Weeks passed and other groups came and went. Anthony's neighbor Stephen would often visit with us, and chat up the volunteers. Stephen was extroverted and affable, and looked at life a little differently.
"I always tell the people at the register to keep the change."
"Why is that?"
"Because I'm gonna build up credit, and then I'll just go in there one day and get something for free."
"You sure that's how it works?"
"Yeah, man, I know that's how it works."
Another time: "I made up my own money."
"Yeah? Whaddaya got?"
"This here is a two dollar and eleven cent piece."
"Let me see that."
He had taped a dime and a penny in between two one dollar bills.
"That's awesome, man. Let me know how it goes."
"Oh I ain't using it. Just gonna keep it here at my house."
"Why is that?"
"It's valuable, man."
Stephen brought some levity to an otherwise dour situation. While hanging in the street during a break with some young men from a private school in Virginia he asked them where they were from.
"Where y'all from?"
One of the boys answered "an Episcopal school in Virginia."
"Oh, that right? So y'all religious people."
This was funny, because we all know the relationship between students, a religious school, and religion is not always straight as a poker.
One of them stammered "um, yeah, kind of."
"Y'all believe in Jesus?"
More uneasiness. "Yeah."
Stephen stretched his hands up to the sky and his eyes grew wide and he said "I believe in Jesus Christ Superstar." Then he walked back into his house.
We all giggled. Oh, the power of Andrew Lloyd Webber.
After talking to Anthony's parents we framed out an extra room in the back to serve as Anthony's apartment, with his own entrance. The house had been gutted, and the smell of cut lumber and sawdust ushered in a different feeling. Anthony played Christian talk radio for us every day, and his appearance began to improve some. He became a little more social, and was even making eye contact with volunteers. One day a volunteer noticed he needed a new can opener, and offered to bring him one the next day, which was a Saturday. We don't work on Saturdays, so she asked me if it was alright for her to drop it off. "Go ahead."
The next morning I got a call from the volunteer.
"I found Anthony face down on the porch this morning," she cried. "I called the ambulance and they're on the way."
I called Katie, and met her at the house. By the time I got there the EMTs had ripped off the iron gates to the porch, put him on a gurney and taken him to the hospital. We rushed to the hospital and waited for a couple hours before someone finally came out and talked to us. Anthony had had a stroke due to a blood clot in his brain. His condition was not good, but the doctors couldn't say much more than that. Anthony's parents lived in Atlanta and we eventually got in touch with them that day, and a nice couple who were family friends. But at that moment, with Anthony in a coma, and no family or friends in New Orleans, it felt like we were his guardians. And to me it felt very lonely.
"I found Anthony face down on the porch this morning," she cried. "I called the ambulance and they're on the way."
I called Katie, and met her at the house. By the time I got there the EMTs had ripped off the iron gates to the porch, put him on a gurney and taken him to the hospital. We rushed to the hospital and waited for a couple hours before someone finally came out and talked to us. Anthony had had a stroke due to a blood clot in his brain. His condition was not good, but the doctors couldn't say much more than that. Anthony's parents lived in Atlanta and we eventually got in touch with them that day, and a nice couple who were family friends. But at that moment, with Anthony in a coma, and no family or friends in New Orleans, it felt like we were his guardians. And to me it felt very lonely.
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