The Mugging
By cari || July 24, 2000
“It happened so quickly: the choke hold, his heart pounding, the feeling of unreality. Still, if he was objectively watching the events unfolding, he was also subjectively terrified.”
The insomniac overslept today.
He awakes at ten both irritated to be making such a late start, with so much that he wants to do today, and relieved that he had slept so soundly, with little to no work on his part.
“This must be how normal people feel”, he says to himself while brushing his teeth, “You decide to go to bed, you close your eyes, and bam! you’re asleep”. How simple and easy it is for those other people. They do not wander around their rooms at night, exhausted. Their brains do not buzz incessantly at some fever-pitch level.
On any given night, he can barely quiet himself enough to lie down. There is no difference between a buzzing brain in a body that is lying down versus a body that is standing. Sometimes he would lie down to rest his back or eyes, but inevitably he would get up again. Of course, this late night wakefulness was taking its toll on him physically.
He felt that despite his conscious state, his physical exhaustion prevented him from actually making good use of the time thrust upon him. His mind would hum unproductively, like a motor idling. Random thoughts and anxieties would pass through, like that line-up at the police station.
He had been mugged two weeks ago by four men, while walking around his neighborhood late at night. He supposed that he had asked for it, being out at that hour, but does anyone ever really ask for it?
The block he lived on straddled the line between a fairly affluent neighborhood and a not-so-affluent one. Well, the projects. It was the arrival of affluence that attracted these ne’er-do-well types. He himself was far from affluent. But the influx of money to an unaccustomed neighborhood can be a shock to its system. Blame Metropolis, its skyrocketing rent had been pushing everyone into the outer boroughs for years.
One of the men had him in a choke hold. It happened so quickly that he didn’t see his face. At first he thought it was a friend playing a joke, grabbing him like that. But when he saw the other three, it was suddenly no joke. Certainly no one was laughing. He felt half numb, already overtired and now full of adrenaline. He felt his mind disassociating itself, like his head had detached and was now floating around his body, watching objectively while simultaneously averting its eyes.
This instant of unreality is common in a moment of crisis, our minds cannot touch the actual happening. We distinctly remember the second before and the second after, but the event itself remains hazy to us. Our minds cannot be wrapped around such things, the car crashing, the bridge collapsing. Instead it holds onto the shell encasing the Terrible Moment.
It happened so quickly: the choke hold, his heart pounding, the feeling of unreality. Still, if he was objectively watching the events unfolding, he was also subjectively terrified.
One of them had a knife. First they wanted his bag, the strap was wrapped around him messenger-style. Then they changed their collective minds and wanted only his wallet. Aware that he was in no position to make requests, he still mustered the nerve to ask that they just take his cash and credit cards, but leave him his driver’s license and photos.
This was his floating head talking now. He himself, concerned for his welfare, would never, ever deign to ask a mugger to pick and choose. After all, “mugger” and “murderer” starts with the same letters, the difference is only what comes after. These men already had an obvious disregard for morality, as evidenced by the choke hold and the knife to the ribs, as evidenced by them prowling around at 3 in the morning, demanding things of him. At that hour, it’s a hair-thin line between theft and death, and he wasn’t about to push them over it. But his head was doing the talking.
His head, which was supposed to be protecting him, but was not currently attached to his body somehow, and was therefore not overly concerned about it, had chosen a bizarre time to be both ultra-pragmatic (thinking about the long lines at the DMV to replace the license) and shamefully sentimental (thinking of the irreplaceable photos and phone numbers). The rest of him, his body and soul, protested loudly: long lines at the DMV?!?! Try long lines at the morgue, dumbass!
The muggers, being pragmatists themselves apparently, acquiesced and took only his cash ($83) and credit cards (maxed out). Although he had cooperated in full, with the minor exception of his head being picky, they couldn’t just let him go and run away, they had to kick him several times in the gut for good measure. Perhaps so they could walk away at the leisurely pace that they did.
Let it be said that these were some efficient, thorough, and practical thieves. They did not go about their business half-assed.
The whole proceeding took all of five minutes, beating included. He went straight home and called the police. They promised to send someone so he could make a full report. Three hours later, a police officer arrived to argue that he had not been “mugged”, but had rather been “attacked”. He was about to tell the officer that he was in no mood to argue semantics, but the latter was already ushering him into a squad car and they were on their way to the 98th precinct to look at mug shots.
One week later, he took a day off from his shitty job to stand behind a two-way mirror, like he’d seen in movies. He quickly identified one of the men as One of The Men.
There was a young German woman present. Kind of pretty. She had been attacked three weeks before him. She spoke very little English and kept asking the officer to please be repeating his question. Several times she was overheard saying, “Ich weiss nicht!” Poor girl, she looked like an exchange student. Welcome to America, fraulein!
He and the woman had gone past the mirror separately, had in fact been forbidden to speak until after they had both signed some kind of paper. There is something tantalizing about the forbidden. He didn’t speak to her, but shot her some sympathetic glances when he could. One of the officers frowned upon that, as she seemed to feel that this non-verbal communication might be some secret signal. And god forbid that this German girl’s testimony should be tainted by his lasciviousness.
One of the questions on the paper they had to sign was, “Where did you see this person?” In the space provided he wrote, “I saw this person while his friend was holding a knife to my ribs, and then again as he was kicking me in the gut.” He asked the officer present if that question was really necessary. The officer gave a half-smirk and said, “It’s a formality”.
Right now, he is looking in the mirror at the faint bruises on his stomach. At the time of his “attack” (and not “mugging”), the idea of fighting back had not even occurred to him, even if he hadn’t been a scrawny white guy with glasses. Even if there hadn’t been four of them against one of him (plus a floating head).
He was still angry with his head for endangering them with its stupid request. It was his head’s fault that he’d been out that night anyway, buzzing and restless as it was.
Tonight would be different. Tonight he will try listening to NPR, drinking herbal tea, taking a hot bath, and every other sleep-inducing thing he’d ever heard of. And if all else fails, he’ll drug himself. Two over-the-counter pills, a nice glass of water, and the next thing you know, he’s dreaming about that German girl.
[ Topic Fiction and Snobbery, Short Fiction | No Comments ]
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