Winter comes to Ottawa, Ontario. Just another day for me. I look out the window from my apartment in the neighborhood of Vanier, right across from the Park. There's snow everywhere. Hard to believe that it was bitterly cold yet dazzlingly bright yesterday. I get up, and walk from the kitchen to make myself a cup of coffee. Another year has gone by, and I'm still no closer to mastering the Curse, and to be honest I don't really give a damn. Too much has happened since my life was irrevocably changed. I sip my coffee, and turn on my laptop. I browse through Yahoo news, followed by MSN and finally Facebook. The Ottawa Senators professional hockey team are having a lousy season after a promising start by the young bucks they recently hired. CNN is still going on about the surprising aftermath of the European-supported Arab Spring and the suddenly dimmer prospects for democracy, women's rights and secular leadership in the Middle East. Fox News still rages on and on about Obama, Hermann McCain and Texas Governor Rick Perry. Oh, and an asteroid narrowly missed the earth. I kind of wished it hadn't. Maybe I would have been freed from the Curse. Maybe. Welcome to my life.
I open my fridge and look inside. It's basically empty because I haven't been to Lob Laws Supermarket in ages. My stomach grumbles, and I grab some frozen meat. I let it thaw in a frying pan on the stove for five minutes, then I eat it raw. Six pounds of raw goat meat. Yet it barely holds my hunger in check. What a surprise. I make a note to myself to actually get off my ass and buy some groceries, then I walk to the washroom. I step into the shower, and warm water cascades all over me. I stay inside for ten minutes, then I step out. I choose my clothes for the day. Bright red silk shirt, Black silk pants and Black Timberland boots. All underneath a long Black hooded overcoat with the logo Bench on it. I grab my book bag, and walk to the bus stop down Donald Street. I'm catching the number eighteen OC Transpo Bus to Hurdman Station, and from there I'll take the number four to Carleton University. I've got a psych quiz that I so didn't prepare for but whatever.
I walk through campus, making my way toward the University Center. I need a new picture ID taken. It's going to cost me but I've got no choice. I lost my ID, along with everything else I had on me the last time I died. All week I've been going to various institutions to restore what I call the essentials. The Royal Bank of Canada is sending me a new debit card and a new credit card. Service Canada is sending me a new health card. Since I never bothered getting a driver's licence, I'm basically okay. The motor vehicles department asks way too many questions when you lose your licence by accident, according to what I hear people say. I don't need the hassle. I fork over twenty bucks to pay for the Carleton University Student ID card. I look at the picture. It's the same one I took two years ago, before the Curse. The guy at the office is trying to get my attention. Mr. Anderson Pierrot, he says, have a pleasant day. I realize that I've been staring at my own picture ID without budging after picking it up. People behind me are anxious to take care of their business and I need to move on. I smile coldly and walk away. Sometimes I have these zone-outs. They've been happening a lot lately. Can't be helped.
I put the ID in my wallet and walk briskly to class. It's not exactly sunny today but the sun always pains me. I don't know why. So I always use the extensive tunnel system which connects all the various buildings of the school in a vast underground network. Hundreds of students use these tunnels every day. It's like the subway, but on foot. Everybody uses it on campus. A Somali gal wearing a hijab giggles and shares a quick kiss on the lips with a Hindu gal dressed in shiny Black leather. A tall White chick bumps into me, and I shoot her a dark look. I don't like being bumped into. She didn't notice me because a dreadlocked Black guy was nuzzling on her ear. And a plump, spiky-haired Asian chick bumped into a towering White guy whom she was walking with because she was too busy looking at the couple whose female half bumped into me. I'm suddenly really glad we're all walking and not driving. Ah, the foolishness of everyday humanity. These are my fellow students, my so-called peers. My definition of normal. Eat your heart out.
I sit through my psychology class, and it goes by surprisingly fast. The professor is a short-haired lady with a Spanish accent. The kind of instructor who drones and on but what can you expect? It's a lecture class. I grin and bear it, and exit exactly sixty six minutes after I sat down. I suddenly realize there are worse things than being half dead, and sitting through this torture hall ( oops, I meant lecture hall ) is one of them. I sometimes wonder what I was doing when my life went to hell. I try not to think about the Thing, but it often creeps up into my consciousness. Can't be avoided. It could be argued that I brought this on myself. I don't believe that. While I certainly had a hand in the events that led to turn me into...this, I certainly didn't choose. Maybe we chose each other, who knows?
Two years ago I had life on a string. I was living in Boston, Massachusetts, with my parents, Louisa and Toussaint Pierrot. My folks are immigrants from the Caribbean island of Haiti, but I was born in America. Dad is a police officer and mom is a librarian. Nice people. Sometimes I wondered how such innocuous people produced someone like me. Anyway, I was studying Criminal Justice at Bay State College, a quaint little party school located in downtown Boston. I had way too much during my first year and ended up in a wee bit of trouble. It involved a frat party, a lot of liquor, a big-booty chick named Stacey and some Irish cops with no sense of humor. I don't think the situation was that bad, but my parents freaked out. They sent me to my uncle and aunt's spot in Ottawa, Ontario, the most boring place in the universe, supposedly to straighten me out. Thus I transferred from my beloved Bay State College in Boston to Ottawa's very own Carleton University. My parents sent me to stay with my uncle Sylvestre Alexandre, my mother's older brother, and his Irish-born wife Diane O'Leary. I was not a happy camper. I had trouble adjusting to life in boring little Ottawa after living in lively Boston my whole life. Luckily, my cousin Sean was quite the party guy and he showed me a good time in Toronto.
Man, as an American living in Canada, I feel that Toronto should be the Canadian capital but the Canadians disagree. Sean and I hit all the cool clubs, and met all kinds of hot ladies. They got all the flavors of womankind in Toronto. Black women. White women. Asian women. Hispanic women. Arab women. And I wanted to sample them all. Too bad Sean hooked me up with Atiyah Abdul-Ghafur. A six-foot-tall, raven-haired, bronze-skinned and absolutely statuesque young woman from the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. I was mesmerized by this Arabian beauty. The Muslim women I encountered in Canada were usually quiet, conservatively dressed and soft-spoken. I never really paid much attention to them because I figured they were deeply conservative and followed the rules of their religion to a T. I had certainly never heard of an Arab woman who liked Black guys and didn't hide it. Well, Atiyah was into the brothers and made no bones about it. This chick liked to get her party on, she drank a lot, and she danced like a grade-A stripper. She was a far cry from the hijab-wearing, quiet Muslim ladies I ran into all the time in Ottawa. How could I say no to her?
Atiyah and I had our fun together. This chick was freaky, man. How many chicks do you know would follow you into the men's washroom and suck your dick in the frigging stall? Yeah, Atiyah was that kind of wild woman. And she could suck a mean dick. The fact that my eight-inch, Haitian-American rod was uncircumcised didn't seem to bother her. I hit that ass for the first time in the club washroom, just bent her over and stuffed her like a thanksgiving turkey. I made her scream and squeal, and we both loved every minute of it. Atiyah led me into a wild world my first summer in Toronto, man. She slipped me this pill one night and told me it was unlike anything I'd ever tried before. I took it, and it was everything she said and more. The first time I tried it...I swear it slowed down my heart, yet made me feel more alive than ever before. I had to have more of it. I begged Atiyah for more, and eventually she introduced me to her dealer, a chubby White dude named Hank. As it turns out, Hank wasn't the source of the drug. He used to work as a security guard for this lab in the outskirts of Toronto and he stole a handful of their pills, which he sold himself.