and who doesn't. He really had his pizza prejudice down to a science. Frank attempted to predict the amount of his tip based on the toppings ordered. Apparently banana peppers were not a good omen.

For the shadow night, and the first two nights of delivering on my own Kenny managed the store; he was the same guy who'd so briefly interviewed me. Kenny was a pretty good manager- he mostly just told me what to deliver and when to leave. The other drivers (Frank included) were not so easy to deal with. From what I could discern, I was the only driver there who wasn't a "lifer", my unspoken term for a man who has decided to make delivering pizzas his career. The lifers disliked me.

From my very start, they criticized. First problem was my car. All the lifers drove tiny little hatchbacks that got 45 mpg's well before anything called a hybrid existed. Also, they knew their town like the back of their wrinkly, tattoed hands, and constantly bickered about the fastest routes. If you've ever worked at a Domino's, you know that you check your delivery out on a computer, and when you return the computer logs the amount of time you spent on the run, displaying it on the screen for all to see.

A typical critique from the lifers went like this:

"13 minutes? Where'd you go? 1450 Knollwood?"

"Boy, what street did you take? Don't tell me you took Franklin? Jesus."

"What kind of mileage you get in that truck? 13? 14? I'll bet you don't get inch more than 15."

"Franklin to Knollwood on 15 mpg's! Christ, just throw that money away son."

The worst of the lifers was the Captain. That was his name. Captain. I swear to God; it said so on his nametag. The Captain had decided that, in addition to being a lifer driver, he was also some sort of unofficial assistant manager. He would take the iniative to dress me down for an errant shirttail, uneven visor, saggy pants, etc... I hated the Captain.

Once, and only once, I made the mistake of coming to work high. I figured it would help pass the time; that I'd have a rowdy time driving around town listening to some tunes and delivering pies, even if that Heat Wave bag turned my Explorer into a big fuel-inefficient sauna. As I mentioned, this was a mistake.

It started to go wrong on my very first run, when I walked out the door without putting the pizza into the heat wave bag. Captain caught me before I got in the car, and called me into the store. He interrogated me in front of everyone, asking me what I'd forgotten on this run. Was it a 2 liter diet coke? No. Some wings? No. And on and on until I realized what I'd missed.

Then, when I finally got into the car to make the delivery, "Wish you were here" by Pink Floyd was playing on the radio. I started jamming out and singing to myself, and got so distracted I ended up driving home instead of to the delivery address. I parked my car (with the pizza inside), walked up three flights of stairs, plopped down on the couch in full uniform, and turned on the TV. It took my roommate asking "dude, aren't you supposed to be at work?" for me to remember the pies in my car and the clock ticking on the Domino's computer.

By the time I made the delivery and got back, it had been almost 30 minutes. Captain was pissed. As Kenny wasn't there that night, Captain had assumed the mantle of control and was working as the manager and not a driver. He suspended me from driving for the rest of the night, meaning I'd only make $5 an hour for the rest of my shift. Worse, I'd never actually learned to do anything inside the store and he spent the rest of the night painstakingly describing all the in-store tasks.

Unlike your Mom & Pop pizza places, Domino's doesn't slide the pie into a brick oven. Instead, everything goes through this hot conveyor belt. This is noteworthy for two reasons. First, it means every item on Domino's menu has the exact same cooking time and temperature. In my estimation, wings require just a little more oven time than pie. Order at your own risk. Second, it means that if no one is ready to receive it at the ass end of the conveyor, your food falls on the ground. At our store, this food usually was dusted off and put right back in the box.

Despite the Captain's watchful eye, several pies hit the ground that night.

Luckily, we missed eachother for a couple weeks after that. I never got high before work again, and Kenny and I got along well. March madness was in full swing, people were ordering pies, and I was making money. For a few weeks, the job worked out real well.

But, on a Friday night in early April the Captain and I ended up back on the same shift. God, he was being a dick. Every run I made was scrutinized for time & route. He took issue with the amount of powdered sugar I shook on the cinna-sticks, the sauce on the wings. It was an awful night. At one point, the asshole even quietly walked up behing and pantsed me. "Too baggy Mendoza!" he explained to the grinning cadre of lifers.

By 10pm or so, I'd had enough. I was making a run far from the store, by the campus fraternity houses and I could hear other students partying, drinking and having fun. I could hear girls' voices. I decided to head back and ask Kenny if I could be cut for the night. About a mile from the store, I ended up side by side with the Captain at a red light. He was heading back to the store after a run in his Hyundai, a little electric blue ultra -efficient whip. We glanced at eachother, and I decided it was on.

When the light turned green, the Captain turned right. He was surely planning to execute one of his trademark supersecret routes that got him back to the store in record time. I was having none of it, and decided to beat him my way. He would twist around little side streets; I would race right through downtown traffic. I pushed down the peddle, weaved through cars, shot through yellow lights. For a five light stretch, the lord was on my side. Nothing but green.

Finally, stopped at a red right outside the store, I saw the Captain pull back onto the street a few cars behind me. I'd done it, I'd beat the asshole. I checked my rearview, he was staring at me fuming. I couldn't wait to stroll into the store and enter my code into the computer, then ask him what streets he'd taken. He was looking at me from his car; I winked. Still looking in the mirror, I noticed out of the corner of my eye that the Volvo in front of me had released it's brake lights and was moving forward. I put the Explorer in gear and hit the gas all while staring at the Captain.

About 10 seconds later I slammed into the Volvo, who'd only pulled head to try and make a right. The light had still been red. My hood was slightly crumpled and emitting smoke. The Volvo driver was a heavyset woman in her 40's or 50's. She was apparently ok, as she's gotten out of her car and was approaching me yelling something unintelligible.

As the light finally turned green, the Captain eased around our accident and pulled into the Domino's parking lot. I watched, sweat pouring down my face from that damn patented heat wave bag, as he strolled into the store counting his tips and checked his run into the computer.

History Will Dissolve Me, Chapter One

It’s funny how so many lies can build up inside until you almost start to wear them like a patch of stubble on your neck or a stain on your shirt. The big ones you absorb so completely you almost forget, or start to believe them yourself. But then the little things start to add up and bother you; you begin living with a certain amount of paranoia, constantly checking yourself in the mirror, cupping your palm over your mouth and nose to smell your own breath, tucking in errant shirttails… It’s as if your appearance becomes the dike holding back oceans of deceit and you are constantly surveying for leaks.

It was halfway through seventh period that day when I rounded the corner of the East Building with trepidation, scared to run into Brother Angelo or Mr. McEwan. Those two were Headmaster and Dean of Discipline, respectively, though they were both dicks. We were only a week into March but already it was hot as shit. The swampy South Florida air was melting the Dep brand #7 Super-Hold hair gel that was keeping my hair slicked back and within dress code length compliance. Just last month McEwan had snuck up behind me, grabbed a handful, and jerked me out of the lunch line.

“This is shabby, Mendoza,” he’d said, wiping a gel covered hand down the front of my shirt. “Don’t look like this tomorrow.”

Hiding long hair with a slicked back gel job was small potatoes around here. A senior named Ernie Diaz had a tongue piercing, and as a result couldn’t really open his mouth during school hours. Not that Ernie had much to say in class. Small potatoes or not, I had no desire for Disciplinary Detention –an hour after school standing face up against the office wall- and was relieved to step into the frosty air of the guidance conference room without incident. It was like that here, all about appearances. You could be a murderer and no one would give a shit as long as your hair was short, your shirt tucked in, and your face free from any visible signs of weirdness or rebellion.

I was out of class to undergo the sacrament of confession, a monthly ritual for all students here at Christopher Columbus Catholic High School. For Boys. This was not your standard daytime TV confession. There was no black box in which to kneel and spill your deepest secrets anonymously to a shadow priest behind dark screen. Instead, we went face to face across grainy fake wooden boardroom table in the antartically air-conditioned conference room with Brother Eladio, who moonlighted as the school’s librarian. As the assigned confessor for juniors last names A-P, Brother Eladio served as the Catholic School equivalent to a guidance counselor. As an 80 plus year old (I’m guessing, but he was fucking old) lifetime monk with limited command of spoken English, he was about as well suited to the job of relating to 17 year old Miami boys as my Cuban great-grandmother Chichi was to being the lead guitarist of a thrash metal band.

I have to admit though, he had his routine down. Often, after school at Pedro or Rudy’s house, we’d sit across the card table in his backyard and take turns playing Brother Eladio. Of course he started with the standard confession business of opening prayer of contrition and admission of time passed since last confessing (always exactly one month), but then he’d jump into the Holy Trinity of teenage transgression with a shocking and often giggle inducing (but don’t you dare) matter-of-factness.

“Do jou dreenk?”

“No, Brother Eladio”

“Do jou yoose drogs?”

“No, Brother.” I’d reply, grinding teeth at this point to suppress the impulse to laugh.

“Do jou mastoorbate?”

Once you were found not guilty of the major sins, the line of questioning tended towards a more proactive destination, i.e. what you’ve done good instead of the bad things you haven’t done.

“And how have jou glorified the Lor this month by serving others?”

I found myself suddenly drained of the desire to lie to men of the cloth.

“To tell the truth, Brother, I haven’t really done much.

“Well then, Moses, jou mus go and serve others in the name of jor Lor.”

Later that night, I was practicing analogies in my SAT prep book when Pedro Rodriguez beeped me with a 420-911. My parents were watching the news in the den, but looked over suspiciously when they heard the jingle of car keys in my hand.

“I’m gonna go put some gas in the Explorer so I don’t have to stop on the way to school tomorrow,” I said, hoping that they wouldn’t notice that I’d used the same line two nights earlier. Dad hit the mute button and looked at me with wrinkled brow, but Mom beat him to the punch. Their decision making was like that, a first-come first served basis.

“Wear your seatbelt, Moses,” she said, draining the watery remains of her wine glass.

Pedro lived about twenty blocks away in a gated enclave of wealthy South Americans called Andalusian Oaks. I did wear my seatbelt too, as I raced down US-1 to make a twenty block pot deal look like a five block trip to the Shell Station. I was pissed when I got to the guard gate and found a five car backup. The gate was a ruse, however, as they lacked the legal ability to restrict people from entering the community and could only slow you down to photograph you license plate numbers.

I didn’t even bother with the door when I got there, knowing he’d be out back by the pool. Pedro didn’t have to make up lies to his parents to hang out on a school night. I knew little about his parents except that they were rich, from Venezuela, and rarely home. Also Pedro’s mom was smoking hot.

Pedro was laying back in a chaise lounge smoking a grit as I made my way around their landscaped backyard, instinctively reaching over the gate to pull the tab and release the door lock.

“What up Mo?”

“Chilling, What’s up with you bro?” I asked, regarding his almost closed eyes. “You look high as shit already. What’d you do this afternoon?”

“Bro, me and Ern chilled with these two gringas from South Miami, Robin and Sara. Public school bitches, hot as fuck. We got faded.”

“Nice, they had chronic?” I liked to be apprised of the competition. Not that it mattered, when it came to pot and high school kids, it was definitely a seller’s market.

“Mad nugs. We got faded for real.”

Pedro spoke in a vernacular that was almost hyperbolic in that it was composed exclusively of Miami slang. I think maybe because it was because he hadn’t learned English until his family moved here when he was twelve, and he never said much in school.

“Bro,” he went on, describing the afternoon he and Ernie had spent getting stoned on the docked yacht of some rich white girls they had met, “We smoked some regs (low grade commercial shit), we smoked some crip (high grade indoor stuff, like I was selling), we sprinkled some hash oil on it. We smoked a fucking salad bro.”

“Word. What do you need?”

“Just and eighter (an eighth of an ounce, $50). We’re hitting up the Spanish Mackerel show with them on Saturday in West Palm. That girl Robin’s hooking it up with tickets, but she told me to bring three crippie joints. I think she’s down to blade too, bro. Brains at least.”

“True.” I reached into the pocket of my jeans for the plastic sandwich baggie and unrolled it on my lap. Pedro picked up a yellow lighter of the little table by his chair and flicked it on to get a better look. I held the baggie up to his nose.

“Damn, Mo. Smells in the bag.”

“I don’t have a scale, but I weighed this quarter out at home. You can just eyeball half if that’s cool.”

“True.” Pedro went to work, picking the two biggest nuggets out right away, then deliberating for a while before settling on a third.

“That straight?” he asked sheepishly.

“Yeah, bro.”

“You want to blow one?”

“I wish,” I answered, checking the time on my pager. “But I gotta get home before Armando Mendoza gets suspicious.”

“Damn,” he said. “Heated.”

I was about to make for the car when I remembered that Pedro Rodriguez was the worst joint roller in the history of modern pot smoking. His sloppy j’s left you with weed in your teeth and nothing but burnt paper smoke in your lungs.

“You gonna get one of those girls to roll the joints for the concert?”

“Damn, bro, I hadn’t thought of that. I don’t want to look like a rook.”

“Chill, hand me some papers.” I said. “And break up the crip for me, I gotta get home soon.”

“You’re a fucking saint, Moses Mendoza. Thanks bro.”

Don’t thank me, I thought, thank Brother Eladio.



I suppose before I go much further I should explain to you how I got my name, Moses Mendoza, because as far as I know it wasn’t given to me at birth by my parents, which is how most people get their names.

I was born, I’m told, in Cuba, although I can’t remember and couldn’t tell you exactly when. I celebrate my birthday on February 21st, which is the date that a Coast Guard boat found me floating on a makeshift raft of innertubes about 20 miles south east of the Florida Keys. There was a man on the raft with me, I’m told, although by the time we were picked up he was dead from exposure. An eyeballed paternity test determined that the man on the raft wasn’t my father. He was black, and I’m not.

I got my first name from my adopted parents, on account of me having floated safely to the promise land (Miami) much like the biblical Moses floated down the Nile River in the book of Exodus. He was three months old when the Pharaoh’s daughter rescued him, but the doctors estimated my age at around a year and a half. My adopted parents gave me my last name too, which is their last name. Armando and Elena Mendoza, prominent and politically active Cuban exiles who were all too happy to rescue an infant who’d miraculously escaped Fidel Castro’s socialist nightmare. I have an older brother too, Armando Jr. or Armandito, who is their real son and was five when I floated on to the scene.

I felt the need to repeat the caveat “I’m told” because, unlike a famous boy who would later undergo a similar but ultimately unsuccessful exodus, none of this is terribly well documented. Only a few newspaper clippings and the conspicuous absence of pictures of my newborn self in my baby book attest to my unusual arrival. Most people, in fact, have no idea that Armando and Elena Mendoza aren’t my birth parents.

I’ve always called Armando and Elena Mom and Dad though, which makes sense since they are basically the only parents I’ve ever known. When I was little, and before she had to go back to Spain because she lost her visa, my nanny Anna Zuniga would put me to bed at night with fantastical stories about my real parents and our escape from Cuba, and each night the stories would be different. By now, it’s been years since anyone has even spoken about it really, but I can still remember how, before she died, my (adopted) grandmother Mamina used to cradle my cheeks in her wrinkled hands and say “Ay Moses, mi milagrito, mi balsero bandito – Oh Moses, my little miracle, my Holy rafter.”



I guess you could say that no good dead goes unpunished, because by the time I rolled the three joints for Pedro, plus one more out of my own stash that we smoked on the spot, plus drove the twenty blocks home going slow cause I was stoned, I’d been gone for almost an hours. My dad was sitting on the steps in front of our door waiting with cordless phone in one hand and a lit cigar in the other, the orange glow brightening and dampening like a cruel lighthouse that doesn’t bother to signal until you’ve run your ship into the rocks. In this case my ship being a red Ford Explorer with an incriminatingly insufficient amount of fuel. I racked my brain for a suitable lie. I could say I’d been at Caro Blanco’s house, between two men sex was always a reasonable excuse, but he’d probably know that there was no way her parents would have let me stay that late.

He moved towards the car slowly and deliberately, with the telephone jammed into his pocket. I was trapped in my own smoking gun.

“Where have you been Moses?” he asked with a calmness that was unnerving. I was still sitting in the car with the engine running.

“Getting gas.”

“Mentira – bullshit. It’s almost eleven.”

He had most of his face in the open car window and the acrid cigar smell came off his mustache and permeated my nostrils. A single finger of smoke was creeping up his left arm, solitary and unbroken. I could smoke pot all day but tobacco smoke still bothered me, especially from a cigar. I wanted to fan the smoke, break it up, break the unmoving wall of angry stillness that was blocking my way.

“I had a little look through your room.”

Fuck.

“The money, la marijuana, some shit I didn’t even know what it was, it’s all gone. Por el inodoro. Flushed.”

Fuuck. The old man took a step back, puffed on his cigar, and seemed to soften for a second.

“Cono, hijo. We have a big year coming up. You’re not going to fuck it up.”

With that he turned and walked back up the stairs and into the house, leaving his half finished cigar to extinguish itself in the marble ashtray by the door. I sat in the car by myself, surveying the damage. About five hundred in cash, another half-ounce of crippie, my scale, bong, papers, “some shit I didn’t even know what it was”. Who knew if he’d found everything, how thoroughly he’d overturned dresser drawer contents, rustled through the stacked shoeboxes in the back of my closet. I’d been so careless, even in my carefulness. I should have kept it all in the car. Still, you never know when you will be pulled over. Seventeen year olds make for easy targets. Better that he find it instead of some asshole cop.

But he’d been so calm, so sure of himself. Had he been so calm as he methodically searched my room? How long was I gone before he decided to go in there? Had he been waiting to do this? They both seemed so oblivious to the circumstances of my life, busy with the business, with the chairmanship of the CANF.

“We have a big year coming up. You’re not going to fuck it up.”

After about ten minutes of just sitting there thinking, still stoned but in a way that was not so euphoric, I shut off the engine and walked into the house. I took about two minutes just really softly opening and closing the heavy front door. Not that I was sneaking in or anything, just that I didn’t really feel the need to remind anyone that I was home. The light in the old man’s office was on and the door was closed. My mom sat on the leather sofa in the den, unmoved since I’d left to Pedro’s.

“Ven, Moses,” she beckoned. “I’m watching the tennis, the French Open. Agassi esta comiendo Sampras – he’s up by 2 sets.”