“Beer-Induced
Van Gogh”
It
is a bit hard to recollect this story. The memories are foggy,
scattered, and if asked to provide a proper timeline I would
doubtlessly fail miserably. I remember a light chill in the air, fair
weather, crowded streets, and creaky barroom floors. I also remember
a pulled pork sandwich near the end of the night that I still wish I
had ordered…
By
that account itself, I would have to say that the mission was
accomplished. Another Saint Patrick’s Day, and I managed to not
have it suck. I think I’m starting to get good at this.
The
parts I do remember were some starting drinks in what we (Joe,
Myself, and my old flatmate, Gabbi) thought would be a hopping part
of town. Maybe it was that most of the locals wanted a change of
scenery for the year, or maybe beginning to drink at noon is a bit
too early on St Patty’s. At least I think it was noon…
regardless, it was dead, and we decided to move on.
We hopped
and we hopped. Bar after bar, and in good Irish tradition, the night
got better with every emptied pint glass. Thanks to Gabbi, we made
‘friends’ with two gentlemen at the final bar, who decided to buy
us all Irish Car bombs. I remember the car bombs, and I remember not
paying for a Guinness, but I know I had more. Joe destroyed a pulled
pork sandwich, I was envious, and Gabbi was the target of a flirty
man attempting to end his holiday the way I’m sure at least half of
Boston did that night—with company between the sheets.
Eventually
Joe and I decided to call it a day. Gabbi ditched her suitor, and we
went our separate ways. Unfortunately we gave no mind to the time and
found ourselves in the T with no more trains operating for the night.
We began strategizing how to get ourselves back to Joe’s place when
a scraggly young man came down the station’s stairs with a violin
case. He stood off to the side for a time, standing idly and looking
about as Joe and I continued to debate on waking someone to drive us
home, or to get a cab. The scraggly man must have eavesdropped,
because he soon came up, and asked us if all the trains were gone. He
was just as disrupted by the news as we were, and soon pitched the
idea of getting a cab with us. It made sense—three people would
make it cheaper. We made our introductions, and tried not to give him
too much shit when he told us his name was Patrick, and that he had
been busking with his violin all day. You can’t really get more
cliché than that.
We got up the top of the stairs of the
station and ran into another lone wanderer. He asked us if we missed
the last train out. We answered in diminishing voices, displaying
without any shame that our extravagant nights had carried us away and
caused us to lose track of time. There was probably a laugh, but all
I heard was his invitation to drive us home.
Looking at the
situation in retrospect, yes, we were two drunken men and a skinny
Irish fiddler. We didn’t hesitate when offered a ride from a
complete stranger. Maybe it was that we all subconsciously thought
that the odds were in our favour if he jumped us, or tried to do
something fishy. But there are still so many things that could have
gone terribly wrong that night. The odd part is, though, that things
didn’t go terribly wrong.
Things went terribly epic.
The
three of us followed our stranger down the roads to get to his car.
“I know I parked it somewhere around here,” he said a few
times as he looked down street after street.
Things were
beginning to look a bit sketchy. After a few more ‘wrong streets,’
Joe and I exchanged a look, mentally agreeing that if this guy took
us down some alleyway, or to a car that looked like it saw more drug
deals than gas stations, we were going to bolt.
Finally, we
heard, ‘ah there it is.’
With tensed muscles we turned the
corner and looked upon a 1995 BMW 6 (how I remember the make of the
car I have no idea. Alcohol is a strange thing). Seeing the mildly
ritzy vehicle prompted a sigh of relief. After all, how bad could a
guy be if he has a BMW?
The engine roared on, and as the stranger
buckles his seatbelt he turns and says, ‘You guys alright listening
to Willie Nelson?’
At
that point, we pretty much knew that our stranger was a badass we
could trust entirely. We all clicked our belts in, and then rode off
into the early morning night.
A Joe, a Josh, a Patrick, a
stranger with a BMW, and the sounds of Willie Nelson; we cruised down
streets I can’t remember, and passed sights I could never claim
seeing. The ride had more in common with a surrealist painting than a
legitimate memory. The picture stays in the back of my mind, streaked
with blurring yellow lights, black and blue shadows—all of them
flowing together like a stream out of the frame. Somehow the most
memorable part of that night was that car ride, and yet I can’t
recall any more details than what I just wrote.
I don’t
remember what the names of the bars were, I don’t remember the
streets or locations we stumbled through, and I faintly recall
falling into bed. But I do remember the people I was with, the
colours of driving through Boston’s darkened streets, and I
remember that the best part of my Saint Patrick’s Day was how it
ended with two strangers being more generous and friendly than some
I’ve referred to as ‘friends’.
There is probably some
moral in that story, but I don’t know if I want to look for it. I’m
not one to advocate ignorance over truth, but sometimes, a memory is
just so damn good that one shouldn’t tamper with it. The lack of
precise recollection just makes the whole day that much better to me.
That painting is complete for me. I’m just going to let it hang on
the wall, and ask no questions of technique or process.
But
I think that guy’s BMW might have been soaked with pot smoke…
-J.
Fensterbush