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PORCH PRESENTS

i came home for a weekend recently after nearly a month on the road promoting my new novel, and I was not in good shape. I had one more week of travel and promotion ahead of me, and I told one of my best friends that this time I was serious about hanging myself. "That doesn't really work for me," he said. "I need you still to be around ... at least briefly."

I'm aware that an author on tour has a lot of gold-plated problems -- the luxury of being sick of room service, for instance, the luxury of bad TV reception, the luxury of too much attention paid to oneself. But still, I felt like a miserable little kid at the end of a long, bad day of travel with parents who have recently decided to get a divorce. My hands were shaky, my mind was paranoid and delusional, like Chief Broom in his fog machine in "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest." And I wondered if I had done permanent harm to my central nervous system.

So there I was, at last able to be at home briefly, trying valiantly to savor the 48 hours I got to spend at home with Sam. And I was actually aware that I was being showered with what my friend Praise-the-Lord-Sarah calls "porch presents" -- a little something someone slips you on the porch when they first show up, that's wrapped in newspaper so you'll know it is not a big deal, and that no thank-you notice is expected. Everywhere I went, I kept getting these little presents -- tiresome interviews canceled at the last minute, a baggie of homemade heart-shaped chocolate chip cookies from a fan in Ann Arbor, Mich., someone's 14-year bronze sobriety chip in St. Louis.

The one fly in the ointment about my Mother's Day weekend, though, was that I had to spend Saturday giving a lecture on writing to a small group of magazine editors and writers in San Jose, which is two hours away. I tried to pump myself out of myself and out of my bad mood by remembering what Breaker Morant said: "Live each day as if it's your last, because one of these days, you're bound to be right." Still, I felt a little bitter.

My friend Neshama was going to come along, because it would be her only chance to see me for another week. But I had to leave Sam behind with a friend, and I had to leave my house in a shambles, which was further demoralizing. Of course it would all be there when I got back -- Sam's stuff all over the place, the dishes in a pan in the sink, breeding malaria. Who knows, I thought: Maybe God would manage to lure someone inside while I was gone, some sort of caseworker with cleaning supplies.

Neshama and I got to the hotel in San Jose on time and walked down a long hallway to our conference room. We passed a very Diane Arbus wedding reception -- everyone in terrible, bright, lacy clothes, a pile of discarded shoes at the top of the stairs -- until we located the couple who had put together the all-day conference at which I was to be the afternoon speaker. They were hanging out in the lobby near the closed door to the conference room. I was not due to speak for 10 minutes, so after a moment of small talk, Neshama and I went looking ... for drugs.


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