JOHN The cops looked at me like I was nuts "No, really" I said "he wants to go to detox. I called the Mobile Assistance van. It's coming." The cops looked at me not only like I was nuts but a traitor as well, faintly distasteful, as if I had declared myself a Red to a hall full of Republicans Then all the cops looked at their shoes and I said: "He'll be fine. I'll wait with him." So they moved on, let him lay there blacked out on the floor of the bus station where I work as a security guard. John was a Greyhound regular. We had gotten acquainted night after night, he told me about himself: hailed from Champagne, Illinois Used to train bird dogs in Mississippi and Louisiana Had a daughter, Mary Beth, down in Florida who told him: "Daddy, I know you're drinking yourself to death. Why don't you at least come home down here to do yourself in with the family who loves you. Please come home You've never seen your grandchild" "But she knows I won't do that," he'd smile with bitter pride, his blue eyes hard set in a sideways look "She knows her daddy too well. I'd never go down there in the shape I'm in I'd never let them see me like this" and I couldn't really blame him He was a mess Tonight he stumbled up to my post showed me a pint of vodka, gulped down about half, sank to the ground next to the turnstiles and groaned: "Take me to detox! I can't do this anymore. I'm too old for this shit" and I guess he meant for laying down in his own filth on bus station floors getting booted out by cold cops and, gently, I agreed: "You're too nice a feller, John. You deserve better" and could tell by a faint glimmer in his eyes that he thought so too So I called the MAP van got a tape recording, left a message: "This is Security Officer in the Greyhound bus depot; I've got a man down here name of John who wants detox. We're by the turnstiles Please come" "Did'ja call? Are they comin?" he drawled, stirring on the ground "On their way, John" I smiled And the wait began By now, my shift had ended and it was late Foot patrols of cops shuffled by in twos, saw him on the ground and barked "Front and center, John! On your feet!" and I called out sadly, not to antagonize "We're still waiting for that van, officers" and they smiled stiffly and sized me up and found me strange and every twenty minutes or so just to reassure him, I called the tape machine and left my message in a loud voice The minutes ticked past and John dozed and woke and I kept thinking all the while of his daughter Mary Beth, of her child whom John had never seen and of how strangely miraculous life is, me a non-relation with her daddy lying dead drunk and close to death at my feet and she in her home somewhere in Florida aching to see her father and for him to see her baby and not even know that all this was going on that the love in her heart had set all this into motion among men, strangers to each other many thousands of miles away After an hour I began to fret knowing how drunks are apt to change their minds at the snap of fingers and I'd say "John, hold on They're coming" and he'd say "I'm a man of my word. I said I'm quittin and I'm quittin Besides, I'm too good a person to die like this. Right?" And grinned and I winked "That's right" and could tell that he was holding tight to my regard for him, and to the love of Mary Beth sometimes that's all it needs to divert a soul from destruction the love of a child the esteem of a neighbor but to complicate matters the relief on my shift came by to gripe about some pay check problem he was having, and he kept tugging at John's jacket, and prodding him with his toe to get up and nothing I'd say stopped him and I thought John'd stumble to his feet, stagger off into the night but he only came to, stood up walked ten feet over to the pay phones on the wall and laid down, and he said "I told you, I'm a man of my word. I said I'm going and I'm going. I want to see Mary Beth for it's too late" and took out his vodka bottle "This stuff's killing me. I'm gonna finish it off before it finishes me off" and he finished it off, down his throat, with a great shudder that passed up and down his body dimming his blue eyes I kept the pressure on. Every ten minutes left a message Time crawled through the station a lazy snake. And a crazy old man with a wax cup gripped in his hand spun in slow circles by the ticket agent's empty booth John watched me through the one-way mirrors of his eyes the blue magnifying his hurt - he was all wounded inside his scabrous skin - and to their glassiness clung a fragile film of hope that a fly's feet could have torn- at one point, he seemed to sink like a boy drowning in a pond, so I calmly reached down with a smile, pulled him up said : "I've got a feeling Stay here, with me. Help is coming" and he croaked "You're good…good man My friend. I wanna go Can't take this…no more" And sick, rolled on his side and passed out And another half hour blacked out John whimpered, coughed the turning man turned I didn't think they'd show when a brawny guy with a shaved head boomed: "You called us?" I sure as hell had! "Man, O man, I'm glad you came. Here's John right here" The man knew him Reached down with his big hand grabbed a bunch of filth tugged and shouted "You want detox you gotta get on your feet You gotta help. Otherwise, you stay!" John made an amazing effort "He's not trying" the MAP man growled "John! Remember what I said People love you John. You're a good man John. You gotta find your legs!" And John found them Enough that we could drag him with a long long string of drool hanging from his chin up the escalator to the van, where we laid him out in back like a rug, and John smiled up at me framed by a windshield filled with streetlights and said: "Thank you" and what could I say? I put my arms around him. "Goodbye my friend. Goodbye. Good luck. I love you, guy" and the MAP man said "John, we're gonna let you sleep six hours and then give you a bowl of soup and then you sit in a chair Right?" "O.K." said John The van doors slammed The rooflight spun and pulled away The city wept Peace to you, my brother I hope you are rescued I see you on your way to Mary Beth, on a bus proud and scared of your hope and best of all, you don't even remember my name