“Excuse me, sir,” I say. The man on the stool looks up. “There’s a mess in the next aisle.” He looks at the wall of cans, mouth agape. I note that some of his teeth are artificial. I can tell because they are a slightly different hue than the rest. He stares at the cans as if trying to look through them.
“What kind of mess?” he asks me. I suppose this is a pertinent question.
“It’s pretty horrible. There’re boxes everywhere, and a broken jar of jelly,” I tell him.
“What happened?” he asks me. He’s just full of questions.
“A man and a woman got into a fight, I think,” I say. “Or, the fight was in the man, and the woman got in its way. I don’t know. She’s still there.”
I think he’s waking up as we talk, coming out of his hypnotic state. It’s likely the only way he can get through the night, finding that happy place and just living in it.
“Well, is she all right?”
“I didn’t ask her.”
“Well…does she look alright?”
“Who’s to judge?”
“Well…what’s your best guess?”
I considered this for a moment. If I were in that position, would I be alright? I supposed not, but it really depends on whether or not she’s still bleeding or actively bleeding. “I don’t think so.”
The paramedics are very loud. They constantly chatter back and forth like two hens. “Pulse-“ this or that, “B.P.-“ yadda yadda yadda. I suppose that that is their job, though. The policemen asked me questions just a moment ago. “Who did you see?” “What did you see?” “When did you see it?” “How did you react?” “Why didn’t you do anything?” That last one is particularly irksome. “I did do something!” I say to the one policeman. She is a lady. “I told that guy.”
“He’s says that you didn’t mention the body until he asked,” the lady policeman says. I assume he’s a lady because he has breasts and wears a broach, but everything else about him sings out in glorious androgyny. I wonder if they have androgynous pageants in some part of the world and all sorts of people compete to see who is the least discernable. This lady would place fairly high, I’m sure, though I doubt he’d take the crown.
“I only sought to present him the aspects of the situation that directly affected his job,” I say. This lady policeman likely sees dead bodies all that time, I think he’d find the broken jar of raspberry jelly, or was it jam? The details are getting hazy, to be much more remarkable, and not so much a woman in a dress.
The lady police officer gives me an incredulous look. For someone whose entire existence seems to be straddling the line between different things, he doesn’t really seem to have any trouble being very explicit with his emotions. His partner walks up. There is no androgyny about the other policeman. He wears a suit, has very manly proportions and jowls, the gray hint of a beard on his jowly, jowly cheeks, and suffers from male pattern baldness, giving him a developing bald patch in the back. “Sir, are you aware if anyone has touched this crime scene?”
I don’t like the way he talks. Everything about him screams half-ass; except his ass. It is working overtime. At least it’s taking up enough space that it should be. I wonder if he ever has any paranoid fears about his toilet breaking when he’s on it reading the sports pages after dinner. I’m fairly certain the sports pages are the only reason anybody even gets a newspaper anymore.
“Sir?” The other one repeats this in a testier voice that makes his partner flinch.
“Yes. I saw two people man-handling the body.”
“Body?” The man policeman asks me.
“The lady’s body, in the yellow dress.”
“You mean the victim?” the lady policeman asks me, growing testier. It’s strange. I’d never presume to know another person’s mind, but I can’t help but assign feelings to this lady policeman. He expresses his emotions so fully on his face and with his body language. But then again, maybe a lifetime of being androgynous has given him the skills to present whatever emotions the society driving him to identify with one sex or the other deems necessary.
“I don’t know that she’s a victim,” I say. “Either way, the ‘lady’ possesses the body, not the other way around. The two in blue can’t affect the ‘lady,’ only her body.”
“The two people you saw handling the body were the paramedics?” he – the lady – asks me.
“Yes,” I say.
His face is beginning to show what he must perceive as the appropriate emotion, which is strange because I’ve never felt that anger was an appropriate emotion in any given situation except professional wrestling.
“Klein,” the man policeman says, putting his hand on the non-sexual-harassment area of the body (elbow) and putting his other arm in front of him (the lady, that is), “why don’t you go see if we can get a status update on the vic, I’ll get this guy’s statement, alright?”
“Klein,” the lady policeman, backs away from me, turns to the side and sidles a step, and then hesitantly turns his back on me.
The man policeman turns to face me full on, now. He looks like he’s resigned himself to some unpleasant task, but otherwise his emotions are blank. I wonder what task it might be. “Is there some special caretaker you have that we should be calling, sir?”
I think about this for a second. Finally I achieve my best answer. “Officer…policeman, I have not slept in two days.”
He sighs. It seems like a well practiced, comfortable sigh. “Let’s start at the beginning. What did you hear?”
