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New Fiction: Deconstruction Page 2 (of 5)

0
by on December 15, 2009 at 9:33 am

Page-2

This was originally meant to be for an anthology to be published next year. I had written other pieces for the anthology that explored horror movie and police drama cliches, and I thought it would be fun to apply the same thing to comic books. The word limit for the stories were 1000 words, and once I decided to do this story visually, the trick was trying to do this in less than 100 words, for the challenge of it.

If you read comic books, I think you’ll notice the little details (Kirby dots!) and recognize the story, one that’s been told a million times before.

New Fiction: Deconstruction Page 1 (of 5)

0
by on December 14, 2009 at 9:29 am

Page 1

This was originally meant to be for an anthology to be published next year. I had written other pieces for the anthology that explored horror movie and police drama cliches, and I thought it would be fun to apply the same thing to comic books. The word limit for the stories were 1000 words, and once I decided to do this story visually, the trick was trying to do this in less than 100 words, for the challenge of it.

If you read comic books, I think you’ll notice the little details (Kirby dots!) and recognize the story, one that’s been told a million times before.

New (old) Fiction: MASKS

0
by on June 26, 2009 at 12:15 am

masks-title I met a woman in Washington.

This was in September.

I was playing the part of a successful writer, living in an obscure apartment in New Jersey, writing endlessly, waiting for all the words to die. She was playing the part of a brilliant artist, living in a skinny house in Georgetown, working passionately, waiting for her canvases to catch on fire. We were meeting because at this moment in the chronology it required that we meet and offer one another soundless inspiration; we were to be reciprocating muses. The set was a bar where the music was too loud and the beer was watered-down and cheap. We sipped our beers through our masks, read our lines through the eyeholes, and waited for the director, the one who disappeared behind the bar after he turned the camera on, to return and finally end this scene.

We played the scene so well, with such a precise grasp of our parts, that when it was eventually over hours later, my life seemed weak, as if it were suddenly running on fumes.

My memory provides her with no name; just another phantom that eventually becomes another obscure character for me to take advantage of in the middle of an abandoned night. As I write of her now, I see her like a drowned girl with pale, slender hands and eyes open, blackened abyss.

She spoke through the music about her life and about the other characters that impose upon her. Her stories seemed important to her and it showed from the way her red lips curved around the names of her past lovers, and the way her eyes paused at her memories. As she spoke, one heavy word upon another, I could feel the pull of her gravity, pulling me into her Drama.

I tried to listen, I really did, but the thought of becoming a part in someone else’s Drama made me feel a little nauseous. I wondered:

Is this what I truly seek? And if so, is this how I enter relationships?

Is it I who seeks the Dramas and not the Dramas seeking me?

Or am I Drama?

I kept drinking, which has been my convenient therapy for too many years.

It is sometimes best not to remain paused on such details; it is slow death, with the mind bleeding ideas into the reservoir of mental darkness. But I am fueled by this mental torment; it is usually through these twisted paths that I discover the smaller gems, the most important of revelations. Like a warrior standing upon a pile of corpses, discovering the virtue of life, I move steadily among the beasts and ghouls, learning the art of their inert language and the aptitude of nourishing the fear.

I pushed the thoughts away for the time being and maintained an indifferent focus on the conversation. I succumbed to the loneliness inside of me; the piece that seems to be inside all of us these days. The piece that I see in the faces all around me, eating silently at restaurants, staring up at the rainy skies, and turning away from their own reflections.

I admit my loneliness with ease, only it feels wrong, as if I am part of a horrendous fad. We have become a society of lonely actors dancing out of step to the music of follies.

I admire the person that sits upon that mountain all alone, with the fresh air being all the company he ever needs; it is something I can never be. Contentment, to me, is found in the same place where I get most of my turbulence: around people.

The masquerade ended before dawn. At this point, the words were harder to conjure up and I could feel a dream or two pushing their way out from behind my eyes. I remember walking away from her, after a kiss in a forgotten corner, thinking to never call the phone number she placed into my pocket. I believe she knew I wouldn’t.

Not because I was mean, but because I was selfish.

And because it was my part.

“Want another beer, Christian?”

“Sure.”

The Friday before Halloween, I find myself ridiculously drunk all over again. I realize this too late, as usual, so I am forced to stick it out. And while I wait, I figure I’ll get myself another drink…if Jenny ever decides to actually bring me one.

I am once again in DC, inside the same bar where I was last September. We are all here, meeting other actors and seeking the sort of generic redemption you get by being sucked off in the bathroom.

Halloween is this Sunday, but the dead were seen rising as early as this morning, clawing their way through the dirt of their lives in search of that second chance. I watched the people in the stores, trying on different faces and posing before the mirror, observing themselves carefully, and when they pulled the mask away, they seemed disappointed, as if the face underneath was to have changed in the process.

We know now that the mask is no longer adequate, that we need the life that comes with it. We want the experience of foreign pain and heavy duality; we want to explore the undiscovered countries in psychology. And why not? Because in our new lives, there will be misery and there will be blood, only it will be diffracted, and we will be able to step away from all of it when it becomes too much to bear.

For the weary freak, take off the mask and walk away; for the jaded lover, wait for the other to fall asleep; and for the introverted geek, change your handle or turn off the computer.

The initiative is simple: flee everything.

Even if it means yourself.

And in the process of understanding all of this new bullshit, we have done the impossible, like always.

We have corrupted a holiday as innocent as Halloween and turned it into something perverted and sad. Even the children don’t treat it with the enthusiasm as we did at their age. Once again our generation seems to be one small step ahead of a new generation without any sense of hope or faith. They no longer waste that precious second of screaming “Trick or treat” before getting their candy, and half of them don’t even bother with the costumes. As if they already recognize the absurdity of the day and can no longer appreciate the magic.

The Holidays as we knew them are all dead.

We started with Christmas and then moved onto the lesser ones. It took many years, but we finally managed to do it. Every year we extracted a little more of the charm and replaced it with superficiality, until finally days like Halloween or Christmas are as emotionally and spiritually hollow as a carved pumpkin. God has no place at Christmas; he is the irritating great-great grandfather who sits at the end of the dinner table, drunk and drooling: the kids all hate him and the parents just want him dead already.

The schisms have already begun to show and the new gods are waking…and they may be a little green, yes, perhaps even a bit reckless, but they are all you have.

And speaking of God, he is here, somewhere near the end of the bar. He was cut off about an hour ago for being too loud and for doing lewd things with his white beard. God sighs and creates a cold mug of beer for himself.

You cannot cut off God. It is unholy and usually leads to bad things…

Just ask the Egyptians and their first-borns.

Jenny is here with me, somewhere beyond the music and darkness, dancing with her eyes closed and a cigarette hanging from her lips. She remains in the distance, which makes sense. I can’t seem to read her tonight: she is living among contradictions and obscure dreams.

Not unlike me, searching contradictorily for both true love and empty fucks.

Jenny approaches: “Beer?”

“Sure…again.

“I’ll be right back.”

And Jenny plays with my head again, disappearing, never to return with a beer for me. What did I do to warrant such cruelty? Jenny leaves me with her friend, Anne, who wants to be left alone with me as much as she wants to be left alone dressed like an altar boy with a drunk priest. “Oedipus never had it this bad. Shit, he was sober and look what happened to him…”

Anne looks at me with a vacant expression. “What are you saying?”

My mouth suddenly feels dry. “Nothing.”

“You’re really weird.”

I do not know how to respond to that anymore. I used to laugh at the expression, but now I hear it so often that it is beginning to scrape at me, bullying me to become insecure. What exactly is it about me that compels everyone to say that to me?

I decide to get a beer myself.

On the way, I accidentally make eye contact with God. I decide to steer clear of him, but as the bartender hands me my beer, God is suddenly right next to me. “I’ll pay for this one,” he says.

He slouches over a bit on his stool and tells me that out of all of his inventions, his favorite is blueberries. “Delicious, absolutely delicious.” He owns a boyish charm that I normally would find appealing, but with God, it comes across like another mask. God catches my thoughts: “You think that this is a mask?”

“Yes,” I tell him. “I think that it’s a mask, just like the one I’m wearing.”

“Hmm, well, it’s Halloween, after all.” He smiles weakly.

“The day we all get to be someone else.”

God pauses. “Most of us anyway.”

fortune-cookie-of-doom I decide to change the subject because I am not in the mood to listen to God’s problems. I remember a fortune I received once from a fortune cookie, something about God giving me a face and I make another. I ask God what it meant.

He finishes his beer and widens his eyes, jerking back his head, as if he were feigning surprise. “I’m not too sure what that means.” And then he creates another beer for the both of us. “But you don’t really care what I think.” He turns away and his voice weakens. “Nobody does…”

“I don’t think I’m the person you should be talking to.” I pick up my fresh beer. “Thanks for the beer though.”

I see Jenny across the way and I step towards her when the hand of God touches my shoulder.

I turn to a face that is like every face I have ever seen, a face that is scarred with the burden of loneliness, with eyes that should be worlds in themselves, only they have settled on being sad provinces instead. And this was no mask. And he said, “I’m in my final days, Christian.”

I think of something polite to say, something positive, but I know that would only be another mask. I look into his eyes and I say, “Aren’t we all?”

Jenny tells me she is going to stay after closing, leaving me to fend for myself in a city I hardly know. She gives me the key to her house and tells me she needs some time alone, but I don’t quite believe her. Earlier, after I walked Anne to her car, I returned to the bar I see Jenny making out with God on the dance floor.

I suppose I have seen worst things in my life. Once, in a bar in Pittsburgh, I was convinced that I was gang raped by a bunch of little leprechauns. So, seeing Jenny locking tongues with God seemed pretty tame by comparison. And besides, it really wasn’t Jenny, but Jenny wearing a mask, and it really wasn’t God, but God wearing a mask…just two more actors playing their parts. It all seems oddly appropriate in a biblical sense.

Whatever it was, whatever it meant, it would give me plenty to think about on the way home.

I make it back to Jenny’s house inside one of those blurs that is disturbing upon reflection the next day, in time to pass out on her couch. I do remember talking to the taxi driver about something important and I remember looking out the window at the city, glowing in orange light, with people in masks fading away into the shadows. There were drunks dancing all around with wide steps and swaying heads, and there were tiny gremlins surrounding all of them, waiting for one to pass out.

I don’t know which one of me had these thoughts and these memories, I don’t know which one of me opened the door for Jenny when she finally came home, or which one of me woke up the following morning; I can’t seem to keep track of me anymore.

And with all of this in mind, for the next forty-eight hours or so, I know that we can afford to lose everything, if that is what we truly want; we can wear as many masks and be as many people as we possibly want to be.

But come Monday, when Halloween has passed, what excuse will we have then?

blueberries

You have been reading “Masks”, written by Christian A. Dumais in November of 1999.

Commentary to come.

The Case of the Mystery

0
by on June 18, 2009 at 2:05 pm

The Case of the Mystery

Just playing around before getting to the serious writing.

New Fiction: PLAYING WITH THE DEAD

0
by on June 4, 2009 at 12:01 am

playing-with-the-dead-title

Written by Dr. Christian A. Dumais

“I’m here for the pharmacist’s dinner,” I tell the hostess.

“You mean the drug thing?” She looks up from her clipboard and squints her eyes. She is obviously not impressed with my appearance. “Are you a pharmacist?”

“Absolutely,” I say, smiling. “I can count to thirty and sixty; any higher than that and the machine counts for me.”

She purses her lips and surrenders with an indifferent shrug. “Sign here and then follow me.” She leads me down a long corridor into a private room and hands me a menu at the entrance.

The private room is vast and strangely dark, set on an aura usually designated for drunken romances. There are people standing around, conversing in groups of two and three, and the rest are sitting awkwardly at two long tables by the far wall. The room is tense, as it always is in the vacuum of professionalism, smelling of cigars and scotch. A wave of silence ripples through the room, and I feel all the eyes descending on me; they can smell the imposter in their midst.

I remain confident and walk further into their territory. A waiter taps my shoulder and asks if I would care for a drink. I order a beer. “And be sure to keep the beer coming,” I tell him. “This is a big night for me and the last thing I want to do is ruin it by being sober.”

I take an empty seat at the end of one of the tables and try to mentally note some observations; however, I am interrupted when a man sits beside me. He is wearing jeans with a faded gray sports coat. “What pharmacy do you work at?” he asks.

I name a pharmacy; a chain named after a rich old man.

“Oh, there, huh? I work for (he names a grocery chain that has no business having a pharmacy). How many scripts do you do a day?”

I think about this, then: “I’m filling about a thousand prescriptions a day now.”

“Jesus God! That’s inhumane! You have help, right?”

“No. Just me and my white jacket.”

“Well, I am only doing about a hundred at my store with two technicians and a cashier. I couldn’t handle that type of load…”

“Well,” I say, “that’s why you’ll never be working with the big boys. Personally, I prefer to work in an environment with plenty of distractions to increase my margin for error. Gets the adrenaline flowing and all.”

“I see, well, I, uh…” he pauses, sips his drink, and says, “I guess I’ll catch you later.” He gets up and leaves.

The waiter returns and puts two glasses of beer down on the table.

“Christian,” a familiar voice calls from behind. I turn around to see my esteemed colleague, Dr. Patel, the man who told me about this sadistic function. “I was beginning to think you weren’t going to show.”

I hand him one of my beers. “I almost didn’t. Pretending to be a pharmacist seems like stepping down, even if it is for a free meal. I prefer being a doctor; I prefer that kind of bullshit.”

In doing what I do, I am required to be many people: a schizophrenic Clark Kent, if you will. Sometimes a pharmacist, sometimes a porn director, and sometimes even a priest…I am always a doctor…

I became a doctor on a Wednesday night.

With the exception of my Fisher-Price Medical Kit I had when I was four, I never really wanted to be a doctor, but then again, does anyone ever really want to play with the dead and then profit from it?

I became a doctor because I had no choice. Everyone advised me to become one and I fought against it for a long time. I protested loudly, but my people were louder and violently charitable; virgin daughters from all over the world and large properties in Montana were offered to me.

“All we want from you,” they told me on the phone after midnight, “is for you to write us a prescription or two.”

That’s all?” I asked.

“Accept your destiny, Dr. Dumais and then the magic really happens…”

Never one to argue with such a mystical prophecy, I became a doctor.

“We better order ourselves more beer because the drug people are going to start talking pretty soon. And you know how they are when you interrupt them to get some more alcohol.” Dr. Patel raises his arm to signal the waiter.

“Like I always say, alcohol and drugs don’t mix.” I laugh.

“Jesus, that was lame, Christian.”

“I know, I know. I’m sorry.” I balance a butter knife on my index finger. “When I am surrounded by pharmacist like this, I feel out of whack. I mean, I didn’t go to school to sit around and listen to a bunch of dip-shits tell me their drugs are better than anyone else’s drugs…even if it means free beer.”

After four easy years of Creative Writing, I had little patience to commit myself to another eight years of school. Even if I wanted to, I would never truly belong. I don’t look all that good in a white jacket and medical schools are clubhouses for people named Patel or Korabathina.

And who wants to spend good money to watch egos crash into one another like bocce balls?

So, instead of schooling, I decided to put a Dr. before my name on a magazine subscription, and three weeks later, with the assistance of companies selling my name to corporate America, I was officially a doctor.

Now, my living room is a demented waiting room filled with junkies and grandmothers, and when I walk the streets, drug reps approach me with free pens, microwaves and T-shirts, pleading and begging me to prescribe their brand of medication. “But my patients don’t need this drug,” I told one of them.

“Who said anything about needing?

There are worst fates, I imagine, but nobody wants to be surrounded by bad actors all day with fake tears and ketchup for blood, moaning and whimpering for you to write your magical words on a magical pad of paper; which, in essence, is what it comes down to in the end. The prescription pad has been seriously overrated; I have seen people kill each other just to be the one to touch it, hold it, and even sleep with it.

By the time the man representing one of the major drug companies begins his lecture, Dr. Patel and I are shit drunk. The representative speaks like he died a few years back and nobody has had the nerve to tell him about it. I have heard eulogies with more enthusiasm. “As you can see that there is an eighty-two percent increase in pain relief without the usual side effects as compared to other pills with hydrocodone.”

Dr. Patel leans over. “And you can also see an eighty-two percent increase in the street value.”

I spill some beer when I laugh, then I add: “But the important question still remains for every patient: will I still be able to drink alcohol with this medication?”

The man pauses and looks in my direction. “Is there something you’d like to add over there?”

“Oy! Don’t make eye contact and he’ll go away,” Dr. Patel says quickly.

This makes me laugh louder.

“Anything with hydrocodone should do the trick,” one of my patients said to me who suffered from high blood pressure. “Just make sure you write it nice and neat; I don’t need any resistance from the pharmacist.”

The pharmacists have become the atheists in the religion of modern medicine, constantly questioning the Word of the Doctors, and making the believers suffer because of trite grammar and logic. Even some of the believers tend to detest the doctor’s poor penmanship because it demystifies the entire process.

It is like getting a phone call from God, but collect.

But one thing is certain to the believer with a prescription: somewhere in all of that gibberish, lies salvation for the damned. Salvation, however, isn’t a cure; far from it. Salvation, in this context, is the sad illusion of a nirvana never achieved, the maddening pursuit of the perfect high: the goal of America’s newest Drug Culture.

The funny thing is, the Drug Culture in America did the unexpected in the past twenty years; they swapped roles with the very people who were prepared to burn them all at the stake. These days, all the acid-freaks and crack-heads point their fingers in disgust at all the men and women who sold their souls just to be allowed to suck on the nipples of an HMO.

The drugs to worry about as you sleep at night aren’t the ones the junky prostituted himself for or some powder you see zip-locked on an episode of Cops; these are all for the amateur. No, the drugs to worry about are the ones in the orange vials sitting in your medicine cabinets; these are the tools implemented by the New Drug Culture.

As a real pharmacist told me once: “The doctors made a business out of modern medicine, so the Drug Culture responded accordingly and made a business out of taking medication.”

Dr. Patel and I are asked to leave after the first presentation, just before dinner is served.

“But why do we have to leave? We haven’t eaten anything yet.”

The owner of the restaurant frowns. “It isn’t the restaurant’s doing, sir, but the people here believe that you aren’t really a doctor and that the young man here isn’t actually a pharmacist.”

Dr. Patel smiles. “Well, that’s true. I am actually a pharmacist and my friend here is a doctor.”

“But the sign log out front has you as a doctor and him as a pharmacist.”

I touch the owner’s shoulder. “That would be my fault. I get confused sometimes without my medication. That is why I am here, so I can see all the new drugs I will probably be taking. Kind of like a ‘coming attractions’ sort of thing, you understand? I can tell that you don’t understand me. That is my fault, as well. You see, I am a victim and I need a cure. I have been victimized for a long time and I have low self-esteem. I am over-sensitive and I am also very fragile. And if I weren’t such a victim I would be able to explain myself better, but I’m sick. This man is here to help me. Would you be so kind as to help him help me?”

Dr. Patel raises his empty glass. “Can we have another beer now?”

The owner sighs heavily. “I’ll have the waiter come around shortly.” And then he walks away.

“What is wrong with these people, Christian? It’s like they want to be damned.”

“I know, I know. It can’t be helped,” I say. “Writers act as a magnet to the doomed.”

“Yes, but these people are pharmacists and doctors. They are supposed to be the good guys. And look at them, will you? They are miserable. I can find happier people in a morgue.”

“It comes with the business.”

“Business. What a horrible word! It’s not supposed to be a business. When it comes to saving lives and preserving the quality of life: it is not a business. I mean, come on; you are supposed to save lives; you are supposed to preserve the quality of life! It’s not a job. It’s just being human. And you know something? We have all these drugs at our disposal, and what are the ones that everyone goes crazy over. Shit like Propecia and Viagra! Once again America reveals to us what we always knew: it is a patriarch where superficiality and sexuality means everything.”

“Are you finished?”

“Hold on,” he says. “Did I do the speech about how HMO’s made a whore out of America?”

“No, not yet. But let’s save that one until after the tequila.”

“Yeah, you’re right. Where’s our beer? My mouth is getting all dry like.”

I glance around the room and realize that most of the room is watching us. “Why exactly are we here? This doesn’t make any sense at all.”

“Are you talking about what you are going to write or what we are actually doing?”

“Both.”

“I suppose that none of this is supposed to make any sense.” Dr. Patel leans back in his chair and exhales slowly. His face changes and I don’t realize just how until it hits me that he is just becoming serious. “I try not to think about what I do too much…working everyday as a pharmacist, I mean. I could tell you all about how it is the most respected profession and all that bullshit. Or about how I am doing my duty when I deny selling a narcotic to someone who is addicted to it, but that is bullshit too because I’ll just get a phone call from my boss telling me to make the customer happy and give it to him. I could tell you that I am supposed to go home fulfilled, knowing that I have helped so many people in need. The truth is, I go home feeling empty. I don’t make any difference at all. Sure there is the occasional person here and there, but none of that ‘grand scheme goodness’ that I imagined when I was a kid.” He pauses and twists his neck to the left until it cracks. “Your problem, Christian, is that you surround yourself with people like us, people robbed of their integrity, sell-outs, people dead of passion, and then you absorb our pain, our frustration. Sometimes you even audit us, you cold bastard! But seriously, the problem is that you are too busy trying to understand us when it can’t be understood. It is like dream logic. Just don’t think about it so much.”

“I guess I really do need a cure then.”

“Cures? Please! What people don’t understand is that cures always come with a price. Cures are a lot like the beer, you know?”

“I have no idea what that means.”

The waiter arrives at that moment and gives us our beers.

Dr. Patel raises his glass and smiles. “Wait long enough and it’ll appear whether we need it or not.”

“Playing With the Dead” tomorrow!

0
by on June 3, 2009 at 3:42 pm

playing-with-the-dead-title

A few of you have wondered about the other Dr. Patel stories not included in Empty Rooms Lonely Countries. Tomorrow I’ll be posting one of those stories, called “Playing With the Dead”. This story deals with Dr. Patel and I being invited to a drug dinner, where a drug company invites pharmacists to meet for free food and drinks and then having to sit through a presentation on the latest drug of choice. Amazingly enough, I managed to push my way into quite a few of these dinners.

“Playing With the Dead” was written for a pharmacy magazine, but it was eventually rejected. Once you read the subject matter, I think you’ll understand why any respectable pharmaceutical publication would be hesitant to publish it.

Hopefully this will satisfy any Dr. Patel cravings you have.

And maybe I’ll get around to writing up a commentary for the story as well.

Commentary #12 (of 28): MAINTAINING

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by on June 1, 2009 at 1:56 pm

commentary-pic

Every so often (weekly at the moment), I’ll be writing a commentary about a story from EMPTY ROOMS LONELY COUNTRIES. I’ll tackle the stories in the order they appear in the book. Given the nature of this exercise, I cannot guarantee that I won’t spoil specific details from the story. So you may want to return to the commentaries here when you’ve finished reading the book. If I don’t address an aspect of the story you were interested in, by all means leave a question at the end of this post and I’ll do my best to answer it.

MAINTAINING

This is one of the many DC stories, following behind “One Dead (Potted) Plant”, “Pancakes, Wishes and Other Tales” and a whole lot of other stories that aren’t in Empty Rooms Lonely Countries. This story puts us somewhere around February of 2000.

If I’m remembering it right, this was my first weekend back after spending a month in Florida for the Christmas and New Year holiday. This was the holiday when Derrek invited me to a New Year ’s Eve party. It was at a mansion somewhere in South Tampa. When I arrived, after ringing the bell for a few minutes, I let myself in. I found Derrek in the hallway. He invited me to have some expensive beers from the fridge and we munched on some amazing food in the kitchen. When I asked him who he knew at the party, he said no one. Apparently, he was invited by someone who was actually invited, and that person was passed out in the bathroom covered in his own vomit. By the time I realized I was the invitee of an invitee of an actual invitee, the owners had entered the kitchen and asked us not to drink their personal supply of beer and food, and that if we must stay, we could drink the beer (cheap!) provided outside by the pool. The night went down – or maybe up, depending on your point of view – from there.

And, no, I have that wrong (this is what I get when I don’t read the whole story before writing the commentary):

The week before had been the worst week in my entire life. There was no way around it. There was the never-ending snow; being trapped in Asheville followed by Atlanta; the plane ride with the stupid magicians; the realization that I had no keys to my car or home, that I had left them in North Carolina; the punks trying to rob me in Philadelphia; the other snowstorm that trapped me inside my apartment as soon as I managed to break in; and then there was the kicker: the dwindling down of all the illusions that made my life tolerable until now.

This part tells me everything I need to know. And rather than explain specifically, I may as well just post the entire story here (again, not included in Empty Rooms Lonely Countries):

SNOWBOUND MEMORIES
Written by Christian A. Dumais

“I was motivated by love.”

I am pretty sure I said this to myself around the time my second flight out of Asheville Regional Airport is cancelled. The terminal is hollow and angry; the people shift nervously and stare towards the ceiling. Winter came during the week and overstayed her welcome very quickly. Outside the windows, a child is shaking the looking glass furiously: snow falls in all directions.

I am sitting on the floor by the pay phones, my knees pressed up against me. I am tired and I am alone. I want to be home, but I don’t know where that is anymore. I can close my eyes and think I see it, somewhere muddled in the darkness, beyond my emotions and within my memories, but it keeps slipping away. I feel like I was supposed to be on a journey but I never got around to packing my bags.

No Prophecies, no Revelations, but plenty of alcohol…

The phone rings above me and I reach for it. I press the receiver against my ear and listen.

“You deserve this,” says a voice. I don’t say anything. “This is what you get when you fuck with us. This is what you get. Do you understand?”

I hang up the phone. I don’t need to be told what I already know; I just need to be told the Truth.

I want to call her up and tell her to pick me up.

I want to say, “I think I am making a mistake. If it isn’t you, then it is something else…but I know I can’t leave you like this. I need to be in your bed, to stay there. Forever: if that’s what it takes. It is as close to a home that I can find. Do you understand me? I need to hear you breathing beside me. I can’t let go like this. I am a fuck up. I am scared. I am tired of being Different. Why can’t I be like everyone else?”

But that is not the way it is supposed to be.


Persephone stares at me for a long time. I try not to focus on the Blue. I don’t know what to say to her anymore. I am afraid to say anything, but I am more afraid not saying anything. This silence is too much to take. I would give anything for it to end, to end rightly instead of awkwardly…which is the problem with silence, not the way it stalks the room when lovers pause, but the way lovers choose to break it.

I have seen gods sell their souls to kill the silence, and what they have never learned is that noise is meaningless when it involves words void of emotional value and music that cannot be danced to.

What price would you pay to end the silence, for everyone to stop speaking and actually talk?

She moves to speak, then walks away instead. I reach out for her but my muscles are twisted and exhausted. I turn in her direction and watch her flip the light switch as she leaves the room.

The room turns dark and I am falling in every direction. The gravity has declared me unfaithful and has thrown me away. As I fall, I feel the darkness pushing its way inside of me.

And then I am drowning in déjà vu; familiarity and fear overcome me. It is suddenly hard for me to breathe and I close my eyes, substituting one darkness for another, and as I do this, I push tears free. I remain in the center of the room, unsure if I am standing or falling or drowning, and the darkness grows and grows, larger than the room itself, larger than the world…and then I hear the darkness speak to me.

My thoughts are impending and slippery and my emotions are changing faster than my heartbeats.

She walks back into the room and turns the lights on, and she sees me standing by the bed in tears: “What’s wrong? What is it?”

“I don’t know,” I tell her. My mouth is dry, and when I speak, my voice cracks.

“What? Tell me, Christian.”

“Jesus, I don’t know. Something…something about the way you turned off the lights.” She wipes my face with her hand. “I don’t know…I’m being stupid.”

“What is it?”

I think I know, but I don’t know the words to explain it. When it comes to the emotions, to the feelings inside all of us, to the reality behind the eyes that we know so well, the words have not been invented that will properly convey it. I say, “I don’t know, really.”


I manage to get aboard a small plane to Atlanta. The lady at the counter warns me that there is a strong possibility that I may be stuck in Atlanta for the night. “It’s the storms,” she says, “nobody seems to be able to predict them. If you want I can get you a flight somewhere far away from all of this. How does Greece sound to you? Or how about Oz?”

“I better just stick with this reality for now.”

“Your loss.” She wishes me luck as I leave for the gate.


Once on the plane, I find myself sitting next to a hobgoblin. He is old and I notice that he smiles to hide his wrinkles. He wears a black ski hat to hide his pointy ears and wears sunglasses to contain the power in his gaze. He tells me that he used to speak only in rhymes. “But I discovered that cleverness wasn’t appreciated in the New World.” He tells me he has been around since the Beginning, but I know he is lying. I learned in my experiences in Florida never to trust hobgoblins. “Do you think we’ll make it to Atlanta?”

“Probably,” I say.

He nods his head. It takes twenty-four minutes to get to Atlanta, and on the way, the hobgoblin tells me a story. “You must never repeat what I have said,” he warns. “To repeat a story once told by a hobgoblin will damn the teller.”

“And if the teller is already damned?”

“You mean: if the teller thinks he is damned?” He laughs. “The problem with mortals is that they all want to be damned for something.”

When we arrive in Atlanta, he shakes my hand. He tells me that I am a good person even if I write lies on paper for a living. Out of curiosity, I ask: “Where’re you going?”

“To Key West. A bunch of us are having a reunion.”

“How often do you all meet?”

“As often as we possibly can.” He smiles and looks younger. “We may be of the Old Ways and we may be Extinct, but we still need our friends.”


I manage to find a plane leaving for Philadelphia at around midnight. I am told that everyone on the flight, with the exception of me, is a magician. Everyone is making things disappear and appear all over the place. Outside, the wings disappear then re-appear. The pilot gets on the intercom and asks for everyone to stop playing with magic.

Finally, the magician in Row 27, Seat B, makes the pilot disappear. I hear someone ask him how the plane is going to land and he says, “We’re all magicians here…we’ll find a way.”

Everyone laughs because they know it’s true.

Stupid magicians.

The woman next to me, who I learn is not a magician either, begins to panic and then is transformed into a purple turtle. I ask her what it is like to be a purple turtle. She says, “Not as bad as you’d think. You really should try it sometime.” I ask her how the world looks from her point of view and if there is hope for all of us. And then the flight attendant comes over and takes the purple turtle away before I asked too many questions.

The plane lands safely and once it is parked, I realize that everyone has disappeared. I gather my bags and notice a blue rose sitting in every seat. I remember that I wrote a story with blue roses in it. If you place a petal in your mouth, everything makes sense…but in the morning, you forget how it felt.

That’s what it was like on paper, at least.


Philadelphia International is unusually empty. The television monitors hanging from the ceiling keep talking about another storm getting ready to begin.

I take a bus to the long-term parking lot. I see the snow crashing into the windshield like burnt-out stars.  The driver tells me to get home and get warm with a woman before the storm hits.

Outside, it is cold beyond anything I have ever known and I am not dressed for it. My ears begin to hurt. I walk for a long time, finding my car where I had parked it nine days earlier. I reach into my backpack and search for my car keys. I find nothing.

A snowflake lands in my right eye as the comprehension in me blossoms: I left my keys in North Carolina. They were sitting next to my bag next to her bed. Just sitting there and I never picked them up. I drop all of my bags on the wet concrete and I think I say something to God…something like, “Fuck you.”

I realize that it is the first time I have ever spoken to God. I did it for the same reasons everyone else does, because I was Alone. I am trapped in loneliness without measure, like a man trapped between two mirrors, unable to figure out where he began and where he ended. I have no one to call, no one to turn to.

I think it takes a moment like this to push in the reality that you are no longer a child, that you are an adult, and all of this, the losses, the disasters and the bullshit, is all up to you. And then there is the voice in me that says, “It’s all you. Right now. Do you stop here or do you keep moving? Keep living in the past or try the present for a change? And whatever is thrown your way, deal with it and move on. So, Christian, what is it going to be?”


The only taxi driver who is willing to drive me to New Jersey, watch me break into my own apartment for an extra set of keys, then drive me back to the airport inside the upset belly of violent winter storm is a man named Granville. And to my amazement, I discover comfort in the backseat of Granville’s taxi. I tell him my story: all of it. I don’t spare him from any of the details; I tell him more than I even knew.

“Why did you cry when she turned the lights off?”

“Now that I still don’t understand.”

“I think you do,” he says. “But you are too afraid to admit it.”

“You’re probably right, Granville.”

“What did she do next, after that?”


“I don’t know, really.” I say again.

She presses the side of her face against mine and I feel her trembling. She holds me with a strength I never knew she had and she says, “I’m sorry, Christian.” She pulls her head back and I see her face is wet with tears. “I’m so sorry.”

And she apologizes like that over and over again until her voice is overcome with sobs.

I want to tell her to stop it, but I realize that I want to hear her say it, that I want to see her like this.

I need to see her like this.

I need to see her in pain, to reflect a piece of what I have been feeling all of this time. I need to see her suffer as I always had: to know how it is to see the woman you love in bed with another man; to know how it is to understand that everything you say won’t be remembered come morning; to know that the one that abused her is more loved than the one that would give her the world; to know that he is tired and can’t keep fighting for a heart that would never be his.

“I love you,” she says. “God, I do. I do love you, Christian.”

“I know,” I tell her.

And to know that sometimes, no matter how hard you try, no matter how much you believe in it, Love isn’t enough.


Granville turns off the meter when it hits a hundred and pulls into a gas station for some coffee. He asks if I want some. “You’ll be paying for it either way,” he says.

“No, thanks.”

He turns the car off and turns around. “Let me tell you something, son. And this is something you can tell everyone in one of your stories. I’m no hobgoblin, see: just an old black man with more years behind him than forward.” He stops and I can tell he is thinking by the way his eyes quiver. “Hell of a thing being a man in this day. Nothing seems worth fighting for anymore, every direction you turn you can taste the sadness all over.” He coughs. “I love my wife. Loved her since the first time I put my eyes on her. It was all so easy, her and me. I could tell you good stories. The kids are all grown and now it is just her and me again. Sad and nice like. I work hard so we can move to Florida. I want to retire. I want to spend more time with her. You understand that. Every night I get into bed with her, I know that someday this is going to end. The good things never last as long as you want them to. The kids grow up and leave. The woman you love turns old. Nothing you can do to stop it – like trying to beat a river with your fists.” He clenches his hands together tightly. “That’s how I see it: like a river rising on you. Flooding everything you know and love. You can fight it all you want. Break every bone in your body. Even kill yourself. Give up and drown if you like.”

He smiles and passes it to me.

“Or you can swim.”

You may notice that “Pancakes, Wishes and Other Tales” has a different meaning now. And parts like this make a little more sense:

Jenny called later that evening. I was maintaining as best I could until she started crying about all the shit in her life, and this just made me cry even more. I don’t think I ever cried in front of Jenny. And looking back, I imagine the scene would have sounded pathetic to someone listening in: two adults crying so hard that when they spoke the words sounded cracked and painful. At the end of the call, we made some promises to one another, I told her I would be coming to DC on Friday, and then I hung up feeling a little better about myself.

Or maybe not.

It should be noted that Francois in this story is the dancing guy from “One Dead (Potted) Plant”. I’m not sure why I left that unclear. And it’s probably apparent that the relationship Jenny had with her boyfriend was, for whatever reason, extremely complicated:

“So, what’s this all about? Did Jenny break up with her boyfriend?”

“No. She’s still with him.”

“Is she going to break up with him then?”

“I don’t think so.”

“Then they’re together.”

“No. They haven’t been together for a few months now.”

“Then they’re not together.”

“Oh, they’re exclusive.”

“But didn’t she say she’s going home with that bartender tonight?”

“Yes, absolutely.”

“So she’s cheating on her boyfriend?”

“Jenny? She can’t cheat on her boyfriend if she’s no longer with him.”

“Then she’s single?”

“Yes, Jenny’s single…unless, of course, you count her boyfriend.”

“Whatever.” Antoine raised his glass. “To Jenny’s freedom.”

“To Jenny’s freedom.”

For those keeping score at home for influences, I had recently finished reading Joseph Heller’s Catch-22.

This was a tough one to read again. It’s amazing how heavy everything feels when it’s going down, and it feels like it’ll never go away. And now, almost ten years later, I can’t even recognize that weight.

If I get that time machine, I’d go back and tell myself not to worry, but, you know, it worked out anyway.

Next week : “Before Waking”.

Previous commentaries:

#1 “Cowboys and Indians”
#2 “Little Conundrums”
#3 “The Illusion of Swing”
#4 “Kicking Love’s Ass”
#5 “On Being Velma-less”
#6 “Muted Porn”
#7 “Defying Gravity”
#8 “The Fifth Ocean”
#9 “One Dead (Potted) Plant”
#10 “Remembering Drajra”
#11 “Pancakes, Wishes and Other Tales”

New Fiction: THE GODDESS OF THE NEVER-WAS

0
by on May 14, 2009 at 1:02 am

goddess-title

     The waiting was the worst part for the princess. She had no problems with the creature – grotesque as it was – because it did what it was supposed to do, which was to kidnap her and take her to its lair. This lair was particularly wet and slippery and muddy, the stench of foul meat soaking the clammy air. Now it was all a matter of waiting for the prince to rescue her. She found the routine a tad archaic and she wished the ogre didn’t have to kill so many people in the process, but what could she do? This was how it was done.
     The ogre lit a fire for her. She could see the air steaming out of its wide nostrils, still out of breath from carrying her all this distance, its black fur crusted with blood. It turned to her, its red eyes narrow, its yellow teeth showing, and said, “It usually takes an hour or so for the prince to find the place. The rest is usually pretty quick.”
     She nodded; it was overwhelming to the ogre how such a simple gesture could exude so much beauty.
     “Would you like some coffee?” asked the ogre.
     When she nodded again, the ogre turned away suddenly.
     The coffee ended up being excellent and the princess appreciated the ogre’s professionalism. He brought her some clothes to put down on the piles of dirt so she could sit down. It sat down across from her, a cup of coffee in its hand. After its first sip, he sighed heavily, it being obviously uncomfortable with the waiting part as well.
     “What now?” the princess asked.
     “We wait,” the ogre said.
     “I know that, but is there something we can do, like play a game?” She looked around and could tell there would be no games to play. “Perhaps you could tell me a story.”
     The ogre appeared to be thinking this one over. “I guess I could, if that’s what you’d like.”
      “Most certainly,” said the princess, a smile appearing for the first time.
      “Okay.” The ogre looked down at his coffee. “Well, once upon a time, in a far away land, there was once a beautiful woman. While she wasn’t a princess – though she was one in her father’s eyes – she was always meant for great things. But somewhere along the way, she made a right instead of a left, mistook a doorway for a wall, misunderstood a prophecy as a compliment out of pity, and took her dreams too lightly. When she should’ve been out exploring the world, she was sitting inside a large box and staring at a smaller box – one that lit up and showed her numbers – for eight hours or more a day. When she wasn’t in the box, she would sit at home and stress and worry about more numbers. Every month she would receive papers that revealed large sums that she owed, and each month those numbers grew and grew. She was always distracted, always staring at boxes, never listening to the Fates, for they are like music – meaningless if there is no one to hear it, and the Fates have only so much patience. She felt as lonely as the bed she slept in, feeling trapped in life rather than being a part of it. There was magic everywhere and plenty to laugh about, but all she saw was yesterday and tomorrow. There was a time when the gods would chain men to rocks for the most trivial of crimes, forcing them to push rocks up hills that never ended – now the gods simply sit back and let men create their own perpetual punishments. They boast their great knowledge – most of it coming from the boxes they stare at, all of them being connected – while forgetting the important things. Their heads are so full of nonsense they may as well be empty, not to mention their hearts. And they fill their homes with insignificant trinkets to match their heads. They have freedom everywhere and yet they restrict themselves, finding excuses when there is nothing to excuse, finding misery and fear where there is none. This was her, punished, restricted, trapped, chained, alone, when she should’ve been laughing a thousand miles away, teaching others to fly, loving so hard it feels like her heart should be breaking when in fact it’s growing, overflowing continuously until her last breath. That was her, the goddess of the never-was. And she –” It stopped suddenly, its nostrils expanding. “He’s close now. He’s a quick one, this prince. My trail was perhaps too good this time.” It stood up and gently took her empty coffee cup. “You’ll need to scream soon to help him out.”
     “Is there such a goddess?” the princess asked.
     It nodded.
     “And such a place?”
    “Oh, yes. I’ve wandered there many times. I’m invisible there, except to those the majority considers to be insane, interestingly enough. Everything is backwards there, it is frightening. And the noise never stops, the air is milky and smells, and sadly enough, they tell stories about us and as if we were simple and quaint. They scoff at our happy endings as impossible things.”
     “How sad.”
     “Isn’t it though?”
     It helped the princess to her feet. She started to brush herself off and the ogre stopped her. “No, he must believe you’ve being mistreated. The dirtier you stay, the better.”
     They said nothing for a few moments.
     “Shall I scream now?”
     “He’s closer; so whenever you want, sure.”
     She took one of his hands and squeezed it. “Thank you.”
     “You’re most welcome. Be sure to recommend me to your father when your sister is of age.” It smiled but she couldn’t tell it was a smile, and then it stretched itself to get back into character. “Now, let’s do it.”
     She laughed, the most beautiful laugh it had ever heard and would ever hear, took a deep breath, and then she screamed towards her happy ending.

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