This began life as a Star Trek story, but don't worry about that--all you need to know is that both characters were played by the same actor, which accounts for the exact resemblance!
Every time I think about that night, I figure I must have been drunker than I realized. I'd only had two beers, but they were the real thing, not synthehol, even though they tasted like warm weak piss. When he walked in, I didn't even notice what he looked like at first. I was finishing the second beer, and wondering if I should order another one or just start in on the hard stuff.
It wasn't a really well stocked bar; all they had was two brands of scotch and four of tequila. That kind of place. I figured I deserved to be drinking in a dump. It wasn't easy to find one this bad in San Francisco, but the cab driver had steered me right. Or wrong, depending on your point of view. A genuine dump.
So he was the kind of guy that belonged in a dump, or felt like he did. That established a rapport right away. He chose a stool two away from me, though there was no one else at the bar, and only one table occupied. The bartender had slopped a puddle on the bar when he handed me the first beer, and hadn't wiped it up yet, so the guy got his sleeve in it. I wasn't really watching, but I saw him lift up his arm and give a little sigh, then put it back down out of the puddle as if it wasn't worth the trouble to change his seat. The stool creaked as he rocked it back and forth.
"Beer," he said when the bartender finally came out of the back room and stared at him. He didn't specify the brand, which was good, because they only had one kind on tap and the bottled stuff wasn't refrigerated. Beer spoils, you know. Got to keep beer cold.
So the bartender drew him a mug of the warm weak piss, and he sat with it for a while before he drank any, watching the head slowly subside until it was just a scum on the sides of the mug, holding it like it was something that belonged to a good friend of his. I finished my beer and got a shot of the worst brand of tequila they had, and told the bartender to leave the bottle. It was half full, and I figured that would be enough.
I was pouring my third shot but hadn't downed it yet when he finally lifted the mug. Down the hatch, all at once, the way you do at parties when you're trying to impress your friends. No breaths. I looked up just to see if he would choke before he finished, because if he sprayed that shit all over me I was planning to object. I hadn't lost quite enough self-respect to sit still and let some asshole spit bad beer on my civvies.
His head was back, and the beer was glugging down his throat like he was dying of thirst. Long white throat, sort of refined-looking, a little bit of stubble showing this late in the afternoon, blond like mine. That was the first thing I noticed that was like me, besides the fact that we were in this dump when there were ten better places in walking distance. It all went down smooth as glass, quite a feat considering what the stuff tasted like, and he put the mug down with a clunk and looked at me.
It was pretty dark in there, with some of the fixtures broken and most of the light right over the bar, so I still didn't notice, not really. Half his face was in shadow. I could tell he was thin, and light-haired, and his hair was in that stupid cut the Academy barbers give you, but he wasn't wearing a cadet's uniform. This kind of place was off limits to cadets anyway. That never stopped me when I was in the Academy, but with a name like mine, you have to do a lot worse to get thrown out. A lot worse.
I didn't say anything to him then, because I had nothing to say. I hadn't come here to talk to anyone. I drank my third shot and poured the fourth one. None of it had hit me yet since I had drunk them so fast, but I could feel them waiting, kind of gearing up, like an ax hanging over my head, trembling in the hands of the executioner, waiting for the order to fall. I liked that thought. I'd been tried, and condemned, and no one had the decency to just take me out and shoot me, not in this enlightened age, so I was doing it myself with more old-fashioned means.
I had figured on getting as drunk as I could while still being able to stand and hail taxicabs, and then going out to the Golden Gate and walking to midspan. I knew they had put up a force field all along the railings years ago, but no one had even tried in so long that maybe it wasn't maintained very well. There might be gaps I could slip through.
I'm good at slipping through gaps. Slicker than owl shit in an okra dish. I like that kind of expression. My favorite grand-uncle, the one who wasn't an admiral, the one who died when I was ten, used that kind of expression, especially when he'd had a few. I liked the pursed-up look my father's face got when he heard down-home talk. I learned as many expressions from my grand-uncle as I could. We didn't see him very often. We didn't go to his funeral.
I doubted that my father would go to my funeral. I wasn't sure I wanted him there. I wanted him to sit at home while my mother and sisters got dressed in black and looked at photo albums and maybe cried a little. I wanted him to sit in his study with the transcript of the court-martial, and run it with the sound off because he couldn't bear to listen to the testimony. At least he would be looking at my face.
He did show up on the third day when they read the verdict, though he hadn't been there for the trial, and sat and listened to it, and then left. Even the reporters didn't block his way. He never looked at me. Judgment had been passed, and for once by a higher authority than him, and that was all he needed to know. It never mattered how hard you tried; the end result was all that mattered. That's a good credo for a Starfleet admiral, but it might not be a good one for a father. He knew which one was his higher calling.
So I was sitting in this dump, and I had two beers and three shots of tequila in me, and there were three voices calling me down to the water, I guess, and the guy two stools down from me ordered another beer. There was something familiar about that voice, but a little strange as well. Like the first time you hear someone you know from 'phone conversations speak in person.
I frowned, but the tequila was starting to hit me. I wasn't thinking very straight. I didn't care who he was. I hadn't come here to meet anyone. I was going to have two more shots, or maybe just one because I had lost some weight since the accident and it didn't take as much to get me blind anymore. I used to have it figured pretty well. I knew exactly how much it took to get me to each stage of drunk and keep me there. That was one of the main things I learned in the Academy.
He chugged the second beer just like the first. This time he seemed to taste it, and made a face. It reminded me of the face I had made when drinking the stuff. Weird--I had the thought that he was me, just a little delayed, a few minutes behind me every step of the way.
But he was wearing different clothes, plain civilian stuff like me, but a different color, and he had a long coat on. I had a better haircut, too. I had the pointed sideburns still, of course, because I had been Starfleet until earlier that afternoon, and I had it a little long on top to let the wave show. I hadn't had a scalp job like his in a long time. Only cadets get haircuts like that. I did begin to wonder why a cadet was in here, and in civvies, and drinking as fast as I was.
"That stuff is piss," I said, and passed him my shot. "It goes out the same way it came in. This sticks with you." He looked at me again, and I saw his brows wrinkle up, but he took the shot and tossed it back, just the way I had been doing.
"Thanks," he said. He didn't say anything else, just looked at the mirror behind the bar, and I looked at his profile for a minute, and then at the mirror. I was seeing double already. I didn't think I had lost that much weight in the hospital. But one of my reflections had on a long dark coat, and had a bad haircut, and his cheeks were a little fuller. He had my face, though.
I'm seeing one and a half instead of double, I remember thinking. I'm seeing my face on this guy. He turned and looked at me again, and I saw his profile in the mirror. Now he didn't look so familiar. I picked up my bottle of tequila again. He was still staring at me. The tequila was about halfway there now, just biting down good and hard, and I studied the label for a while until I got uneasy. What the hell is this asshole's problem, I thought, and he said, "Who the fuck are you?"
"I'm famous," I said. "I was on the news at six. I don't have to tell you who I am."
"You're Thomas Eugene Paris," he said. "Fuck."
"Fuck you," I said.
That ended the conversation for a while. Then he held out the glass, and I poured him another shot. One more, and he'd have caught up to me. He could probably hold it a little better, though, having about twenty pounds on me. But he gave me the glass back when he finished, and I poured myself another one. I didn't drink it yet, but looked in the bar mirror. There was my face again, twice. I'd know it anywhere. Kind of triangular, a little bony, pretty well put together when I was smiling, which was most of the time. Blue eyes.
"What the fuck are you doing with my face?" I said.
"That's mine," he said. We turned our stools and really looked at each other for a minute.
"I'm not that drunk," I said, but I guess I was.
"Neither am I," he said, and he probably wasn't. Still behind me on shots.
"Who the fuck are you?" I said.
He didn't answer for a minute.
"I'm not famous," he said. "My name is Nick Locarno."
"I don't know you," I said.
"I don't know you either," he said. "Not in person, I mean. I saw you on the news. I read about the court-martial."
"So did everyone on the planet. Everyone in the Federation. You don't know me any better than any of them."
"No."