Samples of work from the writer.

Category: Short Fiction (page 1 of 1)

DOMISYLUM

From The Sun – August, 2004

And then there’s the paranoia…

            My crib, I’m sure, was too small and unsafe. A normal-sized child could easily have stuffed his head between the railings. Only my giant, oversized head saved me. I remember the countless hours I spent lying on my back, unable to roll over onto my stomach, staring at the asbestos-laden ceiling, watching the particles sifting down through my “Songbirds of the Central Midwest” mobile and down, down, down my throat and into my lungs. My parents, I’m sure, picked the crib out of somebody’s trash. The mobile was probably a gift from some thoughtless distant relative who didn’t realize that I was terrified of the Midwest, and also of the particular songbirds that dwell there. They looked like German aircraft circling above me. The only thing that gave me comfort in the room was the night-light that was plugged into the wall. It was a banana, or a moon, with a smile on its face and light shooting out its nose.

            My parents, Paul and Bonnie, are so proud of their early poverty. They like to think that they raised themselves up from their bootstraps. But, it’s not like we’re swimming in it now. The house we live in, I’m sure, could collapse at any minute (termites) and we’d be buried alive. Our only hope would be our German shepherd, Rex. But he’d probably choose to run over to the park and swim in the fountain while we bled to death in our urine-soaked nightclothes. Bugs (centipedes) would sit on our eyeballs while Rex bit at the waterspouts. How tragic it would be for Rex when he came back and found our bodies eaten away (rats) and then had to live with my sister in her immaculate apartment and listen to her humping her stupid boyfriend.

My father, Paul, could get us out of this rathole.

“It’s no rathole!” he is always telling me.

“Then why do I have to sleep in the basement?”

“Because you’re twenty-eight years old!”

            This is his answer to everything. He thinks my condition is optional. “You’re not sick,” Paul tells me. “You’re a bum.” Sometimes I think about leaving home and living off the streets just to teach him a lesson. The streets, however, are no place for a guy like me (rats and bugs).

            Paul is not such a large man. He wears big plastic glasses and is clumsy with things that other people do with ease. I see him lose his balance sometimes when he is just walking up the stairs. And whenever he carries a plate of food across the room, the food is at risk of sliding off the plate. Meals with gravy are especially harrowing to watch. Sometimes, when Paul is shuffling around, I am convinced I could knock him over just by nudging him. It would be satisfying but, boy, then he’d have my ass in a sling.

            I think Paul is waiting for me to leave this house  (by casket) before he buys another one. He must have money socked away after all these years as Parts Manager at that place where he works. Bonnie used to work, too, as a nurse in a hospital. But she was bringing home more than a paycheck (Ebola), and I asked very nicely for her to quit, which she did, though now I am her only patient, so I am forced to live with the constant threat of sponge baths, as well as occasional spoon feedings of pureed vegetables. When we hear the blender, Rex and I find it best to make ourselves scarce.

I hate the blender. The garbage disposal, too. I sure could do without that thing! The day the men came and put it in was the worst day of my life. All I can think about sometimes is getting my hand stuck in there. Why would my hand be in there? Maybe I’d be retrieving a dropped biscuit. Maybe I’d be passing by and my hand would slip down there just as it got turned on. The truth is I sort of want to put my hand down there. I must have been hypnotized when I was little.

“You’re going to learn the hard way,” Paul warned me one time when he caught me looking down there with a flashlight.

“I can’t see anything!” I said, frustrated.

“They’re miniature beavers,” he said, looking over my shoulder. “They’re afraid of the light.” 

“Really?”

Nothing would please Paul more than me learning such a painful lesson (amputation). Bonnie would hate me for making such a bloody mess and I’d have to get a hook, and then I’d never find work in my field.

One time I made the mistake of moving out of the house. I’d thrown a bowl of stroganoff out the window (parsley), and Paul had given me a lesson on diplomacy. So when he told me I should get my own apartment, instead of crying, “No way!” I decided to be diplomatic. I said that I’d agree to move, but only under the condition that my new apartment have a spiral staircase, a bathroom with two sinks, a fireplace that you could light by turning a switch, and a Southwestern décor motif.

Paul came home three nights later and told me to pack my bags.

I never made it inside my apartment, though. Paul drove me out of town, beaming and humming oldies. At a stop sign, I exited the vehicle, and darted into a wooded lot.

How long was I in the woods? It is impossible to say. A week? Ten days? Several hours? My progress was slow (quicksand) and I was followed, I’m sure, by Paul’s minions from Parts Department. When I got back home, Bonnie had converted my bedroom into a sewing room. She’d never sewn a thing in her life! I began to throw her sewing supplies out the window, but before I got very far I found a pin cushion that looked strikingly like a chubby man-child—it had many, many pins in it—so I left the rest as it was and set up in the basement where they’d put my things. Paul did not appear happy when he came home later that night; no beaming, no oldies. Rex and I, however, had a hell of a reunion.

Their mistake was not throwing my stuff in the trash. They know that now, and I know that they know, so now I never ride anywhere with Paul, even though he’s always asking, always hopeful. Rex, I am afraid to say, does go with him. He’s stupid that way. Our first dog, Cody, made that mistake one too many times, and me and my sister never saw him again.

My medication, I believe, is optional. They say you are supposed to take it regularly, but of course they say that: it means more dough for them. Why don’t I take my medicine? Because I don’t want to walk through life like a zombie. I love Rex, but I don’t want to be like him, wandering from room to room without knowing why. Paul and Bonnie would love for me to take my medicine. I’m easier to control when I take it, they say, and I’m more fun. But I’m afraid I’ll wake up one day only to discover that there is a potted plant resting on my head and that several years have passed. So I am careful about what I take and when. For instance, I will never take medicine if I know my sister is coming by. Bonnie tries to slip it in my food, but I am on to her. The applesauce gives her away. Suddenly, it’s applesauce all the time, applesauce with everything, even with spaghetti and pizza. Applesauce has become my enemy. I slip Rex my applesauce while Paul and Bonnie are distracted by a difficult puzzle on Wheel of Fortune. He has never been so well-behaved.

One evening, a couple hours after dinner, I came up from my “bedroom” and found Paul in the kitchen standing over Rex. He was crying and was vulnerable to being tipped over. “He’s dead,” he bellowed.

I took a good swing with my foot and kicked Rex, hard, and he staggered noiselessly, but not unhappily, to his feet and moved on to the next room.

As a nurse, Bonnie learned how to trick people into taking their meds. The sudden omnipresence of all that applesauce reveals a decline on her part. She is inept as a nurse, and has a pear-shaped body. She scuttles around the house like a bottom-heavy child’s toy, and would be nearly impossible to tip over. I look nothing like her, look nothing like either of my parents, yet they refuse to admit that I’m adopted, even when taped to a chair. The truth is, I’m not very interested in my real parents, except they may have a bigger house and, I’m sure, a prettier daughter.

Just because I am a bit “psychotic” doesn’t mean that I don’t have urges. Yet, my sister still refuses to put out. She says she is tired of me asking every time I see her. I tell her that if she came around more often, I wouldn’t have to ask her as much.

“For instance,” I say to her, “if you came by every week—” she comes by once a month—“I’d only ask you every other time I see you.”

“Then you’d be asking me twice as much,” she says.

“No,” I point out correctly, “I’d only be asking you half as much.”

She works in a bank and is not very smart. While Bonnie harasses her about some “boy” named Jimmy, I switch plates with my sister. She has said before that she doesn’t remember much of her weekends at home. She should be grateful to me for that and should thank me by letting me put a long object (bowling trophy) in her cookie. If I could find my pills, I’d slip them into her applesauce, and then maybe I’d get to have sex with her. So far, the closest I’ve come to having sex at all is sticking a peanut-butter cracker on my poker and letting Rex lick it off. Rex is a fine-looking animal. He has a thick coat and can fetch the daily paper, but not the Sunday.

Bonnie is plotting to kill me (dismemberment). “Where are the trash bags?” she is incessantly asking.

“How should I know?” I say.

“For Christ’s sake, I can’t keep throwing your father’s money away on trash bags.”

“Well, without trash bags,” I point out, “you really can’t throw it away.”

That’s when she’ll make a threatening comment, pivot like a ball in a socket, and wobble out of the room.

I don’t like trash bags. Back when I used to ride in the car with Paul, I’d see them on the side of the highway. I knew what was in them.

“A body wouldn’t fit in a garbage bag,” he’d say.

“A torso would,” I’d say. And it would. Even a hefty man-boy torso.

“You make me crazy,” Bonnie says to me one day, still not having found the trash bags.

“You shouldn’t make light of my people’s condition,” I tell her. “Didn’t you see Cuckoo’s Nest?” – the greatest movie of all time.

“Why don’t you just tell me where they are?”

“Why don’t you just use paper?”

“Because the grease [blood] soaks right through.”

In my attempt to kill two birds with one stone, I’ve jammed them down the garbage disposal.

Bonnie leans against the doorjamb. For now, she’s given up. “You’ve really been brushing Rex a lot lately,” she says.

“Yeah.”

“He really looks great.”

I give old Rex the once-over. “He sure does,” I say.

“He’ll look nice for our guests,” she says, and retreats into the kitchen.

“Guests?” I say to the empty room.

Paul has confessed to thinking that my condition—though diagnosed and documented by some of the finest professionals this medical community has to offer—is just an excuse for being lazy. “You’re as sane as a songbird,” he says.

“I keep seeing things,” I tell Paul. “Horrible things.”

“It’s all in your head,” he says.

Exactly.

 “You give up on everything,” he says. “You always have.”

I haven’t given up on the sexual pursuit of my sister, I think to myself. But there are other things I have given up on. Like ice-skating, for instance (frostbite andamputation). Ice-skating is basically signing up for death. You could fall through a crack in the ice, or a skate blade could slice right across your jugular. 

“You just have to be different,” Paul said to me the first time I refused to go skating with the family. I was maybe fourteen.

“I don’t want to get my fingers chopped off,” I said.

Paul promised that my fingers would be safe.

“But can you say the same for the jugular?” I asked.

They left me at home with our dog Cody. On the way out the door my sister, then ten, punched me with her ring pop.

Now my doctor asks me, “Is ice-skating more exciting now that you can’t do it?”

“I get chills watching it on TV,” I tell him. “I can’t tear my eyes away. It’s like watching a train wreck.”

“Perhaps,” my doctor suggests, “You create a fear of skating just to make the world a more interesting place.”

“But Doc, the jugular,” I say, holding my throat.

“Maybe you create a dangerous world because the real one bores you.” He raises his big Indian eyebrows, like he does when he thinks he’s made a good point.

If I thought about it, this could go a long way to explaining my fascination with my sister.

I throw open the door on our first guests, two people I’ve never laid eyes on before in my life “Bill!” I shout. “And Marcy!”

Paul, standing right behind me, says, “This is Jerry and Anne.”

He likes to make me look like an idiot. And I guess I know these people are not Bill and Marcy. It just seems that when I open the door, and the party has started, that they could be Bill and Marcy. “How’s Scotland?” I ask them.

“They’re from Albany,” Paul says. He just doesn’t get it.

I drape their coats over my arm and place my free hand on Paul’s shoulder. “How about getting Bill and Marcy a drink?”

 “Jerry and Anne,” he says as I walk away.

When I was little, living in the deathtrap that was my parents’ first house, my mother would make me dispose of the leftover peas. Those peas were not at all like the peas they make these days. They were dark and swollen and they floated around in the plastic container like eyeballs. It was my job to take them down to the basement john and flush them. I don’t know why we had a toilet down there. Our basement in that dump wasn’t fixed up or anything, and the toilet looked like something that had been ripped out of a bus station. Today, if even a single pea finds its way onto my plate, I won’t sleep for weeks.

Was I afraid down there? You bet I was. There was always a strange man in my cellar. His teeth were yellow and loose and fell to the floor when he talked. My doctor told me that this man was not real. And I know he must be right. How could a man live down there with no food? What kind of life would that be anyway? What purpose for living would he have? I know he was not real.

So why, when Paul sends me down to the basement tonight for more, do I catch a glimpse of the man out of the corner of my eye, sitting on the edge of my bed?

“I’m just getting more ice,” I say, my back to him—or rather, to the empty room. And then I get the ice and am very careful not to look his way again. I know if I do look, he won’t be there.

My doctor, the impudent, bushy-browed Indian, suggests that I never saw the man in my childhood, that I have since made him up.

“Are you insane?” I asked. “Why would I do such a thing?”

“Perhaps,” he said, “your own childhood bored you.”

Indians cannot be trusted.

There are many women at this party who I would like to have sex with—or perhaps stick something (banana) in their cookie. They wear these little knee-high dresses, and they may even have fruit stuck in their cookies already. My sister is not at this party. She doesn’t like my parents’ friends, or bananas. My sister is not a good conversationalist. When she eats, between bites, she holds her fork across her index finger like a teeter-totter. That is not to say that this unnerving habit alone makes her bad at parties, but it is a sign of the compulsive behavior that makes her sometimes unbearable to be around. At the dinner table, she props her chin on the V of her thumb and forefinger and doesn’t say a word. It’s as if the rest of us are all just so boring to her, our conversations so boring. It’s as if, to her, we’re just discussing trash bags and the sprinkler system, and not my father’s plot to kill his son (adopted) and bury him (alive) out back.

When she holds her face like that, her fat cheeks fold up like the skin of a Shar-Pei or the undulating hills of Ireland in the springtime. Once, she lifted her chin off the V and her entire face fell off. It was pretty bloody beneath, and there were bugs crawling around. I think she’d look better if she let her hair grow.

Paul is the bowler in the household. He has his own ball, which is really heavy. He is not a very good bowler. He lacks balance. I have been told, by a certain Indian friend of mine, that I lack balance. It is something that I am supposed to imagine, like I’m on a teeter-totter (my sister’s fork), and I have to try to remain in the middle.

Paul carries his ball in a black bag that looks like the cases doctors carry on old TV shows. When he walks out the door with it, he says, “House call!” This is very funny. The shoes, which look like the shoes of a kind of person whose name I am too chilled even to speak (clown), he keeps in the car. I may be in the living room with Rex, and Paul will march past, satchel in hand, head down. “House call,” he’ll say. I’ll applaud, and from some remote part of the house Bonnie will laugh, and Paul will barrel through the front door and go bowl a 110.

Paul took me to the bowling alley one time, several years ago, but the place proved to be a little too much for me. It was waxy and exploding and merry. Some day, somebody in a long, black coat (mad gunman) is going to throw open the glass doors, step into the red-carpeted lobby, and shoot the place to shit. And I thought it was going to be that day. That’s why I spent most of the evening under a bench. In a moment of spastic terror (clown shoes everywhere), I heaved my bottle of orange soda down a lane. For that, Paul had some explaining to do.

I think Paul should throw his ball harder down the lane. My sister tells me that throwing the ball harder would only increase the odds that the ball would end up in the gutter. She is incorrect. I point out that the ball would actually be on the lane for less time, so would have less of a chance of going into the gutter. I have also told Paul that he should put his thumb in the hole, but he’s going to stick to his own style. Paul’s bowling ball looks how the earth would look from space if it were made of cantaloupe. The colorful ball and the technique of not using his thumb are his trademarks. Bonnie does not bowl, but is in the shape of a bowling pin, which may explain why Paul continues to bowl.

When they have sex, Paul shouts out, “House call!”

On my second trip to the basement I am followed. “Helen, lovely Helen,” I say. I don’t know what to do. I’ve never had a woman in my room before, except for my sister, and she doesn’t stay long. This woman has on a green dress with sequins and a tiara.

“My name is Barbara, jackass.”

She has a husky voice and is drunk and busty. She looks for a place to set her drink, and we share a perplexing moment over the complete absence of flat surfaces. She drops her plastic glass to the cement floor. The ice spills out wonderfully.

“Barbara, lovely Barbara.”

Her mouth is warm and it’s on my mouth. Her hand is cold and it’s in my pants. My goodness. “House call! House call! House call!”

The light goes on at the top of the stairs. “What’s going on down there?” Bonnie yells.

There is a long, silent pause while I think of something to say. Helen, lovely Helen, licks her fingers. “Nothing!” I yell back.

Then I get the ice and follow Helen up the stairs. The floor is covered with bananas. I carefully avoid them. I can do this, because I have balance.

I return to my assignment, which is to pick up empty drinks and deliver full ones and to not talk to anyone. I keep an eye out for my friend but she has disappeared. Paul, who in his inebriated condition is especially vulnerable to being tipped over, finds me fishing cashews from the peanut bowl. He looks suspicious, as if he knows something (hidden cameras) that he couldn’t otherwise know.

“I was in the basement,” I say. I am sweating even more than usual.

“What were you doing down there?” he asks.

Several moments pass before I blurt out, “Bowling!”

Thankfully, Paul has heard such drivel from me before, and he walks away, leaving me to my nuts. If he had the same nose for bullshit as my Indian doctor, I’d be toast.

Time passes. I am occupied by tasks and distractions. I find myself having a discussion with Bonnie in the kitchen. The topic is me, and she, I’m sure, is performing some sort of psychological assessment. This routine is one I have been through many times, going back to when I was a mediocre student at Ugo Cerletti Elementary and Bonnie was about the best field trip mother a kid could have. She went with us to the train museum, the Shaker Village, and the Indian graveyard. She carried caramels in her big skirt pockets and would throw them to kids even when they got the answers wrong. She was very good at keeping us in a group. Sometimes, when kids got out of hand, she’d pick them up and carry one under each arm; Bonnie is a strong woman—a strong, pear-shaped woman. Sometimes kids would horse around just so they couldget picked up. She dropped Peter Hasse on his head at the apple orchard, and that was her last field trip.

“How has your evening been?” she asks.

It is clear that her radar has gone off. I force myself to turn away and start calling, “Rex! Rex!”

She grabs me by the shoulder, turns me around, and asks if I’ve been bothering the guests.

I tell her that I have not.

She asks me if I have been drinking.

I tell her that I absolutely have not.

She asks me if I’ve been having fun.

I tell her I got a hand job in the basement.

And that’s the end of my evening. She asks me to identify the “pervert.” I am unable to disguise my disappointment when I confess to her that the fantastic woman has left the party. I am marched down the stairs and put to bed by a very upset, pear-shaped woman.

“Get some sleep,” she says. “Tomorrow will be a hard day.”

I am too excited to fall asleep. I just lie there in my too-small bed and stare at the glowing stars and planets that Paul stuck to my ceiling. For a long time I thought they’d fall off and cause severe damage (blindness), but they never do. It’s truly amazing. There are fewer footfalls upstairs, and I am always afraid that they will stop altogether and I will go up there and everything will be gone, including the furniture and the drapes and even Rex. Sunlight will pour through the bare windowpanes, illuminating the empty rooms, igniting the floating dust (mites). Nobody will come to get me, and when I go outside the world will be empty, too: just me walking down the barren streets, no sign of life except for the distant caw of a blackbird, and the heavenly voice-over of my Indian doctor saying, “There is nothing to be afraid of.”

DEAR DIPSHIT: SO YOU HAVE ALZHEIMER’S (A letter to my dumb, future self)

From The Sun – December, 2004

Click here to read the story at The Sun (a fantastic ad-free magazine featuring thoughtful art and literature.) 

(This story-letter comes from a collection called, “Dear Dipshit: Letters to My Dumb Future Self.” Also included in the collection are, “So You Have Been Abducted by Aliens,” “So You Have A Bug Living Inside Your Body,” and “So You Lost A Limb.”)

HUNGRY BABY

From Lake Effect – Spring, 2013

I run into an old friend while rooting through a downtown salad bar…

He is wearing a suit more dreadful than my own, a suit that makes me think he is still working in accounting.

            “How have you been?” I ask, because I have to say something.

            “I’m tired,” he says. And he tells me about his fourteen-hour days.

            “Really?” I say, and because I’m exhausted by all these people who say they work so hard, I add, “I’ve been working twenty-two hour days.”

            “That’s impossible,” he says.

            “You’d think so,” I answer. “But I went to work this morning at 1 a.m.”

***

            There is a certain pain you feel when the car you are traveling in gets hit by a UPS truck. When you are hanging upside down, with your neck bent at an oblique angle, waiting for the experts who perform this type of extraction, you can run through all the words you know that are pain-related, and then attempt to select one that best fits. Of course, there is no language for what you feel, but you can pass the time by giving it a try. Mind-blowing. Exquisite. Excruciating.

When the rescue workers arrive they will help supply you with the proper term. William, my paramedic, squatted down and said to himself, “Look at all those ouchies.” Then William and I concluded that the word that best described my pain was throbbing. He told me not to pass out. He asked me if I could feel my legs and I said I couldn’t reach them.

Behind William was a man wearing a brown UPS suit. The UPS driver was talking to a police officer and they were both upside down and drinking coffee. That the UPS man could be enjoying a beverage led me to conclude that the accident had been my fault. Then again, seeing as this was the holiday season, a time when UPS drivers scuttle about even more than usual, perhaps the accident was his fault. Surely there was someone I could blame for the predicament I was in. I learned later that the person I could blame was a suicidal naked woman who dashed out in the road. The UPS driver swerved to avoid the woman but knocked me over instead. (“Hey, Sophie’s Choice, whaddya gonna do,” he said when he visited me in the hospital.) The semi behind the UPS truck mopped up the suicide anyway, and in a manner best described as decisive.

            I remember asking William when the jaws-of-life would arrive, not because I was anxious to come out, but the silence was uncomfortable. In the end they were able to rip the door off with their bare hands (my car was a ’88 Mercury) and I poured out like a puddle.

            Unfortunately, I’d suffered a number of contusions as well as a concussion and several other things that started with the letter “c.” I also fractured my jaw, probably on the steering wheel, and that was a bummer. So when the UPS windbag came to visit me, I couldn’t talk, not even to tell him to get the hell out. Thankfully, a nurse entered my room and prompted his removal by reminding him that this was his busy season. That got him gone, and then the nurse shot something warm into my bag, and I was doubly grateful for her kindness.

            A broken jaw is a good thing because you no longer have to avoid people you don’t want to talk to. You can pass them in hallways and shrug your shoulders (whaddya gonna do?). You get to drink shakes and smoothies, which is good for about a week. When you start eating regular foods, your jaw gets tired like it did when you were a kid eating bread at your grandmother’s house.

***

            This is a true story: When I was a kid on my parents’ pre-divorce vacation, I went swimming in the ocean and felt something slimy on my leg. Instead of making a squeaking noise and running for the shore, which I was apt to do because I was such a squeamish child, I reached down and touched the thing. It turned out to be a diver’s mask of the finest quality. I suspected it came from someone who was killed in a shark attack and I put it on right away. The briny ocean teemed with life, but I could see none of it through the sandy water, so I took my mask to the pool. Within five minutes I’d found nineteen dollars and sixty-five cents. There was a rotten kid at one end of the pool eating a Chunky, and I suspected he had unwittingly just paid twenty-dollars for a candy bar. Found money is blessed money, so I decided to put it away and do something important with it, like save my parents’ marriage. But the next day I saw a cool raft in the beachfront store. It was red and had armrests that blew up separate. I rode on it a few minutes, and then, while chasing some kid’s Frisbee, watched it blow away toward Cuba.

***

            The thing that impresses upon my memory, more than fortune, is pain. Am I glad of that car accident so many years ago? Yes I am. I drag a whole world into my present from that one incident. When my jaw hurts, which it does from time to time, I get all sorts of great stuff back, like the music of Coolio, which I listened to on a Sony Discman while recuperating. Whenever I see nurses, or doctors, or anyone in a baggy white uniform (scientist, film processor), I remember the gorgeous women who took care of me and filled me with drugs and touched me in a caring, motherly, very sexy sort of way.

***

            What I remember most vividly from my early childhood is being attacked by a raccoon.

***

            Those spikes of pain that I speak so fondly of rarely break through the steady hum of dullness that is my new life. Getting fired would be a good spike of pain, or getting hit by a taxicab would be nice. But if I lose my job my wife will kill me. I don’t think she’s the type to enjoy spikes of pain. Lately, she doesn’t seem interested in spikes of pleasure, either. We have an ACCOUNT, which must be added to each month by a certain AMOUNT. And when that ACCOUNT reaches a certain AMOUNT, then we will be having a CHILD. I have no reason to believe that I want a child, except that I have, from time to time, said it out loud. “I’d like to have kids,” I may say, not having a broken jaw to spare me. Perhaps I am at a cocktail party, leaning against a refrigerator. “Kids?” I’ll say. “Sure, why not?”

            The problem with being hit by a motorized vehicle is that I have developed an adult fear for debilitating injuries. What if I were paralyzed, for God’s sake? What kind of life is that, being just a head that is pushed around from room to room? Maybe the only thing that suicidal woman wanted years ago when she streaked into the road was to enjoy a spike of pain. Instead, she lost her head. I, myself, am very attached to my head.

            Cocktail parties are a unique kind of pain. Not only must one have a conversation about the stock market and Tiger Woods, but one must also be constantly on the lookout for high school chums. They are to be avoided at all costs. The sight of one, however, is the exact kind of pain imprint that I am talking about. Of the cocktail parties my wife and I have attended, I remember few. We had mind-blowing sex in somebody’s bedroom, I remember that one, and that may not count because all I remember is that my wife was wearing black and saying, “Hurry,” over and over again. But I distinctly remember a party on Montrose, because I bumped into Jerry Slater, a peripheral member of the “old gang.” He embarked on a verbal rampage while sweat beads gathered on my forehead. I remember what I was wearing (black camel hair blazer), what he was wearing (turtleneck with mistletoe pin), what was inside the canapés (spinach of course), and where I was hiding, later, from Jerry, when the hostess played her record of barking dogs singing Christmas carols (back porch).

            As I drove home from the party with the girl who would become my wife, I told her about how terrible my night had been and we laughed. Then she told me a miserable story or two, and we laughed some more. And because we’d fled the party so early, we had time to catch a late movie, a thriller about a space ship set adrift. It was a terrible film, and we had the grandest time.

            My wife has since come to accept cocktail parties as a way of life. She has gone so far as to say she lives for them. What this says about me, that the thing she lives for is to stand in uncomfortable rooms in uncomfortable shoes guessing when she’s supposed to laugh, I am afraid to ask. It is simply unacceptable for a married woman to go to a cocktail party without her husband, so I am inevitably prodded off the couch and hosed down, dressed up and driven to some polished hardwood space that has soft music playing on the CD player.

            What is it that makes veterans gather together and exchange war stories? Why, when our plane is delayed, do we immediately seek someone out to tell all our traveling mishaps to? Is it so important to tell a good story that we find ourselves wishing our plane would crash, just so we have something to talk about? I have told my car accident story a thousand times, and I am constantly adding graphic details. I now tell people that I received permanent head damage. I tell them that I can’t feel hot or cold and that a part of my brain is in decay so that some day I will be unable to have feelings for other human beings. My listeners retaliate with their own stories, of congenital heart defects or tongue-swelling allergic reactions or accidents with spinning blades. One guy told me a bug entered his body while he was sleeping on the African ground and now, if unwound, would measure seventeen feet. A nurse told me that she treated a man who had a cockroach in his ear. To get it out, they turned off all the lights and put a bowl of milk next to his head.

            “Cockroaches don’t drink milk,” my wife said when I told her the story. She has a way of ruining everything.

            “What do they drink then?” I asked.

            “Water.”

            “Milk is water,” I said. I had no idea what I was talking about.

            My wife took a bite of pie. We were sitting at our little kitchen table after a party. We smelled like candles and I was drunk. “Orange juice would be more believable,” she said.

            She was, of course, absolutely right.

***

            Why do I wish that I would catch my wife having an affair? I feel sub-human imagining it. While I spank her, which I do because she likes it, I imagine that she has been with another man. I don’t fantasize about watching her with another man, but about knowing she’s been with someone else, and then I get to imagine myself taking lonely midnight walks thinking about how tragic it all is. The crappy music that is on the radio now would suddenly mean something. (I f-f-forgot how much I love you – Yes, exactly!) I’d buy the CD’s and then be able to listen to them years from now and feel the same wonderful intensity. Maybe I’d make up with my wife and we’d make exquisite love. Maybe I’d have drinks after work with Margie, the woman who works at the cube next to mine, and then go to her place and have awful sex. I could slip out of Margie’s bed and sit on her front stoop (does she have a stoop? Does she have a “place”?) with a blanket wrapped around me, thinking about the woman who was my wife.

            Neither my father nor my mother remarried after their divorce. They both retired early and traveled around the world, though in opposite directions. I suppose they crossed somewhere, Morocco probably. My father survived his travels, but fell off a mountain a few years later in Colorado, incurring the ultimate injury. My mother went to the city of his funeral, but didn’t attend the ceremony, instead choosing to sun herself by the hotel pool in a black bikini. She looked fantastic at dinner that night, surrounded by me and sipping a sea breeze. She had the waiter take a picture—several pictures—and told me that she was sleeping with a woman named Flo. She paid, I got the tip, and I dropped her at her hotel. “You were a good son,” she said, and exited the vehicle.

            Why had my mother adopted such recklessness? This was before I met the girl who would become my wife, so I called Margie, who had enough affection for me to make up for the indifference I felt for her. “She’s grieving,” Margie said about my mother. “In her own way.”

            I told Margie she was full of shit.

            “So how are you?” she asked.

            I didn’t know what to say. There weren’t words for how I felt. It was impossible to describe, so instead I asked Margie what she was wearing. Her underwear, that night, was chartreuse.

            I believe that the emotion one should feel—one who masturbates over the telephone on the night of his father’s funeral to the thought of a simpleminded, chartreuse-pantied woman—is guilt. But I didn’t feel guilty, and have never been ashamed when looking back on that night. The pain of it, the tragedy of having someone you love fall off a big rock, releases you from the world of normal expectations. What you get in this grief bath is the privilege to feel however you want. You can project forward and blame any perverted or slightly immoral act on the insanity of grief. I wouldn’t do something crazy, like rob a bank, but while Margie was telling me where to put my hands and fingers, I was thinking about how great it would be if it was my mother in bed with me, touching me. Disgusting? I argue that it can’t be, as I was in pain, relieved even from the responsibility of decency.

            Freud said that we learn pain as babies when we are deprived access to our mother. He called it the hungry baby. A baby will cry, cry, cry, and then, when reunited with his mother’s breast, will understand pleasure. There have been many times when I have asked my wife, “Hungry, Baby?” Usually, when I ask, she is, and I’ll take her to a restaurant that I know she likes. Or I’ll make her something, perhaps an egg sandwich. (I know so much about my wife.) Sometimes she’ll ask me, “Hungry, Baby?” And then she takes me to a restaurant. Or she’ll make me something, like a piece of buttered, white toast.

            I have felt an excruciating love for my wife a number of times, but I have never loved her more deeply than when she took a vacation to Greece with her friends from college. My second night without her I ate spanakopita and got drunk on ouzo, sat on the floor in front of the stereo and listened to all her records. She called me at three a.m. and I woke up so hysterical that I couldn’t speak. “Calm down,” she kept saying, from thousands of miles away, over a pay phone, on an island painted blue and white.

            Vietnam prisoners of war often talk about how they killed time by remembering the precise layout of all the homes they ever lived in. I find myself doing the same thing lately, with our first apartment, which we moved out of five years ago. When I try to reconfigure in my head where everything went, I picture myself walking barefoot through the apartment, my wife’s music playing, a glass of ouzo in my hand. I can remember the pattern of the Oriental rug and the kinds of fish in the fish tank. Usually, when I imagine this, my wife isn’t in the apartment. But sometimes she is in every room. When I enter, she’ll stop what she is doing, look up, and smile.

            My mother and Flo were in town recently, promoting either a liberal cause or a composite of liberal causes. Flo is an intriguing person, the kind of woman who aspires above everything else to be a mystic. It is tedious and aggravating, and I’m not saying that just because she turned my mother into a lesbian. For someone who is seeking transcendence to a higher plane, she has chosen an odd way to do it. My wife calls her “Flo-caine.” She indulges in the drug casually, daintily even, with the air of an Englishwoman putting on rouge. Her cocaine-zen philosophy intrigues me (primarily because of the intense calms that are its cornerstones), so I told her about remembering the apartment the way I do and about how much I loved my wife during the ten days she was in Greece. “You’re nostalgic,” she said.

            “For what?” I asked. We were in a downtown tapas bar.

            “Your wife,” she answered.

            “My wife is in the bathroom,” I said. “She’s been gone two minutes.” (My wife always waits for me to be in a deep conversation with Flo before leaving the table, as she is afraid Flo will join her in the bathroom and offer her drugs.)

            Cleverness is not high-ranking on Flo’s characteristics chart. She swooshed some flowy fabric dramatically over her shoulder. It always appears that Flo is wearing an excessive number of articles of clothing, half of which trail off her like paper on the back of a “Just Married” vehicle. “You miss that wife, the girl she was then,” she said. “The girl, in whose absence, you could create her to be, the girl—”

            I cut Flo off midstream and told her she was buying dinner. She nodded her head in a way that made me think she knew something about my marriage that I didn’t know.

            The word “Nostalgia” has its own roots in Greece. “Nostos” is Greek for “to return home.” The pain part of nostalgia, of course, is that you can’t return home. I can think of the girl who was to become my wife, and I can almost conjure her up (perhaps this is why I like Flo so much, because she makes it seem like such a thing could happen). This is especially true during the times when my wife isn’t around. Am I closer to her in her absence? I better not tell her that I think this may be so. If she were to leave me altogether, I would become unbearably close to her, and then I would have no choice but to love her desperately forever. (Funny, I think I heard this same sentiment on the radio recently). I am guilty of avoiding my wife, of always keeping her at arm’s length because I want so much to remember how she was when we were first together.

            I am not sure when my wife began liking cocktail parties. I don’t know why our physical relationship is tainted with the disturbing. I am afraid that having a child is a last-ditch effort to save ourselves, or perhaps just an act of total resignation. All I know is we will never sit across from each other on the floor of our first apartment, spread eagle, pressing the bottoms of our feet together, throwing a bottle cap at the bottles of beer between our legs. But we are always, always, almost there.

            Lacan called this jouissance. Not the bottle cap game I played with the girl who would become my wife, but the game I play, circulating this memory, this nostalgia, over and over in my head. I will never get at the center, will never get that wonderful moment back. The pain I feel in not getting at the center, in moving around and around, Lacan suggests, provides me with pleasure. What scares me now is that I am not adding new memories to rotate around in the future. Is yesterday’s salad bar reunion the best I can do? Is it possible that it, too, will some day become a memory I can take pleasure from?

            I have my doubts. But, I will wait and see. In the meantime, I will keep using what has worked for me so far. I will think about my wife sunning herself on a Greek island. About my gray-headed father plummeting off a mountain. And about myself, hanging upside down in a wrecked car, waiting for someone to come save me.