Act 1, Chapter 3
You kids today with your cellphones, you have no idea what it was like back in the 90s. You're always
accessible
, but back in the day, when we went out for the night, if your friends didn't know when and where you were going to be, their chances of finding you at some point along the way were next to zero, especially in a college town with a few dozen bars. Sure, occasionally your friends would be determined in enough that they would forgo the drinking until they met up with you, but most of the time?
Nah.
If you were late meeting up with your friends, and they left without you, you had to decide which was more important -- meeting up with them, or getting a good start on drinking. And, worse still, if you were like me and habitually five to ten minutes late to your friends' places, the decision was inevitably made
for
you some nights.
Saint Patrick's Day? Yeah, they weren't waiting for
shit
.
I know you're young, and you think you kids go pretty hard at Saint Patrick's Day, but let me tell you, in the 90s, in a college town, it was its own little Bacchanalia, with shitfaced twenty-somethings as far as the eye could see. For that one night, the bouncers at the bars mysteriously got worse eyesight, and the cops generally looked the other way for a bit, as long as you weren't
too
out of control.
(The gold standard of "too out of control" was set by Tommy Malloy, who, I shit you not, somehow managed to get his car stuck up in a
tree
. In
Iowa.
I can imagine how you'd do it somewhere hilly like Colorado or Canada, but
Iowa
? I mean, Jesus, we're
still
trying to figure how the fuck he managed to get it that far off the ground with enough speed to wedge it into the tree, but not
enough
speed to take the tree
down
. That's some next-level drunken buffoonery there. And he was
unharmed!
I mean, talk about your shit things to be epic at.)
By the time I got over to Lee and Billy's rented house, they'd already left, and I was basically fucked in terms of trying to track them down, so I decided to do the best possible thing I could think of. I drove back over to campus, parked my car and then walked towards the bar district, looking for the first place that looked like it was having a good enough party for me to start my evening.
I purposefully steered clear of Greek row, just because I knew enough about the fraternity and sorority culture to know that I wanted no part of it. The merciless winter we'd just come through had given way to a particularly gentle spring, and so a bunch of the fratheads were running around campus without their shirts on, or with button up shirts that they let go mostly unbuttoned. I even heard some doofus telling ladies they were invited to "the gun show!" And while the idea of half-dressed sorority chicks was appealing, I knew who they'd be keeping company with, and the last thing I wanted was some dude named Chad trying to pick a fight with me because I wasn't one of his bros.
The reason I was on foot was that... well, it's hard to explain to you kids these days, but the enforcement of drunk driving laws has been ramping up consistently since the early nineties, but in the late nineties, it was still pretty hit and miss, and you had to be
really
swerving all over the place for the cops to pull you over on Saint Patrick's Day in the Midwest.
(Thank god I wasn't in school when my sister Abby was, because drunk driving was a goddamn epidemic back then. There's a comedian named Bill Hicks who joked around that in the late eighties, if you got pulled over for drunk driving, it would go like this: The cop walks up to the car and says, "Son, you been drinkin'?" "Yeah?" "Whoops! Sorry to bother you! Didn't mean to bring your buzz down! Let's go, Billy, it's just a drunk behind the wheel of an automobile! Bye bye!" Abby told me he wasn't really exaggerating that much, and that frightened the
shit
out of me.)
Walking also let me scope out some of the house parties along the way, and while I wasn't personally invited to any of them, back then, that wasn't much of an issue. It was a
guideline
that you should be invited to parties you showed up at, but it wasn't a hard and fast
rule
as long as you were charming enough. In fact, there was even a subsection of kids who just enjoyed drifting between parties they weren't invited to, seeing how long they could hang out before they got caught, if they even did. I wasn't one of those kinds of kids, but I'd met a fair share of them along the way.
I was about half way to the bars when I was passing by a house that had quite the party going on, and the stereo was blasting the Bodeans at maximum volume, so I guessed that it was going to either get shut down soon or they were going to have to turn the music down. It looked like there were thirty or forty people in or around the house, and my first thought was that maybe I should try and be a party crasher, see if I could just slip in among the crowd and pretend that I knew somebody there, or that I'd been brought along by a friend who'd just abandoned me.
As I considered my options, a gorgeous blonde girl in a green tanktop with a gray blazer on over it stormed out of the house, walking towards the front yard, leaning her back against the big tree there, holding one of her hands up to her face, clearly upset and shaken. Her other hand held a can of Pabst Blue Ribbon in it, but she was gripping it tightly enough that the can had crinkled a little under the force of her fingers. She wasn't crying, but she seemed on the verge of it, her breath sharp and deliberately paced, like she was doing her best to keep from breaking down.