No Relation (3 page)

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Authors: Terry Fallis

BOOK: No Relation
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I opened my laptop on the kitchen table where I could look out the window and see the trees lining Bank Street below. The canopy of leaves dappled the June sunshine on the pavement. It was time to write. After I had surveyed the scene outside for fifteen minutes or so, I read through the file folder labelled
“Debut Novel.” I had no title yet for it. Inside were files with names like “Character back stories,” “Settings,” “Chronology,” and “Basic outline.” There was also a subfolder entitled “Manuscript.” I opened the “Basic outline” file and shoved it up against the right-hand edge of my screen. Then I clicked on the “Manuscript” subfolder to reveal chapters one through eleven stacked in separate files. My mouse hovered over Chapter 11 and I double-clicked to open it. I spent the next twenty minutes or so rereading the words I had written in my last writing session a week earlier. They weren’t bad, I guess. But the prose read as I’d been feeling when I’d written it and the previous few chapters – forced, listless, unfocused, rudderless, and utterly devoid of literary merit. But that was then. Now my world had been stripped of at least two of the principal distractions that have plagued writers since words were first etched on tablets. I had no job and I had no girlfriend. Suddenly taking their place were two commodities writers have always sought but seldom found. Time and money.

If not now, when? So I laced my fingers, turned my linked hands downward, and pushed out, stretching and cracking my knuckles in the clichéd way piano players do before duelling with the keys. I know. It must have looked lame, but it actually felt quite good. I opened a new document in Word and typed “Chapter 12.” Then I felt thirsty and got a drink. Okay, Chapter 12. Then I noticed a dustball Jenn had somehow missed in her guilt-encrusted vacuuming frenzy. I picked it up and tossed it in the garbage bin under the sink. Now, Chapter 12. I wrote a sentence. It was not a great
sentence. It was not “luminous.” It was not “elegiac” or “incandescent.” But it was a sentence. It was a start. I read it over, again and again. I flipped the front clause to the back and read it again. Then I put it back. Fifteen minutes later, like the Ministry of Truth, I backspaced through the entire sentence, eliminating any signs that it had ever existed. I looked over at my “Basic outline” for guidance, but found nothing of interest.

Okay, Chapter 12. I shook out my arms like an Olympic swimmer just before the gun. Then I took a shower.

Twenty minutes later I was back at my laptop feeling refreshed and enthused. Chapter 12. What’s in the fridge? No, that wasn’t a new first sentence. That was the question that I simply had to answer before trying to write that first sentence. Writing always makes me hungry. Even trying to write, or avoiding writing, or wanting desperately to write but succumbing to distractions, or falling prey to simple, pure, unadulterated procrastination, all make me hungry. I made a peanut butter and peach jam sandwich. It was very good, with the perfect proportions of peanut butter and jam. It’s hard to nail that balance. Writing and eating usually make me tired. Yep. I took a nap.

I awoke two hours later and wondered what I was doing in bed. Then I remembered, and felt discouraged and depressed all over again. When I analyzed my post-nap feelings, I realized I wasn’t really grieving Jenn’s departure. I wasn’t a blubbering mass of emotion, but actually felt okay about it all, and was oddly motivated to get back to my novel. I was supposed to be
hurting, but it hadn’t hit me yet, and might never. What I did feel seemed more like relief than emotional angst. Strange reaction, I know, but there you have it.

I hauled myself up and was soon back in the kitchen in front of the laptop, staring at a very intimidating screen. By this time, it was three in the afternoon. I decided I simply couldn’t put it off any longer. Not Chapter 12, but replacing my driver’s licence at the Department of Motor Vehicles. Driving without your licence is generally frowned upon by the
NYPD
.

I took the subway up to Broadway and 6th and eventually got myself in line at the
DMV
. I would have arrived sooner, but on the way I was forced to cross the street to avoid two leashed beagles leading their owner up the sidewalk toward me. If I haven’t already mentioned it, I don’t like dogs. Not at all. Longhaired or short, brown, black, striped, or checked, I just don’t like them. More precisely, I’m scared of them. Smaller dogs in particular, for some reason. There was no terrier trauma that I could point to as the root of it all. Dogs just scare me. I’m well aware that my fear is irrational, thanks very much. But that doesn’t make a Shih Tzu any less frightening.

The lineup was long. Right out the door, along Broadway, then wrapping around 34th. What a great day. Losing my job, losing my girlfriend, and now lining up at the
DMV
. The trifecta. At 4:30, I actually inched into the building. By 4:45 I was finally standing at Window 10, in front of a clerk who looked like she worked at the
DMV
dealing with cranky drivers eight hours a day.

“How can I help you?” she said in tone better suited for “What the hell do you want?”

“Um, I lost my wallet on the subway yesterday and need to get a replacement driver’s licence, please.”

She had not yet looked up.

“Spell the first name.”

I did as I was told.

“Surname, now.”

Here we go. I leaned in a little closer and almost whispered the spelling of my last name. Her screen was angled so I could see it, too. She stopped typing at the “w.”

“I do not have the time for this. Do you see the lineup behind you, sir? I do not have the patience for this. By 2:30 today I had lost whatever sense of humour I brought in with me this morning. So either you spell your
real
surname, or move along.”

This was not the first time this had happened. In fact, I confronted it almost daily in one form or another. I could feel my stomach tightening a little.

“I’m sorry. But I actually did give you my real name. Against all odds, that is actually my name.” I said it and spelled it again for her. She wasn’t typing. She pushed her glasses up onto her head.

“Let me see some
ID
, right now!”

“Arghhh.” Yes, that’s what I said, “Arghhh,” while scanning the ceiling for salvation. It seemed an appropriate response at the time. “Look, I’m here because I lost my wallet. So I have no
ID
. That’s where I usually keep my
ID
. That’s why I’m here,”
I pleaded, doing my best to suppress my simmering anger. But my voice was starting to rise a little.

“Look, mister. You expect me to believe that any sane parent would give their son that name. I ain’t buying what you’re selling. You got no
ID
. You’re getting belligerent. You’re practically foaming at the mouth. So back off and go and get your jollies somewhere else. We’re busy here. Try the passport office on Hudson. They’re loads of fun.” She pointed in a vaguely southerly direction as she said it. “Next in line, please!”

I’ve often heard of people snapping under the cumulative stress of a situation. All of a sudden a bolt pops loose and that nice, gentle man who gives to charity and volunteers at the food bank somehow steps off the deep end and turns into a raving lunatic. Well, it was different for me. You see, I volunteer at the Planned Parenthood Clinic down on Bleecker, not at the food bank. But everything else was just about the same. You know, the deep end, raving lunatic part. So much for my civility instinct.

“Wait just a second,” I shouted, yes, shouted. “Wait one second! That is the name I was christened with forty years ago. I am not impersonating anyone. The spelling is not even the same. There’s an ‘a’ in my first name and a double ‘m’ in the second. See, it’s a completely different name. Okay, now try to focus. I’ve had a very, very bad day and I need a new driver’s licence. Your job is to make that happen. Please do it now!”

“Security to 10,” was all she said into her headset. She sounded tired.

It felt like an out-of-body experience. I could hear myself yelling, but seemed unable to control it. As an observer, I was impressed with my coherence, despite the higher pitch and volume of my voice.

“Whoa, hang on! I’ve been waiting nearly two hours. I’m not leaving without my new driver’s licence. I’ve already given you my name. I live at 75 Bank Street in the village. So just process it now and I’ll leave quietly!”

I didn’t feel the need to utter the “and nobody gets hurt” line. It was implicit.

For the first time, I noticed the crowd behind me backing away, some of them even surrendering their position in the line to get a little farther away from the whack job ranting at Window 10. I felt like I was among them watching this crazy dude melt down.

“Security to 10!”

I was still yelling. At one point I seem to recall banging the glass with my open palms. Excellent idea. I listened to myself shout some more at the woman at Window 10.

“Do you know what it’s like to go through life with my name? Do you? It builds a wall around you. It isolates you. It’s harder to meet people. Fellow drivers in the
DMV
think you’re crazy. And you know what the worst part is? Are you listening? Do you know what the worst part of the story is? I’m a writer. Yes, that’s right. What a hoot! Isn’t that a laugh? I am a writer. Say, what’s your name? Where’s your name tag? Come on, what’s your name? I bet it’s a normal, average name that has never
registered on any radar anywhere in the world. Brenda Cooper, or Linda Baker. Something like that, right? No spikes in notoriety, no front-page stories, no celebrity scandals to make your life difficult. You have no idea how lucky you are, whatever your name is.”

The words just flowed out of me. I knew the speech well. I’d been mentally rehearsing various versions of it for many years. I just never thought I’d ever say it out loud. I paused to look carefully at the ceiling again and tried to calm down a bit. That didn’t really work. My throat hurt from shouting. I really don’t know why I was shouting but it seemed the most natural thing in the world to be doing at that moment.

“You gotta help me! Just make this one little thing go right for me today, because
nothing else has
.”

In case shouting wasn’t enough to make my point, I also went back to banging on the glass. But for variety, I pounded it in time with my words for added emphasis, as a crazed bongo player might. Yes, my breakdown was syncopated, almost rhythmic.

“You have no idea what I’ve already been through today! It’s been a nightmare and this is not the way I want it to end! This is not the way it’s going to end!”

“Code 66! Security to 10! Now would be good!”

“Look, whatever your name is, you are not helping turn my day around. It’s your job to help me! And at least you’ve got a job! I lost mine this morning after fifteen years, and then my girlfriend moved out,
all before noon
! That’s gotta be some kind
of a record! Just give me this one little victory. Please! Just this one teeny-weeny win.
Give me my driver’s licence!

Boom, boom, boom, boom, boom went my hands on the glass of Window 10, following the cadence of my words. It just felt so good to get it all out. How do you spell “catharsis”?

I was caught off guard by what happened next. Or perhaps “caught by guards” might be the better way to put it. I felt them before I saw them.

“Hey, wait … what gives … get your hands off meee … I know my righhhhh … Heyyyyy … arrrrrllllllchshhhhh …”

After that, I was still making sounds with my mouth, but it’s hard to be articulate with a nightstick pressed against your trachea. There’s not a lot of give in those nightsticks. But I was gurgling as eloquently as I could. It took three of them to carry me, squirming and squealing, to the front door of the
DMV
. The hordes still waiting in line parted before us, as if I were infected with the Ebola virus.

Now I had always thought that the phrase “They threw him out on his ass” was just a catch-all term to cover any kind of forcible ejection. Well, in my case, it really did mean “They threw him out on his ass.” There’s not a lot of give in those dirty sidewalks of Broadway either. And there’s not a lot of give in my tailbone any more.

I lay back flat on the pavement where I’d landed. The big guard was on me in an instant, her knee pushing down on my sternum, her colleagues towering on either side.

“If you’re still lying here in ten minutes, the police will be called. You’re lucky they aren’t here now,” she said, her face pressed quite close to mine.

She spoke to me like I was one small step up from a disobedient dog. “Go home! Do not go back into the
DMV!
Do you understand? Go home right now!”

I pointed to her knee as politely as I could.

“Need to breathe here …” I gasped. She lifted her knee a little and I sucked in all the air around me.

“Do you understand?” she shouted at me again.

“Of course I understand,” I replied calmly, lying flat on my back on the sidewalk at Broadway and 6th having been mounted by a burly security guard. “I’m not an idiot.”

She just shook her head, stood up, and led her team back into the building. I lay there for a while making sure I had feeling in all my extremities. I can report that I certainly had feeling in my ass.

No one stepped forward to assist the innocent taxpayer unjustly abused by the state. In fact, I’m really not sure any passersby even noticed me. A guy lying on the sidewalk, moaning, is nothing out of the ordinary in Manhattan. From my pavement-level vantage point, I noticed a black miniature poodle closing fast. So I got up, fast.

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