Erin
The last time I saw her
she still lived in London, still crimped and coloured her hair. Rich purple out of a tub of Plum Directions.
She still worked the coat check at the same long standing Slimelight club, dabs of speed, cans of pilsner or better snakebites, up past dawn when everyone emerged paler and blinking into the morning work rush.
Her fingers and arms were still heavy with chunks and slips of silver. Attentively polished bracelets and rings. Bats, skulls, snakes and dragons, a flash of amethyst. Some pieces mementos from the countries she’d visited, many from Camden Market.
Her room was still a mess just as it had been when we shared rooms in Chalk Farm, Peckham and Vauxhall. Her stuff overflowing onto my side. Tights, tops, skirts, mostly black, some purple, bottles of alcohol, bottles of pain killers and in time, other medication, cigarette papers, piles of tobacco mixed with hash, pint glasses, jewelry, tissues, so many tissues, balled up dotting the carpet. She had allergies and lots of pain. She bled a lot too. Not just uterine issues, but from cuts along her arms, under her bracelets. She used to drip the blood onto paper and create tiny pieces of abstract art. She used to black out in toilet cubicles and stumble down London lane-ways. Laugh about it. She met life with equal measures of humor and woe. And a steadfast resourcefulness, holding down several jobs, finding flats to squat or rent cheaply. When we first arrived in London she found the people and places we were looking for.
The last time I saw her she was still her unique self, wacky, intelligent and living her truth. Still funny, still gregarious, a talented singer and a great listener. Yes, she was addicted and fucked up, her ways laden with instability, always the last one ready, rummaging through her things looking for a misplaced item either in a panic or irritatingly nonchalant. But she had been like that for so long, to me, it was just who she was and I never really thought about it. Things began verging on too unstable though and after her parents died her brother and his wife got her to go back to LA and into rehab. I got one letter from her while she was inside but never saw her again.
The last I heard she was clean, engaged and training to be a counselor. One evening after work in some kind of rehab coffee shop she was walking to her car and dropped dead in the parking lot from a heart attack. She was buried with all her jewelry.