(Part Three)
The Man found that he could sit up, and Chim still hadn’t returned. The strange spread of sensation he’d felt before, just before Chim had burst in and beat him, had started again not long before Chim left. When the tingle reached the point at which Chim had stopped it, it gained momentum, a painful one that turned the tingle into a scoring of forks across his body, as if there were now dozens of Chims in the room, more polite and sophisticated than the original, ones who used silverware. This made the Man scream a little. And he didn’t hold back, wasn’t able to hold back, and didn’t want to anyway. Let Chim get an earful, if he was nearby, but the Man didn’t think he was. He thought Chim would probably be gone a good while.
The Man found that he could sit up, and Chim still hadn’t returned. The strange spread of sensation he’d felt before, just before Chim had burst in and beat him, had started again not long before Chim left. When the tingle reached the point at which Chim had stopped it, it gained momentum, a painful one that turned the tingle into a scoring of forks across his body, as if there were now dozens of Chims in the room, more polite and sophisticated than the original, ones who used silverware. This made the Man scream a little. And he didn’t hold back, wasn’t able to hold back, and didn’t want to anyway. Let Chim get an earful, if he was nearby, but the Man didn’t think he was. He thought Chim would probably be gone a good while.
The pain became
wonderful, and at some point, with each contortion of his body, with each
stretch of his muscles, with each dull blade and rusty poker that was rammed
through his guts, the Man began to laugh.
He screamed laughter. His body
flipped to its side, and he marveled at the queasy rippling in his stomach, the
rhythmic rippling of the muscles in his face as he broke out in a sweat. And he wondered at that, too, at the hot-cool
beading he felt along his forehead. He
reached a shaking hand up to his face and wiped the sweat away, and he felt it
wet on his fingers. And he let his
fingers travel down his face, feeling it again, remembering what he probably
looked like, feeling that amazing, nearly forgotten revulsion as the sandpaper
surface of his eyeballs rubbed against his fingertips.
Suddenly he sat up,
like a drunk man in bed who suddenly realizes he needs to vomit. He sat there in the sudden silence, his
laughter and screams gone, cut off, and he just sat there and shook. How sick am I? he wondered. Pretty sick, it would appear. Something was leaking from his mouth and he
wiped it away. It was thick, whatever it
was. He smeared it from his hand onto
the floor next to him. Then he scratched
his head. His head, he realized,, was
moving, moving like it belonged to a functioning human who wanted to look
around a room, see where he was, figure out what was going on. This made him laugh again, a little. What a strange thing to do. Had he ever done that before? He didn’t think so.
The floor was hard
and warm beneath him. His body had
heated it. He’d never really felt the
floor before. He felt it now with his
hands, stroking it, touching it in the loving way he thought he should, after
being without the sense for so long, but he couldn’t seem to muster up much
affection for it. However, the floor had
been pretty indifferent and uncaring during these recent horrors. It just lay there like a board while some
wheezing madman had tried to eat the Man alive and sell his eyes. Fuck it.
But he could still
feel the floor under him, and his legs could move along it. He could slide one leg so that one knee was
cocked out to the side, and his leg now lay in a triangle. And that other leg, he could bend that one so
that it was also a triangle, but this triangle pointed up to the ceiling. He could sit there like that for a bit. It was only a couple of seconds sit there
like that for a bit. It was only a
couple of seconds before he found that he could also put his knuckles against
the floor, and press down, while pressing down with his legs, as well. And he found that by doing this he could
stand up. So he stood there, and now he
did throw up, bent over and let out nothing but bile, sour and scorching,
somehow making him think of what it must be like to drink, and then vomit out,
gasoline. It was thick and
disgusting. It didn’t splash against the
floor, but seemed to flop down like syrup.
The sound made him want to throw up again, but he had nothing left. So his stomach and throat kept pushing and
pulling, trying to rip something else out of him, but only air came out, and
after a while not even that. He was able
to stand up straight again. He felt
clean, despite the itching pain up and down his chest, stomach, and legs. That pain felt washed.
And he brought his
arms up, hands out, and he groped like a blind man until he felt the wall on
his right. This wall would turn into a
door, and he moved along it until he found himself walking on wet wood, soaked
through with melted snow, and his hands roamed over the door frame and onto the
battered surface of the door itself. If
he ran his hand quickly down the door, his palm would come away full of
splinters. So his hands went down slowly
until the touched something round and hard, made of metal, something that
turned in his hand with glorious ease.
The door opened. He stood in the
doorway, naked and covered in dried blood and scabs. Slowly, he walked out of Chim’s home. It was terribly, terribly cold outside.
“How come Deuryde
ain’t here tonight?” Chim asked.
He was drunk and
had been for a while, and he had already asked this question many times. But he hadn’t asked this man, this short fat
man whose own eyeglasses, when compared to Chim’s own monstrous pair, looked
like a pair of microsope lenses. And
there seemed to be no arms for the man’s frames; the glasses just sat there on
his thick nose.
“You ask me
something?” the man asked. He has just
come from Bozz’s back rooms, slipped behind the bar, and was now rummaging for
something in one of the squat refrigerators they kept back there. The bartender had already fielded this
question, and he stood well away from Chim and the new man.
“Yeah,” Chim
said. “You Bozz?”
“Yeah, I’m
Bozz. You’re Chim. You gotta ask who I am?”
“No, I know you’re
Bozz. Hi, Bozz.”
“Hi, Chim. You bring money tonight?”
“Always got
money.”
“You’re puttin’ it
away good.”
“You want me
t’take it somewheres else? I, there’s a
place, there’s bars I could go to.
That’d not ask me. If I brought
money. You know, I put, I spend good
money here. You gotta treat me like I’m
some fuckin’ guy, some poor, no, some poor fuckin’, that I won’t pay for my – “
“Chim,” Bozz broke
in, “I shouldn’a asked. I know you can
pay.”
“You don’t know
shit,” Chim shook his head. “How, how’m,
who am I to you? I’m nothin’ to
you. Just for drinks, er, for
money. I’m…where’s Deuryde tonight?”
“It’s her night
off,” said Bozz.
“God, wul,
shit. I’m – “
“Christ almighty,
Chim, how long you been here? You’re
wrecked.”
“I’un know. Where’sa clock?”
But now Bozz
ignored him and turned to the bartender.
The bartender shrugged.
“You got any
lemons out here?” Bozz asked him.
“Lemons?”
“Yes,” Bozz said,
sighing. “Lemons. Are there any?”
“Yeah,” the
bartender said. “Well, I think. Someone need a lemon?”
“No, well, I got,
back in my office. She suddenly wants
lemon in her – “
“Who?” Chim piped
up. He’d been staring through slits at
the two men talking.
“What?” Bozz
asked.
“Who wants
lemon? Is she back there? Is Deuryde back there?”
“No, you
numbskull,” the bartender barked. “It’s
her fucking night off. How many times we
gotta tell you?”
“Oh, but – “ Chim
stopped, looking over the rim of his glass at nothing. “Is…”
“Where’re the
lemons?” Bozz demanded.
“Refrigerator,”
said the bartender.
“Thanks,
genius. Where in the refrigerator? Which
refrigerator? I been in and outta there
half a dozen times already.”
“Lemme see your
phone,” Chim said, and he held his hand out.
Bozz looked away
from the refrigerator.
“For what?”
“I wanna call
Deuryde.”
“What? No.”
“No, I think she
really wants me to call her, probably.
God, lemme have the phone.”
“No. You ain’t callin’ Deuryde. You don’t even know her number.”
“Well, tell it to
me.”
“No,” Bozz said,
laughing now. The bartender was trying
to find the lemons.
“She should be
down here,” Chim said. “It oughtta be me’n
her down here, an’ she should be – “
“Oh,” said
Bozz. “You’re in love, are you? You fuck her yet?”
“She should be
what?” the bartender asked, smiling.
“Suckin’ your dick?”
Chim glared at the
two men. He had something to say about
Deuryde, and somehow these two men had just stolen it from him. It was gone completely. A fully formed thought, emotion, in his mind,
and he couldn’t make his drunken mouth tell it.
Now these men had somehow just knocked his head empty. All he could do was stare at them.
Apparently aware
that he’d made Chim angry, the bartender reached out for his glass.
“You need a fresh
one?” he asked.
“I’m goin’ home,”
Chim said, slowly. His forehead felt
numb. His lips were slack.
“Okay,” Bozz
said. “Let’s see that money.”
Chim leaned far to
the left, digging his hand into his back pocket. He was close to falling off his stool. He pulled out his money, every last bit he’d
been able to find in his house just before leaving the Man alone. He put the money on the bar.
“That enough?” he
asked.
The bartender
rifled through it and smiled at Bozz.
“Yeah, that’ll
just about do’er,” Bozz said. “Good man,
Chim.”
Chim eased himself
off the stool and staggered a few steps towards the front door of the bar,
which was all the way over there. The
room, of course, was spinning. It had
never done this before, but Chim had always though that this was the way it
should be. The room, rotating slowly
around the center, around where Deuryde stood.
And now it seemed to be doing that, but the door never moved. It was still there, just like that, a sharp
black rectangle, and he kept moving towards it.
Then he stopped, turned around, and said, “Tell Deuryde I called.”
“Yeah, we will,”
Bozz said, grinning.
“Okay. Thank you, Bozz.”
And he made his way
back to the door again, and he pushed through into the coldness and stood there
shivering, the alcohol and his great black coat doing nothing for him.
In some ways, this is a marvelous world [Blue
Baby wrote]. That anybody can find something to enthrall
them in the midst of all this uselessness and idiocy could almost be called a
miracle, if one merely looked at things briefly and with blunt vision. People everywhere are fascinated, mesmerized. They find things and activities
interesting. How nice, the spoon-eyed
would say. How pleasant. Yet with only the barest filing down of the
senses we see that everyone is engaging in acts of cannibalism, that the world
and its people coil back on themselves like Ourboros, devouring themselves into
infinity. People are made pop-eyed by
their own banality. They water a flower,
and day after day after day collapses and dies until finally a few petals creak
open and suddenly something useful, something interesting, has been
accomplished. Or so the gardener tells
himself. Of course, in reality, nothing
has been accomplished. Even if properly
cared for, that flower will die quickly.
The gardener has merely channeled the strangely energetic oafishness of
himself and his life into a physical act of worthlessness. So the gardener finds the fact that he is
Nothing interesting. He celebrates it,
and pretends to be unaware of the dark ritual he is performing. He is too busy amusing himself with his
interests.
So
how is it possible that this world is sometimes such a marvelous place? One need simply have a day of such
exquisiteness as I have just had to understand.
And this perfect day will never be forgotten by me, as it has offered up
the materials for my masterpiece. This
world’s two most profound and abundant qualities, blindness and banality, have
been handed to me in their purest forms.
Before me, on my desk, sits Man
Rising, a squalid, unbelievably cheap lump of sugar. I erase the name given to this still-born
creature, having only barely remembered the title long enough to write it down here
and I re-christen it Idiot’s Idol. The title’s assonance is predictable, and it
is perhaps even a worse name than the one I wiped away, but that hardly
matters. I call it Idiot’s Idol merely so I can properly laugh at it before I really
get down to business. For that business
I need Blindness, the eyes of Io, and right now I do not have them. They exist, I have seen them. They have been promised to me. But I do not have them in my hands right
now. It is perhaps the anxiety and
anguish that this causes me that is fueling my pencil right now. It would be a simple matter for me to get up,
go outside, and walk the short distance to Chim’s house, where they are kept. Pluck the eyes from the head of the unworthy
beast who was stupid enough to spend his life cursing them. But something tells me to wait until
morning. To plan out my project, to
understand exactly what I will do with my strange materials, what I will
create. If anyone other than myself ever
reads these pages, I hope I don’t have to tell you, though I expect that I do,
that it is never wise to rush art.
* * * *
Chim
had liquor with him so he could be drunk when Blue Baby showed up. And the booze helped him wipe his head clear
of whatever the hell he’d filled it with last night. He couldn’t remember anymore, but it had been
bad. Now he was able to drown the
specifics, though he could still feel its presence, hanging there in the form
of depression. But because the reason
for the depression wasn’t clear he couldn’t really feel that bad. So he sat in his chair and kept drinking, and
waited for Blue. When Blue got there,
Chim would just mumble out some indecipherable excuse until he left in a
rage. And “rage” was absolutely the
right word. Blue would probably trash
the place some. Break a table. Or, rather, break the table. Chim would just
have to weather it. Hope that maybe when
it was all over Blue will have decided that he wanted nothing more to do with
him. Leave Chim to himself, to live out
alone whatever time he had left. Which
couldn’t be much. Chim’s hunger seemed
to be steadily ebbing away into nothing.
Life had never held much joy for him, but he had always clung to it,
desperately wrapped his body and mind around the idea of life for its own sake,
and he would let his mind go off on its own sometimes, see if it might not
dredge up something useful, or, at any rate, interesting from his
existence. But if his mind had uncovered
anything in this quest, it was keeping quiet about it. The flood, the endless channel of, of something, from his mind down through
the rest of him that he had expected had never even begun. And it never would begin, and he’d known that
for, Christ, for a long time now. So it
was all catching up to him, making him want to be drunk all the time, making
him not care who he pissed off, and making him lose his appetite. All he did was he sat, and he drank, and he
waited. He thought no more about the
Man, other than to note his absence, and the consequences of that absence. He looked at his window, waiting for a great
blue shape to pass by, blocking it, briefly eclipsing daylight. He wished that son of a bitch would hurry up
and get here.
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