Billy’s Bench: Addiction and Unexpected Community

“I’m going off the high dive, are you guys watching?”

My brother and I nodded vigorously as our uncle climbed the stairs to the highest diving board and waved to us from the top. He took his time, raising long arms into perfect formation above his head, bouncing a few times on the board before swan-diving into the greenish manmade lake below.

“That’s our uncle Billy!” we declared proudly as other kids looked on. We held our breath for what felt like hours waiting for him to emerge again and when he finally did, raced to the edge of the water to hug his legs. He was so much fun.

Billy could move fluidly from the realm of adults to the realm of children—it seemed he didn’t belong neatly in either world. I remember watching Nickelodeon together splayed out on my grandparents’ 1970s chocolate brown shag carpet, laughing as Keenan and Kel bantered on the television. Despite being six foot three he could immediately get on our level.

I didn’t know about alcoholism back then or the way it snakes through generations—my great-grandfather on my mom’s side had also been an alcoholic. I didn’t know Billy had first tasted beer at 11, started struggling with drinking at 14 and was trying to escape the bottle ever since. If he knew how deep the dependency went at the time, he didn’t show it.

In the decades since that day at the pool, Billy moved across the world, from Long Island to the South Pacific to Spain and back again. His final stop was an apartment just 10 blocks from mine in Manhattan. I remember his excitement at being neighbors and his joy with setting up his own place.

But in the 700-plus days he lived in my neighborhood I only saw him twice.

***

When I was about ten years old, a new photo of Billy in a Navy uniform appeared suddenly in our living room. He looked handsome and healthy, but his serious expression was nothing like that of the fun-loving uncle I remembered. I later found out Billy’s drinking had worsened around that time and my grandmother wanted him out of the house. That’s how the phase of his life in the Navy began.

My memories of Billy during those years are choppy, like a file cabinet filled with scattered, torn documents. After training he’d been sent to Diego Garcia, a remote island in the Indian Ocean that had been a refueling station for the Middle East in the wake of 9/11. Off in Diego Garcia, there wasn’t much else to do other than drink. I imagined it then as a paradise; I imagine it today more like a prison.

Following Diego Garcia, he was stationed in Spain, where he met a lovely woman and had a daughter. But his drinking continued, complicating his relationship with both. To stay physically close to his daughter who he loved dearly, he lived for many years in the south of Spain, where he had a small apartment to go home to at night but often appeared homeless, spending most days on the streets. He’d occasionally get sober and find a job, but it was never long before the drinking pulled him under yet again, powerful as the ocean.  

Billy described his last few years in Spain as “surreal” and “Kafkaesque.” He was beaten, robbed and propositioned. The drinking ravaged his body. He went from being six feet tall, broad-shouldered, and healthy to thin, graying, and hunched, his feet slowly losing feeling from the neuropathy.

My mom was ten years older than Billy, and from the time he was a child she looked after him, like another parent. They shared an extraordinary bond, and no matter where Billy was in the world, he was never far from her thoughts.

One weekend my mom texted him to check in. He replied, “Doing bad, but I try to give civil compliments on the street to civil people.”

That was a constant with Billy: wherever he was in the world, he found community. People didn’t see an alcoholic on the street; they saw a kind, intelligent, funny, and deeply caring man who’d been dealt a hard hand in life.

Still, Billy’s internal organs were rapidly shutting down, which no amount of kindness or friendship could stop. Pancreatitis, gastritis, chronic double vision, rotten teeth, hypotension, broken shoulder, chronic rib fractures—the list kept going. His landlord would find him each night to fireman-carry him home.

In March 2018, my family decided they needed to go to Spain to rescue him once and for all. He didn’t want the help, but clearly only had a few weeks to live without an intervention. “Billy had been struggling and was literally near death but never wanted to be a burden,” my mom remembers.

My dad and uncle Pat flew to Spain to lead the rescue mission. My dad remembers spotting Billy sitting in front of a church, messy, dirty, and unshaven. As he approached, people came out of shops one by one because they realized the Americans were there to take Billy home.

Just before my dad and uncle stepped away, two nicely dressed women from a fancy boutique near his “spot” came out to hug Billy good-bye. To them, his filth didn’t matter. This was their friend.  

***

Even when Billy was back stateside and living nearby, he’d again shifted to another world, one I couldn’t quite access. I’d sporadically get tough-to-decipher texts from numbers I didn’t recognize. Sometimes he wouldn’t answer back, and I guessed he’d lost his phone again, or had been borrowing one from a stranger. I often thought of him but was also scared of running into him because the Billy I knew was bright and sunny. I had never seen him during a bender and didn’t want to. 

Our lives only intersected a few times when he lost his keys because I kept a spare. I remember one afternoon he met me outside my apartment to get the key, his beard overgrown, clothes rumpled, carrying a ripped plastic takeout bag stuffed with personal belongings. I tried not to feel embarrassed, but my discomfort lingered. I could sense my doorman watching.

“This is my uncle,” I wanted to explain. “This isn’t a random guy approaching me on the street.” But the words stayed trapped inside me. It felt like we were two balloons that if released, would immediately drift in different directions.

When my uncle died in the summer of 2023, I was 3,000 miles away in Lisbon, Portugal. I’d spent most of July reading on park benches and my uncle’s declining health had only been on the fringes of my mind. He’d survived the brink of death so many times, I thought he might be invincible. But all the drinking-induced ailments had finally caught up to him.

He was 51 years old.

Only after Billy passed did I realize he’d spent the last two years of his life on a city bench just 10 blocks from where I lived. Billy never told me he spent his days there; I never asked. His friend Howard, who’d attended a local temple and had gotten to know Billy over the years, reached out to my mom when he saw remembrances posted on “Billy’s” bench.

So when I arrived home from Lisbon I wandered the 10 blocks down, hoping to feel close to him. I saw chalk memorials expanding across the sidewalk and even up the side of a building, like nature reclaiming the land.

Every few minutes someone would stop, ask about Billy, express their sorrow. I thought the first few times were a coincidence, but I ended up speaking with 20 people in an hour that evening who all had different stories to tell about Billy and what he meant to them. It showed me not only Billy’s kind spirit, but the loneliness so many people face, even those who on the surface have everything you’d want in life—a job, a family, a safe place to live.

That day I met a wonderful woman named Jessica who explained she’d been close friends with Billy. She drew a sunflower on the sidewalk, undeterred by the fact that it was washed away each night.

A few days later I pasted a QR code on the bench to his memorial site and watched in awe as message after message appeared from Upper East Side acquaintances. These were people from all walks of life. Parents. A grandmother visiting. Young professionals who had just moved to the city. All of them leaving their interactions with Billy in better spirits.

“You left a big hole in the neighborhood after you left us Billy,” Mike wrote. “I hope that you can see from the other side how many people in the neighborhood care.”

 “I would see Billy every morning on 77th street getting coffee and we would chat briefly,” Laura remembered. “He always helped me get my day started with positive energy.”

 “He was so kind to each of us, but especially to our children,” wrote Rod and Charlie. “I recall Billy’s excitement when the kids showed off their medals won at the martial arts tournament.”

All of these people in the Upper East Side saw Billy for who he was. They knew about his love of dogs, the Giants, and his close relationship with my mom. And yet, at the same time he’d built these friendships with strangers, he’d disappeared from his family. I felt deeply guilty for not reaching out to him those last few years, but also hurt he hadn’t reached out to me, as if these new friends were more important. I wonder if it just became too hard to face us, those of us who’d witnessed his long struggle.

Occasionally I’ll sit on Billy’s bench for a few minutes, pushing away the empty Dunkin’ bags and debris, and try to see the world from his perspective. The city shuffles around me almost as if he were never here, but I know his memory is now seeded in hundreds of New Yorkers, and his stories will sprout again and again. As people rush by, I can see all the versions of Billy—the diving, the laughing, the silly, the sick, the young, the weathered—passing right in front of me.

I’m comforted knowing I loved them all.

622 Jefferson Street

Below I’ve posted the first three sections of one of my short stories, “622 Jefferson Street.” I wrote it as my final assignment for an Advanced Fiction Writing class at Notre Dame this past spring semester, but I’ve been working on it in one form or another for about a year. The tone, style and even plot line are still in flux, but I’ve given myself a few months’ distance. I’d appreciate any comments you might have– positive or critical! And please contact me if you’re interested in reading the full manuscript.

***

622 Jefferson Street

The 1200 block of Jefferson Street surprised me. It’s hard to tell what a neighborhood’s like from the aerial view on Google Maps, but when I got there I couldn’t believe how beautiful the houses were. Old Victorians with extravagant molding, long windows and the sad remnants of wraparound porches. Somehow, the houses looked vaguely familiar, but I’d never been to Ohio before and I’d definitely never been here.

The houses were beautiful but twenty years past their prime, stripped of paint and porches, roofs so thin a bird’s claw could puncture them. If you looked close enough you could see entire structures sinking an inch or two into the dry earth, the ground coughing up bits of dust from the pressure.

If you looked even closer you could see folding lawn chairs — the old rattling kind made of rainbow vinyl and plastic — and on those lawn chairs, people. The people only watched what was in front of them. The people stared right into the dusk, their eyes dark and full and steady.

I pulled up slowly, grazing the curb. When I got out, a bunch of teenagers were messing around in the street, cursing and kicking around empty cans of Coke. I walked briskly past them. They stared at me but said nothing; I became intensely aware of the way my skirt’s material gathered under my ass each time I took a step. The can rolled towards me in slow motion and I kicked it to the side with my heel. I didn’t look back. I loved the way that skirt hugged my curves but 1208 Jefferson Street was no home for pencil skirts.

The empty tin sound of the can-kicking didn’t resume until I’d made it two blocks down.

I had gotten the call around 5:30 p.m. to head out to the East side of the city. Fifth fire in two days, Shirley said. Still burning so I better move fast. Fast fast fast fast, I know you’re on the late shift and it doesn’t start till six but it’s red hot and will be out soon, we need a photo Jules, the photog couldn’t get out there — his kid’s sick with the stomach bug — so we’ll need you to take a shot on your phone. You’ve got one of those smarty-pants phones, right? Always better to capture something in action than post-action, right Jules? I mean, who wants to see a burnt-down house, a pile of ashes, when you can see a burning one?

Shirley advised me to park way back on the road away from the cop cars, which meant I would have to walk through the neighborhood. Jeez, this wasn’t one of the best neighborhoods — she should have warned me. That’s the thing about Shirley, I love her but she’s been off the streets so long she doesn’t know how bad it’s gotten around here. Considering there’ve been 17 shootings this summer and 13 in August alone, she should realize. But Shirley, she just remembers when she was the cops reporter back in the eighties and the bad part of the city was a quarter square mile thick with bodies and blood, all of it gang violence. As long as you stayed away from that you were safe.

But it’s not like that anymore. Things around here are always smoking, or burning, or disappearing altogether. The violence goes wherever the heat goes and the heat is everywhere. And Google Maps doesn’t tell you where the “good” and “bad” neighborhoods are in Norge. Google knows, I’m sure, but Google has to be objective. Google has to be PC.

I had one more block to go until the fire. The house looked totally fine from a distance, which was the strangest part. All of the damage must have been shrouded in smoke.

At the end of the road I saw police lights, flashing violently behind a shade of ash and smoke. The closer I got, the lights became stronger and the fire weaker.

I felt around my purse for my notebook and tucked it under my arm.

I couldn’t help but view the scene as swarming dots of darkness and color.

***

 “It will get easier, don’t worry, Jules,” Shirley told me that night after I came in from the Jefferson Street house fire, my hair disheveled and reporter’s notebook essentially illegible. Soaking wet. It looked like I’d fallen right into the hose’s stream, and I hoped that’s what Shirley thought, but honestly, my water bottle just opened in my bag. God damnit.

I’d already lost three iPhones that way and I really needed to stop doing that.

“After awhile, you’ll hardly think twice about the fires,” Shirley said.

I nodded at my editor without really looking at her, and when she walked away took an excessively large bite from my cardboard vending machine sandwich. The turkey was about an inch think, a slab of salt and rubber. The bread was hard. Probably sitting in there since the 70s when they installed the vending machine. I was absolutely famished, though, with that clawing gurgliness in my stomach, so I ate it anyway.

“You’re a brave soul,” the court reporter, Kelly, said to me as she walked past my desk. I looked up to smile at her but my mouth was stuffed with bread and meat. I tried to do that thing where you smile with your eyes, but because my mouth was all contorted with sandwich, I’m pretty sure it just looked creepy. So much for making good impressions on your coworkers. She sort of stood there awkwardly, waiting for my response as I tried desperately to swallow, but the bread was just too dry to slide down that easily. Not my fault, but how do you tell someone that?

Finally, I managed to get some words out.

“Um, thanks Kelly. I really appreciate it.”

It was my first fire, my first real one anyway, and I was glad I was getting some recognition.

“Even if I were actually starved, like actually starved, I wouldn’t buy one of those sandwiches,” she said. “That’s intense, Jules.”

***

For a few days I didn’t think much about the Jefferson Street house fire. The Norge Daily News kept me busy running around to drownings and shootings across the city, picking up reports from the station downtown.

I didn’t dwell on it much, but it seemed everyone else did. The people in Norge were scared, more so than ever, and they definitely had a right to be. I could see it in the way they stood — the broad-shouldered men in circles crushing beer cans in their hands and the cowering women, huddled together on the edges of their lawns. It was only mid-August, and already 20 shootings had happened in the city. Most of it gang violence, of course, but not all. And the drive-by shootings were the most frightening. One man was shot to death at night on his way out of McDonald’s, only one bite out of his 99-cent burger, still hot and fresh in his hand.

How do you stand all the death?  My mom, an accountant where I grew up in suburban Boston, asked me one afternoon while I Skyped her at a picnic table during lunch. But the truth was, I didn’t always mind it. There was job life and there was life life. And shootings don’t always mean death, of course, there were only three homicides of those 20 shootings. Covering violence is exciting, horrible to say but it’s true. And there’s a certain distance a police reporter has to have, kind of like a doctor doing major surgery, who knows his patient might not survive — you can’t be attached to everyone you get to know.