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anthonytaille-blog · 11 years
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anthonytaille-blog · 11 years
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"Orphans, orphans, hear us out" they say. "Your lives will become easier soon" they tell. "Believe in us" they cry.
But the orphans can't hear because orphans are deaf to the prayers and the promises and the songs.
"Orphans, orphans, hear us out" they call. "Heavens will open just for you" they declare. "Come join us" they shout.
But the orphans know that heaven is not for them for they are bound to stay sinful, wandering on Earth as the loved and the cared fade and die of fruitful deaths.
"Orphans, orphans, hear us out" they say. "The world you knew is over now" they whisper. "See us" they beg.
But the orphans can't see because their eyes missed what they were meant to see and the world left them lone in the void, left to the burns of a distant sun.
"Angels, angels" the orphans say. "We don't need you" they tell. "Our time won't come" they cry as they keep waiting.   
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anthonytaille-blog · 11 years
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anthonytaille-blog · 11 years
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"Why are you staying here anyway?"
"It's home."
"The city."
"The noise. The smells."
"Because it feels right."
"Like an addiction. I don't drink too much. I don’t do drugs no more. I try to get through. But I need the city."
"Despite all the trouble."
"I tried to live elsewhere. Louisiana, Florida. Places were dumps. You get the sun and warm winters, that's true. But it didn't feel like home. It didn't feel like home."
"How long have you been there?"
"I don't know. Seventeen, eighteen years. I came back in 99. I wanted a real slice of pizza so I walked from North Carolina."
"You walked?"
"I hitchhiked for a couple of days, then I took a train with a guy who had been traveling from Texas. Then I walked."
"All the way up to New York."
"All the way up. It was better than staying in the swamps."
"You were living out of the cities."
"I had a cabin in Florida. Found it abandoned, half crumbling. Used to fish and hunt for a while. Fixed the roof, even. But the damn mosquitoes and the heat, man."
"So you went back here."
"I went back here. First thing I did was eating a frank with sauerkraut and mustard. Tasted wrong but felt right."
"How did you fare with winter?"
"I did better than some. A man I knew died near the tracks under Riverside Park. Another lost his leg."
"In the tunnels?"
"Yeah. I lived there with a community of about a dozen people. Some of them used to work and got up early each morning to shower at the public baths. An older guy borrowed an apartment every time his kids came to visit because he didn't want them to know. There were couples. Only things we didn't have were running water and electricity."
"The Mole People."
"There was sick shit going on. People eating rats. I've seen dead bodies left alone for weeks until someone dragged them outside for the Amtrak workers to pick them. Sometimes we heard a baby cry."
"Wasn't it too cold?"
"We made fires. I stayed in an alcove by myself so I could get some rest and stock on food, you know. Had a real bed and a nightstand all dragged from the streets. This woman had a whole shelving structure in her place, all neatly organized like in a regular apartment. There were thieves from time to time, so I had to get a knife to protect my things."
"It must have been scary living here."
"Not that much. We had a whole system made of pipes to communicate between us. I was always bringing stuff from the trash. Cinder blocks to make walls, framed pictures, rugs. I got in fights. Mostly drunks coming out of bars or kids trying to steal."
"Were they other groups besides yours?"
"About a hundred, maybe more."
"All there in the tunnels."
"All there. It wasn't bad. It was temporary, I thought."
"Did your family know?"
"My sister. She worked in a school in the Upper East Side. She came to see me, once. I met her in a pizza joint on 93rd but she didn't talk too much, you know. Two kids, tow boys. Husband was a retail manager. I remember I paid for the pizza. It was a long time ago."
"Did she offer help?"
"I didn't want her to get involved. I heard she was looking for me after that, but I never spoke to her again. My life is my life. I am who I am. I don't need help. She seemed to be doing fine, that's all that matters."
"I understand."
"I didn't want my mother to know I was back. She was starting to lose her mind at this time. It would have been too difficult. My father passed when I was little, but my mother – I didn't want her to know. My brother and my sister took care of her. I don't know if she's still alive. She was a good woman, always trying her best to keep us together. She was a real good woman. Real good."
"I'm sure she was."
"That's why I feel at home here."
"The memories."
"Everything."
"Did you stay in the tunnels for long?"
"The city opened a few rooms at the 95th Street shelter. I moved there for a while. It was terrible. I left as soon as I could. Some nights I didn't even sleep there. It felt safer in the tunnels."
"Safer?"
"There were gang rapes in the bathrooms, man. Children running with syringes in the halls. Girls beaten everyday. Thugs coming in the rooms and trashing everything to find dope or money."
"City shelters."
"Kids living in there. Six or seven in a room."
"So you went away?"
"I did. Went back to the tunnels. Then I got a job. I was handing flyers to tourists in Times Square."
"Did it pay well?"
"Enough to get an apartment with three other roommates in Astoria. It was great. I could watch TV. I could see the city from my window. Easily the best two years I had here. Then one of the roommates moved out to live with his girlfriend. The lease was in his name, so the landlord renewed it and the rent went way up. I knew I wouldn't be able to stay on my income alone. So I started selling crack cocaine."
"To pay the rent."
"At first."
"Then it got out of hand."
"I started to test the product. I got hooked so fast. So fast."
"Did you manage to pay the rent?"
"I got busted by the cops after three months and got evicted."
"Back to square one."
"I was smoking like a motherfucker. I was really messed up. And it all happened so quick I still don't understand how – that thing fucks you up so bad you don't know who you are anymore."
"They say it's worse than anything else."
"I didn't even feel better. Time just passed slower. My thoughts were like frozen. I knew it was going to kill me but I couldn't do anything to stop. I smoked more and more and more, until I woke up in Lenox Hill's ER after almost a full day of coma."
"What did they say?"
"They gave me methadone and let me on the loose."
"They let you go?"
"Not enough rooms. Not enough doctors. I had to OD two other times to get to a methadone clinic. A nurse sponsored me because I was being a danger to myself and they had this test program to run."
"But you got clean."
"I'm supposed to be dead, you know. I'm not supposed to be breathing right now. I'm some kind of ghost."
"You're there in the end."
"The city didn't want me gone."
"You're part of it."
"She didn't want me gone. I need her, so maybe she needs me. Maybe that's part of her plan. With all the noise and the smells."
"Like an addiction."
"Maybe it's her way to tell me she loves me."
"Because she's home."
"Because she's home."
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anthonytaille-blog · 11 years
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anthonytaille-blog · 11 years
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anthonytaille-blog · 11 years
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anthonytaille-blog · 11 years
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anthonytaille-blog · 11 years
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I can see seven or eight of them between the burnt vehicles, stumbling on the debris-filled highway.
Dawn is breaking over the hills and I'm blinded by the orange sun rising through the mist.
They lurch toward me, torn bodies and torn clothes, some of them naked, others crawling on the ground, lost and wild in the half-light.
I keep running until I reach my car in the grass median.
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anthonytaille-blog · 11 years
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anthonytaille-blog · 11 years
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"How can you sleep with all this noise? The constant rumbling, the horns, the sirens!" "How can you sleep without it?"
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anthonytaille-blog · 11 years
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The Kidnapper Bell by Mono on Grooveshark
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anthonytaille-blog · 11 years
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anthonytaille-blog · 11 years
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anthonytaille-blog · 11 years
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Cape Cod has this way of being eerily cold and windy in winter, yet still giving a quiet promise of summer at each footstep in the crackling sand.
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anthonytaille-blog · 11 years
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