Everyone Wanted to Hire Me.

Occasionally during our wild nights out, Larry would pull his chained wallet from his back pocket to pay for the booze and laughingly say, “You gotta get a fuckin’ job.”

Since I spent my days doing literally nothing, the thought had occurred to me. But what would I do? I’d wanted to be a journalist but in Florida, journalism seemed like a pipe dream. Lifeguarding – for which I was in no way qualified – seemed like a more likely career choice. I had no idea what to do with myself.

Unless I wanted to spend the rest of my life watching palmetto bugs in my living room, or learn to build a functional motorcycle from a rusty frame with a gas tank, I needed to find an actual job.

I knew how to get a job: I needed to read the want ads in the Sunday paper and send out my resume, with a well-written cover letter. I learned this not from college, but from my parents. So one Sunday, at around 2:00 in the afternoon when I finally rolled out of bed, I walked up to the gas station and bought a carton of cigarettes and a Sunday newspaper.

It was heavy and I had to walk a whole block with it, while smoking a cigarette. Life was hard.

When I got to the house, I read the comics first. Then I read Ann Landers. Then I took a shower. Then I lit another cigarette and flipped to the employment section.

Everyone wanted to hire me. The ads offered entry-level opportunities in retail, food service, administrative work, car sales, general sales, and telemarketing. I could do anything!

But what I wanted to do wasn’t available. I wanted to be a writer, and there were no ads looking for writers. My second choice – working in TV or radio – didn’t seem to be available either.

I did not blame my total lack of professional experience or unwillingness to do an internship in college. I did not blame the stupidity of wanting to work in an already overpopulated field.

I did not think about my friend, Debbie, who had a ton of job offers and was working in a beach town as a public relations professional. I did not think about the drunken afternoons I spent at college when she was working in the admissions office.

I did not think about my lifelong resume which included three weeks at The Gap, two summers at Kennywood, and a few months tossing forks around in the college cafeteria before being fired.

In other words, I did not in any way blame myself.

I blamed Florida.

“They don’t have any good jobs here!” I whined to Larry. “I don’t want to do fucking sales!”

“Then don’t do fuckin’ sales,” Larry said, barely looking up from whatever he was spraying with grease.

I didn’t want to be around people, I didn’t want to work hard, I didn’t want to work retail ever again, I didn’t want to do anything related to food service, and I didn’t want to talk on the phone.

That left me with office work. I loved, loved, loved to type. I was the fastest typist in my high school class, and I made very few mistakes. (Accuracy was essential in the days of typewriters and white-out.) And in 1986, fast, accurate typists were still in demand.

So on Monday afternoon, I started calling places. And by the end of the week, I had a job! I’d be making slightly more than $3.00 per hour.

Then We’d Sit and Drink.

Things started getting a little better when we started going to bars in Florida. This afforded me the privilege of hanging out with people who weren’t Larry, some of whom weren’t even bikers. I was unbelievably glad to get out of the house and sit in the dark with loud music giving me an excuse to stay silent.

Sometimes, when there was live music, Larry would ask the band if he could sit in – and sometimes they’d let him sing. It reminded me that he was hot as heck with a straight-stand mic in front of him and a guitar in his hands.

Larry often chose to perform a Willie Nelson song called Angel Flying Too Close to the Ground. Larry said the song was written about us: a guy who discovered a fallen angel and healed her through love.

The lyrics are touching, which made me believe Larry was a romantic. (In actuality, Willie Nelson must have been a romantic.)

I patched up your broken wing and hung around awhile

Trying to keep your spirits up and your fever down.

I knew someday that you would fly away

For love’s the greatest healer to be found….

When Larry sang, “So leave me if you need to …” I wanted to crawl onto his lap and never leave him. The song reminded me that I was safe, that Larry loved me, that I would always be protected by the man who saved me from my imminent crash.

I completely forgot that Larry was actually the man who picked me up at a gas station in the middle of the night, someone I didn’t trust to pronounce my real name.

Larry would come off that stage and I’d gush all over him, believing so wholeheartedly in our love.

Then we’d sit and drink and chain smoke until the bar closed, and I’d look around at all the really old people, contemplating what I should do about my life.

As the bar was closing, I would invariably start complaining.

“I don’t want to fuckin’ go home,” I’d slur. “I need another beer!”

“Bars in Tampa don’t close until 3:00,” Larry said. But we were not in Tampa; we were in St. Petersburg. Larry grabbed my hand. “C’mon. If we shoot across the bridge, we might be able to fuckin’ make it.”

So we’d hop on the bike and “shoot” across the bridge into Tampa, just in time to squeak inside before 2:00, so we could drink for another hour. The Tampa bar seemed built at the end of the bridge specifically for the purpose of allowing St. Petersburg drinkers another hour of alcoholic bliss.

Plus, Larry was teaching me how to play pool and they had a ton of pool tables there. I loved that Tampa bar, and the pool tables, and staying out an extra hour.

And there was nothing quite like the feeling of going over that bridge: completely wasted, believing I was invincible, arms outstretched, boots locked on the foot pegs, breathing in the salty air and anticipating more drinking….

It was the best feeling in the world.

An hour later, we’d drive back across that bridge to go home, which was nowhere near as fun.

This House Was … Nice.

“Let’s go visit my sister,” Larry said one day. “It’ll be a nice ride.”

“Where’s your sister?” I asked. Up until this point, I’d only met Larry’s two brothers. He also had two sisters, which I’d kind of forgotten about.

“Vero Beach,” he said. A beach! I thought. In spite of our prior beach experience, I was still trying to live my elusive dream.

We hopped on the motorcycle and got on the highway. It wasn’t a pretty drive, and it lasted hours and hours. We didn’t stop to drink beer on the way. We just kept riding. I got sunburned and my butt hurt, but we eventually arrived.

I looked up, confused.

Larry’s sister, Diane, lived in a house, but somehow it wasn’t like Larry’s house. It had a green manicured lawn and a little porch out front. There were painted shutters decorating the windows, a storm door on the front door, and shrubbery where the red anthills should have been.

This house was … nice.

We clomped up to the porch in our boots and I suddenly felt underdressed. Larry threw his cigarette behind the bushes and told me to do the same.

Diane opened the door. She had short, dark hair and a big-toothed smile. She hugged Larry before he walked inside, then she hugged me, too, even though she didn’t yet know my name.

Diane was extremely welcoming. “Ed took Julie out so we’d have some time to chat,” she said with a slight southern drawl, letting me know she was married with a baby.

And that Diane maybe didn’t want us near them.

We walked into the kitchen, where Diane poured us both iced tea. I don’t like iced tea but I was afraid to be rude, so I held it. I did not smoke. There was no smoking in this house.

Even though it wasn’t like Larry’s house, it felt familiar. Whole-house air conditioning. Magazines on the coffee table. Live plants in front of windows. Little throw pillows on the couch.

We sat down on wicker stools at the kitchen island and I glanced around, still confused. I couldn’t quite label how I felt here.

I thought maybe it was Diane – something about her. But when I looked at Diane, I only thought: she’s so OLD. Since my sisters are both younger than me, I somehow expected Larry’s sister to be younger than me, too. But Diane was older than Larry.

She was over 40 – older than my parents! That was ancient.

Larry and Diane talked about Danny and Timmy mostly; she hadn’t seen her Pittsburgh brothers for awhile. While they talked I scanned the room, sipped at my tea and tried not to engage.

Suddenly it hit me: this house was clean.

It was big, and clean, and well-maintained. It was a family house, one that someone meticulously decorated and kept nice. This house screamed “suburban life.” This was the kind of house that kept people warm and cool and safe and dry. This house was absolutely beautiful.

This house was like my parents’ house.

Suddenly I hated this house. With every ounce of my being, I just wanted to leave, to smoke, to drink. I sat with my tea and waited. And waited. And waited. When Diane left the room, I pulled Larry aside and begged him to take me home, which he did – back to that tiny, roach-infested house with its scraggly lawn, dirt, dust and grime, and the complacent stench of mold, urine and stale cigarettes.

I just wanted to feel comfortable again.

It’s Fuckin’ Beautiful.

One of Larry’s biker friends invited us to a party.

“It’s all fuckin’ weekend!” said Bear, whose real name was never uttered.

We didn’t get to Bear’s house until Saturday evening. Jammed with people, music blasting seemingly from the sky, this was the best party I’d seen since the ATO pig roast at college. Bear’s tiny house had a huge backyard with two grills going, a keg in one corner and icy, alcohol-filled coolers strategically placed around the yard.

Kegs had sentimental value, so I filled a cup and stood next to Larry, not speaking, listening to southern rock and taking in the hordes of people. The whole place was strewn with strands of white lights.

Everyone was a biker, a chick, or a child. Even the children wore Harley t-shirts. I knelt down and petted a dog while Larry blathered with a group of guys. After refilling my second beer Larry said, “C’mon, we’re going to see Bear’s new piece!”

Piece of what? I wondered. I was the only female but I didn’t want to be left alone so I followed the men. I strolled behind them through the house and into a small bedroom.

The guys walked in first, all taller than me, so I still had no idea what we were supposed to be doing. It looked like everyone was huddled around the lamp. Then Larry turned to me and held out something shiny.

I nearly vomited on the spot. It was a silver handgun, like a water pistol made of metal.

“Haven’t you ever seen a gun before?” Larry asked as I turned pale. “Go ahead, hold it! It won’t hurt you.”

I noticed he didn’t say it wasn’t loaded.

I shook my head.

“Hold it!” Larry insisted. “It’s fuckin’ beautiful.”

I reached out my hand and Larry put the gun in it, handle first. I flattened my hand and stared at it, started to shake, wanted to cry.

Guns were against everything I’d ever known. And I was holding one, expected to say nice things about it.

What if … I thought, but thinking about pulling the trigger made my hands shake harder.

Larry laughed at my discomfort. “Okay,” I said, and held out my palm for him to take it back.

“See?” he said. “It’s fine!” He was still admiring it when I raced out of the room, chugging the rest of my beer.

When I walked out of the house I noticed, for the first time, a huge oak tree in the center of the yard. I grabbed a can of beer, shoved it into my pocket, and started climbing. I got up about 25′ before finally taking a seat and opening the beer.

I breathed.

It took awhile for Larry to find me when they returned. He smiled and shook his head. Even from that distance I heard him say, “Nah, she’s fine. She just fuckin’ does this stuff.”

I stayed in that tree until the wee hours of morning, coming down only long enough to use the restroom and restock my beer supply. At one point a few kids climbed into the lower branches, excited. Then they scrambled down and ran away laughing.

The white lights sparkled below me. I could watch the ground sway, sing along to the music, embrace the warm night air, drink, smoke, and generally be me. I didn’t talk to anyone when I was down, and I climbed like a monkey on a mission going back up. I only did what I wanted to do.

I felt safe. And that was fuckin’ beautiful.

We Were All Called “Chicks.”

With Joe gone from the house, Dave had me all to himself. He was petrified of Larry, especially after Larry beat Joe to a pulp, but Dave was very, very stupid. He continued to make quiet, soft moves on me when Larry was nearby.

Dave and I would ride in the cab of Dave’s pickup truck while Larry was driving. And Dave would very slyly reach his hands over and casually give me a massage as we bounced down the road. He’d play with my hair when Larry went into the store, and stare deeply into my eyes.

I think Dave thought this would make me fall madly in love with him, or at least in lust, but I just took advantage of the free affection and ignored Dave the rest of the time.

Larry never once noticed. He never suspected me of cheating on him, maybe because I’d been doing it the entire time. Nothing had changed except, in Florida, the temptations were substantially fewer.

None of Larry’s Florida friends even looked at me. I was just the ol’ lady, and none of them would have dared to try anything with me. They only spoke to me if I spoke to them directly, which I never did. I didn’t find a single interesting person in Larry’s core group in Florida. The women were particularly lifeless.

The biker culture in which I was immersed had a specific role for women. Other than mothers and sisters, who were exempt, all women were treated – quite simply – as eye candy or meat, or both. We were all called “chicks.” A biker dude did not mess with another biker dude’s “chick,” period. And if anyone crossed that line, it was perfectly fine to blow the head off the offending party.

“Chicks” were never considered much more than property. Like a beloved dog, I believed Larry loved me and would do anything he could do for me. But if I had disappeared, he would have just replaced me with someone equally treasured to prop up on the back of his bike.

One day Larry and I went to a swap meet – basically a flea market for small metal objects and military grade equipment. Just inside the door was a table, like there is at any conference, where you could make yourself a name tag. Swap meet participants generally ignored this table and just walked in, but I was intrigued.

“Can I have one of these?” I asked Larry, who smiled and said, “of course!” They were free, after all.

The free name tags were big, round, gaudy gold pins with a blank space in the middle for a name.

Any name, I thought.

I had my regular huge hangover, a ton of apathy about my life, and a black marker in my hand. I knew who and what I was. I would always be one simple thing.

I took the cap off the marker and wrote C-H-I-C-K in big letters across the middle. This name, much more so than my own, epitomized how I felt about myself in my current role. It told the world that I knew I was nothing more, nothing less, than a piece of property/meat for “my old man.”

CHICK. That was me.

I pinned the button to my jean jacket and wore it for years, until the pin rusted out and the button literally fell off.

A part of me found this to be the most profound action I’d ever taken. Another part of me found it to be hysterically funny.

Larry didn’t understand my profundity or my joke.

It’s Like Living With Animals.

Larry’s sudden brutal attack on Joe shocked me, momentarily, into paying attention to what was going on in my life. After all the brawls and skirmishes I’d seen in bars, and all the stupidity I’d seen at frat parties, I’d never seen anything quite as animalistic as my boyfriend beating the crap out of someone who put his arm around me.

Until I watched Joe walk out of the kitchen covered in his own blood, I didn’t know Larry was capable of that kind of violence. I’d heard people talk about bikers and their capacity for such things, but I’d never seen it with him – or any of his friends. Larry was nearly always calm.

I recalled the night when, in our very first teeny apartment, someone had knocked on the door at 3 a.m. Larry had leapt out of bed and grabbed a heavy chain in one fluid motion – wrapping it around his arm like a seasoned assassin before he opened the door. It terrified me. And then, after he opened the door for his buddy, I shrugged it off as a fluke. I never saw Larry prepare to attack again.

But after Joe, all I could think was: it’s like living with animals. I was stuck in the middle of an ancient ritual that affected all species. Males fight over females, sometimes to the death, and whichever male wins … gets the female.

Larry had quite clearly announced that his mission was to possess and protect me, because I was his female. Larry may as well have been a bear or a hippo or a duck. And my job – as I sat on the couch motionless – was to be the female bear-hippo-duck. My job was to wait and see who won.

As if Joe ever stood a chance.

I thought about The One – my dream man at college – who, during our very nice chat, immediately turned tail and ran when Larry appeared. I thought about the guys in the bars who had turned their backs on me when Larry returned from the restroom. I thought about the men with whom I’d had sex, without it mattering to me or them, when Larry was nearby. Those men could have been beaten, too. Or worse.

I realized for the first time that Larry might actually be dangerous. I’d never asked him if he was a murderer or even a convicted felon. And it was too late now. I belonged to him.

Larry and I – who talked about very little anyway – never discussed what happened with Joe. I didn’t imagine Larry as my knight on a white horse. Instead I suddenly felt like I was living with a bear. Or a hippo. Or a duck.

Larry’s killer-instinct pulverization put everything into perspective for me. I realized with astounding clarity: there was nothing, and would never be anything, beyond the surface simplicity I’d seen in my new lifestyle. Bikers lived like animals. I had willingly joined and the culture was not going to change for me. I was stuck in it, like a burr. Although I wanted substantially more for myself, I could see no alternative.

And without college to balance out my mentality, I became more and more lost in the void. I had no one with whom to share my deepest thoughts. I had no one to discuss anything intellectual. Nobody read books or watched TV. We didn’t go to movies or on hikes or try skydiving.

We rode motorcycles and drank beer. And that was going to be my whole life.

I Started to Believe We Had a Secret.

Larry’s biker friends stopped by on a regular basis. Everyone wanted to come to our house to drink. My new roommates, Joe and Dave, were always invited to drink with us.

While I did not find Joe or Dave attractive, it became evident that they both found me to be attractive.

While Larry was doing god-knows-what, I was fending off advances from both of them. Joe and Dave fought each other constantly trying to get closer to me, impressing me with their worldly ways.

Joe realized very quickly that I liked music, and talked to me about all the concerts he’d seen. He shared tapes of his favorite bands – all classic rock, music I already knew well. Joe talked louder than everyone in the room, and he never left a room when there was still beer in the fridge.

Of course, Joe slept on the couch so it’s not like he could have gone anywhere anyway.

It was obvious from the first night that Joe wanted me for his very own, and that he believed he was worthy. It didn’t seem to matter to him that he was living in Larry’s house and that I was Larry’s “old lady.” He was cocky and obnoxious and rude and, as loud as he was about wanting me, he didn’t seem to have a brain in his head.

Although they were both gross, I much preferred Dave.

Dave was a greasy fellow with dark hair and brooding eyes. He was soft-spoken and junkie-thin with shiny yellowish skin. Unlike Joe, Dave waited until no one else was looking to make his advances.

We’d all be sitting around in the living room – me and a bunch of guys – and I’d look at Dave, who’d be staring right at me. He’d wink and keep staring. I started to believe we had a secret.

Or we’d be sitting alone waiting for Larry to get back with the beer, and Dave would rub my feet, talking all the while about the different pressure points in feet, as though he were explaining anatomy instead of being surprisingly sensual.

Dave’s were the kind of smooth moves to which I usually responded, but I was with Larry.

And unlike Joe, Dave was terrified of Larry. So Dave stayed quietly seductive in a corner while Joe blurted out his intentions every day.

Once after a very long day of drinking, Joe sat down on the couch next to me and smugly put his arm around me. This was not something I wanted, nor did I snuggle into Joe. Instead, I froze.

That’s when Larry decided he’d had enough.

As Joe casually lifted his beer to his lips, Larry took two giant, boot-clad stomps across the room and smacked the beer out of Joe’s hands.

Before Joe could complete the phrase, “what the fuck,” Larry had lifted Joe off the couch with one hand and started punching him in the face with the other.

Tossing out delinquent apologies, Joe scrambled away into the kitchen where Larry pummeled Joe until Joe couldn’t rise from the kitchen floor.

The house was dead silent.

Larry calmly strolled back into the living room, sat on the couch and put his arm around me.

Minutes passed. Crickets chirped. When Joe finally emerged from the kitchen, Larry didn’t even look at him.

Larry’s voice was a hushed roar. “Get the fuck out of my house, Joe.”

Joe and all of his worldly possessions were gone in five minutes; I never saw him again.

It Was Hot.

Before long, I seriously questioned my desire to live in sunny Florida.

We’d been to the beach, and it did not live up to the dream.

I’d conveniently ignored the foreshadowing of spring break, when my best day concluded with passing out under a trailer. I still believed that things would get better since I lived somewhere warm.

But it wasn’t warm. It was hot.

Moving to Florida from the snowy north makes a ton of sense – in the winter, when it’s actually snowy. But moving to Florida during the summer is absolutely insane.

It was brutally hot every single moment of every single day. Larry’s “cooling system” included an air conditioning window unit in the bedroom and a fan over the dining room table. If we opened the door to get more air flowing through the living room, even with that one ceiling fan, the blazingly humid air that poured inside engulfed us, making it hard to even breathe. So we kept the doors shut.

During the day, it was impossible to walk outside except to go somewhere air-conditioned, which we never did. Even when it rained, it was hot. In the evening, when my drinking fun was just getting started, the air was stifling. In the wee hours of the morning – when I was getting ready to go to sleep – it was still hot.

And my drinking “fun” was relative, now that there was no one with whom to drink. There were no weekend parties, no concerts or comedy shows, no sports to watch. Other than our “day” at the beach, we didn’t go anywhere or do anything. Since we weren’t living in a hellhole (relatively speaking), we could finally drink in our own home.

Yippee.

Unlike Larry, whose day included drinking, my day revolved around drinking.

With college over, and Larry lacking the obsession with alcohol that I had, there was no one around who could commiserate. There was nothing but a twelve-pack in the fridge that needed to be repeatedly replenished.

Larry thought being “home” was great. He thought working on the bike in the front yard was better than working on the bike in the gravel lot in Pitcairn. And while he worked on the bike, or ran out to get bologna or beer or cigarettes, I stayed inside where it was not quite so unbearably hot.

Drinking without a frat house or a bar jammed with people or a floor full of screaming girls … well, it was just boring.

But I was an alcoholic who had been drinking every day for at least a year. It never occurred to me that I could create any life I wanted to have. I was too busy drinking to create anything but occasional puke.

Quite frequently I was drinking with Joe and Dave, my new roommates. I’m sure they both had jobs, because they occasionally disappeared for hours on end, but they were also home a lot. They sat around inside with cans of beer, too.

Joe and Dave were younger than Larry, but they were not my friends. They weren’t interesting or funny or smart or even particularly nice. They weren’t fun to be around. I didn’t look forward to spending time drinking with Joe and Dave.

Worse yet, Joe and Dave didn’t even like each other. And we were living with both of them and their squabbles, which happened whenever they were both home.

Apparently it got worse when Larry and I moved in … because of me.

We All Went to the Beach.

After my miserable Florida spring break mere months before, during which I never saw a beach, I started whining to Larry.

“I’m missing my whole life!” I said. “I want to go to the beach! We’re in Florida! That’s what people in Florida do!”

“What beach do you want to go to?” Larry asked. “There’s a fuckin’ ton of ’em!”

“Any beach!” I said. “I just want to put my toes in the sand and stare at the ocean.” I remembered from my childhood vacations that this was the female adult ritual while the men and kids splashed in the ocean.

So one day, we all went to the beach: me and Larry, and my new roommates Joe and Dave.

I got up around noon, as usual, and we headed out. Larry and I rode on the Harley, while Joe and Dave took the cooler in Dave’s truck. We got to Clearwater Beach in a matter of minutes.

Wearing jeans, boots and a tank top, I hopped off the bike and raced for the sand. I never wore socks so when I reached the sand, I pulled off my boots and ran onto the beautiful white-sand beach.

“Ooooooowwwwwwwwww!!!!” I screamed. The sand was incredibly hot. We were way too far from the water for me to cool off there, so I threw myself down and put my boots back on.

Larry, Joe and Dave caught up easily, carrying the cooler. It was a small cooler – only big enough to hold a six-pack – and no one had bothered to get ice. Our beers were already getting warm when we plopped down in the sand to “enjoy” them.

We didn’t bring towels.

Larry handed me a koozie. “You can’t have an open container here,” he said. “Put this on your beer or you’ll get arrested.”

No beer on the beach? Well, that was a bummer, but I wasn’t going to let it deter me from my beach day.

“Let’s go fuckin’ swimming!” I said, starting to pull off my jeans.

“You can’t do that!” Larry shrieked. “Ya gotta have a fuckin’ swimsuit to swim!”

He remembered that I didn’t wear underwear; I’d forgotten it mattered. “I can’t go in the water?”

“Not unless you want to go in wearing jeans,” Larry chuckled.

Adult ritual or not, I wasn’t going to just sit on the blazing hot sand. I wanted to be in that ocean. So I pulled off my boots again and raced toward the water as fast as I could, carrying my koozie’d beer, trying to avoid all the “hot” on the Florida beach in June.

I stood in the water and stared toward what I thought was Europe; I had no idea I was in the Gulf of Mexico.

I stood and stared, alone, while the saltwater cooled my feet and dampened my jeans. As my feet sunk into the sand, I willed myself to be swallowed whole.

It didn’t happen.

After what seemed like an hour but was probably three minutes, my beer was gone. I strolled back to the guys to get another one. Joe and Dave were squabbling; Larry was smoking a cigarette and ignoring them.

I opened the cooler and pulled out one of the two remaining beers. It was not cold.

“We need more beer,” I said to Larry.

“Not here,” he said. “There’s a bar right over the bridge when you’re ready.”

With Joe and Dave still arguing, I cracked the beer. The warm liquid foamed over my hand.

“I’m ready,” I said.

And that was the end of our day at the beach.

I Mostly Just Watched the Critters.

Larry’s small ranch house was fairly typical of the nearby Florida landscape. All the other houses in St. Petersburg looked like his house, although most of those were better maintained.

We parked in the yard since the driveway was just a bit of gravel and concrete and not a driveway at all. Also, everyone else parked in the yard. I liked this feature, since it reminded me of Mask.

My mission was to be perpetually barefoot; Florida was always warm. I’d envisioned myself – in spite of my spring break foreshadowing – spending all my time on the beach, my toes in the sand.

But we still hadn’t gone to the beach, and much of the “sand” in our front yard wasn’t actually sand. It was dirt shaped into mounds by something called a fire ant. Unlike regular ants, fire ants were vicious, evil red creatures that stung mercilessly when they bit people. These were to be avoided at all costs – so being barefoot outside became suddenly impossible.

Lizards – who, I learned later, occasionally eat fire ants – were my favorite critter in Florida. The lizards lived in the house with us, and I’d drink beer and watch them peek out from behind a chair or a table, or squeeze out through the crooked patio door.

They were so cute, scurrying quickly across the floor toward whatever insect might be flying through. There were no screens on the front or back doors, so we got lots of bugs.

By far my least favorite critter was the palmetto bug – otherwise known as a giant, flying cockroach.

Larry told me that they weren’t roaches, though, and I believed him. “Roaches don’t fly,” he laughed. “Palmetto bugs are harmless! Like lady bugs!”

I believed him.

We had enough palmetto bugs in our house to start a lady-buggish colony. They were everywhere, scattering when the lights came on (like roaches) and flying across the house when they needed to get somewhere quickly.

More than once, a palmetto bug in mid-flight ran into the swirling ceiling fan above the dining room table. When this happened, the giant roach would be flicked lightning-fast across the room, causing everyone to duck for cover, hoping not to get hit by the enormous bug. If it didn’t hit anyone, it would smack against a wall, stunned, then scuttle into a dark space to recover.

There were also the occasional flying creatures, which Larry murdered for having the audacity to fly through any open door. I spent a lot of time playing catch-and-release with bees, flies and wasps before Larry saw them.

Larry had a lot of biker friends in Florida. They’d sit outside working on their bikes, or stand around with open beers talking about nothing at all.

I stayed inside. It was brutally hot anyway. After my third beer, I mostly just watched the critters scamper from place to place, or fly across the room with or without the aid of the ceiling fan.

I found the “action” in Florida to be tremendously boring. Previously I’d had a place to go with friends and peers when I got bored. College kept me entertained.

Now I had lizards and palmetto bugs and fire ants and a whole lot of time on my hands.

So I drank, and watched bugs, and wondered what to do with my life.