she got out— like his pee’s showing on his pants. We’d go to

these meetings late at night. These guys would be there; they

were famous revolutionaries, famous to their time and place,

criminals according to the law; brilliant, shrewd, tough guys,

detached, with formal politeness to me. One was a junkie, a

flamboyant junkie with long, silken, rolling brown curls,

great pools o f sadness in his moist eyes, small and elegant, a

beauty, soft-spoken, always nodding out or so sick and

wretched that he’d be throwing up a few times a night and

they’d expect me to clean it up and I w ouldn’t, I’d just sit there

waiting for the next thing we were all going to discuss, and

someone would eventually look me in the eye, a rare event,

and say meaningfully, “ he just threw u p , ” and time would

pass and I’d wait and eventually someone would start talking

about something; I didn’t get how the junkie was more real

than me or how his vomit was mine, you know. When the

junkie’d come to where we lived he would vom it and sort o f

challenge me to leave it there, as he had fouled m y very own

nest, and he’d ask for a cup o f tea and I’d clean it up but I

w ouldn’t get him the tea and I tried to convey to my husband

that m y hospitality was being abused, our hospitality, o f

course, that I wasn’t being treated fair, not that some rule was

being broke but that the boy was being rude to me; I told my

husband to clean it up finally but he never did it too good. I

told m y husband who I still thought was m y brother that I

didn’t want the junkie to come anymore because he didn’t

treat me in an honorable w ay and I said I wasn’t born for this.

So there were these fissures coming between us because the

fraternal affection was with him and the junkie from the old

days together, not him and me from now, and I was shocked

by this, I couldn’t grasp it. I went into the rooms with him but

it came down on him how bad it was from the men and it came

down on me that I wasn’t supposed to be anywhere near

where they were. I kept going to the rooms because we kept

hitting targets all over the city and w e’d need to get o ff the

streets fast and he’d know some place he wanted to be, one

friend or another, and they’d all be there; it would contradict

the plan but he’d say it was necessary. Some were on the run

for recent crimes but most were burned out, living in times

past, not fighting no more, most stopped long ago and far

away and they were just burned out to hell. Yeah, they were

tired, I respected that; I mean, I fucking loved these heroes; I

knew they were tired, tired from living on their nerves, from

hiding, from jail, from smoke, from fucking, which came first

for some but last for others. Some had children they had

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