Eddie
by John Balaban Hadn't seen Eddie for some time, wheeling his chair through traffic, skinny legs in shorts, T-shirted, down at the corner off Dixie Highway, lifting his Coke cup to the drivers backed up, bumper to bumper, at the light. Sometimes he slept on the concrete bench up from Joe's News. Sometimes police would haul him in and he said he didn't mind because he got three squares and sometimes a doctor would look at his legs, paralyzed, he said, since the cop in New York shot him when he tried to steal a car. Sad story, of the kind we've learned to live with. One rainy day he looked so bad, legs ballooned, ankles to calves, clothes soaked, I shoved a $20 in his cup. But, like I said, I hadn't seen him around so yesterday I stopped and asked this other panhandler, Where's Eddie? "Dead," he said. Slammed by a truck running the light, crushed into his wheelchair. Dead, months ago. My wife says he's better off dead, but I don't know. Behind his smudged glasses his eyes were clever. He had a goofy smile but his patter was sharp. His legs were a mess and he had to be lonely. But spending days in the bright fanfare of traffic and those nights on his bench, with the moon huge in the palm trees, the highway quiet, some good dreams must have come to him. |