Authors: Ted Heller
“I'm afraid, sir,” it was the guy at the desk telling me, “that we were not able to get you a taxi due to the weather.”
“And you're telling me this
now?!
” I yelled. Forty-ï¬ve minutes to the reading.
I slammed the phone down. I'd have to walk to the Creaky Lank or whatever it was called. And I'd have to start out in a few minutes. I selected twenty pages to print and began to change clothing. I was gazing at the now grape-jelly-colored bruise on my thigh when I heard a violent thwacking noise . . . it was my printer choking on twenty pages of paper all at once.
It wasn't going to work.
I'd have to, I now realized, recite Chapter One of Book I of the
Trilogy
and I changed, secreted what was left of the whiskey into mouth and into my new parka, and got going.
What I'm going to read now,
I would announce,
was something that I originally wrote here in London many years ago and have returned to London to write again. I hope you like it.
I limped through the dark and deserted frigid streets and arrived only ten minutes late. By the time I got there my bottle was empty. And so, pretty much, was the Leaky Crank.
Th
ings now begin to take an unfortunate turn.
I approached the tall, thin blond bartender, who told me in an offhand manner that he was Nigel, and I ordered a Scotch and told him I was Frank Dixon. Neither relieved, overjoyed, nor interested to hear this, he said, “Yes, so?” I told him that I was here to read my book. He poured the Scotch, looked at me and said, “So where's your book then? . . . Start reading!” He assumed, I could tell, that I was going to just open up a book and start reading to myself.
It wasn't your classic London pub, it was more like a student lounge in a community college. Large, dumpy chairs and couches, wobbly wooden coffee tables and side tables, floppy chenille pillows, stained dhurries on the floor, posters for plays that had closed ten years ago.
Th
e jukebox was on, and there were only six people present, four men and two women, not including the staff (Nigel and his barmaid, a slatternly, raven-haired woman). One of the patrons resembled Frank Lloyd Wright at his most imperious lookingâhe had the
Telegraph
on his lap and was murmuring to himself. It wasn't a promising picture.
“No, I have a
public
reading to do here,” I said to Nigel. “Didn't Penelope from Norwich Cairn call to arrange this?” He summoned over Moira, the raven-haired slattern, and they chatted, then he came back to me and said, “
Th
ere was a call like that, but we're not really so keen on that sort of booky stuff here.”
“I came to London strictly for this reading,” I lied. “
Th
ey told me they put a rather large advert in some paper called
Th
e Pavement
?”
At his table Frank Lloyd Wright, probing his ear with a long, slender ï¬nger but still able to listen in, let out a guffaw that readjusted the ice in my tumbler.
“
Th
e Pivement
?” Nigel echoed incredulously. “
Th
at's a newsÂpaper for homeless people!”
Well, the homeless read too,
I wanted to tell Nigel. Instead I pointed to the patrons and said, “For all we know, these people could be here to hear me read.”
“Who, them?” he said, pouring me another drink. “No, they're always here.”
Moira chimed in good-naturedly: “Oh, Nige, let 'im read 'is book!”
I said, “I'll read but do I have to pay for my drinks?” He shook his head and I said, “
Th
en can I have another?” He poured and I said, “Can you at least turn off the music for this?”
Why did this have to happen to me? Why did I ever want to be a writer? Not only was I a battering ram, I was also the wall the thing was battering.
Th
e best thing that could have ever happened to me would have been if I'd just failed outright. Or better yet, I should never have committed one word to paper.
Th
is perverse desire of mine to matter was destroying me.
Moira got up in front of everyone, brushed her black hair back with her hand, clanked a pint glass with a knife and said, “Awright, everybody, we got a real special guest here tonight who flew all the way from Amerryca just to read. 'is name is . . . What's your name again?”
I stammered out my name, and the door opened and a couple, all bundled up, blew in. Moira said to them, “Jeff! Anna! Are you 'ere for the reading?” and Anna answered, “What reading?”
I staggered over to a patch of dimly lit space between two couches. Moira said to Nigel, “Nige, turn the music OFF!”
“What I'm going to read now,” I announced in a Dewars-mellowed tone, “was something that I originally wrote here in London many years ago and have returned to London to write again. I hope you like it.” Frank Lloyd blurrily folded his
Telegraph
and clasped his long hands on his table.
“I hope I like it too!” another man sitting by himself said to a chuckle or two.
“Ohhh, Trev!” Frank Lloyd moaned to him. “Will you please shut up for once in your godforsaken insufferable life! Everyone is so bloody tired of it!”
Th
e Clanky Reek Pub was whirling. But I began . . .
“
Th
ings were very bad then but still we carried on. Time is a . . .”
It didn't sound right.
I said, “Let me try that again.” I thought a beat and then said, “
Th
en things were still very bad but we carried on. Time is a funny thing . . .”
Th
at didn't sound right either.
I took a deep breath, closed my eyes, opened them and began again.
“We then carried things on very bad but . . . No.
Th
e very things we carried then were still but bad. A funny thing is time . . .”
I had the undivided attention of everyone except for Moira, who was vigorously polishing a side table. It was time to move on to the next sentence, which was . . . which was . . .
Th
ere was a second sentenceâit was out there somewhere, I'd written it, it did existâbut it wasn't coming to me. (Ironically, it had something to do with the quirky nature of time and memory.) It quickly occurred to me that I could just segue into the ï¬rst sentence of
Book 2 of the
Trilogy
and I did so, but lost the thread right in the middle of it, whereupon I remembered the second part of the ï¬rst sentence of Book 3, so I cut and pasted them together to form one whole unlovely unit. My mind racing, I dashed to a ï¬ne sentence I'd remembered earlier in the day in the park and said it aloud:
“And then I saw famous Round Pond for the ï¬rst time, which was just that, a round fucking pond.” After that, nothing came to me. Not a syllable. “You Don't Have to Say You Love Me” by Dusty Springï¬eld came onâto
that
I could remember all the wordsâand had this been a Hugh Grant or Colin Firth romantic comedy I would have begun singing along and everybody would have joined in and adored me. Roll credits.
“And that,” I announced sheepishly to all present, “is as far as I've gotten. But . . . but when I ï¬nish it I would love to come back to London and read it to you.”
Th
ere was a smattering of applause from everyone, led by Moira, who'd tucked her rag and Lemon Pledge into her armpits just so she could clap.
I went back to the bar, ordered another drink and sunk my head into my hands.
Oh, Lonnie Beale, why hath I forsaken thee?
“
Th
is one,” Nigel said, “I'm afraid I've got to charge you for.”
I drank it and reeled to the door to leave. Had I not been drinking, I think I still would have been reeling. Outside, the ground was frozen and the night was silver, ghostly, and daunting. As I gazed into this Shackletonian bleakness, Frank Lloyd Wright called out: “When you ï¬nish your book, I'll be sure to buy a copy.”
I believe he really meant it.
Th
e next morning I limped down to a hospital on Royal Hospital Road, where I was X-rayed, given thirty ultra-powerful prescription painkillers, and told I had a “savagely deep” thigh bruise and a “horribly brutal” hairline fracture.
I didn't go to the library that day. I stayed inside my room and grooved on the awesome opiate high. I don't know if the pills were supposed to kill the pain or simply make me not care about it. In the end, I don't know which one happened.
Tomorrow my mistress was coming!
I nodded out with a bag of ice over my leg, and when I woke up I thought I'd urinated in the bed and was appalled. When I realized it was merely the melted ice, I took two more pills.
Th
e snow and ice outside were melting.
Th
e temperature had risen to a balmy thirty-eight degrees.
Coated with sweat I crawled out of bed around dinnertime and went online and Googled “Odense Book Fair” and found there indeed was such a thing and that Greg Nolan had been in attendance . . . three months ago.
Th
en I looked up
Nuts
on Amazon U.K. It had only been out two weeks but was, at that minute, ranked twelfth. “An engaging and thoroughly ferocious read,” the
Observer
called it. Poker Book Lover, from Wigan, had given it three stars and said: “I would have given this book ï¬ve stars but Gerald Waverly comes across as so despicable, scheming and heartless that, in the end, I felt let down. Is there really scum like this out there? He makes Bernie Madoff look like Mother Teresa.”
Amazon itself weighed in:
AMAZON.CO.UK REVIEW
In his riveting memoir, Gerald Waverly, a self-professed “scheming sociopath, morally bankrupt conï¬dence man, irredeemable oenophile and pathological liar” describes with bracing, nearly toxic wit how he used every devious trick in the book to win unfathomable amounts of money playing poker online. “I am the sort of nasty chap,” he warns us, “who when a woman tells me she recently got engaged, thinks of slicing her ï¬nger off for the ring.” Not for the squeamish, Waverly lets fall not one droplet of sweetness or sentiment. “
Th
ese people weren't people,” he writes of his marks, “they were suckers, fools, bank accounts waiting to be emptied.” And empty them he does. Going to hysterically elaborate lengths to cultivate friendships in order to destroy them, using an hilarious assortment of guises and tactics, the pitiless Waverly (he informs us he has a ï¬rst at Cambridge in physics) confesses that the only tricks “I would not stoop to defraud another player were the ones that I had not yet thought of, and those were few.” By the end, Waverly ends up a millionaire, but it is he whose moral bank account has been emptied. Whether he realizes this or not is conveniently never mentioned.
It took me about three minutes of poking around to ï¬nd out who Gerald Waverly's editor was: Greg Nolan at Norwich Cairn.
I went into the Galaxy. But not to play. I found Second Gunman, who'd just won, he told me, $3K from Bjorn 2 Win in one hand, and I told him where I was and why. I found Kiss My Ace and told him that the other day Boca Barbie had been looking for him. “She found me,” he said.
I took three pills that evening, only two more than the recommended dose, and fell into a long fantasy/dream: I was at a fabulous PEN pool party at an exclusive resort in St. Barts; my date was Artsy Painter Gal, and all the writers, artists, and VIPs loved her. Richard Ford, Jonathan Safran Foer, Michael Chabon, Gary Shteyngart, and the rest of them were there, drinking and lingering around the starlit pool and talking books, art, politics, and book contracts. Near a trellised wall Adam Gopnik and Anäis Nin were making out, and cavorting near the diving board were a naked Sal Rushdie and a naked Marty Amis and also naked James Frey and his naked date . . . who was the one and only Lilly! He was wheeling her around in a red wheelbarrow in the rain, and even though she was dead she was the life of the party. Damien Hirst came over and shook her hand and she thanked him for doing such a marvelous job preserving her.
You ï¬nally made it, Chip,
APG said to me.
Great job.
Th
e Mitch Alboms were there; not Mitch Albom and a wife, but Mitch Albom and his very own deceased self, a sportswriter angel who'd descended from Heaven just for this shindig. Jonathan Franzen traipsed over with a blonde under each arm, and they had an Oprah Book Club sticker on each nipple.
Great job, Frank,
he said to me.
Great job.
Safran Foer or Dave Eggers came over and started talking in tiny footnotes that appeared at his ankles. He told me
1
. . . . I asked him,
Huh?
What do you mean?
and he said
2
. . . and walked away.
Th
en James Frey wheeled Lilly over to me and she said to me,
Did you hear about Jill Conway's new book?
(For a mangy, pathetic crackwhore who'd committed suicide, she didn't look half-bad.)
No, Lilly,
I said to her,
I haven't. It's another book about food,
she told me.
Th
e book actually eats itself page by page as you read it! It's going to turn postmodernism on its stomach.
Molly Bloom, naked on a chaise longue and sipping a melting margarita, said to me,
Yes, Frank, great job, yes, Frank, great job, great job, yes.
I asked Artsy,
What have I done? Why is everyone saying great job?
and she smiled and said,
Th
is is your book party! You're the guest of honor! Your poker memoir got published!
“But I didn't write a poker memoir!” I tried to say but couldn't. Suddenly the party was over, and workers were sweeping up bottles, glasses, other orgiastic detritus, and all the scattered footnotes into dustpans, and I snapped out of it in my sweatsoaked sheets and it was Saturday morning in London and in a few hours the real Artsy Painter Gal would be landing at Heathrow.