He broke my cigarette. Just like that: took it and snapped it in half and laid the two pieces on the table like it was the most natural thing in the world. Then he asked to bum another. We started talking, of course, because how do you not strike up a conversation with someone approaching you in a coffee house that way? At midnight, after closing the place out, we carried our talk outside to the cold February sidewalk. It had begun to lightly snow.
“You like tea?” he asked, looking at the sky distractedly, then wiping the moisture from his thick-framed glasses with his T-shirt.
“Black?”
“Sure. Is there another kind?”
A friendship was inevitable.
The irony now is that, as I sit here writing, I have to little to say about who Justin was as a person. He was a couple of years older than me – nineteen – and willfully eccentric. Most people who knew him might say he lived to make people laugh. If that meant exploiting his quirks, he’d do it. The way he’d argue in favor of such concepts as prohibition and socialism struck me as an extensions of that: an affectation to keep people on their toes, guessing, or perhaps merely to assert his individuality – I never knew for certain. He was also a mass of contradictions. While he espoused the glories of independence, he lived off his wealthy parents’ monthly stipend; eschewing materialistic pursuits, he spent money frivolously on novelties and gadgets. Whatever his faults, though, that carefree persona made him endless fun to be around.
There is a song by Tom Waits, one of Justin’s favorite musicians entitled, “Tango Till They’re Sore.” Starting with a shambling, drunken piano, it stumbles almost accidentally upon a tune with the addition of a trombone and double bass as Waits’ cigarettes-and-whiskey growl dredges up that after-hours ambiance. Great as the song is, the chorus still chokes me up after all these years:
Let me fall out of the window
With confetti in my hair
Deal out jacks or better
On a blanket by the stairs
I’ll tell you all my secrets
But I lie about my past
So send me off to bed forever more
It was a disservice to himself in the end, that bold façade he’d erected, for no one knew enough about him to try and help until after it was too late. Even that last-minute telephone call to a sleepy friend he’d claimed was just to meet for breakfast, not a plea for companionship in an hour of desperation. He could not have known the agony and chaos that his absence would engender – no one could – but for both our sakes I wish more than almost anything else that he had.





