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Authors: Alexander Trocchi

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BOOK: Cain’s Book
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“It’s no good,” I said, “there’s no one. No point in beating our brains.”

“If I could just get a taste,” Fay said.

“What are you going to do, Joe?” Tom said.

“Back to the scow. I may go out early in the morning, any time after eight.”

“I’ll walk you as far as Sheridan Square,” Tom said. “I think I’ll hang around there a while. I might run into something.”

“What about you, Fay?”

“No. I’ll stay here. Look, Tom, if you cop anything, bring it back, will you? I’m going uptown tomorrow, boost a good coat.”

“Don’t get caught,” I said. “Why don’t you take some of your sculptures up to that guy who’s interested?”

“I would but I need something to wear. I can’t go like this. An’ I’ve got to have a fix before I go.”

“Sure. OK. Look after yourself. I’ll see you.”

“See you, Joe. Look, try to get back quick, will you, Tom?”

“Christ, I don’t know if I’ll get anything!”

“OK, but hurry...”

When I was three I went to bed at night with a stuffed white bird. It had soft feathers and I held it close to my face. But it was a dead bird
and sometimes I looked at it hard and for a long time. Sometimes I ran my thumbnail along the split in the rigid beak. Sometimes I sucked the blue beads which had been sewn in place of
the eyes. When the beak was prised open and wouldn’t close again I disliked the bird and sought justifications. It was indeed a bad bird.

T
HE PAST IS TO
be treated with respect, but from time to time it should be affronted, raped. It should never be allowed to
petrify. A man will find out who he is. Cain, Abel. And then he will make the image of himself coherent in itself, but only in so far as it is prudent will he allow it to be contradictory to the
external world. A man is contradicted by the external world when, for example, he is hanged.

These thoughts come to mind... such is my drugged state, the only witness myself, only the metamorphic count offering you eternal death, who has committed suicide in a hundred obscene ways, an
exercise in spiritual masturbation, a game well played when you are alone... and I write them down as I try to feel my way into where I left off.

I always find it difficult to get back to the narrative. It is as though I might have chosen any of a thousand narratives. And, as for the one I chose, it has changed since yesterday. I have
eaten, drunk, made love, turned on – hashish and heroin – since then. I think of the judge who had a bad breakfast and hanged the lout.

Cain’s Book.
When all is said and done, “my readers” don’t exist, only numberless strange individuals, each grinding me in his own mill, for whose purpose I
can’t be responsible. No book was ever responsible. (Sophocles didn’t fuck anyone’s mother.) The feeling that this attitude requires defence in the modern world obsesses me.

God knows there are enough natural limits to human knowledge without our suffering willingly those that are enforced upon us by an ignorantly rationalized fear of experience. When I find myself
walled in by the solid slabs of other men’s fear I have a ferocious impulse to scream from the rooftops. “Yah bleedin’ mothahfuckahs! So help me Ah’ll pee on you!”
Prudence restrains me. But as the past must sometimes be affronted so also must prudence sometimes be overruled.
Caveat.

I say it is impertinent, insolent, and presumptuous of any person or group of persons to impose their unexamined moral prohibitions upon me, that it is dangerous both to me and, although they
are unaware of it, to the imposers, that in every instance in which such a prohibition becomes crystallized in law an alarming precedent is created. History is studded with examples, the sweet
leper stifled by the moral prejudice of his age. Vigilance. Dispute legal precedent.

In my study of drugs (I don’t pretend for a moment that my sole interest in drugs is to study their effects... To be familiar with this experience, to be able to attain, by whatever means,
the serenity of a vantage point “beyond” death, to have such a critical technique at one’s disposal – let me say simply that on my ability to attain that vantage point my
own sanity has from time to time depended) – in my study of drugs I have been forced to run grave risks, and I have been stymied constantly by the barbarous laws under which their usage is
controlled. These crude laws and the social hysteria of which they are a symptom have from day to day placed me at the edge of the gallows’ leap.
I demand that these laws be
changed.

The hysterical gymnastics of governments confronting the problem of the atomic bomb is duplicated exactly in their confrontation of heroin. Heroin, a highly valuable drug, as democratic
statistics testify, comes in for all the shit-slinging. Perhaps that is why junkies, many of whom possess the humour of detachment, sometimes call it “shit”.

We cannot afford to leave the potential power of drugs in the hands of a few governmental “experts”, whatever they call themselves. Critical knowledge we must vigilantly keep in the
public domain. A cursory glance at history should caution us thus. I would recommend on grounds of public safety that heroin (and all other known drugs) be placed with lucid literature pertaining
to its use and abuse on the counters of all chemists (to think that a man should be allowed a gun and not a drug!) and sold openly to anyone over twenty-one. This is the
only
safe method
of controlling the use of drugs. At the moment we are encouraging ignorance, legislating to keep crime in existence, and preparing the way for one of the most heinous usurpations of power of all
times... all over the world...

Such might have been my thoughts as I walked away from Sheridan Square where I left Tom Tear. He went into Jim Moore’s. Sometimes he sat there for hours, usually in the
middle of the night from about twelve till three or four; the countermen liked him and they were generous when he ordered anything. The diner, because it was open all night, was a useful meeting
place. The coffee counter is composed of two U’s linked by a very short counter which supports the cash register. Its top is of green plastic. The stools are red and chrome. There is a
jukebox, a cigarette machine, glass everywhere, and windows... that’s the advantage of the place, the huge uncurtained windows which look out onto the centre of the square. You can only sit
there so long without being seen by your little junkie friends who can see you waiting. It’s like being in a goldfish bowl in a display window of a pet shop. (In New York people look in at
you through the glass windows of snack bars; Paris cafés spill out onto the street where those who are walking by are open to inspection.) It has also, from another point of view, its
disadvantage. If our friends can look in, so can the police, and many of the anonymous men who sit at the counter or who lounge about outside in the small hours could conceivably fink. So it is
dangerous to be seen there too often, especially if you are high. Most of us returned there eventually because we were often hung up for shit.

He had asked me to go and have a coffee with him but I knew that once I was inside I would find it difficult to leave. And of all the hours I spent, the hours of vigil I spent in that diner,
waiting, were probably the worst.

I walked up 7th Avenue and turned west on 23rd Street and made directly for the river. The bars were still open so the streets weren’t deserted. On 23rd a police car trailed me for a few
seconds and then glided past. Without turning my head I caught a glimpse of the man beside the driver, his head turned my way. I wasn’t carrying anything that night.

I kept walking past 8th, 9th, and I walked up 9th and turned left a few blocks later. I was walking slowly. Suddenly I was opposite an alley and in the alley about twenty yards away was the dark
figure of a man standing close to a wall. He was alone under a small light near a garage door and he was exposing himself to a brick wall.

In terms of literal truth my curiosity was pointless. A man goes to a lane to urinate, an everyday happening which concerns only himself and those who are paid to prevent public nuisance. It
concerned me only because I was there and doing nothing in particular as was quite ordinary for me, like a piece of sensitive photographic paper, waiting passively to feel the shock of impression.
And then I was quivering like a leaf, more precisely like a mute hunk of appetitional plasm, a kind of sponge in which the business of being excited was going on, run through by a series of
external stimuli; the lane, the man, the pale light, the flash of silver at the ecstatic edge of something to be known.

The flash of silver comes from earlier; it was a long time ago in my own country and I saw a man come out of an alley. He had large hands. The thought of his white front with
its triangle of coarse short hair came to me. I thought of the mane of a wolf, of the white Huns, perhaps because he stooped. Or perhaps because my own ears were pricked back and alert. In his
other hand was the glint of something silver. As he walked past me he put his hands in his pockets. I looked after him. I realized I hadn’t seen his face. Before I reached the corner he had
turned into an adjacent street. I reached the intersection and he was entering a public house. I didn’t see him in the bar nor in any of the side rooms. The bar was crowded with workmen: the
same caps, the same white scarves, the same boots. He was not in the men’s toilet.

Sitting there – an afterthought – I noticed that someone had cut a woman’s torso deep in the wood of the door. As big as a fat sardine. There was no toilet paper. I used a
folded sheet of the
Evening News
, part of which I tore carefully from the other part which was wet. It was water, and dust had collected. It had been jammed beneath the pipe under the
cistern. The ink had run. I felt a necessity to read inside the wet pages. When I peeled them apart I found nothing of interest. A well-known stage actor was to be married. The paper was more than
six weeks old. I remembered reading a few days before that he had since died. I couldn’t remember whether he left a widow.

I drank one small whiskey at the bar and left. The original impulse to find him had left me. The street was deserted, and the lane. On my way home I wondered why I had followed him. I
wasn’t after facts, information. I didn’t delude myself from the moment I became aware of his shadow, although in self-defence I may have pretended to wonder, to seek safety in the
problematic. I can see now I must have known even then it was an
act
of curiosity. Even now I’m the victim of my own behaviour: each remembered fact of the congeries of facts out of
which in my more-or-less continuous way I construct this document is an
act of remembrance
, a selected fiction, and I am the agent also of what is unremembered, rejected; thus I must
pause, overlook, focus on my effective posture. My curiosity was a making of significance. I experienced a sly female lust to be impregnated by, beyond words and in a mystical way to confound
myself with, not the man necessarily, though that was part of the possibility, but the secrecy of his gesture.

He wore the clothes of a workman, a cap, a shapeless jacket, and trousers baggy at the knees. He might have been a dustman, or a coalman, or unemployed. The hissing gas lamp cast his shadow
diagonally across the lane and like a finger into the tunnel. As I came abreast of it I glanced through into the lane and when I saw him I caught my breath. The valve slid open. The faint lust at
my belly made me conscious of the cold of the rest of my body. I felt the cool night wind on my face as I sensed my hesitation. It was the way he stood, swaying slightly, and half-hidden, and it
was then that I thought of his crotch, and of the stench of goats in the clear night air of the Tartar steppes, of the hairs of his belly, and of the stream of yellow urine from his blunt prick
running in a broad, steaming sheet down the stone wall, its precision geometrical, melting the snow near the toes of his big boots. If I had had the nerve I might have approached him then and there
instead of following him to the bar, but there was no kinetic quality in my hesitation. It lay on me like an impotence, cloying, turning my feet to lead. It was my cowardice which shattered me. The
other knowledge, of the desire, came as no shock. Still, and with a sense of bathos, I found myself moving in pursuit of him when he lurched backwards into full view and passed me at the end of the
tunnel where I stood. Did I invent the glint of silver? Endow him with a non-existent razor. The honing of the blade. When I couldn’t find him in the bar, and after I had applied my skill to
the torso on the wooden door, I returned to the lane and walked through the tunnel towards light. The singing gas lamp evoked memories of sensation, but faintly, and there was no element of
anticipation. In the lane I looked over the wall at the windows of the dark tenements above. A pale light showed here and there from behind curtains. Above the level of the roofs the sky was
darkening indigo and shifty with thin cloud. I thought: on such a night as this werewolves are abroad and the ambulances of death run riot in the streets. I kicked at the snow on the cobbles. My
feet were cold. I walked home with a sense of failure, too familiar even then to shrug off easily. And then, when I entered the flat there was Moira wearing her drop earrings, waiting, hoping, at
the portal of her day’s thoughts, and I walked past her surlily, with no greeting.

Moira was sitting opposite me. This was before our divorce and before either of us came to America. I had put the incident of the man in the lane out of my mind. It was nearly
ten o’clock. Two hours until the New Year. One day followed another. Relief at having attained the limit of the old year made me uneasy. It wasn’t as though I were walking out of
prison.

Moira was hurt at my isolation. I could sense the crude emotion run through her. It was abrasive. She said I was selfish, that it showed in my attitude, on that of all nights. I knew what she
meant.

She felt the need to affirm something and in some way or other she associated the possibility with the passing of the old year. “Thank God this year’s nearly over!” she
said.

BOOK: Cain’s Book
4.91Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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