1417 lines
82 KiB
Plaintext
1417 lines
82 KiB
Plaintext
|
...
|
|||
|
eyes unshrink
|
|||
|
daylight massages
|
|||
|
...
|
|||
|
(pick slide_________________________________________________________________)
|
|||
|
abundantlike flesh
|
|||
|
inspring growing like flesh.
|
|||
|
never enough found to go 'round.
|
|||
|
yeah, yeah, yeah blame your parents
|
|||
|
inspiring growth the mind: twitch
|
|||
|
days as anothers, stolen time from death. a rose,
|
|||
|
flattened. from it grows a soft moss. green like spring
|
|||
|
why not born to die. to live, readiness is
|
|||
|
all.
|
|||
|
in the loneliness of your hollow foot,
|
|||
|
the hall chorus drums you alone,
|
|||
|
or your anemone softlike reaching,
|
|||
|
brilliance of its echo, rolling back to you, the essence of selfisolate.
|
|||
|
and in your hand, its glass diffracts the sun,
|
|||
|
a brutality of: a joy of: notyetsurfeit of: a stench of: a truth of:
|
|||
|
(____________________________________________________________________alive...
|
|||
|
the-
|
|||
|
undi pretentious literariness
|
|||
|
scov from s.r. prozak & l.b. noire
|
|||
|
ered
|
|||
|
coun cblanc@pomona.claremont.edu
|
|||
|
try. rm09216@academia.swt.edu
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<05nov93 -0:02>
|
|||
|
...unshaded)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
c o n t e n t s .:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
~ l.b. noire
|
|||
|
'filter (a.d.1993)'
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
~ w. cattish marsh
|
|||
|
'eyelash'
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
~ r. barney grubbs & s.r. prozak
|
|||
|
'in the lee of the seer: poetical collage'
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
~ b. ambrose
|
|||
|
'you asked for it'
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
~ s.r. prozak
|
|||
|
stoner adventures
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
~ s.r. prozak
|
|||
|
musical morass
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
...............................................:
|
|||
|
l.b.noire 'filter (a.d.1993)'
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It was a Friday night. For once, I didn't have to work the next day so it
|
|||
|
left the night open for exploration of many kinds... When I opened up the door
|
|||
|
of my darkened apartment, the only thing I could see was the steady red light
|
|||
|
of my answering machine -- it was serving its purpose. I didn't turn on the
|
|||
|
lights. Instead, I closed the door behind me and locked it. As soon as the
|
|||
|
outside lights from the hall were blocked out, the street light filtering
|
|||
|
through the blinds was the only source illuminating the room. I set my
|
|||
|
backpack on the bar that separated the kitchen from the living room. It was
|
|||
|
actually one large room, but the bar gave it the illusion of being two. I
|
|||
|
walked to the middle of the living room, took off my shoes, sat down and
|
|||
|
crossed my legs. The carpet was bare except for a small entertainment center
|
|||
|
sitting flush against the wall. In the entertainment center sat an aging
|
|||
|
television, a half-working VCR, and an ad-hoc stereo with an add-on compact
|
|||
|
disc player. I crawled over to the television and turned it on. After
|
|||
|
flipping through several channels, I became bored and tapped the knob, turning
|
|||
|
it off. After that, I sought comfort from music. However, the CD's I flipped
|
|||
|
through brought back unpleasant memories since they were remnants of something
|
|||
|
no longer there. I laid on the floor staring up at the ceiling as my mind
|
|||
|
started to tense up. I had only been home five minutes and was already bored
|
|||
|
into psychosis.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
After a few minutes, I crawled across the living room and into the narrow
|
|||
|
hallway that served as a separation for the living room and the bedroom. I
|
|||
|
opened the closet and crawled in until I was sitting in front of the
|
|||
|
footlocker. I fished my keys from my pocket and opened the lock. After
|
|||
|
digging through teenage leftovers, I found what I was looking for. I took out
|
|||
|
the small bag crawled back into the middle of the living room. I again sat
|
|||
|
cross-legged and opened the bag. I took out five hollow point bullets and the
|
|||
|
.38 special. I loaded all five bullets into the gun and pulled the hammer
|
|||
|
back. It looked like I would go through my daily ritual of trying to think of
|
|||
|
all the reasons not to let the firing pin go forward for once. I put the
|
|||
|
barrel between my incisors and bit the metal lightly. My index finger quivered
|
|||
|
on the trigger with a tensed muscle. I was hoping that if I did get the
|
|||
|
courage to pull the trigger, my medulla would create a unique spray pattern on
|
|||
|
the wall directly behind me. It would be my posthumous contribution to the
|
|||
|
world of art. However, the usual thoughts ran through my head and the usual
|
|||
|
tears ran from my eyes. And as usual, I curled into a fetal position and fell
|
|||
|
asleep on the floor with Gun still in my hand.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
An angel floated to my side and whispered in my ear...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The telephone beeped at me shortly after 10:00pm. I staggered over to it
|
|||
|
through the dark, trying to distinguish between reality and the fading bits of
|
|||
|
a dream I was already forgetting. I finally found the phone just before the
|
|||
|
answering machine kicked on. I pulled the antenna out and flipped the switch
|
|||
|
to "talk." The concerned voice on the other end was returning my call and made
|
|||
|
an inquiry. "Oh, nothing," I lied as I laid Gun on the bar. We exchanged some
|
|||
|
promises, but I picked up something else. It would at least drive me until the
|
|||
|
next weekend. A voice of reassurance... It would be best to leave the
|
|||
|
sanctuary before Boredom settled in again. I put on a white t-shirt and a
|
|||
|
black pair of shorts then headed out the front door. The night air was humid
|
|||
|
causing my t-shirt to stick to my skin as if it was wet.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I only lived two blocks off the main drag of town. There were plenty of
|
|||
|
bars, clubs and dives for me to choose from, but I always ended up in the same
|
|||
|
one. The crowd was familiar, the employees were familiar, and the chemicals
|
|||
|
were familiar. I walked through the front doors and exchanged some greetings
|
|||
|
with the owner. We were friends so I didn't have to worry about the cover
|
|||
|
charge. This meant I could save the five dollars for something with which to
|
|||
|
squeegee my brain. The music was so loud that it was unidentifiable. I could
|
|||
|
only feel the kick drum emanating from the speakers and resonating in my rib
|
|||
|
cage. I bought a bottle of cheap domestic beer and sat down on some stairs
|
|||
|
while watching the crowd -- my favorite pastime. Somewhere between my fourth
|
|||
|
and fifth beer, I had pulled a couple of small capsules from my pocket and
|
|||
|
swallowed them with the urine-colored drink. I remembered something about not
|
|||
|
mixing alcohol with barbiturates, but hardly concerned with this. Actually, I
|
|||
|
was interested in finding new perceptions by mixing different chemicals.
|
|||
|
Shortly after midnight I was talking to a "friend" I only knew as Brandon. For
|
|||
|
some reason, he was also known as "Turnip" to some other people in the crowd.
|
|||
|
We had managed to locate a couple of Al Hofmann's problem children. At prime
|
|||
|
time, we decided to head back to my apartment for some vein candy I had been
|
|||
|
saving.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Last train to reality departing on Track 9...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The walk back to the apartment was quite interesting. It was a challenge
|
|||
|
trying to keep the two of us together. Brandon was convinced that "little
|
|||
|
people" kept running out from under houses and biting his ankles only to run
|
|||
|
back when he would look down. I was convinced that police cars still looked
|
|||
|
evil when filtered through synthetic ergot derivatives. We eventually made it
|
|||
|
back to the apartment without getting hit by a car or bus. He just happened
|
|||
|
(!) to have a strand of rubber tubing with him. I just happened (!) to have a
|
|||
|
few syringes and a vial of Demerol(TM) which I swiped from work. I had no
|
|||
|
previous experience with self-injection, but Brandon showed me the four simple
|
|||
|
steps. Within thirty minutes, we had both administered doses that were more
|
|||
|
than likely above prescription level. The first wave I fought against was the
|
|||
|
nausea.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Somewhere over the next 36 hours, Brandon wandered back into the street.
|
|||
|
I stayed in the apartment and decided to watch the criss-crossing color
|
|||
|
patterns of my bedroom ceiling. The television was fucked also up. The red
|
|||
|
light on my answering machine came to life with new vigor. I tried to drink
|
|||
|
something because my throat was dry, but I was having a hard time with the
|
|||
|
glass. This neon matrix is really interesting!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Please don't take it for granted again..."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A fresh stream of vomit emerging from my mouth woke me. It mixed quite
|
|||
|
well with the dry puddle on my pillow. I was lying on my bed in only my
|
|||
|
underwear. I tried to stand but only fell to the ground in the attempt. My
|
|||
|
sense of balance was nowhere to be found. I crawled into the bathroom and
|
|||
|
leaned into the sink. I turned on the cold water and rinsed my mouth. The
|
|||
|
fluorescent light was too harsh for my eyes, but I managed to focus them
|
|||
|
slightly. My pupils were quite dilated. My throat was swollen and too
|
|||
|
constricted for me to swallow much more than thin liquids. I walked into the
|
|||
|
kitchen with thanks to the wall. A broken glass was scattered across the sink
|
|||
|
and the cabinet top. A small pool of blood was next the glass and was spread
|
|||
|
onto the floor. A previously full bottle of Gatorade was on its side. Its
|
|||
|
contents made the cabinet and floor quite sticky. I walked over to the
|
|||
|
answering machine and pushed the "play" button. A few calls from a parent
|
|||
|
feigning concern for my whereabouts, an occasional friend, a co-worker, and an
|
|||
|
automated telemarketing machine wanting me to tour lakefront property in an
|
|||
|
area that could probably only be reached by four-wheel drive. I unplugged the
|
|||
|
phone and went back into the bedroom. I didn't know what day it was and didn't
|
|||
|
care if I was supposed to be at work. I crawled back into my bed and pulled
|
|||
|
the comforter and a clean pillow over my head. There were still little things
|
|||
|
crawling up the walls and I wanted them to go away. I just wanted _everything_
|
|||
|
to go away.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The angel sat beside me and cradled my head as I left.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
...............................................:
|
|||
|
w. cattish marsh 'eyelash'
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I can't seem to touch realiy
|
|||
|
I'm free floating in my capsule of illusion
|
|||
|
it gushes and mends insanely
|
|||
|
twists and contorts
|
|||
|
inescapable
|
|||
|
my thoughts cushioning actuality
|
|||
|
Oh truth pierce me!
|
|||
|
rupture cleave my cell of delusions
|
|||
|
my comforter of rationalizations
|
|||
|
slaughter me awake
|
|||
|
show no mercy
|
|||
|
let me face existance head on
|
|||
|
stand before me in all its glorious brutality
|
|||
|
don't snip at me and run away
|
|||
|
stop teasing!
|
|||
|
I, and my enshroudings, begin to fray
|
|||
|
rather slice once and let me confront
|
|||
|
the life or death of truth
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
...............................................:
|
|||
|
'in the eye of the seer'
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I found a little baby
|
|||
|
I hung it from my prick
|
|||
|
it makes the day seem brighter,
|
|||
|
with a baby on your dick.
|
|||
|
I hung it from a little hook,
|
|||
|
it nestled gently in the crook
|
|||
|
between my cock and leg.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I taught it how to juggle,
|
|||
|
I taught it how to eat.
|
|||
|
I taught it how to piss, of course,
|
|||
|
(it couldn't help but see)
|
|||
|
I taught it how to cut its meat
|
|||
|
with scissors glinting keen,
|
|||
|
then rap-a-dang-ding,
|
|||
|
with one simple swing,
|
|||
|
it snipped off my thing
|
|||
|
and was gone.
|
|||
|
b. grubbs
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Against the glass my fingers spread
|
|||
|
Beyond which children dance, alive
|
|||
|
In each one daring to be each,
|
|||
|
Against the ice I lean my head,
|
|||
|
To watch the sun crest ev'ry blade
|
|||
|
Of grass abundantly profuse,
|
|||
|
With each one daring to be lone,
|
|||
|
As I had been in youth submerged,
|
|||
|
The moist cadaver of my past:
|
|||
|
As from the bursting lungs of death
|
|||
|
A drowning sailor grasps the air,
|
|||
|
And bushmen quicksand fast depart,
|
|||
|
My eyes found airport, stench of sweat,
|
|||
|
And empty bottles, empty threats.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
..
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
waves of mortality
|
|||
|
decorate this floor
|
|||
|
the crushed breast of a red bird
|
|||
|
(...bravely presented to his children,
|
|||
|
loves, potential, combat for the self replicated)
|
|||
|
the sticking leaves of a fallen tree
|
|||
|
rot's sweet ichor repulsing my nostrils
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
yet i have escaped
|
|||
|
a greater sweetness of stench
|
|||
|
the clotted ways of breath
|
|||
|
whisking through the streets,
|
|||
|
collossal power of fluid retribution,
|
|||
|
clinging each to its fragments,
|
|||
|
as if to balance the whole
|
|||
|
in the destruction of the tiny.
|
|||
|
like clinging hooks,
|
|||
|
gnats.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
here these feet i think
|
|||
|
enshrined far from safety
|
|||
|
must be i think happier
|
|||
|
yet wistful, as the eyes,
|
|||
|
touching each cell in the skin,
|
|||
|
each twitching hair,
|
|||
|
will never witness themselves in reflection
|
|||
|
seemingly never (again, perhaps)
|
|||
|
in the deep smooth muscular lakes
|
|||
|
of admonishing eyes.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
in the best howl of his words,
|
|||
|
among of course his (devices &
|
|||
|
rhythms & symbol syndicate) work
|
|||
|
he paused, breath over beard,
|
|||
|
then returned, shoes hard against the wind,
|
|||
|
to speak out the last utterances
|
|||
|
of some great man
|
|||
|
on paper.
|
|||
|
into the heedless they flee,
|
|||
|
paper birds over the harsh flare
|
|||
|
of an invisible city, burning.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
....
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
purpled like my oldest vein
|
|||
|
sky reaches past a concrete rooftop
|
|||
|
another incarnation of security and stolidity
|
|||
|
each grey emplacement a brick,
|
|||
|
mechanical, plotted, intricate resistance
|
|||
|
to the depth of infinite indefinite
|
|||
|
grasping space. drifting into space is freedom,
|
|||
|
falling out of space is progression.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
from here to beyond the space extrudes,
|
|||
|
extensible yearning lurking, a drawing lust,
|
|||
|
it takes the flesh of the young,
|
|||
|
and perverts the will of the old,
|
|||
|
into dreadful casting tears, siding the face,
|
|||
|
battered in the thousand wars of a mundane lifetime,
|
|||
|
defeated in the abscess of time.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
s.r.p.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
...............................................:
|
|||
|
b. ambrose 'you asked for it'
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I.
|
|||
|
Heat, pounding heat, pulsing and writhing like some
|
|||
|
decapitated snake, washing in waves to an irregular heartbeat; that
|
|||
|
alone was all he knew. Well, that and the fact that Ned's Atomic
|
|||
|
Dustbin was on the radio urging destructive practices on the
|
|||
|
television set he didn't own. "Somewhere along this road," he
|
|||
|
mumbled to himself, "there should be a sign, some sort of
|
|||
|
demarcation." There was a pause as he considered how best to tell
|
|||
|
himself just what kind of construction was needed. "Certainly not
|
|||
|
something cheesy or conventional like 'Entering ...' or 'Welcome to ...',
|
|||
|
but something else [pause], something a bit more undefinable." The
|
|||
|
man chose not to elaborate out loud any further at this point,
|
|||
|
speaking was an effort, and the doll on the seat next to him in turn
|
|||
|
seemed reluctant to probe for deeper meaning in the statements,
|
|||
|
preferring to stare mutely off to the side at the passing landscape.
|
|||
|
Not that there was much in the way of scenery as far as the doll was
|
|||
|
concerned; the barren terrain that sped by in graduated parallax
|
|||
|
offered little comfort. The doll itself had no name, or at least it didn't
|
|||
|
attach any particular concept-sound to itself, and certainly no one
|
|||
|
had ever bothered to give it one. Brightly covered paint strokes
|
|||
|
adorned the doll's wooden surface in a swirling pattern, order amidst
|
|||
|
chaos, that when combined with the thing's bulbous goggling eyes,
|
|||
|
spiraling horns, and permanent grimace, made quite an aesthetically
|
|||
|
unpleasant impression despite the obvious care and craftsmanship
|
|||
|
that had gone into its making. Perhaps aesthetically unpleasant
|
|||
|
would be the wrong phrase to use, more like aesthetically disturbing.
|
|||
|
Whatever it was, it certainly didn't appear to be benevolent in
|
|||
|
nature, a fact that didn't bother the doll in the least. The only other
|
|||
|
remarkable feature about the kachina doll, for that is what it was,
|
|||
|
was the fact that embedded in its back was a squarish lump of blue-
|
|||
|
gray metal. Cool to the touch even in the mind-numbing heat, the
|
|||
|
metallic slab was definitely out of place, but as of yet, no one had
|
|||
|
bothered to tell it thus, and so it remained blithely ignorant of the
|
|||
|
quizzical looks it received from the man next to it.
|
|||
|
The man, quite unlike the doll, did indeed have a name, David
|
|||
|
Proudfoot, to be exact. David (as he preferred to be called), again
|
|||
|
unlike the doll, was rather unremarkable in appearance. A pair of
|
|||
|
dusty boots, a loose slightly-soiled white t-shirt, and blue jeans
|
|||
|
punished in ways that rivaled the Spanish Inquisition in brutality all
|
|||
|
clung in a sweat-fueled embrace to David Proudfoot's rather lanky,
|
|||
|
dark form. At the present, he seemed to be playing a little game as
|
|||
|
to exactly how little he could move his arms, and body in general for
|
|||
|
that matter, and still stay on the barely defined road that led deeper
|
|||
|
into Hopi territory. In fact, as far as the neutral observer was
|
|||
|
concerned, there were two passengers in a truck that obviously
|
|||
|
represented a marvelous advance in technology, for it was doing a
|
|||
|
very competent job of driving itself, though at times it would seem to
|
|||
|
err and come dangerously close to the road's edge. Ned's Atomic
|
|||
|
Dustbin had long since ceased it's techno-destructive tirade, and the
|
|||
|
radio had moved on to a song that David did not recognize. Whoever
|
|||
|
it was, they sure were angry, or at least acting like they were.
|
|||
|
Time passed, sagebrush rolled, the sun shone, and finally the
|
|||
|
station crackled into tinny oblivion, unresurrectable unless the
|
|||
|
vehicle that housed the radio began to travel in a direction opposite
|
|||
|
its current path, but by now it had became quite obvious that the
|
|||
|
truck had absolutely no intention of doing so.
|
|||
|
Slowly, almost reverently, David detached an arm from the
|
|||
|
steering wheel with an audible *shclup* and lightly punched a button
|
|||
|
on the radio. Static indicated a lack of success. A similar result with
|
|||
|
the remaining five buttons produced a small frown, the nearest thing
|
|||
|
to emotion that David had shown externally since the beginning of
|
|||
|
the trip. The arm returned to its former position on the steering
|
|||
|
wheel, which seemed to please the truck, for it no longer weaved off
|
|||
|
the road like it had when David's arm had been occupied with the
|
|||
|
radio.
|
|||
|
For what was probably the hundredth time if anybody had've
|
|||
|
bothered to count (but of course nobody did), David glanced
|
|||
|
momentarily at the doll seated next to him before returning his
|
|||
|
concentration once again to the road in front of him. It puzzled him,
|
|||
|
this menacing kachina doll with the metal lump protruding from its
|
|||
|
back. He had picked it up from a small out-of-the-way occult shop in
|
|||
|
Phoenix, and though his original purpose had been to buy feathers
|
|||
|
for tomorrow's ceremony, he purchased the costly doll so
|
|||
|
automatically that afterwards he gave serious credence to the idea
|
|||
|
that someone or something else had somehow influenced or coerced
|
|||
|
him to buy it, rather than its purchase being a product of his own
|
|||
|
will.
|
|||
|
Glancing at it again (101 for those counting), his mind
|
|||
|
wandered towards the problem of the kachina doll's origins, purpose,
|
|||
|
and function. It was the metal, not the too-perfect craftsmanship,
|
|||
|
nor the chaotic and foreign designs on its surface, that bothered him
|
|||
|
the most, he decided. After he had acquired the doll and returned to
|
|||
|
the safety of his cramped apartment, he had spent several hours
|
|||
|
poring over it, examining the designs, feeling the smooth contours,
|
|||
|
and most of all, puzzling over the metal block. When he had first
|
|||
|
touched it, perched on his sagging bed, a strange sort of vibration
|
|||
|
accompanied by a barely audible humming sound seemed to
|
|||
|
emanate from it. Efforts to pry it out proved to be completely
|
|||
|
fruitless, it was almost as if the wood not only fit around the metal,
|
|||
|
but had also grown into and become a part of it. David wondered if
|
|||
|
the doll's expression perhaps sprung from the very fact that it had
|
|||
|
such a lump of foreign substance protruding from its back; he was
|
|||
|
pretty sure that he would wear a similar grimace if such a plight was
|
|||
|
ever his, but then again he wasn't really worried at this point that
|
|||
|
such an possibility lay in his eminent future. The patterns bothered
|
|||
|
him too, albeit to a lesser extent. Somewhere, he knew, he had seen
|
|||
|
these designs, but for the life of him, he wasn't able to recall where
|
|||
|
or in what context. Nonetheless, the thing remained an enigma that
|
|||
|
his mind could not ignore. Who would carve such a thing, and for
|
|||
|
that matter why? Answers obstinately refused to present
|
|||
|
themselves, so when it had came time to journey to the village for
|
|||
|
the year's most important rain ceremony, the doll became a guest-
|
|||
|
passenger on the trip in hopes that someone else might be able to
|
|||
|
shed a little light on the mystery. For now, David just drove, the land
|
|||
|
scrolled on by, the sun slugged its way towards the western horizon,
|
|||
|
and through it all the doll sat, deaf and dumb, offering not a single
|
|||
|
word.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
II.
|
|||
|
He arrived at the village at sunset, the colors so brilliant that
|
|||
|
he fancied briefly that nature's palette had somehow been scrambled
|
|||
|
in a such a chaotic fashion that nothing was left untouched, orange
|
|||
|
houses, red dirt, and purplish clumps of water-starved grass. David
|
|||
|
always felt a funny twinge when he returned here to the village,
|
|||
|
nostalgia perhaps. The best he could think of was the feeling of
|
|||
|
being caught between two worlds, but even that clich<63> wasn't right.
|
|||
|
He couldn't help but liken his situation to that of the kachina doll, an
|
|||
|
uncomfortable synthesis between tradition and technology, past and
|
|||
|
the present. He returned monthly, participated in the many
|
|||
|
ceremonies, and did his best to help with the survival of the village,
|
|||
|
yet at the same time, he lived in the city, in an apartment even, and
|
|||
|
did the accounting for a prospering insurance company. The intricate
|
|||
|
doll was caught in the same situation, its form grounded in the
|
|||
|
traditions of centuries past, yet also integrated so jarringly with the
|
|||
|
present through the metallic parasite. "The designs too," he thought
|
|||
|
suddenly, "they too were somehow connected to the technological
|
|||
|
side... where were they from, where were they from?" He barred his
|
|||
|
teeth and shook his head in frustration, but unfortunately, those
|
|||
|
gestures did nothing for the puzzle.
|
|||
|
Driving always exhausted David, especially with the summer
|
|||
|
heat, so after briefly visiting friends, he retired for the night to his
|
|||
|
parents' house. He dreamed of nothing in particular.
|
|||
|
The ceremony the next day went rather uneventfully. Looking
|
|||
|
around at the sweaty red-faced tourists, David wondered briefly
|
|||
|
what went through their minds while they watched. Did they see the
|
|||
|
same things, the harmony, the intricacy, the blending between
|
|||
|
nature, people, and lifestyle? For the most part he doubted it. "Odd,"
|
|||
|
he thought, "I'm witnessing probably the most important rain dance
|
|||
|
in the village's history, and all I can think of are some silly-looking
|
|||
|
tourists and some oddly-made kachina doll that I picked up for an
|
|||
|
arm and a leg from some occult freak back in the city."
|
|||
|
Unfortunately, this mental reprimand did nothing for David's
|
|||
|
wavering attention towards what was going on around him.
|
|||
|
It had been a bad year for the village, another bad year in a
|
|||
|
long succession of bad years, drought and barren fields were
|
|||
|
becoming the norm, not the exception. Of course, with people like
|
|||
|
David to help out financially and such, the village was not in any
|
|||
|
immediate danger of starving; rather the threat came from within, as
|
|||
|
more and more people lost faith in the old ways, especially the
|
|||
|
younger ones. Those who remained adamant in the face of such stiff
|
|||
|
adversity found themselves facing a dwindling population as more
|
|||
|
and more left the village convinced it had fallen out of favor with the
|
|||
|
gods. If there was any time that rain was needed, now was truly it.
|
|||
|
Two days later, David, was nearly convinced too, that indeed
|
|||
|
the place had been cursed by the gods; the weather remained
|
|||
|
unbearably hot, the land blistered and parched. He called in sick
|
|||
|
from the village's one phone and remained to help out with the many
|
|||
|
jobs that more and more went unfinished as the work force
|
|||
|
dwindled. As he staggered into bed later that night, his toe
|
|||
|
connected painfully with a rather hard object that had found its way
|
|||
|
into his bed. Pulling it out from among the covers, he discovered,
|
|||
|
much to his amazement, the kachina doll. What was so amazing to
|
|||
|
him though, was the fact that for two days he had been so immersed
|
|||
|
in his work that he had managed to completely forget the doll's
|
|||
|
existence. Now that he was reminded of it however, he found
|
|||
|
himself bothered so much by its mystery that, imbued with new
|
|||
|
purpose, he straight away padded over to one of the village elders's
|
|||
|
homes, doll in hand. His visit was about as successful as the rain-
|
|||
|
calling ceremony several days before.
|
|||
|
Rising-moon, his paternal grandfather, and one of the most
|
|||
|
famous kachina doll makers in the southwest, was not only clueless
|
|||
|
as to the doll's origins or meanings, but he also exhibited an almost
|
|||
|
hostile air towards the thing itself. He refused to give any reasons
|
|||
|
for his distrust, simply saying that the best thing to do at this point
|
|||
|
would be to burn the thing. Consulting with others produced similar
|
|||
|
results, though none so hostile; no one seemed to be able to answer
|
|||
|
any of the questions David posed. More frustrated than ever, he
|
|||
|
returned to bed, and drifted off into a restless sleep.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
III.
|
|||
|
He awoke in the middle of the night to the sound of a single
|
|||
|
wolf howling in the distance. He felt the strange need for a walk, so
|
|||
|
without any consideration whatsoever he sloughed out of bed and
|
|||
|
tromped out of the village in the direction of the nearby hills; it was
|
|||
|
only when he was a good mile or so out that he realized he'd brought
|
|||
|
along the doll.
|
|||
|
The memories of childhood were particularly strong here
|
|||
|
amongst the rocky outcroppings and rising swells that constituted his
|
|||
|
personal playground as a young child. Many things remained locked
|
|||
|
up and secret, a near-fatal encounter with an angry rattlesnake,
|
|||
|
breaking an arm after slipping off a small ledge, and of course the
|
|||
|
discovery of the cave.
|
|||
|
David first encountered the cave while on one of his many
|
|||
|
walks amongst the cyclopean masonry that seemed to propagate and
|
|||
|
reproduce so much in these hills. Tucked behind a rather monstrous
|
|||
|
boulder so that only the slim could ever hope to enter, a small crawl
|
|||
|
hole opened into a spacious but bare cavern. The place still
|
|||
|
contained a strong magic, the kind that tended to accumulate in the
|
|||
|
mind of a young child. Barely squeezing through the small niche-like
|
|||
|
opening, David recoiled in shock at what he saw when he shone his
|
|||
|
light about the cavern. Someone, or something, had been in here
|
|||
|
recently, very recently in fact. The chamber was completely devoid
|
|||
|
of dust, and in the center lay the charred form of a kachina doll.
|
|||
|
David's hand automatically reached for his doll, and much to his
|
|||
|
relief he found it safe and sound, resting quietly in his pocket. The
|
|||
|
charred doll appeared to be very similar to one his grandfather
|
|||
|
might have made, and it seemed not to have suffered extensive
|
|||
|
damage, so David gathered it up into the folds of his sweatshirt, but
|
|||
|
not before pulling out his own doll. In the weak and wavering light,
|
|||
|
it appeared more monstrous and menacing than ever, leering
|
|||
|
mindlessly in a way that reminded David so much of some nameless
|
|||
|
zombie in a cheesy horror film. Setting the doll down in the thin
|
|||
|
layer of ashes before him, he crouched down for a while, eyes closed,
|
|||
|
wondering what all this could mean.
|
|||
|
Movement occurred, movement that was not his own, and
|
|||
|
David shot up out of his crouch so quickly in a rush of fear and
|
|||
|
adrenaline that he almost thwacked his head against the low ceiling.
|
|||
|
A quick glance around told him that he was still alone, no one but
|
|||
|
himself and the doll standing amongst the ashes. It was at this point
|
|||
|
that David's eyes bugged out in a manner that would have made the
|
|||
|
doll quite proud, for the doll's physical position and form had
|
|||
|
changed; what was once a threatening grimace now was a
|
|||
|
triumphant smile that seemed altogether even more hideous than
|
|||
|
the formerly leering countenance. And when the doll began to
|
|||
|
speak, David, staring numbly, found himself not the least bit
|
|||
|
surprised...
|
|||
|
He must have dozed, for his next memory was that of a sliver
|
|||
|
of morning sun creeping across the back wall of the cave. Not
|
|||
|
bothering to even look around at his surroundings, David
|
|||
|
staggered/wormed his way out of the cavern and into the blinding
|
|||
|
sun, which although it had but just risen was already beginning the
|
|||
|
transmutation of the cold night air to the stifling heat waves of
|
|||
|
midday. He paused, groped about in his pocket, and despite the
|
|||
|
warm day, felt an icy, electric chill rush through his body as he
|
|||
|
grasped the form of the doll, not the burnt one, but the accursed one
|
|||
|
his grandfather would not touch. He clutched it spasmodically, and
|
|||
|
everything came back to him.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
IV.
|
|||
|
These days David found himself returning to the village less
|
|||
|
and less, whether it was out of fear or guilt he didn't want to know.
|
|||
|
Besides, the village no longer really needed him; it was prospering
|
|||
|
like it never had before despite the numerous disappearances that
|
|||
|
had taken place in the area and the ugly rumors that had begun to
|
|||
|
spread as a result. Actually, he knew inside that he'd never go back,
|
|||
|
not after witnessing the last ceremony filled with the grimacing
|
|||
|
dancers, each and every one twisting and writhing with shining
|
|||
|
metal boxes strapped to their backs, not after witnessing how less
|
|||
|
than an hour later a gentle and refreshing rain had washed down
|
|||
|
and fed the thirsty fields like a mother would her toddler. There
|
|||
|
was something unnatural and wrong about that rain, it had seemed
|
|||
|
tainted, almost pinkish, but the corn plants didn't seem to mind in
|
|||
|
the least bit. Just what had he unleashed? He didn't know, nor did
|
|||
|
he want to find out. No, the village nor its gods were no longer for
|
|||
|
him. You see, it was not until later, not until after waking up from
|
|||
|
some blasphemous nightmare that David finally realized what the
|
|||
|
design on the kachina doll was and where he had seen it before. All
|
|||
|
he had to do was recall his years in college, one class in particular,
|
|||
|
Engineering 41, something he had audited briefly before deciding
|
|||
|
that engineering wasn't his calling; the design so carefully painted on
|
|||
|
the leering kachina doll was that of a microchip.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
...............................................:
|
|||
|
s.r. prozak / stoner adventures
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Into the darkness the smoke vanished, swirling upward like mother's
|
|||
|
skirts in a dance. Something I remember from childhood: my mother
|
|||
|
dancing. Something I remember vaguely, like a severed head rolling
|
|||
|
down the aisles at church. Drifting from the morass of years, so
|
|||
|
detached that I can't tell if I am five or fifteen in the vision. Artefacted,
|
|||
|
rejected. Gone in a heavy-headed haze like a blackout. More smoke
|
|||
|
pours over the sill, serpentine in its aceitine slowness, somnolent
|
|||
|
stirrings, stiffening. The glistening stained-glass tower pouring smoke
|
|||
|
passed through us one more time, cashed and done, then reloaded
|
|||
|
from another entrant, a man named Goldbee.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Narrow, Italian, he wended his feet between ours to claim the edge of
|
|||
|
a couch. His bag a shallow scratching of schwag, shitty pot, about to
|
|||
|
pass to us, some declining from the rattiness. "It's brick, but it's not
|
|||
|
bad brick," his eyes turning to me wildly and I unwilling to refuse,
|
|||
|
smoked. Harsh, and no additional effect at first. "Wait a while," he
|
|||
|
said. "I got so stoned once I saw my childhood. I was in the kitchen
|
|||
|
and my mother was baking and then I went outside, and fell down, and
|
|||
|
cut myself. I came back in and was sitting on the counter bleeding,
|
|||
|
and she was cooking, and then my father came home and asked what
|
|||
|
happened. I said I didn't know, I'd fallen. It was around ten p.m., and
|
|||
|
then dinner was served. Some of the plates broke and I went outside
|
|||
|
to get away from the noise. I was out there and I saw an old man at
|
|||
|
the curb, smoking a cigarette. I came closer and saw he wasn't old.
|
|||
|
He spoke to me, and I left him shortly. I left without turning around."
|
|||
|
Goldbee left, later, after Spike had pity and brought forth our bag of
|
|||
|
thick luscious ropes of Cleveland Gold.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(Cleveland Gold was an old favorite on the block; a man named Jake
|
|||
|
Hanscom, a guitarist for some blues-rock outfit in Texas, grew it on the
|
|||
|
roof of his downtown Austin store. The roof was an atrium, but plants
|
|||
|
were still visible, even from a nearby dorm. He never got busted,
|
|||
|
however. He had perfected his technique by touring with his band,
|
|||
|
Dijon Lonely, and smoking with fans and bands and an entourage of
|
|||
|
rocknroll crazies out to see the blues across the land, saving seeds as
|
|||
|
he went. When he got back, he practiced some rather unselective
|
|||
|
breeding which worked out miraculously. His first notice of the new
|
|||
|
plants, with their distinctive purplish tint and reflectively-laden leaves,
|
|||
|
coincided with Spike, Aurora (a man), and I arriving at his apartment in
|
|||
|
the back of the store. Spike had brought his new device, a speaker
|
|||
|
impaled with a standard bong ("When the bass kicks in you go wild, it
|
|||
|
reverberates through you and takes off your head" said Spike later,
|
|||
|
slowly staring out a viscous window) and we had loaded a bowl. The
|
|||
|
hit was so smooth we had no idea it had occurred, almost, until the
|
|||
|
voice of Jake punched through the smoky silence, first the broad bass
|
|||
|
of his region of Texas, and then the high screechy international whine
|
|||
|
of a stoner gone happily berserk. "I'm going to fuckin'
|
|||
|
Cleeeeeeveland," Jake sang out, falling back into a ratty dun couch
|
|||
|
with 'BONES 77' spray-painted on its back, pointed toward the
|
|||
|
woodburning stove he kept as a kitchen)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This was all from the vantage of Spike's temporary Los Angeles
|
|||
|
apartment, hovering from a precarious building in the gangrenous
|
|||
|
flesh of the styrofoam city. A burnished wood finish guitar lay in the
|
|||
|
diagonal shadows of a corner, the wind wrestling brief snatches of
|
|||
|
blues from its strings. The sun had set, and the world slowed. I had
|
|||
|
been in a tremendous funk as if possessed maliciously by the demon
|
|||
|
of slow death, feeling the day settle into my gut like a leaden meal.
|
|||
|
There is something in that feeling which passes through me with a
|
|||
|
shudder; I think it's entrapped childhood, pushing to get out and find
|
|||
|
fast old fields of suspense and expectation, instead colliding with the
|
|||
|
day and its falling gap with a stutter. Imagining a wall of whale
|
|||
|
blubber solidly knocking a New England fisherman into the sea, one
|
|||
|
hand gripping his cap for no reason other than habit, the other hailing
|
|||
|
the boat swung away toward the shore by the ruffled string of its wake.
|
|||
|
At Spike's I was more than diffident, but after smoking more than a fair
|
|||
|
share of the Gold (Spike whispering "Cleeeeeeveland" in my ear as I
|
|||
|
each time took a hit, lightening the bits of consternation tracking my
|
|||
|
face) I was too diffuse to notice the artefacted children playing in the
|
|||
|
window. I attempted a read;
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"motherchrist and stern concern,
|
|||
|
her eyes and arms wooden in the day,
|
|||
|
summer suns strengthened years,
|
|||
|
the lifetime of easter eggs defied.
|
|||
|
motherchrist in her darkest smile,
|
|||
|
even too much for the end of day,
|
|||
|
too content with the grating of the cell.
|
|||
|
8x10 squared i am."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
("that's no fucking good," says Spike, ladling ash from a bowl onto the
|
|||
|
floor. It is his apartment, orange carpet beaten by feet like a
|
|||
|
drumhead. "that's a fucking local rag, in the best sense of that, which
|
|||
|
still leaves it...not really any good. no, but yeah, there's nothing in it.
|
|||
|
check out some of this," he said, handing me a too much frothy electric
|
|||
|
novel, in the same way some dance music sticks to the roof of your
|
|||
|
mouth. "inauthentic," I'd once said at a party, and we had a debate
|
|||
|
going, until a girl with the fixed pupils of transportation said to me:
|
|||
|
who cares, you dance to it, and then you fuck to it. deny it that; and I
|
|||
|
was silent, but unsettled. A partial explanation, true but inexplicably
|
|||
|
unsatisfying, as if the truth only gapped a wall, leaving the house
|
|||
|
obscured. "that's no fucking good," Spike rescued, expounding on the
|
|||
|
truth of the blues, and Muddy Waters' truth. "ask burr, he's a writer.
|
|||
|
does Muddy Waters write well? no, but in his icon salad and rhythmic
|
|||
|
leer he tells his truth. his movie." I nodded, gratefully lapsing into a
|
|||
|
zoned moment of quiet breathing. Someone left to dance.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"of course babe you're down,
|
|||
|
it's the city, take you 'round,
|
|||
|
when we go down, we go down,
|
|||
|
and the sun it drop with us."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The yellowing shadows held tack to the light, lining slickly the floors
|
|||
|
with vinyl darkness. Heavily the air rested on our eyes, burdening the
|
|||
|
lids. Late in the night, earlier than the coffee shops. We went outside,
|
|||
|
to the shared balcony of his apartment complex, above the muddy
|
|||
|
pool in which the larvae of hungry mosquitoes bred beyond the lives of
|
|||
|
their parents, growing to full size until the malathion truck came,
|
|||
|
adding one more mist to the sludgy fog hanging over the city, trapping
|
|||
|
it and its vacant anger under the blanket of refuse. Spike exhaled,
|
|||
|
blowing the remnants of a bong hit over the iron railing, it descending
|
|||
|
toward the pool and then hanging in the courtyard. We dreamt that
|
|||
|
those never joined the slurry of the sky.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Later that night, heading home in the aching weariness of morning, no
|
|||
|
classes I would attend, a project to finish on hold. Sleep chancre bore
|
|||
|
my eyes as I fumbled into the lobby of my apartment, my clothes
|
|||
|
drawn with the drunken hand of a bitter cartoonist, hanging to my skin
|
|||
|
in the clumping disarray of rotting curtains in an abandoned house.
|
|||
|
For an instant my brain recollected, falling back into strain, as I was
|
|||
|
halfway through the lobby, blessed seconds from stairs, softness and
|
|||
|
sleep. An echo of the incessant "hey got a light" shot through the hair
|
|||
|
behind my ears, and I turned, too tired to realize dangers although
|
|||
|
fear vaguely sunk into my neck meeting skull. Four days of all black
|
|||
|
coated him, silkish shirt taught over a body molded into it by the
|
|||
|
adipocere of inactivity. His finger held a cigarette in the canting
|
|||
|
stretch of the shadows on Spike's walls lengthening into morning.
|
|||
|
"Sure," thickly, the lighter extending past the immediate fuzz to the
|
|||
|
man: gently, like a swan, his neck bending to the glow of the lighter,
|
|||
|
head returning upright with cigarette stares. "Thanks; join me?" and I
|
|||
|
agreed, sitting in the cheap lobby furniture smoking Marlboros. "I like
|
|||
|
these. I once stole a pack when I was young above twelve, and then,
|
|||
|
in the midst of a vacation, smoked most of them. They asked me the
|
|||
|
second day if I smoked, and I knew they'd smelled it the first day of
|
|||
|
seven on a dude ranch, and I said no, it was the people in the lounge,
|
|||
|
knowing they had smelled and discussed the It, the cigarette, and
|
|||
|
inconclusively accepted the easy answer. I hadn't even looked at
|
|||
|
them when saying it, I was watching TV. I spent a lot of time doing
|
|||
|
that, and spent some writing in a diary I abandoned, full of the scariest
|
|||
|
immature fantasies I could imagine. I was twelve writing like I was
|
|||
|
two, with large dragons who were friendly until they saw something,
|
|||
|
maybe a flowerpot or maybe a ring, and then they became largely red,
|
|||
|
and changed into slumping swamp-things which consumed me (or
|
|||
|
maybe not me, the narrator) with pseudopods and ire. We left on the
|
|||
|
sixth day." The smoke coiled over two butts flattened like bullets in
|
|||
|
the ashtray.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The pillow lay softly like my past, beneath the aching head, sensing
|
|||
|
earth and the moist satisfaction it brings. I reclined, a man atop a void
|
|||
|
of memories, feeling immensely the power of the fall. However life
|
|||
|
works, there is a fall. Priests, man, carnivores fall from grace, and
|
|||
|
others fall out of fashion, out of positions, out of vehicles. Death falls,
|
|||
|
night falls. The earth receives the falling rain and the sweet sense of
|
|||
|
satisfaction drifts up in a mist, an epitaph to sleep.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Morning crisp with the edge of cold and awakening, the city
|
|||
|
slumbering by in thick rivers of cars, draining past in the waning light.
|
|||
|
My hair unsheveled, undone in the spiking randomness of a battering
|
|||
|
night, I bore my eyes through the mirror, like sifting through a bushel
|
|||
|
of grain. At my terminal, I connected to a site in Australia bearing
|
|||
|
some graphical images for public manipulation. I use the net as my
|
|||
|
home, my shield, my buffer; in it lies half of my personality. Stowed
|
|||
|
away in duplicate invisible areas throughout it is the database that
|
|||
|
more comprises me than I do, all of the information of my past
|
|||
|
contacts, each touch with the world through a net. Pointers to every
|
|||
|
known site, vast hordes of data on everyone conceivable I've run into.
|
|||
|
The program which maintains it -- beyond the worm, beyond a virus,
|
|||
|
more like an uberkernel under the kernel (if there is such a thing) of
|
|||
|
the net -- is almost as large, consisting of some of my favorite self-
|
|||
|
modifiers and encryptors, some extremely versatile net manipulation
|
|||
|
software Golgotha Vein and I cooked up one night baked, stupor-
|
|||
|
bound to our terminals, creating our story carved in the net, some
|
|||
|
viruses and defenses, Syd Semper Tyranus' detection evasion
|
|||
|
software, and a thousand subprograms, daemons, and fragments
|
|||
|
crammed into a semiselfaware program which maintains me.
|
|||
|
Transparently, silently -- it is my greatest creation, and the world
|
|||
|
cannot know it, because I only can use it, in my secretive world of
|
|||
|
evasion.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I worked through the vein of a topology I didn't recognize. I found a
|
|||
|
machine -- I assumed it was a billing computer from its size and
|
|||
|
system setup, both fairly standard -- in one of the stranger setups I
|
|||
|
had seen on the net. After an hour, I gave myself respite; I owed an
|
|||
|
editorial to a local paper, and had no inspiration, no desire. Last
|
|||
|
visiting engorged me with rage for the fetid sickness of pop journalism,
|
|||
|
the reductive impulse in mute surrender to the capitulate crowd of a
|
|||
|
gourmand. Wrenching a beer open, firing up the word processor,
|
|||
|
shooting out a link to the cluster of sites I'd found (connected
|
|||
|
bafflingly, as if to confuse, linking two separate topologies through
|
|||
|
collective links nested in each topology) with a program I'd developed
|
|||
|
called FetchBone, an elaborate jury-rig of code interspersed with
|
|||
|
some of the best work I'd done in years. While I wrote, it probed the
|
|||
|
eiffel tower of network connections, spewing a printout silently behind
|
|||
|
me. My cockpit existed in this room, a collection of equipment tied
|
|||
|
together loosely with the cables that powered it, connected it, ran it.
|
|||
|
My devices didn't work with me; I worked through them.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
("...christ under deadline even," the brown man vested for hibernation
|
|||
|
spoke to me. "I didn't let it fall through any cracks," I said, ludicrously
|
|||
|
high. (Spike and I had found a parking meter in a junkyard early in the
|
|||
|
week, and, my column being finished, badly but doneso, we had taken
|
|||
|
it to Raul's apartment over the lip of the baseball stadium downtown.
|
|||
|
Raul used to be called Paul, but had one day taken several hundred
|
|||
|
micrograms of good acid and connected to the net, converting himself
|
|||
|
with us, the epiphany naming him Raul. Over the tympanic passing of
|
|||
|
a train we plotted uses for the meter until Spike (too tired of
|
|||
|
deliberation) rammed it into an old vacuum cleaner, prompting Raul
|
|||
|
and I to modify the device. The coin slot now gaped, the glass
|
|||
|
cleaned; when a perfectly huge bong hit was loaded, the pointer
|
|||
|
swung to the three hour mark, and, when this hit ascended into our
|
|||
|
lungs, swung to 'EXPIRED.' A touch on the vacuum switch operated
|
|||
|
the device, a screw knob on the side regulating lung capacity
|
|||
|
expected. Spike shrugged a bag of fresh green dope from his
|
|||
|
shoulder pocket, uncoiling an arm to slink it onto the table. This was
|
|||
|
DungBrow WetHair, a super-potent variety of red hair grown
|
|||
|
somewhere in the sewers of the city by a college friend of ours,
|
|||
|
LoadingZone O'Rourke (famous for swinging into a physics final
|
|||
|
observably too high to complete it, taking one look at it, and drawing
|
|||
|
out brilliantly the first and last problems, scratching out the questions in
|
|||
|
between, writing "the rest is silence") living on bail for a statute of
|
|||
|
limitations to gasp its last. Four large hits of that assassination mint,
|
|||
|
each one slamming into my lungs reaching serpentine through my
|
|||
|
brain, a clock slurred into focus, meaning my time to deliver; and I run
|
|||
|
downstairs a street or two, a bus departs a lighted barge into the night,
|
|||
|
very hazy like being stoned on the net, getting to my apartment's altar
|
|||
|
in time to realize my needed appearance, staggering into the
|
|||
|
newspaper offices to present the document on local machines (a small
|
|||
|
intrusion having crippled a core machine, killing my link access) and
|
|||
|
bypassing the acetate chaos of a newspaper office to find the small
|
|||
|
brown man:) "...christ I thought you'd never arrive," he says, corpulent
|
|||
|
face hung over smallish body, sheathing fat of a chair life enveloping
|
|||
|
him, creating a miasmic spear of a man, acerbic acidic and harried,
|
|||
|
aging fast. "Is it good to go?" (sure) "Thanks you can ..." his phrases
|
|||
|
lost, my feet carrying me (detached blissfully) from the arena, to home
|
|||
|
and the net, my program deconstructing)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Early in the haze of protective morning I found Skunk latched to a
|
|||
|
wallcorner, dismal cigarette poking from his beard, raging pointer of
|
|||
|
fire which drew the morning to a point. He lit me one, given in the half-
|
|||
|
handshake of the accomplished cigarette swap, and we together blew
|
|||
|
smoke into the morning fog. The haze lifted vaguely from my brows as
|
|||
|
I spoke: "Greetings, Skunk, bearer of unholy weed (Skunk had found
|
|||
|
his name in the Foundation area where he was famous for homegrown
|
|||
|
pot so fragrantly pungent that local authorities had busted him by
|
|||
|
smell in a crowd. Once Spike and I became so stoned at Skunk's that
|
|||
|
we had gone down to the park, and sat in slatted benches by the
|
|||
|
melodic water. A policeman came with metallic tones and told us a
|
|||
|
question to leave, then became upset when we did not really answer.
|
|||
|
I was incapable of saying anything at that point even. I wanted more
|
|||
|
lake-melody, the ancient water rising from its cold wet quietude to
|
|||
|
flood the yearning relic my mind, lost somewhere between a bicycle
|
|||
|
and four days in June some year in highschool. Spike looked up, and
|
|||
|
the blueman wrenched Spike's arm with a grinding sound, beshitting
|
|||
|
all that was tonal and fine in the balance of the morning. The dark
|
|||
|
lakefog colored with mercy enough to see us away, and the blue man
|
|||
|
tapping his shiny black toe at the base of the sword of orange-gold
|
|||
|
reaching from the submerged sun, lurking with trepidation of the
|
|||
|
morning), how goes it?" Skunk said little, flicking his cigarette ash the
|
|||
|
color of his stubble with the same abrasive resignation the mask
|
|||
|
implied. Eyes riding red glow he said: "Not bad. I am waiting for
|
|||
|
something, but I have forgotten what, because I'm really high. I got a
|
|||
|
bag last night, and Oso came over, as did mighty Amon, and we
|
|||
|
consumed masses of thick fragrant smoke. I found myself here some
|
|||
|
minutes ago, for my friends have drifted away, I think to resume lives
|
|||
|
of waiting for jobs in their hydrocarbon homes. I am just now seeing
|
|||
|
how nice it is to have fog drift over everything. I see people in it; I
|
|||
|
think I am almost too high." I said there was no such thing. There isn't
|
|||
|
on a general scale -- you can't get "too high." Specifically, you can be
|
|||
|
too high to do certain things, usually involving other people who
|
|||
|
wouldn't understand. For those you either persevere or make
|
|||
|
excuses. I recall hating excuses. I asked him for what too high and
|
|||
|
Skunk said, "Well, I gotta look for a job today, and I don't see myself
|
|||
|
being normal before everything's closed, so it's going to be a gritter.
|
|||
|
I'll have to take Murine and fake it, but it always makes me twitch, in
|
|||
|
those anaesthetic lines and offices, on dust-clotted floors and in
|
|||
|
sweat-greased armchairs. I don't really want a job, because I want to
|
|||
|
go to school, but I don't want school either. So it's to the lines. Last
|
|||
|
night I think I was too high to talk, because sometimes you get to the
|
|||
|
point where everything else recedes and you can't really talk but you
|
|||
|
think fine, just nowhere near anything else anyone wants you to think.
|
|||
|
They want you to hear them and the world, and talk to them, and you
|
|||
|
want to be underwater in the clarity of that peacefulness, to not be
|
|||
|
there but to feel it more than they." I agreed, vanishing the last eighth
|
|||
|
of my cigarette with a long draw. I don't normally smoke.
|
|||
|
Someguy with dark long hair, curling over his avian shoulders,
|
|||
|
looked at us through the membranes of his lower eyelids. "Heyman,
|
|||
|
can you spare a cigarette?" he repeated. Sure shuffled Skunk and
|
|||
|
lofted him one from the sheaf of his softpack. I bent to with a light
|
|||
|
from a lighter I'd found in some thrift store, a zippo with a marine
|
|||
|
regiment inscription. Puff, drift. The drummer behind us slowed, and
|
|||
|
the inexorable time to speak came.
|
|||
|
Someguy: Thanks. Sure is a nice morning.
|
|||
|
Skunk: S'foggy.
|
|||
|
Someguy: I kind of like it. Mournful.
|
|||
|
Skunk: I am not inclined to be mournful. I like it because it's
|
|||
|
harder to see everything.
|
|||
|
Someguy: Harder to see...? Yeah, I can see that. I can
|
|||
|
imagine that could be fun. Hey is that a somebattalion insignia?
|
|||
|
My own skull spoke at him: I don't know I got this at some
|
|||
|
pawnshop. Richenbacker and Hanover streets.
|
|||
|
Someguy: I was in somebattalion. This was during
|
|||
|
somepoliceaction. We fought in the valley and took heavy casualties.
|
|||
|
Skunk: Wars...I don't get. Fog obscures everything.
|
|||
|
Someguy: Yeah, it was pretty foggy there too. We had to
|
|||
|
shoot into the fog, and sometimes we'd get something. You'd hear a
|
|||
|
yip or something. Pretty ripe ha?
|
|||
|
My lidding eyes: Must have been scary. Glad it's over.
|
|||
|
Someguy: I am actually. It was actually a pretty bad
|
|||
|
experience. But I think I got a lot from it actually. I think it benefited
|
|||
|
me in my real state.
|
|||
|
Skunk: Real estate. My grandfather made a fortune in the
|
|||
|
purchasing.
|
|||
|
My dried, chewed, disconsolate mouth: My grandmother
|
|||
|
canned hams, and was almost shot for witchcraft.
|
|||
|
Someguy: Witchcraft? I never got into that Satan shit.
|
|||
|
(Dusting hands he departs). Thanks for the smoke. Catch me on the
|
|||
|
docks sometime and I'll return the favor.
|
|||
|
Skunk: I live in Minneapolis.
|
|||
|
Someguy: Cool. Do they have fog there? (Sideglance) I'll
|
|||
|
catch you around.
|
|||
|
Skunk: Yep. (looking at me with slaughterhouse look of
|
|||
|
acclimatization)
|
|||
|
My eyes still hung like sodden-framed pictures outside the
|
|||
|
museum in the desolation of twilight. I gots to go, Skunk. We smoking
|
|||
|
Friday I think not really sure, my life's kinda a mess.
|
|||
|
No problems man. We are probably all going to smoke like
|
|||
|
crazy this week. I was gonna look for a job, right, but I think now that
|
|||
|
this is what I must do. Get beyond all of that stuff before it becomes
|
|||
|
me. I feel like I'm going to be executed.
|
|||
|
I didn't know, so I said to look around the northern office district.
|
|||
|
Sometimes sweet stuff got handed out there, relating my tale of
|
|||
|
working as a file-boy for some extravagant rate because I'd proven
|
|||
|
that I didn't talk.
|
|||
|
I took my leave and let the fog slip behind me as coattails as I
|
|||
|
went into downtown.
|
|||
|
Crusting paint slotted stairs sideways up to the landing, at
|
|||
|
which the option of further progress presented us. Spike and I, both
|
|||
|
staggeringly high and drunken, rested the balls of our feet on
|
|||
|
alternating brown and white patches of lichenous paint, drenched in
|
|||
|
the sluggish smell of humid apartment building. A door led away from
|
|||
|
the landing; it was the Nowhere Door, leading impossibly through a
|
|||
|
wall. Beyond the Nowhere Door was outside from three stories up, a
|
|||
|
blank wallface. Its purpose undetermined, it reflected graffiti back
|
|||
|
toward us:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Bill woke each day and went downtown,
|
|||
|
There he found all hangers-round,
|
|||
|
And he asked them what they'd found,
|
|||
|
They replied without a sound:
|
|||
|
There is a girl named Margey-May,
|
|||
|
Who by all accounts is large as day,
|
|||
|
And if you find her, you'll hit the hay,
|
|||
|
With living, bouncing Margey-May.
|
|||
|
And if with her you're really high,
|
|||
|
You might think your time to die,
|
|||
|
Has come, but on Margey's thigh,
|
|||
|
You'll read the motto:
|
|||
|
Now I lay me down to sleep,
|
|||
|
For only I my soul can keep."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Two flights of stairs further upward we paused at Bill the
|
|||
|
Kitchen's door. Bill's Kitchen is his room, his house, wherever.
|
|||
|
Chemistry fell into Bill's hands in an acid-rimmed highschool lifestyle,
|
|||
|
and from there he went on to produce some of the most incredible
|
|||
|
custom drugs known to man. This apartment, with its gutted door of
|
|||
|
paint turned to decaying putty, blackened scorchscars outside the
|
|||
|
windows, and floor flooded with chemicals, trash and clothing, was
|
|||
|
home to many a great production scheme. Bill's bed abutted the
|
|||
|
stove: his pillow was always warm. The rest of the room was a sofa
|
|||
|
facing the bathroom, a small foot-table with a vase and flowers on top,
|
|||
|
and Bill, six feet of sweat clouded with a cigarette burning beneath
|
|||
|
prodigious hair and shadowy face. It had taken him two minutes to
|
|||
|
exhale as we stood there. The faint odor of dope pervaded his clotting
|
|||
|
smoke.
|
|||
|
"Ayeh," Bill said, stepping out into his kitchen from the self
|
|||
|
ensconced in smoke. His eyes glowed upward at us, pupils writhing.
|
|||
|
"I made the new batch: it's dope: it's my savior, man," he said.
|
|||
|
"Christ, Bill," Spike said, "You didn't get religion, did you?"
|
|||
|
Stepping up to a bar, pasting his beer on the table.
|
|||
|
"Nehep," Bill intoned, softly with smoke rising past his focused
|
|||
|
pupils. Suddenly sharp, in the courtroom. More whitespace staring
|
|||
|
outward, the pupils recessive again, lost in the land past the smoke.
|
|||
|
Smoke covered all of us, flowers coming out of Bill's foot-table. The
|
|||
|
vase stared deep into its core.
|
|||
|
Spike footed it, tapping the edge. "Strange contraption," I
|
|||
|
asked. Bill opened the small side door to reveal two thick waterfilled
|
|||
|
chambers made from large mayonnaise jars, an electric bowl made
|
|||
|
from a 1986 Buick cigarette lighter, and some assorted tubing. The
|
|||
|
guts of the beast: sacrifice. "Very technical device, for a bong," Bill
|
|||
|
said, exhaling into Kitchen, "but very good. I hadda problem with pot,
|
|||
|
it being very nice (veryfine) but also pretty ratty stuff: the high was
|
|||
|
great, delivery bad. I couldn't really distill it into a pill and have it be
|
|||
|
fun, so I made this scrub bong. Pop inna some schwag," he said,
|
|||
|
ladling dusty, ratty Mexican brick pot from a large loose bag. "Lift the
|
|||
|
handle to take a hit," he said, closing the door with a musty warning
|
|||
|
that the hit was blown upward when the handle was released, and until
|
|||
|
then the chamber filled "like blood in water."
|
|||
|
Spike's mouth trumpeted to meet the fluting mouthpiece of the
|
|||
|
vase, his fingers twisting upward the chintzgilded handle, smoke
|
|||
|
pouring in a trickle, more like mist than smoke, in the flouting glow of
|
|||
|
the upright room. Clear glass mottled with its own dimension
|
|||
|
intertwined with thick green glass, a pattern from a forgotten urge of
|
|||
|
dead parents; Spike's face pulled back, pallid in parts, BillKitchen:
|
|||
|
"Huge hit", quick inhalation to seal the deed, then a calming face
|
|||
|
shriven in its ruddiness. Bill: "Huge hit." Spike slowly withdrew his
|
|||
|
face toward the window, and blew a pure note of clear smoke into the
|
|||
|
crouching night. "Huge," he said, slowly. We checked the bowl:
|
|||
|
cashed. Outside a car horn howled into a screech, and then a blast of
|
|||
|
metal groaning into a creaking collapse, swearing, an impact. Dim
|
|||
|
edges of streetlight like the rim of an iris diffracted into the barnacled
|
|||
|
windowpane. I took the next hit.
|
|||
|
The smoke was soft underwater gesturing, like falling through a
|
|||
|
memory of some summer spent in the breast of childhood, staring past
|
|||
|
cloudy sunlight into something beckoning, a memory as bogus as it
|
|||
|
was real, embittered in the swelling of life into smacklike infusion to
|
|||
|
the main. The main, which rambled by below us. Outside: more
|
|||
|
swearing, a muffled punching sound caught in the screaming horn of a
|
|||
|
train. Car engine, vanishment into haze. "...so I figure, something's
|
|||
|
gotta scrub schwag, cuz it's all that I can afford. And I talking to Silvia
|
|||
|
one day: she said I was an artch chemist, and from that gotta be able
|
|||
|
to figure out something. I worked with membranes a summer orso
|
|||
|
ago, and these fit well into my two-barrel design, and so I made this,
|
|||
|
and it takes my gunch pot and gives you clean smoke, licking your
|
|||
|
lungs like a slender hand...this is all I need, now." Looking up to Bill,
|
|||
|
past him the intricate crockwork of interlocking tubules like bones and
|
|||
|
skulls, each decanter, each pustule of chemical mixing, and then to his
|
|||
|
face, set apart in the glow of its skin. I was really stoned -- am really
|
|||
|
stoned. Was I in childhood? That memory of a ball bouncing between
|
|||
|
trees, over thick grass, really alive, some people, some hope. Parents
|
|||
|
even not descanted in their faces. Shriven with truth; now beyond the
|
|||
|
censer, something must exist in my mind...Bill saying something to
|
|||
|
Spike: them talking I stoned too much?
|
|||
|
"...big hit." My voice finished from somewhere, and Bill's
|
|||
|
Kitchen device filling him up with strenuous billows of smoke. Gasping
|
|||
|
backward, sucking air, leaning down, grinning a grimace of future
|
|||
|
knowledge: the soft smoke inflating his lungs in huge blasts would
|
|||
|
soon inundate his spine, a serpent swirling to the brain. His hand
|
|||
|
rested on the vase, affixed to that rock of a foot-table. Each hit had
|
|||
|
burned a sixteenth of an ounce or more of cheap pot; Bill's Scrub of
|
|||
|
the Kitchen had curbed the harshness, leaving a manageable hit of
|
|||
|
pure stoniness. I relaxed with pulsing energy flooding out of my limbs.
|
|||
|
The warm orangeness of the sofa supported me; I felt the waves of
|
|||
|
dopeness (beyond dopeness, beyond the slowness, beyond
|
|||
|
relaxation, more to an energy derived from the leftover) swim through
|
|||
|
me, gently reflecting from the sofa and the limits of my limbs, clouding
|
|||
|
them in brilliant adhering light, swarming throughout me to exude from
|
|||
|
me like the smoke I'd blown out. Muscles sunk into the ready atrophy
|
|||
|
of relaxation, my eyes sunk into my face. Spike and Bill droned on
|
|||
|
intermittently, speaking more for the sound of light syllables like Bill's
|
|||
|
high laughter, I spoke a word or two occasionally, my ears swinging
|
|||
|
questions or thoughts through a large space in which my mind moved.
|
|||
|
From me moved energy; without me moved energy, vague awareness
|
|||
|
of other objects, some good, and some dark stimulus, deadness. I felt
|
|||
|
the connection of the world like electricity singing down a wire, or a
|
|||
|
spidersweb of wires covering the world like the outstretched hand of
|
|||
|
gOD. Everywhere the lightness of energy -- beyond particulate,
|
|||
|
beyond wave, more an awareness of both, of creation more than
|
|||
|
substance, a cyclical pulsation -- emanated from its respective entities,
|
|||
|
human or non. I could feel Spike's mind like calm breathing beside
|
|||
|
me, and beyond that toward the corner of the world Bill's Kitchen
|
|||
|
rested absolute, projecting quick alive thoughts into the void in which
|
|||
|
we all swam, lost but not needing to be found, as in a space that open
|
|||
|
and full of potential and hope there is no need for locale..."large
|
|||
|
smoke, very stoned." Spike's quick unhurried laughter.
|
|||
|
"What's its name?" Spike asked Bill, in morning, the next thrift
|
|||
|
store we'd run into. Bill poring through clothing, quickly talking in
|
|||
|
offbeats, smoke still coming off his lip from the cigarette he had spun
|
|||
|
into shorn bushes outside the door. Above the day waxed bleak; I had
|
|||
|
to wander through this greyness to deliver a column, but first solved
|
|||
|
that problem with a quarter phone call to verify that I could have some
|
|||
|
margin of time. Last issue of the magazine turns out was late, and
|
|||
|
deadlines pushed ahead by two days. A sense of encompassing
|
|||
|
knowledge and the urge to probe it called to me. "...thrift stores. The
|
|||
|
cool thing is, this is people selling each other stuff almost directly, little
|
|||
|
outside interaction. Plus you get some groovy shit:" Bill holding up a
|
|||
|
seventies bellbottom pantsuit in orange gold suspended in red, with
|
|||
|
diving canaries of green and vivid blue breaking it into composite
|
|||
|
pieces falling into the furnace of the whole.
|
|||
|
My feet walked backward home, crosscutting through some of
|
|||
|
the clustered collections of building materials in the laundry district.
|
|||
|
These operated 24-7, and blasted steam from their tenuous
|
|||
|
occupation of earth toward the solemn drained monoliths that held the
|
|||
|
starched sky upright over these human twitchings. Multilingual
|
|||
|
musings tongued around me, probing the air for life. Venus would be
|
|||
|
proud; the occasional outburst of exploding language clattered around
|
|||
|
my ears like falling swords. Starch, suds, and steam tunneled around
|
|||
|
me, the wet frothy concrete earth returning impact to my boots, the
|
|||
|
steam sounding hoarlike in its demonic intensity. Onward my feet
|
|||
|
trod, pawing ground backward and whisking it into blurs like nighttime
|
|||
|
skies spinning when one is intoxicated, young. I looked up: the tunnel
|
|||
|
of steam was receding ahead of me, and there lay the grey slack road
|
|||
|
leading home.
|
|||
|
A waterstain started downstairs, and led up the curving
|
|||
|
staircase intermittently, like a contortionist's chair rail, and dying like a
|
|||
|
fallen whip by my door. I grasped the handle, and opened it; inside all
|
|||
|
was silent with the settled smell of infrequent occupation. The skylight
|
|||
|
glowed vaguely over it all. My terminal awaited, the keyboard awake
|
|||
|
with one faint light. A touch and click as the key returned, my eyes
|
|||
|
wandering over the screen as my hands smoothed over the keys. Six
|
|||
|
minutes later back to my newly-found site. I almost went right in, but
|
|||
|
pulled back, built another link and probed from the side. Nothing
|
|||
|
really wrong, vagueness again. A door ajar, almost. I coughed, and
|
|||
|
dropped off, falling instead on another site riding the same vein: some
|
|||
|
brief manipulation with a verify function in their email system, an
|
|||
|
archaic one brought up to date too fast for its security structure, and I
|
|||
|
found a reading on packets to my system. Things had changed: no
|
|||
|
real traffic, and a poke further found the alias: the site was linked
|
|||
|
elsewhere. Fingers pulsing with my heart's anticipatory fear, I slighted
|
|||
|
hand and took a last guess at the link: somewhere to the mountains,
|
|||
|
the connection dead and keyboard closing. Four hours later my
|
|||
|
anonymous storage reactivated, my rent paid, and I sat on my duffel
|
|||
|
bag smoking a slight cigarette and drinking coffee, waiting for Spike.
|
|||
|
He let me stay the week.
|
|||
|
We wandered to a cafe that night, an open air situation fronting
|
|||
|
Mexican food and beers, good and better. A Dos Equis and I drew out
|
|||
|
the day for Spike, and the reason for my flight: I had sensed the
|
|||
|
stroking fingers of what would be called justice in the obituary. His
|
|||
|
eyes called for an explanation, sighted between the beer and I, over
|
|||
|
his mouth. "I am a humble stoner," I affirmed. I took a draught of
|
|||
|
beer, cold, heavy, sweet and full, with the timbre of broad land and
|
|||
|
rich country. "But we fear the dark: that which is not understood can
|
|||
|
be held over us: if we learn the light switch, we can at least know. I
|
|||
|
found, I know. Something is up at that site, but I need another locale
|
|||
|
to see it, more carefully this time. I am not a warrior. I find, I see, I
|
|||
|
explicate to our community. We tell those deserving to know. We
|
|||
|
work for no governments, have our own laws. And they fear us,
|
|||
|
because we can understand as well as speak the language they've
|
|||
|
created in Olympus." Spike drawled a sip of beer down his throat, and
|
|||
|
agreed it was necessary, but wondered why I: it's like art, I like life. I
|
|||
|
like being alive and knowing, and finding myself out there, a sense
|
|||
|
that I'm alive, that we all are. Otherwise, this...? Spike asked if I didn't
|
|||
|
like the restaurant.
|
|||
|
To the streets we took, directing ourselves toward a more
|
|||
|
obscure festival in a semi-abandoned house held in escrow
|
|||
|
somewhere to the east. We found it by luck, or by stoner's intuition, or
|
|||
|
something. Two stories of conventional house, cheaply made but
|
|||
|
humble in appearance, drew up above us, coated in the same shade
|
|||
|
of smog-tainted brown that much of the city without money is painted.
|
|||
|
Some grey shone in the sash of a window above. At the door, we
|
|||
|
greeted our friend Jeff, who waved us in. Each room shown with the
|
|||
|
light of effort; the walls were fresh sheetrock, the lightbulbs
|
|||
|
unyellowed. It was Zentower's doing: Zentower, the artist of flaring
|
|||
|
colors and indeterminate periods of ranging experimentation, who had
|
|||
|
gone each week of one school year on a painting binge, and outlined
|
|||
|
in watercolor some ideas for a series of paintings: now his House of
|
|||
|
Suites stood toward the sky, unveiled anew, recreated from the ashes
|
|||
|
of its intent. "It's dope," Spike began, shouldering the blazing room
|
|||
|
around him, and sliding a knifelike hand into his own trenchcoat
|
|||
|
quickly beneath Zentower's eyes -- withdrawing his latest, a gift from
|
|||
|
one of the indeterminably placed characters named Bob who run
|
|||
|
military surplus stores, a rocket launcher which bore Bob's scratchy
|
|||
|
writing in blue pencil: "Create the apocalypse; save the day."
|
|||
|
Converted with bowl and mouthpiece, it unlocked and slid open to
|
|||
|
unseal the chamber of water kept tight for traveling. "Fatness
|
|||
|
awaits...." Zentower took the bong, and flipped a lighter alight,
|
|||
|
swinging a swerving trace of flame down into the bowl, a whirlpool of
|
|||
|
lifelike fire. He pulled the trigger and fresh air blew through the bong:
|
|||
|
Zentower relaxed, thanked us, excused himself and molded into the
|
|||
|
air to travel around the oddly-lighted rooms. People clustered in party
|
|||
|
poses, toes upward, casual hands sliding into dogsear pockets.
|
|||
|
Clothing ranged from new yuppified to retro, both new words for old
|
|||
|
ideas. But if an old idea is well?
|
|||
|
The old kitchen had its cabinets and drawers stripped from it;
|
|||
|
where the sink and counter had been, a drumset stood, been pounded
|
|||
|
lightly by a vacant-looking Chinese youth, part of the entirely Asian
|
|||
|
band. I swung my chin slightly; the greeting of the discrete from
|
|||
|
across rooms at parties. We knew each other well, their dissonant
|
|||
|
cover tunes having emerged from the yellow light of many parties.
|
|||
|
"The all-Asian band that played Led Zep covers for free beer in
|
|||
|
browns," I had thought once, heading over the ivywall next to a lighted
|
|||
|
pool as police ranting started eroding the front door. My beer had
|
|||
|
fallen, and landed upright, a tombstone to the head of a reveler
|
|||
|
inundated before his time. We went further into the living room,
|
|||
|
dispensing bong hits to the unwary. We had San Quentin
|
|||
|
Wallclimber, incredibly potent dope grown in the center of America's
|
|||
|
most famous prison by a warden set too much like a heirloom diamond
|
|||
|
to forgive his ways. "Well yawl don't really have to see it, out there,"
|
|||
|
he had said, "but in here you see how much unhope is rested in the
|
|||
|
human breast. An' for some of these guys, I like to sell 'em a little
|
|||
|
cheap -- I make a profit, yes, but not much, considerin' the risk an' all -
|
|||
|
- cuz I _know_ they're not getting out. An' the thing is, fellas -- I aren't
|
|||
|
gettin' out either, really. I sold myself to the prison, now I'm selling the
|
|||
|
prison ... some of myself." Thick A's. We had met him during visiting
|
|||
|
hours, and had been introduced by Tremors (from his name, Phil
|
|||
|
Shakes, but also from his habit of shaking wildly when high, as if full of
|
|||
|
energy he was unable to release) to the good warden, who had then
|
|||
|
offered us some of his pot. It was full, fresh, and fed on the scraps of
|
|||
|
the prison cafeteria. "Amazing," Spike said, and we shrugged our way
|
|||
|
out of the faded gray labyrinthine construct.
|
|||
|
We ran into a room with Sift and Shar, two skatepunks who I'd
|
|||
|
hung with some years before, but had drifted out of favor as they got
|
|||
|
more into the skate scene and less into reality. The identity takes
|
|||
|
them, and swallows them whole, but the fishing line still runs out of the
|
|||
|
fish, which then leads the unknowing line around. They were packing
|
|||
|
scraggly dope into a guava juice canister modified to be a large,
|
|||
|
cheesy bong, so we treated them each to two hits of our bag. They
|
|||
|
seemed more glazed, relaxed, and so we caught up on past. Their
|
|||
|
time was conceived in the tomorrows and yesterdays; "yestidday we
|
|||
|
went down to the mall, and got kicked out by a mall cop. You can
|
|||
|
always tell mall cops because they look left and right on the footsteps,
|
|||
|
as if it were some kinda drumbeat -- and then they see you and slow
|
|||
|
their beat so they can watch you, head turning right with each leftstep,
|
|||
|
head left with each rightstep. Sifto here tried a dine n dash at a fuckin'
|
|||
|
ice cream shop." They were living in a trailer home abandoned after
|
|||
|
being smashed by a tractor in the three-lane crisis finale to a multiple
|
|||
|
car wreck, leaving a handful dead. The cause of it had been a stubby
|
|||
|
red car whose driver was busy with a phone call, blurring lanes
|
|||
|
distinctly into a diagonal path, bypassing a truck driver too fast to stop
|
|||
|
whose fender became stained in two shades of ire. The trailer home
|
|||
|
remained, with one end patched with the remnants of cartons that had
|
|||
|
once contained a brand of diapers billed as having "the deepest-
|
|||
|
reaching comfort." We smoked on, the lawn chairs being more
|
|||
|
comfortable than most other accommodations.
|
|||
|
"I was in this convenience store, and I had to take a dump, and
|
|||
|
I talked to the guy, and he wouldn't let me, so I pissed in the aisle."
|
|||
|
General laughter from some more positioned people behind us.
|
|||
|
"Fuckin' cops, giving me hell. It's not so much that they got the
|
|||
|
'statutes' or whatever, but that they got the attitude, the want to bust
|
|||
|
you. It's as if one kid not wanting to be a cop is every kid giving the
|
|||
|
cop a finger. They know they don't have control, so when they gets
|
|||
|
you -- the got you." Shar spat.
|
|||
|
Spike brought up some of our recent experiences with the
|
|||
|
intricacies of life. "Our fridge died some days ago. We bought it a
|
|||
|
year past from a thrift shop in Dayton, and Ed and Flam brought it
|
|||
|
back in their hippybus. They went crosscountry with only $98.50,
|
|||
|
which they spent on gas, and got the rest of the cash for gas and food
|
|||
|
by working nights in towns they'd stop in, getting paid like $4 an hour.
|
|||
|
Noone ever hesitates to pay you cheap under the counter."
|
|||
|
"Yeah," Shar said. "We were living on the Beach last year and
|
|||
|
I didn't have a job, and kept looking, and then one night I went and
|
|||
|
found a restaurant, and they paid me to clean up the kitchen and stuff
|
|||
|
after hours -- midnight on -- for about $10 a night, which kept me going
|
|||
|
until I found this other job up the street. I was bussing tables there,
|
|||
|
and I got paid for three hours a day, but they hinted that I'd get a raise
|
|||
|
if I worked five. I worked five hours a day for a month, and kept asking
|
|||
|
for more hours, and finally one day left after three. Went back the
|
|||
|
next day and I had a pink slip."
|
|||
|
Spike couldn't resist: "Were you surprised?"
|
|||
|
"No," Shar said. "I didn't really care. I thought about it later,
|
|||
|
and it was like I wanted to get the hell out of there, but didn't really
|
|||
|
have any excuse, and so my body got punk to throw my mind out of
|
|||
|
there. They handed me the pink slip, and I told them to fuck off, and
|
|||
|
they told me I'd better leave or they'd get the cops to come. I just
|
|||
|
tipped over a whole rack of glasses, and they shattered, and I could
|
|||
|
hear her dialing the phone so I split through the back, and cashed the
|
|||
|
check at a liquor store two streets over, bought a bag and hit the
|
|||
|
road."
|
|||
|
"They don't mind dicking you over, cuz there's a thousand of
|
|||
|
yous coming through each month. They can dick anyone over except
|
|||
|
the government, who's probably dicking them over anyway," Sift said.
|
|||
|
A man in black belted white leaned over urbanely and said:
|
|||
|
"They are dicking them over. They're dicking everyone over. You
|
|||
|
should see what I paid in taxes last month."
|
|||
|
Sift: "I don't pay taxes."
|
|||
|
Man: "Yeah, I thought about that, but then I realized that I want
|
|||
|
to contribute to society. I mean, if I can hack it with paying taxes, why
|
|||
|
not? It hasn't been that bad so far."
|
|||
|
Sift's response was a very stoned stare. The man mumbled
|
|||
|
something and sipped his drink, backing away into the shade of the
|
|||
|
light. Sift: "That job really did suck. I spent half my time making sure
|
|||
|
that people had clean plates for breakfast five days a week."
|
|||
|
Winding home, each foot crossing the other's path, Spike and I
|
|||
|
drifted through red alleys and slick reflective streets. The city dwelt
|
|||
|
unconscious. The cockroaches ran and scurried between our feet,
|
|||
|
crossing the trails of our pointing toes. Over parked cars our voices
|
|||
|
echoed, into the darkness we vanished, and then came through again,
|
|||
|
the mist of the night coalescing and disintegrating, cotton combed at
|
|||
|
the feet of a spinning wheel. We passed an overturned bike, wheel
|
|||
|
spinning in the air. At chance it stopped as we passed. Spike pitched
|
|||
|
his cigarette through the spokes.
|
|||
|
In Spike's digs, we got ready to sack for the night. I was
|
|||
|
temporary possessor of sofaspace, a comfortable, beaten, beery-
|
|||
|
smelling expanse of wide green softness loosely kept corporate by
|
|||
|
stained white buttons. I threw my trenchcoat over a chair, and then
|
|||
|
sat into it, more shifting my weight from standing to collapsed with a
|
|||
|
convenient catch by the aged wood.
|
|||
|
"Bong hits?" Spike said, hands over his eyes, wandering as if
|
|||
|
he were blind. "Bong hits? Bong hits?" Good idea, relaxation sleep.
|
|||
|
We packed a bowl of some consummately kind Thai Express, which
|
|||
|
gained its name from its site of purchase, an Amtrak porter who had
|
|||
|
worldwide connections with large diplomatic bags. Thai Express is a
|
|||
|
rocket: up fast, very high, but it didn't hold us up hanging over our
|
|||
|
consciousness, like other Thai pot.
|
|||
|
"A nice big bowl," Spike said, descending on his newest
|
|||
|
smoking creation. One of his two speakers had a musicbox resting on
|
|||
|
top of it; Spike flicked open the box, and music sounded as a ballerina
|
|||
|
danced. Spike pressed her head backward in a neckbreaking
|
|||
|
position, and lifted the ballerina and a large circular base from the
|
|||
|
musicbox. Taking a nearby large plastic mug, he flicked out the heavy
|
|||
|
plastic base and inserted it in the box, removing the front cover of the
|
|||
|
speaker to reveal a bowl as he did so. He turned on the stereo: some
|
|||
|
Black Sabbath: "the bass is best when you take a ripper." I took first
|
|||
|
hit, blowing my smoke out the open window, around which danced
|
|||
|
curtains like light skirts, or maybe smoke itself.
|
|||
|
Daylight fluttered past the curtains, now limp. Through the
|
|||
|
greyness it pervaded the room, something I was aware of with only
|
|||
|
light consciousness. Everything was ash-grey; exhausted, the room
|
|||
|
hung with the same spent unrestful quiet that I did. My eyes were
|
|||
|
merging back into unconscious oblivion when they caught just enough
|
|||
|
of something foreign to alert my brain. The doorknob turned, and two
|
|||
|
large men came in. I remained solid in my blanket, viewing them with
|
|||
|
eyes at quarter moon. Behind them a woman I recognized as Spike's
|
|||
|
landlord lurked; I realized something official but negative was
|
|||
|
occurring, better than a robbery perhaps, but probably going to leave
|
|||
|
the same feeling of having been torn, betrayed by some false kinship
|
|||
|
of species.
|
|||
|
Luckily action was not required on my part. Spike, roused by
|
|||
|
noise, came out to interdict the men folding his furniture into the hall
|
|||
|
with a yelp. He moved forward sleepily, and was cautioned to come
|
|||
|
no closer by the landlady. His queries met with little answer; finally,
|
|||
|
they ducked outside the door, to have a somewhat hushed
|
|||
|
conversation salted with strident whispers as mica is with tiny livid
|
|||
|
cracks. The two men in black stood, gloved hands at sides, staring
|
|||
|
around the room, sometimes at me. With a suddenly elbow, I turned
|
|||
|
over, loudly expectorated opinional air, a rising cleft cloud to dispel the
|
|||
|
stillness of the room, and feigned sleep until Spike came in to tell me
|
|||
|
that we had been witnessed smoking pot by an elderly neighbor
|
|||
|
across the way, and were very much evicted. The men resumed
|
|||
|
placing our stuff in the hall.
|
|||
|
"Isn't there a law against this?" I asked him later, as we bade
|
|||
|
Amon and his helpful battered red truck goodbye at the rental storage
|
|||
|
site. Spike wrapped a corner of his mouth around itself, like the knot
|
|||
|
in my stomach, and said no, it was not legal because he hadn't rented
|
|||
|
legally -- lowered rates for no complaints about size, non-working
|
|||
|
facilities and noise from the weird machinery her husband ran in the
|
|||
|
basement. (We learned some years later that he had been busted for
|
|||
|
manufacturing explosives for a foreign concern; we never heard which
|
|||
|
foreign concern, but it was information of doubtful value to us, as
|
|||
|
shortly afterward we learned the pair had been busted for
|
|||
|
manufacturing and selling phencyclidine)
|
|||
|
A mall in flypaper suburbia provided a fast, paper-rustling lunch
|
|||
|
as we planned our next move. "Where to?"
|
|||
|
"I don't know," said Spike. "I don't have enough cash to get a
|
|||
|
real place. I don't know where I can go." Neither of us bothered to
|
|||
|
ask about family; we knew that on each end it had become an archaic
|
|||
|
institution, a forgotten idea thankfully allowed to decay in photo
|
|||
|
albums full of lies. Subservient grins. "I can't think of anything in the
|
|||
|
city. I can't think of wanting to stay here. It's not like this is that big of
|
|||
|
a deal, but the burgeoning out of control of it. First you, then me.
|
|||
|
Paul took it heavy last month, and who knows where he ended up?" I
|
|||
|
said I didn't want a permanent base of operations. "What you saw
|
|||
|
scared you?"
|
|||
|
"It's another manifestation of a wrong voice. The voice there
|
|||
|
has information on us, and knows who we are, but doesn't want to
|
|||
|
know us. It knows we know it exists. It's not even that I suspect what
|
|||
|
it is: the way the net works, it could be government, or anything but
|
|||
|
government. Who pays taxes anymore? Who has the voice to pay
|
|||
|
them?" I continued: "I want to hit the road." Maybe a moving target,
|
|||
|
but more moving vision, to catch the life we've filed too quickly here. I
|
|||
|
like cities; I live in cities. A tour, like a band, or something. Road,
|
|||
|
because it gives hope: it stretches into the horizon like life, in which
|
|||
|
you can never see the end, only visualize on what it is. If you try to
|
|||
|
see the end, and explain it, you'll spook. So you just watch the sun
|
|||
|
set, and then watch your feet, crossing each other as they pound
|
|||
|
against the dark heavy road. Only when you stop do you remain.
|
|||
|
The gritty sleeplessness hung under my eyes. I pushed out a
|
|||
|
cigarette in another collapsible hat of an aluminum ashtray. My half-
|
|||
|
empty coke, waxen cup and halfwet straw pushed out at the skylights
|
|||
|
casting bright existence on the trodding mall, sat next to Spike's hand,
|
|||
|
and his cigarette, infected with fire, grey ash of the deadness moving
|
|||
|
up toward his hand. "Spike," I said. "Ash."
|
|||
|
He swept the air with his eyes, and locked them on me, flicking
|
|||
|
ash on the table reflexively. I knew he wanted to leave, to roam. I
|
|||
|
knew his eyes were sweeping memories, sweeping some away, and
|
|||
|
saving others for a return, a mental packing. I lit another cigarette and
|
|||
|
stared at the colors of clothing passing. I heard his cigarette quench
|
|||
|
itself in my coke, the crumpling of the pack and the light impact of it
|
|||
|
dropping to the table, or maybe floor. I hooked my duffelbagstrap, and
|
|||
|
swung my scarf over a shoulder as I hefted it and stepped into the flow
|
|||
|
of people. Spike followed, and then pressed his chest past me,
|
|||
|
leading toward a site for cheap junkers, fast, traded for a kingsransom
|
|||
|
of pot.
|
|||
|
As we marched outside, the swirling smog engulfed us for a
|
|||
|
minute, and we barely noticed the dawn of winter over the spawning
|
|||
|
noon crowds.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
...............................................:
|
|||
|
s.r. prozak / musical morass
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Macabre 'Sinister Slaughter' - Infested since its inception with the
|
|||
|
fascination with the obscure, morose, morbid, and gruesome, grindcore
|
|||
|
progressed into a less elemental and more intricate genre with bands
|
|||
|
like Macabre. With this offshoot of the genre, grindcore becomes tight
|
|||
|
and compact, losing its characteristic loose, muddy, abrasive sound.
|
|||
|
Yet still it grates -- not as much in the musical assault sense, but in
|
|||
|
the phenomenon of structured musical power in conflict, producing
|
|||
|
frighteningly apt short blasts of grind. Macabre structure their album
|
|||
|
around 21 serial killers, with a lyrical fairy tale matching each. Sung
|
|||
|
in goofy variations on classic grindcore howl and growl, each song
|
|||
|
remains distinct, with touches such as non-distorted guitar intros and a
|
|||
|
cappella parts adding even more variation. Potentially Macabre are the
|
|||
|
most apt musicians in their genre, playing stuff easily as heavy as any
|
|||
|
other band with effortless technical prowess.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Cynic 'Focus' - A great album and a great disappointment. Cynic, whose
|
|||
|
release was easily the most anticipated in death metal, earned their
|
|||
|
fame by playing progressive death metal on their own and for other
|
|||
|
leading acts. On their first album, Cynic produce the incredibly
|
|||
|
technical music all anticipated, but without the progression to a newer
|
|||
|
form of metal most hoped for: as the leading musicians of a genre, Cynic
|
|||
|
were hoped to bring modern metal from the clone-slump that has embogged
|
|||
|
death and speed metal. Instead, what one ends up with is almost a
|
|||
|
composite, although a little more integrated: one part death metal, one
|
|||
|
part jazz-fusion, and one part progressive. With incredible tempo
|
|||
|
changes, difficult guitar work and incredible bass precision, Cynic have
|
|||
|
proven they can play, but seem to have fallen prey to that traditional
|
|||
|
hangup of progressive metal bands instead of concentrating on bringing
|
|||
|
the music beyond what could have been extrapolated from listening to the
|
|||
|
top five current acts. Not to denigrate this release -- this album is
|
|||
|
excellent listening, with plenty of complexity for discerning (and
|
|||
|
perhaps bored with crunch-crunch-smash death metal) listeners.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Therion 'Beyond Sanctorum' - Since Swedish death metal exploded into a
|
|||
|
large portion of the market some years ago, a common complaint has been
|
|||
|
that all Swedish bands sound very...Swedish, that they have stereotyped
|
|||
|
themselves. Therion have held out as one of the most unique acts, with
|
|||
|
"Of Darkness...", their other US release, being distinguishable from
|
|||
|
related acts. "Beyond Sanctorum" takes the musical vision on "Of
|
|||
|
Darkness..." -- a dense darkness in art, coupled with the
|
|||
|
environmental/political conscience of their lyrics -- and expands it on
|
|||
|
this fantasy epic relying partially on the creations of H.P. Lovecraft.
|
|||
|
In that sense it is not unique -- thousands of metal bands have done
|
|||
|
Lovecraftian songs -- but Therion place it into a complex story of an
|
|||
|
album. Rich with quirkiness and unexpected intricacy, "Beyond
|
|||
|
Sanctorum" takes a listen or two to get into, and then furnishes the
|
|||
|
listener with hours more of in-depth listening.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
...............................................and so...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Thanks for reading the fifth issue of the undiscovered country. Back
|
|||
|
issues and future issues are available at the following ftp sites:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
red.css.itd.umich.edu /zines/Undiscovered_Country
|
|||
|
ftp.eff.org /pub/journals/The_Undiscovered_Country
|
|||
|
cs.uwp.edu /pub/music/lists/tuc
|
|||
|
pomona.claremont.edu po_1995:[cblanc.tuc]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
...or by mailing either cblanc@pomona.claremont.edu or
|
|||
|
rm09216@academia.swt.edu.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"be always drunken"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[EOF]
|