Category Archives: Short Story

Eliza’s Body as Sacrament of the Grace I Sunk From

By Ben Leib

“It’s for you.”  Elaine said.

I was midway through my Thursday swing shift at the Nickelodeon Theater, and wasn’t sure who’d be calling me at work.  .

I took the phone.  “Hello.”

“Hi.”  It was a woman.

“Hey…” 

“It’s Eliza!”

I didn’t recognize the voice.

“Uh, hey Eliza, how’s it going?” I said.

“Great,” Eliza said.  “So, I really enjoyed getting to talk to you at the Red Room on Tuesday night.” 

After a moment’s hesitation, I said, “Yeah, I had a great time too.”

“Really?”

“Totally, I’m just wishing I’d given you my phone number.”

“I was thinking the same thing,” Eliza said.  “But you did tell me where you worked.  We talked for like two hours, and then you gave me a kiss on the cheek when you left.”

I was beginning to piece things together.  I remembered enough about the past Tuesday to know that I’d been with a group of friends.  I’d been drunk but clearly I’d still been charming enough to impress someone.  She lingered on me.  That happened to me occasionally – I enamored a woman.  I found it inexplicable. 

The kiss on the cheek didn’t sound too impressive though, and I didn’t like missed opportunities – particularly since they seemed so fleeting.

“I was hoping I’d run into you again.” I said.

“Me too,” Eliza said.

“Well,” I said, “what are you up to tomorrow?”

And so it was decided.  I was going on a date with Eliza.

“Ooh, you’ve got a date!” Elaine announced after I hung up the phone.  She’d been sitting beside me during the entire conversation.  “Who’s the lucky lady?”

“I don’t know.”

I’d dated one or two unstable women and I didn’t want Eliza knowing where I lived before I’d had the chance to get a sense of her, so I had her meet me at the theater.

I watched from inside, hoping for a sign to tell me it was her when she arrived.  When a car pulled into the red zone in front of the theater, I ran out to see, though I left my backpack inside.  I strolled up to the passenger window and knelt down.

“Hi,” a woman smiled at me from behind the wheel.

“Thanks for picking me up,” I said.

Good boy, I thought to myself as I leaned into the window.  I don’t know how, but you done good boy.  

I was attracted to Eliza right off – her black hair flowing from her scalp in ringlets, her light complexion and pale freckles, her slight overbite.  She was beautiful, and she was, assuredly, a woman.  Even crouching at the open car window I could smell the pheromonal softness, the odd, barely detectable aura of femininity.

“Ready to go?” she asked.

“One sec,” I told her.  “I’ve just got to grab my backpack.”

The Saturn Café had brightly colored murals covering the walls and menageries of junk built into the plexi-glass tabletops.  It was a vegetarian diner, oozing an affectation of hipness.

“I eat like a pig.” Eliza warned me.

“That’s all right,” I told her, “I’m used to it.”

The last girl I’d dated managed to make a mess of any plate of food with such daintiness that you’d barely know it was happening until about two thirds of the way through the meal, at which point her supper had come to resemble something gelatinous. 

Eliza was also a messy eater, but in a different way.  She deconstructed her veggie burger with her fingers, eating it ingredient by ingredient.  First she ate the tomato, then the lettuce, then a bit of bun, then some of the patty.  The meal went on like this until she’d cleared her plate.  My own plate was long empty by that time.

We ordered a pitcher of dark beer, and then ordered another before we’d finished eating.

I’d already made the good first impression, done so without recollection.  I’d jumped that first hurdle, but I still felt pressure.  I told Eliza about being a literature major.  It was the one thing about myself that I considered somewhat sexy.

“So what made you choose books?” she asked.  “I mean, what drew you to that rather than, I don’t know, math, or business?”

There’s something compelling about the study of literature, something so purely intellectual, so impractical, that it holds a gravity of passion.

“Fiction was always something that I’ve been able to lose myself in,” I told her.  “Even when I was young, I remember my dad reading to me in bed.  Some of those books were tough, too – Robert Louis Stevenson, Farley Mowat.  Even when it got late I never wanted him to stop.”

“It sounds like you have a good dad,” Eliza said, “like he’s supportive.”

“He is good,” I said.  “But there were other things, too.  There were times when I was getting in trouble – I dropped out of college for a year, for example – and even in the moments when I was struggling I found that books were always something I could turn to.  Fiction’s just been a constant for me.  And by the time I was ready to buckle down and commit myself to the university everyone was going to support me no matter what I was studying.  They were just glad that I made it back.”

“Do you have a type of literature that’s your favorite?” Eliza asked.

“Well, my favorites are crime novels.  But in academics I’ve been drawn to the British high modernists.  And it’s not like this stuff comes naturally to me.  I have to work hard at it.  Reading is work.  Writing is work.  But it’s the only thing that’s made me feel like I’m doing something in life.”

These things were true, but there were also some misleading implications.  I implied that I had made my way through darkness, and was now proceeding along in the light.  I implied that I was good as a student, and that I was perhaps even wise.  I implied that my passions were what drove me.  And I was spurred to continue implying as Eliza leaned further and further over the table.

 “…So it’s my own business,” she explained.  “I started it up before I really knew what I was doing.  Then, when I realized that I was in over my head, I went to Cabrillo and took some business classes to figure out what I had to do next – the licenses I had to apply for, that type of thing.”

Eliza was twenty six, more than five years my senior.  By my estimation that made her a woman – which marked me as a child still.

“What made you decide on babysitting?”

Eliza laughed, and I had to admit that the question could have come across as condescending, though it wasn’t meant that way.

“Well, it’s what I was doing.  You know, I babysat kids when I was in high school, and the money was pretty good back then, but I realized as I got older that folks will pay very good money for a reliable babysitter.  I went AWOL for a bit, disappeared to Hawaii for a couple of years.  When I came back to California, I needed to work fast.  I had a few families that I’d worked with locally, some very well off folks, and they were happy to have me back.

“These families loved me – I still look after their kids, by the way – and they started recommending me to their friends.  Before I knew it, I had more offers for work than I knew what to do with.  I’d come across a few teenage girls who I trusted, and I referred them to the families.  Things kind of just snowballed from there.  I realized, Hey, I’m providing a service here.  People get paid for this.  So that’s when I started developing the business.”

“So how were you able to capitalize on it?”

Eliza took a French fry from her plate, ripped it in two, and shoved one of the pieces into her mouth.  She set the other French fry half back on her plate and began tearing away a piece of her bun.

“Well,” she said, “I make most of my money through finder’s fees.  I tend to have seven or eight girls working for me at a time.  They give me their schedules and their availability.  They switch on call days in case a family needs a sitter at the last minute, but otherwise they get a three day warning when I’m scheduling them.  Anything less than a three day warning, and the fees increase – both my commission, and the girls’ hourly fee.”

“Ah, so you make a commission each time you place a sitter.”

“Exactly,” Eliza said.  “And then I keep sitting for my two favorite families, and I charge quite a bit these days, so with the commissions and my own hourly fee, I do pretty well.”

“That’s amazing that you were able to get that off the ground yourself.”

“It just kind of came together.”  Eliza downplayed it, but I could tell she was proud.  “Really, the most difficult thing about it is finding good, reliable girls.  It sucks when they flake and I have to pick up the slack, which does happen sometimes.  Either that, or sometimes they get poached, too.  But the families are also pretty good about word of mouth referrals, so it all seems to stay pretty steady.  And I’ve had some luck finding new sitters right when I need them, so I’ve managed to stay consistent.”

“I’m impressed,” I told her.

It was the good stuff, the things we were proud to divulge about ourselves, the identities by which we would like to be known to the world – me, an intellectual, a bit of an artist – Eliza, an adult, an entrepreneur, a businesswoman.  And it was each of these personas that we first offered up for judgment and appraisal.  There must have been nuances that night, things that might have revealed our respective weaknesses, our lunacies and incompatibilities.  And those shades of gray may have represented more than just frailty.  It might have been our humanity that we were suppressing.

But I was happy to take first impressions at face value.  I did not consciously analyze them, nor did I want to.  We were lovable and passionate in our own ways.  I was attracted to Eliza and I detected that yearning, a premonition of love, reflected in her eyes.  And I was redeemed by a confirmation of my own desirability, for it was also a confirmation of the person that I wanted myself to be.

Eliza gave me a ride home that night.  I was living with this dude Ed and his girlfriend, Pam.  Ed had a wandering eye that made him look insane.  It was the result of a merciless childhood beating from his father, a fact that I found horrifying when I was told about the incident.  Ed smoked debilitating amounts of weed and he screamed at Pam when he drank.  Pam was friendly but so soft spoken as to become nearly transparent.

My roommates creeped me out.  They weren’t friends of mine but they tolerated some pretty habitual alcohol abuse and the rent was cheap.  I liked my real friends.  I wanted to keep them so I chose not to live with them.  Ed and Pam’s house was located in the Santa Cruz beach flats.  It fronted Riverside Avenue and behind it stood a series of ramshackle apartments that shared a common driveway.  My room was at the back, and I came and went through the back door, avoiding Ed and Pam as much as possible. 

“This is the place, right here,” I said.

“This one?”  Eliza slowed the car, then stopped.

“Yeah.  Sooo, would you like to come in for the grand tour?” I said.  “You’re welcome to pull into the driveway if you’d like.”

I led her around to the back of the house.  The back door opened onto a strange addition, a half bathroom and a walk-in closet.  To the left was the kitchen and at the left of the kitchen was my bedroom door.  The tour was over before it started.  My room was a twelve by twelve foot square.  What floor space not taken up by my futon, was reserved for a tiny computer desk and a set of shelves for my stereo.  The shelves were wooden planks stacked on top of cinder blocks.  There was also a small coffee table that I’d found at the side of the road and carried home one night.

“So, this is your place,” Eliza said.

“This is the palace.”

“I like it.  It’s definitely a college boy’s room.”

“I’ll take that as a compliment.” I said, sitting on my futon.  Eliza sat next to me.  We turned to look at each other as we spoke.  “So, I had a really good time tonight.” I told her, “I’m glad you called me.”

“So am I.  I was nervous to call.  But I’d also been looking forward to meeting you again, and so I knew that I’d have to take some initiative.”  She paused.  “I know you don’t remember meeting me.”

“I remember the night.  I remember sitting in a group, talking.  I was drunk.”

“I know.  I mean, I was drunk too, but I knew that you’d been drinking a lot.  You like to drink, don’t you?”

“I do.”  The admission, for me, encapsulated all that I was guilty of.  “I was glad when I saw you in your car tonight.”

“Oh yeah, why?”

“Because you’re a good looking woman.”

“Even for such an old lady?”

“Yeah.”  I grinned.  “Even though you’re old.”

I kissed her.  It was long and tender, my kind of kiss.  She was starry eyed when I pulled away.  I was smitten myself.  She grabbed my head and pulled our faces back together with force.  Her tongue shot into my mouth.  I was momentarily dazed before I could respond in kind.  Hands explored bodies.  I was proud, happy that it seemed I’d done something right.

“I have to go.”  The announcement was sudden.

“Why, what’s up?”  I was having fun.

“This is just a little too intense at the moment.”  It had been pretty intense, but I wasn’t a fan of deferred gratification.  I didn’t understand why anyone would wait to have sex.

“You know, you could stay here tonight if you wanted.”

“I do.  I mean, I would want to.  I’ve got to work for one of my families tomorrow at eight.  I need to get some sleep tonight.”

I tried a bit more to convince her to stay.  Then I reluctantly agreed to walk her back out to her car.  I kissed her for a long time while she leaned on the passenger side door.  “I had a really good time,” I told her.

“We should do this again soon.”  And with that, Eliza climbed into the car and started the engine.

After Eliza left, I went to the bar.  It was a Friday night after all.

Eliza and I spent the film lip-locked.  Her hands worked their way over my chest, down my abdomen, across my lap.  I pawed at her chest through her blouse – she was wearing something colorful that day, something maybe with flowers on it – my hands made their way beneath the light fabric.  Her bra felt sturdy, held generous curves firmly in place.  I explored the texture of the undergarment.  The weight of her breasts filled its lace.  I groped at what of the flesh I could access and I tried to imagine her naked.  I tried to envision those details…

We went back to the Saturn Café for dinner.  We talked through the meal, but the conversation was interspersed with long silences which were not uncomfortable but full of a lust that clouded all perceptions and drove thought in a very specific direction.  I know for my part that I could not help but think about getting that woman undressed, getting her onto my bed.  I wanted to ravage her.  My breathing deepened.  I ate quickly.  So did Eliza.  The flames ignited in the dark of the movie theater burned, yet to be extinguished.

I ordered a beer with dinner, and was baffled when Eliza refrained.

—.

“…It was during my year off of school – I only came back to Santa Cruz less than a year ago, now that I think about it – but I ended up taking this road trip.”

“Oh, so you went on an adventure,” Eliza said.

“Exactly.  I mean, living in San Francisco had been an adventure of its own.”  I realized it as I was forming the words, but there were details I was emphasizing and details I was omitting.  I had, for example, spent nine months in an urban inpatient treatment facility when I’d moved to San Francisco.  I wasn’t so forthcoming about those details.  “But,” I went on, “I was working in this terrible office job in the city.  I’d worked several different temp jobs while I was there – the Department of Elections had been cool, for example, but that ended after the presidential election – but the last one was a receptionist gig in this engineering firm.  I detested it.”

“We haven’t known each other long,” Eliza said, “but I could see you struggling in an office.”

“That was definitely the case.  At the end I guess I just panicked.  I quit my job over the phone, gave up the apartment I’d just moved into, and I hit the road.  My parents were out of town at the time, and I literally just left them notes saying that I was leaving.”

“Where’d you go?”

“First, I got a ride with my buddy Colin to San Diego via Santa Cruz.  I lived with him for a couple of weeks and then I caught a Greyhound over to Austin, Texas.  I spent a little over two weeks there, too.  Then another bus, and nearly a month in New Orleans.  By the time I was done with my New Orleans trip, I’d gotten myself into enough trouble, had enough of an adventure, and I headed back home.  The return bus ride was over seventy hours – three days straight sitting on Greyhounds and trying not to lose it.  I’d have to clean up in Greyhound bathrooms – sink showers is what I called them.”

“That does sound like an adventure.”

I thought back on it somewhat self-satisfied, but still wondering how much to divulge.  Would it be romantic, for example, or would it be a red flag if I told the story about going to jail in New Orleans?  What about the Tijuana story, where I got arrested at the border?

“It was an amazing experience,” I said.

“I had my version of that, too, my throwing-it-to-the-wind experience.”

“Oh yeah?”

“Yeah.  That’s what Hawaii was all about.  It was just something that I never expected to be able to do.  I literally went there with nothing.  I had nights where I had to camp on the beach.  But over time things worked out.  I found a job, I got my own place, I made friends…  And after a while it had become my home.  I still miss it there.”

“Oh man,” I said, “I’d love to do that.”

“It actually all started because of a boy.  I thought I was in love at the time, and it really took him to get me out of my comfort zone, to get myself moving.  And I’ll always appreciate him for that.  But it didn’t take me long to realize that I needed to do it for myself…”

I didn’t want to think about Eliza with other men yet, and I imagined that, at that point, I remained idealized in her mind as well.

Once again at my house.  Once again shut away in my bedroom.  We kissed savagely.  We rolled all over one another.  I shifted and mounted between her legs, the denim of my pants grinding against her own tight fitting jeans.  She rolled me over, straddled me from above.  My hands worked their way up the back of her shirt.

“You won’t get it back there.” She said.

“I’m a pro at this.”

“It clasps in the front.”

She threw off her blouse, exposing sexy black lace.  She’d put thought into this outfit.  She’d anticipated what view I’d be getting.  Her bra defied gravity and was sheer enough to reveal the discoloration of her nipples beneath the fabric.  She took my hands in hers, guided them up to the front of her bra, to the space between her breasts.  I got it free.  She pulled it away from her naked torso, launching it across the room.

My hands covered every inch of bare flesh, devouring its tactile details.  And despite my hunger, I dwelt on her nudity, on the idiosyncrasies of her naked form.  She had a little tummy.  Her breasts were large and shaped nicely, but not without their own uniqueness, drooping a bit on either side.  She had thick nipples which pointed as they came to life, deeply colored against the whiteness of her natural pallor.  I lingered and lingered on that wonderful body.  I could see the hunger in her eyes, could taste it when she pressed her lips to mine.  She kissed with such a deep urgency it seemed that each might be the last.  Each announced a mournful and long-coming departure, as if, were death to take her in that state of ecstasy, she would if nothing else be leaving the world with that last kiss on her lips.

I reached to her waist and began fumbling with her belt.

She pulled away.  “We can’t.” she announced.

“What are you talking about?”

“We can’t go any further tonight.”  She looked at me with an expression that I interpreted as apologetic.  “I can’t go any further tonight.”

“Oh,” I said, understanding.  “You know, I could overlook that.  It wouldn’t be that big of a deal.”  I was starving.

“No, I don’t want the first time to be like that.  Besides, I already think this is going too fast.  I mean, I really, really like you.  I really want this, too much maybe.  So it’s good that we can’t tonight.”

I didn’t argue.  Eliza didn’t give me a chance to argue.  She jumped off of me.  “I need to take a shower before I go home.  Do you have a clean towel?”

“Yeah.”  I grabbed it for her, baffled.

I wasn’t pushy, possibly to a fault.  I didn’t demand or in any way attempt to persuade Eliza to extinguish the fire she had so efficiently ignited.  This wasn’t because I was a gentleman.  It was because I was too afraid, at that time in my life, to articulate my needs aloud, to state them and ask they be attended to.

I lay on my bed, pining, confused, as Eliza showered.  She emerged from the bathroom fully dressed.  She jumped on top of me once again, gave me one more hard kiss.

“You don’t need to walk me out in your condition.”

She patted my crotch, then she patted my chest, then she stood and left.

Eliza and I rolled around my unmade bed fully clothed, clawing and kneading each other.  As things reached a climactic point, as clothes began to come off, Eliza stopped.

“I need to take a shower,” she said.

“What?”

“I’m going to take a shower and then I’m going to go.”

I had not yet done laundry and she grabbed the same towel she’d used the last time.

“You know, we can keep going,” I said.

“I just think we’re taking things a little fast.  I’m gonna clean up and then I’m gonna go.”

I heard the bath running.  When the water was the right temperature, Eliza turned on the shower.  I’d been laying on the bed, my shirt off, my belt unbuckled, my hand down the front of my pants, when I heard the water stop.  The bathroom was dark behind her when Eliza swung the door open.  Only the desk lamp was on in my room.  Eliza was wrapped in a wet towel.  Steam rose from her flesh.  The ends of her hair were damp.  She let the towel fall to the floor, stood naked for one frozen moment, and then she climbed on top of me.

What made Eliza’s body perfection were its imperfections.  Her glistening pubic hair, which had not been recently manicured, wound in chaotic tangles.  She really hadn’t planned on sleeping with me tonight, I thought to myself.  Her hips had an extra little bump.  She had a gravity defying ass, but it creased and dimpled just a bit where it met her thighs.  Her ankles were only slightly too small for the rest of her figure.

She used soft kisses to chart a cartographic memory of my face, my chest.  Her body was warm against mine, skin still silky from her shower.  As she raised and lowered herself against my chest, I felt her breasts sway against me, her nipples grazing my bare skin and then pressing firmly.  She lay on top of me thoughtlessly, allowing the weight of her body to hold me in place, trusting that I could sustain that weight indefinitely.

She raised herself to her knees, straddling my legs, and I got another opportunity to dwell on her body, to allow the realization of my luck to set in fully.  She reached down to my waist and began fumbling with the button on my pants, then with the zipper.  I didn’t help her.  I let her take her time, teasing her a bit.

“You’ll get it,” I said.  “Just focus, keep trying.”

As soon as my jeans were undone, her hand reached into the vent of my boxer shorts and grabbed onto my cock.  She lowered herself onto her side so that she was laying beside me.  Her head on my chest, she stared down as she pulled my cock into view.

“Oh thank God,” she whispered.

“Mmm?” it was both a moan and a question.

“I knew you’d have a big dick.”

Nothing could have turned me on more.  She liked the way I looked.  She was imagining the way I would feel inside her.

My hand had worked its way to her thighs.  She parted her legs a bit to allow me access.  She was bursting.  I let my fingers explore through the tangles of black hair.  I moistened them with her own fluids and ran them smoothly over the external hills and ridges while she squirmed, breathed heavily, closed her eyes, and ran a hand over my face.  I kissed her chest, alternately taking her nipples in my mouth, trying to raise them to even sharper heights.

I pushed myself to my feet, stood up on the foot of the mattress, and took off my pants.  I grabbed a condom from a box on my shelves and rolled it into place.  The elastic squeezed uncomfortably.  I climbed on top of her.  She spread her legs for me and I lowered myself between them, her hips angled against the mattress.

Eliza groaned cutely.  She had a high pitched and sustained expression of pleasure that ranged in volume from a whisper to a near scream.  I aimed to evoke those screams.  I wanted the neighbors to complain.  She grasped onto my back, controlled the momentum of my thrusts.  She climaxed several minutes before I did, losing control of her muscles momentarily, but never quite pushing me away.

“Don’t stop.  Don’t stop,” she said.  “It still feels so good.  Don’t stop.”

I was sweating as I reached completion.

“You’re all slimy,” she told me when I collapsed onto her.

She kissed me over and over again, pulling my face away each time to stare into my eyes.  She held my face in her hands, and when I saw her staring at me I glimpsed the passion and the devotion that was just then burgeoning behind that gaze.  My heart pounded under the weight of it.  It made me want to convey something dire.

“I could fall in love with you,” Eliza said.

It scared me.

“I want to take another shower,” Eliza said.

I lay on the bed beside her.

“Do you want to stay over tonight?”

“No, I can’t.  I have to get up early for a job tomorrow.”

I arose and stood by the bed so that I could look at her.

“Do you mind if I take a shower with you?”

“Oh my God,” she announced as she sat up in bed.  “Don’t look down.”

I looked at her lap.  There was a small streak of blood on her inner thigh.

“I told you not to look!”

I stood at the back of the shower, allowed Eliza to engulf herself in it.  Hands wandered.  She lathered herself.  She lathered me.  We embraced.  She cleaned me.

“I didn’t hurt you tonight, did I?” I asked.

“No, no, not at all.”

“Because you could always tell me to stop or to slow down.”

“No, you don’t understand.  It felt amazing.  It’s just been a long time.  And you are pretty big – bigger than my ex.  But mostly things have just tightened up down there a bit.  I told you not to look.  I didn’t want you to get worried.  You did everything just right.”

“Tightened up, huh?”

“Yeah, good news for you big boy.”  She patted my cheek with a soapy hand.

Eliza was spread eagle on my bed.  I still had my shorts on as I moved between her legs.  Her hips pumped against the thin fabric of my underwear.  My lips left hers.  I kissed her ears, her neck.  I pressed my fingers into her as I continued my downward journey.  I dwelt on her breasts, coercing those dark nipples.  I worked down her abdomen, across her belly.

She moaned with anticipation.

“Are you going to eat my pussy?” she asked.

I looked up at her and smiled.

“What a lucky girl I am,” she said.  “I was getting nervous that maybe you didn’t do that.”

Eliza’s pubic hair was a thing of the past.  I positioned myself between her legs, a thigh resting on each shoulder.  I lapped at her in broad strokes, using all of the wide surface of my tongue, covering her anatomy.  She flinched with each pass.

She began to open for me.  The tip of my tongue explored her labial folds, worked its way through each detail of her nakedness.  I took hold of her thighs.  She shifted against me.  I tasted the salt of her flesh, of the moisture that I was cultivating.  As her excitement mounted, the natural resistances of her body relented.  She opened more and more.  I plunged into her, burying myself, getting lost in her body, in the flood of saliva and secretions.  I lingered rhythmically, drawing her closer and closer.  She shifted and pivoted her hips, grinding against my face without inhibition.  I held myself firmly in place, braced myself as she thrust against me, determined not to yield, determined to hold my ground.

She screamed and then came in a torrent, her whole body writhing senseless.  She had grabbed onto my hands and her nails gnashed into my palms.

I continued to lap at her softly and she shuddered, still unable to speak.  Then I laid my head on her belly.  My damp face was chilled once I pulled it from the heat of her body.  She stroked my hair.

In the darkness of the movie theater, Eliza’s hand never left my lap.  It was as if she were on a mission to keep me perpetually aroused.  It was the most pleasurable form of being controlled.  She was saying to me, always, during every moment we spent together, I’m the one who’s going to make you feel goodI will always be here to scratch this little itch of yours, and you will be the one to bring me my own pleasure.

And so much of it had been the mutual giving and receiving of pleasure.  Eliza was ready and eager to test the boundaries of stamina, of endurance.

She worked her hand back and forth over my cock, which felt at that point like it might burst out of its own skin.  But as I reached between her legs, she closed them like a vice.  She was teaching me – these public gifts were for me alone.

She leaned over the arm rest and whispered in my ear, “I’m gonna fuck the shit out of you tonight.”

Eliza, though an intelligent woman, was not computer savvy.  I wasn’t much better, but I knew that basic, publically consumed software was bound to be relatively user friendly.  And even if not, at least it didn’t intimidate me in the same way it did Eliza.

“I don’t know what I’m doing.” She complained.  “I don’t understand this shit.  You’ve gotta teach me, baby.”

I spent hours at Eliza’s place with a little library spread across the living room floor around me.  I lay on my stomach, staring at her laptop, reading course handouts, user manuals, and online help sites, attempting to synthesize the various and sometimes disparate solutions to hypothetical problems.

Eliza waited patiently.  Once I’d found the solution, I could explain it to her in the simplest way possible.  I was very professorial, requiring that Eliza actually perform the tasks at her laptop as I described them.

She sat on her couch behind me while I worked.  Sometimes, I narrated the progress I was making while I read endless tutorials and frequently asked questions.  I assumed that she was listening to me.  I figured, somewhat narcissistically, that I was helping.  Yeah, it was boring.  But I was amazed by her patience as I lay there, prattling on about spreadsheets or compatibility or operating systems.

I was carrying on like this when I heard a quiet little noise from behind me.  It was a kind of wetness, a kind of sexy noise.  I turned toward the couch where Eliza sat watching me.  She was wearing a deep blue sun dress that day, patterned with tiny white daisies.  It was hiked up to her hips.  Her panties were pulled to the side, and she was touching herself.  She paused as I looked up, and just sat motionless, not continuing but not covering herself up either.  Then she smiled a kind of naughty, what-are-you-gonna-do-about-it? smile.

I smiled back.

“You bad, bad girl,” I said.  “I’m trying to teach you over here, doing all of your work for you, and you’re not listening to a word I’m saying.”

“Oh, I’m listening.” She said.  She still had not moved.

“Do I need to teach you a lesson?”  I rose from the floor and approached her.

“No,” she said, “you don’t.”  She allowed me one kiss.  “You need to get back to work.”

I did as I was told.  I got back down on the living room floor.  It was difficult to sustain the lesson but I was able, after a moment, to actually focus on her homework problems, and put it out of my mind that she was sitting on the couch behind me.

When I finally turned back to check on her, her skirt was lying flat across her lap.  She was staring at me, smiling nicely, her hands crossed.

“Are you ready to learn how to do this?” I asked her.

“Are you ready to teach me?”

When Eliza picked me up, I had a rose that I’d bought for her birthday.

“That’s so sweet,” she said as I handed the flower through the passenger side window.

I climbed into the car.  “Happy birthday, beautiful.”

When we arrived at Eliza’s house I produced the rest of my gift to her – a bottle of massage oil and a bottle of massage oil.  But by plying her with physical affection, I figured I might make up for the fact that I had no money to buy her a real gift.  I didn’t know much about being a gentleman at the time and I missed an opportunity to make her feel special.

I fucked Eliza on her living room floor that night.  We’d laid a blanket that we’d spread out.  I took all of her clothes off and rubbed every inch of her body while she lay there, docile, wanting to submit.  Having relaxed her into a trance-like state, I dwelt on her ass, kneading, working my palms down her thighs.  She parted her legs.  I stood quietly, not wanting to break her spell, undressed, and lowered myself down on top of her.

Eliza was always reticent to have sex in her own bed.  I figured it was because she didn’t want to do the laundry, but also she seemed to like the idea of exploring under-utilized regions of the apartment.

She came hard beneath me.  I loved looking down at her, facing her when she orgasmed.  I felt powerful when I saw how absolutely she lost control, the way her eyes dilated, opening wide at first and then clenching shut tight; the way her muscles all tensed to rigidity and then totally failed.

She reached behind and held me close, flinching every time I moved inside of her and grasping to keep me still.  When she recovered, she pulled out from under me and enacted a ritual that had by then become familiar.

“I want to sit on the couch,” she said.

She leaned one of the cushions in just the right way to accommodate her and set herself down, reclining against it, her hips pivoted upward.

“Okay, I’m ready,” she said.

I leaned over her, placed my hands on the back of the couch behind her, and eased in.

“Slow,” she said.  “Now get as deep as you can.”

I pushed into her with long slow thrusts.  Each time I thought I couldn’t get any deeper, I pushed just a little further.  Each time I pushed those extra millimeters, Eliza groaned loudly.  It was something like an exercise for her.

“I’m getting better at taking it,” she said.

“Am I getting deep?”

“Oh fuck, it hurts me.  My pussy just aches wanting you inside of me.  I fucking feel it all through me.”

“How deep?” I said.  “Tell me how deep I’m getting.”

“It’s up to here,” Eliza said, marking a point on her abdomen.  “You know how to fill every inch of me.”

I started pushing harder.  I watched her breasts shaking each time I slammed against her.  Moans turned to screams.

“Oh, oh,” she said, and then she stopped me.  “Okay, okay.  Stop, stop.  It’s too much for me.”

“Back onto the floor?”

“I want you to bend me over the counter,” she said.

Eliza was throwing a barbeque for her twenty seventh birthday.  Her apartment occupied the second story of a split level up in the Santa Cruz Mountains.  She rented the place from the folks living below her, Dave and Maria, a couple in their early thirties with a mortgage on the property.  There was a large deck that extended from Eliza’s front door, and she and her landlords shared that space, often spending time out there together, barbequing, eating dinners on warm nights.

“How many people are you expecting?” I asked her as I looked through the groceries she’d purchased for the party.

“Not too many,” she told me.  “Dave and Maria are coming up, and they’ve invited Dave’s brother and sister in law.  They’re bringing their kids with them, who are five and three.  Of course Katrina is coming…”

Katrina was Eliza’s best friend.  She was dating a recently single man with a new born baby, and didn’t make it out much.

“Is her man coming?”

“No, he’s working – thank God.  My friend Sarah’s coming, too, and she’s bringing her boyfriend.  You haven’t met them yet because they living in the city, but her boyfriend’s this Irish guy.  He’s okay – you’ll probably like him – but he drinks too much.  Way too much.  They’ve got some serious problems, but I love her and so I’ve gotta put up with him, too.  My sister will be there.  Let’s see…my parent’s will be getting in about two o’clock or so…”

“Wait, what?” I said.  “Your parents are coming?”

“Yeah.  I mean, it is my birthday.”

“Still, you could have given me some kind of warning.”

“They’re easy,” Eliza said.  “It’s no pressure.  You’re just another one of my friends attending.”

I did a bit of mental calculation and came up with my own conclusions.  Eliza didn’t have an extensive guest list.  It was going to be pretty obvious to everyone there what integer I represented in the equation.

Her father wore a beard and wire rimmed glasses that I interpreted as an attempt to make him look sophisticated and maybe a bit rugged.  They did not have their intended effect.  Upon shaking the man’s hand, I got a distinct sense from him, something that I interpreted as more lecherous than manly, something not so sophisticated at all.

He arrived as I was bringing a bowl of marinating chicken over to the grill.  “So,” he said to me, “you seem to be right at home here.”

I didn’t really know what he meant by it, but he said the words as if there was some deeper meaning that only he and I understood.  I knew from what Eliza had told me that she and her father were not close.  I wasn’t sure if I imagined it, but there seemed to be a constant and mindful acknowledgement that I was fucking his daughter, a kind of wink-wink mentality that made me squirm.

“My little baby is all grown up,” he said, leering at me.

“I don’t know what you’ve done to that girl,” he observed, “but she’s walking on clouds.”

Eliza sat beside me and placed a hand on my thigh.  Her father stared at me from across the porch and produced a grin out of the side of his mouth that wasn’t really a grin at all.

Because it was my way, the method by which I dealt with discomfort, I was sociable.  I drank too many beers, told stories, ate copious barbeque, played with the kids, and did my utmost not to judge the situation too harshly.

It was dusk by the time everyone left, and Eliza and I were cleaning things up.  I stood over the sink, scrubbing dishes while she packed away the leftovers.

“Hey,” I said, “do me a favor.  Tell me next time I’m going to meet your parents, or any other new members of your family for that matter.”

“Okay, baby,” she said.  “Thank you for being so good with them.”

“It’s no problem.  I just wish you would have told me.  Just give me some warning next time, okay?”

I turned to Eliza in time to see a bit of that evil on her face.

“It’s not like it’s some big deal,” she said.  “We weren’t announcing an engagement or anything.  It was just a little barbeque, and, yeah, my parents were invited.  But that’s it.  So don’t try to make something out of it that it’s not, okay?”

The sun shone through my bedroom curtains.  That old house was barely insulated, and I wondered if the neighbors could hear Eliza screaming.

“Shit, I’m so fucking close,” I said.

“Do it, baby.  Keep fucking me.”

“I’m right there.  I gonna come.”

“I want you to come on my tits,” Eliza said.  “I want you to pull it out and come all over me.”

I pulled free, and straddled her torso, as she squirmed to move her body down the bed beneath me.  I grabbed onto my cock.  I looked down at Eliza as she grabbed her breasts in her hands and pushed them together on her chest.

“Oh fuck, yes, baby,” Eliza moaned.  “Fucking come all over me.  Fucking cover me in it.”

She moaned and I almost thought that she was also climaxing.  Before I’d even finished, Eliza was rubbing my come into her breasts, across her nipples, all down her torso, so that her body glimmered with the moisture of it.  I made sure not to miss a drop.

I collapsed beside her.  Eliza rolled toward me, pressed her lips against mine, and our bodies met as I turned to return the kiss.

“Did you like that, baby?  Do you like coming all over me like that?”

“That was fucking hot.”

“God, I just want to fucking drown in you.”

“We don’t always have to eat out,” I told her.

“I like taking care of you, baby,” Eliza said.

“I like being taken care of,” I said.  “But I’m just saying.”

The proprietor of the Thai House approached our table.  She was a broad, matronly woman with a round cheeked smile and a thick accent.

“Hey Tama,” Eliza said.

“How you, girl?” Tama said.

“I’m doing really good,” Eliza said.  “This is my…friend…”

Tama took my hand in both of hers.  “Oooh,” she said.  “You such a lucky man.”  Then she turned to Eliza.  “He handsome.”  She winked.

“I first met Tama in Hawaii,” Eliza explained.  “She had a restaurant over there, too.”

“You was always the best, sweetheart.  Always my favorite customer.”

“How are your kids doing?” Eliza asked.

And the formalities went on like that for a couple of minutes while the ladies got caught up with each other.

Eliza ordered a bottle of wine for us.  The waitress arrived at the table a few minutes later with the wine and a couple of glasses.  She poured just a splash for each of us.  I waited while Eliza swirled, while she sniffed and then tasted.

“Very good,” she said.

The waitress filled our glasses.  She set the half empty bottle on the table, pulled out a pad and a pen, and asked for our orders.  I smiled up at her and listed off the courses that Eliza and I had agreed on beforehand.  Eliza was beaming at me from across the table.

Dinners with Eliza were always easy.  I never felt like I was straining for conversation like I did with some women.  We were just able to chat and drink our wine and eat our food, and that was pretty good.

As we finished up the meal, Eliza slid her credit card across the table at me.  This had become protocol.  Maybe Eliza liked for people to believe that her man was taking her out, and that was probably the case to a degree.  But she also had my feelings in mind.  At every turn she guarded my manhood, as if its fragility was something plainly evident.

Eliza wanted to preserve my dignity, wanted to cultivate it for her own reaping.

Tama brought the check to the table personally.  I took the check from her, glanced at it quickly, tucked the card into the tray, and handed it back to her.

Eliza let herself in the back door.  I knew that she’d be coming over when she finished with the kids, but I wasn’t sure when she’d be arriving.  I was lying on my bed when she knocked on my bedroom door.

“Come in,” I said.

“Hey babe,” she said from the doorway.

“Hey.”

“Could you come out here and help me put these groceries away?”

“Wait, what?  You got groceries?”

“Just a few things.”

“Aw, you didn’t need to do that,” I said.  “I mean, seriously, I can feed myself.  Besides, you know I don’t really cook much.”

“Oh, I’ve seen what you eat,” Eliza said.  “And this stuff is super easy to make, just the essentials really – eggs, milk, butter, cheese, some fruit, salad ingredients, some dressing…  Besides, this is mostly for me, really – for the nights that I’m over.”

“All right,” I said.  “But I really don’t want you to feel like you have to do this.”

Eliza smiled at me.  “I don’t think I have to do anything.”

I grinned at her.  “I can think of a few things I’m gonna make you do.”

“Are you gonna force me?”

“Damn right.”

I didn’t know what time it was when I opened my eyes.  The first thing I saw was Eliza standing over me.  She’d let herself into the house at some point and I hadn’t expected to see her.  She was wearing an ankle length trench coat.

“Eliza,” I said.

“Hey baby.”

I could smell hot bacon grease.

“What are you doing here?”

“I was thinking about you,” she said.  “And I brought you two presents this morning.”

My head was throbbing from a night of excess.  I had so little time to myself.  I seemed driven to reckless irresponsibility on the nights that I didn’t spend with Eliza, and I was paying for it that morning.

“Presents?” I said.

“Do you want to know what they are?”

“Yes,” I said.  “Yes I do.”

“Well, first…”  Eliza disappeared into the kitchen.  “Sit up in bed,” she hollered.  I did as I was told.  Eliza returned with a plate in her hand.

“What’s this?” I said as she set the meal in my lap.

“I cooked you breakfast,” Eliza said.

There was bacon, eggs and cheese, toast, even a halved grapefruit.

“Oh my God.  What the hell is this?  You’re spoiling me.”

Eliza handed me a fork and a folded paper towel.

She was smiling.  “I made you coffee, too.”

“You should join me,” I said.  “Do you have a plate for yourself in there?”

“I ate while I was cooking,” she said.  She took a seat in my desk chair and gazed at me as I began piling eggs onto my toast.  “Do you want to know what your other present is?”

“What?” I said, my mouth now full.  “There’s another gift?”

“I told you there was two.”

“Lay it on me.”

Eliza stood up.

“I wore this over here just for you,” she said as she let the trench coat fall to the floor.  “Do you want to unwrap your second gift?”

I set my plate aside.

I disappeared for a moment as we walked through the grocery store.  When I found Eliza again, I was toting along a fifth of bourbon.  I dropped it into the basket.

“What do you need that for?”

“Don’t worry, I’ll pay for it.”

“That’s not what I’m worried about.”

“You don’t keep any booze in your house.  I want to be able to have a drink while I’m over.”

“Is a night without one so unimaginable?”

Eliza was worried, but she was also jealous.  She had a mistress to compete with.  Maybe it was becoming clear that she would have to share my love, that she wouldn’t be my only source of comfort.

“I just like to have it around.”

I wouldn’t be able to consume the bourbon with the abandon that I so desired, but at least a drink or two would help.

I lay there with my eyes open.  Eliza was sleeping turned mostly on her belly, her head resting in the nook of my shoulder, my arm thrown around her, her breasts pressed against my chest, her legs straddling my thigh.  She sunk her hips into me as she slept.  I could feel the stubble of recently shaved hair.  I lay there pondering the great heat generated by that particular region of her anatomy.  I lay there feeling the moisture of post coital perspiration, smelling those post coital smells, feeling as if the sheets were sticking to me and not quite comfortable or tired enough to sleep.

I was mostly sober, too.  That didn’t help things.

Eliza was out like a light.  She had no problem sleeping naked on top of me like that.

It’d been about a week since I’d purchased the bottle of sleeping pills.  I was already familiar with these sleep-aids.  During my series of long, cross country bus rides, I’d survived off of them.  They staved off the delirium of sleep deprivation when there was no other way to doze off.  I knew they were effective and I purchased them for my nights with Eliza.  They were over the counter medication and they didn’t get me high, so I figured that there was nothing to be ashamed of.

I could see my pants lying on the floor just beside the bed.  My sleeping pills were in my pocket, and I was wondering if I’d be able to sneak out of bed without waking Eliza.

I hadn’t told her about the sleeping pills.  I didn’t want to admit that I found it difficult sleeping so close to her.  I didn’t want to seem as if I had some revulsion to intimacy that prevented me from passing a night normally, like any other couple, so I kept my mouth shut and let the pills put me to sleep.

It was an impossible secret to keep.  My pants had been lying on the floor for ages by the time we were ready for bed.  There was no clandestine way to reach into my pocket, grab a bottle of pills, and disappear into the bathroom.  It was my mistake.  For the past week, I’d been strategically leaving my pants in the bathroom, by the bathroom door, anywhere outside of the bedroom, so that when I arose from bed I could access the pills without revealing my intent.

As innocuously as I could, I pulled my arm from beneath Eliza’s head.  She groaned and set her head onto the pillow, but she did not open her eyes.  I set my feet on the floor, tiptoed over to where my pants lay, picked them off the ground, and headed towards the door.

 “What’s in your pants that you always need them for?” Eliza asked.

I jumped.

“Uh,” I said.  I thought about lying.  Nothing came to me.  “Sometimes,” I said, “I have to take sleeping pills to fall asleep.  It’s nothing crazy or anything.  I bought them at the drug store.  It’s just that sometimes I get insomnia, and, well…”

“That’s messed up, baby.  Why do you think it is that you can’t fall asleep?”

“It’s just insomnia.  Lots of people have it.  Nothing’s wrong.”

“I want you to be able to fall asleep with me.”

Eliza eyed me suspiciously.  I think she saw through me.

There was a group of us all sitting around the dirty living room.  Eliza sat on the couch beside me, a hand on my thigh.  She was quieter than usual.  When Eliza and I were alone together, it could be difficult to get a word into the conversation.  But there, in my buddies’ apartment, she was more taciturn that I’d ever seen her.

All those guys lived together in an apartment above Café Pergolesi, downtown Santa Cruz.  It was the perfect spot for a bunch of twenty year old college scenesters.  Eliza didn’t really fit in.  My buddies were loud and opinionated.  They bethought themselves edgy and hip.  I think they intimidated Eliza but she was doing a good job of being patient there.  She was on her best behavior.

When I went downstairs for a smoke, Eliza followed me.  It was evening, just before eleven – still early by my standards.  The guys would be heading out to some house party or another before too long, and they wouldn’t likely be getting back before three.  I’d already given Eliza a head’s up, but she’d been quite insistent that she wasn’t so old, that she could still enjoy drinking beer out of plastic cups, and hollering over a too-loud home stereo system.

We descended the steps from the guys’ place, down to Pergolesi’s side patio.  They’d just closed up and the porch was deserted, but I could still see the lights on inside where the baristas were cleaning things up while they drank after hours drafts.

“What’s over here?” Eliza asked, leading me to the back of the café patio, through the latching gate to the employees-only porch.  It was empty.  “Let’s sit here,” she announced, lowering herself onto the bench.

I sat next to her, pulled out my smokes, and lit one up.

“You doing okay so far?” I asked her.

“You’re friends are intense,” she said.

“I know they can be.”

“But I’m doing good.  I like them.  But I’m also glad to have a minute alone with you.”

She turned toward me and started kissing my neck.  Her lips found my left ear.  She knew I loved that.  She’d discovered every one of my sensitivities, my weaknesses.  And she exploited them.

I dragged my cigarette.

Eliza kept kissing.

Her hand slid across my lap.

“What have we got here?” She teased.  “What is this?”

She unzipped my fly and stuck her hand into my pants.  She toyed with me down there, then pulled my cock out.  She was still kissing my ear.

“I love rubbing this big dick of yours,” she whispered.

I closed my eyes.

Her lips left my ear, and I felt the heat of her breath as she lowered her head to my lap.  She spent just enough time down there to get everything lubricated, and then she returned to kissing my ear, returned her hand to my lap.

“Does that feel good, baby?”

“You know it does.”

“Do you want to go back home?” she whispered.

“Yeah.”

We’d been fucking on the rug on her bedroom floor for an hour.  I was already drunk when Eliza had picked me up that night, and I couldn’t finish.

“What’s the matter, baby?” Eliza cried.  “Am I doing everything right?”

“Yeah, it’s amazing.  Everything feels great.  I don’t know what’s going on.  I keep getting close, but then it just doesn’t happen.”

Eliza climbed off of me.  Her hair was matted with sweat.  She was pouting.  “I don’t know how much longer I can go for.”  She smiled a pouty smile.  “You already got me off more times than I can count.”  She stood and looked down at me where I still lay naked on the rug.

“You can just use your hands,” I told her.  “Massage me.  You know I love it when you touch me.”

“But why can’t I get you off in other ways.”  She was talking with a sulky, childish intonation.  She flopped, belly down, over the edge of her bed so that her ass stuck up in the air and she turned her head to stare at me.  She was frowning.

Because I was unwilling to recourse to excuses of drunkenness, I had no way to explain my diminished capacity for sensation.  “I’m sorry,” I said.  “I don’t know what’s going on.”

She kicked her feet a bit while she lay on the bed, still staring at me.  Her behind jiggled.  “I want you to come inside me, baby.”  She lay there, bent over the bed, breasts flattened against the mattress.  Her poutiness had taken on a kind of sexy affectation.  “I would do anything you wanted,” she said slowly, “to get you to come inside me.”

The first time Eliza scratched me, the first time that she dug those sharp claws across my shoulder blades, sunk them into my flank, I loved it.  It thrilled me.  She screamed and moaned as I pumped harder.  I gritted my teeth, squinted.  My muscles flexed and tensed in response to the pain.  The wounds stung in the cold air.

“I’m coming, oh, oh, baby, I’m coming so hard!”  She was screaming.  I wanted her to announce those delights.  “Oooh baby, you’re getting it just right!”

Her vaginal walls quivered and then clenched at me as if her whole body was working in unconscious ways to bring me off.  She tore the flesh from my back as I sank deeper, cried out and released.

“Did I hurt you, baby?”  She asked.

“No, I liked it.”

“Good.  I liked it too.  I didn’t even mean to.  You were just making me feel so good.  But I wouldn’t want to hurt you.”

Droplets of my blood stained the sheets that night.  Upon waking the next day, I took stock of those little stains, the marks of something terribly passionate, maybe forbidden.  I was proud.  I was proud that I’d been man enough to let Eliza have her way with my body, that I’d withstood.  But more than that, I was proud that I’d enjoyed it.

I went into the bathroom and examined my wounds, a series of parallel scratch marks shone bright red, some of them scabbing here and there.  My love handles were patterned with deep crescent lesions, each ringed with an emerging bruise.  The hot water of the shower stung, reviving memories of the previous evening.

Eliza’s delight in pain endured, prevailed.  I had already been initiated into the relatively innocuous world of playful domination.  A bit of spanking, a bit of hair pulling, that was all fine and well, but Eliza wanted something a bit more.

I set my teeth onto her erect nipples.

“Harder,” she roared.  “Fucking bite me.”

I’d put my hands around her throat and she’d actually set her own hands over mine, squeezing them firmer.

She wanted me to pull her arms behind her back, pin her to the mattress.

She told me to fuck her harder that I thought any woman could really take.

And then, when she got a hold of me, she lashed out, scratching, clawing, biting.

I typically let her down in those situations.  She’d scream and beg for a little bit of agony, and I couldn’t deliver.  I didn’t have it in me.  I was scared.  And where was that line?  Because I didn’t mind throwing her around the bed a bit.  I didn’t think that I was an overly-cautious lover.  And yet, I did view her body as something more delicate than it must have been.  I was scared of hurting her when she wanted to be hurt in a controlled and loving way.

And it’s not like her desires were unhealthy.  She never requested anything unreasonable, and I was thrilled when I had the will to acquiesce.  I wanted to satisfy her.  But even my own pleasure was something worrisome to me.  The scratching became common place.  My back was a roadmap of wounds at various stages of recovery.  Because the pain, even if negligent, was constant, because I was always made aware of those wounds by a pat on the back, by the insignificant weight of my undershirt, Eliza haunted the margins of my consciousness during every waking moment.

It was the first night I’d been out with the boys for over a week.  Eliza nearly broke down. 

“Don’t get drunk and fuck anyone,” she commanded.

“Nobody wants to fuck me,” I said.

“Don’t play dumb with me.  Don’t forget where I met you.  I know what a fucking flirt you are when you’ve been drinking.”

“Eliza, don’t give me this shit.  The only reason I’m going out is so I can spend some time with my friends.”

“I still don’t understand why I can’t come,” she said.

“I told you, it’s just the guys tonight.  Besides, you know that I can’t keep my hands off you when were together.  I’d end up spending all my time with you.”

She responded well to flattery.  Her voice brightened as she said, “So?  What’s wrong with that?”

“I just miss my friends and want to spend some time with them.”

“Maybe I’ll just go anyway.”  She was getting sassy.  “There’s no law that says I can’t go to the bar to get a drink.”

It wouldn’t have been the first time Eliza showed up unexpectedly while I was out with friends.  Previously, I’d interpreted it as almost cute.  It’d been early enough in our friendship that it almost seemed accidental.  I also had been happy to see her in that event.

“That would be a big mistake,” I told her.  “Just let me have my night, and I’ll see you tomorrow.”

“I’m scared you’re gonna be flirting with other girls.”

“No flirting, I promise.”

The guys were sitting on the back patio of The Avenue when I arrived, and they gave me a hard time about my absenteeism when they saw me coming.

“Hey, you can’t blame me if I’d rather be getting pussy than hanging out with a bunch of assholes,” I declared.  Inspiration hit.  “Check this out,” I said as I turned my back to the table and pulled my shirt over my head, revealing the crosshatched scars, the fingernail crescents in my sides.

“Holy shit, dude.”

“That’s gnarly.”

“Doesn’t that hurt?”

“She’s beating you, isn’t she?”

I got drunker that night than I’d been in weeks.  I stumbled home after last call.  I heard the phone ringing as I pushed open the back door.  She knew better than to call at night.  The landline woke up Ed and Pam.

I fell onto my bed and pulled the phone from the receiver.  “Eliza, is that you?”

“Baby?  You’re home?”

“Yeah, I just got here.”

“Did any girls try to take you home tonight?”

“No.”

“So you’re alone.”

“Of course.”

“Can I come over?”

I paused for a moment.

“I’ll leave the back door unlocked.”

Eliza rocked my shoulder, roused me from sleep.  “Hey, your roommates are fighting.”

I woke slowly.  “What the?  I’ve never heard them fight like this before.”

Ed was screaming at Pam.

She was crying, begging really.

“Get the fuck outta here,” he said.  “Get the fuck out of this fucking house you stupid cunt.”  He took his time enunciating each syllable, really dragging it out.  “I don’t ever want to see your disgusting fucking face again.”

Pam screamed.  We heard the front door open.  I could only imagine that Ed was flinging her from the house.  It was a terrible thing to hear.  I knew, somehow, deep down, that I should do something – call the police, intervene physically even – Ed wouldn’t be a match for me.  He was a coward and I knew it.  But I did nothing.  It made me feel useless.  I was not a man.

“What the fuck should I do?” I asked Eliza.

“There’s nothing you can do, baby.”  It was comforting to hear, although I doubted her sincerity.

“This is fucked up.  I can’t live with these fucking guys.  They’re crazy.”

“Do you think Pam will come back?”

“Yeah, she’ll be back tomorrow.”

“So what is there to do?” Eliza said.

I still felt like something less than a man.

“You know, baby…”  Eliza talked softly, still consoling me.  “…I used to be in a relationship like that.  It was the guy I went to Hawaii with.  I loved him so much that I’d let him get away with it.  Things would get bad and I’d end up running out of the apartment in the middle of the night.  I’d sleep on the beach and typically things would be better when I went back the next morning.  It was an ugly relationship.  I had to learn that I didn’t need him though.  When I left him, I didn’t have any place to go.  I was working a little bit over there, but I didn’t have a place to stay.  But I got through it, you know?  I was determined.  I left him, but I didn’t run away.”

My impulse was not original.  Rather, it was stereotypically masculine.  I saw red.  I had visions of a violence of my own.  Here was a woman that I was trying, in my weak and futile way, not to hurt, to protect and love even.  I began fantasizing about killing a man I’d never seen before.  Apart from being Eliza’s abuser, his identity was unknown to me.  But I knew abusers, I told myself.  I knew bullies.  I knew he was weak and that I would be able to capitalize upon that weakness.

“Where does he live?” I asked, as if I might follow through on these impulses.

“Oh, my wonderful man.  You want to protect me.  He’s still in Hawaii, and he’s finally out of my life, which I’m so happy about.  Things haven’t been so good in a long time.”

“Was it hard to get rid of him?”

“He called me every fifteen minutes for months.  I’d run into him every once in a while – at a bar or something – and he’d beg me to come back.  He’d cry in front of everybody.  But when I turned him down, he’d get mad again.  Luckily, he knew better than to try anything in public.”

“I’m sorry you had to put up with that.”  I couldn’t think of anything meaningful to say.

“Just be good to me, baby.”

We lay silently for a little while, unable to fall back asleep.

I went outside for a smoke.  When I came back, Eliza was sitting up in bed.  “You could move,” she said.

“I was just thinking the same thing.  I bet I could get my own place.  It wouldn’t be that much more expensive.”

“Then we wouldn’t have to deal with your roommates anymore.  It would be more comfortable for me to come over and spend time with you.  I could cook for you more.  I’d never have to put my clothes on.”

And with visions of Eliza taking care of me, I closed my eyes.

By the following afternoon, I’d put in my thirty day notice.

We were fighting.  I was sober.  I felt trapped.  That was the one thing I hated about spending the night at her place.  I felt like a hostage.  She lived out in the woods, out in Aptos.  Because I didn’t have a car, I relied on Eliza to drive me to her place and back into town.  So, once I was out there, alone in that house with her, I was at her mercy.

We hadn’t picked up any booze for me that night: no beer, no whiskey, nothing.  Eliza’s house was dry.  That was a difficult situation for me, and I was irritable because of it.  But I was becoming discontent in general.  I’d made up my mind and I didn’t want to fall in love.  Eliza’s apparent need for me, her love, her devotion, it was just one more thing that terrified me, just another burden.

And while there was a part of me that considered abandoning myself to the feelings that she managed, as no other woman had, to evoke in me, I was in equal part frustrated by her love.  Why couldn’t she reason through her emotional impulses?  Why did it so often have to be all or nothing?  And why was her all so profoundly bountiful?

Eliza had started to make plans.  I always kept my mouth shut and allowed her these fantasies.  She planned elaborate vacations.  She wanted to backpack South America.  More immediately, more realistically, she wanted to go backpacking out in Yosemite, roughing it in the woods, just she and I.  She didn’t realize because I didn’t tell her, but there was no way she’d ever have been able to convince me to go camping with her.  It was my idea of a living nightmare: the dirt, the food, the physical trial of it…the sobriety.  Besides, it was intense enough being isolated with Eliza in civilization.

But I wasn’t honest.  I placated her.  “That sounds great,” I’d say.  “One of these days.”

Talk of the future didn’t end there, either.  Such talk terrified me.  But I was a weak man, and unable to express my own desires clearly.  I placated and learned to resent with a sense of self-righteousness.

So one night we fought.  I got mad.  I didn’t like fighting and I’d mostly avoided it up until then.  There had been underhanded comments.  Eliza didn’t want me to drink.  I nursed my own resentments.  But more than anything else Eliza wanted me to be a man and I still wanted to be a little boy.  The fight came to a climax when I demanded that Eliza give me a ride back into Santa Cruz, back to my place. 

I had the thirst, and I wanted a drink so badly that it was about all I could think of.  If I got a ride back to town, I could still go out and get drunk – all the better now that I had an excuse.

Eliza tried to dissuade me and then relented in a fit of rage.  She grabbed my sleeping pills from the medicine cabinet (where I was allowed to keep them, no longer hidden).  She threw the bottle at me.  “Don’t forget your fucking pills.”

On the ride back to my house, Eliza attempted to smooth things over.  “Oh baby, don’t be mad at me,” she said.  “I’m sorry if I’ve been a brat.  I’m sorry if I haven’t been listening to you.  We don’t have to go camping together.  We can take a trip you want to take.  We need to do something nice together.”

We arrived back at my place.

“I don’t want you to go, baby,” she said.  “Don’t just walk out of this car.  I want you to invite me in.  I want to take real good care of you tonight.  I need you to take care of me.”

But I wasn’t having it.  I could already taste the drink that was waiting for me.  In my mind, it had already been poured.

Eliza called dozens of times over the next week, left several messages a day.  It was another example of my weakness.  I couldn’t be a man.  I couldn’t take responsibility for my decisions, for hurting someone who had been kind enough to love me when I felt so unworthy of love.

One day I was careless.  I picked up the phone without letting it go to the machine.  It was Eliza.

“I’ve been trying to call you,” she said as if I might not have known.

“I know.  I’m sorry I haven’t called back.”

“What’s the matter, baby?  What’s going on?”

“I think we need to talk.”

“Okay.”  She was crying.

“Do you want to meet me for coffee tomorrow?”

She agreed.

She was crying.  “I should’ve never let you go home alone that night.  I should’ve convinced you to stay with me.  I should’ve come into your house with you.  I would have made everything better.”

“There’s nothing you could’ve done.”

“You can’t do this.  You can’t do this to me.  I won’t let you.”

“I’m sorry.  You don’t have a choice about this.”

“That isn’t fair.  Why don’t I have a say?  There’s two of us.  We should have a discussion and come to a conclusion together.”

“I’m sorry.”

“So there’s nothing I can say to you, is there?  You know that I’d do anything to keep you, baby.  I want to keep you.”

“I’m so sorry, Eliza.  I know I’m not being fair.”

“You’re not being fair at all.”  Eliza jumped from her seat, stood in front of me, grief becoming rage, her fists balled.  I stayed in my seat.  She grabbed me by the collar and yanked me forward.  “I want to hit you so hard in the face right now.  Do you hear me?  I’m gonna hit you in the face!”

I looked around, nervous about the scene we were making.  “I’d understand if you had to.”

She let her hands fall back to her side and abandoned herself to sobbing.  I was relieved, but also a little disappointed.  I wanted her to hit me.  I wanted some self-justification, for as it stood what was I throwing away and why?

I left the café and made a b-line for the liquor store.  I knew how I’d be spending the rest of my evening.

I wondered if I’d be able to turn my experience with Eliza into a story.  I would go to my friends’ house and I would try to entertain them with details of my private life.  It wasn’t a kiss and tell story – none of the mindless pornography that men tend to share with each other in the spirit of big dick contests.  I would spin a yarn that might encapsulate my prevailing un-sureness.  Maybe, through that re-creation, I’d be able to rectify the ambivalences, be able to come to some satisfying conclusion about my experiences with Eliza.

As I walked down the street, I thought about what I would tell my friends.  They’d be happy to have me back, I knew, but would they understand the decision I’d made to leave a woman who exhibited so many qualities, a woman who was eager to gratify me, a woman whose rapture, though arguably unhealthy in some ways, had the potential to grant immeasurable satisfaction?  Maybe they would understand all too well.

Eliza was following me as I walked down the street.  I didn’t think it was healthy but I let her have her way.  I didn’t want to provoke another confrontation.

I picked up a pint of whiskey from Bonecio’s, and headed over to the café.  It was dark out.  When I arrived at Pergolesi, I climbed the steps at the side of the building and entered the apartment.  The boys were sitting around the living room.

“Well, it’s over guys,” I said.

I uncapped the Jim Beam and I began to talk.  At some point, I turned to look out the front window of the apartment.  I was looking for Eliza and there she was, sitting on the front steps of the café with her head cradled in her arms.

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Filed under Literature, Short Story

The Gifts I Received

By Ben Leib

I was surrounded by relatives. There were seven of us staying in my folks’ place alone, not including Dad and Janice. Thanksgiving wasn’t for another several days, but people had started rolling in from out of town as early as the weekend prior.

I had the phone to my ear, dodging aunts and cousins, and made my way to the extra bedroom, my room.

“Hey Ma,” I said.

“Hey you,” Mom said. “So when’d you get into town?”

“I drove up last night.”

“When will we get the chance to celebrate your birthday? I want to see you guys.”

“I don’t know,” I said, “and I can’t speak for Ely, but I just wanted to let you know we’d gotten in. We’re pretty busy over here. It looks like this Thanksgiving is going to be pretty crazy.”

“Well, I definitely want to get some time with you, too.”

“Of course. We’re gonna work something out for sure. Let me check with Ely, figure out our schedule over here, and I’ll call you back tomorrow.”

“Okay,” Mom said. “I love you my big boy.”

“Love you, too, Ma.”

My brother and I did our best to avoid our mother over the holiday. His future in-laws were coming into town for the first time, and Ely and I conspired together to keep them as far from my mother as possible. What this meant for my mother – she got penciled in for the Sunday morning slot, three days after Thanksgiving, the day after Esther’s parents had safely caught their return flight to Santa Monica.

So, after nearly a week of festivities with my paternal family, my mother was relegated the dregs of our vacation time. It was as if, by one unfortunate and unintentionally cold gesture, we had articulated the true nature of our relationship with her. I assured my brother that it could be no other way.

“Dude, am I being an asshole?” he asked. “Should I introduce them to Mom?”

“Absolutely not,” I advised. “Don’t introduce them to her until your wedding day.”

Mom called several times over the long weekend we avoided her. It was unsurprising that her feelings were hurt. Here we were spending quality time with her ex-husband’s family and all she got was a few lousy hours for breakfast. I did feel a bit guilty, but I understood the situation Ely was in. I had spent my fair share of the time protecting past girlfriends and their families from my mother. No matter how normal a person seems, it’s always jarring to find that they have a parent who’s just strange enough, just unpleasant enough to make you ponder the hereditary likelihood of passing along such traits.

Of course, I’d been in relationships with women who, like Esther, had insisted on meeting my mother, not quite understanding that the anecdotes were understated rather than exaggerated. But the love of a good woman will inspire her to carry a torch for many causes. Although Esther had already met my mother once, knew how potentially uncomfortable the situation might be, she insisted on accompanying us.

But her parents would not be invited on that particular outing. Ely was a wreck just having to entertain the future in-laws for five days straight. Brokering an introduction with my mother would be as relaxing as mediating disarmament between two nuclear powers.

I supported Ely’s decision: Esther’s family could not be allowed to meet Mom.

“What are we going to do with her?” Ely asked.

“I say a brunch is a good holiday get together.”

“Have you checked anything out?”

“Yeah, there’s this super fancy place in Sebastopol called the French Garden. They do a Sunday brunch and I think I can make reservations.”

“Nice.”

“So that’s when we’ll meet up,” I said. “Maybe we can tool around Sebastopol for the afternoon, just hang out for a bit.”

“Okay.”

“Are you guys planning on making it back here at all in December?” I asked him.

“I don’t think so,” Ely said. “We’re supposed to go to New York to visit Esther’s family, and I don’t think we’ll get a chance to do holidays here.”

“So the next question is, should we get Mom anything for the holidays?”

“Oh man, I don’t think so, dude.”

“I’m with you.”

“She’s already got too much garbage filling up her house,” Ely said. “Have you ever been over to Adrian’s house?”

“No, I haven’t visited since she started staying there.”

“But you remember her old apartment in Guerneville, right?”

“Yeah, it was a fucking mess for sure.”

“Her room now puts it to shame.”

“Shit, man. Has she overflowed into the rest of the house?”

“Now? I don’t know. I haven’t been there in, I don’t know, four years. But I doubt that she’s stopped collecting shit since then.”

“I know what you mean,” I said. “So you think brunch is enough?”

“You said it’s a nice brunch?”

“Expensive.”

“Then that’s enough.”

We met Mom at the French Garden at ten. She’d beat us by a minute or two – a shock since punctuality was not one of her strong points – and was standing in the parking lot looking almost normal. She was wearing black jeans that fit her, though they were splattered with trashy looking bleach stains. She wore a sweater and a black leather jacket. It was a conservative look for Mom, none of the crazy blouses, pants less trashy than usual, nothing that had been purchased for less than a dollar at a second hand store, her mullet neatly quaffed.

“Hey my boys,” she hollered as we pulled in.

“Hey old Ma.” I jumped out of the car and hugged her.

It had the potential for being a good visit. Mom was, at first impression, looking pretty good. She’d been recently diagnosed with diabetes and had lost quite a bit of weight since I’d last seen her. She claimed to be following her diet rigorously.

“Happy birthday my big sweetie!”

My thirtieth fell on the day after Thanksgiving. It had been a small and traumatic milestone.

“I’m getting old,” I told her.

“You bought yourself a new car?”

“Yeah, pretty sweet, huh?”

“My boy’s growing up,” she said, beaming. “So it sounds like you guys might have a hard time getting back up here again during the holidays, so I brought gifts for all of you.”

“Thanks, Ma.” The politeness was formality.

“It’s my pleasure.” My mother spoke over her shoulder as she ambled toward her car. Inside the trunk were three canvas satchels, each containing a plastic storage box. “There’s one for each of you.”

The mystery boxes – each year the mélange of refuse that she compiled for us seemed to get worse, cheaper, more useless. When Ely and I were little, even into our teenage years, the mystery gifts had been exciting. My mom would invest some thought in picking stuff out for us, and she had a knack at the time for identifying the random little trinkets that might pique the interest of a child or an adolescent. As adults, the gifts that Mom presented seemed more like bargain hunting rejects than anything she’d picked out with either of us in mind. They were worse than useless – they were someone else’s garbage.

She loved bargain hunting, the intoxicant of the untreated hoarder – and it wasn’t the only intoxicant she indulged in. Searching for deals at thrift stores and estate sales was just one of her many excesses.

Ely and I looked at the bags my mother was pulling from her trunk and we both frowned.

“All right Ma,” I said, “we’re late for our reservation. Should we go get our table?”

“Yeah,” she said. “Here, take these. You each get a bag.” The more my mom spoke, the more I realized that this wouldn’t be one of her good days. Her speech was slurred, her mouth drug-dried and dehydrated. She spoke in spurts, blurting out sentences as if she couldn’t wait to get rid of the words and move on, as if linguistic communication was some painful necessity to be dispatched with as rapidly as possible.

The French Garden – there was a small stage on one side of the dining room, couches arranged around a fire place built into the corner, clean tables, linen napkins, table cloths, ornate wooden chairs. And because of the niceness of the restaurant, its understated and classical modishness, I was embarrassed of my mother. And because I was shamed by such a reaction to my own mother, I felt pained to conceal my discomfort.

Even as an adult I had difficulty recognizing and embracing my mother’s humanity in ways that might allow the idiosyncrasies of her personality to exist unquestioned, that would allow me to accept her love instead of seeking its evidence in actions that seemed designed to disappoint.

The restaurant had just opened for the day and the dining room was empty. The moment the hostess left our table, the busboy was over to fill water glasses.

“I checked the menu online,” I said. “I already know what I’m getting.”

“You gonna try the Benny?” Ely asked.

“You got it dude.” I began practicing my pronunciation of the French entrees. “Pommes frites. Fromages…”

When we set our menus down the server materialized, as if called into existence by a subtle and wordless cultural language. He was smarmy and long winded, and spent too much time trying to up-sell us.

“And I don’t know if you’ve had a chance to look at our breakfast cocktails yet…” he said. “We also have some delightful charcuterie…”

He looked at me like I might not know the definition of charcuterie.

We didn’t want the fromages plate. Nobody wanted a goddamn breakfast cocktail. I wasn’t drinking at all at the time, for fuck’s sake, and now here’s this guy making me feel like a negligent consumer for not ordering a spruced up twelve dollar mimosa. I certainly didn’t want to get Mom going that early, though sitting beside her, in such close proximity, I could smell the booze and knew that she’d gotten started early regardless.

“All right guys,” my Mom blurted, “time to open gifts. Let’s start with you my big thirty year old.”

“Okay, what have we got here?”

I pulled the plastic storage box from the canvas bag, pulled the packing tape away from the sides of the box, and removed the lid. It was dusty, and the contents smelled of mold, possibly a hint of decay. Resting on top, the most accessible of my gifts was a little disco ball, about four inches in diameter. It looked as if it had sat in a dirty basement for the past thirty years, and a grimy resin had accumulated in the crevices between each mirror segment.

As I grabbed the ball and began to remove it from the box, my mom shrieked. “No!”

She startled me, and I looked up at her, annoyed.

“What the hell’s the matter?”

“You have to grab it by the base.”

“Oh, I didn’t even realize that there was a base.”

“Yeah, like this.” My mom grabbed the disco ball by the little pedestal onto which it was affixed, removed it from the surrounding junk, and set it in the middle of the table. “See, it works like this. I got it for your car. Now you can have a moving party.”

The ball was mechanized: the base had tiny spotlights that focused on the mirrored ornament and a motor rotated the little ball. When my mother turned it on, a spinning pattern of lights reflected across the breakfast table.

“I’ll use it every day,” I said.

I reached back into the box, removed a pair of sunglasses. A slim rubber tube traced the frames of the glasses, led away from the left ear piece to a hand held remote control.

“Ooh, put them on sweetie,” Mom insisted.

I capitulated, placing the glasses over my eyes with one hand while I held the remote control in the other.

“Turn the switch,” she instructed.

I hesitated. “Are they gonna shock me?” I asked.

“No they’re not going to shock you. Just flip the switch.”

I eyed her for a moment longer and then turned the glasses on. Ely, Esther and my mother chuckled. A long, tubular light ran through the rubber trim along the frames, and it now shown a bright and gaudy blue.

“Flip the switch in the other direction.”

I flipped the switch in the other direction. The blue light began blinking rapidly.

“Jeeze, Ma, a disco ball, remote controlled glasses – it’s like you’re trying to get me laid.”

“Who could resist?” She said.

“Oh wait, I almost forgot.” She pulled a sandwich bag full of key rings from her purse. “For your new set of keys. Take a look. Maybe Esther or Ely will want one.”

I pulled them out, one by one, naming them as I went. “…a slinky, a Halloween Snoopy, a lanyard, Samurai Swords…”

“Now those don’t come out of their sheaths,” she informed me.

I tugged at the little copper swords. “No, they sure don’t,” I acknowledged before moving on. “Here’s a compass with an LED light. And here’s another compass.”

“Just in case you get lost in your new car,” Mom said.

The compasses were so old that their plastic covers had browned. It was difficult to see the reading, to find just which direction was north.

“This one’s got a whistle,” I observed.

“Now, I rinsed that out with alcohol, so it’s sterile,” mom announced.

I imagined her dipping it into the tumbler full of vodka that she was likely in the middle of as she put together these gift boxes.

“Well, that’s a relief.”

I held it with the tips of two fingers, assuming that it might still transmit some unknown contagion.

“You can blow it next time someone tries to rape you,” Ely informed me.

I resisted giving it a test blow.

I dug back into my box, and pulled from it a series of bumper stickers: a DARE sticker (which, I guessed, was meant to be tongue in cheek), Just Wear It emblazoned over an enormous silhouette of a condom, This Car Stops At All Garage Sales, several more. My favorite read, Celebrate Diversity – Pride ’01, and the text was scrawled over an enormous rainbow. I date women, so the sticker didn’t seem appropriate, but, in any case, what self respecting gay man is going to put a faded, 2001 Pride sticker on his new 2009 automobile, as if he’d saved it for eight years until that glorious, celebrated day that he was finally able to afford a car?

Ely and Esther went through their respective boxes with much the same result: Esther’s box contained, among other useless artifacts, an ugly looking crystal in a decrepit leather satchel, an off brand Leatherman, and an egg timer.

Ely’s box had a stack of temporary tattoos an inch thick.

“Because you’re too much of a chicken shit to get the real thing,” my mom explained.

She’d been trying to convince us to get matching tattoos for years.

“Great ma,” Ely said with what little enthusiasm he could muster as he flipped through the stack of childish stickers.

I tried unsuccessfully to convince him to wear the purple Pegasus, flying into the foreground from a castle in the clouds.

When Ely pulled out a musky old tin box, my mom felt it appropriate to give him a warning, “This one’s kind of weird,” she said, “but I just thought it was so cool…”

The box was shaped like a shell. It looked as if it might contain toiletries of some sort, a fancy compact or something.

“Where’d you get it?” Ely asked.

“I got it from an estate sale. An old lady passed away.”

“Is it her ashes?” Ely asked.

“No, it’s not her ashes.”

“It’s her teeth,” I shouted, convinced that the box actually might contain the last of old lady’s teeth, saved as the memoriam to a time when she’d been able to eat apples and steak with abandon.

We all laughed, though no one seemed genuinely thrilled at the moment.

Ely removed the bit of packing tape holding the box closed and slowly its lid.

Looking over his shoulder from where she sat at his right side, Esther shrieked and lurched away in her seat.

Ely’s gaze slowly rose to address my mother. “What the fuck, Mom?” he asked calmly.

“Aren’t they cool?” Mom was unconvincing.

“What the fuck is it, dude?” I was dying to know. “Is it her teeth?”

“It’s bugs.”

“Bugs!?!”

“Yeah.”

He passed the dusty, malodorous box over the table. I looked at him before opening it and could see that, though he remained stoic, my brother was genuinely angry. I opened the box. Sure enough, there they were: a pair of dried out, dead bugs, looking like a couple of gigantic fleas or over-grown dust mites. They were round and about a half inch long each – desiccated shells of lifeless insects. Because a long-passed death had left them dehydrated to the point of weightlessness, they rolled around the box freely, fragile to the point that the modest disturbances of transit had cost each of them a limb or two, which rolled about amongst the other sloughed flesh in the corner of the box. They made for a strange holiday gift.

Ely and Esther had been struck speechless.

“Jesus Ma,” I said, “you bought these from an estate sale? The old lady was probably senile when she caught these bugs in here and forgot about them in the back of a bathroom drawer.”

I understood what drove my mom in this case; I knew that it interested her, the value with which folks come to imbue objects, the strangeness of the items that they stow away and keep for years. Unfortunately, this sentimental value is not so easily transferable, nor is an esoteric personal history, and these truths shed light on the irrationality of my mother’s project.

We shifted in our seats and Mom seemed not to notice. “Now,” she announced as she pulled out a small, cardboard jewelry box, “there’s one last thing I have for you guys. These things are really cool, they’re collectables. They’re really worth something.”

I looked at my brother and his fiancée: Esther, poor thing, seemed so thoroughly disturbed that she was at a loss for the etiquette, for the politenesses that such a situation might call for. She sat there, looking nervous, wringing her hands through the cloth napkin. Neither of them wanted to open the final gift so I took one for the team.

“Let’s see what we got here.”

I removed the trinkets one by one and showed them to the table, and Mom took a moment or two to describe each of them.

“That’s an owl,” she said. “It’s carved out of malachite.”

“Oooh, and that one’s a monkey,” she said. “It’s a little hard to tell because the stone has corroded, but I think that means that it’s old, don’t you?”

 “What’s this one, Ma?” Ely asked, pointing to an inch tall figurine of Thing 2, the character from the Dr. Seuss book. I’d seen these little toys before and I happened to know that they were dispensed from gumball machines.

“It’s a Dr. Seuss toy,” my mother informed us. “It’s part of a set. They’re collector’s items.”

I chose not to tell my mother where the figurine had come from.

“What the hell is this?” I pulled what couldn’t be anything but a bird’s talon from the box. It smelled of decay.

“It’s a bird’s claw.”

“Where’d you get it from?” I asked.

“I pulled it off a bird.”

I inspected the talon more closely. It still had a bit of meat protruding from the base of the nail.

“You what?” Ely said.

“Yeah, there was this dead bird on the side of the road. The claw was just so big. I thought it was really cool.”

“Well, at least the bird was dead,” I said. “I was imagining you wrestling a falcon, trying to break off its toe while it shrieked and clawed at you.”

“Actually, it wasn’t even a whole dead bird,” Mom admitted. “There was just a leg laying there.”

We were all silent for a moment. Then I laughed in a way that approached hysteria. I grabbed the final artifact from the bottom of the box. It was a wooden bead, maybe a third of an inch from end to end. It was black with some red and yellow abstract designs on it.

“So where’d you get this one, Mom?”

“Oh, I found that one on the ground.”

I continued laughing. “You found it on the ground?”

“Yeah, isn’t it cool?” she asked.

“It’s all right. It’s just that you pulled out this box like it might be full of gold, like it was fuckin’ treasure, but now that were looking through it it turns out that you found this stuff on the ground, at garage sales…on a dead bird!”

“A dead bird’s leg,” Ely corrected me.

“I found it on the ground at the rotary club, after Adrian snuck me in there one night.” Mom said this as if the story of its finding might increase the desirability of the uninteresting little bead.

“Really?” I asked her.

“No, I found it on the ground at Colleen’s house, but that would’ve been cool, right?”

I was laughing uncontrollably–everyone at the table was, including my mother. “This stuff’s really special to me.” She was laughing, but I could tell her feelings were hurt.

Our lunch arrived. Everyone but my mother made sure to wash their hands before eating. Mom told us about cases she was working. She’d been a public defender for twenty years, which seemed incredible considering the morning we’d spent with her. She was defending a sexually violent predator who was nearing the end of a fifteen year sentence. The state wanted to keep him incarcerated at a mental health facility, but my mom argued that he’d paid his dues. Another defendant was a serial burglar with a penchant for unnecessary violence, facing his third felony and life in prison.

I’d been trying my best to keep an uncomfortably surreal situation from deteriorating further but the truth was, I was upset. I was angry about the gifts. Granted, my mom possessed her own brand of eccentricities, but the presents felt like just one more emotional manipulation to me. It was her forte: she gave us a bunch of useless crap that took a half an hour to open and sort through – the gifts were less than useless, they were a burden. We had to open the gifts and we had to feign appreciation, and my mother got to sit there like the parent of the year while we dug through dirty old key chains, dead bugs, and bird talons.

She expected us to treasure the gifts, to take them home and keep them safe for years to come, so the burden of the gifts endured even after my mother left the breakfast table and put considerations of the day behind her. Ely and I were left with presents that represented, not the thoughtfulness of a parent, but dread that my mother finally may have reached an point of madness from which she could not return, that she had abused herself into oblivion.

The sentiment that we attached to her gifts was fundamentally different from the sentiment with which she’d invested them. To her, they seemed something special, prized even. To us they were one more reminder of something approaching painful neglect – a resentment that exceeded our breakfast together, one that spanned three decades. No, despite my mother’s expectations we would not stockpile these gifts, we would not store them for her, would not keep her treasures safe. Instead, we would bring them back to my father’s house and dispose of them, every last one.

After a breakfast like that, the day could have ended. We’d seen enough of crazy for a single morning. But the meal had only taken an hour and a half and we still had at least another ninety minutes to go. After having neglected, avoided, and ignored her so thoroughly for an entire week, we felt obligated to grace my mother with at least a full afternoon of our company.

One of my favorite bookstores was located downtown there, and I figured that book shopping was a relatively silent, solitary enterprise, and that I would thereby be able to hinder the destructiveness of my mother’s social impulses. But, having experienced our less than enthusiastic reception of her gifts, my mother sunk into a morass of self-pity, a landscape in which she truly felt at home.

We parked on a side street and walked through a farmers market to get into town. I paused at a booth showcasing handmade prints – etches and lithographs.

“What do you think of ‘em, dude?” Ely asked me.

“They’re pretty cool,” I said. “This one’s badass.” I gestured to a print featuring a tree with labyrinthine branches, a dark background.

“You want it?” My younger brother was far more successful than I was.

“You’re offering to buy it for me?”

“Yeah, for your birthday.”

“I like it, but I don’t really have a place for it. I appreciate it though, dude.”

“Are you going to buy me something?” my mother interjected.

We ignored her.

Walking through town, Mom spotted a rock and crystal store.

“Look guys, let’s go in here. Do you mind?”

When we entered, Mom’s voice seemed to raise several octaves. Apparently she was excited to be looking at all the crystals, and, again, that mania struck me as terribly embarrassing.

She yelled across the store. “Oh my God, look at this one. It’s huge. I bet it weighs a thousand pounds… There’s one over there that looks like an enormous egg… Oh, I love opals. I used to have an opal this size… Look at this one you guys. Can you believe it..? This is a fossilized tooth… I love all of this stuff, you guys… Have you had a chance to check out their jade over there? It’s beautiful… Oooh, look at that. What do you think that blue stone is?…”

She was screaming. She went on and on. It was getting weirder. “Hey you guys, did you know that I used to find all of this stuff when I was a kid?” I knew that she couldn’t have found all of it, for many of the minerals on sale were geographically specific. “I would go rock hunting in the desert,” she said, “and I would find all of this stuff. Opals, quartz, geodes, amethyst, everything, every different color you could think of.”

She was getting too worked up and I began bustling our little party out of the store.

“My God, did you guys see this one?” Mom was pointing to a huge piece of quartz in the window display. The crystal was at least three feet across, a foot thick. “I once found a quartz this size.”

“No shit?” I asked.

“Yeah. But my mom, that fucking bitch, she made me give it away.”

Why is she bringing up her mother? I thought to myself.

“She made you give it away?” Ely sounded confused.

“My mother made me trade it for a piece of rose quartz.”

“Did you get to keep the thing you traded it for?” I asked, unsure what she was getting at.

“Of course not. My mom stole it from me. Everything valuable that I ever found, my mom stole from me.” Her voice was raised. She made sure that we could hear her.

It was turning into one of the worst visits I’d ever had with my mom. It was difficult for me to reconcile this drug-addled woman, near dementia in her current state, with the county employed attorney who defended disenfranchised felons. I was worried. If she acted this way at work, even if it was only occasionally, her job would be on the line. If she acted this way in the courtroom, she’d be done.

Mom had made it clear many times over the years that Ely and I were her backup plan. When she reached the age of retirement we were expected to step in and take care of her. I knew that she’d have a pension of some sort, but I had no idea to what extent she’d destroyed her finances. She’d spent stints of time on disability, had once sued the county. She’d declared bankruptcy. She had terrible credit – in fact, she no longer maintained a single line of credit. She rented a room from a guy named Adrian in Guerneville. She’d been homeless from time to time.

Ely and I had no intention of taking care of my mother. Neither of us had any aspirations toward greatness. We never expected to be able to give my mother the free and easy lifestyle that she anticipated nor did we want to. Helping my mother maintain her habits once she gave up her job was a haunting proposition.

Occasionally, she’d even suggested that she would like to move in with one of us, that we’d live together. She expected to be taken care of even before she’d grown too old to take care of herself. It was an absurd suggestion, considering that she had been incapable of taking care of us when we were younger. It seemed that she wanted it both ways: she was too wrapped up in her own dilemmas to be a parent to her children, but when it came time for her kids to give something back she had absurdly high expectations. We were her insurance plan, her one and only plan. And this was the prospect that loomed before us.

I led us down the street and into Copperfield’s Bookstore. The moment we entered I ran off to the mystery section. Ely and Esther perused politics. My mom buzzed around the store exuding discontent.

She approached me as I surveyed the crime fiction.

“Sweetie,” she said, “there’s a book I want you to see.”

As Mom led me through the self-help section, I rolled my eyes. I’d be damned if I was going to let my mother suggest some self-improvement literature, if I was going to stomach her diagnosis of my faults, and I was ready to rebuke her.

“I don’t really think that you and your brother understand me,” she told me. “I don’t think you really know what I’ve been through, what I fight with everyday.” Mom led me to a book titled The Courage to Heal: A Woman’s Guide to Surviving Childhood Sexual Abuse. “Do you have this book at home?”

“Why would I own that book?” I asked.

“Because it’s really important and well known,” she said. “Besides, there must be so many people close to you who have suffered sexual abuse. Of course you know that I’m a victim of sexual violence.”

“Um, no, I don’t own it,” I said. “I’ve never felt the need to read it. Haven’t the authors been discredited, though – they were kind of just making up whatever sounded good without proof or credentials.” I had heard of the book.

“I don’t know about that. It describes what I’ve gone through, what I continue to go through. I’ve told you what I was subjected to as a child, but I don’t think you understand what I have to go through every day of my life. It helped me to retrieve all those memories about my father. I want you to read this book.”

I was furious and I felt heartless for my fury. Once again, I had to do the work. I had to read the suggested literature. I had to educate myself that I might understand what was wrong with my mother, that I might forgive her. And if I did the work to understand my mother, then she’d be expiated her transgressions. Her sins would become my guilt for a lifetime of expecting motherhood from this damaged woman.

And it seemed to me that she was fundamentally misinterpreting the lesson of the literature she was suggesting.

“This is why I don’t have any friends,” She insisted. “This is why I find it so hard to be around people, why I act so strangely.”

It was as if she had read descriptions of the behavior symptomatic of sexual abuse, seen herself in those descriptions, and been granted legitimization in her own dysfunction. She read the lines, said to herself, Ah, now I know why I am what I am, and never found the need to recover.

My mother had been sexually abused by her older brothers. This behavior was tolerated, if not outright sanctioned by her own mother. My maternal grandmother, Bernice, had been a cruel, abusive woman. But now, years after Bernice’s death, my mother continued to operate mechanistically under her control. Bernice was, by proxy, guilty for all of my mother’s sins. It was as if my mom had lost all agency. Her circuits had been cast, her wires routed, her programming uploaded, and her dead family operated the controls from some phantasmal in-between. She dwelled in perpetual victimhood, gloried in it as if a state of grace. Victimhood was amnesty, indemnity, and she was able to dispense with all culpability. In exchange for this cosmic innocence, my mother relived her trauma second by second. This was her plea. Now she was presenting her children with bugs and rotting talons. She made a decision at some point that she was incurable, and, to her benefit, what therapeutic magnetism, what pharmacological alchemy could change her, could make her function once again as Mother?

There comes a point in a story at which one expects, demands even, some tenderness, some compassion. Did I pity my mother? Did I recognize the inhuman cruelty of the crimes to which she’d been subjected? Could I see her as fallibly human, as opposed to the image of perfection against which parents are so often unfavorably and unfairly measured?

I answer, emphatically, Yes.

I have known and loved my mother for a long time. I’ve bared witness to the infinite incarnations of her personality – her intelligence, her humor. I have been her son and I have been her friend. But any idyllic reveries sunk into despair, a despair born of the love for someone incapable of disentangling their own love from an infinite resentment, so that the one would forever poison the other. There could be no pure hate for my mother just as there could be no true love.

Would I ever cease loving her? Would that love forever be imbued with a pain so profound that it haunts me at all times, haunts my very core? Though, to some, the answers to these questions may not be obvious, I read them and know that their asking is redundant. I am haunted, and I myself must fight against the self-pity of a disappointment that will never leave me. I too will turn to powders and drink in search of a peace of mind in a world that does not operate according to my philosophies or expectations.

As we left the book store, my mother turned to me.

“You know,” she said, “I could die tomorrow and you wouldn’t even fucking know it.” She spit the words at me like their venom could poison by proximity and vehemence.

And she was right, though it seemed her choice alone. It would be years before my mother spoke to me again.

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Filed under Literature, Short Story

My Portrait In The Memorial

By Ben Leib

P—- was taken from her mother’s home one evening. It was the last time that she would ever see her home, the last time she’d feel the textures of the carpeting on her bare feet, the last time that she’d hear her friends laugh, the last time that she’d whisper about boys, the last time that she’d have a shower or brush her teeth. For her, at least in this earthly form, in the materiality of an existence that we can believe in based upon the reassuring powers of our senses and our rationality, the evening constituted an unexpected, unanticipated finality.

P—- had two girlfriends spending the night that evening. Very likely they participated in the innocent yet whispered gossip of twelve year old girls, the intrigue that feels so illicit at the time, but becomes quaint and endearing in retrospect, through the renegotiations of intervening years. P—-’s mother was asleep in her own bedroom when a bearded man—heavy, reeking of cheap liquor, sweating in his delirium, fat, unwashed, balding, sinister in ways that true villains are so often deprived of, sinister from the cover to the core—let himself into their home, snuck upstairs to P— -’s room, where the girls sat awake, and he took her. At knifepoint, he tied the other two girls up and threatened them to make them keep their mouths shut. Maybe their silence, maybe P—-’s silence, saved all of their lives. Maybe it saved the lives of P—-’s mother and her little sister.

I cannot, in good conscious, put myself in P—-’s shoes. I cannot tell her story. What a sham that would be! And what hypocrisy, to claim to be able to represent the horrors of a tragedy far beyond the spectrum of imagination, beyond the emotional limits of empathy. To confine her story to narrative would suggest understanding where there is none to be had. For these reasons, I can only give my story, the recollections of an observer, a bystander who may have witnessed, but had no agency.

I was also twelve years old at the time, and P—- and I were classmates at Petaluma Junior High School. In the daily life of my adolescence, I was troubled. I was out of place in my own skin. I felt scared of life, and I spent my school days hiding out in bathrooms, smoking weed and cigarettes, and trying, relatively successfully it seems to me now, to endure as comfortably as possible.

P—- and I knew each other only as very passing acquaintances. We shared the same homeroom, and on the very first day of seventh grade, a day which, due to the fear and anxiety I had been experiencing, remains a small and memorable trauma, P—- smiled at me, though I couldn’t remember where I knew her from. As it turned out, and I only realized this weeks later, her mother and my own mother were members of the same women’s group. P—- and I had met once during a swim party that the group held. I was already interested, very much so, in my female classmates, and I remember thinking that P—- was pretty, if a bit mousy, a bit bashful, possibly intimidated by the loudness, the insistence of adolescent voices. She was poised for beauty, and I remember, on that first day of school, after seeing P—- smiling at me, thinking that things might go all right and that I might be a bit more special than I’d initially judged myself.

From then on, I made a point of smiling at her, saying hello in the hallways, but I was intimidated by girls, and I never made an effort to get to know P—- beyond these superficial pleasantries. So, on the morning of October 2, 1993, when Kay, my stepmother, asked me if I knew someone named P—-, I told her that I didn’t. “She’s in your class,” Kay said. “She was kidnapped last night, right out of her house while her mother was sleeping.” That sparse description didn’t elicit the sense of urgency that was already burgeoning in the community around us. Somehow, other folks’ tragic truths have the tendency to remain distant enough that they become legend, fairytales played out in some familiar but parallel reality.

At some point on Saturday, a portrait, a police sketch of an almost swarthy man, bearded, smirking, began running with the reports. A description of the man had been provided by P—-’s two friends. I imagined crazy hoboes armed with homemade shanks, dirty rags wrapped around the handle, slipping into homes and abducting children under cover of night. Though I told myself there was no need to worry, I nevertheless considered the layout of our own home, both my mother’s and my father’s, and imagined what I might do were some armed transient to breach the sanctity of our domicile. I planned escape routes: what window I could crawl out of, what rooftops I could jump from, how I could get to a phone, how and with what I could arm myself.

By Sunday, the hunt had begun. As of that weekend, the search was limited to details of the suspect’s recollected image, all points’ bulletins, and descriptions of a vehicle he might be using. So in that sense, the hunt was similar to one for any suspect, but for the urgency that had now set in. Petaluma’s community, which was not used to such flagrant and sensationalistic transgressions of its sanctity, worked in hysterical tandem with the media, whose only motivation seemed the story itself, whose stratagems involved documenting and publicizing a community gripped by terror, by fury. Any local citizen willing to be filmed for the purpose, and there were no shortages of such citizens, were recruited as talking heads in community response pieces that dominated the nightly news.

When I returned to school the following Monday, P—-’s chair in homeroom remained unoccupied. Teachers spoke of the tragedy of her disappearance in each of my classes, and lessons were put on hold in favor of something like a forum for discussion about our feelings, our fears. Mental health professionals were brought in to counsel students traumatized by the kidnapping. Teachers in each class announced that any student needing a mental health pass would be granted one without question. I took passes from every class. Instead of heading to the administrative offices, which had been set up as the temporary sites for marathon therapy sessions, I snuck into bathrooms, into the flora on the edges of campus, into the wooded area across the street from the school. I got stoned and smoked cigarettes, feeling only tinges of guilt that I was exploiting the unknown yet presumably dire condition of my disappeared classmate.

It has only been with time and experience that I’ve been able, even to a small degree, to stop interpreting the world based upon the ways that it directly affects me to recognize my own insignificant influence in the daily churnings of fate, and to allow that those random happenstances were not designed for me alone. It was this narcissism, in part, which led me to conclude that the rest of the city and the rest of the nation was exploiting P—-’s disappearance far more despicably than I was at the time. The world was involved in an emotional exploitation, using the tragedy of another to selfishly publicize its own emotional upset in acts of cathartic displacement. While people went on television and cried for a girl they never met, I felt that I was mourning in my own, more honest way. I was wrong. The community was right to cry for one of its lost children, and the news was right to give voice to that sadness.

But the media were not saints. That school week began as a free for all, with reporters sneaking onto the junior high school campus during school hours, interviewing any weepy children that they could corner, and, again, people, young people in particular, were only too eager to be filmed, as if the camera itself bestowed some affirmation of importance, of relevance, the promise of which proved irresistible, for we all want the relevance of our emotional lives to be affirmed. Because it seemed as if the newsmen were unable to restrain themselves through common sense, the school had to impose sanctions upon the media, forbidding reporters from stepping foot onto campus or from interrupting school day proceedings in any way. From that point on, fleets of media vans, television crews, cameramen, and reporters were sure to be waiting at the base of campus when class got out. My grandparents lived about three blocks from Petaluma Junior High School, and, walking home each day, I had to dodge these media folk, who I was determined would not get a minute of my time, for this wasn’t a legacy that I wanted to propagate.

It became a nightly routine, during the weeks at my father’s house, for our family to gather in my parents’ bed—my dad, Kay, my brother, and I—to watch the ten o’clock news. We were sure to see recognizable members of our quaint community airing their sadness in public reaction pieces. We sustained a running commentary about the folks appearing on the news. For example, when watching the news reel of my friend’s mother, an unstable woman to begin with, screaming in drugged-up hysteria, we laughed with abandon. We laughed at Ms. Stitch, because her performance was so bizarre, so over the top, and because some news station found it fitting to air this woman’s instabilities as representative of our community. We critiqued P—-’s family in ways that were only acceptable amongst ourselves, in the privacy of our home. My dad and I found fault with P—-’s father, who seemed to thrive on the media attention, who seemed to glory in the limelight like some small town John Walsh. Kay’s critiques, which questioned P—-’s mother for her overstated fragility, possibly contained an unstated but more heartfelt critique of a mother’s inability to prevent such a thing in her own home. I suspect that other families watching the drama unfold had their own privately expressed opinions, all of which were irrelevant and invalid, of course. We had shared no legitimate experience with the family upon which we could critique their reactions to such a tragic loss. But through our nightly rituals, we were able to relegate P—-’s kidnapping to the realm of the unpleasantly unfamiliar, instead of participating in more substantial speculations that would have forced us to acknowledge the horrors that humankind is capable of.

Some weeks into the investigation, the fliers began appearing on light posts, on phone booths, in storefront windows. The fliers presented images of other missing children, kids whose circumstances, for one reason or another had not elicited the same kind of attention as P—-’s. And the fliers asked difficult questions of those who cared enough to pay them any mind: “Why is my child different than P—-?” a flier would ask. “Will you help me find my little girl?” “B—- was loved just as dearly as P—-, please help us bring her home.” “If I looked like P—-, would you care about my fate?” They featured images of children less stable, less prosperous, more ethnically diverse than P—- or her family. These kids didn’t live in Victorians on D Street.

These children came from troubled homes, I imagined. They had been abducted by angry or unstable family members, they’d fled their own domestic horrors, they’d succumbed to the temptations of inebriates, they’d been taken in by smooth-talking boyfriends, and somehow the complicity in these imagined situations, in the public’s mind and in mine, constructed a less sympathetic victim, though they were children to the last. It was P—-’s unarguable role as victim that made her story so compelling. I, nevertheless, was moved by the fliers. I heeded their message and was convinced of the unfairness of a world that does not care for and protect all of its children.

The nature of the manhunt shifted at some point. The kidnapper was still at large, and there were still perpetual reminders of his presence among us, but, as time passed, volunteer hours were spent searching for P—- herself. Thousands of county employees and community-minded citizens joined together to comb the Sonoma County countryside, expecting, if not exactly hoping, to find P—-’s body and some sort of evidence of the crime that still remained a mystery. Newsreels featured helicopter-view films of adults, organized into long, single file rows, searching the shrubs and fields of our undeveloped landscapes. There was a sense of communal purpose, as tens of thousands of man-hours were spent in an endeavor that seemed bound to produce results.

But it was not the endless hours of human endeavor, nor was it the investigative ingenuity of police or national agencies then involved, that finally led to the arrest of D—-, two months after the kidnapping. Rather, it was the vigilance of the memory of two traumatized 12-year-old girls who aided in creating a police sketch, the memory of a nation who would not let this one child, out of so many, fall from the realm of consciousness, that caused officers to detain D—- for parole violation until they confirmed his role in the P—-’s abduction. The material evidence linking this man to the crime: a lone and otherwise inexplicable palm print in P—-’s bedroom.

D—-’s rap sheet read like the biography of another lost child: in and out of youth authority, recurring struggles with drugs and alcohol, an inconsistent home life, impelled to join the military as a form of coercive sentencing, burglary, theft, violence. As he matured, so too did his crimes. He did not become a sophisticated criminal, but rather an opportunist with a gun. He became more and more violent, and, over time, came to exhibit sadistic impulses, kidnapping, beating, and sexually assaulting women, and ended up spending more than half of his life in prison. After serving 16 years of an even longer prison sentence, D—- was released only three months before landing in Petaluma and kidnapping P—- out of her bedroom.

The fact that D—- was a recurring violent offender was also a matter of media intrigue. Here was an example of a man who made no redeeming contributions to the world, who only took away and destroyed, as if a primal force, without conscience, without contemplation. As such, as an embodiment of violence, D—- was inept, he did not constitute the threat that a smarter, more charismatic man might have. He was not intelligent. He did not act with forethought. His crimes were impulsive. But, as such, as so clearly a dangerous man, as a man with so little in the way of potential redemption, how was he able to roam the streets freely? I was torn, because it was quite easy to hate such a man, and I was shocked that, with all of humanity’s technological, scientific, and epistemological advances, we could not spot a sociopath, nor could we find a cultural justification for keeping this man off of the streets forever. But it was my mother who pointed out that D—- was chalking entries onto his rap sheet when he was my age, that his troubles began when he was young, and that he had suffered horribly, unimaginably. And where did these questions of nature-versus-nurture get me? Could I feel empathy for a man who had committed unforgivable crimes? And would empathy constitute forgiveness?

It was D—- who finally led police to the body. P—- had been left in a shallow grave in a countryside locale not dissimilar geographically to the fields and woods that volunteers were combing daily. Because the body was badly decomposed after two months in the unprotected wild, the specific details of P—-’s death remain a mystery, D—-’s account being the only one on record. And it was at this point, two months after her disappearance, that I finally was able to mourn P—- in a way that seemed authentic. It was the not knowing that had done it to me.

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The Writing Group

By Ben Leib

John approached me at the Oscar party, an event held for friends and employees of the local indie movie theater.  The fact that I was still attending these parties more than seven years after quitting the job was an indication of just how stagnant life had become.  I’d go and try to feel young amongst the teenage and college age generation of new employees, who I watched sipping their wine and not knowing how to really drink.  I yelled at the television, wisecracking every thirty seconds, lambasting the Academy for their lamentable decisions that I could make better, and I hoped to entertain these kids.

I couldn’t remember meeting or even seeing John before, though he’d been working at the theater for over three years.  “Hey, you’re the guy I see writing downtown all the time, right?”

He was right.  Because I considered it unhealthy to sit at home and write all day long, getting paler and paler, retaining my ability for spoken language only because I chose to sing along with the dated and unhip music that I was into, I spent most of my time in cafes.  I’d convinced myself that my brief hellos to baristas, my nods to passing acquaintances, that these fleeting instances of human contact constituted a social life.

“Why, are you a writer?”  I already knew the answer to that question.  By the way he approached me, I could tell that John was not only a writer, but that he was a special breed of writer: the kind who never wrote.  I was one of this number at a certain point, when I was drunk all the time and would spend the moments before I fell asleep dreaming of how important and talented I was, how inevitably bound for fame.  Since then I’d transformed into the hermit kind of writer, who is productive, but so self-focused, so ironically reflexive, so out of tune with all things human, that my destiny as a loser had become a passing inevitability.

John and I spoke for a couple of minutes.  He told me how impressed he was with my dedication, told me that he wanted to know my secrets: how could I be so inspired? So disciplined?  It was a mistake to compliment me, for he was mentioning the only things which made me exceptional, and it was in my nature to be prideful despite the fact that I was unpublished and unread.  He did not know that I clung to the order of my life for fear that my world might spiral out of control, disintegrating into homelessness or madness, or just plain loneliness.

“Do you want to exchange work?” I asked him.  I was sure that he would stammer and dodge the question.  People declare their intentions to help each other out, but then become so terrified by some nebulous form of competition—maybe they are less talented, maybe they are less productive—that they balk and allow their fears to inhibit them.  I was done with fear.  I was sick of it, though it was still pervasive.  And, because I’d become brave enough to share my prose, I searched for some kind of guidance, and a good reader seemed impossible to come by.  I had grown so desperate, in fact, that I’d taken to printing anonymous books of short stories and leaving them on café magazine racks, hoping that interested and equally anonymous parties might see fit to critique my work.  It was a moderately successful enterprise, but, in a ratio of approximately ten to one, folks preferred to draw dicks in the manuscripts than write critiques.

Because I thought I had his number, I was surprised when John said that, yes, he would love to exchange work.  This was exciting.  I’d be able to improve my craft, and would have an activity that I could point to and say, See, I do have a social life.

John called me fifteen minutes before we were supposed to meet. “I’m running late, dude.  Sorry, I’ll be there soon.”  Two hours later John came sauntering onto the cafe patio, looking disheveled, affecting a hurried, out of breath urgency.

“I’m always late,” he explained, by way of preemptively justifying future tardiness. “Hope I didn’t keep you from anything.”

“It’s fine.”

During our meeting John seemed to scoff at the solipsistic emphasis of my own prose, though he hadn’t read a thing I’d written.  “I don’t know if this’ll work. I mean, I kind of thought you were doing something different.”

“Look man, take it easy, I read a lot, and I have a lot of opinions.  I’m sure that we could help each other.  Now, what exactly are you looking for?”

John described for me the novel that he was working on: it began as a short story that he’d written for class three years earlier, and had since spiraled into something longer, something more convoluted.  He described to me how each section would jump from subjectivity to subjectivity.  Despite his intentions, John didn’t know how to expand the three year old short story – he wanted to write a novel, but didn’t have a novel’s worth of material.  That, in John’s idealized vision of our little writing group, would be where I came in.  “I don’t really need critique on the writing itself. What I’m really hoping for is just someone to brainstorm with, someone to help me find the direction that I can take this in.”

 “Look, how much have you got written so far?”

“Forty pages are edited and ready to read.”

“All right, why don’t you email me what you’ve got, and I’ll send you forty pages of my work, and, say, by month’s end we’ll get back in touch and set up a time to meet?”

I will not dwell on the prose itself.  It would be presumptuous of me to lambast John’s writing when I have experienced so few compliments regarding the quality of my own little stories.  So let’s say then that we were both unskilled amateurs, possessing a surplus of dreams but wanting in talent, where our proclivities would have been better invested.

I guess I knew that John would be late again, he’d as much as promised me that during our first meeting, so it was unsurprising when I got a text message from him letting me know that he was running behind.  There were several more text messages. I waited for ninety minutes.  My phone buzzed one last time. “Sorry it’s taking so long.  I’ll be leaving soon.  Just waiting for my laundry to dry.”

“I’ve got things to do,” I wrote back, “let’s reschedule.”  I controlled my impulses, and did not tell him to fuck himself.

When John and I finally did meet up, we chose to do so at his house.  It was a strategy to neutralize his propensity for lateness.  John told me that he loved my work, which helped thaw my frostiness, for I was so desperately wanting of praise that I would go to great lengths to seek it out, and I could recall every moment that someone had told me, I like this, or, This reads well.

In turn, I did my best to fulfill John’s requests, and avoided a critique of the writing itself.  I tried to help brainstorm ways that John could expand the word count of what was, in my opinion, a project that he should brush aside in favor of fresher ones, and in that way I was not a good editor.

John, I discovered, didn’t get along well with people.  He rubbed them the wrong way.  He’d been fighting with his roommates, he explained, because they couldn’t keep the place clean enough, or didn’t do whatever it was he expected them to do, and it led to animosity and resentment.  John wanted the world to conform to his strange notions of its inherent workings (and I could relate to him on this level).  For example, he was looking for a new apartment because of these household frictions. He was in the process of sending out rental applications, but every time he was invited to an open house John would make up an excuse as to why he was unable to attend. Instead, he would ask the landlords to set up a special walk through just for him.

“That way,” he said, “I don’t have to compete with a house full of people.”

I thought this strategy unwise. He was granted very few of these individual appointments with landlords.

Furthermore, John’s strategies for composing fiction struck me as foolhardy, or, at best, misguided.  He divulged an elaborate fantasy that, in whatever room he moved into, he would construct a simulation of the bedroom that his protagonist might have.  He would buy her DVD collection, hang up the posters that she would have chosen: he would live her life, and therein might find inspiration.  I thought these drastic measures for a man who hadn’t written a new word in months.

It seemed to me that John was trying to escape himself in some way, as if all he needed was a change of environment, a slight tweak in this or that aspect of his life, and then he would find inspiration.  I’d lived through that craziness. For too long it had been my approach to life in general. I’d searched for the magic bullet that would set everything right.

By the time we finished up at John’s place, I had come to the conclusion that we would probably never meet again.  I would never be able to impart the secret of productivity because the truth was that I’d bartered my identity for my own reservoir of inspiration.  I’d stopped drinking, stopped using drugs, stopped (not by my own determination in this case) having sex – I was celibate, sober, and furiously unhappy, but I wrote over a thousand words a day because it was all I had left.  How can one person impart such a thing to another?  I wrote out of desperation and out of terror, for, without it, I would have nothing.

Nevertheless, I did meet with John one more time.  He called me and suggested we hang out, maybe get dinner, play some pool, just to stay connected, you know, not to let things fall to the wayside.  It was a way for John to keep in touch while he spent his time procrastinating.  And maybe I am not giving human credit where it’s deserved, for John also wanted to be friends.  But, unfortunately, and as testament to the coldness that I’d fallen prey to, I did not want to be John’s friend.  I wasn’t so frosty that I would avoid his calls, and I was still human enough that I would do a favor for almost anybody who asked, because I still wanted to be available to people who felt the need for some support, an extra set of arms to move a couch, a ride to the airport. But as far as being a friend, I didn’t have those skills just then.

Nevertheless, I felt for John, for though I had no lasting investment in our two man writing group, I could see that he was lonely and lost, and I know that this world eats its lonely.  I told him to call me before noon so that he could tell me where and when to meet him.  I figured that I was compensating for John’s compulsive lateness by allowing him to dictate when and where we met just hours before meeting.

Friday rolled around and John called a little before noon.  “Let’s meet at three o’clock at the 515.”  The meeting was set: a late lunch and then some eight ball.

At a quarter to three, John called to tell me he was running behind schedule.  He mistakenly figured that since I’d given him room to schedule our meeting at any time of the day, I wouldn’t mind if he ended up being an hour or two late.  I told him to call me when he actually arrived at the 515.

He called at five o’clock.

“I’ll be right there,” I told him.

I passed a little sidewalk sale at Logo’s bookstore on my way to the restaurant.  I perused the selection a bit and bought a couple of books before meeting John at five thirty.  He seemed speechless when I showed up with my little shopping bag and the news that Logo’s was having a sale.

John was unkind to the wait staff: he was pushy, he asked too many questions, and he wanted things for free that would clearly cost money. He made a point of announcing how long it took to get the bread (bread that was conspicuously absent from the other tables).  He wanted to share meals and then ate ninety percent of the food we ordered.

But it was at Surf City Billiards, during the last hours of interaction I would ever willingly have with John, that I really got to know him.

John couldn’t play pool, so I wondered why he’d suggested it as an activity.  “So, you found a place yet?” I asked.

“Well, it’s complicated. Without an income it’s hard to know just what to write on the applications.”

I interpreted this as an exaggeration.  I assumed John meant that his wages at the theater were so small that they barely constituted an income.  I asked him whether or not his parents would be supplementing his rent, and suggested he offer them up as cosigners.

John was leery.  He felt he was too old to be relying on his parents, and that he was sure he’d find a job soon enough.  Otherwise he might be forced to move back in with his folks.

“Shit man, what about the theater? I know that they don’t pay much, but plenty of people get by without a second job.”

“Yeah, I got fired last week,” John said.

“Fired?  But you’ve been working there for three years.  What happened?”

I circled the pool table sinking ball after ball while John stood to the side holding his cue like it was made of lead.

“You haven’t heard?”

“No man. I haven’t worked there in seven years. Who would tell me a thing like that?”

“I was working one night, and…Do you know Esther?”

“Nope.”

“Well, she was managing that night.  I guess I have a hard time with her because she was promoted before me even though she got hired a year after I did.  But she’s also totally passive aggressive.  I don’t think she’s ever liked me.  She nitpicks – like she’s looking for the things I’m doing wrong.

“I was working concessions, and Esther overhears when I get into a fight…well, not a fight, really…when I got into a confrontation with this customer.  In my opinion, this lady wasn’t being respectful, and I was just standing up for myself. She asked for a glass of water, so I gave her an empty cup and pointed out the drinking fountain.  But she got upset because I didn’t fill the cup for her.  I tried to explain that the drinking fountain was the same water as the tap water that I’d fill the cup with, but I guess that she wanted ice too.  She just wanted someone to be her servant, and she started being a fucking bitch about it. I know it’s stupid but it just escalated into this argument. Esther overheard the entire thing.”

“Did you ever fill her cup of water?”

“I couldn’t.  You see, and I guess that this shouldn’t be important in this situation, but it felt like it was at the time, I’m having some problems these days.  I’m seeing a couple of therapists every week, and my psychologist noticed that I have a hard time sticking up for myself.  I feel like people take advantage of me a lot, but I always have a problem saying what I need, you know, telling people, you can’t treat me this way.”

From what John had told me about his experiences with housemates, about his experiences with landlords, from what I’d seen of his interaction with our waiter that afternoon, John had no problems telling people when they weren’t doing what he wanted them to do.  I came to the conclusion that John believed that the people around him were actually far more interested in him than was the case, that people were actively doing the things which annoyed him with the express intention of making his life difficult.

“So my therapist suggested that when people are treating me badly, when I think people are walking all over me, I stick up for myself, I tell them I won’t allow them speak to me like that.  That’s all I was doing with this lady.  I was just doing what my therapist suggested.  It’s a part of my treatment.”

“But that’s your job.  She’s a customer, and even if she is a bitch – which, don’t get me wrong, it sounds like she was a bitch – you still just have to suck it up and get her the cup of water.  I doubt your therapist told you to argue with customers.”

“Maybe. But I don’t think I did anything wrong sticking up for myself.  Esther overheard everything, and when it was all over she asked me to talk to her in the projection booth.  I knew that I was about to get into trouble. The problem was, she just refused to see my side of things too.  She told me I couldn’t ever talk to customers that way, but she couldn’t acknowledge that the lady was being a bitch.  I tried to explain about my therapist, about how it’s part of my treatment to stick up for myself, but Esther wouldn’t hear any of it.  She just kept saying, I don’t care, you can’t do that at work.  She always had to have the last word, and I just found myself getting so frustrated.  I could tell that she wanted to get me riled up.  She’s never liked me, and she could see how upset I was getting.”

“Esther didn’t fire you right there, did she?”

“No.  What happened was that she kind of got the last word and just walked away and left me standing there feeling pissed off.  And I’ve got this thing – it’s another thing I’m working on with my therapist – but when I get mad I direct all that rage at myself.  And sometimes I do stupid things. I just want to hurt myself.  So after Esther walked away I just let loose.  I was so frustrated that I started cussing and screaming all this bad stuff.  I started punching myself in the face, and just cussing because I was so frustrated, and I guess that I was being louder than I realized and Esther heard me.  She walked back upstairs and saw me there, kind of freaking out.  That was it, I think.  She took me by surprise. I guess I snapped at her.  She told the boss about it, and the rest is history.  Four days later, they tell me I don’t have a job there anymore.”

I was struck momentarily silent.  I imagined John punching himself in the face, imagined his fury, each blow a misdirected punishment, each blasphemy meant, not for himself, but for Esther, who had cut him down to size.  John was an intense guy, but I’d underestimated his mental instability.

But what struck me most was how clearly I could see myself reflected in him.  I have known that fury, and I have found ways to punish my own body as if it were the body of another.

And I could imagine Esther’s fear as she walked in on that scene, as she witnessed John’s violent impulses.

“Of course they fired you. No one likes violence in the work place.  They were right to fire you.” 

He took this summation in stride, ignored it in fact.  “I still think I got a case.”

“You mean a law suit?  Why on earth would the theater owe you money for acting crazy at work?”

“Because they didn’t even take into consideration that I was in therapy, that I was only doing what my psychiatrist had told me to do.”

No, I would never come to like John.  We would never be buddies, and our writing group had seen its day (though he would continue to send me messages and updates implying that we were deeply entrenched in some mutual creative enterprise that was inevitably on its way to completion).  But John had come to frighten me, for we were one hair’s breadth away from being the same.

So I cling to what is mine. I wrestle my sanity into submission as if it were an agent that may cut its mooring at any moment.

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The Last Dignified Transaction

By Ben Leib

When I approached the table of young people, I didn’t recognize any of them.  “Hey guys,” I said, “how are you doing this morning?”

“Good,” they all answered.

“Hung over,” one of the boys said.

“Well, in that case, can I start you off with drinks?” I asked, “Water… coffee… orange juice?”

I’d been waiting tables at the Walnut Café for two years now, ever since I’d finished the coursework for my Master’s degree.

When I arrived with the drinks, one of the girls spoke up.  “Hey, you were my TA,” she said.

I examined her.  To me she was a perfect stranger.

“Oh yeah, I remember you,” I said.  “What class did I have you in again?”

“History of India,” she said.

I would never get comfortable serving former students.  Didn’t graduate school bestow some modicum of respectability, some prestige that precluded situations such as this?  And I only agreed to take the job because my debt seemed so overwhelming.  Just for a little while, I told myself, pay those credit cards down, pay those loans off, get back on your feet, and then it’s off to an existence you can be proud of.

“Did you enjoy the class?” I asked my former student cum customer.

“Yeah, it was really informative.  I’m not really an India person,” she said, “and I didn’t major in History either – I was taking the class for general ed. credits.  But I really liked the reading.”

“What was your favorite text?”

“Probably the Ramayana.”

“I dug the Vedas,” I told her.  “TAing that class was actually the first time I’d been exposed to them.  They read like sparse poetry, like something modernist and almost indecipherable, but with these kernels of wisdom, of the truth and the faith that modernists eschew.  Now,” I addressed the table, “are you guys ready to order?”

I was going to do big things, I told myself.  I was always telling myself that.  So, that in mind, I was looking for other jobs.  I was pursuing creative interests.  But in the meantime it was the café – small talk and a pervasive sense of personal degradation.

I returned to the table with plates of food stacked on my arm, announcing the dishes as I distributed them, “Eggs Benedict, ham and cheese scramble, rancheros con carnitas, another Benny here… Now,” I said once the food was on the table, “can I get anything else for you guys?”

I considered what my former student must think, finding her teaching assistant waiting on her at the local breakfast joint.  It was good money there and the hours were good, too.  But how did such a discovery bode for her own bright future?  What kind of advertisement was this for higher education?

As I was clearing their plates, I turned again to my former student, “So, if you don’t mind me asking, what grade did I give you in the class?”

“B+,” she said.  “I deserved an A for the amount of work I put in, but a B+ isn’t so bad.  I’m still getting out of here with a great GPA.”

I apologized and agreed with her that a B+ wasn’t a bad grade at all.

Grades were inflated anyways.  I knew that a B+ student probably deserved a C+, and I wasn’t remorseful about the marks that I’d given, though I was always deferential to customers.

The kids lingered for a moment, finishing their coffees and digesting their food.  They paid in cash and had me make change for them.  I stood by the kitchen door, eyeing them from a safe distance.  I watched as the table conferred with each other, cash in hand, peeled off bills, threw their tip on the table, grabbed their coats, and began to shuffle toward the door.  My student lingered, taking a final sip of coffee.  She didn’t notice me watching her, for she was eyeing her friends as they headed for the exit.  That in mind, she was unaware that I saw her as she reached across the table, swiped up the cash tip, and stuffed it into her purse.

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The Drive Home

By Ben Leib

I believed in God, so it was in earnest when I prayed for my life to end.  I knelt at the foot of my bed and went through my nightly routine.  I offered myself to my Maker.  I prayed for guidance and the wisdom to recognize and to act upon what was right.  I wanted to be a good man. 

I prayed not to be angry but upon a review of my day I found myself furiously unhappy.

“God,” I said, “please kill me.  Please take my life, Lord, for I find this existence unbearable.  It’s too hard, God, and I can’t take my own life.  I’m too afraid.  So please, Lord, please kill me.”

“God,” I went on, “I’ve been laid once in the past two years.  I have so many dreams, God, so many ambitions, and I work hard to bring them to fruition but I always fall short.  Is that why I’m here, Lord?  To fall short?  I understand that nobody is happy all the time, but I just wish that I could be content.  And I feel helpless because this life, the one that I’ve led all along, it hasn’t been so hard.  I could have faced much worse tribulations, God, and I thank you for the grace I’ve been given.  But it’s too hard for me.  Each day, a trial of its own.  I don’t want to do it anymore, Lord, so I pray that you end my life.”

And as I finished the prayer, my phone rang.

“Hello,” I answered.

“Hey, it’s Charlene.”

This was unexpected.

“Hey, how are you doing?”

“Look, I’m sorry to call,” she dove right in.  “I wouldn’t if I wasn’t totally stranded.  All my besties have kids and my family’s busy looking after my nephew.”

“What’s the matter?” I asked.

“I need a ride home from SFO tomorrow night.  My flight gets in at eleven, and I’m totally stranded…”

Our meeting in a smoky barroom had not ignited fires, nor was it the stuff of nostalgic reverie.  We were both drunk, it was late at night, and mutual friends were egging us on.  We were both lonely and both het up by drink and by sustained abstinence, and so it was unsurprising when Charlene took me home after last call.

We giggled as we ascended the staircase into Charlene’s apartment. 

I nearly passed out on the living room couch before she could get me into the bedroom.

When Jeanne, Charlene’s roommate, appeared, I told her to shut up and leave me alone.

“You don’t get to tell me to shut up in my own home,” Jeanne said.

“Jesus Jeanne,” I said, “you never told me you had such a beautiful roommate.”

Jeanne looked at Charlene, “How’d you even get him up the stairs?”

Charlene smiled and swayed.  With a forefinger and a devilish smirk she beckoned me into her bedroom.  We kissed standing, pawing at each other, not patient enough to dwell upon the newness of each others’ bodies, as if in that drunken and lonely state only an act of penetration, only an exchange of fluids would have the alchemical potency to fundamentally alter our desperation.  I pressed my face into Charlene’s, tasting the smoke and the booze.  My fingers worked their way over the buttons of her shirt, eager to explore the flesh within but not animal enough, even in my stupor, to actually tear the cloth from her body.

“You’ve got amazing tits,” I muttered.

“Thank you.”

I took a breast into both hands, feeling its heaviness, and I buried my face against Charlene’s chest, mouth open, kissing as much of her bare body as I could.  I kissed down her abdomen, and fumbled at the waist line of Charlene’s jeans until she reached down to help me.

Once Charlene’s jeans and underwear were lying on the floor of her room, I didn’t take the time to appreciate the miracle that was Charlene’s ass, the perfect hugeness and roundness of it.  I didn’t take my time to work her up, teasing her.  I stood, threw my own pants from my body, and crawled on top of her.

We both received the minimum of what we sought.  Once we were naked and intertwined, I used Charlene’s body to sate my need.  The booze didn’t help.  What the booze did do was decrease sensitivity, and I became frustrated, turning Charlene over for better access and less obstructed motion.  I thrust into her from behind, shoving her face into the pillow as she groaned, and I hammered away until I came into her, by which time Charlene’s body had already collapsed, and she lay on her belly, panting, still groaning a bit.  I lay on my back beside her, sweating.

“Thank you,” I said, and then, “You have an amazing ass.”

Charlene groaned.

That night I forgot Charlene’s name.  I snuck out of bed, unable to sleep until I found out.  I tiptoed into the kitchen and sifted through a pile of mail that sat on the counter until I came across a small cardstock advertisement with Charlene’s name printed on it.  I folded it into a square and snuck back into the bedroom, where I slipped the junk mail into the pocket of my pants.

We exchanged numbers before I departed the next morning, but I never tried to woo Charlene again.  We weren’t exactly uncomfortable around each other, and happily participated in hello, how are ya’s, and awkward hugs, but for the next ten years I devoted the little time I spent thinking of Charlene to a contemplation of my own insensitivity.  From that night on I was embarrassed in her presence, and I secretly believed that she had dirt on me, that she could gossip about my over-eager fumbling – a prospect that I found terrifying.

 “Yeah,” I said, “I don’t have anything going on.  I can pick you up.”

“Are you serious?” Charlene asked.

“Sure, I think it’d be good for me to do something nice for somebody.  Maybe I’ll stop thinking about myself for five minutes.  Just text me the flight info.”

Moments later, Charlene sent the airline, flight number, and arrival time.  She included a message that read, “Here’s my algorithm: Who’s local?  No kids?  Who do you want to be friends with?  Ask for a random needed favor: cement for friendship.  And I didn’t even have to offer sexual favors, though they’re still on the table.”  A winking emoticon acted as the period to the final sentence.

The message made me take pause.  Charlene had gotten married and given birth to two children, and, as far as I knew, she was still married, so that last little comment could only have been meant as a joke, right?

Whatever the case, I was forced to reconsider the faith I’d placed in memory.

I’d been kneeling at my bed, saying over and over again, “God, please kill me,” as if a perverse will could be manifested through incantation.

And my Creator had established a scenario in which death was plausible.  First off, the trip to San Francisco Airport took me through the twisting back roads of Highway 17, on which accidents were a regular occurrence.  Furthermore, though the weather report had not predicted it ahead of time, the first autumn rain came pouring in that afternoon and had not let up by the time I departed.  The skies simply opened up, and all I could read in that storm was unsafe driving conditions.  There was roadwork taking place on the 17.  Each night, county workers shut down one lane travelling in either direction.  Fast moving traffic was forced to merge abruptly, and the narrow lanes were confined by too-close concrete slabs.

I had always believed in a God, some Creative Intelligence or Spirit of the Universe type of thing, that was responsible for the mysterious harmonies of existence.  But my God operated mechanistically, without concern for pleasure or pain.  There were times even, not so many years before, that I convinced myself that I’d been cursed.  My suffering seemed divinely determined, and I’d chosen to medicate my pain.

One particular night I’d gotten started early and by nine in the evening I realized that I’d consumed the better part of a half gallon of bourbon.  Walking over to Dallas’s house, it dawned on me that I’d be better off in bed, or, possibly, in the hospital.  It was raining that night, and I walked passed the government building, through the park and then the drug store parking lot, up Walnut Avenue, so that by the time I reached my friend’s house I was soaked through, feeling I must look the wreck of a human being I knew myself to be.

I bought an eight ball from Dallas and we worked on that before heading to the bar, where I continued to power through bourbon and took regular trips to the bathroom stalls.

On my way home, I thought to myself, My heart is racingThis may be it for me, I thought.  These may be my final moments.  Though the thought frightened me it did not deter me, and when I arrived back at my apartment complex to find my neighbors smoking crystal in the driveway I joined them, almost daring death, driving myself through dark places in search of a threshold from which I could not return.

I entered my apartment, uncapped the bottle of whiskey that I had waiting there for me, and upended it.  I twisted apart opioid gel caps and snorted their contents to take the edge off. 

All else was lost to the delirium.  The clothes crumpled in the corner, the accumulation of scrapes and bruises, the mud that I tracked into the house – these were the material evidence that I survived despite forgetting.  And when I awoke the next morning I thought to myself, It’s a fucking miracle.

At ten PM, as I set off from Santa Cruz, I contemplated the darkness that had driven me for so many years.  The rain pounded the windshield of my little Kia Rio as I hit the base of the mountains, through which I had to pass on my way to SFO.  The little dips in the highway had already become troughs, siphoning standing water off of the pavement, and I hydroplaned through these troughs, feeling the steering wheel take its own control for brief but terrifying instants.  I saw the traffic around me, and imagined how easily any one of these cars could veer off course, sideswiping me into the retaining wall.  Though I was scared of death, I did not shy from it.  If anything, I drove more aggressively through the storm.  C’mon God, I faced my Maker, you put me here, in fitting conditions for an accidental death, I’m giving you the means, the recklessness, just twist the wheel, God, blow my tire.

What form would that reckoning would look like?  How would I make peace?  How would I come to my own terms, and how would I come to terms with my Creator? 

I was lonely, and I was as lost as I’d ever been.

I made my way through that night, and I made my way to San Francisco Airport, where Charlene stood by the arrivals gate, looking scattered and slightly nervous that maybe I wouldn’t show up.  But I did show up.

I parked at the sidewalk, climbed out of the car, and called Charlene’s name.  She smiled, dragging her luggage over to the curb.  I could smell her when we hugged.  She had a sour odor of the un-bathed after a day of travel.  We loaded her things and set off.

And I found that I had new things on my mind, but I chose to keep them to myself. 

Instead I listened while Charlene talked. 

She was still adapting to motherhood and to the confines of marriage. 

“I’ve always been depressive,” she revealed, “and I’ve never quite been able to figure out what to do about it.  I always liked to drink, but it seems like lately I’ve taken it to a new level.  The drugs that the psychiatrist prescribed me make it so that I can drink tons without ever getting too drunk, so I’ve found that I’m just running through the bottles of wine.  You know what I mean?”

“I do.”

“So then I break out the gin, start mixing myself up martinis, that type of thing.  And it just gets bad.  I don’t want to be doing this around my babies.  You know, it’s not really right.  But I also can’t figure out how to feel good about being a mother.  It isn’t something that I can be flighty about.”

“I can relate to that,” I said.  “Not to being a dad, but just the weight that life puts on you sometimes…”

“How did you do it?”

“What?”

“How’d you stop?”

Because I turned to Charlene, examined her for a moment, recognizing the youthful beauty that had been there all along, that had been present for the past ten years, because I needed, at that moment, to make eye contact and let her know that she was not alone in these struggles, that I understood better than I would be able to explain, I wouldn’t have seen the misplaced headlights, pointed tree-ward, appear from the darkness of a blind turn, nor would I have needed the opportunity for a reckoning with my Maker.

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Vengeance is a Speechless Clown

By Ben Leib

Soso the Clown was born Soren Sodegren, and his rise to clownsmanship was one fraught with complex and troubling emotions having nothing at all to do with laughter.  Motivated by disdain, by fury, Soren was driven to become the best clown that he could be.  And he was able to achieve success.  He was known and coveted by circuses worldwide for his edgy routine, which managed to be dark and seamy without being crass, which succeeded, time and again, at bringing children and adults alike to share in the common merriment of laughter, pure, easy, pleasurable.

There was a time in his life that Soren could partake in this simplest of pleasures, a time at which innocence remained relatively uncomplicated, unadulterated by life’s undiscerning allotment of cruelty.  Although Soren’s parents passed away when he was quite young, he had never really known them, and he had the bountiful love of his grandparents to nurture him.  Despite bouts of mournful curiosity about his parents, Soren remained an uncommonly happy and curious child.  Until, that is, his tenth year of life. 

The Sodergrens were farming folk.  Soren’s paternal line was of Swedish descent, and his mother, a decent, hard-working, all American lass.  Soren’s parents lived on the family ranch with the elder Sodergren’s, who had moved to Iowa decades before with a dream, a dream that the land could provide them with a means of self-sufficiency, which their more intemperate home climate precluded.  Soren’s paternal grandparents had built up their land together.  They worked the days away, sought meaning in the work, and, without much more in mind, the diligent Swedes, over time, found themselves the owners and operators of a lively and thriving agricultural enterprise.  They grew corn.  The Sodergren’s also raised a small amount of livestock.  Agriculture was the business and the animals were much more a result of the Sodergren’s grand philosophy of self-sufficiency: if they wanted meat, by God, they’d have to raise their own.  No different, milk, eggs, butter, cheese, etc.  But, as time went on, even the animals came to garner a not insignificant supplemental income.  Local butchers seemed to prefer the home-raised fowl and livestock that the Sodergrens easily provided over the suspect products supplied by their corporate counterparts.

The one regret that the senior Sodergrens were plagued with during a life of good luck and good blessings, was that they had waited too long to have children.  Locally, members of their small, rural community speculated amongst themselves about the possible causes for the Sodergrens’ childlessness.  “They’re actually brother and sister.  The marriage is a sin and they had to flee to America after being excommunicated by the Swedish Republic.”  “He was maimed during the Great Swedish Uprising, brutalized his parts.  That’s why he has so much vigor for the fields – he can only reap what he can sow.”  “They do things different over there.  They’re heathens, and their marital practices rarely lead to new additions.”  The fact is, there was a shortage of passion in the Sodergrens’ household.  They, of course, celebrated their marital bliss on regular occasions.  But some women, or possibly the contributions of their men, are lazy and unmotivated.  It takes more work, more discipline than semi-regular monthly couplings to ensure that their household will grow.  That isn’t to say that the happy couple did not mutually cherish their intimacy.  They just didn’t have the libidinal drive to practice their marital rights so frequently.

When Mrs. Sodegren finally found herself with child, she was approaching her thirty-seventh birthday.  Mr. Sodegren, who, as tradition stipulates, was the older of the two, was more than half way through his forties when his one and only child was born.  They loved their son desperately, but were not destined to have more than one child.  And, although Mr. Sodegren considered himself secular, with socialist political leanings, he would state, when friends or guests commented on the “quietness” of his home, “Tis God’s will.”

Soren’s father grew to be a local celebrity.  He was a stellar student, both in school and on the farm.  He was a large child, had inherited the ruddy strength of his Nordic ancestors.  He played the line on the local high school football team, was considered one of the all stars, and helped lead his team to a regional championship for the first time in nearly two decades.  Furthermore, it was unarguably because of his power on the defensive line that the team was able to beat the spread at State.  Soren’s father married his high school sweetheart, who shared the love for farming that he had inherited from his own parents.  The new Mrs. Sodergren, Soren’s mother, was far more maternal than her mother in law, and therefore had a passion for the simple domesticities that were otherwise foreign in the Soldergren household.

Soren’s parents also possessed a surplus of the passion that his grandparents seemed to lack.  They mutually agreed that they would populate the Sodergren household as quickly and as bountifully as possible.  Soren’s mother became pregnant with him when she was nineteen, just weeks after their wedding day.  And Soren’s birth marked the most monumentally happy moment in an otherwise very content household.  But that serenity was short lived.  Within months of his birth, Soren’s parents were involved in a gruesome mechanical accident, the likes of which continue to be the subject of whispered lore and porch side gossip in their old community.  The young couple, so happy, so full of potential, died and left Soren’s grandparents to raise him.  It seemed as if the elder Sodergren was correct, as if the household was simply destined to remain limited to a trinity.

Soren lived a happy life.  He was raised with the same discipline for manual labor as had been his father.  His grandparents, for all intensive purposes, treated Soren as their own son.  Life was good, and Soren was so like his late father in every way that his grandparents came to think of him as the incarnate of their only son.

Like many children, Soren developed a fixation on the circus, all the more fervent that the travelling carnivals rarely passed through his rural community.  He loved the acrobats, the elephants, the lion tamers, the ring leader, but, most of all, he loved the clowns.  They were so funny, so unarguably entertaining in their caricatures of the most basic of human emotion and interaction.  Soren collected everything clown related that he could get his hands on: coloring books, figurines, rubber noses, face paint, postcards, etc.  His room was a mausoleum enshrining the simple entertainment of circus life.  His grandparents, who had a propensity to spoil Soren in a way they never had his father, happily purchased these trinkets and collectables without question, possibly contributing to the unrealistically high expectations that Soren had when he finally got an opportunity to go and see a real circus.

Soren’s grandfather came in from the fields at dusk one evening.  Soren had helped his grandmother to set the table, and was waiting patiently for the meal to be served.  “Got some good news for you, boy.”

“What’s that, Pop?”

“Bjurman and Bjorn’s Travelling Circus’ gonna be coming through town.”

“Really!?!”  The great Swedish circus promoters were among Soren’s greatest heroes.

“Sure are.  I got us front row seats.”

Soren arrived at the circus so early that they were still setting up the smaller tents, arranging game booths, cleaning out the concessions equipment.  But Soren was fascinated by this process, by the labor spent in preparing the carnival.  He wandered the fairgrounds like a scholar in a library, like a baby-faced artist touring the Louvre.  On the perimeter of the dirt lots and flattened, dried fields, Soren came across a series of trailers which housed the transient circus performers and employees.  When he spotted a large, elaborately polka-dotted double-wide, Soren knew that it must belong to clown royalty.  He mustered the courage to knock at the door, and a makeupped man opened.  His natty hair was pinned back against his scalp, held in place by metal burettes.  He wore a white tank top under broad red suspenders, which were attached to his too-large, polka-dotted undershorts.

Soren recognized the performer immediately.  It was Yibi the Clown, Yigal Birtrovski, the brilliant Russian emigrant.  “Yibi, is that really you!?!”

“Yeah kid, in the flesh.  Now I gotta get ready for the big show, whadaya want?”

Soren stammered, “I just can’t believe it’s really you.”

“A fan, huh?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Well, tell you what.  Since you were so eager to come out here, to the modest little structure that I call a home, found it important enough to interrupt me while I put my game face on, I’ll do something special for you.”

“Oh yeah?”

“Sure, kid.  Where are you sitting in there?”  Yibi gestured to the big top.

“My grandpa and I have front row seats.”

“Front and center, huh?  Well, there is an important moment during my performance when I need a volunteer to come on stage with me.  I would like you to volunteer.  I’ll pick you out of all the other little boys and girls.”

“Really!?!”

“You bet, kid.”  With that, Yibi slammed the door to his double wide, leaving Soren speechless, attempting to process this glorious turn of events.

His grandfather was waiting for him back towards the carnival proper.  “Well, did you meet any clowns, Boy?”

“I just met Yibi the Clown!”

“He a big one?”

“The biggest, and he asked me if I wanted to be part of the performance.  He said to raise my hand when he asks for volunteers and that he’d choose me.”

“Well, congratulations Mr. Charming, you just talked your way into the circus.”

Soren and his grandfather watched the elephant parade, the acrobats, the high wire act, the lions growling and jumping through flaming hoops.  Each act of the performance was punctuated with interludes, during which Yibi and his counterparts clowned their hearts out.  Yibi was a genius.  Soren watched with an academic attention to detail.  Yibi’s skills were impeccable.  He was a master juggler.  His pantomimes were brilliant, expressive and emotive without being too flamboyant.  He could squeeze his compact frame into impossibly small spaces, was a king of pratfalls and other cartoon-like violence.  Not Scaramouch, not Pagliacci, none of the greats held a candle to Yibi.

The only thing, through the performance, that put a damper on Soren’s immeasurable pleasure were his grandfather’s reticent complaints.  “I’m not used to such a crowd, Son.  I’m a country man.  Got my heart all a flutter, it does.  Got me sweating, boy, I’m soaking wet.  Never heard nothing so loud.  Boy, those big cats are terrifying.  Lord, it is hot in here.  Is your heart beating real fast, Son?  ‘Cause mine’s wantin’ to jump clear out from my chest.”

Finally, as the performance reached its climax, Yibi reappeared center stage.  He took hold of the microphone.  “Now, boys and girls, I’m going to need a volunteer for the next portion of the performance.”  It was the first time he’d spoken during the entire show.  Yibi’s accent was Midwestern, but Soren could still detect a trace of his Soviet roots.  “I need one of you little boys or girls to raise your hand as high as possible, and one lucky child will get to come up on stage with me.”

All of the children in attendance screamed at once.  They flagged their hands with hysterical abandon.  Soren, despite the fact that he’d been promised the volunteership, screamed louder than all the others.  After a moment of assumed deliberation, Yibi locked eyes with Soren, shot out a rigid finger.  “You there!  You, Son!  Why don’t you come on out here and take a bow.”

Soren ran to where Yibi stood, in the center of the ring.

“What’s your name, Son?” Yibi asked, holding the microphone out for Soren to speak into.

“My name’s Soren, Mr. Yibi.”

“Alright folks, let’s have a big hand for Soren!”

The crowd went wild.  While this ado was taking place, a pair of clowns ceremoniously appeared carrying a life-sized horse costume and set it behind Soren and Yibi.

“Okay, Soren, here’s what we’re going to do.  We’re going to put on this here horse costume.  Do you folks out there want to see Soren and I dress up as a horse?”  The crowd again erupted into applause.

Yibi climbed into the head of the fabric horse while Soren tucked himself into the rear.  All the while, Yibi maintained a constant and unerringly hilarious soliloquy about the perversities of men becoming horses.  Finally, tucked away inside the horse costume, Yibi screamed, “Alright Soren, I’ve got a question for you.”

“What’s that, Mr. Yibi, sir?”

“If I’m the horses head, then what does that make you?”

“I don’t know sir.”

“That makes you the horse’s ass!!!”

The audience erupted into laughter.  Soren wilted under the derisive pleasure of an audience that, he could now see, was so willing to turn on him.  Humiliated, now frightened, Soren struggled to break free of the horse costume, and his struggles served to humiliate him all the more.  He felt like he was suffocating which caused him to panic, wrestle with the fabric of his moist, claustrophobic bondage.  He emerged to the sight of Yibi pointing that long finger at him, howling derisively, thrilled at successfully having demeaned this young boy.  When Soren turned to his grandfather for some sort of emotional assistance, guidance in this unorthodox situation, he saw his elderly guardian clutching at his chest, struggling painfully.  The audience members around Mr. Sodergren, each of them standing and pointing and laughing, were too occupied with their own entertainment to notice this flailing old man.  Soren tried to run to him, but Yibi caught him by the collar, held him in place on stage to linger in his humiliation.  Soren struggled and eventually escaped from the clown’s grasp.  He ran to his grandfather, but by the time Soren reached him, his limp body was slumped forward on itself, resting, hunched and motionless.  Mr. Sodergren, after a lifetime of hard work and familial devotion, died in the circus that day.

It was a day that Soren would never forget.  He made a vow, then and there, that stuck with him thorugh life, guiding every waking decision he would make from that day on: “I’m gonna get that fucking clown!”

The funeral was a somber affair, but Mr. Sodergren was mourned by the entire community, as well as many business associates from around the state.  Attendance at the funeral totaled over one thousand.  Soren allowed himself just until this day to grieve.  He accepted the genuine sympathies of those around him.  He cried uncountable tears.  But, once Mr. Sodergren was buried, once that loose clay sealed him in his deathly conveyance, Soren hardened himself.  He remembered his declaration of vengeance, and he vowed to make good.

Mrs. Sodergren seemed to lose her zeal for the work after she buried the love of her life.  She had never possessed excellent managerial skills, was never so good at politicking as her late husband and business partner.  Now, without the will to exert herself any longer, without a clear and focused long-term picture that she could drive toward, she was forced to make some difficult decisions about the running of the business.  It was ultimately decided that she would set up a small board of business men and lawyers, who would run the farm and manage her properties.  A sizable trust was set up for Soren, wills made out, percentages allotted, all to ensure that Soren would be comfortable, for Mrs. Sodergren no longer had the conviction to teach her young grandson the family business.  She retreated more and more into herself, until the time came that she barely left her room at all.

That being the case, it was not difficult for Soren, as he approached his thirteenth birthday, to enlist his grandmother’s support when he chose to apply to a French boarding school.  He had a special school in mind.  Ever since his grandfather’s death, Soren had been studying the various clowning arts, and, in the course of his research, had discovered the best clown school on the planet.  It was a performing arts academy located in Marseille.  L’Academie Lumiere emphasized a grounded education in all facets of performative theater: acting, singing, dancing, comedy, along with the more conventional high school curriculum.  Classes began at seven AM, and ended after the sun set.  The most dedicated students did even more: scriptwriting, live performances, rehearsals, promotion.  Soren knew that L’Academie was the perfect place, the only place, for him to lay a true foundation in anticipation of his emergence into professional clowndom.

“But that would mean that you’d be leaving me here all alone,” Mrs. Sodergren protested.

“I know that, Nana, but if I’m not going to learn about the family business, it’s a good idea for me to go to school some place where they can teach me about a different kind of job.”

“But performing arts?”

“It’s my passion.  You know it’s what I’ve loved my whole life.  And Grandpa left us with the money that I can do these things.  I can find out what I love.”

Mrs. Sodergren remembered leaving her own family as a teenager, embarking on an adventure and a new way of life.  She knew that she couldn’t keep her plucky grandson from exploring his own sense of destiny.  He was growing just as quickly as his father had.  She could see this unique, almost adult personality already emerging, and she knew that it would be a sin to stifle such individuality.  It would have been selfish to keep Soren from pursuing a real education.  After all, how long could he be expected to stay out here, in the middle of nowhere, to play nursemaid to his mourning grandmother?

“Of course you can go my darling.”

Despite a rigorous admissions process, despite the staggering level of competition, Soren was accepted to L’Academie.  He moved to France at thirteen.  Soren quickly became the pride of his French boarding school.  He excelled in all of his courses, but emphasized theatrical acting, improvisation, makeup, and, of course, the more traditional clown arts.  His slight of hand rivaled that of the most skilled pick pockets of the Parisian café districts.  He could balance, fall, jump, and tumble–his physical acting was extraordinary, prodigal.  By the end of his first year, Soren was choreographing and orchestrating some of the best received performances that L’Academie sponsored.  His comedies were entirely nonlinguistic; they relied on the emotive brilliance of Soren’s gestural acting.  They were simultaneously hilarious and tragic, and all the more funny in the bravery with which they acknowledged life’s profound unfairness.  In his most remembered first year performance, Soren and one of the more seasoned clowns played hobos, stuck on a railroad track, waiting for a boxcar that would never arrive.  The two clowns incited gales of audience laughter as they fought over their limited supply of Sterno, struggled to keep a small fire smoldering in the rain, were duped by a stealthy dog out of their small ration of bones, et cetera.  Needless to say, Soren became a point of pride, a beacon of success in his prestigious academy.

Soren would return for short holidays to the family farm several times a year.  His grandmother fell ill during his third year abroad.  Soren was sent for.  He took a leave of absence from L’Academie to see his grandmother through her final days of consciousness, and then to see to the affairs of her funeral.   He met with the board responsible for the maintenance of the family business, and was assured by them that his property remained in good, capable hands.  Though Soren mourned his grandmother, he returned to France even more embittered.  There was nothing now to deter his unswerving desire for vengeance against Yibi, the clown who had catalyzed all his disillusionment, all his honest despair about the nature of humankind.

Soren graduated at the head of his class, indeed, he was the number one student in all of L’Academie.  He costarred in a performance that headlined the end of the year production.  He wrote, choreographed, and casted a thirty minute routine, which featured three clowns trapped in a flaming building and ended with the revelation that they were, in fact, suffering in purgatorial castigation.  Despite the obviously macabre content of the performance, Soren again managed to elicit the glee, the hilarity of this arguably distasteful circumstance.  He was rewarded with a standing ovation, bowed to the audience, but all the while repeated the mantra, “I’m gonna get that fucking clown.”

After graduating L’Academie, Soren found that he had made a name for himself in the avant garde clowning and miming circles.  He toured briefly as an adjunct to, then headliner for various experimental performing arts troupes, always to great critical acclaim.  But, despite his successes, he knew that he needed more professional tutorship before he could market himself as experienced and capable in the profession.  Because no true clown colleges existed–those offered in comic books, on late night radio, being shallow mirages of formal institutions–Soren found himself compelled to seek the mentorship of an established clown, someone willing to pass along the knowledge of experience to a young student.  Soren needed an apprenticeship.  He decided to track down the most famous clown alive, the undisputed master of physical comedy, a genius envied and admired the world over, Yojimbo-Bo. 

Unfortunately, Yojimbo-Bo, the Japanese master, was also the most elusive clown alive.  Soren spent a full year searching the globe for his coveted tutor.  Soren drew on his significant trust funds as he skulked through the opium dens of Nanking.  He adopted the shrewd entrepreneurial savvy of Hong Kong’s manic businessmen.  He hobnobbed with anorexic artists in the SoHo district of Manhattan.  He toured the juke joints of the southern US, and landed in the wild flamboyance of San Francisco’s subcultures.  Soren’s abilities to adopt the idiosyncratic nuances of any character allowed him to adapt to the various cultural circumstances in which he found himself.  He so seamlessly adopted nuanced, complex personalities that he himself was barely aware of the schizophrenic nature of his existence.  Soren’s search led him through South America, where, word had it, the master made a rigorous study of various indigenous theatrical traditions.  Back in Europe, Soren’s inquiries led him through to traverse the gamut of the most developed countries’ red light districts.  If nothing else, it became clear to Soren during his travels that the honored Yojimbo-Bo made a lifestyle out of partaking in all of the hedonistic vices humankind has to offer.

Soren would get a fresh lead.  Yojimbo-Bo had been performing at smoky hash parlors in Amsterdam.  The master was busking on New Orleans’s Canal Street.  Someone had seen a hunched Asian man in ill-fitting robes doing ingenious pantomimes of unsuspecting passersby on Haight Ashbury.  At times, Soren felt he was on the heels of his fabled hero; he could almost smell the lingering sweat, the unmistakable fumes of cake makeup.  And at other times, it seemed to Soren that Yojimbo-Bo was a thing of legend.  He felt he was following a trail years, decades, centuries cold, long after the old clown had made his mark.  It was impossible to discern myth from truth.  The only optimism that Soren could glean from his hunt were the constantly renewed reports that someone had spotted Yojimbo-Bo at this place and at this time.  Descriptions of the performer followed a general pattern, evidencing the existence of a man known to his audience as Yojimbo-Bo.  Though often robed, the master was unassuming, blending anonymously into any crowd.  He was monastic in his vow to silence.  Everywhere he went, he was mistaken for a vagrant or a harmless lunatic until slipping into one routine or another, at which point all who witnessed the master roundly agreed about his brilliance, his genius. 

The trail ran cold in Perth.  Soren felt he was so close as he worked his way through Okinawa.  He could barely contain his excitement as his plane landed in Australia, convinced, as he was, that he would at last cross paths with Yojimbo-Bo.  But, after spending a week in Perth, Soren had not come across a single account of the aged performer.  On his tenth afternoon in Australia, Soren was more discouraged than he had been at any point over the past fourteen months of travel.  He was considering returning to Japan in order to begin afresh, a gloomy prospect, as he ambled along Saint Georges Terrace. 

He passed the Concert Hall and the Government House, barely aware of the newness, the unfamiliar cultural significance of his surroundings.  As he came across a series of kangaroo statues marking the Council House, Soren noticed an unassuming elderly man inspecting the stationary marsupials.  Soren instantly forgot his woes, if for but a moment.  The intensity with which the old man gazed at the statues was funny.  Soren willed himself not to laugh aloud, so as to avoid embarrassing this simple old tourist.  When the man began petting the critters–reticent as he approached them with outstretched hand, recoiling nervously as if they might bite–when he began attempting to endear himself to these inanimate objects, Soren nearly choked.  The old man was so innocent in his desire to befriend these representations of kangaroos, that he seemed almost to converse with the statues, as if brokering some primal compromise, all without speaking a word.

By the time the old man developed the courage to mount the largest of the sculptures, Soren himself was climbing the spire statue in the lawn, not twenty feet from the old man.  Soren found himself, almost without forethought, a ruddy, salt-worn seaman, climbing the mainmast, working, step by step, into the crow’s nest.  Soren, the sailor, felt the icy gales, the intensity of the headwind, the frozen spray of parting swells, and he climbed the mast in search of light, in search of some distant shores toward which to set the ship’s sails.  He plotted a course in hopes of survival, in hopes of rescue.  Unfortunately, there were also pesky birds up there, obstacles which he had to dodge, had to swat at and take cover from.  The wind became a character, taking Soren’s hat over and over from his head, causing him to lose his balance and his focus.  In this spontaneous performance, comedy came in the form of obstacles.  But there was an odd hilarity in simply watching Soren focus on those unseen distances, hypnotically swayed by an imagined ocean.  Upon descending the statue, Soren’s audience of one, the lone Yojimbo-Bo, applauded slowly.

Over a steaming cup at the Indiana Tea House, Soren explained to Yojimbo-Bo his need for a tutor.  “Master, I have been developing my craft since I was ten years old.  I am a graduate of Marseille’s L’Academie Lumierre.  I left the school top of my class.  I have received numerous accolades for performances that I both wrote and starred in.  I am fit, as it stands, to join any circus touring today, but, more than fame, I want to improve my craft.  I believe that only you, the undisputed master of clownsmanship, can educate me in the true craft of clowning.  I would be utterly devoted to you, would willingly abide all instruction without question, suffer the drudgeries of physical labor and the torments of despair, if you would agree to accept me as your apprentice.”

By the way that Yojimbo-Bo stirred his tea thoughtlessly, by the way that he refused to meet Soren’s pleading gaze, Soren knew that he was being snubbed.  “But you must take me!!!”  Soren arose violently.  Yojimbo-Bo looked up at Soren with an exaggerated look of shock, an expression of confusion that seemed to say, “Now where is this passion coming from?”

Soren looked the master dead in the eyes.  “I know a man named Yibi the clown.  He conducted the performance at which my grandfather died.  He humiliated me onstage while my grandfather’s stout heart failed him.  I must avenge my grandfather’s death.  I will make Yibi pay.  I’m gonna get that fucking clown.”  Soren was composed as he said this.  He spoke in a near whisper.  But the vehemence of his words, the palpability of his emotions hung in the room like the earthy vapors of some rich and intoxicating brew.

Yojimbo-Bo motioned Soren back into his seat.  He stared at the young clown, as if those wizened old eyes could decipher the very substance of identity.  As if the hidden mysteries of the human unconscious unfurled themselves before him, he gazed, first hard, then questioning, then, softening, he took one of Soren’s hands in his own.  Yojimbo-Bo had accepted his first apprentice in over three decades. 

For the next three days, Soren and Yojimbo-Bo worked a duet in the various public spaces throughout Perth.  Soren had never busked for money, had always possessed the sufficient means to fund his education, his travels.  But his master wordlessly refused Soren’s offer of payment in any form.  He insisted that an apprentice could not pay his master, that the bounties of the educator were reaped in loyalty and transcendence through the talents of another.  Busking gave the duo an opportunity to play off of each other’s idiosyncrasies, to challenge each other.  Soren was competitive by nature.  He was unabashed in his willingness to take risks during public performances.  But he could also tell that his new master was unimpressed by these cavalier and blunt comedic decisions.  Soren could sense that, while working in a partnership, Yojimbo-Bo had also been making a study of his new student, scrutinizing his every movement.  That said, the silent pair were nothing short of genius.  After three days performing on the streets, they had begged enough money for airfare and travel expenses to the Hyogo Prefecture of Japan.

Yojimbo-Bo’s studio, a remote and monastic edifice that seemed to grow from the northern mountains on which it stood, could only be reached by foot.  Once stuck on the mountain top, Soren found himself encumbered by an all-encompassing aloneness, the likes of which he had never known.  Villagers made random appearances from time to time.  Knowing that the famed clown was back in residence, they came to pay homage bearing armloads of food stuffs and other supplies, and through such charities Soren and Yojimbo-Bo were able to subsist.  In this mutual isolation, gratified only by a mutual love for their craft, Soren and Yojimbo-Bo survived for the following seven years without any report from the world at large.

Within two months of arriving in the Hyogo Prefecture, the winter season set upon them.  It seemed to arrive with the intent of driving out the two spiritually sustained artists.  The snow isolated them, secluded them within the master’s studio for weeks at a time.  During this period tutorship was focused entirely on meditation.  Yojimbo-Bo stressed a life without spoken language, and insisted that this was only possible through serenity.  If the self was at odds to express aloud its fragile desires, then the self had not been mastered, had not been emancipated truly, could therefore never approach genuine artistic excellence.  Soren at first fought against his mentor with an internal savagery that brought him to the brink of madness.  But as he relinquished his will, though slow and begrudging it may have been, he began to attain an internal peace mirroring the whiteness of the landscape in which he dwelt.

As winter gave way to spring, as the snow melted, as the colors began to return to the mountainside, so too did Soren find rebirth.  Yojimbo-Bo found it appropriate to begin a more concrete mentorship of his apprentice.  Class took the form, primarily, of educating Soren in the arts of wordless performance.  Of course, there were the physical trials of balance, strength, endurance, climbing, falling, flailing, diving, rolling, but these more obvious slapstick elements of performative comedy were considered base by Yojimbo-Bo.  They were begrudgingly perfected and utilized by the old clown as essential stock tools of the trade, but were considered crass, inferior to the true brilliance of subtle emotive expression.

The years passed.  Soren became so enraptured by the old clown, that he almost managed to forget his own family.  After three years had passed without communication with the board of trustees, Soren knew that he had forfeited his right to the family fortune.  He trusted and liked the members of the board, but they were all ruthless business men at heart.  They could have Soren declared legally dead after three years without contact.  Soren had travelled the world before disappearing.  The board would search, but they would never find him.  They would dismantle the family farm, sell it in parcels, and divide the proceeds amongst themselves.  On the anniversary of their third year together, Yojimbo-Bo performed for Soren.  It was a comedy in which a young monk, who had inherited a great property, was murdered for his fortune.  The decipherable moral of the tale: a fortune not earned is only an encumbrance.  And Soren had come to so trust his mentor that he took this advice as irrefutable.  He did not mourn the loss of his property.

Soren’s talents grew immeasurably.  He had been egoistic as a young man, fresh out of L’Academie.  Had he been asked at the time whether he knew all there was to know about clowning, he would have responded, “Damn near.”  While he recognized the importance of an apprenticeship, he’d thought of it primarily in strategic terms–no one could ever rebuke the student of Yojimbo-Bo the Clown.  But now he saw that he had known nothing, nothing before he began that arduous mountaintop training.  Up there he learned to speak without words, conveying, non-linguistically, a fluency of performed language that was related to speech in its capacity to represent narrative, but also fundamentally different from it.  Acting required audience interpretation.  His spectators had to decipher this performed language in the moment of its articulation.  Soren had to learn to preempt, assume, and manipulate his audience into feeling just what he wanted them to feel, all the while ensuring they retained a sense of freedom that they could feel special, unique in their privileged understanding of the performance taking place.  Performance became interactive.  Soren could never again be the professional standing before his spectators, separated from them, elevated above them onto a different and unbridgeable plateau of existence called the stage.  With the crook of a finger, a twitch of an eye, Soren could make the most stoic observer break down in tears, erupt into laughter, break all standards in the etiquette of public professionalism.  He could convey epic narratives wordlessly. 

During the seven year apprenticeship, Soren and Yojimbo-Bo rarely performed for a crowd.  Occasionally, once or twice a month when weather permitted, they hiked into the local village where they busked on the streets for an impromptu audience.  They became almost folkloric locally, and dedicated artists would make pilgrimages to their unpopulated end of Hyogo Prefecture in hopes of catching a glimpse of the brilliant duo.  These unrehearsed performances sometimes lasted for an entire day.  By their end, every member of the community would be in attendance, laughing in unrestrained pleasure.  As payment for these semi-regular performances, the villagers provided Soren and Yojimbo-Bo with all of their basic necessities and their survival was ensured.

After seven years as a mentor, Yojimbo-Bo performed a private and unexpectedly personal routine for Soren.  The performance had obviously been rehearsed to perfection.  It was a story of a talented, up and coming clown, beginning to make his way in the world, only to be stifled again and again by the jealous cruelty of one of his competitors.  The young clown had approached the world bright eyed and bushy tailed.  He expected men of talent to embrace him, to work with him towards a common goal of entertainment.  But the resistance he met in the form of very young Soviet prodigy was astounding.  He had never met such a man, a man so driven by envy and greed and selfishness.  At first, Soren believed Yojimbo-Bo’s tale to be a parable for Soren’s own experiences with Yibi, but, as the plot thickened, he realized that his own mentor nursed a long-standing grudge against the famous Russian clown.  In an act of drunken jealousy following a particularly embarrassing showing, the Soviet expatriate succumb to drink and set fire to his rival’s circus trailer, knowing that its occupant was still out celebrating his success.  The Russian doused the trailer in gasoline and struck a match.  Unintentionally and unknowingly, he was about to commit murder.  There was a young Gypsy child who had been employed by their travelling circus to help clean and care for the animals.  The protagonist of Yojimbo-Bo’s story, clearly Yojimbo-Bo himself, had taken in the young child, had begun teaching him the clowning arts.  That child had grown under Yojimbo-Bo’s mentorship, and, as the boy entered his teenage years, he came to prove himself something of a prodigy.  The boy was sleeping peacefully in the trailer when Yibi set it ablaze.  Yojimbo-Bo’s first and only apprentice perished in the fire.  Soren, who had begun to know peace, found renewed in his mind a promise that he had made years before, “I’m gonna get that fucking clown.”

Yojimbo-Bo’s private performance, despite being the most melancholy he had ever enacted, was also the funniest.  Soren, as the only audience member who would ever witness this masterpiece, found himself torn by his ambivalence, his simultaneous need to laugh and to cry.  He was so enraptured by the genius of Yojimbo-Bo’s work that he couldn’t help but memorize every second of it.  Soren’s sense of bittersweet privilege at having witnessed Yojimbo-Bo’s finest work was exacerbated by the fact that it was the final performance enacted during the life of the old master.  Within days of the performance, Yojimbo-Bo fell ill.  The old man refused medical attention, refused even to let his young mentee out of his sight.  Soren had to sit and watch over the following weeks as his teacher, his spiritual advisor, wasted away from pneumonia.  At least Soren assumed it was pneumonia, which made the waiting, the watching, all the more devastating that the sickness may have been easily treated.  But the old man felt it was his time to go.  He would not allow Soren to persuade him otherwise.  With his final breath, Yojimbo-Bo broke his decades-long vow to silence, “Because the path will never be clear to you, because revenge only contaminates the very art that you’ve spent your life perfecting, because you will never genuinely participate in the laughter you evoke, you will, from here on in your life as a performer, be known as Soso the Clown.”

Let us not speak of Soso the Clown’s hike back to the village, bearing in his arms the fragile and withered body of his beloved mentor.  Let us not mention a community ravaged by grief, the tears that marked the end of a life dedicated to laughter.  Let us forget the months that followed, defined by a melancholic vagrancy, during which Soso the Clown spoke not a word, lifted not a finger to perform, took his nourishment from soup kitchens and charitable souls, as he inched his way back to his country of birth.  And let us not speak the words that drove him every step of the way, the mantra that he had striven, for a fleeting and brief period, to transcend, “I’m gonna get that fucking clown.”

If Soso the Clown’s despair seemed immeasurable, then it might come as a surprise the momentum, the inertia of his rise to stardom.  It began when he first stepped foot back on his parents’ old land.  Now a vagrant, having worked fleeting and often degrading jobs for sympathetic men who would put up with his ineffectuality, with the inevitability of his abrupt departure, Soso arrived home a broken man.  During his travels, he worked only until he could afford the next leg of his return trip, then he moved on.  Back in Iowa, in the rural community that he had grown up in, he returned to the childhood experience, however fleeting that may have been, of working on the land.  Because of his upbringing, he was perfectly capable of laboring on a local farm.  And because he was a local boy, many of the landowners went out of their way to find work for Soren.  He rebuilt strength, rediscovered his vigor, on the very same that soil had brought his own family success in a new land.

As news spread locally about the return of Soren Sodergren, a man who had been presumed dead, a man whose land had been sold out from beneath him, more and more folks offered their condolences.  Locals went out of their way to make Soren feel at home.  He was never short a room to rent or a home cooked meal to nourish him.  And the same folks, being themselves so unused to outlandishly dramatic happenings in the neighborhood, had endless questions for Soren.  “We were told that you’d died, what happened?”  “Where have you been?”  “Your parents died in that awful thresher accident, am I wrong?”  “Shame about your grandfather.  You two were really close, right?”

Faced with questions about his absence, Soren was compelled to reveal details about the past decade of his life.  Because he had seen the world, because of the unbelievable nature of his experiences, he became a local eccentric.  Folks couldn’t believe that the young boy who’d been subject to so many family tragedies, who had now returned to work the fields, that this young man had travelled the world entire, that he had studied with a master in the snowy heights of Japan, that he had willingly let a fortune fall from his fingertips in pursuit of a passion, the intensity of which was foreign to all who dwelt in those parts.  The demand for Soren’s labor shifted, from a need for able hands in farming duties, to a desire for entertainment.  Soso the Clown’s reemergence into public performance came at the behest of the community that had raised him.  And to rediscover his passion before their eyes seemed a fitting arrival.

For over a year, Soso performed locally.  He made appearances at carnivals and festivals countywide, he entertained at private parties, when demand was slow, he even busked in the town square, and in this way, Soso made a content living.  But, news travelling the way it does, from mouth to mouth, from town to town, on the leaves of newsprint from a quaint lifestyle section, Soso’s notoriety gained momentum.  His existence had not been a secret.  It had been known, whispered about among circus promoters, the subject of drunken reveries between devoted performance artists, that Yojimbo-Bo had taken an apprentice.  When the mysterious new talent disappeared in the wake of Yojimbo-Bo’s death, mourning had been the common assumption, and a curious, expectant, devoted audience waited patiently for Soso to resurface.  So, upon discovering Soso’s humble existence, the devotees descended upon his sleepy Iowa town in droves.

Soso’s local performances became a thing of legend.  The county fair couldn’t nearly accommodate the number of attendants that had made the pilgrimage to see Soso perform.  He had been bombarded with offers from promoters, but it wasn’t until the wooden bleachers of that county fair nearly collapsed under the weight of the revelers that Soso realized he could no longer sustain a lifestyle of relative anonymity.  He accepted a job offer with none other than Bjurman and Bjorn’s Travelling Circus.

Soso’s humble biographer will not bore the reader with details of Soso’s years with Bjurman and Bjorn.  The clown was a success.  From the beginning he was a headline act.  He was brilliant and he could draw a crowd.  He choreographed routines.  Soso took to studying music.  He learned to play the organ, and began composing the soundtrack that accompanied his routines.  With a seemingly limitless budget, he could afford the sets, the special effects, the visual spectacle that other clowns only dream of.  And Soso was more than a clown, he was a genius, a true artist of historical brilliance.

But there was another, more pressing explanation for Soso’s employment with Bjurman and Bjorn.  All these years after the fact, all this time since that one defining and life-altering moment in Soren’s youth, Yibi the Clown was still in the employment of Bjurman and Bjorn’s Travelling Circus.  Soso got his first look at the now decrepit, arthritic, dyspeptic, alcohol-jaundiced cretin within a week of joining the circus.  Yibi had not been a young man at the time when he’d pulled a youthful Soren out of the audience.  He was now determinedly old.  But Yibi’s fame and his stalwart ruthlessness in the face of competition had ensured him a place in that renowned circus for life. Yibi adapted his routine over the years to better suit his ever advancing stages of life.  At the time Soso entered into employment with Bjurman and Bjorn, Yibi’s performances began with the clown hobbling into the center ring at a snail’s pace, aided by his tennis-ball-shoed walker.  He then played the caricature of an embittered, demented old coot, bossing and cajoling a fleet of bumbling worker clowns as they attempted to landscape his yard or perform simple maintenance around the house.  Soso watched the act and was forced to admit through gritted teeth, despite himself, that Yibi’s routine was funny.

But Soso had something else in store for the elderly clown.  He immediately began choreographing his special routine, the revenge act, in which Yibi would play a decidedly integral role.  Of course, no one would see the true performance until the day came when he could enact it before a live audience, but, to achieve that, Soso had to find a way to enlist the support of the circus’ promoters and the participation of Yibi.  The former was not difficult to gain.  Soso had constituted such a revitalization to the lifeblood of the circus’ dwindling popularity that its promoters would have done anything for him.  He had only to mention to them the notion of uniting their two stars into a single show, and they promised him the world in support.

Yibi was a harder sell.  The old clown, not having any idea that he’d met Soso once before, in the long and distant past, hated his new rival.  He was indignant, reproachful, cruel, even conniving and in his dealings with this competitor.  He spread rumors about Soso.  He whispered in barrooms about Soso’s allegedly syphilitic delirium.  He told elderly patrons about Soso’s rumored proclivity for a special brand of teenage Vietnamese lady-boys.  He insinuated that inhalants were integral to Soso’s creative process.  Yibi let the air out of Soso’s trailer tires, literally.  He slipped laxatives into Soso’s breakfast cereal.  But, somehow the younger clown’s popularity never waned, his performances only continued to grow in their brilliance and hilarity.

Soso, for his part, focused on the big score, ignored the incremental vengeance that seemed to drive and give meaning to Yibi’s waking existence.  He nevertheless took immeasurable pleasure in knowing the discontent he was causing the old clown.  Yibi was infuriated by Soso’s fame and success.  Soso’s reputation as a prodigy perpetuated a flurry of raving reviews.  His popularity had a momentum of its own.  He could do no wrong.  But, with such a competitive relationship mounting between the two clowns, how could Soso ever enlist Yibi’s willing participation?  Yibi would never agree to a costarring role.  He would never agree to participate in a performance, to which he was not the accredited choreographer.  Soso plotted.  He knew that he would have to appeal to Yibi’s narcissism.

To recruit Yibi, Soso presented him with a script in which Yibi’s character would be so selfishly dominant and Soso’s character so servile, that Yibi wouldn’t be able to resist.  The old sadist wouldn’t be able to turn down an opportunity to publically subjugate his prodigal competitor.  Furthermore, Soso based this mock-script on the very performance in which Yibi had first inalterably redefined the trajectory of Soso’s life–the horse’s ass routine–thereby obligating Yibi an authorship credit.  In the proposed script, Yibi and Soso begin the routine standing center-ring.  Two clowns would approach them, carrying the old horse costume like it was the sacramental garb, embodying the spirit of renowned and enduring genius.  Soso would enter the rear end of the horse and play the fool, attempting to operate that two man costume entirely on his own while Yibi stood aside and silently mocked him through acts of caricature violence.  Yibi must have thought Soso a true fool, and he was so entertained by this foolishness that he agreed to participate in the performance.  Of course, Soso had plans of his own.

On the opening night, Soso’s script was billed as “the collaboration of the century.”  The souvenir playbill that the circus published referred to the duo as the “meeting of the mumblers.”  It boasted that, “never before have two geniuses collaborated so selflessly, shared the stage so cooperatively.”  It promised to present, “the most brilliant and unique comedic performance art in recent history.”  The featured performance was to take place during the final minutes of the show, directly preceding the acrobats’ stupendous finale.  As was always the case, the big top was full, the room was sold out.  As Soso applied make-up, as he painted himself the hapless fool, he saw, in his reflection, the eager cruelty of vendetta.  Had he the opportunity to sacrifice Yibi on stage, in front of thousands of cheering spectators, he would eagerly have performed the role, done so with gusto.

The lights were blinding as Soso made his way into the big ring.  He was energized by thunderous applause.  He saw the silhouette of Yibi, arms raised, basking in the glory of an ill-achieved fame.  Soso submerged, always controlled, into the character of the fool.  He was a buffoon as he tripped and plodded his way into the spot light.  Together, he and Yibi hammed it up before being presented with the ceremonial horse costume.  Yibi played the exasperated old mentor clown, while Soso, the dimwitted apprentice, failed to grasp the directions provided.  Yibi silently demonstrated the art of their shared craft.  Soso the fool could physically mimic the instructions that he was given, but he could never grasp the comedy, and therein lay the humor of that opening bit.  Soso’s character was so nuanced that he could express these hapless and good-intentioned attempts at comedic mime in a way that garnered audience-wide laughter while he failed.

Then, as Soso knew it would, came the moment of truth.  Two clowns, dressed in monkish regalia, stepped forth from the darkness bearing the horse costume.  They laid it respectfully, delicately at Yibi’s feet.  After solemnly giving that tattered costume the silent respect that he felt it deserved, Yibi lifted its rear portion and motioned for Soso to enter.  Up to that point, the act had gone according to script.  But now came Soso’s opportunity.  He scanned the crowd, blinded in all directions by the glare of the spotlights, but feeling the presence of those thousands of expectant spectators.  He could smell the hay, the elephants, the stale popcorn, the dryness of the earth beneath foot, the vaporous moisture of thousands of human bodies.  His mind raced.  He knew what he had to do.  He hadn’t lost his drive.  He remembered his first trip to the circus, his humiliation at the hands of Yibi.  He remembered his grandfather’s death, and, years later, that of his grandmother.  He remembered the single-minded drive that he felt all through school.  He remembered Yojimbo-Bo, that revered and well-deserved genius.  He remembered Yojimbo-Bo’s own solemn narrative, remembered that old clown’s indomitable spirit, his will to laughter despite profound personal trauma.  Soso remembered his own experiences travelling the globe, first in search of an elusive mentor, then as a broken man returning home.  He recollected the cultures in which he was welcomed, the adventures he had.  Even as a poor and broken man, his hermitage had been, not only a healing experience, but a growing experience.  He’d had expansive, irrepressible life in him.  And he hadn’t even known it existed.  He’d known success and he’d known devastating impoverishment.  He remembered the support of his hometown, those good, simple folks, who were so eager to lend encouragement to Soso’s strange and barely recognized art form.

A tear came to Soso’s eye as he allowed his mind to wander.  Then he raised his gaze once again to that crippled, rheumatic old villain.  Yibi tensed, gestured evermore urgently for Soso to step into the costume.  Soso gritted his teeth, overcome by a rage known only to those who have experienced a sense of unadulterated helplessness.  In front of all of those fans, in front of a world of spectators who had unwittingly agreed to witness a brilliant and inspired act of revenge, Soso pointed a saber-like finger at Yibi’s hunched form.  Having forgotten the details of a meticulous and elaborate plot, without knowing what he was about to do, Soso screamed, “Fuck you, Clown!!!”

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Filed under Literature, Short Story

My Legacy as Written in the Lives of Kin

By Ben Leib

Because I liked to drink, because I, in fact, drank to unhealthy excess, various folks, family members in particular, enjoyed disclosing their own experiences with the bottle.  Sometimes these narratives took the form of confession.  My paternal grandfather, for example, occasionally confessed his proclivity for inebriates, emphasizing the self will that he had to exert in order to abstain.  My grandmother derided my grandpa’s addiction to opiates in his later years, when he took an ever-increasing supply of painkillers to subdue the agonies of physical deterioration.  Janice, my stepmother, discussed her short-lived but intense stint as a cocaine user, which ended with her holing up in an apartment and hiding from the trees that loomed over the front windows.  Reeva, my cousin, wrote her Ph.D. dissertation on twelve step recovery, which she utilized to address her addictive relationships to both food and sex.

Everybody had a story to tell.  Certainly they were cautionary.  The intended message was stop fucking around.  But there was a confessional element to these tales as well.  Everybody has lived.  Everybody has done things of which they are not proud.  And yet, they take the experience gained through these debaucheries as a point of pride.  The eagerness with which these tales were whispered was telling.

There was another breed of story that I heard.  Also cautionary in nature, folks wanted to inform me about ancestors who had been notoriously liable to the temptations of inebriates.  In my father’s family, these stories were very much the exception.  Although his mother’s line exhibited a very prevalent strain of mental illness, my dad’s kin were, for the most part, pretty upright and responsible folks.  My mother’s family was different.  I barely knew them.  I didn’t have a relationship with a single member of Mom’s clan.  They were, one and all, drug addicts and alcoholics.  They were bikers, hermits, convicts, rapists, gamblers… low lives.  They were violent and uneducated.  I’d met members of her family – my grandparents, my uncles, a few cousins – enough times to accept the verity of the stories I would hear about them later in life.

Learning about my family lineage, both paternal and maternal, I had the superstitious habit of projecting onto my own personality, the traits that I came to believe must have been inherited genetically.  I was like an overzealous psychology student with an inclination toward psychosomatic illness: I diagnosed myself.  Mental disabilities, dubious ethicalities, a do-wrong right mentality, these were my hereditary legacy.  I paid no mind to ancestral heroisms, to the political organizers, the mathematical geniuses, the European revolutionaries, the Pentateuch scholars.  Rather, I absorbed the stories of the misfits, made studies of their narratives as if in them I might discover, if not the key to, then the reason for my own madness.  The tragedy of my own life (for what else could it be) paralleled a history of tragedy over which I had no control.

My mother herself, who’d grown to become one of the most disturbed addicts I would ever meet (and I’d spent time with my fair share of junkies), was the only source I had for information about my maternal family.  Because I did not communicate with my mother’s relatives, it was up to her to educate me on the unforgivabilities of the human condition.  In these stories, I found great justification for my despair.  My great-grandfather, as the only patriarchal figure my mother spoke of, became something like legend for me.  To this day, I possess a feeling of great kinship, an existential bond to this man who I never met.  He became something closer to legend than human.

He was an Irish drunk, an alcoholic of historic proportions.  As medical detoxes were less common in that time and place (that time and place being depression-era mid-western United States), my great-grandfather relied on his regular stints in county jails and other mandated institutional sojourns to dry out for short periods of time.  His condition was hopeless.  He’d sweat, seizure, and hallucinate in the safety of a jail cell, and would dream fondly of the approaching day when he would once again find himself with that old familiar bottle in hand.

He prided himself a car thief.  “In those days,” my mother explained, “that was a really serious crime.  There weren’t so many cars on the road, so it was harder to get away unnoticed.  Also, because cars were kind of newer back then, it was way harder to afford them than it is nowadays.  Stealing a car was like stealing someone’s house.  They took it really seriously.”  Although grand theft auto was the skill by which my great-grandfather supported his family, he was not good at it.  He was wanted in multiple states.  His irresponsibility necessitated a transitory life.  My great-grandparents and their five children were constantly on the move.

At one point the inevitable happened: my great-grandfather, after multiple offences, received a somewhat lengthy prison sentence in Detroit.  He was generally incarcerated for about six months out of any given year.  But those sentences mostly consisted of short stints in county jails.  He skipped out on any court dates that he could.  With three years in prison looming, his family despaired.  Because stealing cars wasn’t the most reliable living, he plied his trade as a refrigerator repair man when he was sober enough to hold a job.  Although he was a liability, he was also a breadwinner.  Though he wasn’t the ideal father, his children loved him.  They wanted their dad around, even if he was a violent, drunken man.

Mom told me this story as we drove up 101 to the River Rock Casino.  Such outings exemplified my and my mother’s relationship.  Once every couple of months, I’d visit Sonoma County.  I’d catch the bus up to the Santa Rosa transit center.  Mom met me there, and together we’d drive to an Indian gaming parlor where she’d play the slots and I’d lose money at the card tables.  The only real visiting we did was during the drive itself.  As my mother described her own grandfather, it struck me how closely she had followed in his footsteps.  I’d witnessed the chains that bound my great-grandfather imprison my mother two generations later, thereby concretizing the precedent for my own alcoholism.  The gears turned.  My interpretive sonar detected with acuity the invisible, subterranean flows of meaning, the rumbles of destiny’s tidal machinations.  There but for the grace of God go I, I attempted to reassure myself.  But where was my grace to be found?  Could the narrative itself provide some sort of map?  Though I dared not heed their warnings, could the tales somehow indicate nodal points in the road where I’d best lay each progressive footstep?

My grandmother, Bernice, thirteen years old at the time that my great-grandfather went to prison, developed a plan.  She wasn’t the brightest kid, but she was astute enough to understand that the President of the United States is a powerful man – powerful enough to pardon any prison sentence.  My great-grandmother was not the most responsible of parents.  She could barely keep track of the children without her husband around, nor did she bother to try.  Bernice decided to pack up two of her younger siblings and pay a visit to the Commander in Chief, Herbert Hoover.

And it is here that the story momentarily shifts focus from my great-grandfather, to my grandmother.  Bernice, along with Ray and Irene, managed to hitchhike from Detroit to Washington D.C.  They managed to get into the White House.  They somehow gained entry to the Oval Office.  They got Herbert Hoover’s ear.  They asked the President for their father back.  And the most unsympathetic President in U.S. history was faced with a choice which required him to weigh emotion against rationality.

More than half a century later, a certain women’s television network, known particularly for making original movies, produced a film based upon this family saga.  It has been quite some time since I’ve seen The Angel of Pennsylvania Avenue, so please forgive any misremembered inconsistencies.  It’s not a film that gets re-run on a regular basis.  It’s not a movie that was released for distribution.  The Angel of Pennsylvania Avenue is a made for TV movie, with all the accompanying schlock and morality.  My great-grandfather is represented as innocent of the crime for which he’s imprisoned.  The film rationalizes details about the story that I find dubious at best.  For example, how was my great-grandmother unable to keep control of three of her children?  These kids were obviously running from something as much as they were running to something.  In the film, the children are helped along their journey.  Happy hoboes, a charming puppeteer, a slew of do-gooding stereotypes populate the American countryside, unselfishly lend support at every turn.  It’s a feel good movie.  The cliff hanger comes when Hoover shuttles the kids out of the White House and sends them on a plane back to their mother.  But the payoff, oh the climax of that magical film: Christmas morning, congregants crowd the pews of a large church.  Grandma Bernice prays to the lord for their father’s release.  In a cathartic moment of emotional frenzy, Papa appears in the doorway of that great religious sanctuary.  A Christmas miracle has occurred.  The film ends with the picture of a benevolent and sympathetic angel, none other than President Herbert Hoover, smiling as he gazes upon the snowy lawn from the White House window.

The general details of the story are true.  My grandmother, my aunt and my uncle travelled together from Detroit to Washington D.C.  They hitchhiked across the country, the oldest of them, my grandmother Bernice, thirteen at the time.  They covered the most ground on a Greyhound bus, for which a sympathetic manager gave them tickets.  They did get Hoover’s ear.  And Hoover, in an unprecedented moment of empathy, pardoned my great-grandfather.  But there the accuracy of that creative piece of religious jingoism ends.  The film made a heartwarming story about an event that, to me, seems so much more amazing in its own sad tragedy.

In 1932 Herbert Hoover was not the most admired man in the United States.  Infamous for his inability to relate to the populous which he represented, Hoover faced the battle cry of the American media once it got wind of these three children begging for their father’s pardon.  The president was confronted with a tough decision: either lose more credibility in the eyes of a struggling nation, or abandon his fundamental policy of penal retribution.  He chose the latter.  My great-grandfather was pardoned for his crimes, and released from the Detroit prison.  But Hoover always got his cake and ate it too.  My great-grandfather was wanted on felony warrants in multiple states.  After the media blitz surrounding his incarceration, authorities across the Midwest learned of his whereabouts.  He was extradited within days of his release and re-imprisoned elsewhere.  “He was pissed off.  Mom had actually fucked him over and he ended up serving more time than he would have if he’d never gotten that pardon.”

Furthermore, because the family’s assets were limited, Bernice had very little in the way of compensation for the benevolent folks who helped her and her siblings to reach their destination.  “Mom said that she had to ‘trade feels’ for rides.  Now I can only guess what that means.”  So my grandmother prostituted herself in order to secure transportation for her and her two siblings.  The expression “trade feels” left me with a lot of questions too.  Who was feeling what?  Was Grandma Bernice giving hand jobs, or simply showing off her tits?  Was this quaint euphemism an understatement?  Was Grandma actually fucking dudes in the cabs of trucks while her siblings waited patiently on the roadside?  “I don’t know if I told you this,” my mother informed me, by way of further genealogical explication, “but Aunt Irene spent years working as a call girl.  Do you remember her at all?  Even as an old woman, she looked like a hooker, in those high heels and sequined miniskirts.”

Mom told me the story and my world suddenly made sense.  Hookers, alcoholics, neglectful parents and car thieves – this was my legacy.  I listened and was granted the key, the missing piece that I’d sought all along.  I knew now.  I understood my roots.  Bernice, who I’d known a bit, was an angry, abusive old bitch.  My mom, whom I adore with the love and empathy only accessible to one who truly, deeply, profoundly understands, knows, inarguably, the object of their affection, was crazier than a shithouse rat.  Forget my dad’s family history of political insurgency, refugee emigration, scholarly pursuit, noble rebellion; I was a member of mom’s clan.

“My brother, Doug, wrote this sappy editorial comment about the film.  That lying, asshole, piece of shit acts like mom and grandpa were some kind of saints.  He says that my grandparents died of natural causes, and that Bernice was forced to become the head of their household.  He claims to be writing my mother’s biography – like the real, un-fictionalized version of events – but if that’s the story he’s going to tell, he might as well make another TV movie.  Did I ever tell you how my grandfather died?  He was a hopeless alcoholic, and he couldn’t take care of himself anymore – let alone his family.  One day, he decides that suicide is the best option.  And what better way to kill yourself, what better way to ensure that you don’t survive, than to use a shotgun?  My grandpa shot himself in the face with that shotgun and he lived!!  It’s like, Jesus, you can’t even do that right?  He lived for like three years after that.  The only time I met him, he was in the hospital.  It was terrifying.  He was missing half of his face.  He looked like some kind of monster, you know, with this big hole showing all the bones and blood inside.”

It’s sick, I know, but my mother and I laughed the entire time she was telling me this story.  While I can still find the humor in the making of a family film based upon biographical events in the lives of a teenage prostitute and a drunken criminal, it’s now more difficult for me to see comedy in my great-grandfather’s attempted suicide.  But, at the time of its telling, I cackled with hysterical abandon.  Something about my mother being horrified by this hapless bastard who was her grandpa, something about the utter absolutism of his failure… It was funny.  But the laughter was also an uncomfortable symptom of the lurking knowledge, the sinking awareness, that there, with no cognizable grace to my name whatsoever, went I.  I related to my dead ancestor.  I now saw that my own shortcomings were written in blood.  The genetic material that coursed my veins predestined tragic failure, a failure upon which my lineage was founded.  And in that moment, I fully expected to spend the end of my days in a hospital bed, breathing tubes crammed down my esophagus, half my face blown to fragments.

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Pyromaniacs, Bored and Young (Second Story)

By Ben Leib

Someone gave Randy a homemade blowtorch for his birthday.  It was well constructed, looked almost commercial-grade: a steel frame mounted with shoulder straps supported an oxygen tank and an acetylene tank side by side.  Hoses ran from the tanks to the torch itself.  Though I knew that he was taking a welding class, I was shocked to discover that someone had gifted Randy such a dangerous toy.  The man’s biggest aspiration with metalwork was to create an enormous barbeque from a steel drum.  Not only did his dreams of welding strike me as fleeting, but, and more importantly, Randy wasn’t the most responsible guy on the face of the planet.  Because of an inherent strangeness that drove him to inexplicable acts, I never put anything past the guy.  So, in my mind, giving Randy a blowtorch was tantamount to giving a small child a paper bag full of broken light bulbs – it was cruel precisely because he might choose to play with it.

“You guys want to go try it out?”  Randy was thrilled with his new toy.

“What the fuck are we gonna do with a blowtorch?” Hector demanded.

When fire and Randy united, it was a combustible marriage.  I wouldn’t say that he was a firebug in the traditional sense: he wasn’t compelled by some irresistible and internal force to set the world aflame, though I cannot say that he wasn’t empowered by the witnessing of destruction.  So, despite the fact that his vandalistic tendencies were not compulsive, despite that they were not necessitated by some psychological drive against which Randy was powerless, they were satisfying nevertheless.  And because this was the case, he dedicated himself to destructive vandalism of all kinds, considered them something akin to acts of recreation.  And because of his eccentricities, because of a clear cut difference between him and other specimens of humankind, a difference that he’d been made aware of since emergence into cognitive thought, Randy had a grudge against civilization, and against our hometown.

That said, if he got an opportunity to evacuate our little city and ignite one gigantic and celebratory bonfire, he wouldn’t hesitate to strike that match.

 “I’m fucking tired, dude,” I complained.

“Well, this’ll wake your ass up,” Randy said.

“Seriously, Randy, what do you think we’re going to do with a blowtorch?” Hector asked.

“We’re gonna weld Corbit’s gate shut.”

We pulled off of the road and into the mouth of the driveway.  The gate was closed and locked, and beyond it the driveway curved uphill for another two hundred yards or so.  I viewed Corbit’s house silhouetted in moonlight and could discern no signs of waking life.  There was enough of a gap between the gate and the main road that Randy’s car remained out of sight and provided some cover from any traffic that might happen to pass at that hour.

“So what’s the big plan Randy?” I asked.

“I’m going to actually weld the links of the chain together so that it’s one continuous loop holding the gate closed.  They’re gonna have to get bolt cutters down here if they want to go to work in the morning.”

“I wish I could see Corbit’s dad when he tries to unlock the fucker,” Hector chuckled.  “Could you imagine them climbing the gate to get out of here?” Hector savored the image, “Corbit’s dad all decked out in his work clothes.”

Hector and I watched as Randy hauled the blow torch from the trunk of his car.  He had dismantled the entire thing before putting it into the trunk, tanks of gas stored at opposite sides of the car.  Any safety precautions taken by Randy were reassuring.  He inserted the tanks into the steel frame, reattached the hoses and the torch itself, and began adjusting the pressures of the gas tanks, allowing a certain ratio of oxygen to acetylene.  He then turned a few knobs at the base of the torch.  Randy ignited the torch, which burned orange red.  As he continued to adjust the gas ratio, the flame grew, narrowed, and deepened in color to a hazy blue.  He looked enchanted as he stared into that intense blade of flame, the blue reflecting the blue irises of a Promethean supplicant.

Hector and I took our places beside Randy as he attacked first the pad lock, then the chain links themselves.  When Randy was done, he stood back.  “Well, gentlemen, what do you think?”

We inspected the welding job.  “Little sloppy, don’t you think?” Hector asked.

“Hey look, this isn’t precision welding.”

“Good God, Randy, I had my doubts.”  I tugged at the chain.  The weld was solid.  “But you did it.  Corbit’s definitely gonna need bolt cutters to get out of here tomorrow.”

When we got to the junior high, Randy drove through the dirt lots at the side of campus.  He pulled onto one of the paved walkways between classroom buildings so that the car wouldn’t be seen during a routine drive through. 

“So what the fuck do you plan to do here?” Hector asked.

“We’re gonna burn through the change box of the pay phone,” Randy announced.

I groaned.  “Oh, you’ve got to be shitting me Randy.  That’ll take all night.”

The payphone was located at the front of the school, on the trespassing side of a chain link fence that marked the school’s entrance.  Randy ignited the torch.  Once he had the ideal flame, he got to work on the thick steel of the chrome coin box at the base of the payphone.  It took an eternity for Randy to pierce the metal itself.  He crouched, goggles affixed to his bony face, reflecting the fountain of sparks and flame that danced away from the point where heat and metal collided, and he looked mad in his intensity, a man consumed by a project demanding complete devotion.

“Let me take a stab at that,” Hector said after an hour or so.

“Fuck off,” Randy told him.  “I got this, dude.”

When he was getting close to cutting the face off of the change box, Randy screamed for us.  “Well boys, our hard work is about to pay off.”  Moments later, a chunk of steel about three inches square fell to the ground.  Because the change box was red hot, we had to wait for it to cool, anxiously hovering around it like a trinity of alchemists before a cauldron sure to produce gold.  We could see the change glowing inside. 

“You better not have fucked up the coins, Randy,” Hector said.  He had gloves on, and was the first to reach into the box.  “Ow, fuck, my Isotoners.”  The leather blistered on two fingers of the glove.

“Fuck it,” Randy announced as he pulled the straps over his shoulders and reignited the flame.  He walked to the chain link gate at the front entrance of the school and began welding the hinges on the latch.  “Give ‘em a couple of surprises for the morning.”

I imagined the administrators, the adults who had suspended me, who had been my sworn nemeses in junior high, all standing around a welded gate, baffled.  I imagined them getting onto the campus and finding the face burned away from the pay phone’s coin box, and I was satisfied.  I felt as if we’d accomplished something that night.  A fleeting and strange mark, an annoyance, a hindrance had been struck and I laughed and laughed to think of its making.  Indiscernible among time’s millions of fleeting little pranks, that evening’s undertakings nevertheless had the potency to make me feel that I could exert some force upon the universe, and though itself fleeting, I clung to that empowerment.

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Best Of The Terrible Lies

By Ben Leib

During flood season, Dr. Sherman asked the students if anyone’s home had sustained water damage. Petaluma was having a tempestuous winter, and some of the at-risk neighborhoods had flooded, leaving several blocks of houses evacuated and uninhabitable. In the worst cases, houses were entirely submerged.

As Dr. Sherman took attendance, each student offered the same answer to his question: “No, no I did not get flood damage.” After hearing twenty students repeat the question in Spanish, after hearing them confirm, in Spanish, that their homes had been spared the high waters, it was my turn to respond. I hate the monotony, I thought to myself.

 “Did your house sustain any flood damage?” I repeated the question in Spanish. “Yes,” I responded, “my house was damaged by the flood.”

 “My God.” Dr. Sherman reverted to English. “That’s terrible, what happened?”

“It was pouring out. We knew about the warnings, but figured that the water wouldn’t be able to sneak up on us. It was the middle of the night when the house flooded. When I fell asleep the driveway was under water, and it just kept rising. When I woke up, the water was creeping over the edge of my bed – it didn’t make a lot of noise like you’d expect. If I’d slept any longer, I might have been trapped. I might have drowned.”

Dr. Sherman sustained a chorus of sounds, each meant to express new levels of amazement and empathy.

“I live over on Payran. The whole neighborhood flooded.” It wasn’t true. I lived on the east side of town, in a residential neighborhood of upscale prefabs. I did know somebody, my friend Hector, who lived on Payran Street where the flooding was the worst. His house had sustained some water damage, but nothing close to the destruction that I was imagining.

As Dr. Sherman hemmed and hawed Emmy jabbed me in the side with her pencil. “You’re full of shit.” She smiled.

 “What happened to your family?” Mr. Sherman asked. “Is everybody all right?”

“Yeah, everybody’s fine. My brother was at my mom’s house, but I had to get my dad and my stepmom out of bed. They’d slept through the whole thing and had no idea thing’s had gotten so bad. If the water had filled our house like that, we knew it was at the same level outside. The cars were flooded… Everything.

“We waded through the house. By then it was above our waists. Debris floated through the hallway and in the living room. All the things we took for granted bobbing around our house. And it was pitch black. There was no way to know if a bedside table had floated in front of a door, or that a bookshelf had fallen across the hallway. We made it to the front door, but couldn’t get it open. Maybe something was blocking it or water pressure was keeping it closed…

“Since the front door was out of the question, we knew a window would be our best bet. The water level reached to the base of our kitchen windows. It was dark out there too. The streetlights were all out, so it was only the moon, but when we looked out the kitchen window, we could see how high the water had gotten. It had risen to about a foot above the window and was sloshing against the pane. My dad positioned himself on top of the sink, so that he could get a footing. He warned us to get out of the way…”

“This is unbelievable. You’re lucky to be alive.”

“The water poured in and just swept him off the sink. It was so powerful that it ripped the screen out of the frame. It broke both window pane. My dad cut his arm when he fell off the counter.”

“It took a couple of minutes to get out. The water was filling the entire house. We couldn’t force our way through the current. We gathered in the corner of the kitchen, knowing that there was broken glass and that the pressure was probably carrying pieces through the house. All the stuff floating around the surface followed the current into the living room, down the hall, and into the bedrooms. We could hear this whistling of the air being forced through any unsealed door or window frame. The yard debris poured into the house. Finally the water levels equalized.”

“Then we swam up to the kitchen window. My dad went first, then I went, and together we helped to pull my stepmom through. We couldn’t stand in the backyard. The water was deep enough that we had to wade and swim. But it wasn’t quite high enough that we could climb onto the roof…”

Emmy jabbed me with her pencil again. “Tell him your dog died.” Emmy’s approval was my fire.

“Once we got outside, my stepmom started screaming, Leroy! Leroy! Our dog had been chained to the tree in the back yard. My dad and I swam over, but the branches were underwater, and they kept us from getting close. My dad dived under the branches. But it was impossible to know which way you were swimming. The water must have risen around Leroy. His leash was long enough that he could have swam around at the surface and survived, but he got caught in the branches. We couldn’t save him.”

“I am so sorry.”

“We lost everything. There were helicopters out with their spotlights shining into the water, looking for people stranded in their houses. Several blocks had been flooded, and we started swimming west. As it turned out, earlier in the day my neighbor had pulled his outboard canoe out of the garage. He originally did it for fun, you know, just floating around while his house sank. But then he started helping people out of their houses when things got bad. As he pulled up to us, I saw who it was.

“He brought us up towards the boulevard, three blocks, from my house to the railroad tracks behind the Lucky’s shopping center. That’s where the canoe bottomed out, and we could walk again.”

Dr. Sherman was astounded. He wasn’t making noise anymore, just stood slack-jawed, staring at me.

“We called my Grandparents from the payphone over by Lucky’s, and they came to pick us up. I stay with my grandparents pretty often, so I had some extra clothes over there. Luckily, I do all of my school work there as well – they live right up the street – so my books and my homework were safe. Other than that, everything we owned was destroyed. The house looks awful. The neighborhood’s still flooded, but the water level has gone down enough that we were allowed back yesterday afternoon to see if anything was salvageable. Nothing survived. It’s just mud and debris. We had Leroy cremated, and we’ll bury him in the backyard once we can move back. Until then, I’m staying with my grandparents.”

“What an adventure.” Dr. Sherman said. “What a tragedy.”

“It’s been tough.”

“Can we do anything to help you? I mean, as a class? I could organize a day trip to help with the clean up.”

“No, it looks like we’re going to have a pretty easy job with clean up. We have pretty good home owner’s insurance, and repairs are taken care of. But they’re only going to give us so much, and that will cover repairs, but we’re still going to have to replace everything. What we really need is money.”

After the telling, class proceeded as usual. Emmy and I worked together on our textbook exercises, and forgot about the lie. As the bell rang and the students lined up by the door, Dr. Sherman called me to his desk. “Can I have a quick word with you?” he asked.

“Sure, what’s up?”

“I’ve been considering it, and I’ve got something that I want to give you.” Dr. Sherman slipped me a check, folded in half. “I hope everything works out for your family,” he said as the bell signaled the end of the school day.

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