Authors: Francesca Lia Block
T
he maenad’s father told her she was stupid, a slut. She took off her clothes and danced in the snow, hoping it would make her skin that perfect, white and untouched. But as soon as she stepped into it, the frost became dirty sludge. Her lips were red bitten blood. The roots of her hair were black like the branches that scratched her arms. She wrote poetry and played her guitar so she wouldn’t have to cut herself with something sharper than wood, the fingers of trees. Her guitar spoke and lay in her arms but was not warm. She was only looking for someone to love her.
The maenad went to the big faraway city and formed a band. She threw herself around the stage, whipping her neck, flashing her breasts, bruising her hipbones, spinning until the world whirled away. Oh, obliterating ecstasy. When she opened her eyes she spit into the audience, thinking the boys with the beefy faces were her father.
After the shows she was starving, bloodless. She devoured meat, imagining she was ingesting the flesh of the god of pleasure and pain, becoming one with him, divine. She drank wine, imagining it was that same god’s blood, the god of the beautiful and the cruel.
And Orpheus, he was like a limb of that god. When she heard him sing she felt herself changing. When she touched him she felt herself becoming powerful, beautiful, pure. They ate wild narcotic poppies in his cavern while the bees and lovesick birch trees clamored outside; they wanted him as much as she did.
“Don’t close your eyes,” she wailed.
She didn’t want him to leave her, even for a moment. Even in his dreams.
She asked him, “Do you still love that girl?”
He said it was over.
The maenad knew the only way she could be sure was to do something irreversible, terrible, mythic.
A
nd you came
hell god
At a concert downtown
Somewhere dark, I don’t remember
The air hissed with sound
The chandeliers were shattering
Black smoke swirled around the stage
I sat on the ground
in the pool
of my mother’s old aqua blue taffeta dress
I wore rhinestones on my breasts and on my ears
I wore black gloves with the fingers cut out
black satin pointy-toed stilettos like a wicked bird
Bees swarmed around me, buzzing in my ears
I had a forked tongue and horns and a tail
I saw you and I said, that is the one for me
My hair caught fire
You took me home
It was an old Victorian building
wooden floor painted black—
so shiny, a lake—
no furniture except the low black lacquer bed and table
You kissed me until I passed over
The corpse of my body
was stuffed with black lilies and buzzing bees
I forgot Orpheus, my song
I even forgot my first lover, Love
I stopped wanting anything else in the world
We ran through the city
The air smelled of smoke
Pieces of ash rained down
Some headless mannequins
were lined up on the sidewalk by the trash
You put them in your hearse and took them home
In Chinatown the cloisonné vases
were covered with dust
The animals hung dead in the windows
We ate sticky noodles and pork buns with plum sauce
There was a sign next to a cage of chickens
THESE BIRDS TO EAT NOT FOR PETS
No one looked at us as we ran up and down the hills
The air smelled of burning meat
We were invisible
We were demons
I wanted my mother
I am not a goddess, I said
But you are a god
The god of chaos
The god of hell
Hades, my love
You are a businessman
You own a tattoo parlor
and a clothing store that sells leather clothes, masks
whips and handcuffs
sex toys and porn
You are a club promoter
We went to some kind of old mansion you had found
at the edge of the park
I was wearing my mother’s white smoking jacket over her
tight black cocktail dress
and black satin shoes with sharp points
People were standing
around a pool
that you had filled with dry ice
Their drinks were a strange, smoky green
I wondered how absinthe tasted
as I ate my poisonous maraschino cherries
The band was playing in what had once been a ballroom
You had discovered them
They looked like birds of prey
and their music beat past me on dark wings
You had the room filled with chandeliers, broken
like crystallized tears
Thousands and thousands of dried leaves
blew through the corridors
Black hounds guarded the doors
Everyone said you were brilliant
Everyone said you were some kind of genius
We went to a small glass café overlooking the dark water
and drank something I didn’t recognize
in the red leather booth
“You are corrupting me, my darling,” I said
having another bittersweet sip
I felt my body melting under the table
The waves crashed against the rocks
What if I couldn’t get up and leave?
Would you desert me here?
No, you took me home again
You bit me gently, not drawing blood
You fed me pomegranate seeds
I sucked the clear red coating off the sharp white pith
The taste was sweet at first
and then dry as dirt, as bone
“I love you so much that I don’t care if I die,” I told you
So what if you didn’t say it back?
Your hair was always cold against my burning skin, cold
and smelled of smoke
Your skin was always cool and sleek
Hades, my love
Are you just one more task
to bring back the lover I burned with my candle wax?
with the flame of my doubt?
One day after we had eaten oranges in the rare sunlight
I remembered him
the pressure of his lips on my forehead
and at my throat—
making my hot skin feel icy with their burn
The calluses and soft places on his hands
The vibration of his voice in his chest
as he gave me the myths again
I told you the story then, and you said
“He was a monster to do that to you
Did he think he was so much better than you
that you couldn’t see him?”
I told you about Orpheus and you said
“Maybe he didn’t kill himself
Maybe his girlfriend shot him in the head”
You had different ways to bite
I wondered how much more pressure it would take
to make the blood come
Once we drove all the way back to the city I’m from
We passed the cattle waiting for slaughter
by the side of the highway
The air reeked with fear
You said you grew up on a farm
You saw cows killed
When I asked you to tell me more
about your childhood you just laughed
cranked up
the music and rammed
your foot against the pedal
We didn’t stop in the city
but drove all the way through to the border
There were signs along the highway
of silhouetted, running people
holding the hands of their children
like animals, like targets
At the border you turned off the music
smoothed your hair with some water
from the bottle you had gripped between your thighs
You took off your sunglasses and spoke politely
“Yes, Officer, no sir”
No one would have suspected you
No one would have thought, This is Hades himself
In the border town the light was harsh
Dust motes looked as if they were catching on fire
You took my hand and we ran
through the unpaved streets, past the little shops
We bought loads of black leather belts
and cuffs studded with sharp silver
You pulled me down some stairs
into a dark bar where you made me drink tequila
I marveled at the worm saturated with poison
My head was pounding as we emerged
back up into the sun
A lovely girl had a huge tumor in her neck
A man was missing his hand
We found a punk band playing in the dust
The lead singer was a Mexican albino
with tattoos all over his body and shaved head
The band was good, really fast
You gave them your card and spoke to them in Spanish
I was so thirsty
We ate some greasy food and you ordered beers
There was a tiny building that said
CASAMIENTOS
and you said we should get married
You laughed
and I felt like the worm in the tequila bottle—
bloated, sick, greenish-white, trapped, in love
That night there were fireworks
You grabbed my hand and we ran through the streets
as the sky exploded
There was panic in your eyes I didn’t understand
Maybe I had imagined it
I was wearing my mother’s green satin cocktail dress
hemmed short, above my knees
and dusty black cowboy boots
We headed back that night
and slept by the sea in your truck
I vomited on the sand
You carried me into the ocean as the sun rose
“Good for hangovers,” you said
I was so cold
I didn’t stop shivering for hours after I got out
The sun turned the water to aluminum foil
I was afraid it would all just burn up
anyway
Then suddenly you stopped wanting me
You turned away
You wouldn’t touch me
I lay staring at your cold, muscular white back
your blue-black shiny hair
I wondered what I had done wrong—
I had lost weight, so my belly was concave again
I was seeing a dermatologist—
Or maybe I was being selfish
Maybe you had been wounded when you were younger
Maybe you had been damaged and this wasn’t about me
at all
I tried to ask you if you had been hurt
“Do you know Philomela?” I asked
“Who?”
“The myth
She was raped by her sister’s husband
When she threatened to tell, he cut out her tongue
She turned into a nightingale
She sang her story”
“Do you want to know why we don’t have sex?”
you asked
I started to cry and you said
“Not everyone has been molested, okay?
Maybe I just don’t want to fuck you anymore.
Have you ever thought of that?”
“Is there something I could do differently?” I asked
“We could try it different ways,” I said
You smiled at me
Your incisors sharp
Your eyes were two dark bandages
“I thought you’d never ask, baby,” you said
The more punishment, the sooner I will be redeemed?
You had finally earned your name.
H
ades grew up on a farm in an old red house next to a dilapidated barn. There were cornfields stretching to the horizon; maybe they went on forever. Hades believed they were haunted. The wind in the corn sang strange whispers. Sometimes he’d catch glimpses of emaciated people, thin as scarecrows, with corncob pipes, straw hats, missing teeth, wading shoulder deep through the cornfields. Sometimes he imagined he heard children screaming.
Once at baseball practice he was almost struck by lightning. It hit a tree beside him instead, charred and gnarled it, and he kept imagining his own body ruined like that.
In the winter it was so cold that Hades got frostbite. He had stayed out too late in the snow making angels, not wanting to return home. His father told him he might lose his fingers. He lay in bed trying not to cry, imagining the stumps on his hands.
In the summer Hades was always bathed in sweat from the humidity. His mother screamed at him to bathe. “You stink!” At night he ran through the meadows catching fireflies in jars. Then he took them home and watched them die, the lights snuffed out.
He saw animals born and he saw them slaughtered. Blood was just something that was on your hands all the time. Blood was just another bodily fluid. There were more interesting ones.
When Hades wet his bed at the age of five his mother put him back in diapers. She stuck the pins into him. She kept diapering him until he was twelve years old.
When Hades had an erection his mother locked him in the closet. Sometimes she even beat him. This didn’t stop Hades from getting hard. It made him harder in every way.
Hades’s father waited for him when he came out of the shower. He commented on the size of Hades’s penis. He showed his son his own. There was something odd about the way Hades’s father taught him to slaughter a cow. There was some kind of
pleasure in it. Sometimes Hades’s father would set off fireworks from behind the barn and watch to see his son jump at the noise.
Hades’s mother did not like how her husband looked at their son. Because of this she beat Hades even harder. She beat him and locked him in the closet and finally Hades left home.
He had been born an unscarred, sweet-smelling baby with pale down on his head that soon fell out and blue eyes that turned pupil-less black. He had been born loving animals and tractors, getting lost in the lightning bug meadows, lost in the angel-making snow. He had become something else entirely. So he decided to become something else again. He changed his name, he changed the color of his hair, he wore eyeliner and grew his fingernails, changed his skin with ink tattoos of devil girls. He went alone into the desert to set off fireworks to immunize himself to loud sounds. He developed an insatiable appetite for meat, any food that bled, that had once had eyes. He became rich, a businessman. He listened to the loudest music, sought it out, to further immunize himself.
Hades saw Eurydice and plucked her like a flower. He became for her the god of chaos, the god of hell. This was why he wanted her. She was proof of his success, his change.