I have typed the word “fuck” today more times than I have spoken it the entire year

He was an ______. Everything hateful about the teenage brain. Ignorant yet opinionated, hateful, and crude. “You want to be remembered? Find some fucking ten year old kid with an ice-cream cone and shove it in his face. Bloody his fucking nose if you can. I guarantee you in fifty years, he’ll still be telling that story. That’s fuckin’ immortality, yeah. That’s being famous.”

It was easy to dislike him, even on sight. The semiotics of his clothing said he was aggressive, stupid, and mean. His uneven buzzcut matched his acne scars, matched the half smoked American cigarette that sat behind his ear, (looking like he’d fished it from the floor of a dirty men’s room), matched the cheap nylon sports jacket, matched the greasy whine of his voice. His accessories all looked stolen.

I was sitting across the aisle from him on the bus, on my way to see Michael for the last time before I left town, trying to concentrate on reading my lovely new book, and instead building up a quite justifiable loathing for the redneck prick loudly mouthing off beside me. He sat facing backwards in his seat, feet braced against the backrest, all the better to dispense his wisdom to the lapdog thug-kids he was talking to. Within reach, I thought.

“What you do is you shit on the pile of coats, fucking piss all over them, then fade back into the party. Someone will come out, say something fucking stupid, like, “hey, I think someone’s maybe shit on everything,” ’cause no one wants to be the fucking guy who says there’s shit, right? And you don’t say a fucking word. No one will know!”

My first impulse was to spook him, my second to drag him off the bus and pop him in the head. The story I was reading spoke of redemption, hatred, the torture of self-knowledge laid bare. I opted for my first idea. Less messy. Only gods and brave doctors know what he might have, anyway. One split knuckle is all it takes. Yuck.

Back in the day, I used to work for this six foot five Russian cowboy ‘from Old Country’ named Boris. A secretly teddy-bear NYC bouncer turned Toronto nightclub owner, he could be easily be the scariest man you might ever meet. I’ve only got one photograph of him, sadly, but in it, he dwarfs everything. It wasn’t his size, though, that was so intimidating, it was how he used his voice.

As the bus pulled through the intersection at 14th and 11th, I stood up, borrowed every actor’s trick of body I know to make myself seem as solid and immovable and as confident and nasty as possible, and I put my hand down hard on the boy’s shoulder. He looked up at me, rattled, surprised, people don’t touch strangers in the city, and I leaned down, met his widened eyes, conjured that wonderful Russian terror and very quietly said, “In my country, we kill children like you.”

Then I got off the bus, met Michael, and we had a lovely pot of tea. So there.

I don’t know where Lethbridge is, but the name is nice

Standing on the C-train, I’m looking out the window, trying to pinpoint what stop I need to be closest to the bookstore, (I had accidentally left my book, The Best of Lady Churchill’s Rosebud Wristlet, on the floor of the taxi we took from the airport to the temporary hotel), when she taps me on the arm. “Excuse me,” she says, and asks a woman’s name, something with multiple syllables I don’t exactly catch. “I’m sorry, no. You’re mistaken.” I reply, shaking my head. She’s somewhere in her fifties, well dressed, slightly expensive. The top of her head comes up to my chin. “I’m sorry,” her voice catches, “for a moment.. you reminded me of my.. my daughter.” Suddenly, she’s crying. I reach forward, take her in my arms, and let her lean into my body as she crumples. What else is there to do?

We stood like a statue of women welded together until the train slowed into the next stop. “Are you alright?” She nodded into my chest, took a deep breath, shakily stepped back, and thanked me. “Would you like to go for coffee?” I asked, “Talk about it?”

I bought her a dark hot chocolate and sat with her in an oversized chair, our knees touching. “She was the sweetest thing in my life. We had the same colour hair, but her voice was her father’s, do you understand that?” I said that I did, and she continued, “I was wonderfully young, around your age. Such a nightmare. I felt so stupid. We searched the whole place, got security to shut down the doors, check the parking lot. Didn’t matter.” Her story was sad, terrible, simple, and not unexpected, considering how we met. About twenty years ago, she said, her nine year old daughter was snatched from a Lethbridge grocery store.

“This is only the third time I’ve ever mistaken someone for her, you know, and the other two people wouldn’t give me the time of day.” I put an arm around her and she rest against it, warming her tiny hands on her cup, and we sat, silent, with our heads together. “I’m glad you found me,” I said. “Me too.”

he was right, I was wrong


This went to Michael Green, best friend, Calgary theatric, and
co-founder of One Yellow Rabbit, Canada’s premiere theatre company.

So this morning, which was really yesterday morning, when That Mike and I said goodbye at the airport, he said to be careful, there’s some crazy people out there, I laughed because he was being a goof. I take it back. Next time he says that, I will still laugh, but for 100% different reasons. Someone pulled a gun.

So I was waving bon voyage with my toque, being silly and grinning to see him get stuck in the metal detector, when this rather governmental looking fellow stood next to me and waved to what looked like a delegation of rather tired lawyers. “There’s something deeply satisfying about waving goodbye over a distance, isn’t there?” I said to him, and he replied, “There really is. It never hurts to wave.” I pointed Mike out and said, “look, there’s mine, the fellow with the long hair and the funny hat.” He told me that his were a batch of Czech diplomats, coming to visit Edmonton because it was sister city to wherever they were from, and then he asked what I was doing. “Waiting until dawn,” I said, “so I can call some friends at a slightly more reasonable hour and go crash on their couch in the city until my flight later tonight.”

Next thing I know, I’ve been introduced to a bodyguard chauffeur, I’m stowing my bag in the back of a rather posh government bus, turning down expensive whiskey, and blessing my propensity for talking to strangers. They treated me a little like I was an exotic species, me with my dyed hair and lazily black sense of humour, and showed me postcards that the diplomats had given them from their city, pictures of little story-book architecture buildings with colourful red roofs, as we drove into town. It took about half an hour, fourty five minutes until we were downtown again, and I was dropped off at the exact Tim Horton’s that Mike and I almost went to for coffee before the gig, within sight of the venue, at 102nd and Jarvis.

My thought is that it would be criminal to be calling anyone so early in the morning, no matter how much I want to sleep, (oh blessed sleep), so I settle in, buy some dubious drink, (I had one, and yet – I still don’t know what a hot smoothie is. It’s such a contradiction of terms!), dig out my book of short stories, and settle in to wait at least until there’s light in the sky. I seemed like almost every table sat someone else who looked as exhausted as me. Everyone there was either incredibly tired or just waking up, in that dark gray zone between the all nighters and the early late shift. (I think the truck driver one table over, upright, leaning against the wall, was asleep underneath his sunglasses.) We’re in there because it’s the only thing open, because it will keep us warm, because we have no where else to go.

After about an hour, a trio of Native kids walks in, can’t be more than seventeen, two guys and a girl, obviously a couple and their friend. They sit down over to my right, I don’t even notice them, but then a wigger kid smarmily walks in from the door to my left. Oversized clothes, glitter glass stud earrings, a little blue nylon skull cap, a dark blue jacket so big it must have been made for two Americans to wear simultaneously, walking like his pants were going to fall down, walking like he’d seen too many rap videos and knew how to look cool.

Boyfriend kid immediately springs up, bristling, full of angry energy, and starts saying “fuck” more times than I could ever count, like ‘fuckin fuck you fuck you fucking fuckin here fuck, what’re fucking think you’re fucking doing, fucker, being fucking in here, fucker”. Like that, like… wow, like, “how does he do that?” (Seriously, I’m trying to write this as verbatim as I can, but there was likely about 10,000% more swearing than I’m typing).

So now I’m looking, everyone is, and the other boy leaves in that “man, my friend’s a jerk, I’m outta here” way, but the girlfriend stays sitting. Her face has gone hard, as if she’s had to deal with this sort of thing too many times before. Boyfriend kid moves so that he’s standing directly in front of her, facing the new kid, so now she can’t see anything. Which is great, because Boyfriend’s swearing takes a turn, “you fuck, fucking dressing like a fucker, you fucking mobster fuck, you fucking poseur fuck, fucker, fucking dressing, you fuck, like you’re fucking a fucker with a fucking gun, fuck, fucker should fucking pull it out, fucking shoot me, fucking poseur, fuck off, fuck you, fuck out of here, you fucking fuck”

And, with a little grin, Wigger kid slides a gun out of his right hand pocket. Just like that.

And no one even blinks. No one reacts. We’re all too tired. There’s not going to be any Springing Into Action, no Leaping To The Rescue. I’m not even going to try anything, I’m just too tired. I’ve been essentially up and awake for three days, I’m at the point where I’m looking right at this potentially dangerous kid and I can’t even CARE. The only person who moves is Cussing Boyfriend, who keeps swearing, (the word “fuck” has lost all meaning, except as punctuation), and all he does is one of those angry asshole half-step stomping motions, like he’s trying to scare Wigger kid like he’s a growling dog instead of a smirking idiot with a firearm.

Wigger kid, he’s more awake than the rest of us, but he won’t make eye contact. His eyes just slide around everyone, like he’s practised his look in front of a mirror but hasn’t really thought it out. The gun in his hand is steady, though, and he swings it slowly over everybody in a classic Hollywood blockbuster, “back off, I could take you”.

No one else does anything, not even look nervous, but when it points at me, I LAUGH.

(Because I thought it was ridiculous when he told me to be careful at the airport, yet here I am, not even two hours later, in this super Canadian doughnut shop, first thing in the morning, with a gun pointed at my head. Like, what?)

Which, apparently, was the perfect thing to do. It seems to remind him that, uh, yeah, here we all are, in an Edmonton Tim Horton’s for crying out loud, this isn’t an appropriate setting for this kind of scene. (I think he was embarrassed a little, especially that no one seems to care.) The grin on his face shifted from ego-delight to chagrin, he slid the gun back into his ridiculously oversized jacket and then took off. Sleazily walks back out the door, then books it. We could hear his feet begin running.

Then the girlfriend, who hadn’t seen a thing, gets up, annoyed at Boyfriend kid’s constant stream of swearing, (amazing), tells him he’s an asshole, then stalks out the other door. He follows her, someone pipes up “better they fight outside”, and that was it. That was the only reaction. No one called the police, nothing. It was insanely Canadian. The guy at the next table over slept through the entire thing. I went back to reading my book.