“As an Orc we're told how much better than humans we are. Better than anyone really. We held the world at our mercy, the fiercest warriors anyone has ever known. There is no way in hell we could be brought down by some human drug,” he pauses. “PCP, is no normal drug. When I first got introduced to PCP I witnessed some friends take it before a big football game we had. We're Orcs but damn, those humans make some fun games,” he pauses for a laugh, and to gather his thoughts. “Well, they told me it made you faster, stronger and just all around better.” The Orc gets choked up, a rare sight, but he takes a deep breath and forces himself through it. “I felt invincible, as if nothing could stop me. The Gods had come to this realm and blessed me with the power that none before me could grasp before. I thought, no I knew, this is how my ancestors felt when they conquered four continents. This is how they felt crushing their enemies beneath their feet. I felt as if I was the monstrous Orc people tell their children stories of. The Orc that ground bones into dust, and baked bread. I was the Orc that built a throne of my enemies’ bones and a coat made from their flesh. I could not be stopped. Then one day, I stopped playing football. I was just me.”
He looked away as an elf rubbed his back gently. All of these stories are beautifully twisted. Each one follows the same plot and we all end up here, the climax. What happens next is up to us, but we all ended up here the same way. No one ever interrupts during the pauses, we wait. It’s important to let the full story be heard, and if someone can’t finish, they’ll be prodded. Nobody gets to start a story and leave it abandoned like some wannabe journalist.
“Even without the need, I still felt the power calling to me,” he begins again. “I still needed to be that monster. I kept taking the drug, and I needed bigger doses to feel the same levels. I remember on one occasion, I broke into an old woman’s,” he looks down and begins to bang his fist on his head with force that would knock a human out. The thud echoes through our silent group but none of us move to stop him. This is therapy for him. “I wanted to take her crystal ball, because I knew I could get money for it. What I didn’t know is her husband was home. She screamed, I panicked. I could have ripped her head off, I probably was going to. Her husband came around the corner firing. He hit me six times, but I was so fucking high I didn’t even notice. I dove out of a sixth story window to get away, broke both ankles and just kept running until I couldn’t run anymore.”
Six stories, that’s between 70 and 90 feet depending on building code. If he weren’t an Orc, he’d be dead from the drop. Being an Orc high on PCP, he probably could run. Perhaps fifteen blocks before he collapsed. I wonder if his broken ankles would have given out before the PCP dulled the pain. Where would he run? His mind would have been on auto pilot, perhaps he was running home, but just couldn’t make it. Questions that I’ll never have the answers to, because he likely doesn’t know them.
“When I woke up in the hospital they had taken part of my intestines, said they got ruptured from the gunshots. I didn’t even feel it,” the orc lifts his shirt displaying a gnarly scar and sagging wrinkled flesh across his abdomen. The man must have used a high caliber round to pierce an Orc’s flesh. The bullet would have penetrated and ricocheted around his abdomen. “My ankles are some kind of metal alloy now, can’t even get through an airport. I’m strapped to a hospital bed with a catheter all the way up my schlong and all I wanted to do was get high. I rubbed my wrist against the restraints until they were bloody enough to slip free,” he holds his wrists up displaying more scars. “I rolled out of bed, and crushed my implants because I was trying to get high. Then I tried to crawl out of the hospital. As they fought to hold me down, I cried. I cried because they weren’t letting me get my fix. Then I saw my mother in the hallway, and that’s when I quit fighting. The only thing that can make an Orc cry,” he wipes a single tear. “That’s when I realized just how messed up I was. I really was a damn addict, a junkie. A disgrace to what it meant to be an Orc, I had brought shame on my clan name. That’s why I’m here, because I pissed away my whole life with PCP,” the Orc takes a seat as others applaud him.
The story has been illicitly taken; should you find it on Amazon, report the infringement.
I add my own claps to the chorus. The claps won’t bring any healing or acceptance. No, they’re a ritual, calling out into the darkness. A sign that there is a way back to normality; a way back that none of us can truly find. Well, except for Michael almost as angelic as his namesake. Protecting innocent souls from the dangerous world outside and guiding our corrupted beings back to the light.
“Thank you for that,” Michael brings us back onto topic after a few minutes of comforting to our new member. “As you all know Rythe is going to be leaving us soon. He’s been here a few times around, but this time is going to be the last time we see you right,” he gestures to me.
“I won’t tell that lie. Addiction isn’t something you beat, it’s an everlasting disease,” but I’m not an addict. “It doesn’t matter if I’m clean now, every day I’m going to hear the call. It’s my job to not pick up that phone. Unfortunately, I’ve picked it up too many times before. Just can’t seem to block the calls. So, I’m leaving here today, clean. I’ve done this three times before, but hopefully it sticks. Still, I can’t promise I’ll never get high again. I will say, don’t follow in my footsteps.”
“Wow, that was great. Thank you Rythe,” Michael motions for me to sit back down.
Outside of our therapy session Michael stops me, he gives me the same speech I’ve heard many times before. Just because I’m discharged from the rehabilitation center, doesn’t mean I can’t continue therapy. They’re all here for me. I don’t have to go through this alone. The fact is, I don’t really care. You’re born alone, live alone and die alone, occasionally others stop into your life to provide you with joy or pain. Addiction is no different. I stand in the therapy and say I’m an addict, and I need help. I tell some fake stories about what I’ve gone through and then they cry while I stand stone faced pretending to process the feelings.
I’ll be back here, my job forces me to come. They say my work performance is slipping because of addiction. They’ve never seen me addicted, or without drugs in my system. The way this country perceives people with addictions or even people who might have one is disgusting. They’re treated like criminals who are nothing more than a burden on society. None of these people have done anything but become victims of circumstance. Instead of giving them real help, they’re locked in prisons with murderers and child abusers. The lucky, are trapped in a building and get to do team building exercises. We’re supposed to be one big family helping each other out now. A team, nor a family, can stop you when you’re staring down your next hit.
Am I rehabilitated? As rehabilitated as you can be when you’re not an addict.