Mark is staggering along the narrow street,
crashing from the doors on one side to the doors on the other. His shirt is
long since gone, and the belt of his jeans hangs behind him like a tail – that,
and the strange way he lopes along, almost dragging the backs of his hands
along the pavement, makes him look like some crazed, denuded monkey. There’s a
big patch of bloody hair on the top of his head, a freely flowing cut over his
left eye, scuffs and red patches all over his torso, but none of his injuries seems
to have done anything to dampen his drive to get along. Every so often he stops
and gives out an open-throated bellow, swatting at the space around him like
he’d blundered into a hornet’s nest. Then his spine straightens again, enough
to give him the spring and the gravitational wherewithal to carry on, this time
headfirst into a post box.
‘I think he must’ve taken something,’ says
the woman who called us, hanging over the terrace of the bar that overlooks
this street like a nervous punter at the zoo.
We thank her for the call, park up, and
approach.
Mark has come to another stop, propped up
against a wall with one straight arm; with the other he has lobbed his penis
out, a gross appendage, hairless as his chest, blanched by moonlight.
‘Can you put that away and talk to us, Mark?’
He sniffs the air, his arm retracts, leaving
him upright just long enough to stuff his penis back in his pants. Then with
one tumultuous heave of his jeans, he frees his legs sufficiently to start
moving away from us, further up the street.
He howls and roars.
Two steps more and he almost pitches
backwards through a plate glass window.
When we try to calm him down and guide him back
towards the ambulance, he spits, bunches his fists, and tries to focus on the
threat.
We call police to scene, but there’ll be a
delay.
Whilst we’re waiting, another man appears. Rangy-looking,
with a wild beard and dirty teeth, like he’s not just been drinking in the park
but running a still.
‘Jab him,’ he says. ‘He’s had a legal high,
that’s all. Jab him and chill him out. He’ll be fine.’
‘We’re just a bit worried about his head
injury. He should really go to hospital to get checked out.’
‘What are you, ambulance or police?’
‘Ambulance. But we have called the police.
He almost went through that shop window.’
The man’s beard twists into a sneer.
Meanwhile, Mark has moved on. He leaves the
side street and staggers out onto the main road. He lies down in the middle and
starts rolling around, slapping the tarmac. Buses are brought to a stop. Taxis
scuttle away down alternative routes.
ETA
on police, please?
Three
minutes.
Mark’s friend has grabbed him and hauled
him to his feet. Mark responds by jumping up, hooking his legs round the man’s
hips, then lying backwards with his arms resting on the tarmac.
‘Jab him!’ says the friend.
‘Sorry. It’s not something we do.’
‘Fucking ambulance,’ says the friend.
Somehow managing to keep his balance, he sets Mark upright again and props him
up against another shop window.
‘Careful now,’ I say.
The friend is leaning in to Mark and
talking urgently into his left ear, whilst he takes Mark’s belt out of the
remaining loops, and coils it round his knuckles. Every so often Mark laughs,
showing a rack of bloody teeth. He tips his head back and howls when the friend
leaves off.
I heard it all. What he said to Mark was
this:
You
take the tall one, I’ll take the shortie, yeah? You go up, and you punch him,
hard as you can, right in the middle of the face? Yeah? Hard as you can, mate.
Hard as you can. Smash his nose. Let’s make some blood.
Then he straightens up, looks at me and
smiles.
We turn and walk back to the truck, Mark’s
friend following. We get in the cab and lock the doors just as he reaches us. I
expect him to start punching the windows, but he doesn’t. Instead, he looks up
and down the street, smiling and shaking his head. Then he turns to look at us.
‘Can you help me with my bag?’ he says.
‘Your what?’
‘My bag. I put it down over there somewhere
and I, err... I can’t seem to find it.’
We move off.
A bottle bounces off the side.
***
2 comments:
By heck Spence, never mind about the talks of arming the police maybe it's time to arm you guys.
It's sickening how our "emergency services" (and I am counting ambulance in there) are treated.
Yeah - it does make you wonder just what's happened in that guy's life to make him like he is. A brutalised kind of existence, at war with everyone. Drink & drugs must cloud the issue, too.
I was very impressed how well the police handled that incident. Even-handed, calm but forceful. I can't tell you what a relief it was when they pitched up!
Cheers for the comment, Derek.
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