Saturday, January 31, 2015

Fumbling Toward Love Painfully: A Short History

Often people look back on adolescence as an amusing, if not embarrassing, period of one's lifetime. Despite the fact that, on the surface, it appeared to me that everyone else seemed to know what they were doing, apparently not everyone had a fucking clue. At least, that's what I hear. Jury's still not quite out on that one. I can only speak for myself.

And for myself, I can boldly proclaim that I did not have a snowball's chance in hell of succeeding in the game of Love, nor did I have the faintest clue what I was doing. In that polluted fishbowl of teen-dom, it's a wonder I could see three feet in front of my face. My paranoia made for a filmy filter when it came to sussing out what was reality and what wasn't. Coupled with a crippling self-doubt, a non-existent sense of self-worth, cystic acne, braces and glasses until I was thirteen, devils would surely put on their own star-studded Ice Capades revue before I had a boyfriend of any degree.


There was never any question as to my sexual affiliation. When people claim that they knew their sexual orientation as early as three or four, some scoff and turn up noses. I'm living proof-- I knew when I was four. I liked boys. And I never ceased to like boys for one moment onward. I was crushing from the age of at least four or five. When I was six, I was going to marry Shaun Cassidy. When I was seven, possibly Shaun Cassidy or R2D2. But that's another story.


Middle school was a hotbed of hormones. And I would embody the term that came about twenty-plus years later: hot mess. Royal hot mess. Nothing could quell my ardor. I fell in love with an eclectic band of seventh-graders, a group of about five friends, who were like characters out of a movie to me. They were smart, funny, a couple were musically and dramatically inclined. There was just something chemically attractive about each one of them, and the fact that they were all friends made them into a delicious package to my hormone-addled brain. This crush extended on to my 7th grade and their 8th grade year.


How I could not be self-aware enough to realize just how badly I was embarrassing myself by sending notes and letters and other such rubbish to them is beyond my capacity now. I even received notes back from one of their girlfriends, telling me to back off (in the nicest of ways, believe it or not)-- you would think that would have made me cool it. I occasionally would call one of their houses, hear his voice, and then hang up (oh, those glorious Stone Age days of no Caller ID). Then there was the time that a friend and I were engaged in softball practice in a field conveniently located across the street from one of the guys' houses. We made up some half-baked story about how I needed to use the bathroom, and would it be okay if we came in for just a minute? He had a perplexed look on his face, as he was acquainted with my friend but probably more than a little wary of me, perhaps thinking I was going to leave some weird voodoo doll in the hallway toilet or something, but politeness won out, and I was invited in, where I pretended to use the facilities. I'm not quite sure what the point of my doing all this was, other than to say that I'd been in his house. All I remember is how god-awful ugly the color scheme of the wallpaper was-- a strangely Seventies' red and silver reflective paper that would no doubt induce vomiting if one had had too much to drink.


It makes me cringe to recall it all, even today. Needless to say, my affections were not returned by any of them. That period was so ridiculous, it deserves its own blog post. But apparently I knew on some weird psychic or chemical level that I was on to something; one of the objects of my awkward affections went on to found an eclectic nonprofit dance troupe that gained some notoriety for its innovative and often-bizarre performances; another found modest success in a band that became known in the tri-state area; and still another become a very successful producer in Hollywood, at the helm of some big-name films you would all recognize.


MATCHMAKING 101

I had a friend who was a year ahead of me in school, yet our birthdays were separated by a mere month, and thus our schooling had been determined by our ages in whatever respective state we were living in at the time. Anyhow, she was never to be described as a raving beauty. She was a scrawny tomboy with flaming orange hair, a face full of freckles, braces, and a pretty obnoxious bravado. She was smart, but insensitive and sarcastic. How she wound up with a GORGEOUS boyfriend from the local Catholic boys' school is still beyond me, but, there it was. The dynamic duo must have decided that it was a real pity that poor, fat, zitty, ugly Heather had no boyfriend, so they teamed up to play matchmakers.

Her boyfriend had a friend, John, who like myself had no other half. I can't remember how the transaction occurred, but they gave one of us the other's phone number once granted mutual permission, and John and I began a phone friendship of sorts. We would talk for what seemed like hours; he had a dark, sarcastic sense of humor, which I loved. I could make him laugh, which I also loved. He seemed sort of quiet and unassuming, but the sense of humor was definitely the binding/bonding thing for me. I had no idea what he looked like, and at that point, it really didn't matter. In a sense, the "courtship" on the phone was rather akin to today's Internet romances, in that even though you're generally looking at a photo, you really don't know exactly who you are talking with, but you go on a feeling and a mutual set of likes. It was nice to be talking to a boy who genuinely seemed to want to talk to me. It was uncharted territory. I hadn't experienced likes of which since elementary school, when I was a royal tomboy and most of my best pals were boys, with whom I could play kickball and football and basketball, tell dirty jokes and roll around in the dirt without it being "weird."


Naturally, the next step would be for us to actually meet. My friend invited her boyfriend, his friend John, and me to her house one afternoon. Because we were all total dorks, we had agreed beforehand to play the electronic D&D-type board game Dark Tower and hang out. So I got a ride to her house, and there standing in the driveway I saw my friend, her boyfriend, and John.


John was a chunky, lumpy, sneering 15 year-old.


Now, to be clear, at fourteen, I hadn't yet developed that sense of empathy for all people. I mean, I had a great deal of dorky friends whose unique-ness I embraced and loved (probably because I was unique and dorky myself, in my own way), and I could easily find the good in a lot of people that would be tough to find by most others. But when it came to the opposite sex, I had sadly been weaned on 80's teen flicks wherein the hero had feathered blonde hair and the preppy polo collar turned upward, et cetera, ad nauseum. (Well, there was that stereotype, and then there was the androgynous British rock stars of questionable sexuality, but again, that's another whole story.)


And I know that I was no Bo Derek, but come on.


I have very little memory of the afternoon, other than playing Dark Tower in my friend's living room, but I do recall that John was distant and cold toward me, his rotten attitude further compounded by my perception of his physical appearance, and those narrowed, beady eyes of his, buried in that fat face, framed by yellow curls. I did my best to hide my disappointment, knowing at my core that looks weren't really what mattered, even though my 14 year-old self wished he looked a bit more like Michael J. Fox or Rob Lowe, or any member of Duran Duran.


At some point, I learned that John asked my friend's boyfriend, "I thought you said she was CUTE..?"


Needless to say, that was the end of our phone friendship, or any contact whatsoever. Apparently he had hoped I looked a bit more like Ally Sheedy, or some scary heavy metal slut from a Motley Crue video. It was all relative, I suppose.


MATCHMAKING 2.0

Fast-forward to the ninth grade. My friend and her boyfriend were still going strong (and I still don't know how or why, and probably don't want to know how or why). Enough time had passed that they must have decided that hooking me up with yet another friend of her boyfriend's was the only way to go. And like a fool (even though I had a host of crushworthy boys in the 9th and 10th grade unwittingly at my disposal), I agreed.

My friend's boyfriend had another friend, Rob, and soon Rob and I were chatting on the phone every day like old friends. I was assured that he was not a lumpy, grumpy, roly-poly snot-rag like John. He had been described as being tall, on the slight side, with brown hair and glasses. Sounded fine to me. I conjured up some picture in my mind, and coupled with his great sense of humor and the hours we spent on the phone, clearly enjoying one another's company, it all seemed to mesh.


Unfortunately, in the midst of all this, my paternal grandmother had fallen ill suddenly, and I was whisked away on a ten-hour road trip with my parents to northern NY to see what the outcome would be. It was a miserable time, having never come close to losing anyone in my family before, and after a week of her being on life support (and my not being allowed to see her "like that"), we headed back home with little in the way of answers, but plenty in the way of teenage bitterness and resentment.


She passed away the following week, so we were off again on another mammoth car-ride, this time culminating in a funeral and much sadness all around. By this time, I had learned that Rob wanted to ask me to a 10th grade formal at his Catholic high school. I obviously couldn't commit to this, since it happened in the midst of my first learning my grandmother was ill, which then turned into two long-distance trips and a complete discombobulation of my life. Apparently, according to my friend, Rob was quite pissed, because he had gone ahead and rented the tux and everything without even asking if that was cool with me. As if I had planned my grandmother's untimely death just to avoid going to a dance? What an asshole.


Needless to say, that was the end of our phone friendship, or any contact whatsoever. It was like déjà vu all over again.


IRONY, MUCH?

Then there was the time when another friend of mine invited me along to join two of the area churches with her and her family. I agreed to do this, despite the fact that I had decided by the age of fifteen that I was surely an atheist, as was requisite when gathering components that dictated one's level of bad-assery at said age. (I wasn't quite worldly enough to declare myself agnostic.) Besides, the anarchy symbol was so punk-rock. I drew it on my notebook binders, on desk tops, and scrawled it on the white rubber toes of my Converse high-tops (and painted it on the black canvas parts of my shoes with Wite-out).

The only reason I went along with joining either of the churches we did was because I loved to sing, and I frankly didn't care what the lyrics were, so long as it gave me an excuse to put my voice to them-- and, more importantly, that I got to stand next to that cute guy I was currently crushing on. He was a year ahead of us in high school, and I don't even remember how I came to know who he was, whether we had a class together, or what. But I was smitten. He was rather quiet, very intelligent and articulate, blonde feathered hair, glasses, preppy collar folded upright, argyle sweater vests... Yes, smitten. Odd, since he had nary an inkling of guitar-playing or heavy makeup-wearing on the immediate perceptible horizon.


Anyhow, I was in my glory when standing next to him on those risers at church, our voices blending in perfect harmony. I could have died right there and taken an express elevator straight to Heaven, that little matter of atheism notwithstanding.


But he didn't know I was alive.


Another friend of mine who knew him in school (apparently shared a class with him or something) approached me one day with a bit of caution. After a few false starts, she finally spit it out, saying that he had asked her to the 10th grade dance, and did I mind-- since she knew how badly I crushed on him-- if she went?  I had never known her to have a boyfriend, and now here he was, my current crush-of-the-moment, asking her to a dance. I was beyond devastated, to be sure, but I put on my best martyr face and of course gave her my blessing. I mean, why not? Who was I to begrudge someone else, particularly a close friend, of having a good time? It would be incredibly insensitive of me to do otherwise. It really did seem they were going as platonic friends and nothing more, but of course the drama that escalated within my imagination went to epic places that I won't even repeat. Surely they would wind up dating, going steady, whatever we called it back then, and live happily ever after. While I sat home alone staring at the walls, perhaps eating bon-bons.


Flash forward a couple of decades-- to learn that my sweet little preppy crush was, in fact, gay. And yet he'd still asked my friend out and not me. It was just one in a long string of Gaydar-on-the-fritz moments I would have in the years to come. I won't bother including those here.


LOVE IN THE PRODUCE DEPARTMENT, PART UN 

When the new GIANT grocery store went up in my home town, it was like a first-job flame to all the high school moths. It seemed like everyone who worked there went to my school. I started out (for a grand total of one day) as a cashier, but after being put on the express line on opening day, it proved disastrous and a serious blow to my ego, and I begged to be demoted to "bagger" status, which meant I got to sack groceries and collect carts in the parking lot.

I later moved to the Produce department where I filled and refreshed the store's salad bar, and basically hung out in the back room chopping vegetables and washing bins. There was another guy who worked back there who was quite cute-- he was older than the rest of us, maybe twenty. He had long feathered blonde hair (oh, here we go) and a faint mustache, liked heavy metal music, and yes, he turned this little girl's head more than once. We got along well, joked around, had fun. But his girlfriend worked in the Bakery-- she was a sweet, innocent-looking thing. I think she was my age, just a living doll, but really quiet and shy, and it seemed an odd coupling to me.


One day, he told me that he had an extra ticket to this concert in Philly, and asked if I would be interested in going. I can't even remember who the band was. But being the ever-cautious (no matter how smitten) chick I was, I thought about it first. I talked to a few friends of mine about it who also worked in the store. It got back to me that one of them, who I had actually thought was a real friend, said to the other, "Well, she'd better go with him-- it's not like ANYONE is EVER going to ask her out or anything." I wound up not going.


PART DEUX

My friends and I were all friendly with this guy Rob (Rob # 2) who was also our age (but went to Catholic school) and worked in the store as a cashier. He was loads of fun, very straight-laced in appearance, but had a great sense of humor, and we always teased one another and had a good time at work. I remember him telling me about his Italian grandmother who actually grew up and lived in the same village as Madonna's grandmother (yes, that Madonna), and they had been friends for years. He had some great stories. As it turns out, I had a little mini-crush on him going on, but figured there was no way in hell he could possibly feel the same toward me, so why let on and ruin a good thing? I came to find out later on through friends at the store that he actually did like me, but figured I never felt the same toward him, so he never asked me out. (Insert facepalm here.) So one of my friends who wound up working at the store basically jumped him like a cat in heat, and dated him into our first year of college, coming home at semester breaks with obnoxiously-detailed reports of the wild sex they both had.

NO, YOU CAN'T MAKE THIS $#!% UP

By my senior year of high school, I still had never had a boyfriend, never been kissed, never been asked out, nothing. The weird thing about my school was that even though it sported the stereotypical cliques, there was never anyone truly left on their own as a complete and total loser. And there was a weird sense of superiority that I perceived from every group. The jocks, the cheerleaders, the honor society, the metal-head burn-outs, the punks, the geeks, the goths, the art majors, you name it-- everyone had friends, everyone had a "clump" that they belonged to, and they all thought they were better than the others. By senior year, and certainly by the Prom, everyone, even the most "hopeless" cases, seemed to have dates.

I was sitting at lunch one day with a friend and other mutual friends, when this guy came and sat with us, across the table from me. He was a friend of the girl with whom I was sitting at lunch that particular day. He and I somehow became engaged in a discussion about music, about the Sex Pistols and the Alex Cox film Sid & Nancy, and he was soon leafing through my art class sketchbooks with much interest and commentary. Before I knew it, everyone else had left the table, and it was just the two of us chatting. That had never happened to me in my entire life. No guy had ever expressed any kind of interest in me, much less my artwork or my weird musical tastes. Then he found out that I wrote poetry, and countered it enthusiastically with proclaiming himself a poet and lyricist as well. Oh, and his name was ROB. (That would be Rob # 3, for those of you keeping score at home.)


For the next several weeks, he and I would talk on the phone and pass notes in the hall to each other. All the while, I would get heated warnings from everyone and their brother. One guy told me "Are you shitting me? He's a complete asshole. He's asked out every girl since the fifth grade. Total loser. Stay away from him." And others told me about how he had been in a bad car accident the year before-- he had been riding his bike behind a station wagon, when the car came to an abrupt stop and he had no time to brake, thus catapulting himself through the glass of the back window, face-first. He had been in the hospital for an extended period, doing much damage to his face (ironically, I did not notice the scars when he and I had talked), and it was said that he was never the same afterward. Essentially, I was warned that he was a completely crazy fuck, and that if I had any sense, I should probably just walk away from any nutty ideas I might have about dating him. But still... It gave me a weird sort of butterflies-in-the-tummy thrill to walk by the ISS (Inner School Suspension) room, finding the door open just a crack, and flinging a folded-up note at him while he sat in one of those horrible public school chair/desk combos, to have him grin back at me through the narrow window before the supervising teaching could take notice.


I would learn through his notes and letters that he was a child of divorce; his dad was a former Marine and a total bad-ass, and his current step-dad was a strict minister, so things at home were not all that cool. But he seemed to adore me, loved sharing poetry and lyrics with me, and he took to calling me "Nancy" while referring to himself as "Sid." Never mind that Sid and Nancy's ending was a pretty bad one. Ah, young punk love. He even had kind of spiky black hair if memory serves, and his eyes were glinting with a little bit of bad-boy promise. We even shared a Scottish heritage.


One day I got a note from him that was full of lyrics, and closed with "So-- if I ever got up the nerve to ask you out, would you say yes? HINT!!!!"  You could have knocked me over with a feather. A boy had asked me out. My senior year, the tail-end of what I'd perceived to be my personal hell on earth, a guy had expressed actual interest in me. Again, being the ever-cautious Capricorn, I had to think about it. I ran it by people, without much in the way of positive reinforcement, receiving instead the same horror stories I'd been regaled with before about what a total dork he was, and how I could do SO much better. Could I, really? Here I was, almost eighteen, and never had ANYone express interest. Tick-tock, tick-tock... 


So I finally decided, yes, I would go out with him. Now, to tell him. To make it "official." To be like everyone else, finally. Individuality was always extremely important to me, being a clone was abhorrent, but deep down, I'd be lying if I didn't really want what everyone else seemed to have, particularly in the case of a boyfriend.

I told my friend who had initially introduced us at the lunch table about my decision, thinking surely she'd support me. I'd known her since the second grade; she was one of the very first friends I'd made when I moved to Pennsylvania at age seven. Her response?

"Don't get your hopes up."


I'm like, what? 


"I can't talk about it. My boyfriend will kill me. I mean, do what you need to do, but... just don't get your hopes up."


What in the frigging hell..? 


The next day, I saw Rob after lunch period, when everyone was loitering in the atrium before the next slew of afternoon classes. He had kind of a sad smirk on his face. "I'm sorry, Red..." he said. ("Red" was his other nickname for me, because of my orangey-red hair that resulted from using a low-percentage peroxide solution mixed in with my shampoo every day.) The reason he was sorry was because he had been busted by his PAROLE OFFICER for underage drinking, and they were SENDING HIM AWAY TO REHAB.


In TEXAS.


By now I'm sure that you can see why I titled this section "NO, YOU CAN'T MAKE THIS $#!% UP." 


You could have, again, knocked me over with a feather. Rob gave me a big hug, and told me he was going to try to come in tomorrow to say goodbye to everyone. He said he was sorry, hugged me close again, and then I had to somehow wander through my tears to my next class like everything was normal.


The rest of the day was a fog. I was in tears for most of it. I didn't have some sort of hysterical hormonal girly-fit or anything like that. Just spilled silent tears that chased each other down my cheeks for the duration of the afternoon. And not a single one of my friends-- my true friends-- knew what to do or say to me. They had never seen me express emotion like this in the open (other than anger, or hysterical fits of laughter), and I guess they all thought he was an asshole anyway, so they couldn't really sympathize with my situation. Their silence made me feel even more isolated and alone.

Poorly-rendered
self-portrait,
 © 1987
I went home that afternoon, sat on my bed, and proceeded to write Rob a goodbye letter to end all goodbye letters that I would deliver tomorrow, to put a seal on the closure. I also pulled out one of my sketchbooks, and, while looking over my shoulder at my bedroom mirror, I sketched a self portrait and then embellished it with colored pencils, particularly the streaks of kohl eyeliner winding their way down my cheek. I rolled it up with the letter, tied it with a ribbon like a scroll, and brought it to school the next morning...

...Only to learn that he had been officially EXPELLED for spray-painting the collective epithet "FUCK YOU [insert last name of our Vice Principal]" on a wall near the bus dock.


I actually heard from him during my first year of college-- can't remember who sought out whom-- only to learn that he was now living in Connecticut, and that he was currently dating someone, and that even though he had "saved himself" for me, these things just happen, and they were happy together...


Thus endeth the tale of the boyfriends who never actually were, but kind-of almost-were.

Monday, January 5, 2015

Untitled (Warhol) © 1994

Photo © 1965 by Burt Glinn
Below is yet another snippet-of-nothing, written more than twenty years ago. I have long been fascinated with the notion of time travel, and the idea often seeped into my scribblings, from middle school and onward.

This was written while in the throes of wickedness with a guy I then adored-- the one who inspired the poem "Selene, She Makes Me Empress"-- I had penned a few short literary exploits of our alter egos, Jimmy and Lydia.

I'd read many biographies about the crazy world of Warhol in my teens and twenties, and was fascinated with the madcap Factory crowd. During a week-long visit with my then-love in Pittsburgh, we visited the newly-opened Warhol Museum, and being around the silver clouds and Brillo boxes must have triggered the idea of perhaps going back in time and space to that insane period, complete with its drug-addled characters. I never really explained how the protagonist "did" it; she had somehow recently discovered her ability to move through time, and now wanted to share it with her beloved other half and playmate...

Again, a trifle. Quite dated, as it was a world without smartphones or instant gratification or 9/11. There's also nothing in the way of editing, and you will by now notice the standard style of a piece possessing neither beginning nor end... 


... she held the postcard before her eyes, which were now glazed-- not out of confusion, but rather with a newfound understanding, as if peering through a window that had been fogged only moments ago, now streaked clear by the sudden, careless backswipe of an invisible hand.

“I wanna go there," she breathed. "And I want you to come with me." Jimmy took the plastic cup of vodka and orange juice away from her free hand.

"You're insane. You've had too much. You shouldn't even be drinking--"

"No. I can feel it, Jimmy. It's so unreal, it's real. It's so insane-- it's sane. Don't you see? It all makes sense. It's not something I can explain. It's not like words, it's... it's feelings." She peered intently at the black and white photo.

"Maybe you were only dreaming, Lydia. I mean, it's just not possible."

"I think I can take you with me," she said, with a tone of finality in her voice.

"Besides, if you really could do it, I mean, there's hundreds of places and times way cooler. Major pivotal points in history. The Inquisition. The construction of the Pyramids, the Great Wall. Vikings. Genghis Khan. Kings, queens, knights, chivalry... wars... treaties... the dinosaurs..."  There went Jimmy, the history buff. She didn't need encyclopedias or museums or PBS. Jimmy knew all, with an almost frightening accuracy.

"Well, I guess our definitions of 'way cooler' are way different," she sniffed, staring at the image of the little silver-coiffed man with the albino skin, who clutched a camera close to his black turtlenecked chest, along with his two spaced-out compadres, circa 1960-something. "I wanna know, I wanna see... those fabulous glittery moments that I've only read about in books... I want to be able to say that I was there... even if only to myself."

"You're insane," Jimmy repeated with a laugh, chewing on a handful of Good n'Plentys and staring at the television screen that played a series of videotaped Duckman episodes. He kissed her neck, and finding it cold, jerked away. "Christ, are you okay?"

"You don't wanna go, fine. I do. I'm going without you."

"You're not serious."

"Is this the face of someone who's kidding..?" Her green eyes burned to a dark brown. No, it definitely wasn't.

"But, like, don't you have to set a time, a date, a place..?" he asked, still chewing the pink and white capsule-shaped candies.

"Details, details. You're obsessed with details. It's not healthy. No, silly. I don't need details. This isn't Back to the Future or  Time After Time. There are no levers to pull, no buttons to push, no destinations to be keyed in. You just think. Focus. But remain in a dreamlike state..." She shut her eyes, and her head bobbed to her chest, her neck going limp. "Come here..." she whispered. "...and don't mock me..." She reached out and took his face in her cold clammy hands, pulling it to her own, pressing his cheek against hers. He flinched, as her skin seemed to be dipping considerably in body temperature. How did she do it? Did she really travel astrally, leaving behind her earthly body to go dormant in waiting? Could she truly surf the waves of time, cresting and beaching herself on different decades of her choice? And how could she take him along? Drag him behind her in an inflatable ethereal dinghy? And did he need a lifejacket for this?

Her lips suddenly found his, and she was licking halfheartedly, forging a link between them, her tongue cold and wet, but not at all displeasing to him. "Shut your eyes..." he heard her say, only she hadn't spoken. She couldn't have made any coherent sentences what with her tongue lingering in his mouth. He obeyed just the same, gazing at the pink and brown patterns, only to find her, grainy, but still Lydia just the same-- she was squinting back at him strangely, up and down, gesturing at his clothes.

"What...?" he started to ask, then felt a hand against his cheek, shushing him. Her image slipped just out of his line of vision, hidden by all the pink and orange patterns that were floating behind his eyelids. Oh. I'm not supposed to talk. I'm supposed to think... her image came back into view again, and in the outside world, the world of his bodily senses, he felt the chilled palm move away from his cheek.       

"You're not honestly wearing that... are you?" she asked. He looked down at himself. He was dressed in his usual t-shirt and jeans combo. She'd never voiced a disliking to it before.

"Jesus, Lydie-- I mean, I realize I have all the fashion sense of a baked potato, but what gives? I thought you liked this shirt. You've borrowed it enough." The t-shirt depicted Marvin the Martian of the Warner Brothers cartoons. It was one of Jimmy's favorites to wear.

She shook her head, rolling her eyes as if at the end of her rope. "Jimmy. We're gonna be with the fabulous people, the beautiful people. The crazy, innovative, artsty-fartsy, decadent--"

"Who gives a shit? Lookit what you're--" With that, Lydia raised her arms above her head, and the white undershirt, baggy olive green pants and black boots all... well, melted away. Granted, the whole motion looked undeniably cool against the backdrop of dreamy swirls, colors and geometric patterns in this in-between world, but nonetheless it scared the shit out of Jimmy. The clothes melted, then morphed (damn, no nudity, to his dismay) into another outfit-- seconds later, Lydia was dressed in a black sleeveless minidress, black tights, black leather hipboots. A silver-looped belt was cinched about her tiny waist. Her hair was no longer fluffed up with spray, but combed flat and shiny against her head, parted over to one side. Her eyes were ringed above and below in kohl, her lashes heavily spidered in mascara, and her lips frosted a faint mauve, her eyelids frosted a sparkly canary yellow. Two big clusters of silver medallions suspended by thin teardrop loops of wire hung at her earlobes, jangling noisily against one another, nearly reaching her shoulders. She pursed her lips, then smiled vampishly.

"C'est groovy, non..?" she giggled. Jimmy was stunned. Lydia had transformed into a sixties' freak in a matter of seconds, right before his disbelieving eyes. "Come on, Jimereeno-- I know there's a Mod in you just clawing to get out..." she purred. "Hey, it's like... I dunno-- think of it as dropping really safe acid... c'mon, trip with me..." Her voice was like honey, and with that his entire body began to tingle-- not in the sexual sense, but rather he felt bathed in a warmth that spread through every cell, coursed through every fiber of his being. He arched his neck back, and felt his body melting, pulsating, undulating into continuous waves of ectoplasmic matter, then coming back together again. Gone were the Looney Tunes tee and jeans-- now he was truly a hipster, in black ribbed turtleneck, black 501's, black scuffed motorcycle boots. Lydia's face beamed in approval. Even his hair had grown in soft waves, flowing to the middle of his back, much to the surprise of his own exploring fingers. It was held in a ponytail by a thin strip of rawhide.

"Holy shit..." he breathed.

"Look at you. You're far out, man. You're like, the epitome of cool..." she cooed, snapping her fingers softly, kissing him full. "Read me some Ginsberg, speak to me about Burroughs, play me some Coltrane... " He pulled away, dazed and tongue-tied,  looking all around for something, anything remotely normal, tangible... something he could relate to.

"We're in an elevator," was all he could manage.

"I can see that," she said, leaning against one of the walls. They were shiny and grimy at the same time, a strange silvery grey paint coating every inch, even the floor. Jimmy touched the door tentatively, pondering the color that had rubbed off against his fingertips.

The door opened with an unsettling clang and squeal, and the scene unfolding before them was one of utter hedonism, chaos, brilliance, decadence, mystery.

"Hi... would you like to be in our movie?" came a small voice, belonging to an equally small, frail-looking man, and Lydia's breath drew inward on reflex. "You're just... just so pretty... so pretty, you should be in our movies..." whispered the waiflike Warhol, reaching into the pocket of his black leather jacket and producing a white capsule which he then popped into his mouth like a candy or coughdrop.

Lydia turned to Jimmy, who was dumbstruck once again. "I... I feel immortalized already," she mumbled breathlessly, at a loss for words. She looked up to see a beautiful young man at Andy's side, one of his Superstars, Joe Dallesandro. Immortalized in Lou Reed's gritty "Wild Side." A lovely specimen, but sexually ambiguous, pretty much like the rest of the fucked-up Factory crowd. Sprawled on an oval black velvet couch lay the hound dog-eyed Taylor Mead beside a chattering Ondine who was twitching every now and again from his penchant for gobbling amphetamines. A tall, leggy blonde with a gorgeously painted face sidled up alongside Jimmy.

"Hello, pretty boy..." she whispered. "We've never seen you before... have a popper..." She held a tiny foil-wrapped hit of amyl nitrate under Jimmy's nose, but before she could snap it open, he turned his face away.

"Uh, no thanks," he protested, but Candy Darling's slim-fingered hands were already weaving a purposeful path down to his crotch. Lydia stifled a laugh. I bet he doesn't know she's really a he... also immortalized in the same Velvet Underground number.   
"Look, she's a black rose, just opening..." murmured Andy, staring at Lydia, rapt, his tiny eyes unblinking behind the black wraparound shades. She was still busy absorbing everything around her. The brick walls had been sprayed silver, the rest layered in foil. Three stacks of silver filing cabinets rested alongside the couch, before which sat a large mirrored ball, the prototype that would be used in discotheques and skating rinks in the decade to come. Ondine seemed to be attempting to grasp the glittering bits of light in mid-air as the ball turned lazily on its mirror-specked dish on the floor. A silent black and white film churned against a screen that was tacked against the far wall, the scene depicting a young man's face only, relatively expressionless. Lydia stared, her cheek feeling unusually warm. This was the infamous Blow Job film of yore...  

Towards the back hovered a striking woman dressed from head to toe in kitschy thrift shop threads, every stitch a slightly different shade of purple-- Ultra Violet, another Superstar...

Sunday, January 4, 2015

Penny Dreadful © 1995

Written back in the day (i.e. long ago) when I still considered the idea of being a fantasy/fiction author. Just a trifle, with neither beginning nor end, and very little in the way of editing...

...he saw her in a corner, cheek resting against the palm of one hand. She was staring straight ahead at the votive candle on the table before her. As she moved her other hand back and forth across the flame, she let it lick her fingers with a sooty kiss. The candle's glow lent some color to her otherwise colorless face, illuminating the deep green eyes buried under a thick swipe of black kohl. She appeared bored; she appeared lonely. James had never seen her before. He had a nagging deadline to reach tomorrow morning with his music reviews for Scorpio Rising.  He hadn't even begun the editing process of his roughest of drafts-- but that could wait. It would be his duty to see to it that the striking creature seated over there was neither bored nor lonely from this moment onward.

“Don't waste your time with her," the owner (and bartender this evening) of the Crow & Key warned in a clipped British accent, wiping a glass with a grey rag. "That there's Penny Dreadful-- s'what we call her, anyways-- she's as quiet as the grave, my friend. Never bothers with nobody. Just sits there is all. Strange bird, that Penny Dreadful. Don't know what her real name is. Never speaks."

"Well, then I guess it's up to me to get her talking," said James, drinking the last bit of foam from the bottom of his glass. James loved a challenge. He didn’t particularly love the bitter brown ale, giving a final swallow and wishing for a nice domestic, bland bottle of anything to rinse the burnt-peat taste away… but what else would one drink in a bar such as this?

Donnie Crowley laughed a gritty, sandpaper laugh. "You go on, then-- give her a try. You'll see what I mean. That there Penny Dreadful, she's a mystery, mate." He gave James a wink. "I've clean given up on figgerin' her out. Time to pass the torch on, I suppose. Looks like a job for a younger, more intrepid explorer."

James stood from the stool and emptied some bills and change onto the bar, when Donnie pushed a bottle of pale domestic ale at him, icy vapor curling from the open neck, as if he had read his mind . "For luck," said the grizzled bartender with a smile. "Maybe you can come up with some clever bit to say to her that none of us have..." James amiably took the bottle and nodded, downing the final bitter swig in the glass that remained, and then started off toward the dark corner.

She was no longer playing with the candle flame, rather just staring at it with a desperate sadness that all but broke James' heart. What was it? The downward cast of her eyes, the downward curl of her lips? He knew nothing of this girl other than the local mystery as retold by a barkeep who was known to dip into the sauce himself on more than one occasion. And yet James now felt compelled to take her quickly in his arms, caressing away all of the misery that clung to her like cobwebs, like graveyard moss.

She turned her gaze to meet his, and his heart nearly leapt from its cage. So beautiful, he thought, so fucking beautiful... He sat down in the chair across the table from her, careful not to appear too eager, lest he should scare her off. But she wasn't moving. Her eyes weren't even dashing about in search of the quickest exit; in fact, they had never left his own. Yet there was still an uneasiness about her, one that was trembling just beneath the surface of the skin. Her entire body seemed clenched, as if at any moment she might spring out of his reach, straight over his head and up into the ceiling rafters, only to scuttle into an even darker corner, one where rats and roaches and ghosts of past conversations fled.

"Hello..." was all that James could manage, and he cursed himself silently. For all the gift of gab that he possessed, his talents seemed lost on this pale wraith before him. She blinked slowly, blackened lashes kissing one another briefly, then parting to show the shimmering emeralds tucked inside. Their hue shifted with the candle's wavering flame, from glints of green to the rusty gold color of autumn leaves. She wore fingerless gloves of black lace, and one hand rubbed a thumb and two fingertips together, smearing the soot of the wick deep into her skin. In the bobbing and weaving of the tiny fire, the lace appeared to be highlighted a deep blood-red, and upon closer inspection James found its inlaid patterns to be intricate, delicate weavings of swirls and roses. The knuckles were hugged in silver rings, all differently-shaped-- ankhs, crosses and claddaghs, bodies of faceless lovers tangled in tantric embraces...

James' eyes traveled back to the face, a face which appeared to be carved from ivory-- finding not a single flaw, neither bump nor scar. Her lips were painted a deep burgundy, though they appeared black in the shadows thrown by the candle's constant flicker. Several charms hung at her white throat, all silver like her rings: more ankhs, strange dragon-like creatures, more crucifixes. A black velvet bustier was laced up to the cleave in her breasts, the sleeves of lace not quite covering her shoulders, and where the sleeves ended, the gloves began. She was a vision he expected to find somewhere else, at clubs like Tantra, the Crypt, the BatCave, the Abyss, on those special Gothic and Alternative Dance nights... not in a tiny, unpretentious side-street English pub like this-- a favorite of his, nonetheless. He didn't want her to assume from his stare that he was some kind of pervert who was merely taking inventory on all her finer assets, but he couldn't help himself. He was a guy, after all. Hormones or not, how could he help but to notice her beauty?     

"Sorry... it doesn't bother you if I sit here, does it?" James asked apologetically, again slightly cursing himself for the less-than-stunning conversation that he was struggling to strike up. She blinked again, bracelets jangling softly as she pushed a long glossy strand of curlicued hair out of her eyes. Much of it was pulled back and restrained by more braided black ribbons, but a few bits poked free to frame her face. James was nearly consumed with this overwhelming need to run his fingers through it. He leaned a bit closer, and could smell spices-- a sweet, smoky scent. Never before had a woman made him feel so positively silly. He'd chatted up hundreds of girls, and later hundreds of women, in his relatively short lifetime of a quarter-century on the planet, but never before had he been at such a loss for words as he was right now. With this bizarre Penny Dreadful, he could scarcely recall where his tongue was. And she hadn't even uttered a single word herself.

"You just look like something's wrong. I only wanted to know if you were all right-- if there was anything I could do." Her lips were now drawn deeper into a pout, and James knew in an instant that his awkward fumbling for just the right words was getting him no where fast.  "What can I say to make you smile?" There. Now there was something. It was witty, it was sweet-- and yet there was no change in her expression. Not even a wince, a look of disdain, nothing. She'd probably heard it all, every cheesy line, every lame come-on from many a stuttering, drunken barhopping fool that had no doubt circled her like a wobbly moth drawn to her most enticing of flames. Still, he couldn't bring himself to give up quite yet. "Please-- I'm begging you. I've never begged a strange woman in a bar for anything. Not even so much as a phone number. And I'm now begging you to smile. If you don't, I'll be forced to sit here until there is the most remote of possibilities that a smile might happen in the next several hours. So please, for the record, I am begging you. You're breaking my heart."

One half of her lips curled into a partial smirk, probably more for his benefit than anything else, and he beamed. "Thank you... now introductions are in order," he said, clearing his throat.

"I know who you are." The ghost actually spoke... James' heart began to pound.

"How could you know?" James extended his hand cordially across the table. “I'm--”

"I know who you are because you've been here before. I've seen you at this bar many times."

"Huh-- I think I would have noticed you," he mused aloud. He most definitely would have remembered laying eyes on this extraordinary creature.

"I only make it my business to be noticed when I want to be noticed," she answered to his unvoiced question. "That stupid Crowley's made a game out of it." She rolled her eyes in the direction of the bar, exasperated. "He sends over as many patrons as he can. It's like the Riddle of the Sphinx to him. A barside carnival show." She lowered her voice, in confidence. "I've tired of the flunkies he sends over each night. There's no mystery to unlock here."

"I see." James continued to gaze on her, his mind clouding with less-than-pure visions and sadistic scenarios of the wickedest kind. He blinked them away. "I reiterate, you're breaking my heart."

"I know all about broken hearts."

"I believe that." James eyed her carefully. "You look as though someone's taken a beating on your heart."

"Life's done that. It happens to everyone, eventually." She gazed into the candleflame, sighing softly. James could smell a citrusy, smoky scent again. "It happens in different ways, of course. Life lays out many paths, but eventually they all meet in the same place."

"Where would that be? To where does Fate draw us? Where do we meet? Here? The Crow & Key?"

"In Death." James shuddered at her answer. Spooky little chick, this Penny Dreadful, pretty little girl with the gothic moniker. Intriguing, nonetheless. He shook off the chill.

"Well, I have the utmost confidence that the two of us'll be around for quite awhile yet. Might as well make the most of it. No future plans of owning a piece of real estate six feet deep..." he chuckled. "You said you know who I am-- care to take a stab at the Name Game?"

"James."

Taken aback, but only for a moment. "Well, that was easy. Shit, some lucky guess. You do this for a living? Stop people on the street and guess their birthdays and weight? Tell their fortunes? You read tea leaves or Tarot cards?" She was back to silent, now clearly unamused. James thought he had better make a quick recovery. "Well, I'm impressed, all the same. I suppose now I owe you a drink for that scintillating display of otherworldly phenomena ."

"You owe me nothing."

"Sure I do. It's the holidays, a time for giving. Here." He reached to hand her the freebie bottle. Cheap move, he thought, berating himself. "So, what do you see in the future for me?" he asked. "Any drastic relocations? A sudden scaling of the corporate ladder? An upward swing in cash flow?" 

She pushed the bottle away crossly. "I don't drink."

"Well, kinda defeats the purpose of hanging out in bars then, doesn't it?"

"Not especially. I like to watch people. People enjoy looking for Death, the irony being that once they find it, they'll do anything to claw their way out of His grasp." Her voice was like tiny blue wisps of smoke playing with his brain.

"Why so morbid? I never understood you little Gothic chicks having this preoccupation with death---"               

"Why do people come here, if it's not to look for Death?" she asked sharply, though her voice was still barely above a whisper.

"Death? What do you mean, to look for Death? They come here to socialize, to drink-- they don't plan on finding something bizarre and extraordinary here--" 

"They come here in search of something that they can't name, that they don't recognize. And after they've drunken themselves into a false sense of warmth and comfort, they oftentimes lean right into Death." Her emerald eyes glinted, shimmered in the flame. "Mind you, it is a false sense. They might stumble back out the door, stagger out onto the pavement-- only to be shoved up against a wall and knifed in a darkened alley, or run over by a taxi driving dangerously close to the curb. Perhaps to be dragged home by a prospective lover, only to get bludgeoned to death and left to rot in a dumpster, or the river-- even in the non-literal sense, Death is within the realm of possibility. People might think they're having the time of their lives, with the love of their lives, only to later learn that they've been used, cast aside, much like a paper cup or dirty sock. They take their chances when they let their guards down, when they let their thoughts and vision be clouded and consumed by the very drink they themselves consume." Fascinating.

"So why do you come here?"

"I told you, because I enjoy watching them. I enjoy watching them dance with Death, unknowingly. It makes me feel... less alone."

"Donnie was right. You're a strange one." Royally fucked-up is more like it, he thought to himself, taking a drink out of the bottle. Couldn't let a good pale, flavorless domestic beer go to waste.

"Do you normally make it a habit to converse with strange ones, then?" she asked, lowering her eyes.

"I suppose so. Every now and again. All part of the job-- artists and musicians are some of the most seriously disturbed souls there are. I've had some pretty eye-opening interviews. But it keeps life interesting."

"Until Death finally catches up with you. Now that would be an interview."

"Enough with the Death, already. No wonder you're alone. You probably creep people out when you go on about Death like that." He paused, afraid he might have offended her, afraid that he was being horribly insensitive. He lowered his tone. "Are you really that sad? Has life really treated you that terribly?"

"I'm... not always alone," she said carefully, pursing her lips as if thinking very hard.

"You seeing someone?"

She looked up at him as if he had just asked the stupidest, most offensive question. He may as well have asked the Pope if he had gotten any lately. "In my time, I've been in the company of many," she answered flatly. "But the moments shared have been brief. The love is always so one-sided. I need too much. I need more than any one person can give me."

"Maybe you just haven't found the right one yet." James was feeling lucky. Extremely lucky. Sad girl, beautiful face and shape, smelled great, hotter than hell-- perfectly-painted little gothic chick who looked like a lacquered piece of living artwork-- and not only was she apparently vulnerable and needy, she sounded like she had the inklings of some serious nymphomania. Excellent combination. Yes, he was indeed feeling lucky. He could overlook the necromania. The other elements far outweighed the strange and even the borderline scary.      

"For your sake, that's not an invitation, is it..?" His face fell.

"Jesus, why don't you just save yourself the trouble, and let me stick my own knife in here..." James motioned to his heart, shoving an imaginary blade into his breastbone.

"You're cold."

"Cold... yes, cold. But you-- you are not. You are teeming with life. You are warm. You have not found Death yet. Or else, you have not recognized Him." 

"Or Her..?" Now he thought he might be catching on. She smiled.

"Yes, or Her. Death can take on any shape. He-- or She-- is invisible. That is, until you're face to face, and it's already too late-- by the time you recognize Her, you're already being snuffed out..."  Their eyes met, and for a second James could not tear his gaze free. So stunningly attractive in a bizarre way... everything about her. He wanted her, wanted to bring her home and fuck her and make her cry until all the sobs were silenced, all the tears were loosed, and she was a warm, reeling, divine body bathed in happiness and completion. He felt something in his loins flare, and he shifted awkwardly in his chair.

"Leave with me," he said softly, fighting the urge to lurch across the table and take her by the shoulders, to drag her out the door and down the pavement to his apartment. She said nothing. "Come home with me... talk to me. Where it's quiet. Where there's no one else. Then tell me if you still feel Death everywhere." She smiled, eyes still riveted on his. Despite his own attempts and hopes of seduction, he felt himself caught in a sticky-sweet, dewy web.

"I assure you, Death would still be everywhere. Even around you." She reached slowly across the table, her fingertips brushing his cheek gently. "Caressing you... holding you..." Her face was suddenly inches away, though James didn't notice her move forward. Her mouth hovered before his. "...kissing you..." His eyes shut, and his tongue grew taut, awaiting the seemingly inevitable-- which didn't come. He opened an eye to find that she was seated across the table, a good three feet separating them again. She was still smiling, adding a coquettish wink. Even in his dizzied state, the scariest part was that he wanted her more.

"Caroline... Sandra... Harley... you met them all here."

That came out of left field.  Ticking off names from the past-- three weeks ago. Several months ago. Damn, that Harley-- that had been last winter, hadn't it? He only remembered her because of the unusual name-- but hadn't given the girl a second thought since. "What..? How did you--"

"You came here and picked them up at the bar... you danced the dance with them, drank the elixir with them-- then took them back to your lair and did your deed." James could feel all the blood draining from his face. "And you never saw them again. Right?"

"You sit here like a fucking mute-- and when you finally open your mouth all it spills is Death? And if that's not sick enough, you start in about my lovelife? How in the fuck would you even know? How would you know their names, or what we did..."

"You aren't that hard to follow, you know."

"Follow?"

"Yeah. And they were fairly easy as well."

"Easy?" He wanted to stand up from the table, but couldn't. Not now. He took another swig from the bottle.

"You never saw them again," she repeated. "They never returned your phone calls-- that is, if you bothered to call them back at all, right?" His face blanched. His stomach flipped. "You figured they were just one-nighters, right? A passionate fling, perhaps? Something to do on a Friday night?" she continued on with a menacing nonchalance. "You're a passionate human being, James. Your blood boils with passion. It consumes you. It makes you prowl the streets, the bars, in search of something to quench it, doesn't it? We're not so different, you and I."

"Oh, hell yes, I think we are... you're fucking certifiable... how long have you been stalking me?"

"Stalking. Now there's an interesting word. Yes. I suppose stalking would be accurate. But not in the way you mean. No. I was preparing. Internalizing. Observing. Making mental notes."

"For what?"

"Do you still want to bring me home with you?"

"Huh?"

"Do you still want to bring me home with you?" she said again. "You were thinking it before. You've been suppressing a dire and animalistic need to leap across this table and sweep me off my feet to the heights of ecstasy, and unless you plan on throwing me down on this table and taking me here, I would assume it would entail bringing me home with you."

"Apparently if you've been stalking me, you already know the way there."

"Would you like me to go now and wait up for you? Let you have a few more drinks here and leave the porch light on, so to speak?" She's enjoying making me squirm like this, he thought. "That wouldn't do. That's not your style. You want to take me by brute force, whisk me away to some torrid passion pit that you have rigged in your cozy bachelor pad. Erase the tales of castle ruins and darkened dungeons, of chains and torches... sing me songs of satin, wrap me in velvet, let me twine my fingers through your ever-spilling raven's locks--" (she softly took hold of some black tangles that draped his shoulders, letting them spill free of her gentle grasp) "--give me the sweetest thrill of my sad and sorry life, correct? Show me that everything isn't so wretched and full of Death after all..?"

"You're insane..." But everything she'd said was exactly what he'd been thinking all along. How did she know?

"You think too loudly, James. It's deafening. It's etched in your face, it's shining in your eyes. I'd have to be blind not to see it. Now please tell me that you'll give me what I want."

"What do you want?" he asked, weakly. He had no choice but to ask, at this point. 

She didn't want to feel cold anymore.

"I want your passion," she said simply. The words were nearly lost on him, as he was consumed in his own definition of passion while he looked on her-- a strange cocktail of longing and fear. Her eyes were the most intense, beautiful shade of green he had ever seen. "I want to have the drive and desire that you have, that I lost so long ago. I want it back." The eyes were wide now, brimming with a blaze behind them. "... And I'll do anything to have that chance." Her words were forceful, solid with a determination unlike any he'd ever experienced. Inside her fragile casing of velvet and lace, he knew she was foaming, rabid. Nails could easily become claws, teeth could grow into fangs...

But, he tried to remind himself, this wasn't a fucking Anne Rice novel, this wasn't a scene culled from the poison-candy pages of Poppy Z. Brite-- this was the real world... He shuddered as he caught a glimpse of her in his mind's eye, biting at his throat, pausing with a crimson grin to lick at his dark blood as it spilled down her chin... he had to stop going to those goth clubs downtown. Had to. Some people who dressed like this took the scene way too seriously... and yet, there was something otherworldly about her. She couldn't be... James wouldn't allow himself to ask. He knew now why he had been riveted. That had to be it...

"You want my passion... in exchange for Death, right..?" he said, swallowing. His throat had become dry.

"Everyone needs a taste of Death in order to put Life in perspective-- but I'm not this black widow that you think I am..." she said softly. "I don't just go around fucking indiscriminately... you don't understand..." Her stony exterior was crumbling to mossy ruins. The green glazed over to black as her eyes filled with tears. James' heart felt like it was shedding, splintering, piece by piece when he looked at those eyes. They appeared blind. Blind but for one thing--  him. A hall of mirrors, her eyes. Turning every corner, he saw his own face, his soul reflected. Those eyes held his every secret, his every move.

"Someone took me to the brink of Death, took all that I had inside, every drop of life within... and from that night onward I have been in search of something to warm my bones again, kindle my heart again, stoke the flow of my own blood again..." He wanted to look away, but again, was mesmerised. "At first I did it to drown out the hurt, the hate-- to take out my anger and frustration at such a cruel, sadistic act that had befallen me... one over which I had no control." she hissed, her face knitted into a frown, eyes focused on something faraway that James could not see. "I was nearly mad. I threw myself into one situation after another, and of course I couldn't find the same life I had once before... I wasn't in my right mind." Her eyes returned from their journey into the past, resting on his again. "I've searched. I've clawed through the muck and the shit of this world, in this strange shell, looking, scrambling, trying to keep my head above water all the while... and every one of them that I found left me to drown," she whispered, her voice shaking slightly. "I couldn't keep them. I simply sucked the life out of them. I tried to give, but couldn't give enough... and a person can only give so much... so when the others themselves became empty and tired of giving they would leave. I too had to move on."

James begged silently for the tears to keep from straying outside the lines of her lashes. He had to bite down on his lower lip to keep his own emotions in check. He tasted blood, shivered again.

"How can a person continue to give when nothing is ever returned? When there's nothing left to be returned..?" she asked, saying it more as a statement than a question. "And then I found you." A tear managed to get loose, dragging a black line down her pale cheek. "I found you, but I knew if I got close I'd scare you away, like all the rest." Another black streak. "So I took what was closest to you... tasting here and there... I couldn't help it-- I couldn't get that close to you and then not take some for myself..." she moaned, shaking her head. "Have you ever settled down to bed, ready to sleep, when suddenly you're gripped with this fear that you'll die before you wake? That Death will take you all alone before your next sunrise, right in the middle of your last dream..?"

Where is my crucifix, he wondered to himself, thinking back to his brief childhood stint as a good Catholic boy. However, after only a moment of consideration he was convinced that a hundred crosses would do no good after all. A hundred crosses and two hundred cloves of garlic and three hundred stakes through the heart would do absolutely no good at all.

"I need passionate blood," she continued.

Holy water, he thought. Holy water.

"When your little girlfriends stole away in the night after you'd fallen asleep, I took them in alleyways, even in the atrium of your apartment building, just so that I could taste the faint glimmer of what you'd given them-- sometimes I'd call to them, lure them onto the balcony-- and make them disappear. But the passion left in their blood was faint, so very faint... I almost couldn't taste it." Her voice again grew quiet as a cemetery as the memories danced before her eyes-- green again. "They had almost always... already grown cold."

"You... 'took' them..?" he asked carefully. I am seated before the Undead, his mind whispered. Again, as if she had heard his thoughts, her eyes darkened, emptying twin black streams to roll down the other cheek.      

"I made sure they'd never come back..." She sighed. "That was after I tried to taste you through them-- tried to feel you... tried to fill myself with your vitality, your beauty..."

I'm sitting in a bar, talking to a nosferatu, a beautiful chick who just happens to be a blood-hungry monster-- and people are drinking, and the room is smoky, and somewhere in the same city a jukebox is seeping strains of Bauhaus, the Sisters of Mercy, SunShine Blind, and life is just going on around me...

"What do you mean that you 'took' them..?" he asked hoarsely. His voice was trying to make an escape, right now when he wanted answers the most.

"I am getting the feeling that if you still want to take me home, you ought to do it quickly. Do it now. Before the sun comes up and all of this is null and void in the light of normal daytime." She stared at the candle, and yet made no move to get up from the table.

"What do you mean that you 'took' them..?" he repeated, willing her eyes to meet his. I should feel sick right now, he thought, I should feel like throwing up, because I know where this is leading, and it's scaring me shitless...

"I just... I had to taste it, to taste you, you know..?" she replied weakly, playing with the wick again, as if trying to avoid answering him directly. "I couldn't leave without taking some of you home with me..."

"You're not telling me this. You're not. I refuse to hear it." From somewhere came a pounding-- ah, but it was only the blood against his eardrums, beating a warning...

"I..." She swallowed. "I couldn't remain content with your image, with mere thoughts of you. I listened at your door, at your window, to your laughter, moaning, crying... wanting so desperately to be the one making you laugh, moan, cry..."

Again, James felt his face go white.

"And I'd wait, I'd crouch, sometimes in shadow, wishing for them to leave. Sometimes I'd call to them." She shook her head, ran her fingers against her charms; they jingled like wind-chimes. "If they wouldn't leave by their own will, I would have to lure them... because I had to see them. I had to see the flush still fresh in their cheeks. I had to taste your tongue on theirs. I had to rest my hand against the hearts that you made pound... my fingers against the flesh you made quiver and glisten--" Now she was wringing her hands plaintively, the gloves making a scritching sound of lacey palms against one another. "I'd take them with such a force, I'd grab hold and slam them against a wall, and bury myself in them, all the while searching for you inside... and I'd only be left with remnants, but still they were better than nothing... so put off, so frightened, they would run away. But before they'd get a chance to wrestle free, I'd lean in..." She lurched across the table again, and James felt his face being lured closer as well. "... and I would tell them to stay the fuck away. To go back to their tiny lives of bars and clubs and city boys, but to never, ever come near you again, or I wouldn't be responsible for what would happen to them."  Pause. "Because I want you. I know you like no other. From the second I saw you, I felt that heat, I felt that passion, that passion which matches mine, otherwise so unequalled, so unparalleled. I heard it. It took ahold, and I couldn't have fought it if I'd tried... don't you understand..?"

James wasn't sure whether or not to be relieved or terrified.  She wasn't a vampire. At least, not of the fictitious, blood-sucking ilk. But at the same time, she was a vampire-- a vampire far more sinister and sad than any found on page or screen-- one that hungered for life, thirsted for passion. One that had been dealt a lethal blow and was now desperately clawing through one night at a time in search of a way to feel alive again. The very worst kind of vampire to be, he thought, is the metaphorical, psychological vampire.                 
"A life without passion is Death..." she whispered. "A lonely, walking Death. A nightmare in daylight. Food without taste. A rose with no scent. Fingertips possessing no sense of touch--" She paused, her eyes again faraway. "One broke my heart-- no, break isn't a strong enough word. He took it, shattered it, destroyed it, killed it. Someone I would have done anything in the world for-- and he led me to believe that he felt the same, but quickly proved otherwise with indifference, with mockery..." Her eyes spilled more tears now, trickling coal streaks. She reached up and ran her hand along his cheek, and he didn't flinch. He felt an intense warmth spread throughout his body. "Ah, there it is... I knew I'd find it... I knew I wasn't wrong about you, James..." Her mouth curled into a hopeful smile. "Show me a place where there's no more Death... show me that place now... and I promise you will have no regrets."


He knew of just such a place, and it was a mere ten-minute walk around the corner, through a swirl of dry winter leaves that rustled against the cold concrete like sighs and quiet, knowing laughter. 

my dirge and rebirth (for CB) © 1994

it's too bad I'm lazy
with no lesson in my plan
(but who'd listen to me, anyway)

I'd rather lurk behind the scenes
of someone else's dreams
than awaken my own

while I sit and play
connect the dots
in the broken mirror
(that's another seven years
of zits, I guess)
painting ragged portraits
of faces that don't exist

scribbling bits of scenery
from a play without a stage
and actors fighting to be free of their page


but until anyone can crawl
into my head
and look out through my eyes
struggle to beat with a wavering heart
battle splinter and shards
that try to crack my skull apart

until then

they'll never have the right
to ask why
I am the way I am

my words may bloom on paper  
to those who can't discern
the flowers from the weeds
but behind my lips they're forever trapped
with garble and spit
and mumbles

(which is why I prefer
silence to speech)

I guess I don't care as much
as everyone else
or maybe I care too much
for all the wrong reasons

I'll continue to coast
on a crest of good intentions
until my welcome has been
overstayed
and breaks on another beach

then I'll move on
to another shell where
again
they don't know me
 
all I leave here
are a few stray rusted tangles
eraser dust
and a legacy of parody

outside of this box
maybe I'll amount to more than
an empty bottle
a pack of cards
some candle wax and invisible scars

more than everyone else's prophesies
of name, of fame
or, maybe none of these

when eyes are no longer
holding in hauntings 
of ghosts that never walked
except maybe for show

I myself no longer know

perhaps the glow behind them
will mellow to embers
and no longer burn the slow burn

maybe I'll turn to my own phoenix
and this time

 smile