Memories
I press rewind and play, rewind and play. Sometimes I don’t need the remote at all, scenes flashing on without invitation: there I am goading gaudy women into squats, leg presses, pushups, chin; aiming Garth’s second hand Jeep Wagoneer onto the 401 to the Whitby Mental Health Hospital; flying back to Toronto to pick up Talon at Dalemount Elementary; brewing supper ingredients in the condo’s galley kitchen, Garth and Talon sprawled out on the leather sofa with Spawn on TV; back again to the nighttime women— Russians, Israelis, the Polish accountant with purple hair to spruce up a life ruled by columns of numbers, immigrants with proletariat bodies. Caroline, only twenty-one, shoved away in a mental institution, pressed in by criminals, patients who grin and piss on walls and dream of matches. She chooses to rename herself. Her mother is dead, she says. Two years. When I bring her home, she slaps me. On my face, across my chest. I don’t blame her. She sits still, all quiet, and then shrieks like a wild crow.
Josie flies back home from Israel along with Shiva, an Israeli friend who reads Tarot cards. One weekend a month, she retreats to a communal cabin in Northern Ontario where she meditates, keeping a vow of silence for eight days. She returns bloated by her triggers and unspoken words. Garth complains about the incense: Sai baba Nag, Champa, Auromere Ayurvedic from India, Nippon Kodo from Japan, Nandi Incense from B.V. Aswathiah & Brothers. One day Shiva packs up and zooms off with four guys with tattoos in a beat-up truck. The smell of incense remains. At last it’s spring. In every room I open windows and, off the dining area, the sliding balcony door.
Late Night on the Subway
It’s around one in the morning and I’m on the Yonge line northbound. Or maybe it was the reverse: it’s nine in the evening and I’m southbound, intent on the TTC map posted above the subway door.
“I got fifteen guys wasted,” says one guy, swinging round a subway pole.
“Sure. Me, I love older women,” the other says, winking at me. “My girlfriend is older.”
“Show her a picture—how old are you?” asks the guy with shoulder length brown hair. “Forty-two, forty?”
I shake my head. Passengers are turning around, casting sideways glances. “
You’re too nice, boys. Enough.”
“I love dark hair. She has dark hair, y’see? You’re giving me a hard-on,” the shoulder-hair-kid says, grabbing his crotch with both hands.
“Let’s go. We gotta go,” says the kid with the older girlfriend.
“Hey, she has green eyes. Will you look at that!” says the shoulder-hair-kid as the doors slide open at St. Claire. “Man, did you see that? Green! You know I’ m crazy about women with green eyes!”
I had to smile. Because that was sweet. Fucking sweet and nice as music, anyday.
Garth swore he would he would never leave me again. At three-twenty on a Wednesday summer afternoon, he left a phone message: “I’m glad you aren’t home, so I can leave you this message. What I wanted to tell you this morning was quite the opposite of what you understood. I am calling to tell you that I want you in my life, married or not, as my permanent romantic partner. You’ve been great.”I am still waiting for one of Garth’s size fourteen and a half shoes to drop. “Listen,” he tells me, “I’ve realized the error of my ways.”I remind him: “Forgive my cynicism, but you’ve been leaving me for eight out of almost ten years. And anyhow, if you’re staying out of honor, you’ll create a scenario so I’ll be the one to walk, even with my old hips.”Garth is always pissed off at me for one thing or another.
Peering out from a window seat on a train ride to visit my mother, eighty-four and possibly dying, frames of Colville, flat fields, square wood houses painted white or red brick, a bridge painted hospital green, I write longhand about the bright red vibrator Garth has recently purchased. For a fifty-seven-year-old ex bodybuilder, a train ride causes knees to ache, a right leg to numb, pain sweeping outward across a lower back. Passengers stand, adjust clothing, walk down the aisle to the bathroom. For twenty-five minutes, the pressure of accumulated urine bears down on my bladder. I’m a short-sighted astigmatic fugitive on VIA 1, car 91, seat 48, bound for Montreal. When I’m feeling shy, I take off my contact lenses. I’ve trained myself to seek out positive purposes whenever I’m in a bind, so I reframe: that mix of pressure and holding it in—it’s sex! Whether from piss or a man’s cock, it’s sex. And that’s the power of the reframe.I often wonder about my future with Garth. I love him as surely as I breathe. I hold my breath, sometimes, to escape from loving him. I like the way his shadow cloaks me and his good eye makes sure I’m safe. He walks slowly, but he’s steady. Sometimes he can’t fall asleep because his mind is still plodding along. I guess he could walk clear across town nonstop or that with one giant step, he could traverse across a continent. His mind works in the same way.
After he bought the bright red vibrator, I asked him what he was thinking about when he walked into the store.
“Why do you insist on asking me questions that you know will cause friction?” he said.
“What?”
“Like that other message you sent.”
“Which one? Oh the one where I asked you what you thought when you first heard me coming for you over the phone? I didn’t mean every time, but the first or in general, you know. When you had your eight hundred number and we were new and fresh and I’d lie on the floor in the Indian Road house and come for you. I’d say, now I’m putting my index and middle finger on my clit and I’m rubbing, harder, faster―all that shit―and I’d sigh and moan for you. And you know what you said, the only thing you said?”
“No. Although I know you’re going to tell me.”
“You said, ‘You’re using up my 1-800 minutes.’”
“That’s what I mean,” Garth said, perturbed, “It was ten years ago. Why would I remember something that happened ten years ago?”
“Because I remember. I’ll never forget as long as I live.”
“That’s you. What I want to know is why you even bother to think about these things, and although I can’t understand why you do, why you purposefully annoy me?”
I inverted the Ajax container over the toilet bowl. I’m outta here.“Because,” I lied, “I’m writing a book. I wanted to know how you think. You’re supposed to be interested in the mind of the person you’re fucking.”
“I walked in, looked around, saw a vibrator, paid, and walked out.”
“You visualize or even think of me, when you were looking around, I mean?”
“No.”
In all my fifty-seven years, this was the first time a man had stuck a vibrator up my cunt or ass. We were lying down, side by side down and kissing and Garth said, “Just a minute, got something for you,” and walked across the room to his dresser. He was wearing his usual black t-shirt, the one that comes down to the top of his balls. He came back to bed, kissed me, and put his arm around me which was unusual for him.“Will you come for me?” he asked, in a low seductive voice that only a select few can truly achieve. He didn’t say, “Will you come for me, baby?” because it wasn’t his way. He never calls me baby, sweetie, sweetheart, or darling, although the next time he fucked me, when he bit my ass so hard I cried out, he said, “How about my girl?” “I like it!” I said. He did his best.
“Lie on your back,” he said. He rubbed my clit with his index, his middle up-yours finger near my cunt hole. I moved his hand higher. I like when Garth rubs directly on, not hard-pressed on, but short, repetitive, moderately fast motions across, which is an important bit of knowledge to pass on to subsequent generations, of which Garth is one.Garth excels at timing. He knows when fast is preferable. When to go slow and ease in. When to put his large hands on my neck, on my hips, thighs and breasts, when to squeeze my ass or one of my nipples. He’s good at what he does. Sometimes he bites into the flesh of my ass. I know I will recall these times when I am older. There are those who reminisce about a shared sunset or a lover’s starry sky. I wish for more brightness and depth in his eye when he first catches sight of me, a softening in his face. But Garth is blind in his right eye, something about a pencil being lodged and his mother His psyche is similar―alternately insightful and blind.
The vibrator trembles continuously; it shudders and churns my insides. I prefer the real thing―Garth’s cock with its wonderful width, its sweet musky scent, and the burnt sienna pubic hair surrounding his balls. I love his cock. I rub it over my face, on my neck, across my mouth. I breathe deeply when I’m on an outing with his prick. Garth has a powerful prick with Zen inspiration. Even when he’s short with me, I look at him with admiration and lust. He’s a fine figure of a man. There is no doubt about that.
Meanwhile he’s really into this vibrator thing. “Do you mind if I take over?” I ask.“Suit yourself,” he says. After nine years, I still don’t know his predilections or whether he has any. I know he likes it when I talk: “Tell me what you’re thinking.” “Why do you like it?” “Tell me which you prefer and why?” Multiple choice might be easier. I feel with my mind when Garth fucks me, which is altogether different. Garth hammers me about being argumentative. Fucking is the only time when the game is almost real. I know who we are when he’s slamming my cunt, crammed up my ass and pulling my head back by my hair, when he positions his prick at the very back of my throat.
Anyhow, he’s shoving this red V inside me as I rub my clit, tensing my legs and pointing my toes. He kisses my mouth. He kisses me after I’ve been sucking on his cock; he kisses me deeply after he rims me. The man is transforming himself. He doesn’t see when I start to grin. When I’m about to come, I stop, and he takes over. I imagine myself hooting hollering screaming, and resolve to work on my vocalizations. Garth says I have a standard range that I pretty much stay within. I can come two or three times in a row and when Garth leaves the room, I come three more times. I’ve discovered the sexy warmth of coming accompanied by piss. Not a bladder full, just left-overs. Garth adores his bed so I save this new adventure for my own private wanderings. I believe that altering my come song is a sound beginning. I want to yell when I come, to discover unchartered territory.“Come. Come now, my girl, and spray all over the bed,” he says. Which pleases me immensely. He’s full of surprises, although he delivers them sparingly.
I think in time I might grow to appreciate the red vibrator. Or not. On this introductory night Garth carefully inserts it up my ass while he fucks me in our now decade old kneeling on the floor, leaning against the sofa style. When I grow older and less able, I’ll never tire of this position. “On all fours,” he says in his low mellow voice. Our first couch was a black, fake suede curvaceous piece. After that a tan, also fake suede, more traditional style sofa, and now a light beige leather love seat. Pumping and fucking away, with the hum of the red plastic inside me, he asks:“What are you thinking of?” “How does it feel?” “Why do you like it?”“I just like to please you.” “I like it when you’re up my ass and my cunt all at the same time.” “It feels like it never ends, that my ass is connected to my cunt.”And will you get that damn thing out cause it feels like a fucking turd and it’s fucking plastic for shit’s sake—but baby, let’s play it anyway. On my way home I feel, back-to-back, the end of my cunt and asshole. No pain, but I shift my position a few times as I drive and maybe I need to pee, or maybe it’s the beginning of a urinary tract infection.
Juicing Up
Garth is juicing up. He says his balls have hardly shrunk. Next time I suck on his balls, I’m going to see if I have to suck one in and then the other or if I can slurp both in at the same time. When Garth first asked me to give him his shot, I refused. I was worried about being an accomplice in potential ill health consequences and subsequent afterlife recriminations. Also I have to admit to a slight queasiness at stabbing a needle into his flesh. Garth is thick- kinned as well as thick-minded (due to his low sensitivity quotient, not his intellectual prowess). I phone him. “So what did you do?” “What could I do?” he says. “I went elsewhere.”
I like being involved in Garth’s life. It brings us closer together and shines through into our sex life. When it’s time for his third shot, jealousy prompts me to swab a swatch of skin on his upper left glute with alcohol, stretch the flesh, jab the needle straight in, steadily depress the syringe with just the right speed sending the shit into his body, then quickly, without delay, withdrawing the needle. He’s using Deca in this cycle. Next cycle he’s going to use Winstrol V. We both have a fondness for V. You can see the results within three weeks; you become bigger, leaner, stronger. Sometimes I miss my building days. The truth is, within all my years of training with builders, I’ve never seen such raw size and enormous potential as Garth possesses. When he lies on his side and bends his leg, his thigh, his fucking quads and hams are mammoth as all hell, one fucking huge Redwood tree trunk. I love and envy his size.
Garth is cranky, morose, and short-tempered, while I ache for gentleness and surrounding warmth. He worries about me and I like that. Like the time I felt dizzy for two days and he lay awake for three hours, going over my family’s cardiac history and my potential health risks. He wants to go down as a man with some heart. I think I love him too intensely, though it’s true I embrace passion. I cast him out of my life at least a dozen times a day and miss him in my bed at night. Tomorrow he might fuck me, kiss me with his big hands.
Pissing
Writing an erotic story is the neatest thing. It’s such a fucking turn on. It’s true that the words, how it all comes out or doesn’t, causes my right leg to shake while I type, first one leg and then both. The tapping (legs and keyboard) has a jazzy, syncopated beat. If I walk away from the computer and take a few deep breaths, I might relax. Instead I rock ten times in my black office chair. Then I count off twenty-nine steps to the bathroom.
When Garth heard my voice this morning, he said “Have you ever thought of taking up yoga?” I pee and wipe myself. My mind is like a manual typewriter, images and phrases streaking through―woman on the floor, ping; woman rubbing clit, ping ping; woman, ping ping ping; intake of breath, ping; lower case c, o, upper case MES, ping. A come is a come, solitary or joint. Garth should know that. Either way, it’s release. Or should I hold off like an athlete, revving up my words with pent-up energy?Lately, I come with my ass as well as my cunt because Garth is performing all this rimming and my nerves are waking up. Still, there’s something missing when my come whishes through. I’m tired of streamlined arrivals and departures.
Garth’s office is nestled inside a beige brick and glass building on Willowdale Avenue. To get into his office, you have to enter a general waiting room. Two doors lead off the room. One leads to a small corridor that folds into a rectangular room of about ten feet by sixteen feet. The furniture is functional; a sturdy black wood L-shaped desk surrounds him at one end of the office and a soda-fountain-high wood dining table with four upholstered chairs stand self-consciously in the centre of the room. There are no pictures on the walls. The desk holds the usual accoutrements: a computer, papers (piled), assorted pens (in a blue kitchen glass), and a photo (outdated, of his son).
Garth still has his mail sent to my apartment because one day he’s going to buy a house and he wants to improve his credit rating. Even though I live ten minutes away by car, I rarely drop by. That’s an issue between us.
“I work,” I tell him. “What if you had a conventional girlfriend who worked at an office?”
“But you don’t,” he says.
“It’s different. You should know—there’s Caroline.”
“Yes,” he says. “I know.”
On this occasion, I’m wearing some perfume, actually an oil. Egyptian musk. Two dabs on the inside of my wrist, rubbed in, and then massaged onto each side of my neck. Lisa says it’s a subtle approach.
“You took a bath in it just to annoy me,” Garth says.
“What?”
“You come in here, after I practically beg you, and you know how your perfume affects me.”
“It’s Body Shop, Garth. Two dabs.”
“If you say so.”
“Listen. I’m here, aren’t I?”
“To annoy me? Yes.”“
I don’t know why I bothered. I left my writing. I left Caroline when she was sleeping—I put a note on the table and some food and her meds. And I took a shower and put on just a touch of this oil, Garth, just a touch. I was sad for almost twenty-eight years my first time round—add that with our time, maybe thirty-five.”
“I don’t need this,” he says, “there are plenty women who would be glad to have me. Is it too much to ask for a happy simple life?”
“Fine. You find your little woman.” My throat swells up when I’m upset, its walls becoming dry like caked earth. Words escape parched and brittle.
“If you go out that door, you’re not coming back,” he says in his low flat voice. “Go. Get it over with.”
It’s an ordinary door. Smooth surface. Painted white. He’s tired, he says, of sending people out of his life, of forcing a final decision. “Go or stay, I don’t care anymore.” He leans back in his office chair, his face immobile as he plays solitaire. The clicking as he sets cards in place and moves others from or to the pack makes my skin itch. I slap my skin. It’s black fly season, the air thick with buzzards swarming and landing.I ask for some kind words before I leave; after one decade such a memorable moment should be played out with grace.
“The situation doesn’t warrant positive words,” he says. “Make a choice,” he says and gets up. “Excuse me. I have to leave my office for a moment.”
“Why?” I say.
“Nature doesn’t stop for quarrels,” he says.
I wait with restless eyes. Perhaps he thinks I would choose to exit; he’d return and I’d be gone—a shadow on the walls of his office and narrow corridor, slipping into the street. My throat is a noose. When he returns I ask him what he wants for himself although I know I cannot offer him those things he needs—to settle down, his wife in his bed at night, a quiet life. I ask for friendship. “Drink some water,” he says, “it’s important to keep your body hydrated, it’ll help your joints.” He offers me his water bottle.
“Come here,” he says. “There’s something I need to do.”
“I haven’t showered since this morning.”
“I could smell you.” he says.
“That’s nice.”
“Really. Your smell changes when you’re thinking of sex.”
“I was thinking I would miss you, how I would be sad.”
“Come.”
I walk around his desk. He swivels around in his chair, pulls me to him, and holds me. It’s uncomfortable but I don’t move. I look outside his office window beyond the heavy-lidded Venetian blinds. There’s a grooming pet store across the street. Occasionally a body and pet walk south to north or the reverse.
“Your blinds are open.”
“Look at my car. Can you see through the windows?”
His car is silver with shaded windows.
“No one can see through the blinds and dark glass. Same thing.”
“You sure? You’re not getting off on a peep show and we’re the show?”
“No,” he says.
“I’ll suck you off, but I don’t want you to rim me.”
“Why not?”
“Because, this is your office and not your bedroom.”
“I can see that,” he says. “So?”
“Well, I can’t come in your office and it’s such a pleasing thing, this rimming thing you do. I want to be in your bed.”
“Don’t worry about it.”
“But I would love to suck you off.” Which at this moment is not true.
“I’ve lost the interest.”
“It would please me, as well as you.”
“I have to leave in twenty-two minutes anyhow.”
“Just turn around then.” He pulls my jeans down. “Lean across the desk.”
“But I can see people.”
“Look the other way or close your eyes.” He rolls his desk chair back. “Can you bend over the desk?” He worries about my back pains. He bites the left cheek of my ass. He licks the line from my asshole to my coccyx and kisses me on the other side of my ass. He puts his finger up my cunt and rims me. I close my eyes so I can feel the light from his tongue. He flicks his tongue in my asshole and he says, “That’s what I needed, that’s what I have been waiting for.”
I use my all-purpose double-consonant. “Mm,” I say.
“You’re as wet as you were last time. It seems that we’ve taken the next step.
“What?”
“Ass fucking without lube.”
“Sounds scary,” I say. “I don’t feel that wet.”
He twirls his middle finger inside me and draws a thick circle on my thigh.“How do you want it?”
“I don’t know. Maybe in the traditional way.”
“But where exactly?”
“Not in my mouth and not up the ass, which would leave only one hole.”
“Are you sure?”
“I think so.”
He puts his prick up my cunt and I say “ow” although he’s actually gentle. “Sure you don’t want it in the ass?” he asks and I say, “Yes, I’m sure,” because his cock filling my asshole takes some getting used to and I’m tired. So he fucks me hard in the cunt, ram ram ram. “Let’s just test that,” he says and stands up beside his black wood desk with his cock out and ready. I want to see if his balls are normal size because he’s juicing up, but I worry about ruining the moment, so I tell him the drops at his cock’s tip look like stars. “I only hope you can find another broad who loves sucking and swallowing the way I do,” I had said earlier when I thought I was leaving. What an odd pair we are, certainly. I realize that afternoon as I must have before, not that I couldn’t leave, but that I don’t want to and that perhaps I love him with the ferocity one reads about in coveted novels with worn covers. I love my girls more than my own life, I often say. There are some moments when I think I love Garth even more. And that’s one secret.
The Story Ends, Part Two
The story ends quite simply. It stops. The words stop. I am no longer able to tap out exotic messages to panting men. Garth will not allow me into the gym at the same time as he is there. I’ve embarrassed him in the past, he says. Once I lay under the vertical leg machine, pressing three plates and a quarter on each side for reps. Afterwards I got up and started to cry. I lost it. Garth walked away. “Even strong women cry,” I said. “Not at the gym,” he said and walked away.He says he has his own reasons for his refusal to admit me. I know he’s training Marion because he needs the cash. He trains with her and she pays him; she sidles up to him after his set and wipes the sweat off his forehead with her palm. Marion wanted to fuck Garth even when he was living with me and I was training her at the prissy Women’s Workout. I’m responsible for her metamorphosis from scrawny to moderately muscled although her upper torso is way too long and she has a straight bony back. Garth has wildly overstepped his bounds. I love this harsh man. Whether my book with its stream of words is published, is equally undisclosed. That I seek out love as a reason for living―such wishes dim suddenly and gradually, flicker and expire. My mind, kicked in its stomach, keels over. The family doctor puts me on antidepressant medication. I wish life would stop. Not end. Just a welcome freeze frame. There’s a line in Moonstruck when Olivia Dukakis confronts her straying husband. “You’re going to die anyway,” she tells him.
Men trickle back into my life. “Sorry, sorry,” Mark finally writes. His alcoholic friend was sacked. Mark was spending his days reading and writing dirty emails. He has relocated. He has a new job. Lenny is coming to visit. From time to time he reviews the CD of my artwork. He says he might fall in love with my soul if he stares at my work too frequently or for too long. The prospect of Lenny’s visiting thrills me. I feel alive for a morning and part of the afternoon. Robbie calls me “hot mama” and wishes to see me naked. I send him a picture of me and Josie. We’re both in jeans, our heads and fingertips touching. Sometimes I phone Abie and cry. He likes to give advice. I love my girls. And that is the beginning and the end.
When It Is Summer at the Lakeshore
Is this how a woman allows a story to end? Selling her soul? Pimping herself out? Have I not learned anything in my two-and-a-half-year search, ignoring truths I stumbled on in my nine-year run with Garth, my grueling twenty-eight-year trek with Abie? Are these the lessons I want to teach my girls? The printed words I offer them in memory? Are these my ashes? The pride I gather around me when all else has been lost or taken? The story is too fucking sad. Bag ladies leer at me, their screeching haunts me at night. It’s cold inside.
It’s only a cunt baby. It’s only an asshole. But honey, it’s my cunt, my asshole, my soul you’re ramming the lights out of.If I check my soul, can I reclaim it later? Do I weave and smile and bob? Have I grown soft, honey?
After all this time, I still can’t distinguish between love and need. And you know it’s funny, because you go up to your man and tell him what a fucking asshole he’s been and he says “Who me?” I used to think my father was the messiah; that Abie would keep me whole and safe; and finally, that Garth with his powerful body and treacherous mind would prevent harm from breaking and entering.But waves like hungry sharks pursue me, and men are either unwilling or unable champions. Gathering at the shore’s edge, they track my bobbing figure: “Now her head is submerged. Now she’s coming up and gulping for air. Nope, she’s going under again.” From the receding shoreline, men wearing black ankle socks in leather lace-up shoes shout out advice and directions.
Robbie with his magnificent dreadlocks emailed his six-scene play to be critiqued and has written few words to me since. Mark, with all his coolness, leaves his final message, “All I can say is I sure do miss you JCT. It’ll take a few more weeks, two, or three, until it all gets back to normal.” He phones from an airport, his voice slurred. “I just landed in Los Vegas. I’m going to do little gambling. We’ll be here a couple of days. Talk to you soon. I trust that you’re doing well, OK babe?” In the end they just want to fuck you one way or another. And yet, my darling daughters, when it’s summer in town at the Lakeshore and the moon is up and full, grab your young man, let your heart slide down into your arms, and hold him tight.
“There Is No Remedy for Love but to Love More” —Henri David Thoreau
I like my words to fill the room. “Fill in all the white space,” my grade school art teacher used to say. So I’m always late, sometimes fifteen minutes and up to thirty, which makes coloring in Dr. B’s forty-five-minute hour easy. I don’t like pauses or boredom. As Dr. B. arrives at the inner door to his office, I make a B-line toward to the clock on the end table. Sometimes I offer up a reason for my delay. Usually I don’t. Not after all these years. He says I look younger than when we first met in the later part of the nineties. I list off my procedures: lower lids, collogen, laser, botox. Being upfront pleases me and makes me laugh. People think I’m being honest. This round I’m back with several goals in mind: to de-traumatize after the evictions, poverty and instability; to embrace Caroline whose head roots about as she talks to everyone and no one in particular; to build my Josie a tree house; to transform the fear base from which I operate; and to bring closure to my relationship with Garth whom I love quite obsessively and who has repeatedly announced as he did last night at around eleven o’clock that he is number one, the only number that matters. “It’s my well being before anyone else’s,” he said while I sucked the come out of his inflated prick.
He’s a professional trumpet player who has performed at three presidential inaugurations. He’s played with this and that notable, and this and that notable have played with him. He also burps, farts and pisses while he talks to me. The more I talk to him, the more his talk transforms into a series of snorts and grunts. I say something about my pain. “Where baby oh my baby where?” he says. “My ankles, my knee, my groin,” I say. He perks up when I say groin. “I’m the man to fix that one.” He laughs and snorts again. He travels across the country. He’s an in demand classical trumpet player although he plays jazz and experimental on occasion. He has a fine collection of sweaters.
A tall man delivers a used dining room table with clawed feet. Even though John in the gatehouse calls up, I start and then freeze at the double knock on the door. The mover looks at my art work. He loves art work, he says with a French accent. He is wearing a dark grey straw hat and he’s as tall as night. I decide I must have him.
He moves in for two weeks. He phones when he’s coming home. I have supper waiting for him. He eats everything. He listens to Caroline and teaches her how to play drums on his soundless drum kit. Garth thinks I’ve taken a stranger in to protect him from immigration and that’s true. “You’re a fool,” Garth tells me and advises me to call the cops.
Kema’s prick is longer than Garth’s. I choke. Maybe it’s because I have less practice. Because I’m alone a lot. I want my hair to fall across a man’s chest, I want him to bruise my lips with his kisses, to sweep my hair across his thighs, his neck his face his cock. That’s all that I want. Is it asking too much? Do you think?
Thursday, January 13, 2011
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
Hooked (erotivc memoir - edit 1)
Hooked
Mark hasn’t responded to my latest phone message. A woman comes on the phone, oh honey, oh, oh, heavy breathing, and the schmuck hasn’t the decency to send a thank you. He has five hundred of my emails, a damn book if he wants, and a video, and I’m pissing in my pants about the video because of Garth and his pornographic Internet wanderings. Men fall in love with me over my words. Lenny thinks they’d love me for my art as well. He is the only man with my art CD. He’ll fall for me if he stares too hard at my work, he can see my soul in those pictures, he says. Go right ahead, I tell him.
Lenny offers me a birthday present to visit him whether we fuck or not. I’m not used to such nice men. Instead I spread my legs; “There’s love in these here parts, baby.” The weeds behind my eyes grow wilder day by day. I’m renting a condo with a southeastern view of electrical towers beside theYonge-Finch subway line. Just beyond the towers, a plot of grass remains untouched, except for summer gardeners who plant vegetables and fruits in clear rows. The land looks like a cemetery even though there are leaves growing and weeds running out of control.
Everything is for the book: the first time Garth told me to take a shower and then shaved me so he could ass-lick me; how I lay on my stomach, pressing my cunt into the mattress, coming right there and then, and how that pleased me. Garth is a fastidious shaver. He takes his sweet time and he doesn’t say anything. His breathing doesn’t waver. He just dips the razor into warm water, wipes with another warm towel and surveys his work. Sometimes he tells me to lift my legs or turn over or go on all fours. And then he fucks me. His emotions are so bare, I lose sight of myself. I can’t even tell whether I’m hot or wet and to what degree.
My life has been turned inside out with all the writing. I could deal with Lenny’s fucking other chicks, I just need to be his main squeeze. I miss my painting and my paints, the hues of greens, blues, and purples, also reds, my irredescents, and my gentle life. I’m hooked and high on the book.
One clear suburban night outside Tim Hortons, two separate men roll down their car windows and offer me cash. “I was wearing my man’s leather coat, jeans, and my blundstones for god’s sake! Right next to the condo, can you believe it?” I tell Garth. Even watered down Willowdale debauchery allures me. I get drunk on the chattering of the keyboard although Garth advices me to leave debauchery for the next book.
I’m hooked. Lenny, Mark, Edward, Robbie, Louis, Will, the other Edward, Errol, Bruce, Robert, Michael, Garth —one deep full-bodied breath and I’m off and running, seeking out that point where life stops, just around the bend, I think, but when I reach the corner, life leers and moves to another block, another corner. You can’t direct life like steering a cock to a pussy. So I keep walking. The only time I feel fully embraced in the arms of happy moment, when I’m really cooking and thankful, is when I’m working on the book, writing to one of my men or lying with him. Visiting my eighty-three year old mother, I pace, sneak alcohol from the lower pantry shelf, peer in cupboards, and make notes on her medication for Garth who will tell me “oh, this is for that and I’d say give her six months, a year tops.” I’m homesick for my computer keys and I miss smoking up. My glasses remain in their silver Hakim Optical case. One early morning I tiptoe into the living room to inhale my father’s meticulously selected books and Zadi’s old treasures stamped “Pro Libris Samuel Lapitsky.” My god, all these books. I wonder whether my deceased relatives captured in these shiny frames are witnessing me taking stock.
I search for my father in Irving Stone, Durrell, Sinclair Lewis, in titles like “Main Street,” “The Mandarins,” and “Ulysses” books transported from the floor-to-ceiling bookshelves in the house on Wilder Avenue since renamed after some French-Canadian woman, Antonine Maillet, about whom I have wondered, but never looked up—and why not? I mean it’s odd, my following a homeless question for decades when a single trip to a local library would have saved it from the streets and inclement weather.
“Portrait of the Artist . . .”—sitting at Garth’s black desk one night, Caroline asleep in her sunroom cot, I told Lisa I was writing to an ex-con with a penchant for James Joyce. “It’s tough reading,” my poet daughter said. “He tries to go into the unconscious of characters in Dublin, as they might think or say in their tongue and with their history. I’m not advising against it, but it’s challenging.” “Which is not a bad thing, I’m always up to a challenge,” I’d said. I’m a pro at bravado. I can round up the players—brain, heart, and clit—at a moment’s notice. Dressed or naked, it’s all about energy, and every time, they fall for it, the men-boys, applauding wildly and pressing past security.
I sit on the shoreline, my memory at high tide—stepping on the wood, red, and silver metal step ladder to hoist “A Rage to Live” off the uppermost Wilder Avenue bookshelf, the book cover deep burgundy, romantic paragraphs read and reread. DH’s “Women in Love,” “Lady Chatterly.” Can my father hear me? If he hears and sees, what does he see? When? Always? At intervals? What does a spirit do for eternity? And how does one remain occupied when time never starts or stops?
A wood elephant, its grainy texture smooth but still apparent, trunk raised, tusks intact, draws me to the middle shelf. I am hoping the tusks aren’t real. On the shelf above, a black and white photo of Mummy nineteen-forty’s beautiful, and Daddy, his expression all soft and mellow. He was not like that, not an easy man. My parents’ McGill days, Daddy lighthearted and animated. And old photos, a young girl in a dress with knickers peeking out from beneath the hem, a smooth-faced boy, his hair wet and parted, bare wrists exposed past the edges of his jacket sleeves.
I’ve come away with a good catch this time. Five of Daddy’s sports jackets, four ties, a a pair of his pajamas, white and blue striped, my sister’s ankle-length black coat, a plastic ribbed vial with “Elizabeth Arden Make-up Remover” in my mother’s scrawl, two long sleeve jerseys, red and olive green (Daddy’s), and four books instead of one. A hardcover with gilded edges signed, “For Your Reading Pleasure, With Love, Mummy.” We have a family custom: one souvenir book per visit. I choose Feuchtwanger’s “This is the Hour,” because a book on Goya with well-written words about his persona, art processes described, and accompanying reproductions might be an inspiring and impressive book to possess. I’m self-conscious about the scope and appearance of my library. I also copped “The Mandarins,” something by Alexander King—“I Should Have Kissed Her More” (recalling past reading pleasures, possibly romantic), and Franz Kaffa’s short story collection to activate my mind into an avant-garde sensibility.
My mother is growing old. One night after supper, sitting at the table while pouring over the TV guide as has become her post-meal custom and placing red ink stars beside shows she would recommend, she holds out her left leg. “See,” she says, all perked and chipper, “it gets swollen.” The calf and front leg are swollen and hard. There are raised purple and red circles on the flesh. The skin is red. “It’s water,” she says. “I take pills.” Garth told me to record her prescriptions. I flip through her worn leather-bound diary she keeps on the kitchen counter and make notes. He’s preparing me, he says. It’s not that he cares about her, but he figures she’ll go soon. He asks for updates about her health and her mood. When had she become so feeble? Five front teeth are missing. Her dental plate irritates her. On her chest and arms are coin-sized red welts, sores, and medieval round red circles on her limbs, back, and upper chest. She sits watching TV, her hair done just this day for the occasion of daughter and two grandchildren visiting. She picks absentmindedly at the shapes on her upper back and on her arms. “Keeps me busy,” she says.
She has started using my father’s walker that had been stored away. Stubbornly and only on occasion. My father still asserts his presence with his plaid pillow against the back of his chair and the opaque white pail he had used for Kleenex and spittle. The plastic bucket had become toward the end, kind of a spittoon. Life goes fast. There are newspapers all over the table, some already yellow, piled up and edited with headings underlined or circled, “Send to Susan.” “For Janice.” “Mail to Julian.” She doesn’t answer when her back is turned and I’m sitting at the teak kitchen table. “Ma,” I say when she sits down in her chair, “I don’t know, I’m worried.” She looks at me with her clear lake eyes. “Your hearing, Ma, can you, I don’t know, sometimes—” Her hand settles lightly on my arm. “No,” she says, “what makes you say that?” Still, if you whisper a juicy bit you don’t want her to hear or if you tiptoe over to the fridge late at night to sneak out some of supper’s remnants or to pour a glass of red wine for the sake of slight inebriation not the quality of wine, she’s suddenly right beside you, peering over your shoulder, taking notes. All your secrets, your hidden life, she creeps up and files them. I know this―we’re a family of internal spies.
I compose and send my new slight off to Robbie and then to Lenny. I yearn for love’s shawl around my winter shoulders. Men enter and fade or simply exit. While defining themselves as cool, they worry about my excessiveness. Lisa says I’d be wiser to choose a man with the possibility of a future, a man from the same city and maybe I should think about why I go for these long-distance ones.
Lenny phones every four months, calling me “baby,” “honey bunny.” “It’s a nice family piece with some interesting aspects,” Lenny writes when I send him the writing about my old mother, “but how will you weave the family piece into that fucking and sucking?” I tell him it all fits together. My mother coughs in bed at night. She keeps her standing lamp light on; she coughs and coughs. It’s a dry cough. I lie still so I can listen in and then I think of Robbie who has not yet phoned to tell me how great I sounded coming on the phone. Fuck him. If he doesn’t fall for the sound of a fine come. I worry whether I had sounded wild enough, had it sounded fake, too standard “oh baby,” intake of breath, “oh,” intake of breath. Everything is linked, Lenny. You know that, you who peeped at nuns.
I should have. I should have stayed by his bedside. Instead he died alone in the dying ward with only a fluorescent green line to keep him company. “You can go now, Daddy,” I said, my voice low and mellow and honey. “You can let go. You don’t need to fight any more. I’m alright. Really I am. And Caroline is with me and that makes her happy. And Lisa’s home. She writes poetry, Daddy. She’s a wonder.” His ears. Elephant ears. Can he hear me? “Let go Daddy. Don’t be afraid. And we’ll see each other again, you’ll see. You took care of us so well, all this time. It’s your time. You can let go now. Don’t be afraid.” I dressed my voice in black velvet to help him die and then I left.
“Ma, I’m going to the hospital,” I said the next morning.
“What can you do?” she said. “Where is the TV remote? Didn’t I leave it here? Maybe it’s my room, last night—”
I stayed for her. She’s alone, I thought, here while he’s dying. At ten the phone rang.
“It’s over,” she said. I want to write what she did after that, did she sit, sort the yellow-edged newspapers on the table, circle TV shows in the Gazette. She didn’t cry. I never saw her cry. Except once, at the Wilder house. “I’ll ask Daddy, he’s smarter than you anyhow,” I said when she didn’t know the answer to a history question. She was standing behind the counter, her hands busy adding greens, potatoes, and broiled steak to our home-from-school lunchtime plates. One swollen tear sighed on her cheek. Regrets.
When I was seventeen, Juan, a waiter at Camp Epstein in the Quebec Laurentians, fucked me in his cramped staff cabin just beside a clear path etched out from repeated romantic nighttime trips to the waterfront and conveniently down the hill from the mess hall. He was a highfaluting Jewish boy from Buffalo who went to some private school where his father was an English teacher. Juan said he was a certified genius. He had dark brown razor cut hair and an excellent profile. His cabin mate, Marty Cohen (whose voice never changed and who later became a double-chinned government financial analyst) lay asleep in the cot just two or three feet away. I lay on top of Juan, his prick up me as I grinded back and forth against his pubic hair. “Harder, harder,” I said. “Don’t stop,” and came three times in a row, moderate level but first time memorable and impressive. Marty woke up five minutes after I left. After that summer I would bring my boys downstairs to the den, fuck them, and come. Nothing hardcore screaming uncontrollably, just a hard climbing, low-peaked climax. Family and fucking are always linked, Lenny. It’s biological.
My mother’s room is not of this world. She waits in a space levitating, just raised above the earth and bound for heaven, waiting in line.
Mark hasn’t responded to my latest phone message. A woman comes on the phone, oh honey, oh, oh, heavy breathing, and the schmuck hasn’t the decency to send a thank you. He has five hundred of my emails, a damn book if he wants, and a video, and I’m pissing in my pants about the video because of Garth and his pornographic Internet wanderings. Men fall in love with me over my words. Lenny thinks they’d love me for my art as well. He is the only man with my art CD. He’ll fall for me if he stares too hard at my work, he can see my soul in those pictures, he says. Go right ahead, I tell him.
Lenny offers me a birthday present to visit him whether we fuck or not. I’m not used to such nice men. Instead I spread my legs; “There’s love in these here parts, baby.” The weeds behind my eyes grow wilder day by day. I’m renting a condo with a southeastern view of electrical towers beside theYonge-Finch subway line. Just beyond the towers, a plot of grass remains untouched, except for summer gardeners who plant vegetables and fruits in clear rows. The land looks like a cemetery even though there are leaves growing and weeds running out of control.
Everything is for the book: the first time Garth told me to take a shower and then shaved me so he could ass-lick me; how I lay on my stomach, pressing my cunt into the mattress, coming right there and then, and how that pleased me. Garth is a fastidious shaver. He takes his sweet time and he doesn’t say anything. His breathing doesn’t waver. He just dips the razor into warm water, wipes with another warm towel and surveys his work. Sometimes he tells me to lift my legs or turn over or go on all fours. And then he fucks me. His emotions are so bare, I lose sight of myself. I can’t even tell whether I’m hot or wet and to what degree.
My life has been turned inside out with all the writing. I could deal with Lenny’s fucking other chicks, I just need to be his main squeeze. I miss my painting and my paints, the hues of greens, blues, and purples, also reds, my irredescents, and my gentle life. I’m hooked and high on the book.
One clear suburban night outside Tim Hortons, two separate men roll down their car windows and offer me cash. “I was wearing my man’s leather coat, jeans, and my blundstones for god’s sake! Right next to the condo, can you believe it?” I tell Garth. Even watered down Willowdale debauchery allures me. I get drunk on the chattering of the keyboard although Garth advices me to leave debauchery for the next book.
I’m hooked. Lenny, Mark, Edward, Robbie, Louis, Will, the other Edward, Errol, Bruce, Robert, Michael, Garth —one deep full-bodied breath and I’m off and running, seeking out that point where life stops, just around the bend, I think, but when I reach the corner, life leers and moves to another block, another corner. You can’t direct life like steering a cock to a pussy. So I keep walking. The only time I feel fully embraced in the arms of happy moment, when I’m really cooking and thankful, is when I’m working on the book, writing to one of my men or lying with him. Visiting my eighty-three year old mother, I pace, sneak alcohol from the lower pantry shelf, peer in cupboards, and make notes on her medication for Garth who will tell me “oh, this is for that and I’d say give her six months, a year tops.” I’m homesick for my computer keys and I miss smoking up. My glasses remain in their silver Hakim Optical case. One early morning I tiptoe into the living room to inhale my father’s meticulously selected books and Zadi’s old treasures stamped “Pro Libris Samuel Lapitsky.” My god, all these books. I wonder whether my deceased relatives captured in these shiny frames are witnessing me taking stock.
I search for my father in Irving Stone, Durrell, Sinclair Lewis, in titles like “Main Street,” “The Mandarins,” and “Ulysses” books transported from the floor-to-ceiling bookshelves in the house on Wilder Avenue since renamed after some French-Canadian woman, Antonine Maillet, about whom I have wondered, but never looked up—and why not? I mean it’s odd, my following a homeless question for decades when a single trip to a local library would have saved it from the streets and inclement weather.
“Portrait of the Artist . . .”—sitting at Garth’s black desk one night, Caroline asleep in her sunroom cot, I told Lisa I was writing to an ex-con with a penchant for James Joyce. “It’s tough reading,” my poet daughter said. “He tries to go into the unconscious of characters in Dublin, as they might think or say in their tongue and with their history. I’m not advising against it, but it’s challenging.” “Which is not a bad thing, I’m always up to a challenge,” I’d said. I’m a pro at bravado. I can round up the players—brain, heart, and clit—at a moment’s notice. Dressed or naked, it’s all about energy, and every time, they fall for it, the men-boys, applauding wildly and pressing past security.
I sit on the shoreline, my memory at high tide—stepping on the wood, red, and silver metal step ladder to hoist “A Rage to Live” off the uppermost Wilder Avenue bookshelf, the book cover deep burgundy, romantic paragraphs read and reread. DH’s “Women in Love,” “Lady Chatterly.” Can my father hear me? If he hears and sees, what does he see? When? Always? At intervals? What does a spirit do for eternity? And how does one remain occupied when time never starts or stops?
A wood elephant, its grainy texture smooth but still apparent, trunk raised, tusks intact, draws me to the middle shelf. I am hoping the tusks aren’t real. On the shelf above, a black and white photo of Mummy nineteen-forty’s beautiful, and Daddy, his expression all soft and mellow. He was not like that, not an easy man. My parents’ McGill days, Daddy lighthearted and animated. And old photos, a young girl in a dress with knickers peeking out from beneath the hem, a smooth-faced boy, his hair wet and parted, bare wrists exposed past the edges of his jacket sleeves.
I’ve come away with a good catch this time. Five of Daddy’s sports jackets, four ties, a a pair of his pajamas, white and blue striped, my sister’s ankle-length black coat, a plastic ribbed vial with “Elizabeth Arden Make-up Remover” in my mother’s scrawl, two long sleeve jerseys, red and olive green (Daddy’s), and four books instead of one. A hardcover with gilded edges signed, “For Your Reading Pleasure, With Love, Mummy.” We have a family custom: one souvenir book per visit. I choose Feuchtwanger’s “This is the Hour,” because a book on Goya with well-written words about his persona, art processes described, and accompanying reproductions might be an inspiring and impressive book to possess. I’m self-conscious about the scope and appearance of my library. I also copped “The Mandarins,” something by Alexander King—“I Should Have Kissed Her More” (recalling past reading pleasures, possibly romantic), and Franz Kaffa’s short story collection to activate my mind into an avant-garde sensibility.
My mother is growing old. One night after supper, sitting at the table while pouring over the TV guide as has become her post-meal custom and placing red ink stars beside shows she would recommend, she holds out her left leg. “See,” she says, all perked and chipper, “it gets swollen.” The calf and front leg are swollen and hard. There are raised purple and red circles on the flesh. The skin is red. “It’s water,” she says. “I take pills.” Garth told me to record her prescriptions. I flip through her worn leather-bound diary she keeps on the kitchen counter and make notes. He’s preparing me, he says. It’s not that he cares about her, but he figures she’ll go soon. He asks for updates about her health and her mood. When had she become so feeble? Five front teeth are missing. Her dental plate irritates her. On her chest and arms are coin-sized red welts, sores, and medieval round red circles on her limbs, back, and upper chest. She sits watching TV, her hair done just this day for the occasion of daughter and two grandchildren visiting. She picks absentmindedly at the shapes on her upper back and on her arms. “Keeps me busy,” she says.
She has started using my father’s walker that had been stored away. Stubbornly and only on occasion. My father still asserts his presence with his plaid pillow against the back of his chair and the opaque white pail he had used for Kleenex and spittle. The plastic bucket had become toward the end, kind of a spittoon. Life goes fast. There are newspapers all over the table, some already yellow, piled up and edited with headings underlined or circled, “Send to Susan.” “For Janice.” “Mail to Julian.” She doesn’t answer when her back is turned and I’m sitting at the teak kitchen table. “Ma,” I say when she sits down in her chair, “I don’t know, I’m worried.” She looks at me with her clear lake eyes. “Your hearing, Ma, can you, I don’t know, sometimes—” Her hand settles lightly on my arm. “No,” she says, “what makes you say that?” Still, if you whisper a juicy bit you don’t want her to hear or if you tiptoe over to the fridge late at night to sneak out some of supper’s remnants or to pour a glass of red wine for the sake of slight inebriation not the quality of wine, she’s suddenly right beside you, peering over your shoulder, taking notes. All your secrets, your hidden life, she creeps up and files them. I know this―we’re a family of internal spies.
I compose and send my new slight off to Robbie and then to Lenny. I yearn for love’s shawl around my winter shoulders. Men enter and fade or simply exit. While defining themselves as cool, they worry about my excessiveness. Lisa says I’d be wiser to choose a man with the possibility of a future, a man from the same city and maybe I should think about why I go for these long-distance ones.
Lenny phones every four months, calling me “baby,” “honey bunny.” “It’s a nice family piece with some interesting aspects,” Lenny writes when I send him the writing about my old mother, “but how will you weave the family piece into that fucking and sucking?” I tell him it all fits together. My mother coughs in bed at night. She keeps her standing lamp light on; she coughs and coughs. It’s a dry cough. I lie still so I can listen in and then I think of Robbie who has not yet phoned to tell me how great I sounded coming on the phone. Fuck him. If he doesn’t fall for the sound of a fine come. I worry whether I had sounded wild enough, had it sounded fake, too standard “oh baby,” intake of breath, “oh,” intake of breath. Everything is linked, Lenny. You know that, you who peeped at nuns.
I should have. I should have stayed by his bedside. Instead he died alone in the dying ward with only a fluorescent green line to keep him company. “You can go now, Daddy,” I said, my voice low and mellow and honey. “You can let go. You don’t need to fight any more. I’m alright. Really I am. And Caroline is with me and that makes her happy. And Lisa’s home. She writes poetry, Daddy. She’s a wonder.” His ears. Elephant ears. Can he hear me? “Let go Daddy. Don’t be afraid. And we’ll see each other again, you’ll see. You took care of us so well, all this time. It’s your time. You can let go now. Don’t be afraid.” I dressed my voice in black velvet to help him die and then I left.
“Ma, I’m going to the hospital,” I said the next morning.
“What can you do?” she said. “Where is the TV remote? Didn’t I leave it here? Maybe it’s my room, last night—”
I stayed for her. She’s alone, I thought, here while he’s dying. At ten the phone rang.
“It’s over,” she said. I want to write what she did after that, did she sit, sort the yellow-edged newspapers on the table, circle TV shows in the Gazette. She didn’t cry. I never saw her cry. Except once, at the Wilder house. “I’ll ask Daddy, he’s smarter than you anyhow,” I said when she didn’t know the answer to a history question. She was standing behind the counter, her hands busy adding greens, potatoes, and broiled steak to our home-from-school lunchtime plates. One swollen tear sighed on her cheek. Regrets.
When I was seventeen, Juan, a waiter at Camp Epstein in the Quebec Laurentians, fucked me in his cramped staff cabin just beside a clear path etched out from repeated romantic nighttime trips to the waterfront and conveniently down the hill from the mess hall. He was a highfaluting Jewish boy from Buffalo who went to some private school where his father was an English teacher. Juan said he was a certified genius. He had dark brown razor cut hair and an excellent profile. His cabin mate, Marty Cohen (whose voice never changed and who later became a double-chinned government financial analyst) lay asleep in the cot just two or three feet away. I lay on top of Juan, his prick up me as I grinded back and forth against his pubic hair. “Harder, harder,” I said. “Don’t stop,” and came three times in a row, moderate level but first time memorable and impressive. Marty woke up five minutes after I left. After that summer I would bring my boys downstairs to the den, fuck them, and come. Nothing hardcore screaming uncontrollably, just a hard climbing, low-peaked climax. Family and fucking are always linked, Lenny. It’s biological.
My mother’s room is not of this world. She waits in a space levitating, just raised above the earth and bound for heaven, waiting in line.
Sunday, August 22, 2010
Oy Va Voy or Busting My Balls (edit 1, erotic memoir)
Busting My Balls
“What I can’t understand is why you’re showcasing those people,” Harriet says, her French tips lounging on the escalator railing, “when you could be giving all this energy to your own.” I’m busting my balls, working my builder’s ass off twelve hours a day to pay musicians who dig my giving back to the arts and the whole RANG mentorship system while charging full scale SOCA rates. And although he left me one million, I don’t have my grandfather’s cash, my father wanting to put all the capital together, Julian’s, Susan’s, and mine. Abie brought Judge Gold’s son Mark over to advise me. “You’ll never see it again,” he said, but I worried about my father’s love and inheritance since he was still moderately thirty-million dollars’ rich, so I returned that million dollar cheque to my parent who, one year later, was scammed by the same guy who ripped off the Steinbergs which almost gave honor to my father’s reduced state, except the Steinbergs remained rich and my father used his capital to mortgage his award-winning twin Highland Beach condos. Still I had my builder’s mass and a steady gig training females in their LuLu Lemons. I just wanted to show a little love, you know, hold close and slow dance cheek to cheek, cock to cunt. And so I set up my gentle non-profit with its mentorship system for young up-and-comings, telling my story to NOW, EYE, Whole Note, Maple Blues, CIUT, CKLN, the Barker man at 91.1 Jazz FM, branding cards, postcards, posters, the works, ten thousand dollars worth of free advertising, a spot on 680 AM, press releases. I let it all hang out—all the houses, Caroline, my two solo art shows, the ex, my long days at the gym. This was the story I was full speed running with. There was a long distance runner at Number One Nautilus, such a skinny beetle—marathons and music festivals never intrigued me. But once I started running, I was in the race and for the sake of promotion, I spread my story out to musicians, clubs, sponsors—like selling cars, the story the same but always fresh. Maybe a new twist or detail—the sheriff at the door this time, Caroline’s body a twisted tree in emergency the next, and always music like a eiderdown quilt or an angel. I never said I wouldn’t have preferred cash.
“So what are you getting out of it? What’s in it for you? And I mean profit.”
“I don’t think there’s going to be a profit.”
“So you’ll break even.”
“I don’t think so. I did. I thought I’d at least get my investment back. I’m so tired, Garth, I don’t know. I mean, what the hell was I thinking!”
“You’re asking the wrong person.”
“Yeah. I work all these hours and then I do all the producing stuff and you have no idea how crazy it is behind the scenes, all this technical shit, the sound man and getting musicians there for a sound check, and tickets and TicketMaster, and Charles Mack won’t let the opening act from Montreal use his drum kit—oh, and then there’s food for the musicians and do you know how much all that’s going to cost? Five hundred dollars, that’s how much and the musician who said what a great thing I was doing and he’d lower his rates, well, fuck him, he wants one thousand for forty-five minutes and Levitasyon, that Zouk group, guess how much!”
“I haven’t got a clue.”
“Two thousand.”
“You’re kidding!”
“Nope. So I called Charles Mack who’s driving all the way here from Detroit and I told him, I got to cancel. How am I going to come up with all this cash? And he gives me this bit about the show must go on because that’s what his Daddy used to say.”
“So what are you going to do? If you cancel will you get your deposits back?”
“Nope. But that’s still a hell of a lot easier than coming up with twelve thousand more dollars. I’m so tired. And my back is hurting me, my lower back and you know that shooting groin pain? I can’t walk. How will I coach when I can’t even walk?”
“What does Pariser say?”
“She says I have to go for physio, she says it’s my lower back. You think it’s my piraformis?"
“You need to see a specialist.”
“See, I asked her and she said it’s your lower back and then she sighed. I can’t afford physio. And the other day, at the gym, I had to sit down. Well you know I never sit down, so along comes Karen and she says it doesn’t look good if I’m sitting down and what if someone tours the club and sees me? And Greenspan, I don’t think he listens to me, and I have this fear when he cracks my neck. ”
“He’s good. But it’s true he doesn’t listen. Hubris.”
“What?”
“He’s thinks he knows it all. But it would help to listen to the patient, especially when the patient is a trainer.”
“Last time he stretched my right leg to the side and it felt like my tendon was being ripped. He said it’s tight. But what I’m afraid of is how I’m going to work. How can I work with those women? I pick out their weights, I bring the weights back, then I pick out other weights. And I count. Remember when I broke my finger at Strictly and the shit Barbara, the one with the art dealer husband who liked my work but I couldn’t make it to one of his artist’s openings—I was having that skin thing done under my eyes the next morning—so there I am with my finger in a cast and she’s sitting, blabbing, and rolling her eyes, waiting for me to pick up her weights, and I’m limping like a parakeet because I couldn’t walk or pick up weights because of my broken finger.”
“Why a parakeet?”
“Well, when I was seven, my—”
“Your point?”
“And my point is what’ll I do? You’re telling me to lie on the floor for two hours which I don’t have and Greenspan is telling me it’s my back and tight muscles and referred pain, and Pariser is telling me I have to go to physio when she knows I can’t, I mean, she knows.”
“Maybe you have to find something new.”
“Yeah. Right. Remember I asked you when we met, how will I take care of myself? I mean how? And who’s going to help me? I’m going to talk to my mother. I’m going to tell her I have to cut back, I have to stay with Caroline and it’s true you know. I’m scared. I hate being scared. I spent so much time being scared and then I met you, and you’re not here anymore. So what’ll I do?”
“You’re the one who told me to leave. I didn’t walk out.”
“ And you’re the one who was telling me he was going to leave for how many years?”
“But you know me better than that. The fact is I didn’t. Until you insisted.”
“I’m not going to do this. You’re not going to do this to me.”
“Let me guess, you don’t want to talk about it now. So when will be a good time? Later? When later? Give me a time.”
“I can’t give you a time, I can’t. I phoned because my body won’t even let me walk and I need to work to support me and Caroline and Lisa. You’re never going to pay me back. I know that. You said you were keeping track of every penny. That’s not true. How much do you owe me? Do you even know?”
“It always goes back to money with you, doesn’t it?”
“And with you? It doesn’t with you?”
My grandfather gave me maroon bank shaped like a book without a key, the idea being to fill the book with coins and set up an account at the Bank of Montreal, Van Horne and Davaar branch. I filled up the book bank and broke into it. A few years later I stole eighty dollars from my grandmother. Green turns me on. Garth talks about his plans for grand wealth and we’re back in our beginning, my index finger tracing the breadth of his forehead down his fine profile “do you know your nose has the slightest bump in it?” I say each time, and each time he says “yes, broke it in a fight when I was ten.” It’s part of our love dialog, just as money is. “One million is nothing,” I say, “Ten is like one used to be, and what’s ten anyhow?” I like when he thinks big.
What Have I Got To Do?
It’s a grand morning. I’m inspired which always makes me happy and horny. I’m thinking history and intimacy are of greater value than passion and decide to part with existing online men and the minor fucks pending. Life and love are becoming too complicated, although there is something about my men and how they make me feel―like I’m eighteen again and love is all new. Only better, because finally at age fifty-six, I have learned how to exult. But then in the most fundamental way, I love Garth, even as I wait for his next breaking up summons. Because he lives in me. And he’s family.
I eat a leg of chicken Garth cooked in the “Total Oven” I had regifted him with. “But you regifted me,” he reminded me when I had complained about his inattention to holidays including my birthday, using my ambling tone even with my sad urge for a briskness.
“How quickly they forget,” I said. “There were cards and Chapter’s coupons.”
“Coupons,” he said.
“I wanted to give you books. Remember that bible I bought you. I looked at all these bibles for over an hour. St. James, the English Standard Bible, the New American Standard, the New Revised Standard, the one with my father’s name, the Phillip’s Modern English Bible, even the Daily Bible in Chronological Order. You were disappointed because I gave you the wrong bible, you said I hadn’t been paying attention all those years. I’m Jewish for fuck’s sake. So now I give you coupons. Sometimes I go to five stores for just the right card.”
“They’re meaningless.”
“And it’s meaningful that you give me nothing, no fucking cards, no presents.” My voice strains and cracks when I get upset, my words like abused dogs.
“See what I mean, I can’t even have conversation with you.”
Garth is working on his red and green trading graphs. He keys clients’ numbers with the pads of his fingers. I learned to play piano en pointe. I couldn’t play by ear, skipping out a tune, my fingers demi-pointe just knowing the way home, the way Garth keys words and numbers and lives his life. I sit with my legs pulled up beneath me on his beige leather sofa purchased from the Brick on credit and watch him. “Look, if you’d have gone short when I told you, pulled out instead of getting greedy, you wouldn’t be down. I told you what to do, you chose not to listen,” he’s saying, as he approaches and places his prick in my mouth, although I’ve just had my lower and upper lips enlarged for one thousand dollars, the freezing still intact and bruising setting in. Sucking Garth off plumps up my lips. I like the look which is why I went and had them enlarged.
He thinks I am satisfied. Or maybe he figures it’s not his place to say anything. He’s odd that way, like a cactus in the middle of an English garden. Anyhow, I’m more process than product-oriented and I like those solo coming times on the carpet beside what used to be his side of the bed or on the tiled bathroom floor. Still, when I pray, which comes and goes with the weather, I’m sure to slip in, “Please God, let me come while he fucks me. And if you could and I’m thanking you n advance, could it be with me underneath and his finger up my ass?” I’d be pumping away, moving my hips and cunt around and Garth would say, “Move your ass baby, that’s it.” But his belly is a mountain which I loved when I met him and still do. I might need some of God’s help on that one too. He’s larger than life, Garth is, and I can’t leave him. I’ve grown “attached” which was the word Garth used for his feelings about me when I requested five positive adjectives relating to what he likes about me. “Attached” was what he said, pissing me off at the top of moderate.
I email and discard two local men. Mark is back on BlackPeopleGreet with a new profile. “How can I your JCT when you’re on the computer prowl again?” I say my voice light as sideways glance. “Hey baby, don’t do this. I’m just connecting with old buddies,” he says, so I renew my membership. I hide my profile, delete it, and return online, although I click “view as offline.” “Why are you after geographically unavailable men?” Lisa asks when I tell her about the good ones, from LA, Washington, Atlanta, New York, North Carolina, Texas. I prefer words to tin can voices. A man from out west whines. Another sounds drugged or bored. Written words thrill. They wake me up in the morning and warm me at night. I adore life and myself. I’m an ancient, weary soul with my eyelids half-closed, unable to move my limbs and taste life. It isn’t Garth. One artist needs the understanding of another. But oh, this Washington man sounds fine, still Lenny — I would do anything for a man who could fuck my heart.
Louis is a Vietnam vet. I found him on BlackPeopleMeet. He’s from Mississippi and he has no intention of moving up here. He’s a country man all the way, he says. And then he’s going on about long-haired hippies slamming their placards on sides of the bus when he came back home and I say, “hey man, I just happened to be one of those hippies” and he tells me he damn well near killed one of them which was why he moved to the country. I ask him questions and scribble down his dialog, flipping pages, writing on a pocket-sized lined yellow pad. Now he lives with this giant cactus, maybe the biggest on record, the only black man in Lincoln. He can talk gently to me alright, but he can also murder and maim which is why he’s out there in the country. But sometimes the woods aren’t deep enough and the only place that can hold him is China. I know he’s too much like Garth. Harsh as a hundred-year old tree. But the next moment speaking to me with such gentleness, I cry. And when he says he’s starting up two businesses, something about archiving medical histories and broadband in the off-country, my cunt sparkles with those Canada Day sizzlers. Abie, Garth, Louis—wild men panning for gold. Some say I’m nice and I guess I am, but inside there’s a feral part and when I smell that in a man, I sidle right up, I’m on his track.
Louis has various ailments as a result of the war. He’d fade out, totally paralyzed, for one minute. “Never know when it’s gonna happen. They put me in this damn hospital, cause I was claiming for benefits, see, so they put me under observation. Well I had one of these fits you know, and this fucking cunt of a nurse kept jabbing her pen into my hand, hurt like hell and she asks me, ‘Do you feel this?’ Askin’ me if I feel this! And she’s plunging and plunging this pen tip straight into my damn hand! Fuck! ‘What do you think, you fucking cow?’ Treatin me worsn an animal! Shit! ‘Do you feel this?!’ Fuckin ram it up her ass and see what she says!” The war scooped out most of his gut and his hip got shot off. He’s like an old gun slinger, tossing on his prosthetic hip when he goes into town. I talk to him about My Lai because I’d just heard a show on CIUT FM saying it was the whites committing atrocities.
“Whites!” he shouts. “Listen, I got no fondness for bigots, but here’s the fuckin’ truth, and that’s where the media comes in, stickin’ their noses in where it don’t belong!” he says, shooting out each word like a machine pistol. “Makin’ things worse, makin’ trouble, more killings. What happened was twenty was killed, and those women and children . . .”
“What about those women and children, for god’s sake!”
“Well ya see, you up there in Toronto, the Reds put these grenades round these kids’ necks and then they tell ‘em, ‘Go up and ask for a chocolate,’ or ‘Give the American a chocolate.’ And I don’t care who the fuck, or how old the fuck, who’s comin at me with chocolates and a grenade round his neck, gonna blow me up―I learned how to stay alive that day and what the fuck does the press know about that!”
Louis says he licks pussy bettern’ any dyke and some of them’s damn good at what they do. I don’t understand these one-dimensional men. Technique will get you to first base, but it doesn’t come close to passion and heart. Maybe Louis will stalk the country side and poach all its cash. I need saving and that’s the simple truth. Truth is a strange bird; its plumage changes according to season so it’s almost unrecognizable. Also it’s known to be quite elusive.
“Do you know that Mao couldn’t read or write?” I listen to this man, Louis, and I wonder if he’s crazy or misguided, or both. “But the Red Book!” “Ghost written,” he says.
He tells me to buy a web cam so he can see my eyes. “The eyes are mirrors to the soul,” he says which he knows because he’s half Cherokee, his mother having been full blooded. He says his momma always told him,” Ain’t no one bettern’ you, no one.” All his life he could hear her say that and it stuck. His son used to say he was half white, hung himself from a willow tree over it. In a quiet way I care for Louis. We make plans. He comes up to Toronto. The phone rings once, twice, six times. I don’t answer. He emails. He says God may forgive, but he no way he can. I wish I’d have seen him, so I phone and leave messages until he says he forgives me, him and God, both. He calls me “my love” when he says good-bye. I say “sweetie” since I don’t want to hurt his feelings. He’s been through enough. It’s the same with Garth. Scary men intrigue me.
Garth
Garth knows my father is dying. “Take the train in,” he says. “He doesn’t have long now.” Lisa stays in the condo with Caroline. Abie says he’d drop by to relieve her. I know we’ll get maybe one hour out of him and that’s alright. Otherwise I’ll come back to trees uprooted, limbs blocking entranceways, books thrown off their shelves, scattered.
Demanding two servings of eggplant lasagna, three Little House on the Prairie reruns, and the remote, Caroline wields her mental illness like a battle sword. Lisa enters the field with a forced smile, while I, on this train ride to my father at his dying time, scan scenery and take photos.
My mother stands by my father’s bedside in the Montreal General. She’s holding a spoon with red jello. “Why are you doing that?” my sister says. She has a tan and pearls and her tough skin is covered with wrinkles. “Maybe he’ll eat,” my mother says, holding the spoon to my father’s mouth. “If it makes you feel better. But I’m telling you, he’s not going to eat,” my sister says in her smoker’s voice. I look at my mother. Better not to say anything. I move forward and put my arm around her. My arm spans her back and down her shoulder. She’s lost weight.
“Daddy,” I say. “Daddy.” He lies propped up on two pillows. There are clear and opaque tubes. I see the attachment points on his wrist and in the crook of his arm and I understand. Because of Caroline. “I love you, Daddy,” I say. He doesn’t blink. “Daddy,” I say. “Caroline and Lisa are fine. They love you. I love you. So much, Dad. Do you know I sold a painting? A huge canvas. It’s commissioned work and maybe they’ll want another. I did a portrait of you. Your hair is fluorescent green and you’re wearing a royal blue bathrobe, but it’s you alright. And you have a twinkle in your left eye.”
“He won’t talk to me, not to anyone,” my mother says.
I put my hand on his and gently press. “I love you,” he says.
Later he calls out “Swine, swine.” Also, “Take me home.” “He needs more morphine,” my sister says.
On my train ride back to Toronto, my eyes take in scenery, latching onto its tail as it passes. I phone Garth from Union Station. “He’s dying and I left him.”
“It’s your last chance. Go back,” Garth says. He knows about these things. He has a gift. Because he was abused, maybe.
I don’t want to write about my father dying. He was a powerful man who became reduced. He wore diapers. My mother took care of him until he started soiling himself and then PeeWay came in. PeeWay loved him. When my father died, my sister told Peeay not to come to the funeral. “You better stay here. They read the obits and break in.” PeeWay just looked straight ahead, her brown eyes dark and mournful. As my sister was leaving, she called out, “You might as well come along, we’ll alert security, so you come on now.”
My mother didn’t know how she could manage the reception after the funeral. “You have to be present for your visitors. You’re the hostess,” my sister said.
“I don’t know if I can,” my mother said, her eyes darting the way they always did when she was depressed.
“You will,” my sister said.
I wrote my father’s obituary in five minutes. “Write about his love for music,” my brother said. “His storytelling,” my sister, Susan, said. “Oh, and he took care of his shoes.” She was walking on two canes at the funeral. She’d had one hip replaced and then the other and she wasn’t healing well. But then her idea of exercise was isle shopping at Steinberg’s in Cote St. Luc mall. For my referred pain points on my right side, I had one wood crutch Abie had used when his back gave out in the Bluffwood Drive house. It’s odd, some of the items that have stayed with me. My sister had insisted on unpainted pine for the casket. “He would have wanted it that way. Do you remember those ten blocks he walked so he could save twenty-five cents on a lousy ball-point? In the middle of winter?” she’d said. “It was the principle.” I said. “And what about the green Cadillac convertible and the pink jeep with the candy-striped canopy at Los Brisas?” Even though I had to steady my hands on Paperman’s lectern, reading my speech pleased me. It was like being on stage again, slipping into my father as he dragged out the first syllable of my mother’s name, “Flooorence! Flooorence!” He spent his final years falling asleep at the TV and calling for her. She’d click her tongue, “Coming Phil. I’m coming, I’m coming.” Sometimes she’d take her time, so he’d call out again. “Just a minute, just a minute,” she’d say. He said she was his angel, in those years. She always was although I’m not sure he knew it.
So there I was intoning with just the right degree of expression, in the swing as my rowing crew would have said, my sister leaning forward in the front row, her clasped hands swaying oi va voy side to side like Baba used to. The tips of Julian’s ear’s were red, his office hair parted neatly on the side. I don’t know if I cried. That came three months later, racking howls, great forces of nature.
The night I returned from my father’s funeral, Garth invited me over to his basement apartment. I called him from my car. “I’m two blocks away,” I said. He liked to unlock the door ahead of time so if he were in the middle of something, he wouldn’t have to interrupt himself by letting me in. Usually when I came over he’d be working on his computer or watching his favorite TV show or cooking on his electric wok or attending to his Total Oven.
Garth sat like a Sphinx on his beige leather sofa. “Janice,” he said.
“Yes?”
“Sit down.”
“I think I’ll stand.”
“I think you might want to sit.”
“That’s alright. Maybe it’s better for me to stand,” I said, eyeing the open bedroom door.
“Up to you. You may recall our conversation while you were in Montreal. This is where you answer.”
“I don’t know, I was distraught, I was in the kitchen, with my mother and Susan was there. I wasn’t focusing.”
“Yes. I know.”
“You were cleaning up your life.”
“So you do remember. Cleaning up my life. Whatever it takes. I looked at my life while you were in Montreal. You’re holding me back.”
“You’re telling me this now? My father just died, for fuck’s sake and you call me over to tell me this? What kind of a man are you? I mean couldn’t you wait? Maybe a week? I just got back. He’s dead. My father is dead, and you—I don’t believe you.”
“Find a therapist,” he said. “I’m going places. I want a simple life. Mental illness just doesn’t fit in.”
“But Caroline doesn’t live with you.”
“Like I said, I’m cleaning up my life.”
A week later, as I was about to walk into our mutual gym, he emerged from his silver Acura.
“I’m warning you,” he said, “you bust into my training session and I’m erasing your name from my cell.”
“So you’re training that dirt bag, Sharon. You’re just a gym gigolo, you know that? She can’t even do a fucking squat and she has a back like a set of train tracks. ”
“It won’t be the first time I’ve erased people from my life. I cut out my own mother and sisters. You’re the next in line.”
“But Garth.”
“Recall one small detail—who signed your lease? You come in and I swear I’ll get you and crazy daughter evicted.” Garth doesn’t raise his voice. You have to look closely to observe any shift in his features.
“No, no, please don’t do that.” I cried, inhaling air like a junkie.
“Take my advice, then. Get in your car and drive away.”
“You fucking evil asshole!” I gunned the accelerator of my second hand Grand Prix, its tires screeching. For emphasis, I drove around in two more wild circles before exiting.
I shall never forgive him.
Still, it’s important to know that Garth is a man with a vision, that he will be phenomenally rich and that there are always two sides to these “he said, she said” stories. I could play him. I could walk free and clear and unafraid of the sheriff’s loud knocking at my door. But I am writing this book, which he will read and never will he understand that each time he said he was leaving, I died. I drooped closer and closer to the ground. I wilted. And each time the only thought that could pick me up was there was an online man to slow dance with and love me. I would have killed myself otherwise. Garth stole my heart one night at Strictly Fitness and almost hammered it to death. Through passion I am hoping to reclaim it.
“What I can’t understand is why you’re showcasing those people,” Harriet says, her French tips lounging on the escalator railing, “when you could be giving all this energy to your own.” I’m busting my balls, working my builder’s ass off twelve hours a day to pay musicians who dig my giving back to the arts and the whole RANG mentorship system while charging full scale SOCA rates. And although he left me one million, I don’t have my grandfather’s cash, my father wanting to put all the capital together, Julian’s, Susan’s, and mine. Abie brought Judge Gold’s son Mark over to advise me. “You’ll never see it again,” he said, but I worried about my father’s love and inheritance since he was still moderately thirty-million dollars’ rich, so I returned that million dollar cheque to my parent who, one year later, was scammed by the same guy who ripped off the Steinbergs which almost gave honor to my father’s reduced state, except the Steinbergs remained rich and my father used his capital to mortgage his award-winning twin Highland Beach condos. Still I had my builder’s mass and a steady gig training females in their LuLu Lemons. I just wanted to show a little love, you know, hold close and slow dance cheek to cheek, cock to cunt. And so I set up my gentle non-profit with its mentorship system for young up-and-comings, telling my story to NOW, EYE, Whole Note, Maple Blues, CIUT, CKLN, the Barker man at 91.1 Jazz FM, branding cards, postcards, posters, the works, ten thousand dollars worth of free advertising, a spot on 680 AM, press releases. I let it all hang out—all the houses, Caroline, my two solo art shows, the ex, my long days at the gym. This was the story I was full speed running with. There was a long distance runner at Number One Nautilus, such a skinny beetle—marathons and music festivals never intrigued me. But once I started running, I was in the race and for the sake of promotion, I spread my story out to musicians, clubs, sponsors—like selling cars, the story the same but always fresh. Maybe a new twist or detail—the sheriff at the door this time, Caroline’s body a twisted tree in emergency the next, and always music like a eiderdown quilt or an angel. I never said I wouldn’t have preferred cash.
“So what are you getting out of it? What’s in it for you? And I mean profit.”
“I don’t think there’s going to be a profit.”
“So you’ll break even.”
“I don’t think so. I did. I thought I’d at least get my investment back. I’m so tired, Garth, I don’t know. I mean, what the hell was I thinking!”
“You’re asking the wrong person.”
“Yeah. I work all these hours and then I do all the producing stuff and you have no idea how crazy it is behind the scenes, all this technical shit, the sound man and getting musicians there for a sound check, and tickets and TicketMaster, and Charles Mack won’t let the opening act from Montreal use his drum kit—oh, and then there’s food for the musicians and do you know how much all that’s going to cost? Five hundred dollars, that’s how much and the musician who said what a great thing I was doing and he’d lower his rates, well, fuck him, he wants one thousand for forty-five minutes and Levitasyon, that Zouk group, guess how much!”
“I haven’t got a clue.”
“Two thousand.”
“You’re kidding!”
“Nope. So I called Charles Mack who’s driving all the way here from Detroit and I told him, I got to cancel. How am I going to come up with all this cash? And he gives me this bit about the show must go on because that’s what his Daddy used to say.”
“So what are you going to do? If you cancel will you get your deposits back?”
“Nope. But that’s still a hell of a lot easier than coming up with twelve thousand more dollars. I’m so tired. And my back is hurting me, my lower back and you know that shooting groin pain? I can’t walk. How will I coach when I can’t even walk?”
“What does Pariser say?”
“She says I have to go for physio, she says it’s my lower back. You think it’s my piraformis?"
“You need to see a specialist.”
“See, I asked her and she said it’s your lower back and then she sighed. I can’t afford physio. And the other day, at the gym, I had to sit down. Well you know I never sit down, so along comes Karen and she says it doesn’t look good if I’m sitting down and what if someone tours the club and sees me? And Greenspan, I don’t think he listens to me, and I have this fear when he cracks my neck. ”
“He’s good. But it’s true he doesn’t listen. Hubris.”
“What?”
“He’s thinks he knows it all. But it would help to listen to the patient, especially when the patient is a trainer.”
“Last time he stretched my right leg to the side and it felt like my tendon was being ripped. He said it’s tight. But what I’m afraid of is how I’m going to work. How can I work with those women? I pick out their weights, I bring the weights back, then I pick out other weights. And I count. Remember when I broke my finger at Strictly and the shit Barbara, the one with the art dealer husband who liked my work but I couldn’t make it to one of his artist’s openings—I was having that skin thing done under my eyes the next morning—so there I am with my finger in a cast and she’s sitting, blabbing, and rolling her eyes, waiting for me to pick up her weights, and I’m limping like a parakeet because I couldn’t walk or pick up weights because of my broken finger.”
“Why a parakeet?”
“Well, when I was seven, my—”
“Your point?”
“And my point is what’ll I do? You’re telling me to lie on the floor for two hours which I don’t have and Greenspan is telling me it’s my back and tight muscles and referred pain, and Pariser is telling me I have to go to physio when she knows I can’t, I mean, she knows.”
“Maybe you have to find something new.”
“Yeah. Right. Remember I asked you when we met, how will I take care of myself? I mean how? And who’s going to help me? I’m going to talk to my mother. I’m going to tell her I have to cut back, I have to stay with Caroline and it’s true you know. I’m scared. I hate being scared. I spent so much time being scared and then I met you, and you’re not here anymore. So what’ll I do?”
“You’re the one who told me to leave. I didn’t walk out.”
“ And you’re the one who was telling me he was going to leave for how many years?”
“But you know me better than that. The fact is I didn’t. Until you insisted.”
“I’m not going to do this. You’re not going to do this to me.”
“Let me guess, you don’t want to talk about it now. So when will be a good time? Later? When later? Give me a time.”
“I can’t give you a time, I can’t. I phoned because my body won’t even let me walk and I need to work to support me and Caroline and Lisa. You’re never going to pay me back. I know that. You said you were keeping track of every penny. That’s not true. How much do you owe me? Do you even know?”
“It always goes back to money with you, doesn’t it?”
“And with you? It doesn’t with you?”
My grandfather gave me maroon bank shaped like a book without a key, the idea being to fill the book with coins and set up an account at the Bank of Montreal, Van Horne and Davaar branch. I filled up the book bank and broke into it. A few years later I stole eighty dollars from my grandmother. Green turns me on. Garth talks about his plans for grand wealth and we’re back in our beginning, my index finger tracing the breadth of his forehead down his fine profile “do you know your nose has the slightest bump in it?” I say each time, and each time he says “yes, broke it in a fight when I was ten.” It’s part of our love dialog, just as money is. “One million is nothing,” I say, “Ten is like one used to be, and what’s ten anyhow?” I like when he thinks big.
What Have I Got To Do?
It’s a grand morning. I’m inspired which always makes me happy and horny. I’m thinking history and intimacy are of greater value than passion and decide to part with existing online men and the minor fucks pending. Life and love are becoming too complicated, although there is something about my men and how they make me feel―like I’m eighteen again and love is all new. Only better, because finally at age fifty-six, I have learned how to exult. But then in the most fundamental way, I love Garth, even as I wait for his next breaking up summons. Because he lives in me. And he’s family.
I eat a leg of chicken Garth cooked in the “Total Oven” I had regifted him with. “But you regifted me,” he reminded me when I had complained about his inattention to holidays including my birthday, using my ambling tone even with my sad urge for a briskness.
“How quickly they forget,” I said. “There were cards and Chapter’s coupons.”
“Coupons,” he said.
“I wanted to give you books. Remember that bible I bought you. I looked at all these bibles for over an hour. St. James, the English Standard Bible, the New American Standard, the New Revised Standard, the one with my father’s name, the Phillip’s Modern English Bible, even the Daily Bible in Chronological Order. You were disappointed because I gave you the wrong bible, you said I hadn’t been paying attention all those years. I’m Jewish for fuck’s sake. So now I give you coupons. Sometimes I go to five stores for just the right card.”
“They’re meaningless.”
“And it’s meaningful that you give me nothing, no fucking cards, no presents.” My voice strains and cracks when I get upset, my words like abused dogs.
“See what I mean, I can’t even have conversation with you.”
Garth is working on his red and green trading graphs. He keys clients’ numbers with the pads of his fingers. I learned to play piano en pointe. I couldn’t play by ear, skipping out a tune, my fingers demi-pointe just knowing the way home, the way Garth keys words and numbers and lives his life. I sit with my legs pulled up beneath me on his beige leather sofa purchased from the Brick on credit and watch him. “Look, if you’d have gone short when I told you, pulled out instead of getting greedy, you wouldn’t be down. I told you what to do, you chose not to listen,” he’s saying, as he approaches and places his prick in my mouth, although I’ve just had my lower and upper lips enlarged for one thousand dollars, the freezing still intact and bruising setting in. Sucking Garth off plumps up my lips. I like the look which is why I went and had them enlarged.
He thinks I am satisfied. Or maybe he figures it’s not his place to say anything. He’s odd that way, like a cactus in the middle of an English garden. Anyhow, I’m more process than product-oriented and I like those solo coming times on the carpet beside what used to be his side of the bed or on the tiled bathroom floor. Still, when I pray, which comes and goes with the weather, I’m sure to slip in, “Please God, let me come while he fucks me. And if you could and I’m thanking you n advance, could it be with me underneath and his finger up my ass?” I’d be pumping away, moving my hips and cunt around and Garth would say, “Move your ass baby, that’s it.” But his belly is a mountain which I loved when I met him and still do. I might need some of God’s help on that one too. He’s larger than life, Garth is, and I can’t leave him. I’ve grown “attached” which was the word Garth used for his feelings about me when I requested five positive adjectives relating to what he likes about me. “Attached” was what he said, pissing me off at the top of moderate.
I email and discard two local men. Mark is back on BlackPeopleGreet with a new profile. “How can I your JCT when you’re on the computer prowl again?” I say my voice light as sideways glance. “Hey baby, don’t do this. I’m just connecting with old buddies,” he says, so I renew my membership. I hide my profile, delete it, and return online, although I click “view as offline.” “Why are you after geographically unavailable men?” Lisa asks when I tell her about the good ones, from LA, Washington, Atlanta, New York, North Carolina, Texas. I prefer words to tin can voices. A man from out west whines. Another sounds drugged or bored. Written words thrill. They wake me up in the morning and warm me at night. I adore life and myself. I’m an ancient, weary soul with my eyelids half-closed, unable to move my limbs and taste life. It isn’t Garth. One artist needs the understanding of another. But oh, this Washington man sounds fine, still Lenny — I would do anything for a man who could fuck my heart.
Louis is a Vietnam vet. I found him on BlackPeopleMeet. He’s from Mississippi and he has no intention of moving up here. He’s a country man all the way, he says. And then he’s going on about long-haired hippies slamming their placards on sides of the bus when he came back home and I say, “hey man, I just happened to be one of those hippies” and he tells me he damn well near killed one of them which was why he moved to the country. I ask him questions and scribble down his dialog, flipping pages, writing on a pocket-sized lined yellow pad. Now he lives with this giant cactus, maybe the biggest on record, the only black man in Lincoln. He can talk gently to me alright, but he can also murder and maim which is why he’s out there in the country. But sometimes the woods aren’t deep enough and the only place that can hold him is China. I know he’s too much like Garth. Harsh as a hundred-year old tree. But the next moment speaking to me with such gentleness, I cry. And when he says he’s starting up two businesses, something about archiving medical histories and broadband in the off-country, my cunt sparkles with those Canada Day sizzlers. Abie, Garth, Louis—wild men panning for gold. Some say I’m nice and I guess I am, but inside there’s a feral part and when I smell that in a man, I sidle right up, I’m on his track.
Louis has various ailments as a result of the war. He’d fade out, totally paralyzed, for one minute. “Never know when it’s gonna happen. They put me in this damn hospital, cause I was claiming for benefits, see, so they put me under observation. Well I had one of these fits you know, and this fucking cunt of a nurse kept jabbing her pen into my hand, hurt like hell and she asks me, ‘Do you feel this?’ Askin’ me if I feel this! And she’s plunging and plunging this pen tip straight into my damn hand! Fuck! ‘What do you think, you fucking cow?’ Treatin me worsn an animal! Shit! ‘Do you feel this?!’ Fuckin ram it up her ass and see what she says!” The war scooped out most of his gut and his hip got shot off. He’s like an old gun slinger, tossing on his prosthetic hip when he goes into town. I talk to him about My Lai because I’d just heard a show on CIUT FM saying it was the whites committing atrocities.
“Whites!” he shouts. “Listen, I got no fondness for bigots, but here’s the fuckin’ truth, and that’s where the media comes in, stickin’ their noses in where it don’t belong!” he says, shooting out each word like a machine pistol. “Makin’ things worse, makin’ trouble, more killings. What happened was twenty was killed, and those women and children . . .”
“What about those women and children, for god’s sake!”
“Well ya see, you up there in Toronto, the Reds put these grenades round these kids’ necks and then they tell ‘em, ‘Go up and ask for a chocolate,’ or ‘Give the American a chocolate.’ And I don’t care who the fuck, or how old the fuck, who’s comin at me with chocolates and a grenade round his neck, gonna blow me up―I learned how to stay alive that day and what the fuck does the press know about that!”
Louis says he licks pussy bettern’ any dyke and some of them’s damn good at what they do. I don’t understand these one-dimensional men. Technique will get you to first base, but it doesn’t come close to passion and heart. Maybe Louis will stalk the country side and poach all its cash. I need saving and that’s the simple truth. Truth is a strange bird; its plumage changes according to season so it’s almost unrecognizable. Also it’s known to be quite elusive.
“Do you know that Mao couldn’t read or write?” I listen to this man, Louis, and I wonder if he’s crazy or misguided, or both. “But the Red Book!” “Ghost written,” he says.
He tells me to buy a web cam so he can see my eyes. “The eyes are mirrors to the soul,” he says which he knows because he’s half Cherokee, his mother having been full blooded. He says his momma always told him,” Ain’t no one bettern’ you, no one.” All his life he could hear her say that and it stuck. His son used to say he was half white, hung himself from a willow tree over it. In a quiet way I care for Louis. We make plans. He comes up to Toronto. The phone rings once, twice, six times. I don’t answer. He emails. He says God may forgive, but he no way he can. I wish I’d have seen him, so I phone and leave messages until he says he forgives me, him and God, both. He calls me “my love” when he says good-bye. I say “sweetie” since I don’t want to hurt his feelings. He’s been through enough. It’s the same with Garth. Scary men intrigue me.
Garth
Garth knows my father is dying. “Take the train in,” he says. “He doesn’t have long now.” Lisa stays in the condo with Caroline. Abie says he’d drop by to relieve her. I know we’ll get maybe one hour out of him and that’s alright. Otherwise I’ll come back to trees uprooted, limbs blocking entranceways, books thrown off their shelves, scattered.
Demanding two servings of eggplant lasagna, three Little House on the Prairie reruns, and the remote, Caroline wields her mental illness like a battle sword. Lisa enters the field with a forced smile, while I, on this train ride to my father at his dying time, scan scenery and take photos.
My mother stands by my father’s bedside in the Montreal General. She’s holding a spoon with red jello. “Why are you doing that?” my sister says. She has a tan and pearls and her tough skin is covered with wrinkles. “Maybe he’ll eat,” my mother says, holding the spoon to my father’s mouth. “If it makes you feel better. But I’m telling you, he’s not going to eat,” my sister says in her smoker’s voice. I look at my mother. Better not to say anything. I move forward and put my arm around her. My arm spans her back and down her shoulder. She’s lost weight.
“Daddy,” I say. “Daddy.” He lies propped up on two pillows. There are clear and opaque tubes. I see the attachment points on his wrist and in the crook of his arm and I understand. Because of Caroline. “I love you, Daddy,” I say. He doesn’t blink. “Daddy,” I say. “Caroline and Lisa are fine. They love you. I love you. So much, Dad. Do you know I sold a painting? A huge canvas. It’s commissioned work and maybe they’ll want another. I did a portrait of you. Your hair is fluorescent green and you’re wearing a royal blue bathrobe, but it’s you alright. And you have a twinkle in your left eye.”
“He won’t talk to me, not to anyone,” my mother says.
I put my hand on his and gently press. “I love you,” he says.
Later he calls out “Swine, swine.” Also, “Take me home.” “He needs more morphine,” my sister says.
On my train ride back to Toronto, my eyes take in scenery, latching onto its tail as it passes. I phone Garth from Union Station. “He’s dying and I left him.”
“It’s your last chance. Go back,” Garth says. He knows about these things. He has a gift. Because he was abused, maybe.
I don’t want to write about my father dying. He was a powerful man who became reduced. He wore diapers. My mother took care of him until he started soiling himself and then PeeWay came in. PeeWay loved him. When my father died, my sister told Peeay not to come to the funeral. “You better stay here. They read the obits and break in.” PeeWay just looked straight ahead, her brown eyes dark and mournful. As my sister was leaving, she called out, “You might as well come along, we’ll alert security, so you come on now.”
My mother didn’t know how she could manage the reception after the funeral. “You have to be present for your visitors. You’re the hostess,” my sister said.
“I don’t know if I can,” my mother said, her eyes darting the way they always did when she was depressed.
“You will,” my sister said.
I wrote my father’s obituary in five minutes. “Write about his love for music,” my brother said. “His storytelling,” my sister, Susan, said. “Oh, and he took care of his shoes.” She was walking on two canes at the funeral. She’d had one hip replaced and then the other and she wasn’t healing well. But then her idea of exercise was isle shopping at Steinberg’s in Cote St. Luc mall. For my referred pain points on my right side, I had one wood crutch Abie had used when his back gave out in the Bluffwood Drive house. It’s odd, some of the items that have stayed with me. My sister had insisted on unpainted pine for the casket. “He would have wanted it that way. Do you remember those ten blocks he walked so he could save twenty-five cents on a lousy ball-point? In the middle of winter?” she’d said. “It was the principle.” I said. “And what about the green Cadillac convertible and the pink jeep with the candy-striped canopy at Los Brisas?” Even though I had to steady my hands on Paperman’s lectern, reading my speech pleased me. It was like being on stage again, slipping into my father as he dragged out the first syllable of my mother’s name, “Flooorence! Flooorence!” He spent his final years falling asleep at the TV and calling for her. She’d click her tongue, “Coming Phil. I’m coming, I’m coming.” Sometimes she’d take her time, so he’d call out again. “Just a minute, just a minute,” she’d say. He said she was his angel, in those years. She always was although I’m not sure he knew it.
So there I was intoning with just the right degree of expression, in the swing as my rowing crew would have said, my sister leaning forward in the front row, her clasped hands swaying oi va voy side to side like Baba used to. The tips of Julian’s ear’s were red, his office hair parted neatly on the side. I don’t know if I cried. That came three months later, racking howls, great forces of nature.
The night I returned from my father’s funeral, Garth invited me over to his basement apartment. I called him from my car. “I’m two blocks away,” I said. He liked to unlock the door ahead of time so if he were in the middle of something, he wouldn’t have to interrupt himself by letting me in. Usually when I came over he’d be working on his computer or watching his favorite TV show or cooking on his electric wok or attending to his Total Oven.
Garth sat like a Sphinx on his beige leather sofa. “Janice,” he said.
“Yes?”
“Sit down.”
“I think I’ll stand.”
“I think you might want to sit.”
“That’s alright. Maybe it’s better for me to stand,” I said, eyeing the open bedroom door.
“Up to you. You may recall our conversation while you were in Montreal. This is where you answer.”
“I don’t know, I was distraught, I was in the kitchen, with my mother and Susan was there. I wasn’t focusing.”
“Yes. I know.”
“You were cleaning up your life.”
“So you do remember. Cleaning up my life. Whatever it takes. I looked at my life while you were in Montreal. You’re holding me back.”
“You’re telling me this now? My father just died, for fuck’s sake and you call me over to tell me this? What kind of a man are you? I mean couldn’t you wait? Maybe a week? I just got back. He’s dead. My father is dead, and you—I don’t believe you.”
“Find a therapist,” he said. “I’m going places. I want a simple life. Mental illness just doesn’t fit in.”
“But Caroline doesn’t live with you.”
“Like I said, I’m cleaning up my life.”
A week later, as I was about to walk into our mutual gym, he emerged from his silver Acura.
“I’m warning you,” he said, “you bust into my training session and I’m erasing your name from my cell.”
“So you’re training that dirt bag, Sharon. You’re just a gym gigolo, you know that? She can’t even do a fucking squat and she has a back like a set of train tracks. ”
“It won’t be the first time I’ve erased people from my life. I cut out my own mother and sisters. You’re the next in line.”
“But Garth.”
“Recall one small detail—who signed your lease? You come in and I swear I’ll get you and crazy daughter evicted.” Garth doesn’t raise his voice. You have to look closely to observe any shift in his features.
“No, no, please don’t do that.” I cried, inhaling air like a junkie.
“Take my advice, then. Get in your car and drive away.”
“You fucking evil asshole!” I gunned the accelerator of my second hand Grand Prix, its tires screeching. For emphasis, I drove around in two more wild circles before exiting.
I shall never forgive him.
Still, it’s important to know that Garth is a man with a vision, that he will be phenomenally rich and that there are always two sides to these “he said, she said” stories. I could play him. I could walk free and clear and unafraid of the sheriff’s loud knocking at my door. But I am writing this book, which he will read and never will he understand that each time he said he was leaving, I died. I drooped closer and closer to the ground. I wilted. And each time the only thought that could pick me up was there was an online man to slow dance with and love me. I would have killed myself otherwise. Garth stole my heart one night at Strictly Fitness and almost hammered it to death. Through passion I am hoping to reclaim it.
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