Tag Archives: death

A Head in My Garden

And thus it happened that I lost my head:

I had been gardening, bent at the waist and forcefully churning a trowel in the large, rectangular flowerbed that parallels my porch, working to liberate the soil from a hardened layer of filth and death built up over the long winter months and the extreme hot and cold that indicates the arrival of spring. 

My flowers had begun to decay last autumn, and I recall fondly sitting at the edge of the flowerbed watching their necks bend—more and more each day—toward the earth as though a heavy crown drew them prostrate.  Petals that had been a vivid yellow or orange but a month earlier were by October or November dull and leaden.  The insects that used to pick over these flowers had long gone where insects go during the cold months, and as I would sit watching my dead plants, I could almost hear the buzzing not of honey bees but of flies that gather around dead bodies.

By November and on into December, January, and February, my flowers had been reclaimed completely by the earth, and my flowerbed sat vacant and silent until weeds began to clamber to the surface in large numbers, strangling life where life might ordinarily reemerge.

Thus yesterday I took to ridding my flowerbed of weeds and the fossilized remains of the previous year’s growth.  With my trowel, I had managed to work the soil into a rich brown, taking in the characteristic smell of dirt.  Incidentally, in turning over the soil I unearthed a small cylindrical object that would turn out to be the head of a small child’s doll—though this was not immediately obvious to me.

About the size of a small orange and the color of soot with splotches of yellow and white, and brown, I initially thought this head a rock that had for some purpose ended up in my flowerbed.  I snatched it up with my fist in angry haste and was intent on flinging it someplace far away until it began to speak to me from the hollow of my clenched hand.

“Excuse me……………………….Excuse me.  Sir?  Sir!”  It was a woman’s voice.

I opened my palm.  There were no discernible features to suggest that what I was holding should have been capable of speech.

“Sir, would you be so kind as to turn me over?”

Doing as requested, I transferred the woman from one hand to the other so that what had been facing down in the one hand was now facing up in the other.

There were two eyes—a vibrant, enchanting green—blinking at me in silence.  There was also a mouth that appeared to have been painted on.  The rest of the face was badly weathered.  There was no nose; neither were there ears.  If I speak, I wondered, will she be able to hear me?  She had no hair.

“Thank you,” she said.

“You have no hair,” I replied.

“I used to.  It was long and brownish-blonde.  It was naturally wavy, but I would straighten it for special occasions.”

This made a great deal of sense to me, so I pursued the topic no further.

“What is your name,” I asked.

“K.”

“What an odd name.  How do I spell it?”

“Just the letter K, please.”

K smelled like the earth, so I offered to draw her a bath.

“Just a bowl with warm water, if you have it,” she said in response.  “I don’t need anything as elaborate as a bath.  I am just a head, after all.”

I was saddened by what she said.  Although I had just met K, there was a part of me that wanted to draw her a bath, gently wash the grime away, and revive her to her former self.  I would have bathed her with the utmost care and, after drying her off, would have applied the finest lotions and oils I own with an equal caution.  And if she had invited me to join her in the bath, I would have gladly stripped myself bare and cleansed my own body—filthy from tending my garden—as I cleansed her gentle face.  The bath water—a translucent blue when first drawn—would certainly have become a murky brown, but neither of us would have been bothered.  Indeed, we would have imagined we were religious relics that remained pure even amongst the dirtiest of conditions.  But K was modest.

Cupping K in my hands and drawing them close to my torso—the way one might hold an injured sparrow— I retreated inside to the kitchen and set her down on the counter.  From my cupboard I withdrew a large soup mug in the shape of a snowman’s head.  I was fond of this mug—which my mother had given me for Christmas one year—and drank from it often.  The possibility that K might take offense to this mug did not occur to me.  Luckily, she remained silent.

I filled the snowman’s head halfway with warm water and—hoping to make a good impression—retrieved a hand towel and a bar of soap from the pantry and excused myself.

“Please,” I offered, “take your time. I’ll be in the sitting room.”

She said nothing, but perhaps her eyes sparkled in unstated gratitude.

From just beyond the kitchen, I heard a gentle PLOP—what I took to be K plunging into her bath.  And although I couldn’t be certain (nor do I know today), I thought I detected a faint song emanating from her lips as she bathed herself.

She called for me several minutes later, and what I found as I returned to the kitchen was indeed a rejuvenated beauty.  Gone were the odd splotches of various colors.  Gone, too, was the smell of earth.  K was a glimmering pearl; her eyes twinkled in the dim kitchen air, white and pinkish hues danced atop her healthy skin, and her head—which is to say, K herself—was of a sublime roundness that no other creature on Earth could possibly imitate.  It was as though K had spun herself a cocoon out in my flower box and simply had to let the fine protective silk dissolve in the bath.  Anybody else would have died out in the elements or would have at least grown flabby and unsightly.

As I entered the kitchen, K met my gaze but for a moment before casting her eyes down.

“Thank you,” she said. 

Her reticence startled me.  Was K embarrassed to be in my presence?  Was what I took to be modesty—was what I took to be feminine restraint—in actuality a manifestation of K’s abhorrence toward me?  Suddenly I was overcome with shame; I wanted to cower in the shadows or hide myself away in the basement or attic—for how could an unsightly creature such as myself survive in the midst of such a boundless radiance?  The warmth of her glow would burn holes in my oily, flakey skin; I would flounder to the bottom of her eyes, my feet encased in concrete; my feeble frame would be crushed as she rolled across me on her way to a more suitable mate.  I felt as though I were mere lines of graphite on paper; I was but a base, worthless stick drawing of a man slated for erasure.

“Sir,” she inquired, breaking a probable lengthy silence.  “Is anything the matter?”

“Nothing at all,” I replied much too hastily.  “I was simply admiring your beauty.”

I immediately regretted my remark, finding it in poor taste.  I was simply admiring your beauty—what respectable man would say such a thing?  Perhaps I should have told her the truth, that I was petrified—even, somehow, hopeful—that her radiance would destroy me.

How contrary I had become since K’s arrival.  Until rather recently I had been prideful of my body.  I would stand gazing at it in the full-length mirror in my bedroom as though it were an expensive piece of art I finally had the capital to acquire but hadn’t yet placed in my home or office.  It was beautifully taut, the product of intense exercise—it was steel, it was indestructible.  As a young man I had been unable to attract even the most hideous members of the opposite sex, encased as I was in a permanent state of boyhood, hampered by a body that was sickly and asexual.  Yet as a man—with a body of substantial worth—I encountered numerous women who found my body enchanting.  When I couldn’t sleep, I would count them and rate them in terms of attractiveness and sexual abilities.

But in recent months my virile body had begun to grow sterile and limp.  I am at pains to explain why.  It is as though my body had anticipated K and started to decompose in preparation for her arrival—similar to the ways dogs can smell approaching storms.

“Would you like anything to eat?”  I broke the silence that settled over us.

“No.  I’m fine, thank you.  I would like to rest, however.  I am very tired.”

“Of course.”

I gingerly scooped K up into my hands and, holding her close to my body, began to make my way to my bedroom.  Her bath had made her warm to the touch and I frowned in spite of myself, knowing that I would soon have to put her down.

She said nothing as we crossed the foyer and made our way upstairs to my bedroom.  Her breath was slight as it brushed against my hand.

There were two pillows on my nicely made bed.  I set K down in the center of the fluffier of the two and stepped back.  She blinked at me quietly as though waiting for me to say something of import.  The full-length mirror, attached to the door of my bedroom closet, was much larger than I had remembered.

“Will you cut off my head?” I asked. 

She said nothing.

“I would like you to cut off my head,” I implored.

“Why do you want me to do that?” she rejoined.

“So that we can be together.”

“But we are together right now.”

“You have misunderstood.  We are in proximity to one another, it is true, but we are not together.”

“How is it that we will be together if I cut off your head?”

“Once I am headless, I will place you on top of my neck and we will be as one.”

“I forbid it.”

“Please.” 

She closed her eyes and refused to open them.  Were we a married couple, we might have called this a marital argument.

“Do you find me so unsatisfactory?” I whimpered.

From behind her clamped eyelids, K offered: “It is not that.  I simply do not want to cut your head off.  I would have no stomach for such a thing.”

“It will not be such a messy endeavor,” I countered.  “I have a very sharp knife.”

“We have just met,” K rolled her eyes open and stared at me.  She seemed confident.

“I do not care.  I would like to join your head to my neck.”  I stared back.  I was suddenly equally confident and hoped she would acquiesce to my request before my confidence ran dry.

“Cut it off yourself, then,” K said.

“I could shoot myself in the head if I owned a gun.  But I cannot cut it off.  It is implausible.”  I felt as though I were imparting wisdom to a small child.  “Besides, I do not want to die.  Shooting myself in the head would kill me.  I simply want to live with you as my head and me as your body.  Do you not need a body?”

“I do not.  Nor do you need a head.  You have one of your own.”

She was missing the point.  I sought to explain.  “Of course I have a head.  But I would prefer it if you became my head and if I became your body.  We would be joined as one, and it would be beautiful.”

“Cutting off your head is not beautiful.”

“You are beautiful.”

“Please do not resort to flattery.  It is unbecoming.”

“Cut off my head.”

Either to appease me or to punish me, K spoke:

“Bring me your knife, then.”

Silently, I turned from K and toward the bedroom door, which led to the hallway, which led to the staircase, which led to the first-floor sitting area, which was adjacent to the kitchen, where my sharp knife was locked away. As I made my leave from K’s side, I caught my gaze in the full-length mirror. I looked gaunt and lifeless, as though my body had already portended its end. Although I quickly fled in disgust from my own gaze, I felt the gaze of the me in the mirror linger on the real me as I stepped toward the bedroom door. The me in the mirror seemed to follow me with its eyes, the way photographs of people in magazines do, and I became terrified. Making my way toward the kitchen, I–that is, the real me–began to decay rapidly. With each step, my bones splintered, and from the subsequent cracks in my skeleton a fine dust escaped. I felt the hair on my head slough off in large, tangled clumps. My skin melted like candle wax and slid off my desiccated skeleton, leaving large discolored holes in the dirty carpet under my feet where it landed messily. Resigning myself to a painful, lonely, and unorthodox death in a corridor of my home, I was surprised to find myself in my kitchen, standing whole and unharmed. Death has not yet accosted me, I concluded, I have simply seen the future. The knife I sought happened to have been a gift from a friend who died of an illness, the name of which I do not remember, in a hospital bed in an unimportant town, tended to by unimportant people.

Convinced his internal organs were conspiring against him, this friend–whose name is not important–went to the hospital to have them all removed and executed for lèse majesté. The doctor on duty ignored this now-dead friend’s request and had him committed to a psychiatric evaluation, where it was found that while he was not insane, he was, in fact, dying–and he had been for some time. He gave me the knife in question, he said before dying, so that I could avenge his death–reason being that he understood his illness as the underhanded scheming of his internal organs rather than the ill fortune of organic sickness.

I was to bide my time until he had been autopsied and all of his organs extracted, at which point I was to raid the hospital—wielding my sharp knife all the while—and demand access to his dismembered body, whence I was to stick my knife vengefully into his stomach, his spleen, his liver, his duodenum, his pancreas, his kidneys, and for good measure his testicles, which were not necessarily internal organs but deserved a good butchering nonetheless. At the time I obligatorily swore allegiance to my now-dead friend’s cause, knowing full well that I would use his gift not to avenge his death but rather to, one day, unite my body with that of a lover I would find outside in the dirt.

From a locked cabinet, I extracted the knife, thought momentarily of cutting off my tongue, and then mechanically made an about-face and marched back toward K.I returned to my bedroom to find K as I left her, sitting in the middle of the fluffier of my two pillows. Her eyes were closed as though she were deep in thought or asleep. The floor creaked as I crossed through the doorway, rousing K from her meditative state. She met my eyes with her own. She did not smile. Without speaking, I took a kneeling position at the edge of my bed and offered my knife gently with both hands, placing it at the base of K’s pillow–which seemed more of a throne at the moment. She was beautiful, and I would have hardly complained if she simply reached out to slash my throat and watch me die. This, of course, was not the plan. But just as I had betrayed my now-dead friend, ignoring his plea for vengeance, perhaps K would betray me. K eyed the knife in silence, drawing her gaze slowly from the base of the handle to the tip of the blade and back again. She lifted her gaze once again toward me and spoke softly: “Please, close your eyes.” Her eyes were alive with fire.

Shutting my eyes, I gave my body to K.  She will not betray me, I told myself.  We are to be as one.

I had nary a moment to anticipate the beloved union to follow before the knife was swung and my head lopped off.  It bounced and rolled here then there, finally settling at the far corner under my bed.  My body then waited—headless—for K to situate herself atop its neck.

Though my head was no longer attached to my body, my brain continued to function for a minor period of time.  From where I—or rather, my head—was, I could see my beheaded body waiting patiently for K to fulfill her promise as the blood spilling from my body’s neck quickly formed a deep ruby-red pool at my body’s knees. 

To my horror, I saw K leap from my bed and move toward the door, avoiding my body as though it were diseased.  She was surprisingly agile.

“K,” I called from my place under my bed.  “This was not what we decided.”

At the doorway she briefly turned.

“I’m sorry,” she whispered, a moment of intimate communion—one head to another.  “I do not want to live as your head.” 

I began to cry.  My body, undoubtedly weak from losing its head, collapsed to the floor as K turned away.

“K!” I called, to which there was no reply.

I tried again in vain: “K!”

She was gone.

I have to go after her, I decided and willed my body—now a lifeless mass hunched over itself and quickly surrendering to exsanguination—to will what life it had left.

Its shoulders seized and twitched and thrashed about under my command.  Its arms flailed and flopped as I ordered it to reach out to me, its head and master.  If only I can reassemble myself, I thought, I’ll be able to catch K.  She is to be my head.

At my order, my body hurled itself into the side of my bed, sending its right arm and outstretched fingers toward me. 

Just a little further, please.

My body’s fingers were like worms as they writhed along the carpet searching for extra length.

Just a little further.

My body lurched toward me one last time, its fingers probing in blind desperation.


Tequila and Ashes

As is well known, K was a stubborn old buzzard. After he died – which happened not so long ago, really – he was cremated and his ashes submerged in his favorite bottle of tequila and then consumed by citizens of the small New York town where he resided until his death. Or so is said.

Some days ago I stopped into the bar where the famed bottle is said to reside. When I asked the dark haired bartendress about the bottle, she furrowed her brow and narrowed her heavy European eyes. “K!” She spat. “I hated him. There’s no way I would ruin a perfectly good bottle of tequila for that monster. Maybe the bottle of which you speak is at a different bar. Try across the street.” She jammed her finger against the window, leaving a smudge.

I did as she suggested. At this adjacent bar I found the bottle of tequila. To my surprise it was full. The bartender, observing my confusion, interjected, “There is also this bottle. It contains the ashes of one of K’s servants, I think.” He then sauntered off, apparently satisfied with himself.

I examined the small bottle, which was a much lesser tequila. I swished around the liquid and watched the ashes agitate and then settle. So this is the final resting place of K’s famed servant, I thought to myself. The fact that this bottle was smaller and inferior in quality demonstrated to me that K’s servant wished to remain humble toward him even in death. After observing the bottle, I returned home and dusted off my copy of The Life and Times of K, which his servant published posthumously, or so my investigation has concluded. The text has no identifiable author, though I am sure it was penned by K’s servant who, herself, had no name.

To quote from the text:

K had no family. Although there were whispers of relatives stirring and scavenging someplace in the developing world, K never spoke of others in the affectionate manner often reserved for family members. His ascent to wealth and fame was unrivaled in the small town he came to call home and, owing to his modest upbringing, he was never ashamed to showcase his success.

Supposing the source of this information is true, K’s servant certainly idolized him. The book contains one photograph of K, taken before he died. In the photo, despite the terrible events surrounding his loss of sight, he merely looks like a man who has closed his eyes. He appears graceful, philosophic even, kind. As you probably know, K hated having his picture taken and so this may be the only picture of him left in public circulation. It occurs to me that the date stamped in the corner of the photo – January 14, 2018 – was near the date that K’s nameless servant herself became blind. Her last image of K must have been something like this picture. Did she remember him as a benevolent philosopher? Or did she create an image in her mind to counter those vicious rumors regarding his comportment and treatment of those in his stead?

The Life of K goes on to state: Although not much is known about K, it is common knowledge that he lost his eyesight early in life, after which he devoted himself to capitalistic pursuits and the acquisition of material possessions. The book does not mention his eyesight again, and so we are left to speculate on the cause. I have heard, however, that he was blinded by the sun during an eclipse. This doubtful. But I know of no other explanation.

In any case, it need only be noted here that K lost his sight at the prime of his youth. And it was because of this unfortunate incident that he invested himself in the enterprises that eventually made him rich, egotistical, and beyond reproach. Or so is written in his biography. We know, however, that nobody is beyond reproach. K’s favorite servant may be exaggerating here.

K’s servant also writes that it was shortly after his blinding that she came to work for him. Yet as long as she lived, this nameless soul considered herself fortunate not to have seen the light of his eyes. Had K seen her, she may have been thought somehow imperfect – lumpy and pale and reproachful. But thanks to his blindness her features could only have seemed ideal. She could only ever and always be a phantom.

K suffered from terrible class anxiety and felt himself above those of lesser means. As his worth climbed, he brought on more and more servants in order to degrade and ridicule them. His sense of inferiority was no double exacerbated by the loss of his sight. He kept his mansion forever wrapped in the dim twinkle of twilight, just bright enough for the servants to avoid bumping into each other as they traversed the cold, masculine corridors of his space.

One wonders why K took a liking to this particular servant above the others. Perhaps he felt her adoration. Perhaps she was simply an easy target who absorbed every insult like a loyal dog. Spoiled by his success in the markets and embittered by his blindness, he never gave her a moment’s rest.

“Why is he so hard on you,” the others would ask her. But to her credit, she never wavered. Perhaps she took his extreme waywardness as a warped form of flattery.

Not long after she arrived in his estate, she began playing the market, enamored as she was by anything K did. In the dark, she would pour over facts and figures almost by touch alone. K is ever in the dark, she would tell herself, inspired. She was no good at the markets and lost what money she earned from K. The other servants began to whisper. One day, K surprised her by giving her insight into the most reliable stocks to follow. Under his tutelage, she did well and earned herself a small fortune. She remained loyal to K, however, and stayed on as his servant even though she hardly needed to.

But once, she ignored his advice, risked everything, and lost. K was especially severe to her then. “You fool,” he shouted, and struck her across the face. K had never hit any of his servants before; if the book is to be believed, he had never hit anyone from any station before. The rumors, though, always the rumors…they paint a picture of a sadistic figure whose violent hand was but a pretext for perverse sexual games.

Unfortunately, this first time of violence led swiftly to others, and soon enough K would strike his loyal servant with regularity. She would walk to her room crying, earning looks of concern from the other servants who encouraged her to seek other employment. But if K was stubborn, so was this servant and she was always by his side in spite of – or perhaps because of – the verbal and physical assaults. She eventually controlled her tears, which enlivened K. This strange admixture of devotion and violence drew K and his servant closer and their relationship became less of master – servant and more of husband – wife. According to The Life of K, K decided from the time he was a boy that he would never marry. If that were true, then this particular servant softened his heart in an unanticipated way. Always one to eat alone, he began to dine with her. The blind do not dine with others; so this was a large gesture that gave way to others.

The poor girl, she thought all of this fanfare gave her reprieve from her duties. K would ring for her and she would arrive late, if she bothered to arrive at all. “You bitch,” K admonished! “Don’t forget, you belong to me!” Then, according to the text, he hit her badly. I suppose that K’s awareness of his wealth and greed had something to do with the malicious, if not sadistic treatment he administered. That is, because he was known for his cruelty he was forced to become cruel all the more. Gradually, becoming more and more vain, he ended up losing all control.

Given K’s reputation and the foul ways he treated everyone in his estate, it is reasonable to assume that his attacker was one of his servants. One possible perpetrator could be the Korean man he kept in his home as his gardener. After K trampled freshly planted lilies, numerous individuals overheard the Korean make a threat against K’s life. Another incident, one which I personally witnessed, happened with a handsome Puerto Rican. Still, because K had so many enemies it is hard to say who it was who snuck into K’s bedroom one fated night and threw acid on his face.

This is all the book says about the incident: K’s screams filled every floor and every room, and he shooed away all of his attendants except the one he prized most. She tended to him tenderly throughout the rest of the night. The others overheard through the door: “Don’t look at me! I’m hideous”! The servant responded: “My eyes are shut, K. I see nothing. Like you.

The event caused K to retreat further into his mind. He fired all of his servants except this most special one who tended to him with eyes always clamped shut.

“You mustn’t open your eyes,” K implored time and again. “You can never let my appearance now diminish how you used to see me.”

“Fear not,” she responded time and again. Then, one day, the servant moved from K’s side and into the kitchen where she cut her eyes out.

“Where did you go,” K inquired.

She answered: “I am blind now. I will forever see your radiance in this darkness of mine. I shall never see your face again for as long as I live.”

“I am touched, K” said sheepishly. He put a hand on hers and blind lovers embraced.

A local writer of fiction is the only person with intimate knowledge of how these blind lovers spent their remaining days. K stopped accumulating wealth and the two of them rarely ventured beyond the estate walls. Nevertheless, I am told, the couple lived happily until K’s death. The woman supposedly said that even if the gods offered her her sight back she would refuse. But who really knows what to believe?


Inconclusive Stability

Still not used to her new glasses, she reached behind the lenses and rubbed an eye. “Why did you make me get these?” she asked. “I can see fine.”

She kept the windows open even in the winter, and a sharp frozen breeze blew in. I retrieved her favorite cashmere throw and draped it over her shoulders. “Thanks,” she said with surprising sweetness. She extended her hand as I walked back to the kitchen, grazing my arm. It was the first time in three weeks she had touched me.

I asked her how many eggs she wanted and she said two.

Her touch, though faint, stayed on my skin. As chilly as it was inside, I felt myself growing warm and the kitchen seemed stuffy. An eerie quiet settled in and I could hear her measured breath.

“Are you okay, K?” she asked from the kitchen table where she was reading a fashion magazine.

Without warning, I toppled to the floor. I heard her scream with an unfamiliar urgency as she rushed to my side. Her hair was messy and the lenses of her new glasses were fogged up. I closed my eyes, stung by the life in her breath.


At His Irrepressible Best

The dazzle of the evening – fancy cocktails, lots of cleavage, rolled up sleeves – was eclipsed by the weight of  inevitable failure.

She took me to a french restaurant, where we sat rooftop and looked out at the decaying skyline. Ever the portrait of dark sophistication, she sat contemplatively in the embrace of the day’s remaining shadows, her gaze drawn to something beyond my right shoulder.

“There’s a building on fire over there,” she said, removing the olives from her martini. “It’s pretty bad.” When I first met her, she was, to me, impossibly unapproachable. I made up a bullshit story about wanting to adopt her dog.

“Is there a lot of smoke,” I replied, losing myself in her eyes.

“Yeah.” She lifted her martini. “People are jumping.”

“I imagine it’ll spread soon.”

She scrutinized the scene behind me. “Probably. We’re the only ones left up here. At least we won’t have to pay. But my martini is almost gone.”

She was right. I could feel an uncomfortable warmth biting at my neck.

“Do you want some of this?”

“I think mezcal is disgusting.”

“Are we in trouble?”

She nodded silently, took my hand and pressed her lips to my knuckles.


The Gloomiest Antidote

She had been a robust child.

 

Years later, however, she found herself prone to serious illness and disease. On Christmas several years ago, I nursed her through pneumonia, strep throat, and a host of other dangerous afflictions.

 

As terrible as it all was, watching her die (It was inevitable. If not this illness, then surely that one, or that one.), we benefitted handsomely on, as we came to call it, PharmDay. We would put on our best farmerwear – a hard thing for a couple of middle-class snobs to accomplish – and head to the pharmacy. The whole thing was terribly fun.

 

Back at home, we would dump her medicine on the kitchen table and play with it. Small pills became stones from which we erected mighty pyramids; other pills became grenades as we tried to blow each other up. Still others we simply abused with alcohol.

 

She maintained until the end that she would rather spend her time this way than filling little boxes – one for each day of the week – with medicine.

 

And so we did. And one day she overdosed on a little green drug.

 

I tried carrying on the tradition without her. But it just wasn’t as fun.


Colonial Elitism

I made myself a drink with his expensive scotch and lay on his expensive couch. For some reason, I felt uneasy. “K?” I asked. He didn’t answer. “K?” I asked again, deciding that he, under the influence of too much alcohol, passed out somewhere out of view. I turned on the television and watched a show about winter in upstate New York.

I fell asleep.

When I woke up, my coat had been thrown over me. K was banging around in the kitchen.

I sat up. “What time is it?”

“Five,” he called from behind me.

“What are you doing up?”

“Making waffles. Want some?”

“I guess,” I whined.

He dropped a plate of waffles on my lap, returned to the kitchen.

We hadn’t spoken about what had happened several nights prior, and amidst the lunacy of the waffle conversation, I felt the need to speak up.

“K,” I said from his couch. “I’m going to kill you.”

“Huh,” he replied cooly. “I feel the same way.”

I didn’t get the joke he was trying to make. He continued: “How are the waffles?”

“Fine,” I replied, not yet aware of what had just happened.

Then an uncomfortable silence settled in.

 


Convergence and Coincidence

And so we went to Thirsty Thursday, as her short-haired friend liked to call it. Thirsty Thursday was the cutesy name for the four of us gathering around her friend’s dining room table making stilted, domestic chit-chat and drinking poorly made gin-and-tonics.

Thirsty Thursday used to just be three, but her friend went and got herself a boyfriend – bald, midwestern, decently friendly. He worked in a train yard, kept a tally of how many vagrants he busted riding the rails.

I drank six poorly made gin-and-tonics, slept until 2 pm. I woke up with a terrible headache and a half-baked plan to take up model railroad.

“Enjoy yourself last night?”

Her voice rattled against the insides of my skull, causing me to wince. “I always do.”

“You wouldn’t shut up about trains and” – a dramatic pause – “their symbolism as great modernity or some shit.”

I dropped my head back on the pillow. “Sounds like something I’d say. Trains are always going forward after all. Progress.”

“Whatever.”

I closed my eyes. “Remember how I used to live next to some tracks?”

“Yeah. I used to fantasize about your death by train.”

She heard me sigh, then added: “Now that would be progress.”

 


I Shall Be With You

The photographer called again. “Just checking in. Are you okay?”

He had been calling everyday for the past week, leaving the same message: “It’s terrible. Just terrible.” I answered today, figuring that if he hadn’t caught his error by now, he never would.

“Are you sure you have the right number?”

“I’m sure. How are you holding up?”

“Um. Excuse me?”

“And this close to the wedding,” he continued to himself. “I’ll return your deposit. You’re dealing with enough.”

“We got married in December of last year.”

He paused: “I don’t think so…” His voice trailed off into confusion.

“I’m positive. You took our photos. My favorite one is on my desk.” Her head on my shoulder, my hand creeping up her dress; we looked like models in a perfume advertisement. The me in the picture stared back at me. Was he as confused as I was?

“Look, K,” the photographer whined. “It was on the news.”

I hung up and read on the internet about my wife’s death. I read, too, about our imminent vows.

I looked back at our picture. The me in the photo looked upset now, his hand continuing it ascent up my wife’s wedding dress.

 


Fabricating the Fake

I make a cocktail every night, stir it with the long helixed spoon she gave me the night she killed herself.

It was a birthday present, I think, the spoon. Or maybe her suicide. She jumped from our veranda at 8 pm central time. So at 8 pm central time I always make a cocktail, toast her, toast the life we used to have.

I cue up Interpol first, good Interpol, not their recent shit, and irritate my upstairs neighbor. Then I mix my cocktail – often vodka because she loved vodka, but sometimes something jingoistic because she hated jingoism.

Then I sit in the dark and drink. I cry, too, in the dark, let the good memories carry me away for a while. I think about how we used to listen to Interpol in the dark, went so far as to get matching Interpol lyrics tattooed on our bodies some snowy night some November.

We sat next to each other, grimaced in unison as our bodies accepted their tattoos. We healed our tattoos together, put expensive lotion on our tattoos, defended our tattoos from cynics who questioned our devotion.

To Interpol?

To each other?

It’s hard to say.

I make another drink.


Techniques for Intervening

“Anything at any price,” read the inside of the card, which featured a cat sleeping in a martini glass.

The attending package – displaying no return address – contained a cylindrical fish tank, complex instructions, and laudatory remarks:

Congratulations! Your new jellyfish will arrive tomorrow. Make sure your tank is calibrated to the appropriate temperature. Jellyfish are temperamental creatures, so handle your new friend with care!

I assembled the tank, placed it on my dining room table. I filled it with water and spent my evening hours envisioning various scenarios occurring within its narrow walls. In my mind, I saw her treading water, face creased with deceit, anger, and hatred. I saw her puff her cheeks up before descending toward the bottom of the tank for no reason in particular. I saw her begin to convulse and spasm, unable to ascend to the surface. I saw myself jump into the tank to retrieve her from the bottom.

The creature arrived the next day. It was dead already. I placed it in the tank and watched its tentacles gently keep it afloat. Then, thinking I could revive it, I jumped into the tank and pressed my lips to the top of its hood.


An Urgent Telegram

She sent herself to me, in a box wrapped with celebratory wrapping paper. By the time she arrived on my doorstep, a day late, the wrapping paper was badly tattered and you could see that the box she stuffed herself into was a shoe box that had contained men’s shoes, size 8.

She had a bow in her hair that was, in spite of the rough journey, relatively still in tact. Probably at one point positioned just so atop her head – like a halo – the bow barely clung to her forelocks.

She smiled at me when I opened the box and something unintelligible leaked from her badly distressed lips.

“That’s from stress you know,” I said, falling immediately back into my long neglected role.

“Fuck off,” she whispered playfully. Her makeup was smeared against the insides of the box and missing from her face almost entirely.

I picked her up from the box and kissed her, bristling against her dry lips.

Then I frowned, peered into the empty box. “Where’s the rest of you?”

It was her turn to frown. “It’s not important.”

I tucked her under my arm and marched inside. “I wish you would have told me you were coming,” I said. “I would have tidied up.”

“Happy birthday,” she said, changing the subject. She uncoiled her tongue to offer me a shiny tungsten ring. It was the one I wanted.

“How long are you staying?”

“Until I bleed to death.”

Then she sunk her teeth into her tongue.


Hurt

When there was no further recourse, I sent her flowers, expensive specimens hand selected by a homosexual man on the other side of the phone who liked to bind twigs around his vases – his natural signature. When there was no recourse, she would call me, thank me. Then we would renew again, our flawed courtship.

I never specified the flowers, leaving everything to the nice man on the other end of the phone, only demanding that he charge me no more than the maximum cost for purchase and delivery. She never told me, the many times I sent her flowers, what flowers she received, only that she liked them very much.

She told me always what she did with the vases, after the expensive flowers died. She broke them and chose the large shards of glass to construct a sharp, unforgiving version of myself, without my wicked tongue and unforgivingly passive personality. She looked forward to my flowers, she said, so that she could add to her jagged rendition of me. She loved it, she said, because it was nice to her and forgiving of her flaws. I am, too, I implored from my prison cell; by then she had hung up the phone.

She came to visit recently, wounds up and down both arms, also on her face. I asked what those are from. She said she fell in love with the other me, made love to the other me.

She smiled, her lips bloody. I’m lonely, she said.


The Frail

I lost the needle I used to sew her mouth shut. That also meant that I couldn’t sew her hands back onto her arms, or reattach my tongue – which I bit off, impulsively, after I swore I’d never speak to her.

Some time later, she asked me to cut her hands off and sew her lips together so she wouldn’t be tempted to sing me songs or write me poetry. I obliged, though her voice and her words sustained me.

I kept the needle on a chain, which I wore around my neck. When she was ready, I promised, I would unsew everything – when she was ready to nourish me again.

But I was mugged one day, coming home from the store. During the struggle the chain came off my neck and the needle disappeared. The eggs in my shopping bag also cracked and yolk got everywhere.

She smiled at me when I got home, but all I could do was cry and hide my bruises. When I opened my mouth, incomprehensible consonants tumbled out. She only gestured and flailed in return. I took a pen and wrote everything down: the mugging, the eggs, the needle. She shrugged, accepting the forever silence.

All I could do was write. All she could do was read.

But we discovered solace in each other’s gaze – and love, compassion, understanding. The silence would heal us.

Until I found her in the kitchen, her left eye dangerously close to the flame of her favorite candle.


Xenon

Never did I think I would love, for love was a ridiculous, childish concept.

But I loved, finally, in spite of myself. I loved, I knew, because I thought only of her, always. Because she was my default, my origin.

She says, “Fuck you, K,” in a voice that craves verbal violence, disappearing from view even though I can see her, touch her. I reach, she recoils – a perverse dance. She looks at me with the eyes a stranger, yanking her engagement ring from her finger, throwing it out the window.

I go outside and sift through the bushes. I find her ring floating in a dog’s water dish.

I pretend I am not relieved and go back inside. She is dead, having swallowed my pain killers.

I put her ring on her lithe, cold finger. I press her lithe, cold finger to my lips.

Then I go to sleep, taking the same pain killers. I dream of our wedding. Our families are present. We are happy.

I wake up, see her dead body at the kitchen table, coax myself back to sleep. Again our wedding, our families, our happiness.

I wake, finish my pain killers, kiss my phantom bride.


Universal Values

She was born hungry and she died hungry.

But her hunger was in name only, for never once did she, between her birth and death, feel hungry. She ate things – delicious and exotic and expensive – but she did so only to be social, like a casual smoker casually smoking among friends. Alone, she did not eat; she felt no desire to do so.

She felt the effects of starvation. But she thought that this was her disposition. Indeed, she grew concerned when she did not feel this way.

She died, only, because I ended our relationship. She died, only, because I was not there to eat.

It took her but a week to starve.

During that same week, I feasted on the bodies of women as a display of sexual rebellion and fear. During that same week, my taste in disposable women became increasingly stringent: thinner and thinner, I demanded.

She died on a Friday, the same day that I unearthed and climbed into a coffin to lay with the skeleton of a woman, the same day I was shot for breaking the law, the same day I sold our companion burial plots to a young, attractive couple in love.

 


The Philosopher on His Deathbed

I found the angel dangling from the end of her halo, her limp body suspended by the prettiest cloud in the sky.

 

She was still alive, I noticed, as I hurriedly untied the knots in her halo.

 

I collected her wispy body and crinkled halo and vanished into my apartment. I didn’t know what I was going to do with the angel. I wanted to nourish her but I also wanted to eat her. So I placed her on my blue velvet couch and watched her.

 

She slept the way you sleep after something traumatic happens. Was her trauma her attempted suicide or all that preceded it? I could never know.

 

The sky darkened because it wanted its angel back. It crackled and groaned, but still she slept, her chest rising and falling slightly in response to some life still stirring inside her.

 

The rain came and her cloud pounded on my window. “Don’t make me go back there,” she whispered. “I hate it.”

 

I pressed my vial of antidepressants into her hand. She sat up and forced a smile.

 

Then she took her halo and smoothed it out before placing it several inches above her head, where it stayed.


The Man Who Sees Himself as an Athiest

K designed a high rise in the likeness of his favorite girlfriend. She wasn’t actually his girlfriend, however – more of a fetish object, a “girlfriend.” In fact, he had gone out with her only once.

She had agreed to a second date and then proceeded to stand him up. He waited for two hours at the fanciest rooftop lounge in the city.

That’s when, staring absently at the skyline over a double shot of something expensive, he decided to design a building in her image. Every Tuesday at 9 pm – the day and time of the second date that never was – he ascended to the rooftop lounge to watch poorly paid workers labor over the construction of his favorite girlfriend.

But one night, after too much expensive alcohol, he got angry at her and ordered her demolition.

He watched with coldness in his eyes as the wrecking ball tore holes in her half-completed body. He thought he heard her cry out – from somewhere under all that concrete, glass, and metal.

He was sad to see her fall. He knew he would miss her. But he was also sad because he knew that, next Tuesday at 9, he would have nothing to do.


Even Subtly Joyful

“Draw me a picture,” said the woman, sliding me pencil and paper.

“Of what?”

“Draw my portrait.” She brushed her hair from her shoulders and posed in mock grandiosity.

I drew a jellyfish fighting with a human skeleton. I was impressed with my technique and wanted, momentarily, to keep the picture for myself.

“What the fuck, K,” she said, putting her clothes back on. “Not really what I had in mind.”

I wanted to point out the imperfections in my sketch. I wanted to tell her that because the ship was swaying rather violently, my lines here, here, and here were imperfect.

“It’s just as well,” she bellowed. “A storm is coming.” She knocked me over as she left my cabin, letting my picture float to the ground.

Against my knee, I smoothed out the wrinkles of my discarded drawing, hoping that I might frame it after all.

Climbing to my feet, I locked eyes with the jellyfish and human skeleton outside of my porthole. I shrugged and the skeleton shrugged back.

With a bony finger the skeleton beckoned me over. “Careful,” it mouthed through the glass, “you’re next.”

 

A knock at my door. I already knew who it was.


Totemic Metastasis

“I feel her perfume on me still,” K said, fidgeting and gasping. “I don’t know, it’s just…on me.”

The date he went on went poorly. The woman sat politey in her chair and drank the expensive drink K dutifully purchased. Then she went home while he was busy paying the tab. He never touched her – the goal of any date, unachieved. Not even a handshake.

Later, not entirely sure what happened and not necessarily upset about it, he began to feel the effects of her perfume. It was pleasant to the nose (expensive, K could tell), but heavy on the skin, like a flak jacket or the lead thing you wear at the dentist during x-rays.

K spent an agonizing evening on the floor of his modest apartment, air seeping in fits from the holes in his body. She was beautiful and K would have pleasured himself over the toilet, making up for intimate contact denied. But the weight was crippling. So he left even himself untouched.

Sitting in front of me, K’s body leaned like a dying flower.

“Can I have her number,” I asked.

“Fuck off,” he replied with his last breath. “I think she likes me.”

 

 


An Overdetermined Result of Textual Practices

“May I please have my eyes back,” asked the angel. I wasn’t sure how she knew I had them (I found them in the gutter; the dazzling green of the iris caught the sun and blinded me), but her voice was stern. I reached into the breast pocket of my jacket and handed over her eyes. The angel and I had sex and I fell in love.

 

Sometime later the devil came to my door, offering a cure for my heartache. “Take this,” the devil offered, extending a hand that gripped a small pill. “She will leave your mind as will the sorrow she has caused.”

 

I retrieved the pill from the devil’s outstretched palm. “It’s a special compound just for you,” the devil said. Small and rectangular in shape, the pill had a “K” in its center.

 

The devil saw me hesitate. “Or take this” – the devil produced another pill – “and be haunted by her memory until you die.”

 

I retrieved the additional pill and placed it on my palm next to the first pill. They were identical.

 

“But you may not have them both,” said the devil impatiently, glaring at me with eyes a penetrating shade of green.


For Which I Had Been Punished

We hadn’t seen each other since college. Our friendship ended abruptly because we were in love with the same woman. He wanted to fight over her. I politely declined and wished him well.

 

I wasn’t surprised when he told me of their breakup. Everybody knew that this particular woman had been adamant about remaining a virgin until marriage.

 

“You lucked out, K,” he said with a mouthful of vodka. “She never caved.”

 

The way he described their sexless courtship – hours of cuddling and making out – was rather charming.

 

His eyes lit up. “I saw her last week. She called and told me that she’s married now. Then she invited me over. Before we broke up, she promised to have sex with me once she was married – even if she wasn’t married to me. I guess she was serious.”

 

“Did you?”

 

“Of course.”

 

“And her husband?”

 

“She told me that you’re her husband and that you’ll probably kill me. She said you’ll have a sharp knife with you.”

 

I put the knife on the table and shrugged. “I’m not going to kill you with this.” I nodded toward his empty martini glass and watched his throat tighten. “Thanks for the drink.”


This and That Spectator

I know this artist who is also a taxidermist. Naturally gifted in art, he found that he could only accurately sketch living creatures if he killed them, stuffed them, and manipulated their bodies into wildlife scenarios.

 

In his home, which I borrowed for the first time in high school to rob my girlfriend of her virginity, are lots of taxidermied creatures and accompanying artistic renderings. They’re perfect renderings and also that girl and I broke up shortly after because the dead animals, which seemed very alive, made her uncomfortable.

 

I had the opposite reaction and haven’t been able to have sex not surrounded by dead animals ever since.

 

“K, I need your house,” I implore a little less often than I like. With each visit, I find that his home is a little more overrun by his animals and his art. Last week, I had sex with a girl inside the mouth of a large shark. She cut her hand on one of its teeth and won’t return my calls.

 

I kinda want him to kill and stuff her. But he would probably want to sketch her and that would make me uncomfortable because I like her a little bit.


Exhibitionism Itself

My girlfriend was the most beautiful woman in history. So when she was blown up by insurgents, the world’s museums went to extremes to collect her parts, divvy them up, and house them behind expensive glass in expansive rooms.

 

I didn’t realize this at first. “You know,” said K, recently returned from abroad, “I saw your girlfriend’s torso at a museum in Paris.” He handed me a replica, a souvenir he purchased in the gift shop. I had read of her death – “Most Beautiful Woman in History Killed by Terrorists” – and lamented. But my thoughts shifted as soon as K handed me her mini torso. I punched him in the face and stole it.

 

I traveled the word, collecting her replica body parts from museum gift shops throughout the world. In Tokyo I acquired her tongue; in Tel Aviv I acquired her womb. And so on.

 

After a year of travel I had all of her body parts, inside and out. Standing a mere four inches, she was as exquisite as I remembered. I carried her to my bed and we had sex. Unfortunately my erect penis broke her in half. I lamented my girlfriend’s death for the second time.

 


An Affirmation That Affirms Nothing

“Why are you here,” I asked in an accusatory tone.

 

“I loved him,” she moaned, extending a finger toward the coffin. She had dirt under her fingernail. “We were going to marry next August.”

 

“See that brunette in front? That’s his wife. So, why are you here?” I was calm.

 

“I don’t know.” Her eyes were red. She grabbed the lapels of her miniskirtsuit and pulled them tightly to her chest. “Do I have to leave?”

 

“Well, no. But you’ve been at every funeral for the past month. So I’m curious.” The authority with which I spoke prevented her from realizing that I was guilty of the same.

 

“I just prefer the dead.” She glared at me.

 

I was overcome with passion.

 

“So do I,” I gasped, grasping her hand. It was like ice. She recoiled but I refused to let go. “It’s okay. I understand.” She was obviously dead and found comfort in those like her. I, however, was just a deviant with a fetish for dead bodies. “Give me a chance,” I implored. “I won’t let you down.”

 

I took the flower she had tucked behind her ear (symbolizing life, perhaps) and sank its stem into my neck.


My Way Back to Sea

I spent much of her insurance money repairing her body (no easy feat after the body dies), filling bullet holes, sewing lacerations, reattaching her head. The embalmer thought I wanted an open casket (he made her beautiful), not knowing that there would be no funeral.

I cashed in the rest of her policy to have her body encased in ice and stored in my newly-purchased freezer. “You said I could,” I muttered the first time I laid her frozen body on the bed and, with my newly-purchased icepick, chiseled out her sex organs.

She was at the height of physical perfection when she was murdered. And thus in preserving her body, I preserved her sexual attractiveness. Every Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday I wheeled her out of the freezer, liberated the parts I needed, performed the acts I needed to perform, and wheeled her back in.

Yesterday she escaped from her block of ice. I placed her body on the bed but received a phone call. My mom. “K! Why don’t you call anymore?!”

When I went back to the bedroom she was gone. So was the icepick.

If you’re reading this, whoever you are, help! There may still be time.