*The following story is fiction. Mostly fiction...
My kid has this stuffed monkey. He sleeps with it every night. He found him at Walmart, my wife was shopping with him one day and took a wrong turn down the toy aisle. That’s a bad move, the toy aisle. Rookie mistake.
My kid has this stuffed monkey. He sleeps with it every night. He found him at Walmart, my wife was shopping with him one day and took a wrong turn down the toy aisle. That’s a bad move, the toy aisle. Rookie mistake.
My son and this monkey. He takes it everywhere. Bathroom.
Daycare. To the store. This monkey travels. The other night it had snowed, and the
next day the sun warmed things up so that the streets shined black with salt
and chemicals. My son was hopping over a curb when, splat, he dropped he monkey
face down in a tar black puddle of grime. The kid was devastated. Crying about
Patrick the monkey as I cleaned him up some with a Clorox wipe and fix him. But
the wipes only managed to smear his face and belly and the more I wiped the
more he smeared until he looked like a coal miner with a beard.
That was the worst. My wife was working late and it was just
me and the kid and Patrick—my kid named the monkey Patrick—and I got this
situation under control and stepped out into the living room. I was whipped
from the trauma of parenting, and I was about to crack a well-deserved beer and
turn on the game when I felt a draft.
That’s when I saw it.
Patrick’s tail. The window as shut but I knew that tail
anywhere. I leaped up and snatched the monkey, knowing I’d just seen him in bed
before lights out.
He was cold in my hand. I looked to the hallway, then back
to the monkey. Something swatted my hand away. “What the hell you think you’re
doing?”
I’m pretty sure I screamed. Okay so I screamed, but Patrick
was talking, with an Irish accent no less.
“Hey,” he whistled. “You don’t want to get involved. Let me
go, okay?”
I rubbed my eyes and he was still there. “Let you go,
where?”
“Anywhere,” he said, wiping at his cheek. Maybe it was
remnants of today’s mishap, but he was trembling, terrified. This monkey had
been to hell and back. “This gig, it’s too much. I need to bail.”
“Bail?”
“You gonna sit here and repeat everything I say?”
“No, I just…”
“I can’t do it. Look at me. I used to have fur, this coat
with a sheen to it. I played a lullaby and my smile drove the girls crazy. I
was the only male monkey on the shelf. Then that lunatic son of yours comes
along.”
“He’s hardly a luna—”
“Look at me!”
I did. I saw his matted fur and deranged eyes. His tail
hanging to the floor like an old rope. Today’s chemical bath hadn’t done him
any favors, and that smile he spoke of was torn clean off at the edges.
“You see now?”
“Well,” I shrugged.
“Pull my tail.”
The sounds warbled out of a box that was visible through his
threadbare skin and lost stuffing. The song was drunk, but the monkey thirsty.
“Now go pour that drink.”
I started to get up. “Beer?”
“Bourbon.”
We set up at the table. Patrick drank bourbon like a champ.
He wiped his face and began the story of how he was assembled in Mexico by a
woman with strong hands and few teeth. How he came across the border on a box
truck with a bobble doll named Sheila. “Sheila,” he said, his faded eyes
mustering a glow. “She was something, kid. Really something.”
“Mexico?”
“Born and raised, Chico,” he said, knocking back another
shot.
“But the name, the accent, the,,,"
“Drinking? Is that what you want to say? Try soaking up a
few pounds of drool, get dropped in the toilet, see what it does for your
sobriety, okay?”
“Okay, Patrick.”
“Okay, he mimicked. “And the dogs. Jesus, that pooch took my
ear off.”
“We sewed it back on, Patrick.”
He set out his glass. I filled it to the top.
---
We talked it out. Patrick and I are all
right these days. I look out for the guy. Bought a cute female monkey for my
son. We look our for each other. Patrick tells me all the silly things my son
said or did. And every now and then when the house is quiet we share a drink at
the table.
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