
I kneed the guard in
the gut and laughed as
he collapsed like a dynamited bridge.
He went down hard but managed to swing
his baton in a wicked arc from the floor, rupturing
the plastic bottle in my right hand. Mescal splashed
into his face and he dropped the baton and shrieked
as the savage Mexican liquor burned his eyes raw.
So much for the victory shots , I thought
as I leapt over him and sprinted down the hall, pursued
by hoarse shouts and shrill alarm bells. I was bitter
about the spilled liquor, but I pushed it aside. On
the other side of the steel door at the end of the hall
was all the booze I could ever want — and more.
Three weeks earlier things hadn’t
appeared so promising. I awoke to the mean bass-drum
beat of a world-class hangover and meaner surroundings.
Stark fluorescents glared from the low ceiling, searing
my bloodshot eyes. The bed and adjoining dresser were
made of metal and bolted to the cement floor. The walls
were the hue of institutional green that suggest society
had suddenly taken an interest in you. The windowless
walls were bare except for a single adornment: a poster
of a scrawny cat hanging from his front paws above the
text: Hang in there, baby!
“Great,” I said, sitting
up slowly. I’d
been locked up before. The layout suggested detox but
the poster and the pajamas I wore suggested I’d
been dragged much deeper into the system. Rehab.
I went to the door. It was locked and looked solid
enough to stop a runaway beer truck. It had a little
steel-mesh window. I stuck my face in it.
“Hey!” I yelled. I could see identical
doors across the hall. “Fire! Fire!”
A severe woman’s face appeared. “Fire?
Where’s the fire?”
“No, I said, ‘ You’re fired.’ Where
am
I?”
“On the road to recovery.”
“That’s great. What am I recovering from?”
“You don’t know?”
“Of
course I do. I just want to hear you say it.”
“Alcoholism. Antisocial behavior. Destruc—”
“That’s enough. Who’s paying?”
“Your father.”
“I have no father.”
“Of course you do. He signed the papers. It
was this or jail.”
The face disappeared. I sat on the
bed and looked at the poster. Hang in there? Why?
What was the point of a mangy cat hanging from a goddamn
rod? What did it accomplish?
I learned at the slop parade that passed for breakfast
that I was ensconced in the Sierra Vista Sanitarium.
To be committed against your will meant you had to be
declared mentally incompetent. Was I? I didn’t feel incompetent.
The last thing I remembered was running from cops or
possibly security guards and ducking into my sister’s
house with an armful of allegedly stolen liquor. “Hide
this,” I remembered telling her, “and hide
me while you’re at it. Wanna drink?”
I couldn’t remember where I’d gotten
the bottles, but I did remember that they had the pour
spouts common to bar bottles. And believe you me, you
have to be more than a little competent to walk out
of a bar with an armful of their inventory.
After breakfast I endured half an
hour of general questions in the office of my personal
counselor, Mrs. Cross. Routine stuff. Then I was sent
to orientation, except it was called “Getting
to Know You” or “We
Know How to Get You,” I forget which. Two dozen
of us sat in chairs circled around a washed-up hippie
named Mr. Henke. Right off the bat he let us know he
wasn’t there to judge our sins, heck no, he used
to be a screw-up himself. As a matter of fact, his screw-ups
would make ours look like schoolboy pranks. He had a
big droopy mustache and pronounced alcohol, alky-
hol. After we introduced ourselves he asked each
of us to answer a simple question: “If you could
change one thing about yourself, what would it be?”
This was standard counselor trickery. Once they got
you on board as the star witness for the prosecution,
they just sat back and watched you tear yourself apart.
I watched the question rip its way around the circle
like a chain saw. It was sickening.
There are exactly two types of heavy drinkers: drunks
and alcoholics. Drunks hunted booze, they preyed upon
it. Alcoholics, on the other hand, had decided at some
point that they were not actually hunters, so much as
alcohol was hunting them. They were just innocent victims,
minding their own business, and evil old alcohol sniffed
them out and made their lives a mess.
I looked around the room and mentally assembled the
two groups. It was as easy as separating wolves from
sheep. At the moment it was about 50-50. By graduation
it would be around 80-20. That’s the irony of
rehab. It doesn’t cure alcoholics — the
recidivism rate is notoriously high — it creates
them, it cranks them out like widgets.
“What would you change, Mark?”
I snapped out of it. Henke was looking at me. Everyone
was looking at me.
“Everything,” I said.
Henke’s mustache twitched. “Everything?”
“From the ground up.”
“A fresh start, eh? I guess
that would include your relationship with alkyhol.”
“You bet. But mostly I’d change my arms.”
Laughter tittered around the room.
“Your arms, Mark?”
“Yes. I’d like to have three arms. The
first would be strong. It would hold me up when temptation
tried to pull me down. The second would be friendly.
It would shake the hand of every good man I met.”
Henke nodded approvingly. “That’s interesting,
Mark. But what about that third arm?”
“Oh, that one’s flagging down the bartender.”
Half the room erupted in laughter. Henke stared at
me for a moment, angry that he’d been tricked.
Henke knew the difference between wolves and sheep too.
And he didn’t like it when they started wearing
each other’s clothing.
Henke’s head turned to the next guy, but his
eyes stayed on me. He said, “What would you change,
Stan?”
That’s how he was going to play it. Non-confrontational.
He had nothing but time, and I had nothing to drink.
He knew the harder I fought the current, the more tired
I would get, and sooner or later I’d be too tired
to even tread water. Then I’d drown.
When we broke for lunch, two wolves
joined me at my table: Happy, a heavy-set Samoan and
Stan, a raw-boned Alabamian who’d distinguished himself at orientation
by saying he’d like to have four arms,
because he was a smoker.
Happy was a retread, he’d served a three-month
stretch at Sierra Vista the previous year. I went right
to work on him.
“How’s security here?” I asked.
“Tight for rehab. Two doors between you and
daylight, both key locked. First one opens into the
staff area, the second into the reception.”
I frowned. “What’s the hooch situation?”
Happy shook his head. “Dry,
real dry. Get it out of your head.”
“We
just gotta gut it out,” Stan said. “They’ll
still be pouring when we get out.”
“Just hang in there, huh?” I said.
“Yeah,” Stan said. “Who knows,
maybe we’ll learn something while we’re
in here.”
“Yeah,” I said, getting
up. “That’s
just what I intend to do.”
Between lunch and dinner
I languished in an array of classes tailored to my
particular problems: Anger Management, the Physiology
of Alcohol Dependency and the Orwellian-themed Quitting
Is Winning! Standard indoctrination.
After dinner you were given the option
of getting some air in the high-walled courtyard, playing
games in the rec room or returning to your room. After
a smoke, I went back to my room and laid on my bed.
I looked at the poster. You hung in there because you
had to. You hung on because you were dangling over Hell.
I don’t care how deep a hole they put you in,
a little light always shines through. There’s
always a chink in the wall. It took me all of two days
to find it.
The chink was working a mop in my wing,
holding it like he was dancing with the ugliest girl
in town and all his friends were watching. But don’t think
I’m racist. The chink wasn’t Chinese. He
was Mexican. The moment I laid eyes on him I knew we
could communicate. It was in his hunched shoulders and
his pained eyes. I knew the look, I’d seen it
enough times in the mirror. He was gloriously hungover.
As I walked toward him I reached my hand into my
pocket and fingered the twenty dollar bill I’d
been allowed to keep. You could draw $20 a week from
whatever money you came in with, to buy personal items
in the sanitarium’s commissary. Instead I decided
to bet it on a long shot.
When I got abreast of him I stopped, stooped, and
pretended to pick the bill up.
“You dropped something,” I said, offering
him the twenty.
“ Que?” he said, startled.
He looked at it and shook his head no.
“Put it in the lost and found, then,” I
said, tucking it in the breast pocket below his ID card.
His eyes followed mine to his janitorial cart. I hefted
a plastic bottle of Mr. Clean. “Man, I wish this
were whiskey. You like, whiskey, Pedro?”
“Tequila,” he whispered.
“Me, I like whiskey. It gives
me new eyes. Ever notice that? It lets you see more
clearly. You know,” I held the bottle up, “if
his were whiskey, I’d be finding twenty dollar
bills all over this place.”
He looked me in the eyes. Wolf? Sheep? I couldn’t
tell.
“Which I’d give to you, of course,” I
said.
His gaze faltered and the mop started
moving. He went back to his work, his expression clouded.
I settled into my routine. Aside from
the vaguely interesting battle of wills that my morning
sessions with Henke were turning into, the classes and
meetings blurred together into grey landscape of impotent
pop psychology and hoary old lies about Mother Alcohol.
I ran into Pedro on four occasions during the first
week. Each time he ducked my eyes and became very earnest
about his job. I decided it was a wash. I would have
to go to Plan B, which rhymes with P, which stands for
pruno.
Once a week each prisoner was expected to help out
in the kitchen. Most of the guests of Sierra Vista hated
it, mostly because a venal bastard named Rod who ran
the operation. I, on the other hand, was looking forward
to my chance to serve. When my turn came, I volunteered
for the dishwashing detail. The job consisted of loading
dirty dishes into racks and feeding them into a large
industrial dishwasher.
I got a case of the slows, so that long after the
food line servers had left, I was still at it.
“You’re slow,” Rod said, standing
in the doorway with his hands on his hips.
“I’m getting the hang of it,” I
said, levering open the washer’s hatch and shoving
in a rack of dishes. “Give me five and I’ll
be through.”
He ducked out and I headed straight
for the dry goods room. The thing about pruno is, you
can make it from almost anything organic. All you need
is sugar and yeast. I scooped up two gallon cans of
fruit cocktail and a bag of bread and returned to my
station.
I doubled a pair of black trash bags and dumped in
the fruit cocktail. That was my sugar. I ripped open
the bread bag and threw in six slices of bread. That
was my yeast. I added a gallon of water and four packets
of sugar to sweeten the deal, gave it a good shake,
twist-tied the bag tight, then ran it through the washer
with a load of dishes to warm it up.
I checked my watch. Four of my five minutes were
up. I pulled out the bag, wrapped it in dish towels
then realized I’d screwed up.
I’d forgotten to scout out a
hiding place. I was standing there with an armful of
contraband and no place to put it. I frantically searched,
looking for something, anything, but there was no crevice,
no cranny, there was only the steel racks for the
dishes. I was about to drop the whole shebang in the
trash and cut my losses when my eyes fell upon on the
washer.
I leaned over and took a look behind the big stainless
steel box. There was about eight inches of space between
the washer and wall. The pipe that fed it water came
up from the floor then angled into the machine. I reached
out and felt the pipe. It was warm to the touch. Perfect.
I carefully laid the bag over the pipe. The contents
split into equal haves and hung like a pair of water
wings. I adjusted the towels and took a step back.
If anyone bothered to look behind the washer, it
was over. But why would they? It looked like it hadn’t
been cleaned back there since it was installed.
“Taking a break, fuckface?”
I turned to Rod, who was standing in the door way.
“Fucking thing’s broke!” I blurted.
It was all I could think of.
“Bullshit!” Rod grabbed the washer’s
lever, threw it up, slammed it back down and jabbed
the wash button. It roared to life. “Works fucking
fine!”
“I guess you’re smarter than me.”
“No shit. Now finish up so I can get outta
here!”
He stalked out and I glanced at the bag hanging from
the pipe. It looked like a big pair of balls. I thought
that was funny as hell at the time.
“Did you find any twenties today, senor?”
I stopped in my tracks. It was Pedro.
I hadn’t
even noticed him, that’s how much I’d given
up.
“I told you,” I said. “I need whiskey
to see that money.”
He glanced around then slipped me a small bottle
of Mr. Clean. The bald man smiled from the label. “I’ll
give it a try,” I said and walked to my room.
I closed my door with my back, unscrewed the bottle
and took a whiff. It smelled like cleaning solvent.
What kind of sick fuck was I dealing with? I thought.
Did he really think I wanted to drink Mr. Clean?
I took another smell and this time I noticed there
was another pungent odor lurking beneath the solvent. Mescal.
I steeled myself and took a swig. Pedro hadn’t
done a bang-up job rinsing out the bottle, but the stuff
inside was the real deal. Cheap, raw mescal, the stuff
you could get for three bucks a bottle on the warmer
side of the border.
I had good, long, welcome-back pull, then sagged
against the door and sucked in a raspy breath. I never
liked the stuff much, but now I was a big fan.
I took another pull and I suddenly felt like a new
man. A man with possibilities, with resources, with
big plans. I closed my eyes and saw a light, a thin
sliver of light shining down through the darkness. I
felt like my old self and a new man.
I carefully screwed the cap back on. I’d already
sucked down a third of it, and I had to watch over my
investment. I looked at Mr. Clean, my silent partner.
I looked at that goddamn scrawny cat. He was hanging
in there. I thought about my bag of pruno back in the
kitchen. It was hanging in there too. And so was I.
It was time to go find those twenties.
Just as I’d told Pedro, I found them all over
the place. I went room to room, seeking out only the
wolves, selling shots. The price was high, but that’s
the nature of supply and demand. An hour later I returned
to my room with sixty three dollars and a wake-up shot
for the bartender.
“How are we feeling today, Mr. Malloy?” Henke
asked the next morning.
“Fan-fucking- tastic,” I said.
“Why, you look downright chirpy!” he
said in a slightly mocking way. “And you managed
it without alkyhol. Give him a hand, boys!”
They gave me a big hand, especially those who had
gotten a taste the night before. I actually got up and
bowed, smiling like an fool. It was too much. Henke
thought I was drowning. He didn’t know I’d
got my strength back. I could tread water all day. And
my water wings were on the way.
From there on out it was just a matter
of keeping the wheels turning. I negotiated a rate of
20 bucks a bottle with Pedro. He wanted more, but I
knew it wasn’t
costing him more than three dollars to fill each twenty
ounce bottle. I told him I’d take as much as he
could deliver.
Next I made it known that I would
pick up anyone’s
kitchen detail for a fiver and soon I was working the
wash box four days a week. I massaged and burped gas
from the bag, and by day five it was ready. I poured
the mash through a strainer and filled up 24
Ziplock sandwich bags. I started up two new batches,
hung them from the pipe, then smuggled out the Zips
in my pants.
The pruno would gag a wino, but it did the trick
if you kept it down. It went for six bucks a bag, pure
profit. I kept four for myself and sold off the rest.
I played it tight at first, only selling to those I
knew from my classes, but they soon ran out of money
and I had to expand my market. I took on Happy and Stan
as salesmen and they in turn hired guys in the other
wings. They all worked on liquor commission.
Soon Pedro was carting in a half-dozen
bottles a day — Mr Clean Mescal, Pine Sol Whiskey,
409 Vodka, Clorox Gin, whatever it took to make your
insides sparkle, we had it. I was pulling in up to two
hundred bucks a day profit, not to mention a half bottle
of booze and a couple bags of pruno per diem for personal
use. I mean, I had the joint wired. And everyone was
happy. Pedro was cleaning up, the drunks were drinking
and me, I was on top of the whole game, getting my cake
and drinking it too. The way the light was shining,
I’d be walking out with enough dough to rent a
bar stool ‘til Xmas.
Not that I was being naive about it. I knew it would
fall apart at some point. Which is why I intended, after
I made my roll, to pass off the operation to Happy and
Stan. I would still skim a little cash and enough juice
to keep me level, but I would be clear. This way, when
it finally came crashing down, I’d be far enough
away to avoid any falling timbers. Of course, those
kind of plans never seem to work out.
I saw Pedro down the hall and smiled. He looked away,
stricken, and I immediately knew the gig was up. Somewhere
the network had cracked and it was undoubtedly rolling
up on itself at that very moment.
I found Happy smoking nervously in the courtyard.
I signalled him to follow and we went back to my room
where he gave me the news.
Stan had stashed a bottle in the restroom
next to Henke’s classroom, so he could ease his
way through Henke’s afternoon class (Power Up
with Positivity!) with little nips during the breaks.
Only he’d
forgotten to lock the stall door and Henke had barged
in and caught him chugging from a bottle of Pine-Sol.
Henke thought he was trying to commit suicide. They
wrestled with the bottle and Henke got the best of Stan.
That’s about when Happy arrived:
“I ducked my head in the restroom
after a couple of attendants dragged Stan to the medical
ward. Henke was leaning against a sink with the bottle
in his hand. He looked like he was going to cry. I mean,
there’s
a little soul searching involved when one of your patients
decides he’d rather guzzle floor cleaner than
sit through another Power Up session. He looked like
he was going to pour it down the sink when his whiskers
started twitching. He stopped and sniffed the bottle
and you should have seen the look on his face. He looked
like he would have been happier if Stan had chugged
Pine Sol.”
I could figure out the rest for myself.
They must have put two and two together and rounded
up the janitors for a quick Q and A. Pedro should have
been safe. I’d
bought out his supply that morning and passed all of
it off except a bottle of Mr. Clean for myself. As long
as he didn’t talk, they couldn’t prove a
thing.
That’s when I heard his squeaky cart coming
down the hall.
I didn’t have to look out the
door to know for whom the cart squeaked. My chink had
cracked.
I went to my dresser, pulled out the drawer and removed
my bankroll and bottle of Mr. Clean from the recess.
Happy eyed the bottle. “Right!” he said,
reaching. “Let’s chug it before they take
it away!”
“They’re not taking it away,” I
said. “I’m taking it with me.”
“Where?”
“Out. According to my watch, it’s Happy
Hour. Last call, pal.”
Happy blinked at me, then looked off to the side.
Before I walked out the door, I took one last look
at that scrawny cat and realized I had been right from
the start. Hang in there? What for? What’s the
point in a cat hanging from a rod?
I walked into the hall and sure enough, Pedro squeaked
up the hall flanked by Henke and two burly attendants.
“Just who we wanted to see,” Henke said.
He was powered up but it wasn’t on positivity.
“I found this in my room,” I said, holding
up the bottle of Mr. Clean as I walked toward him.
“Too late!” Henke yelled
and I dropped my shoulder and drove it into his chest.
He fell into Pedro and I grabbed the cart and drove
it into the pair of attendants. They split like a pair
of bowling pins and flopped onto the ground. I took
off running.
I had planned on grabbing Henke’s
keys, but I hadn’t counted on the attendants,
who were already scrambling to their feet. I was loose,
but I was trapped. I ran toward the security door, on
the other side of the wing, without having any idea
how I would get through it.
I slowed to take a corner and couldn’t believe
what I saw. Rod was walking out of the chow hall with
a pruno bag in each hand. It was too much. He saw me
coming and he just stood there, dumbfounded. With his
hands occupied it was an easy, sweet punch. I hit him
at full stride, knocking him clean off his feet. I grabbed
his key ring and for the life of an insane second I
thought about grabbing the bags. I really did. I was
that twisted.
There were a dozen keys on the ring and I got lucky
and sprung the first security door on the third try.
It locked behind me, cutting out the shouts closing
in behind me.
A bell started ringing and I took off down the hall
toward the second and last door. That’s when I
ran into the guard I mentioned earlier.
After I left him on the tiles with my mescal, I ran
and prayed for luck with keys. I swore once I got to
the bar I’d buy myself a shot of the best scotch
in the house, if I could just have some luck.
I got the second door on the fifth or sixth key.
Average luck, but good enough.
As I loped through the reception lobby, the receptionist
hollered, “Excuse me! Excuse me!” I excused
her and dove out the double glass doors into downtown
Phoenix.
I got picked up six months later on
a drunk and disorderly charge. I ended up serving six
months in county for my crimes, past and present. It
wasn’t as soft
as rehab, but there was plenty of pruno to go around.
Now, eighteen years later, I work in the import/export
trade. Strictly on the up and up. Sometimes I wonder
what happened to Happy and Stan. I wonder if they came
out of Sierra Vista with anything they could use.
As for me, I’m hanging in there.
Every now and then I’ll open the doors under my
kitchen sink and look at that smiling bald man (it’s
the only brand I’ll buy) and get a funny feeling.
Then I’ll close the doors and head down to Happy
Hour.