Like I already said, I was hardly being held captive. I kind of liked the old folks. Since my own family and I were on the skids - what family doesn't have its ups and downs?, to quote Eleanor of Aquitaine - I guess I gravitated toward their warmth and hospitality, like any bummed-out and lonely bloke would do. Anyway, rather than tempting the flesh by walking the edge between Town's good and evil, I found myself staying at the old homestead more and more. Oh, yeah, I wandered out once and a while, but there didn't seem the push to find some cheap, empty thrills. Gee, am I just getting older and wiser? Actually, the first but not the last.
In the prime of life, a guy doesn't think about tomorrow and responsibilities so much as he does enjoying where his energy and lust for life take him - a big, nonstop adventure. Well, I don't know what happened, but something came along and took all the starch out of my sails. I've lost it. It's not quite like I've lost the will to live, just because my dear, departed family has turned their backs on me. Sure, it hurts, but Mabel and Henry, out of the blue so to speak, have filled up the empty hole in my heart.
I can't figure why I feel so exhausted though. Take a look in the mirror and you're not always displeased. Sure, there are those bad hair months and a little too much good food and beer that go straight to the gut and stay put. But lately I notice there are bags under my eyes and a few creases I never noticed before. Now don't get me wrong. I'm no Narcissus or whatever his name prancing and preening in front of any piece of glass that happens to cast a reflection of yours truly. I just look old.
The old folks - why do I even say "old" folks? They are up and at it, going circles round me ...
They never looked better.