This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, merchandise, companies, events and incidents are either the products of the author's imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental. All characters in sexual situations are 18 years or older.
My life could be encapsulated in two words - frustrated journalist.
As long as I could remember I'd always wanted to be a newspaper reporter. Writing feature stories for the New York Times, Sunday edition. The Holy Grail. I pictured myself with thousands of followers on social media and maybe an occasional appearance on a national news show, to be questioned by a high-profile anchor. I often looked in the mirror, putting on my glasses for a more scholarly look (I usually wear contacts), and took my beyond shoulder length dirty blonde hair and put it up in a French twist, pretending to be interviewed about my latest investigative piece. It was as close as I'd gotten to the real thing.
I was editor-in-chief of my high school newspaper in Green Bay, Wisconsin, and then with good grades and a glowing recommendation from my journalism teacher, I attended Northwestern University and secured my ticket to fame - a B.A. in journalism. Everybody warned me that there might not be a job waiting for me when I graduated, so I followed my father's advice (the only time I can recall doing so) and minored in accounting.
I hated accounting. It was everything journalism was not. It was all numbers. It was dry. It was boring. It was impersonal. It literally sucked the creative gene right out of me. Unfortunately, it also paid the bills. And I was good at it. I ended up in New Orleans (following my now ex-girlfriend, who grew up in New Orleans - our relationship and break-up is yet another story) and found permanent employment with a regional accounting firm. I'd been there about five years, long enough to know what needed to be done to do the heavy lifting on an audit, but not long enough to earn the big bucks. It was long hours during the busy season and abject boredom the remainder of the time.
My work life pretty much ruled out a real life, so after I broke up with my girlfriend, I didn't have much of a social life, and aside from an occasional date (usually set up by one of my friends), my downtime consisted of binge watching a series on Netflix or trying to make a new recipe from the latest copy of
Cooks Illustrated
.
Don't get me wrong. I haven't surrendered my dream, just sort of put it on life support.
There's an "alternative" newspaper in New Orleans,
The New Orleans Intelligencer,
that became my second career. The grandeur of the name of the newspaper belied its modest credentials. It was a free newspaper that had a weekly circulation of about 20,000, and was based on the second floor of a warehouse located in an industrial park on the outskirts of the city. It was one step up from my high school newspaper and about four steps down from the
New York Times
.
About a year ago, I approached the editor, Benjamin Broussard, with an idea for a feature story. At that time I'd been relegated to editing other people's work, and was anxious to get an opportunity to write my own piece. As part of my accounting firm's local outreach program, I prepared tax returns free of charge for persons who couldn't afford a retail accountant. I met a number of people that lived in a homeless encampment under a freeway overpass that was not far from the newspaper's offices. I told Ben that I wanted to spend a few days in the homeless encampment to understand how they came to be homeless and what their issues were living in the encampment. I would also interview nearby local business owners.
Ben thought it a bit dangerous for me, being a woman on her own, so I recruited one of my roommates, Craig, to stay with me in my father's old hunting tent. Mind you, Craig was not my favorite person. He was available and willing, something none of my other male friends were. He was actually the roommate of someone else that we invited to live in our house (the house has six bedrooms) and he was brought in to take an empty bedroom, so I really didn't know him until he moved in.
Craig was a slob. He routinely left his dirty dishes, smelly clothes, and sophomoric comic books strewn around the house. He told me that he did something computer related (he told me, but my eyes glazed over after about fifteen seconds of his bullshit) and generally stayed in his room with the door shut. My guess is that he was either playing Call of Duty or watching internet porn with his dick in his hand. He wore clothes that looked like they came out of the Goodwill bin.
I'm a bit of a neat freak, so spending time in a tent under a freeway was not one of my top choices for a vacation, especially with Craig. But I reminded myself it was my idea, and set off with Craig, backpacks filled with food and a couple changes of clothes. At least it occurred me to buy one of those granny carts, the ones that are made with a thin wire metal frame and had a canvas bottom and sides. I loaded it with water, two books I'd been meaning to read, my sleeping bag and foam pad, a flashlight, and a bag of toiletries. Craig and I drove in my ten year old Honda Civic to the encampment, parking about a block away.
Well-scrubbed and freshly bathed, I rolled my shiny new cart to the overpass for the main highway out of town. I shaded my eyes from the bright afternoon sunlight and peered into the relative darkness of the underpass. The first thing that hit me was the smell - the noxious odors of alcohol and piss that made my eyes tear and my nose crinkle. The second thing that assaulted my senses was the noise - vehicles travelling overhead at high speeds, with the ground shaking each time a big rig drove over the concrete structure. I held my breath and ventured into, literally, a pit of despair.
Shadowy figures with sallow complexions and sunken eyes followed my every movement as I tried to find a clear patch on which to pitch our tent. Craig followed close behind me as I walked around tents arranged helter-skelter, overflowing shopping carts, and many small mounds of rotting garbage. I found only one suitable spot, and had to spend ten minutes hauling away the trash and the weeds to clear enough space for the footprint of the tent. Craig watch in amusement (he said he'd keep me company but that was after I told him that he wouldn't have to lift a finger) as I got down on my hands and knees, dirtying my jeans on the rock strewn patch of uneven ground. I was thoroughly dirty and dusty by the time I got the tent up and ready for habitation. I crawled in first and staked out the least rocky part for my foam pad and sleeping bag. Craig grumbled as he rolled out his foam pad on the rockier side of the tent. I'm sure he was questioning why he agreed to accompany me.
Like a naΓ―ve doofus (that I still am), I got out of the tent with a pad of paper, a pen, and a small stack of business cards. Homeless men and women, and even children, flocked around me. They must have sensed a rube when they saw me, a relatively well-dressed white woman (though a bit dirty), brimming with enthusiasm and likely carrying a fat wallet. Arriving first was a homeless man with two small boys. Soon, two teenage girls and an older man were standing next to me. Within a few minutes there must have been twenty people crowded around me. They mostly asked for money, which I gave it to them, and some asked for my help. I must not have been the first reporter to try this stunt. I ended up giving away most of my money and all of the business cards I had brought. The experience was a blur, and I didn't have the presence of mind to take notes or to remember a name or a face. Craig pulled his nose out of his comic book when I staggered back into the tent, frazzled, and about $200 poorer.
"How come you didn't tell me you were going to leave the tent?" he asked me, as if he were my father, which of course he isn't. That didn't sit well with me.
"I didn't want to disturb you. You were reading your
comic
book." I jabbed him where it hurt.
"