This is when the day begins to go downhill, ultimately to meet it’s terminus in a surreal, comical sort of hell.
It begins when Marjie, one of the managers, comes back to the stock room to ask me if l want to kick someone out of the dining room. The frustrated sigh that erupts from me is involuntary. Save for rare, repeat, bat-shit crazy offenders like the Cave Man or the Alien Chicken Guy, kicking people out is always an awkward ordeal and I inevitably end up feeling like a total fucking asshole.
Can I, like, not?
Some new guy from the kitchen, though, his eyes light up like a pair of goddamn supernovas as he overhears our conversation and asks — all-too-eagerly, it seems to me — if he can do it. Marjie then gives the go-ahead, and boy, am I relieved, but I decide to observe nonetheless, just in case he needs back-up.
I’m not that much of a pussy, after all.
Evidently they’d kicked this homeless guy out twice during the morning shift, and now he’s back, laying down in one of the booths, lost in slumber.
From a distance, I watch as the new guy talks to him, from what I can tell in a kindly manner, and while the homeless guy takes his merry fucking time, he was reportedly polite about it. As he finally gets up and approaches the door, however, he suddenly locks eyes with one of my many coworkers behind the counter and wishes them — and them in particular; no one else — a good day, and then turns to leave.
Is there, perhaps, a backstory here that we’re all unaware of?
Motherfucking nope.
Judging from the vibe and body language of the particular coworker he targeted these seemingly kind words to, he is as confused as the rest of us as to why he was singled out.
An hour or two later, the tall, slender, bushy-bearded vagabond returns, and immediately starts exhibiting some utterly bizarre behavior.
He picks up one of the wet floor signs in the pathway along the booths and walks it up to the shelves where we place the Doordash orders, leaning it up against the wall. After that, he picks one of the empty brown trays up off of one of the tables and places it on one of the Doordash shelves.
But wait: that’s not all.
Then he moves towards the counter, where we have multiple stacks of those plastic, numbered tent signs we use for dining room orders, and he proceeds to rearrange them.
I hide around the corner, out of his sight, and stare intensely at Marjie until we meet eyes, and then point with dagger pupils towards the counter, returning to her own pupils for emphasis.
This? This works.
Approaching the counter, she politely says, all the while calling him “honey” in that sweet way, that if he doesn’t order something, well, honey, she’s sorry, but he needs to leave.
That’s all that I catch, though she subsequently informs me that he was rearranging the tent signs because “things like that bothered him.”
Ladies and gentlemen, it appears that we have ourselves an obsessive-compulsive vagrant on our hands.
Interesting, to say the least.
As I go on about my work duties, I can’t help but imagine what special type of personal hell it must be to be a homeless obsessive-compulsive, at least judging from the traditional depictions.
Washing hands. Locking doors. Creating and sustaining some semblance of strict, preordained order. Squeaky-clean sanitization. Perfectionism to a tee despite living on the streets.
Anal-retentive conscientiousness in tandem with the contrary conditions inherent in homelessness.
Sweet mother of fuck.
The notion of being plagued with this mental disorder coupled with his apparent circumstances, it sends me into an endless rabbit hole of utter horror. Visions of a prison of endless, self-inflicted, hypnotically-compelled torture.
By the time I make my way back out to the dining room to sweep and wipe down tables, however, he’s seemingly gone.
As I proceed to clean, I see a purse sitting on one of the seats at the tables. You’d be amazed what people leave at a fast food restaurant — phones, wallets, laptops, bicycles, a single shoe, plush animals, a full diaper forcibly wedged between the seats — so a purse isn’t out of the question.
There is one woman in the dining room, and she’s waiting at counter, and when I ask her if the purse is hers and she responds in the negative, I take it behind the counter, placed it in the storage area beneath the register, and tell Marjie what and where it is in case anyone comes looking.
You’d also be surprised how often no one comes looking, even when the item is seemingly important. Yeah, in such cases that might suggest it’s been stolen then abandoned, or at least you’d think so if we happened to live in a universe that operated in accordance with logic.
Unfortunately, we live in this one.
So anyway, I go on about my other work duties. In passing, Porky, a coworker, tells me that it belongs to the homeless guy, and I initially respond with a tilted head, quizzical look, and lifted brow.
“You mean the purse?”
“Yeah,” he confirms. “He was carrying it with him when he came in.”
I immediately flash back to the movie The Hangover, where they tease Zach Galifianakis’ character for having what they refer to as a purse, though he’s adamant it’s a sachel.
This, though? This is a purse.
The homeless guy is seemingly absent from the dining room after my smoke, though, so there’s shit I can do about it, so work continues.
At some point I’m coming in the doors from outside, on my way to do something, when I see the homeless guy in the dining room, clearly looking for his purse. He’s apparently even acquired help from some random customer to assist in the search.
And yes.
Yes, I could stop and inform them that it’s behind the counter, explain to them why it’s there. And yes, later I’ll feel incredibly guilty for not having done so, but I feel confident that they’ll eventually come to the counter and ask if anyone brought it there, okay?
And as I said, I’m in the middle of something.
So now I’m on break, sitting in the truck, trying to read a book as I sip from my java and chain-smoke cigarettes, when I can’t help but hear some girl just beyond some cars to my left, by the side door, sitting on her bicycle and talking on her phone.
The voice, the vibe, it all conveys that she’s one of those bouncy, energetic people that are so open, honest, and unfiltered — of such a wild, innocent, and carefree spirit — that one can’t help but be attracted to them, even if that energy swiftly becomes unbearably overwhelming, at least for types such as myself.
In any case, she’s grabbed my attention.
After break, I’m changing trash in the dining room when I notice that Free Spirit and the OCD Vagabond are sharing the booth right by the side door. On the table, amidst food and drinks, are two purses. One of them is a purse made entirely of transparent plastic; the other, well, it’s the purse I put behind the counter earlier.
The fact he got it back strangely put me at ease. The job is done. All has been put right. I could have made it easier, sure, but forgive me. I’m off the fucking hook.
After I gather all the trash and take it out to the dumpster, I do some dishes and decide to clean the dining room again. As I wipe down the second booth from the door, the Free Spirit at the first booth is talking with OCD Vagabond about exchanging purses. He temporarily gets up and walks away from the table, however, so, lacking any other target, she turns her energy towards me.
She likes her transparent purse because she used to date this guy who shoplifted, she tells me — he’s gone now, she assures me — and she’d gone into this store one day and on her way out, the alarms had gone off. Though they didn’t search her, it made her nervous and self-conscious, so she’d dumped out all the contents, purged her purse.
This see-through purse? She likes it because at a single glance they can tell she hasn’t stolen anything.
Judging from this, I surmise, her purse serves as an accurate reflection of her clearly transparent soul. However envious in a way, the thought of being like her, given the truly alien nature of my own soul, delivers unto me spasms of utter terror.
Some of us, my dear, are better left opaque.
Later, out the front door, I’m speaking with Porky when I reference the OCD Vagabond sitting with “that cute girl.”
His eyes bulge in alarm.
“Don’t,” he says, and when I ask him why, he only says that “she’s a crackhead,” though he never details how he came upon this information.
I’m inclined to believe this is just the nature of her personality, but I confess this is due to my naive reaction to the coupling of how she acts and how she looks, and how she looks physically, at the very least, does not at all resonate with the appearance of those that I’ve encountered in this town who were clearly on some sort of speed.
Maybe he was prejudging.
Maybe he was right, and she was just a newbie, and I, ever-shallow and shamefully superficial, was just failing to accurately judge her based on her presently pristine physical appearance.
I didn’t question him further on the matter, so fucked if I know. Figuratively-speaking, of course.
Which brings me to what I impulsively and under some consideration still choose to interpret as a compliment. His reactionary response of “don’t,” the broader context of which I confirmed in the course of our conversation, went far beyond merely suggesting that I’d have a chance with this girl.
I’m honestly delighted that he so confidently overestimates my capacity to get laid.
If only, dude.
This was undoubtedly the highlight of what turned out to be an incredibly surreal evening.
Later, as I’m smoking out front again, the OCD Vagabond appears out of the ether, approaches me, and asks if he can pay me fifty cents for a cigarette. With him being this close, I can feel his present vibe, and he seems forlorn and contemplative. I take out a smoke from my pack and tell him he can just take it, but he hands me the fifty cents anyway.
“I’ve been to jail a few times,” he says, after lighting it up. “I’m trying to help people out.”
The vibe I sense from him in this moment, how he says it, all of it is in total congruence. He seems not only forlorn and contemplative, but sincere. Nothing about him or what he says strikes me as threatening, dangerous, bat-shit crazy or worrisome, and the last line struck me as stemming from the heart of true empathy.
He walks away after that, and I’m left stunned, honestly, and feeling rather guilty. Feeling as though I’d prejudged him from the dawn of my shift.
All throughout this shift, I’ve been thinking about how all my years of working in this town has changed me from this open, trusting, naive, and broadband empathic asshole into this suspicious, judgemental, jaded and cynical asshole determined not be manipulated, exploited, used and abused as I have been in the past, and that however depressing that shit might have been, and however nostalgic I am for who I once was, this is simply the process of embracing realism through accepting and adapting to the way the world truly is rather than hanging on to your insipid, idealized notions of the way you perhaps selfishly think it should be.
Now I start thinking to myself, maybe I really have just become a prejudgemental asshole. Maybe it really is that simple.
Then it happens.
It’s probably twenty minutes to ten in the evening now, and just as I’m finishing up mopping the dining room and on my way out for a smoke, I see him at the door.
The OCD Vagabond.
This tall, bushy-bearded, clearly obsessive-compulsive homeless guy we kicked out earlier — who apparently carries around a purse with him.
No, not a satchel. A purse.
He tries the door, finds it locked, and a moment later I step out and tell him that we close inside at nine. Arby’s is still open, though, and they at least used to take walk-ups in the drive-thru.
He’d paid me fifty cents for a cigarette earlier despite my protests, as I mentioned, so when he asks me for a smoke again, I just give him one. Then he asks for a lighter. After he hands it back, he walks around the corner, and I begin to sink into my thoughts, as I tend to do.
Then I’m jolted out of my head when he asks me a question, and while I’m sure I heard him right, at the same time I had to have misheard him. Nothing else makes sense.
“What?” I ask.
“Are you Brad Pitt?”
I’m looking for signs he’s joking. A smile, a twinkle in the eyes. Nothing.
“No,” I say with a little laugh and, to set him up for what I hope is a punchline, I then ask, after a pause for dramatic effect, “Why?”
“Somebody told me he wanted to lick my balls,” he says. “I was gonna be, like, ‘I’m not gay, dude.'”
Then he mumbles to himself as he walks across the street to Arby’s.
So it was a satchel after all. Got it.
Honestly, sometimes this town is like a fucking fever dream, I swear.