797 lines
40 KiB
Plaintext
797 lines
40 KiB
Plaintext
,gggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggggg.
|
|
$$$"""""""""$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$T"` ggg `"T$$$
|
|
$ $ ! $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$[ 501 ]$$$$$$$$$$ :: $$$ ! $ $
|
|
$ $ | gg "T$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ $$$ | $ $
|
|
$ $ : $$ ! $$T"` ggg `"T$$ $$$ $ $
|
|
$$$ . $$ | $$l $$$ | l$$. gggggggggggg$$$
|
|
$ $ $$ : $$: $$$ : :$$: $$$$$$$$$$$$$ $
|
|
$$$ . $$ . $$: $$$ . :$$l $$$ g$$
|
|
$$$ $$ $$l $$$ l$$&bgggggggggg : $$$
|
|
$ $$$$$$$$$$$$ . $$&bgggggggggggggggggggd&$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ . $ $
|
|
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ $$$
|
|
$$$$$$$$$$$$$gggggggggggg$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ggggggggg$$$
|
|
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
|
|
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ "GNOSIS" $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
|
|
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ by Kreid $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
|
|
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ HOE #501 - 3/8/99 $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
|
|
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
|
|
$"$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$"$
|
|
`""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""'
|
|
|
|
- Part 1, Chapter 1
|
|
|
|
Gnosis.
|
|
|
|
Physically relaxed, chemically collapsed, and psychically prostrate
|
|
before my own self, it came to me. Gnosis. Complete cognition.
|
|
Amazement. Thinking about it now, it seems like nothing, but these things
|
|
only hit us so often, so we tend to be amazed by them as they do. Total
|
|
understanding of all the mystical intricacies of myself, the world, God,
|
|
and everything. Gnosis. Catharsis.
|
|
|
|
I could never expect anyone to care, of course. And that's not an
|
|
accusatory statement, it's just factual. When I have a headache, I keep
|
|
my goddamned mouth shut about it, because I know nobody gives a rat's ass
|
|
how my head feels. Sure, they pretend to have sympathy for you, but
|
|
really all they're doing is thinking about how their own heads feel. It's
|
|
simple fact. Human nature. You can't blame men for being assholes.
|
|
There's too much tension in the world for all of us to be coping with
|
|
blame.
|
|
|
|
Anyway, that's just idle philosophy. It's not worth speaking
|
|
about. I have more important things to be writing about. No, I will not
|
|
attempt to explain or even describe the nature or form of my gnosis. I
|
|
know that would be nothing less than absurdly futile. What I am going to
|
|
describe is what I feel is the most interesting part: the circumstances
|
|
surrounding the gnosis. The story around it. The most useful way to
|
|
communicate something, after all, is through a story.
|
|
|
|
I should stop blabbering. I apologize, but we all know how a
|
|
psychicrevelation can turn a person into a blathering idiot for a few
|
|
days. We've all been through that embarrassment before. But on with the
|
|
story:
|
|
|
|
I was in a bar, on a Saturday night, numbing my mind out in a
|
|
little poorly lit booth in front of a bottle of rum which I had procured
|
|
from the bartender. About half of it had disappeared down my throat so far
|
|
that night. Things were working out quite well. A young couple with whom
|
|
I was not acquainted with was stuffed into the seat next to me, in this
|
|
booth, straddling each other, adjoined at the lips for at least half an
|
|
hour. Why they chose to express their passions for each other in such
|
|
close vicinity to my head in such an uncrowded bar, I do not know. I can
|
|
only assume that they got a kick out of it, somehow. I'm not too uptight
|
|
about that sort of thing, anyway. I was actually quite flattered that they
|
|
had selected me to rub up against. My only fear was that they would somehow
|
|
try to further involve me in their sinful play. That did not coincide with
|
|
my plans for the evening. My mind, as usual, was not in the right frame to
|
|
be thinking about passions or desire for any other person but myself.
|
|
|
|
These late nights alone in poorly-lit booths were certainly not
|
|
designated as possible preludes to sex. At least, not sex for me. I've
|
|
had an unfriendly relationship with humanity all my life, and have learned
|
|
not to take my chances with it. I loved once, and it was wonderful, but
|
|
for my own reasons, it is an experience which I will never attempt to
|
|
duplicate.
|
|
|
|
I reached out my left hand (the one not pinned down by the
|
|
passionate ones) and grabbed the neck of the bottle in front of me. My
|
|
next motion, of course, was the familiar pull of the vessel onto my lips
|
|
and its contents into my body. Down it went, and I don't know how much it
|
|
was, except that it was too much. Far too much. My eyes bulged as I
|
|
yanked the bottle away from my face, spilling a little (actually a lot) on
|
|
my shirt and then on the table as I slammed it down. I gagged and keeled
|
|
over a little as I felt the vomit start to boil inside my stomach. Much
|
|
too much. What was I doing drinking rum when I was this drunk, anyway?
|
|
Who was I trying to impress? Only myself, I suppose. Obviously not the
|
|
couple next tome, or the bartender, or God, or the dumb-faced waitress that
|
|
always bounced around this place, carrying expensive-looking cocktails to
|
|
expensive-looking people.
|
|
|
|
Jesus, was I going to puke? There's no way I could make it to the
|
|
bathroom, I'd be crawling on the floor, and crawling would just make me
|
|
puke faster. Had I really gone too far, even for myself? I had known
|
|
pain which dwarfed this wretched taste in my throat, but it had never
|
|
driven myself down to the level of a pathetic, vomiting drunk.
|
|
|
|
There were a bunch of thoughts that went through me, as I tried to
|
|
hold my stomach down. Those just mentioned were only a few of them. It's
|
|
always amazing to me how one can turn off his mind so effectively for so
|
|
long, and then, through a complete alcoholic haze and swarmed by such
|
|
chaos, have so many thoughts in his head, as if he were suddenly completely
|
|
sober. One would think that he would be reduced to raw instinct in such a
|
|
situation. And sometimes he is, but not always. Sometimes it's quite the
|
|
opposite. Very strange, I think. Alcohol is such a wonderful and
|
|
mysterious drug if it's applied in such a perfectly confused manner.
|
|
|
|
Anyway, that's when it happened. Gnosis. Ecstasy. The tragic
|
|
culmination of my evening. As the psychotic gagging subsided into mellow
|
|
burping, the usual revelatory swarm of thoughts left my head, and my mind
|
|
was annulled. The world glowed as it spun around my dizzy head. The
|
|
sinful couple was Adam and Eve, the bottle was the serpent, and I was God,
|
|
watching it all happen, unemotional, uninvolved, and yet responsible for it
|
|
all, like an uncaring father to an accidental son. My sick body and my
|
|
sick mind had dissolved into thin air. My veins conquered by rum and my
|
|
throat by bile, this moment was my sweet ecstasy. My gnosis.
|
|
|
|
And like that, I was changed. By alcohol, of all things. An
|
|
idiot's elixir. I was surprised, to say the least. But that was just a
|
|
peasant of a thought inside the kingdom my mind had become that night. I
|
|
stood up, slowly and wobbling, nodded goodbye to the bartender, and
|
|
walked/crawled out the door, down the sidewalk, and into my car. My
|
|
enlightened mind had decided to overrule my common sense, as it tends to
|
|
do sometimes, and my will to live wasn't speaking up, that's for sure. I
|
|
started the engine and drove, drunkenly, until I found myself driving by
|
|
some kind of forest. It looked like a good place to stop.
|
|
|
|
I parked the car in a little dirt clearing off the side of the road,
|
|
and walked home, to my clearing in the woods, and I started to dig myself
|
|
a hole in the ground. I didn't have a shovel so I just used my hands.
|
|
The dirt between my fingers felt soft, silky, amazing, my whole body still
|
|
in the shell of amazed ecstasy that the high dose of rum had strangely
|
|
brought me. Why was I digging myself a whole in the ground? It was my
|
|
grave. I had decided that I was going to lie in my own grave and die that
|
|
night, out there in the forest under the half-moon. It seemed like such a
|
|
beautiful thing to do. I would finally have done something worth being
|
|
proud of, and I would have died completely satisfied with my life.
|
|
|
|
Only, of course, I did not finish digging. I dug the grave about
|
|
11 feet deep, then passed out, face first in the dirt, prostrate before
|
|
the trees, the world, and God, who I was certainly not anything like.
|
|
|
|
Today is Sunday, and I cannot rest. This morning I woke up filled
|
|
with emotion, something I have not done in many months. And I'm sitting
|
|
in my own hand-dug grave, with a little notebook, writing, trying to make
|
|
sense of myself. Today, I feel things. I feel life. I feel human. I do
|
|
not like it, and I don't know how long it's going to last, but I do
|
|
believe that I am a better person because of it. This is the price I pay
|
|
to myself for wanting to believe in something, when I know that I should
|
|
not. This is the price of gnosis.
|
|
|
|
There is feeling now, but the ecstasy is gone. I've been living
|
|
inside a cold, uneasy afterglow of enlightenment. But all things
|
|
considered, I would say that it was a good experience. I wanted it, I
|
|
deserved it, and I am thankful for it. But it was an experience which I
|
|
will never attempt to duplicate.
|
|
|
|
[-----]
|
|
|
|
- Chapter 2
|
|
|
|
I feel that I've falsely implied that I've been enlightened,
|
|
somehow. I want to take that back.
|
|
|
|
Maybe I thought that I was finally enlightened, at some recent
|
|
moment, but that's just how it goes. That's just the aftershock of
|
|
tragedy. "Gnosis." It's inside my stupid head and I'll forget about the
|
|
whole thing pretty damned soon. Just as soon as I can scrape some money
|
|
together for another bottle tonight. No more bars, though. I'm promising
|
|
that to myself right now. Tonight, I'm drinking at home.
|
|
|
|
As my luck would have it, though, I don't really have a home. My
|
|
car, maybe, the El Camino with duct-tape over the window so the rain can't
|
|
leak and fall on my head at night. It's a place to sleep, and I'm usually
|
|
drunk enough to not mind the coldness. I wouldn't call myself a bum,
|
|
although I wouldn't mind being one. I'm just without a place to sleep for
|
|
a while. Three days ago, I was sleeping in my girlfriend's bed, curling
|
|
up close to her, being warm and loved. Three days ago, I could.
|
|
|
|
I forgot to mention that I pissed myself last night. Real fucking
|
|
genius, I know, real expert alcoholism from Mr. Tough Guy. Sitting in his
|
|
own fucking grave drenched in piss. The real tragedy about me pissing
|
|
myself is that I happen to be wearing my only set of clothes. I'm lucky
|
|
enough to be wearing black jeans, so the piss doesn't show all that much.
|
|
The T-shirt is white, but it didn't get too much piss on it, so I can get
|
|
by with it for a while. I feel that the underwear is totally soaked,
|
|
though, so I strip down, remove them, and throw them on the ground.
|
|
Before I put my jeans back on, I hold them up to my face to catch a whiff
|
|
and assess the damage.
|
|
|
|
Well, they reek. They fucking reek. I'm going to smell like piss
|
|
for a while until I figure out how to take care of this little mess I've
|
|
gotten myself into.
|
|
|
|
So this is the new me. The post-cognition me. I've got some
|
|
things to take care of today. First off, I have to stop smelling like
|
|
piss. Then, I need to start looking for a place to sleep and not freeze
|
|
to death. And after I fail at that, I need to score some alcohol for the
|
|
night. Time to take care of business. Get in fucking gear for Christ's
|
|
sake.
|
|
|
|
I don't think I like the new me very much so far. The new me just
|
|
spent the whole damned morning sitting in the dirt and philosophizing.
|
|
|
|
I use morning as a relative term, of course. It's probably
|
|
afternoon to most people. But I have no idea what time it is. I'm getting
|
|
the feeling I'm never going to know what time it is ever again.
|
|
|
|
I'm still philosophizing.
|
|
|
|
This perceived understanding of the world I've developed has brought
|
|
out some seriously unfortunate qualities. Things are going to be very bad
|
|
for me. I'm going to be unhappy. It's not going to work out.
|
|
|
|
[-----]
|
|
|
|
- Chapter 3
|
|
|
|
So I'm walking out of the woods, towards where I think I left my
|
|
car, the gray El Camino. I'm getting ready to make my way into town and
|
|
find a laundromat or something to clean the piss off of me. I'm setting
|
|
my life into motion, again, at last, and my eyes fall upon my greatest and
|
|
most recent tragedy.
|
|
|
|
The car is parked just off the side of the road, near a little dirt
|
|
clearing, and the lights are still on, but only the taillights. The front
|
|
lights are out because the entire front of the car is crumpled up against
|
|
a telephone pole. The driver's-side door is opened and there's vomit still
|
|
dripping out from the inside of the door onto the dirt beneath it. I get
|
|
in and try to start the engine. No luck.
|
|
|
|
The car might have moved if it had gas in it, but I seem to have
|
|
left the engine running overnight. It's dead now. I scan the car for any
|
|
possessions I might have left behind. Of course, there aren't any.
|
|
|
|
I knew that the car was really my only possession left, and
|
|
probably my best chance of getting myself back into respectable society,
|
|
but at the time, I was very paranoid. Maybe the cops had been here
|
|
overnight. _I could get into some serious shit for this_, I thought.
|
|
Probably an irrational train of thought, considering all the circumstances.
|
|
But, better safe than sorry. I decided to walk away casually and leave the
|
|
car behind. They'll send it back to the guy I stole it from, perhaps.
|
|
|
|
That had done it for me. My worldly possessions had been reduced
|
|
to nothing but piss-soaked clothes. Oh, yes, and in my pockets:
|
|
piss-soaked cigarettes, and a piss-soaked wallet. I didn't know how much
|
|
was in the wallet and I didn't feel like checking. It was time for
|
|
walking. I put my boots onto the road and started to walk back to where I
|
|
assumed the town would be: naturally, the direction opposite that which my
|
|
car seemed to be facing.
|
|
|
|
[-----]
|
|
|
|
- Chapter 4
|
|
|
|
I was right about that. It was about a two mile walk, I estimated,
|
|
before I started to notice stores and gas stations and sidewalks and all
|
|
the other signs of heightened population density.
|
|
|
|
The walk was good for thinking, I think, maybe. I don't remember
|
|
much of what I thought. A lot of cars drove down the road as I walked, and
|
|
I had to stay off the road most of the time and walk on the dirt. A lot of
|
|
people looked at me as they drove by, slowed down, passed me, turned their
|
|
heads back a little, checked me in their rear view. I wondered what it was
|
|
that was so interesting about me. Usually motorists are only interested in
|
|
seeing death on the side of the road. I hoped I wasn't disappointing them.
|
|
|
|
It was a nice town. I had been living there for about six months
|
|
previous to today, actually, but I didn't really know much about it. I
|
|
thought about this and realized, actually, that I didn't know what the
|
|
town's name was, and, I didn't know what state it was in. And, I didn't
|
|
know what month it was. The year I did know. It was 1994. And it was
|
|
Sunday.
|
|
|
|
Yes, okay, my life is unusual. I'm not very observant, I don't
|
|
know or care much about things like location, date, time. I had
|
|
sacrificed all of that knowledge, all of that caring. It was gone for me.
|
|
|
|
For the past six months, I've been pampered, taken care of, kept up
|
|
in a third-story apartment with a little laptop computer and a CD player
|
|
on the floor. I was alone a whole lot of the time. When I wanted to
|
|
relax, I listened to music. When I wanted to work, I wrote. I wrote, I
|
|
think, eight novels and probably about eighty short stories. I planned to
|
|
get them published some day, but I don't have the laptop anymore, so
|
|
there's no hope in that. All my stories are still sitting in that third
|
|
floor apartment underneath the bed.
|
|
|
|
Yeah, 1994 had been an unusual year for me. I was sure that I
|
|
would remember it for a long time, if I ever remembered anything ever
|
|
again. It was quite cold now, so I figured it must have been about
|
|
November. The place, I don't know. I knew it was America. Somewhere in
|
|
the Northeast part of it.
|
|
|
|
I was heavier than I had ever been in my life at the time. I
|
|
estimated that I weighed about 170 pounds. I was so well-fed up in that
|
|
apartment. Three meals a day were brought to me or cooked for me by the
|
|
girl I lived with for all that time.
|
|
|
|
it was nice. It's over now, though. Hopeless. Severed.
|
|
|
|
I finally found a laundromat. It was closed, though. The sign on
|
|
the door said that they opened at 1:00 PM on Sundays. That seemed to me
|
|
like a late time to open for a place of business that required no
|
|
employees present. Unfortunate for me, but no big deal. All the stores
|
|
seemed to be closed. Everyone in this town must go to Church. That made
|
|
me happy. At least I had been stranded in a town with some hope in it. I
|
|
didn't know what time it was, but I knew that it really didn't matter. I
|
|
had nowhere to go. There was a green bench on the sidewalk in front of
|
|
the store so I decided to sit down for a while and ponder things some
|
|
more.
|
|
|
|
The bench faced the sidewalk and the stores instead of the street
|
|
so people could sit on it and watch the people walking and shopping
|
|
instead of driving. There was nobody around, though. They were all
|
|
dressed nice and worshipping something. I fantasized about spending the
|
|
day begging for money so I could get some alcohol in me by nighttime. The
|
|
people in this town must be charitable. There was hope for me here.
|
|
|
|
A man walked down the sidewalk, up to the laundromat, jerked on the
|
|
locked door, squinted at the sign that had the hours posted on it, checked
|
|
his watch, grumbled, walked back in the direction from which he came.
|
|
Maybe he forgot it was Sunday. He was probably rushing off to Church now.
|
|
Or maybe he was Jewish. Yes, he looked a little Jewish, I think. I think
|
|
I remember him like that.
|
|
|
|
After that there was nobody on the sidewalk for a long while. A
|
|
few cars drove by, but they were behind me. I couldn't see them.
|
|
Non-religious people from another town, probably. Just passing through on
|
|
their way to work in a nearby city, maybe.
|
|
|
|
About an hour passed and more and more cars drove by and people
|
|
started to walk down the sidewalk. Eventually, a fat, sweaty bald man
|
|
walked up to the door of the laundromat, walked in, switched the lights
|
|
on, walked out, and walked away. At last, I could cleanse myself. This
|
|
man was my savior. Finally. Now I could get myself in gear. Set the day
|
|
into motion. I stood up and walked into the laundromat.
|
|
|
|
[-----]
|
|
|
|
- Chapter 5
|
|
|
|
There was nobody in the laundromat except me; I thought that was
|
|
great. I had become such a recluse from all the previous months of being
|
|
completely taken care of in that third-floor apartment. I've forgotten a
|
|
lot of things about living. My social skills haven't been tested much
|
|
since I've been on my own, but I have the feeling that they're not much in
|
|
tune. I preferred to be alone for the moment. Too many people around me,
|
|
too much motion, and. I don't know, I could just snap. Like a frightened
|
|
snake. I'm just trying to protect myself!
|
|
|
|
Time to wash up, then. For the first time since I could remember,
|
|
I pulled out my wallet and checked up on my money status.
|
|
|
|
Oh.
|
|
|
|
Shit.
|
|
|
|
Well, fuck that idea. Silly me. I guess this is an appropriate
|
|
demonstration of how my mental state has withered. Well, it's a free
|
|
lesson in responsibility, I guess. I'm still covered in piss. I put my
|
|
wallet back in my jeans.
|
|
|
|
That Jewish guy should be showing up soon, though. There's a
|
|
bathroom inside the laundromat and I decide to hide in it until someone
|
|
decides to get his laundry done. Then I pounce.
|
|
|
|
I couldn't find the light in the bathroom, so it was dark. No
|
|
matter; I would have turned it off eventually anyway. Light is another
|
|
thing I just seem to have problems. dealing with. I sat there for about
|
|
ten minutes. I think I was thinking about something; nothing responsible,
|
|
though. I had a lot of things to figure out, and I just wasn't figuring
|
|
them out. I was probably philosophizing about something (again, god damn
|
|
me). Anyway. ten minutes passed, and I heard the door to the laundromat
|
|
open, then five minutes later I heard one of the machines running. Two
|
|
minutes after that, I heard the door open again. I had to assume that
|
|
meant it was time for me to get my laundry done with.
|
|
|
|
I walked casually out of the bathroom and the laundromat was still
|
|
empty, as I had imagined. I walked hastily, but still casually, up to the
|
|
machine that was purring, opened the door to it, and emptied its contents
|
|
onto the dirty laundromat floor. Pants, socks, shirts. they looked like
|
|
the clothes of a Jewish man. He had plenty of quarters, I didn't.
|
|
Therefore, my petty thievery is justified. I didn't feel bad about it at
|
|
all.
|
|
|
|
I stripped down to my birthday suit, taking my boots off, then my
|
|
socks, then putting my boots back on. Then I threw my clothes into the
|
|
washing machine, then closed the door. Twenty-six minutes, it said.
|
|
Twenty-six minutes until my clothes would be piss-free.
|
|
|
|
And so I was naked in a laundromat in a town I didn't know the name
|
|
of yet. It was thrilling, as you probably could imagine. The walls that
|
|
stood against the street were glass so that everyone that walked by the
|
|
place could look in and see me. Plenty of people were walking the streets
|
|
at this point, and I tried to make eye contact with all of them, but I
|
|
don't think anybody looked back. I guess the people in this town have
|
|
their own washing machines. Everyone but that strange Jewish man whom I
|
|
just robbed of 50 cents. I walked casually, but more slowly this time,
|
|
back to the bathroom and sat there naked until I heard the machine stop.
|
|
|
|
I walked out of the bathroom and my boots went clomp clomp clomp
|
|
on the dirty tile floor as I made my way to the washing machine. There
|
|
were more people on the street now, and some of them were actually looking
|
|
at me. It made me a little nervous as I gathered my clothes and put them
|
|
back on, but I kept my cool. _Put on a show for these people, I told
|
|
myself. Entertain them. Make them love you._ I think I did entertain
|
|
some of them, but for the most part I just scared the hell out of them.
|
|
The people walked fast past the laundromat and tried to cover their
|
|
children's eyes.
|
|
|
|
The clothes were very hard to put on because they were so wet. They
|
|
were quite cold, too, but at least I was clean. I sniffed myself, trying
|
|
to detect any trace of a urine smell. There were only small traces. I
|
|
would do okay as long as I didn't stand too close to anyone. I stood there
|
|
in the laundromat in my heavy, waterlogged clothes, and I felt very clean.
|
|
|
|
[-----]
|
|
|
|
- Chapter 6
|
|
|
|
I was about to make my way out of the laundromat when a man walked
|
|
in. It was the Jew. He smiled at me, and I smiled at him, and just stood
|
|
there, while he figured out what had gone on in his absence.
|
|
|
|
"Hey! You ripped me off! _You_ stole my laundry!"
|
|
|
|
That wasn't very fair. How did he know it was me?
|
|
|
|
I just stood there.
|
|
|
|
"Fucking kid! Fucking. juvenile delinquent!"
|
|
|
|
I was 21, actually. Not a kid at all. This guy looked like he was
|
|
about 25. "I'm sorry," I mumbled in my most apologetic tone.
|
|
|
|
"_You_ just ruined my whole fucking day! Asshole!"
|
|
|
|
"There's no reason to be so aggressive."
|
|
|
|
"That's it. I'm calling the cops! _You_ stay right here while I
|
|
call the cops!"
|
|
|
|
It didn't make any sense to me. I was being put in a very awkward
|
|
position, and over what? Why did he have to bring the police into this?
|
|
|
|
He turned his back and walked toward the payphone at the back of the
|
|
laundromat. His expensive shoes went clomp clomp clomp on the tile floor
|
|
as he walked, and I followed him back to the phone, and I grabbed him by
|
|
the back of his neck, and I slammed his face right into the payphone before
|
|
he could pick it up.
|
|
|
|
The blood started flowing pretty quick. He let out a pathetic
|
|
whine, crying, "Help! Help me somebody please! My God!" but he didn't
|
|
get much volume out. I think he was too scared. Then, I noticed that he
|
|
had pissed his pants pretty good. That little man had quite a lot of piss
|
|
in him.
|
|
|
|
He kept staring at me and whining, trying to get some noise to come
|
|
out of his lungs. I was worried that someone would eventually hear him,
|
|
but nobody ever did. He had a pen in his breast pocket and I stabbed him
|
|
with it, right in the neck. He didn't die instantly but he definitely
|
|
stopped screaming. It was more like gurgling after that; after the blood
|
|
started really flowing. A lot of it got on my hands, so I went to the
|
|
bathroom one more time to wash myself off. It came off pretty easily.
|
|
|
|
I wasn't sure if the man had died at that point. I didn't look at
|
|
the body as I walked out into the street.
|
|
|
|
[-----]
|
|
|
|
- Chapter 7
|
|
|
|
I walked down on the street checking my clothes for bloodstains.
|
|
There weren't any. I was still really wet, though. People gave me funny
|
|
looks on the street and I felt ashamed of myself. I shrugged helplessly at
|
|
all of the staring eyes as they passed.
|
|
|
|
There was still no way for me to keep time, but I estimated that it
|
|
was somewhere around 3:00 PM. I decided to sit down for a moment and
|
|
recall my agenda for the day. Another green bench on the sidewalk, facing
|
|
the stores, not the street.
|
|
|
|
Eventually, I came to the realization that I had nothing left on my
|
|
agenda besides getting drunk. But I refused to let myself get started on
|
|
that task before sunset. I had to keep some sort of dignity! Sure, I was
|
|
homeless, but I wasn't at all a bum. I was clean, and my clothes were
|
|
clean, too.
|
|
|
|
I sat on the bench and thought about the Jews, and how they had
|
|
always been victimized. I thought about all the times that I could
|
|
remember Jews being victimized, and then I thought about Jesus. He was a
|
|
Jew and he loved to be victimized! It was all that he lived for. I had
|
|
never read the Bible before, but I was pretty sure that's how it was.
|
|
|
|
A lot of people walked down the sidewalk, but I didn't notice them
|
|
much. I was thinking a lot about a lot of stuff. After a while, though,
|
|
all I could think was, _Shit. Shit, shit shit shit shit shit shit shit
|
|
shit._ I had been sober for way too long.
|
|
|
|
I stood up and started walking. I needed to find a liquor store.
|
|
|
|
[-----]
|
|
|
|
- Part 2 -- Chapter 8
|
|
|
|
Well, I don't know how, but I woke up in a jail cell this morning.
|
|
It doesn't seem too hard to figure out some of the circumstances that got
|
|
me arrested last night: alcohol, poverty, some lack of cleanliness, some
|
|
lack of fear. This is all I need to know. No use trying to summon up
|
|
lost, irrelevant memories.
|
|
|
|
When I first opened my eyes and realized where I was, I went into a
|
|
state of complete panicked terror. I jumped out of bed screaming, and when
|
|
the warden came to the bars to see what was wrong, all I could think to say
|
|
was "WHAT TIME IS IT?!"
|
|
|
|
"Two O' Clock P.M."
|
|
|
|
Maybe I should have asked what month it was, or what town I was in.
|
|
|
|
Anyway, they let me out within an hour of my waking up. They were
|
|
nice people, really. I think on my way out they told me to watch myself
|
|
next time I decided to get drunk, or maybe they told me to get the hell out
|
|
of their town and never come back. I can't remember, really. I had a
|
|
hangover and I really wasn't listening. I was sure it didn't matter,
|
|
anyway, because I had decided, once and for all, I was going to stop
|
|
drinking.
|
|
|
|
I hate to be so nondescript, but I find it hard to care enough
|
|
about such trivial matters to talk about them. In and out, that's how my
|
|
night with. In and out. Okay?
|
|
|
|
[-----]
|
|
|
|
- Chapter 9
|
|
|
|
I'm moving on. Now is the time to think more about the... present?
|
|
|
|
Yes, the present. The present. Now is the time. I'm guessing,
|
|
about, well, 8:00 AM. I get up early nowadays, don't I? That's something
|
|
to be proud of! You get more out of your days when you wake up early, you
|
|
know.
|
|
|
|
I'm at the bench again. My old bench. Except, this time, I'm not
|
|
sitting on it. I'm sitting on the sidewalk, leaning up against the wall of
|
|
the laundromat, staring at the bench. I'm trying to be objective here, not
|
|
take on any roles, you know? I can't be sitting on the same bench two days
|
|
in a row. That's something that bums do. This morning, Monday I believe,
|
|
I am leaning against the wall of the laundromat.
|
|
|
|
The place looks surprisingly clean to me. I feel surprisingly
|
|
clean, too. It's very satisfying to be so self-sufficient and still so
|
|
perfectly clean.
|
|
|
|
As I was sitting there, leaned against the wall, someone walked by
|
|
and threw some change at me. A quarter and a nickel. Unbelievable! I
|
|
felt like screaming in his face: "What the hell is this? I don't need
|
|
your charity!" But, by the time I thought of it, he was way past me; I
|
|
would have been screaming at his back. And then, I didn't want to make a
|
|
scene. That was something that bums did. I took the thirty cents and put
|
|
it in my right jeans pocket. Cha-ching!
|
|
|
|
Wordly Possessions: Black jeans, a T-shirt, my humble, stylish
|
|
garb. 1 Leather wallet, empty.
|
|
Cash, $0.30
|
|
|
|
I took that money, looked up at the sky, and got a very familiar
|
|
sense. It felt very good and I pondered it for a moment. Then I realized
|
|
what it was... amazing! I wasn't looking at the sky, not at all. I was
|
|
looking at a third-story window. Very curious indeed. My eyes had
|
|
somehow, through some magic of coincidence fallen upon my forgotten former
|
|
abode. The place I had written all those stories, all those novels. The
|
|
place where
|
|
|
|
uhmmm
|
|
|
|
...she ... lived. Fuck! I couldn't remember her name. Well, that
|
|
would be a minor setback. Regardless, I was going back up there, no matter
|
|
what happened. Right now, too, right here, in this present.
|
|
|
|
Why?
|
|
|
|
Well, I... I would go up there and demand my stories. After all, an
|
|
artist is entitled to his own work, and that's what I am. I'm an artist!
|
|
She would have to attend to my rights as an artist. That was indisputable.
|
|
I ran across the street to her building and opened the front door.
|
|
|
|
[-----]
|
|
|
|
- Chapter 10
|
|
|
|
Now, I wasn't quite sure what her name was, but I did know that she
|
|
lived on the floor, which, according to the names scribbled next to the
|
|
doorbells, her name was either Katherine Johns or Elizabeth Moon. Or
|
|
David Crover, if she was living with a man, but that seemed impossible.
|
|
It hadn't been long enough for that to happen. It had hardly been
|
|
|
|
well, it hadn't been long enough. It wouldn't have made sense.
|
|
|
|
None of the names rung a bell with me. They were both too ordinary.
|
|
Too common; they almost seemed fake. But one of them had to be the girl I
|
|
was looking for, so, eeny meeny, et cetera, I rang the bell for Katherine
|
|
Johns.
|
|
|
|
"Who is it?"
|
|
|
|
"Kathy, this is your neighbor, David. I left my key in my
|
|
apartment, could you buzz me in please?"
|
|
|
|
Buzzzzzz. I opened the door and started to walk in.
|
|
|
|
"David, can you get into your apartment? If you locked your key
|
|
inside, you can stay in my room a while."
|
|
|
|
Well, I didn't expect that. Katherine must be a lonely girl. "Er,
|
|
no, that won't be necessary, I left my door unlocked, thanks, though!" I
|
|
tried to sound as pleasant as possible.
|
|
|
|
"Okay, well, if you change your mind, just knock. We could have a
|
|
drink."
|
|
|
|
I did not reply to that. I walked inside. On the first floor,
|
|
there was a little space underneath the stairs where it seemed no one would
|
|
be able to detect me. I needed to rest, so I curled up and hid for an hour
|
|
or two, dozing.
|
|
|
|
[-----]
|
|
|
|
- Chapter 11
|
|
|
|
A lot of time passed under the stairs. When I felt rested, I
|
|
climbed up three flights and saw the door to Katherine's apartment. I
|
|
crossed my fingers and knocked on the door.
|
|
|
|
I heard Katherine approach the door on the other side, then pause to
|
|
investigate me through the little peephole. Then she opened up and stared
|
|
at me, as if to say, Yes? She didn't seem to recognize my face.
|
|
|
|
Intrusively, I pushed past her into the apartment. There was no
|
|
laptop computer, no CD player. It was much less bare than my former place
|
|
of living: there were chairs, a rug, and the bed was much bigger. Nothing
|
|
was familiar. I did not seem to be at home. Katherine turned and just
|
|
stared at me, half-frightened, half-annoyed.
|
|
|
|
I stared right back, lost for words.
|
|
|
|
"Are you going to explain yourself?" She said it with quivering
|
|
bravado. Very admirable. She was a timid girl, it seemed.
|
|
|
|
I felt quite dumb at that moment. I had no idea what to say. I
|
|
just stared at her, examined her; she was a very good-looking girl, of
|
|
course, and of course, she was wearing only a bra and panties. They were
|
|
red, which didn't really seem to suit her, but they looked very nice.
|
|
Nothing too sexy, just humbly beautiful. I was frightened too, now. We
|
|
were two trapped animals. I had to be honest: "Oh, well. No, I don't.
|
|
That is, I can't explain myself. Or at least I don't know how I could.
|
|
I'm sorry."
|
|
|
|
At this point, I suppose it would have been appropriate to leave,
|
|
but I didn't. I told you, I was trapped. Between myself and the door,
|
|
there she stood, staring at me. "Who are you?"
|
|
|
|
"I feel I would be at a great loss if I told you that..."
|
|
|
|
"Are you here to rape me or do you just want to kill me?"
|
|
|
|
Well, she certainly had a dark sense of humor. At least she was
|
|
honest. And prepared. It was at about that point that I realized that she
|
|
was quite a bit drunk. I scanned the apartment again and found bottles,
|
|
half-empty, in every corner. I stood silent and I suppose she took that to
|
|
mean that I was not a hostile intruder.
|
|
|
|
"Care for a drink?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
|
|
She went into her kitchenette and grabbed a wine glass from above
|
|
the sink, then took a bottle of gin from the counter and poured it out
|
|
until the glass was full. She made no attempt to ask me what I wanted, or
|
|
to even provide a more social drink than straight gin. She was very
|
|
decisive and authoritative about these things. I appreciated that about
|
|
her.
|
|
|
|
She hobbled back over to me and handed me the drink. I sipped at
|
|
it for a minute or two until it was empty, then set it down on a nearby
|
|
coffee table. The room was silent all the while. I was very happy, of
|
|
course, to be a little drunk once again. It felt familiar. I liked that.
|
|
|
|
Katherine crawled into her bed, half-covered herself with her
|
|
blanket, and continued to stare at me. I walked over to the kitchenette
|
|
and poured myself another straight gin. I drank this one much quicker,
|
|
then walked back to Katherine and sat down in a chair several feet from the
|
|
bed. Our staring contest continued.
|
|
|
|
"You can join me if you want to."
|
|
|
|
"Okay."
|
|
|
|
I crawled into bed with her and curled up about a foot away from
|
|
her, facing her back. We were no longer staring at each other. Several
|
|
hours passed like this. It was very intense for me. Of course I felt
|
|
very sexually charged by this girl, and the alcohol in her and my own
|
|
bodies did not make it any easier. Over the course of two or three hours,
|
|
I found myself wrapped around her, my stomach pressed against her back,
|
|
our legs curled, one pair behind the other, in a double-fetus position. I
|
|
fell asleep like this. I'm not sure if she did. It did not matter,
|
|
though. The sleep did not make the time pass with any less intensity.
|
|
|
|
[-----]
|
|
|
|
- Chapter 12
|
|
|
|
When I woke up, it was night. The room, formerly lit only by the
|
|
sun, was much darker then. Katherine was awake. We were still locked in
|
|
the same embrace, but I felt cramped all over.
|
|
|
|
I'm not sure if she noticed that I was awake at first, so I made her
|
|
aware that I was. I grabbed the waistband of her panties, humbly,
|
|
beautifully, and slipped them off. She did not respond. Her eyes were
|
|
closed but I knew she was awake; she must have been. I removed my jeans,
|
|
once again remembering that I was not wearing underwear. In that same
|
|
locked embrace, I slipped myself inside of her. She opened her eyes. It
|
|
was very, very beautiful.
|
|
|
|
It felt very natural; very familiar. I held her hip in place as I
|
|
worked, thrusting myself into her, repeatedly, with an unchanging and
|
|
fluid motion. She was motionless; probably aware that in the position we
|
|
were in, it would have made it much more difficult for me if she had tried
|
|
to move along with me. I expected her to be completely silent. She was
|
|
not loud, but she communicated with me, certainly, she was uttering
|
|
something, some happy, pleasured sounds. The experience became more and
|
|
more intense. She spoke:
|
|
|
|
"Come inside me."
|
|
|
|
"Okay."
|
|
|
|
And I did. I was happy to receive this permission, as it is not
|
|
something a courteous man does to a woman without her permission. I did
|
|
not want to seem discourteous. We held still, and locked, but much tighter
|
|
than before, and with more intensity, for an indeterminable time. I could
|
|
not keep myself from smiling.
|
|
|
|
When I finally came to removing myself from her, I found that I was
|
|
covered in blood, and so were the sheets. She was menstruating. I didn't
|
|
notice that before. I was not repulsed at all by this, rather, I felt
|
|
lucky. To me, a woman's inability to conceive seemed more of a blessing
|
|
than something to be avoided.
|
|
|
|
She turned her head around and kissed me on the lips. Our embrace
|
|
had been unlocked. She was a very good kisser. I'm not sure that I was.
|
|
I fell asleep again on her bed.
|
|
|
|
[-----]
|
|
|
|
- Chapter 13
|
|
|
|
I've never been accused of being unrealistic or dishonest. I could
|
|
never accept such labels. I have, however, been accused many times of
|
|
being incommunicative and self-absorbed. I believe, therefore, that I am
|
|
a person who understands the truth, tells it, but cannot manage to fit it
|
|
to the needs of others.
|
|
|
|
Of course I acknowledge that there is something very wrong with me,
|
|
but why bother changing? I seem to be doing fine. I've made certain
|
|
sacrifices. Yes, I'm half-empty, but for what I've given, I must have
|
|
taken in certain wonderful talents. It wouldn't make sense any other way.
|
|
|
|
I woke up many times there in Katherine's bed; I had to move myself
|
|
periodically so that I would not become cramped. I tried not to wake
|
|
Katherine, but she would move with me, every time, half-asleep. Mostly
|
|
asleep. She kept saying "I love you" in her tired stupor.
|
|
|
|
When I woke up and saw the sun rising, I felt it was time to get out
|
|
of bed and face the next day. I slid away from Katherine, trying not to
|
|
wake her, but of course, as I got out of bed, she leaned up. She was
|
|
squinting at me, trying to figure things out, I suppose. We both had
|
|
hangovers, but we were well-rested.
|
|
|
|
As her squint turned to a wide-eyed, smiling stare, I asked her the
|
|
first thing that came to my mind: "What day is today?"
|
|
|
|
"It's Sunday."
|
|
|
|
I looked out the window. The streets outside were empty, just as
|
|
they had been the morning after I crashed my car. "Okay," I said as I was
|
|
putting my clothes back on, "I'm going to church."
|
|
|
|
"Okay."
|
|
|
|
I walked out the door.
|
|
|
|
[-----]
|
|
|
|
This story will be continued.
|
|
|
|
[--------------------------------------------------------------------------]
|
|
[ (c) !LA HOE REVOLUCION PRESS! HOE #501 - WRITTEN BY: KREID - 3/8/99 ]
|