Jean Luc "Mahi-Mahi" Croissant

Part I: Pete & Mahi Meet

Mac's Pub on a Slow Night
It was just before 8 p.m. on Monday, March 13 of last year when I first met that grizzled old sailor. I wasn't even supposed to work, but Seth had failed to show up again, undoubtedly due to one of his legendary Bacardi binges, and Mac only closes his pub when the Pope's in town. Let me just say this about Seth's whereabouts on that memorable night: it's a sure bet, given his normal company of junkies and whores, that he wasn't singing and praying in a nearby church. My mood, as I recall, had gotten quite poor by this point, given that it was Monday, and I was working on my day off (did I mention I'm the only other bartender?), not to mention the nerve-wracking fact that since around four that afternoon I'd been suffering through the drunken confessions and slurred interrogations of some big-butted tourist type calling herself Coco and stretching an obnoxiously patterned sundress to its absolute limits. I was really beginning to loathe March 13, 2000 and everything it represented when Pete (I would soon discover his name) came sauntering into Mac's front door.

My first impression of the man was a direct result of the horrifying scents accompanying him as he saddled up to the bar. The best thing I can do to describe that potpouri of smells is to ask you to imagine a shipfull of rotting chum, a truckstop washroom left uncleaned for a month, and the decaying carcass of a killer whale that's somehow ended up in your garage, and then combine this mighty trio of stenches. Now don't take me the wrong way: I love fish -- the taste of it, the thought of it, even the powerful smell of it -- but this piratelike old guy (he wore a patch, for God's sake!) established new standards for public indecency. His unkempt grey mass of hair and tattered old rags of an uncertain hue and origin didn't improve his presentation in the least, and when he finally uttered those simple but profound words, "Whiskey, please," I was just praying that Coco would frighten him away. "Coco," I chuckled to myself, "you're our only hope."

And yet, despite the smell and appearance of this man, who I'd soon learn to be a veteran sailor named Pete, and who, very much like me, had lived away from his native land -- Spain, in his case -- for twenty-five or so years, and despite my initial desire to hurl him headlong from my bar, I grew to enjoy old Pete's company in the next few hours. "You see, my friend, I believe in destiny and fate and all that other crap," he began...

Part II: Pete & Mahi Become Temporary Roommates

The Muse's Introduction

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