White Out (19 page)

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Authors: Michael W Clune

BOOK: White Out
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Or just Nancy, for instance. It was snowing a little.

“I worry about Todd, Mike. He seems so vulnerable, as if he could be easily lost.”

“We should mark him in some way so we could easily find him, if he does get lost. If he had one eye, for instance, or one arm…” She laughed. I didn’t like this talk of Todd’s tenderness. It seemed like the beginning of a crush. She was worried. She wanted to take care of him. A nasty nurse’s crush. Nurse Nancy pushing Todd around in a wheelchair. Todd and Nancy. An animal with Nancy’s legs and Todd’s head. Bestiality. That would upset our little triangle. I knew; I had experience. Plus I had other plans for Nancy.

“Still,” she said, “he seems to like dope a little too much. You and I, Mike, we’re different. But I can see it being a problem for him.”

“You know, you’re right,” I said, looking troubled. “Last week he asked me if I could get him some. Just to do on his own. Help him relax after his seminar. I refused, of course, but…”

“Oh, I’m glad you didn’t, Mike. You mustn’t! Promise me.”

“I promise.” We sat in her living room talking about philosophy, and Milton, and rap. It grew dark. She was drinking wine; I was drinking tea. When the white light dimmed I went to the bathroom and tipped a little white powder onto the sink, sniffed it up, and flushed the toilet. When I came out I told her some stories.

“And then he told me that after the revolution, the slums would be filled with white people!” Nancy laughed merrily. I told her about how Funboy and I had stolen guitars from a music store and almost got caught. I told her about my stepmother’s sister, and fell silent for a few seconds, while she contemplated the depth of my hidden feelings. I told her about Charlie.

I began talking about Marx. I told her a joke about Queen Elizabeth. She laughed until she coughed, her cheeks were bright red, and her eyes were shining. I wished I were on the ceiling, looking down, the better to admire my performance.

Then she ruined it all. She took my hand. I stopped in mid-sentence. She kissed my open mouth. When her tongue pressed into my lip I could feel her heart beating. This was not what I’d planned.

“Come on,” she said. Her hand slid down my leg and back up, and back down. My rebel body responded. She kissed me. I kissed her. I pinched her nipples. She put her tongue in my ear. I massaged her inner thighs. I turned, bent, kissed, rubbed, and kissed again, thinking frantically all the time. What was I going to do? Dope doesn’t stop you from having sex, but it makes it absolutely impossible to stop having sex. No finish. You can’t come.

I knew this. I’d been planning Nancy’s seduction for weeks. But it wasn’t supposed to be tonight. I was going to make very sure I didn’t do dope the night we finally hooked up. But the dopeless night never came, and now it was happening. I was pulling her hair; she turned around to look nasty at me. The mirror showed an animal with four legs and two heads.

I had total control over it. Total control over my mind, her body, and the situation. The one thing I couldn’t do was the one thing I needed to do: lose control. The most natural and ordinary thing in the world, a kind of sneeze. A little muscular spasm, seven seconds of uncontrollable shudders and my triumph would be complete. But I couldn’t do it. And I couldn’t not do it either. She’d know something was up.

She didn’t make it easy.

“I want you to come on my face.”

“Um, I don’t want to ruin your sheets. I love this color.”

“Never mind the sheets!” It had been a half hour easy. She was going all out. Everything she could think of. She could have used a wrench and a vise; it wouldn’t have mattered. I noticed the snow sifting down through the dark windows. I looked at her back when she was facing that way, her breasts when she faced this way. She was red-faced and sweating like a sailor. She was stronger than she looked. I had to admire her effort. I was afraid she was going to have a heart attack. There was no putting it off any longer.

“Oh God!” I cried. “Oh it’s happening, oh baby! It feels so good! Aaaarrggghh!” As soon as I’d said it I realized how fake it sounded.

“Oh Jesus yes!” My best wasn’t good enough. The room fell silent, the really bad kind of awkward silence it usually takes more than two people to generate. Saying the wrong thing at a funeral, for example. This was a fifty-person awkward silence. Maybe a hundred. Nancy lay still in it. I hadn’t been wearing a condom. She hadn’t let me. For men, successfully faking an orgasm requires either a very drunk woman, or technology. I had no technology and the exercise had sobered her up. She lay looking at me strangely.

“That was really awesome,” I said. Just ride it out. I was still as hard as a rock. The room was dark but my pupils were tiny pinpricks. Nancy wasn’t an idiot.

“Good-bye, Mike.”

Gaining control and losing control. One night that fall I dreamed I was JonBenét Ramsey. My white, white face floated in mirrors, in silver bowls, in huge, dark eyes. I put my tiny white hand in someone’s huge red hand. He followed me wherever I went. I could make him do whatever I wanted. I had total control. I stopped. He stopped. I knelt down. The vast dark bulk above me halved.

I charmed my follower’s huge hand like a snake. It moved toward me, fingers spread. I pointed at it. It stopped. It started moving again. I pressed against it. It kept coming. I pushed. The tiny muscles popped and wore out all along my arms and back, and still the hand moved toward me, the fingers closing. I saw myself in the huge white and red eye like the white dot at the center of a target. My white face. The eye closed on me like a trap.

Gaining control and losing control. Perhaps they’re the same after all. One makes more sense than two.

But that was an anomaly. I started telling people Nancy had raped me. I said it as a joke at first, for the shocked laughs. Then I kind of believed it. She wasn’t too pleased when it got back to her.

But that was just a misunderstanding. Not important. I really don’t know why I even put it in here. At the time, I hardly even noticed it, with all the new things I was learning. The little things, for example. I never knew about the cancer of the little things. Checking my mail, doing laundry, opening a car door, closing the door. I never realized how sick it was making me. Picking up the phone. Buying milk. I was a sitting duck. Walking across a floor or down a path. Driving somewhere. Waking up. It was killing me. It’s killing all of us. Some diseases you never know you have until you get the cure.

I got the cure. It came in white-topped vials. Sometimes they had red tops. The cancer of putting gas in my car in fair weather or foul without being high was history. The cancer of sober morning, the cancer of sober evening: history. The cancer of being vulnerable to constantly changing feelings. Exposed naked on the cliffs of your natural brain chemistry. Alternately scorched or frozen. Some days you’re happy; some days you’re sad. Fuck that.

Human life is like a Greek curse. Pushing a rock up a hill. Everything good is changing into something bad. And what’s almost worst, everything bad is changing too. Smiling or crying for no reason. On purpose or by accident.

When you’re human all things conspire against you. The terrible feeling of a sheet brushing against your naked skin when you’ve got a cold. No price is too high for escape. Stalin’s agents had cyanide capsules hidden in false teeth. I was the agent of the white revolution, and I had white tops hidden in my glove compartment, my desk drawers, my shoes, my allergy medicine bottles.

Perfect safety. Perfect freedom. Perfect comfort. Straight months of the invulnerable high. It closes all those doors, the doors that let in what you hate and let out what you love. The accordion doors of the lungs, the traitor heart mixing pain and time-poison with your blood. The hand door, the eye door.

Dope gives me a new, dope body. Closed like a fist. Of course I’m a little constipated, but that’s a small price to pay for total protection. No way for the time-poison, the change-poison to get in. I’m like a ball of metal. A thick spike of oxygen melts slowly in my center, where the lungs were. A white heart. I don’t know what the white heart does. It gets me high. I imagine it looks like a lump of dope. Like two big sugar cubes in a glass of milk.

And the way the world looks from deep inside the dope body! From high atop the white tower. The world. It would break your human heart to see it. Everything so smooth, gleaming so smoothly. So beautiful, so deep. My dope eye doesn’t have any bottom, and I see into the bottomlessness of things.

Eyes open for ten minutes without blinking. The world has a perfect geometry. The buildings above in the snowfall are all arcs and moons. The way ahead is all squares and triangles. Sleep is like the back of my hand, nothing mysterious. Same with death. Nothing to fear.

And when I wake, I’ve saved a half vial. I wake with that itching and twitching, the old human body thawing, the old creaking doors opening, letting in the time-poison, the human lungs starting up again. A little cold sweat on the forehead.

But it’s just tingles of anticipation. Savor it for a few minutes. I can stop it anytime I want. Withdrawal lasts only as long as I let it. Make a cup of tea. Let my limbs ache and let sweat come out on my forehead. Watch my body stutter and shake like a zombie coming back.

And remember it like a prayer: This is the sickness of human life, the sickness I’ve been saved from.

Then do that half vial. Here comes the perfect world. The essay, where I left it. The thoughts have been burrowing while I slept. The morning is like a star that swallowed itself. Bright dust in space. And it still costs just ten dollars to keep my white metal angel body alive for another day. My exoskeletal astro body. My astro lungs, white heart, and hard, decorative marble genitals.

Nobody better fuck with me. Funboy got a foot up his ass when he came sniffing around. He owes me forty bucks. See you never, Funboy. I was copping from Tony. I always knew where to find him. I wrote my essays with ten dollars in each nostril. Todd came around in the sweet, deep afternoons. Am I making myself clear? I floated like an astronaut in the white world. I was in graduate school. Listen to the voice of the teacher:

“Our work at this institution concerns interpretation. Interpretation is the art of becoming open to the past. You wish to become a historian? To discover the past? Endeavor to become the future of the past you wish to discover. Endeavor to remember it.

“The documents we work with in this institution are not messages. Do not think of them as messages. They are not communications from one person to another. They are more like fossils than messages. More like the tools of an ancient people than fossils. Primitive and clumsy. Ridiculous, out of place, a scandal in the modern world.

“Henry David Thoreau’s
Walden
, for example. Delivered into your hands. Do you understand this document? Do you understand the past? Is your memory strong enough?”

Dear reader, I floated like an astronaut in the white world. October 1999. I sat on my ratty couch reading
Walden
for my seminar the next day. Imagine me there in my white space suit, heavy sound of mechanical breathing, my white eyes dim behind the glass shield of my helmet, the book spread out before me. I unhooked the ropes of words from the lines on the page, strung them between my bookshelf and the stars in my window, and they began to glow.

CHAPTER 10

Bloodless

W
hat’s left of you when you change? Is there a part of you that doesn’t change? And if there isn’t, how will you even notice when the change comes?

I can’t say for you. I kind of noticed. I noticed I’d changed. At first I was relieved. I was relieved I couldn’t feel certain things. Like the boredom of waiting for my car’s gas tank to fill up. I couldn’t feel it. That was fun. Then it was fun, but a little spooky. Like putting a two-inch needle through your arm and not feeling it. Or feeling good. Then I caught a glimpse of myself in the mirror.

It wasn’t what you might think. I wasn’t shocked by my white lips or red nostrils. I didn’t get freaked by the astronaut suit or the silver visor.

It was very quiet.

I was getting ready to teach class. I brushed my teeth, spat, and looked up into the mirror. I saw my body, my face, my eyes and lips there in the mirror. I also saw my bathroom wall, my sweater, the edge of the light fixture, and the back of the faucet. All these things (nose, wall, eyes, faucet) looked the same. The things looked the same as each other. I looked the same as the things. I didn’t see a difference between my face and the back of the faucet.

I’m not saying my face and the faucet somehow lost their proper forms or colors or melted into each other or something. Enough LSD or Robitussin can do that. I’m talking about a genuinely strange experience.

There’s a simple human feeling people get when they see themselves in the mirror. I don’t mean when you worry that your teeth look yellow or your hair looks flat. I’m talking about something beneath that, something basic.

There’s a simple basic difference between seeing your own hands or eyes and seeing a metal faucet. It’s not a sharp difference, like discovering the person sleeping next to you is a dead horse instead of your girlfriend. It’s not a big feeling, this felt difference between your hand in the mirror and the faucet, but it’s there. You’re reading this, you can see a fringe of yourself, your hand or maybe your hair, around this page of words. See?

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