Dedications And Considerations
Thanks and love to the following, in no particular order: Mary Alice
Lee Bush, MH Bush, Gwen Bush, Heidi Truog, Annette Suthers, Celeste
McCray, David Fairclough, Kevin Fairclough, Charles Rice, Lori May,
Frida A. Kahlo, Brian Benford, The Cabrini Clinic For The Mentally
Insane And Those Raised Catholic, David Greer, Hanna J. Valentine, Joey
A. Dougherty, Julie of Canton, Shely Robbins, Malon, Marina, Lenny of
Garden City, Reverend Kenneth Taylor, Emily Garthie, Brandi Vander Eyk,
Liam Flanagan, and Red Boy.
“My mother groaned!
My father wept.
Into the dangerous world I leapt;
Helpless, naked, piping loud:
Like a fi end hid in a cloud.”
-W. Blake
* * *
Élan separated three parallel lines on the kitchen counter and yelled
for me to open my shirt. Then he rolled a fifty and vacuumed up the coke.
He fingered-up the remains and rubbed them onto his gums.
“It’s you’re lifestyle that’s the problem,” he said, walking down the three
steps to his living room. “And PTSD. And diet.”
The source of my advice was Dr. Brian Benford, M.D., but he liked his
close friends to call him Élan. He picked the silly name after interning one
semester in France. I wasn’t his close friend but I was his favorite cousin
and therefore not exempt from his request.
He pulled a stethoscope from his blazer and leaned into me, shaking
his head disapprovingly at my signature aroma of whiskey and unwashed
days. “Breathe in,” he said, huffing on the stethoscope and placing it on my
chest. “And…out.” After a minute, he shook his head again and poked a
thermometer into my mouth.
Eventually he diagnosed me with fatigue and PTSD, but I knew the
source of my problem was a fractured heart – that feeling like everything
inside you had been ripped out by someone, so you walk slightly hunched
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over because you’re empty inside. Finally, you try to fill it up with booze or
blow or God or a hollow point. “She said she’d love me forever,” I mumbled.
The thermometer fell to the carpet in a stream of drool.
“Close your shirt,” Élan said indifferently. “There is no forever. Forget
about forever!”
Lately, getting drunk always reminded me of Lisa Rosatti, even though
she had dumped me without saying goodbye and changed her phone
number. She did send me a text though, from an Internet café in Denver.
What were the words? I fumbled through my phone looking for that last
message…that poisoned arrow.
I could track her down if I wanted to; try and change her mind. But
there’s no use in finding someone that doesn’t want to be found. “When
she stops chasing ghosts,” I thought aloud, “She’ll come back to me then.
She’ll be back.” But the odds against it overwhelmed me and I slumped
backward into the couch, resigned that she’d taken everything from me.
Everything but a fractured heart and a jaundiced liver. The latter I used for
the backwards miracle of turning wine into water.
“Get me a gun,” I pleaded.
“Don’t delude yourself, mon frere, this sofa cost more than your house!
You’d better not so much as shed a tear on it!”
“I got no tears. All cried out.”
“You know, you’re still the same. C’est tres, tres damage! I always knew
you’d snuff yourself; I just thought you’d do it more artfully, you know?
Alone in some sleazy motel… Blow your brains all over a cum-stained
duvet, next to a bottle of Wild Turkey and a cheap fuck book. Can you see
it?”
“What I can’t see is people paying you to practice medicine.”
“You don’t need medicine, mon frere, you need some nappy. Trust me
on this one. We’ll go to Gracie’s, get you a few fatties to bang… Get your
self-confidence back up…”
“So you’re prescription for someone suicidal is that they ‘bang a few
fatties’?”
“Trust me, it’s what you need. You’ll thank me later.”
Everything looked dead outside of Goodnight Gracie’s picture
windows. The weather had changed on a dime, discoloring and killing
every living thing. November snowflakes twisted wildly in the wind and I
yearned for the heat of Africa.
The bar’s indoor lights were covered with conical tiki shades that gave
everything a golden hue. Gold… It reminded me of Africa. Hell, everything
reminded me of Africa. Africa, Lisa, and Joe.
4 Shadows In The Sunlight
Joe, that crazy son-of-a-bitch with a Christ complex. He paid me to
publish his online blog, but it was more like a psychotic manifesto. He’d
just ramble on and on in a constant flow of trauma and mysticism. Eyes
flashing with manic brilliance. Then he’d let loose a demonic howl and
slowly look my way, scaring the crap out of me. But all his philosophies
came pre-packaged with a shadow of doubt since so many had labeled him
insane. Even me. The things he did near the end…utter madness! “Sanity
is the refuge of the unimaginative.” Yeah, he’d mess with your head like
that…lay it all out there…psychic breadcrumbs for the brave to follow. He
told me once that a stagnant life was a wasted life. Now that, I believe.
I couldn’t blame Lisa for loving him, though. That’s right, I lied; she
didn’t say she’d love me forever, she said she’d love him. I tried mentioning
my love for her once and she frowned up and wouldn’t speak to me for
a week. I took that pretty hard since she was living with me at the time. I
tried taking it back or even making light of it but she was not amused. And
then one day…she was gone.
Élan took a call from overseas and disappeared into the restaurant
portion of the bar, while I sat on the love seat near the front door,
landsliding into the conversation next to me. One of the nine-to-fivers
asked me something about the Pistons. I couldn’t make out what he said so
I just answered, “When in Rome,” and smiled. This was apropos because he
nodded and laughed. I decided I’d use that phrase as much as possible for
the rest of the night.
On the way to the bar, I’d gotten a call from my source – someone who
had worked in Michigan with Joe Bosco. I told him to meet me here when
he finally let me get a word in edge-wise. Tom Kiernan was very talkative.
His head was as big as a basketball and his mouth never closed. I only
hoped his mouth could open wide enough to take a bite out of GM. At that
moment, Kiernan showed up. He was unstable and babbling hysterically.
“I can’t do this!” he said. “I’m sure they know! There’s no way they
can’t know!”
“Easy, Tom. You contacted me, remember? You got a story to tell? I’m
all ears and paychecks. Sit down a minute. Let’s get you a drink.” I called for
Sophia, the bartender, but Kiernan waived her away, craning his pumpkin
head in a three-sixty around the bar.
I touched his shoulder reassuringly. “If we stick together I can offer
you protection. Don’t you think I have other sources inside GM? I don’t
really need your help, Tom. I just wanted your help. There’s a difference.”
“You’re a real prick, Bush! Do you think I’m completely fucking stupid?
I mean seriously, is that what you fucking think?” With those words,
Kiernan was gone. I cashed out quickly but by the time I made it outside,
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Kiernan had kicked rocks. I went back in and found Élan in the crapper;
victimized by cheap blow cut with baby laxative.
“I gave my card to Sophie,” he said agonizingly through the stall door.
“Just order on my tab. I’ll be out soon. Merde!”
I switched to Sapphire gin and tonic and made several unanswered
calls to Kiernan. Élan came up to me at the bar and closed my cell phone.
“Forget about work,” he told me. He ordered us never-ending shots of
chilled Patrón. Soon I forgot about everything. You know that old saying…
when in Rome.
My head was throbbing as I peered through hungoverness and saw
Frenchie. She stood over me, tall as Lisa Leslie and leaning over the back of
Élan’s sofa. I wished she’d stayed there; she was blocking out the morning
sun. But once she saw I was awake, she circled to the front of the sofa and
perched on the edge of the coffee table.
I could see she was wearing Élan’s white robe because a big E-L covered
one tit and A-N covered the other. She sat with her legs open, her hands
p