Furby
So, there I was at Starbucks, grading papers and trying to ward off an Overused Comma coma with a Cranberry Bliss bar, when Tiny Bladder at the next table asked me to watch his stuff for the millionth time. I rolled my eyes, stuffed a chunk of Cranberry Bliss into my mouth and said, “Dude, I don’t care how cold it is outside, no one wants your dollar-store notebook and the ratty goddamn trench coat your mama obviously dressed you in.” Somehow, through the crumbly brown sugary goodness that fell from my mouth he heard, “Sure! No problem!” Then he dashed off.
While Tiny Bladder ran to the bathroom, a fetid odor snuck into the coffee shop, curdling the last of the lemon frosting sticking to my fingers. I held my nose in the nick of time because, given a few more seconds, it would have jumped off my face and scurried out the door. For there in the doorway stood Furby. I groaned. I had thirty-three more papers to grade with sentences like:
Homosexuality didn’t have a name in the 12th Century. It was called gay in the 20th Century being that men what lived together were happy.
And
During the American Civil War in the late 1960s feminism was dying. It was in its death throws.
I did not have time to deal with Furby’s brand of crazy. My stomach tried to dissolve itself with its own acid as Furby’s pungent, dank, mop soaked in urine, moldy cabbage scent settled over the store. I turned back to my papers hoping Furby would not sense the crazy magnet implanted behind my left ear during a secret government experiment in the 1980s. He had thirty or so mangy stuffed animal torsos from the Island of Plague Infected Toys pinned to his moldy jacket and 70s era running shorts. As he made his way toward me (natch!) eyeless heads with mouths disfigured by rats and dry rot taunted me, “We’re coming to get you, Dingo! We’re coming to get YOUooouuuuUUU!”
It’s just a dream, it’s just a dream, it’s just a dream, I told myself, closing my eyes and wishing it all away. It worked. Sort of. When I opened my eyes, Furby was seated at Tiny Bladder’s table drinking Tiny Bladder’s coffee and writing in Tiny Bladder’s notebook.
“Excuse me, “ I said. “Someone’s sitting there; he’ll be right back.”
Furby continued to scribble in Tiny Bladder’s notebook. Although Furby ignored me, his Typhoid Toys did not. Bouncing and bobbing with every elaborate flourish of Furby’s Tiny Bladder’s pen, their empty eye sockets stared at me accusingly, spewing reproach (not to mention hantavirus) in my direction. I was supposed to be watching Tiny Bladder’s things! What kind of derelict sentinel am I? I had to do something.
Before I could interrupt him again, Furby paused from his frantic writing. Apparently, all that creative activity, together with the large coffee, were making him warm. So he removed the head-studded coat with some fanfare, and the smell of sick room sweat and body odor became even more overpowering.
But at that moment, thoughts of compassion, understanding, and kindness rose above the wormwood stench of Furby’s presence. Furby, after all, seemed to have fallen on hard times. I was warmed by the holiday music playing over the speakers. The beautifully lit professionally photographed pictures of pumpkin pie latte evoked Normal Rockwell images of friends and family. Furby’s furry contingent of contagion was his family. And I, I am a friend to man, a comrade of all mankind. My mind floated on thoughts of “we are the world” and “we are the children,” and, miraculously, my body went with it, all the way up to the manager where I, with compassion, understanding, and kindness said, “He’s using someone else’s stuff.” Because nothing overcomes a spiritual bond with your fellow man like good ol’ property rights. It’s the American Way!
I stayed at the counter thinking of Peace on Earth and ordering another Cranberry Bliss as the manager gently, and with compassion, understanding, and kindness, gave Furby the boot. Furby gathered his things and flounced out of the Starbucks with a primetime pageant-worthy flounce to end all flounces. If trumpets had heralded his departure, it would have been no more dramatic. Still, if he had turned at the door and said, “Good day, sir! I said, GOOD DAY!” I would have applauded.
Instead, I hummed Fa la la la la! La la la la! all the way back to my seat and launched into another poorly written paper. Tiny Bladder returned. Dear god! What took him so fucking long!
“Hey!” he exclaimed. “What happened to my coffee?” He eyed me suspiciously.
“Well,” I began to explain but was cut short.
“And where’s my coat?”
Oh shit. Still sitting on the chair was Furby’s coat of heads, all of them staring at me critically with their vacant eyeholes. Tiny Bladder’s trench had departed.
“That’s not your coat?” I asked.
Yes, there are eight million stories in this naked city. And tonight, one of those stories is a little less naked.
Posted on Monday, November 23, 2009 at 12:23 PM.
Tags: It's off to work we go, In The Neighborhood, La Vida Loca, Little Red Schoolhouse
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