Authors: Blake Butler
In a pinch between two blinkings I see my body from overhead
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the way my mother says she saw the room the day when I was born, C-sectioned. I see my body bent and leaning, whole hosed and half-lit live into a flat white shape just at my head
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like the sky sunk down to sit above me
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endless ceiling. It’s dry and wide. Me craning fully forward wet into it, up to my waist by neck and chest, my whole half of me there given unto the white, gone sealing, my body drank as would one into a vat of milk
. . . and at the windows, a great seizure, a scattering of cells, which with their color, through the window, form fine pictures splashed against my brain: flesh of piglets, humans, goats, and geese; parades of bodies aiming through a blender, giving their limbs unto the night; a child large as the sky is; liquid money; where does this come from; why these letters;
you are
all right. Against the shape of sky, body coursing, getting juiced of what I’m worth, giving unto the screen my private thinking, taking from it, and this is okay, the volume of the room in here filled with small prayer; in each inch another of me, asking, asking; want large as I am, large as ways; I open eyes inside the seeing and see again and open eyes again inside that seeing and can see again here nearer still, and open eyes again inside that, and inside that, the sky there disappearing in my skin
. . .
When I can see me clear again from there inside me I am sitting in the chair, the same I sit in almost every day, here with the machine. The room has shrunk against me. My shirt has been removed. All down my chest the drool erupts in runnels from my mouth. Where the wet is, my chest appears burned. Welts, like little windows, for how my flesh within them swims see-through. The machine’s face stunned in all white, blowing. My arms against me cling. I cannot stand up inside this room again. I rub along the lash of it, the inseam, looking for where upon the air the boards will bend, or a keyhole or some fissure. I sense my mother just behind me—hear her breathing, her certain tone—but in the reflection off the screen I see no one standing. This room again. The friction my fingers on the box’s want makes sound—cues in a music in me booming, a subwoofer underneath my fat, tweeters in my testes—doorbells, ringing, stones—all in singing, come combined—songs spent threaded through my years, the days arranged in their unwinding, though herein replayed into me at once, all at the same time, blistering my blood—a song’s song.
Something is writing words down on my back. I can feel the ink gun on my inches. Silent laughter. I try to turn around. My arms grind where my arms are. My spine itching in time to the song in shaking versions, instruments of air. In the box a slow heat rising. My hair clings to my hair, a kind of helmet. Where I turn the room makes sticky. Batches. More spit. I flub. A stink of warm all through my stuff. I settle down. I face the front, with eyes wide. I try to focus again on the reflection in the white. The screen is too wide. My eyes, too, stinging to get stood. My arm muscles clinging to my ribs.
In my lap, I see now, seeing, a book has been spread across my lap—a white book with a white spine and no title, in the shape of the white screen, as if it had been pushed out in a silence to sit upon me. I find around it I can move my fingers, held magnetic. My neck cocks my skull to face straight down. The book is humming, warm. Inside the front cover I find my name written in childish letters, inscribed.
This book belongs to _____
. Black crayon. No numbers.
The book’s pages are all blank. I thumb through them finding no word. The paper bright against my eyes.
I turn back to the front. Where the crayon inscription of my young me before had been, there is now only a cursor at the margin, blinking, waiting:
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I can hear the cursor think—can hear it waiting for me, making, in its image rerepeated, along the book’s far edge, again, again.
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The stutter of its light. Magnetic fire.
I go to put my fingers at the paper but my arms again are not allowed to move. The cursor. Inside my brain I hear it hear me think. It wants.
My words inside my head in shaping scrolling appear again inside the book, framed a command:
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WHAT IS GOING ON
I hear a sound—a click—within the nothing.
Below my line, another appears, scrolling across the book’s page in quick marquee, words appear there in the book in set response:
You are in a room. This is where you have always been.
The words disappear each one as I read them—my input phrase as well sunk gone—and then there again the cursor, waiting, blinking in the none:
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My hands do not look like my hands. My tongue flips in my head a little. I am sitting.
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WHAT AM I SUPPOSED TO DO NOW
You tell me.
I look around. The walls where there had been a room before have moved against me mostly, shaped to fit me in the air. There is a smoke pulsing behind the surface.
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I WANT TO LEAVE THIS BOX
You cannot. Not by saying. The air is hard.
The air is getting harder.
I still cannot move my arms. My brain inside me gaining heat to match the book’s growing gloam of burn against my thighs.
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IS THERE A KEYHOLE HERE
You cannot see any keyhole.
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A KNOB
No.
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PASSWORD
You have to try.
Some coming word.
What is the word
. I ape to speak and nothing comes out. My mouthroof sticks to something welled up around my tongue. Through my eyes, I see nothing beyond the book’s blown color. I feel my body spreading out around me, getting fat again with all the warm.
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SAY MY NAME
Your voice enters a hole.
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SAY MY MOTHER’S NAME, MY FATHER’S
There is nothing.
A puddle in me runs—organ to organ, a shake like laughter.
Then, from overhead, inside myself, I feel something lurch: nails just as the white flat fold that forms the sky here, inches from my skull. In pads the scratching piles in packs as dogs do after something buried. I try to shout, again: the taste of leather. Money. Ashes and clean knives. I go again to try to say my mother’s name and feel it hum hard in my neck.
Overhead the light is piling. Windows in the light.
Inside the scratch, the cursor replicating.
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MAKE IT STOP
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PLEASE STOP
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OK HOLD ON
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LISTEN
I close then open up my eyes. I squeeze my self inside me. No think.
The words come spooling out.
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THE DAY YOU FELL WHILE PLAYING BASKETBALL IN THE BACKYARD WITH YOUR FATHER AND BLAMED THE ACCIDENT ON HIM, SAID HE’D PUSHED YOU, SO YOU’D LOOK LESS DUMB IN FRONT OF YOUR FRIENDS, SO YOU DID NOT HAVE TO BE THE ONE WHO FELL: INVENTING BLAME. HIM WET-EYED IN THE DARK LIGHT THAT THEREAFTER, THE ONE TIME YOU CAN REMEMBER WITNESSING HIM IN TEARS, OVER HOW HE DID NOT UNDERSTAND QUITE HOW TO REACH YOU.
The scratching above and below me becomes doubled. Close then open up my eyes.
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THE DAY YOU AND THOSE FIVE OTHER KIDS SURROUNDED DARRELL ON THE PLAYGROUND IN THE MUDYARD AND KICKED HIM BY TURNS IN THE CHEST. YOU WENT ALONG AND LAUGHED AND DID NOT THINK. HIM CENTERED IN THE BRIGHT WHITE SHAKING. THE AIR LOST IN HIS BODY. HIS COVERED EYES.
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THE DAY YOU SHOOK YOUR SISTER BY HER WHOLE FRAME ON THE SOFA, UNDERNEATH THE PICTURES OF YOU SOMEONE ELSE HAD DRAWN, FOR HOW SHE’D GONE INTO YOUR ROOM AND COPIED MUSIC, THE SONGS FED INTO HER HEAD, YOUR SHUTTING DOORS, YOUR GREED, AND WHY NOW WHEN IT COMES UP NOW SOMETIMES YOU PRETEND IT NEVER HAPPENED.
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THE NEON BLUE KEY YOU STOLE FROM A HARDWARE STORE IN FLORIDA AND WERE QUICKLY CAUGHT, THAT YOUNG AND ALREADY SO UNGRACEFUL, THE KEY BURNING IN YOUR HAND SOMEHOW FOREVER AFTER.
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THOSE HOURS FED INTO MACHINES, TYPING BULLSHIT FOR THE NOTHING, NO GIFT, TURNING OFF IN WAYS FROM THOSE MADE NEAR AS IF IN SPITE, KNOWING IN THE KNOWING OF THE SILENCE YOU WERE HIDING. FROM WHAT. FROM WHAT. FROM WHAT.
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THE WAY EVEN TODAY MOST DAYS YOU SPEAK TO THOSE YOU LOVE: FLAT, IMPATIENT, STUBBORN IN SILENCE: AND GOING ON WITH SUCH A WAY EVEN IN RECOGNIZING, FEELING TIME END, ALLOWING DAYS TO PASS INSIDE OF DAYS, COUNTING OFF THE HOURS THEY WILL BE BESIDE YOU, DOWN TO NONE.
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EVERY THING YOU DID AND DID NOT DO, AND HOW YOU NEED IT, CLUNG TO GUILT WITHOUT A NAME.
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EVERY BOOK YOU’VE READ AND CAN’T REMEMBER, LIKE A PRISON, HIDDEN WALLS AROUND YOUR HEAD. ALL THOSE INSTANTS BURNING OFF ALREADY UNREMEMBERED. FOR WHO.
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EVERY HOUR IN SUCH WANT OF NO DIRECTION.
The book in my lap has grown large. It is larger now than my whole lap. Its face is kind of milky. Around my head, wrapped. Around my backmeat. The still blank book feeds its response:
In the room you cannot see. The sound of scratch has filled all sides here. It fits underneath your skin. A small pockmark of light appears inside your vision, jostled as you sneeze—something snaking in you, raking. You sneeze and sneeze again.
As you sneeze the point of light expands to crust the blank air. The scratch so loud you cannot hear it. Holographic.
There is a flat before you now. A floor.
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WALK ALONG THE FLOOR
The floor is built of mirrors. It replicates the sky. As you move you can see yourself stretched underneath you, and so in the sky too. Onto and underneath yourself you walk.
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HOW OLD AM I INSIDE THIS IMAGE
The floor begins to incline. Your leg muscles ache with bulbs. The sky is building light. The light burns in time with the muscles, making putty around your blood. It hurts.
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STOP WALKING FORWARD
Your legs move faster.
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I SAID STOP IT
The itch is underneath your tongue. You still can’t hear it, but the spit flows. Flowers blooming, on the mirror’s edge and in your hand. When you look they will not be there.
In the light ahead, a form.
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EXAMINE FORM
It is long and it is nothing.
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You continue toward the form.
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I’D RATHER NOT, PLEASE. I’D LIKE TO STOP NOW
As you go even closer, the form has edges. It has a top and bottom. Has a front, a wall without a door.
The form, you think, is mottled.
You are not wrong.
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THAT IS NOT ME WHO THOUGHT THAT, THAT WAS YOU, I DON’T THINK THE FORM IS MOTTLED, I WOULD NOT SAY THAT. AT LEAST LET ME HAVE MY HEAD. I WANT TO FEEL GOOD. I WANT TO BE KIND.
The form reminds you of somewhere you have been.
There is an awful texture to the air here.
The mirror underneath you does not glow.
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TURN AROUND
. . .
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I ASKED PLEASE TURN AROUND
You are now standing right beside the form. It is smaller than you imagined, from the distance, and in how you recalled it from before.
The surface of the wall still shows no hole, no stutter. The sky has filled in on you, from behind. There is no inch or leak of where you just walked, or elsewhere forward. Above, below, so too—all mirror, which when touched won’t shudder. Flat. Forever.
There are many houses, all around you, breathed in crushed upon the air.
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TOUCH THE MIRROR HARDER
Gone.
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TOUCH THE FORM
It’s warm. A color appears, a wash around your head. Pops in small collision. Rashy. A fuzz that disappears, unfurls, repeals.
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SPREAD THE COLOR
Under your fingers, breathing, the form becomes a home. It is a long, cream-colored ranch-style dwelling with a lawn that appears dead.
All the bikes you’ve ever ridden are buried underneath the lawn. All the phones you’ve called in from are again calling. There is no sound. There is the hair you’ve grown and cut off of you in the years wove to a necklace that you wear around your neck. If you look down to see the necklace it will disappear. Your fingernails are very long now. Your heart is purple. Someone watches from behind.
There are still no doors or windows in the home’s face, though you can hear a rattling inside. A smoke burst from the upper quadrant’s corner, forming a column to the sky. A little ladder. Soft and risen.