Features • Spring 2026 - Fear
Gezi
Once again, a newborn cried for the first time. The bald scream carried her voice through crowds in a chestnut-smelling street, rousing the cats from their curbside sleep. The sound stretched farther on to the trees of Taksim as they shuddered with an intensity foreign to them. The cats knew of what was coming before us. They found Spirit in a corner of İstiklal, licked and nursed her. They were the ones who would tell her about the name of the street, about how long before it meant independence, it meant dismissal and rebellion. They told her, as she cried, that she was rebelling even now when she did not know the word for it. They were the ones who decided that the time was right and carried the newborn to a nearby park. The cats, from atop the branches of Gezi, all silent in their knowing, wanted to show Spirit the trees.
Poetry • Spring 2026 - Fear
There’s something to be said about those little birds inside the eggs, with the sticky baby down and bones melted tender. This morning, you call me soup-for-brains and I imagine a boy’s guts cupped inside the feathered belly on my plate—another boy pressed open like a drum, a membrane. I drink the brine from a jar of Koon Chun plums for breakfast. Practice, I say, and you call me Pussy for the first time all week. They say it doesn’t taste like anything. Just the salt of the duck and the blood-tang of marrow. But I forgot you’re tutoring Leah Wong at her place today, so I turn and face your black-feathered buzzcut. No time for a game behind the school with the Chus’ half-popped basketball, which yesterday I poked till it dimpled and likened it to one of her mom’s big fake ones, and you hit me. For a split-second I thought I saw your eyes turn milky and your spine go baby-bent, but I pulled up your T-shirt and you were still hairless as a girl, your skin opaque. So it’s dinnertime and Mom isn’t home yet and all I have is the chick in my egg. He’s just boiled awake, beak parting to call me Dumbass. Soft. My fingers turn to yellow protein in calcium dust, prying you into this wet, scalding kitchen. Walls gum-pink and beating; I take you where heat reigns.
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From the Archives
Features • Summer 2015
At the age of thirteen, I went to my first concert. It was performed at the Qwest Center in Omaha, Nebraska by Gwen Stefani—Gwen, the modern blonde bombshell, fashion maven, and self-declared American ambassador of all things Harajuku. The performance was part of her Sweet Escape Tour. She slid up and down the stage, platinum hair set unwavering on top of her head, accompanied by four dollish Asian women who mouthed lyrics, fluttered hands, swayed their asses to the beat of “Wind It Up.” My then-best friend, who had invited me to the concert, waved her renegade camera in the air (no smartphones yet in 2007). To sneak it past security she’d hidden it in an empty tampon box. Her younger brother, forced upon us by her mother, fell asleep in the row in front of us.
For the next few months, I would listen to Gwen’s “Hollaback Girl” on repeat on my MP3 player, lying on top of the cool sheets in my parent’s bedroom. It was July, but their windows faced west, so in the late afternoons the room was always cool and dark, permeated by that kind of woozy clarified shadow which filters through Venetian blinds. Sometimes, my friend and I would sit, bare-kneed on the hot cement in her backyard or mine, and we would look up pictures of how to tease our coarse black hair into perfect ringlets. It was the summer after seventh grade. She was more popular than I was, and she always wanted to make me over by painting my nails, as if a different color were the secret to a second skin.
The highlight of that summer was when she received, as a birthday present, a set of Harajuku Lovers fragrances, including bobble-headed bottles of Love, Angel, Music, Baby, and Gwen herself wearing plastic Marilyn Monroe hair and a so kawaii outfit. For those who don’t know, Love is the pretty one, Angel is the sporty one, Music is the artsy one, and Baby is the cool one. Gwen is the leader of their posse. In commercials and music videos, she stands in front; their images are encompassed by hers. In the bathroom, my friend would choose one of the Girls, perform a temporary decapitation (the spray nozzle was underneath the bobble head), spray her wrist and necks, and set the little bottle on the counter, where it would sit smiling among its sisters. I would imagine that the little perfume figurines had travelled all the way from their native land: Tokyo’s Harajuku fashion district, an expanse spreading from Harajuku Station to Omotesando, where, according to legend, otakus roamed freely in their dark makeup, Lolita dresses, and almost-perfect curls.
And then I would be so bored, in my hot midwestern summer with my nails painted a sparkly pink, quickly chipping as I dragged them back and forth over concrete sidewalks. I wondered how Gwen’s Harajuku Girls got to be so beautiful—and they were beautiful, though always silent. Only Gwen ever sang, or spoke. The Girls only meowed, sometimes, dressed in cat costumes with black whiskers streaked on their porcelain faces, in the music videos or under bright concert lights, their red-red-lips barely moving save to replicate that cattish “O”. A round spot of blush on both cheeks, a cultivated body, a patch of red on the lips—was that really all it took?
As if in answer, an emphatic “No” comes from Harajuku district, in the 2000s dominated by Japanese street fashion. In the first years of the millennium, a movement gains momentum called Decora, which takes accessorizing far beyond even the standard set by Gwen and posse. In Decora, beauty is found in excess. A Google image search produces pictures of Decora girls—and boys—wearing colorful wigs, long socks, a medley of layers, and ring upon necklace upon bracelet upon ring. In a documentary, a Decora girl says she takes two hours to put on her outfit before heading out to walk the streets with a group of similarly-dressed friends. Some cover their mouths with faux medical masks, as if guarding against a disease of plainness, the dull life of a salaryman or woman.
A secret: There is no such thing as a single Harajuku Girl. She is a block of city by the train station, she is fantasy, she is pure Gwen creation. In the Harajuku district, if you take a walk around the block, the women are mostly civilians. The humdrum crowd is occasionally interrupted by a variety of mostly young people, teenagers, pimpled and sweating under a vast array of subculture styles, wearing gothic Lolita dresses, or covered in pastel amulets, or smelling faintly of hairspray. They are not all alike. They are not all beautiful.
***
I couldn’t quite tell the Girls apart when they were onstage. Their outfits were different, each one embroidered with her name—Love, Angel, Music, Baby—but their makeup was the same. Perhaps they were intentionally cast that way, but I couldn’t tell them apart however I tilted my head. Gwen calls their identity a ping-pong match of culture, America bouncing back the best of couture Japonais. The Girls don’t speak in public, by contract. They hover around Gwen like four silent familiars or human Decora accessories. I wonder if they all use their own perfumes, beheading and recapping their tiny selves each day.
But perhaps Gwen is right, and cultural back-and-forth is an accurate description. A slice from the Japanese side of the table: One of Japan’s most popular pop phenomenons, a girl group called Morning Musume, will turn seventeen this year. Fear not, the group members never become old. Membership is renewed as older performers “graduate” and fresh girls move up the ranks. The group has become a veritable institution, a nation in and of itself, fueled and fed by fans ranging from preteen girls to adult men. This year marks the twelfth generation of performers. The girls grow up together, perform together, and promote themselves together.
Morning Musume’s mastermind is a bleached blond man-child who goes by the name “Tsunku.” In photos, his face is surgically smooth, and he’s usually surrounded by his girls, who pout and make victory signs with their hands. Until the early 2000s, Tsunku headed his own band, a Japanese rock group called Sharam Q. Nowadays, he commands the Hello! Project, a vast network of interchangeable girl groups of which Morning Musume is but the flagship. Hello! Project has a performer for every taste. The name of the groups sound like space cadet units in some alternate universe, where fruit and dessert names are bubbled with sexual references: Pocky Girls, Shugo Chara Egg!, Coconuts Musume, etcetera. One popular group, Minimoni, auditions performers with the caveat that their height must be under four feet eleven inches.
Members are moved from group to group as the need arises and as their ages change, but over the entire empire presides the constant and omnipotent Tsunku. No matter the group, Tsunku designs the costumes, writes the songs, determines the makeup, and choreographs the dances. No matter the group, the girls are expected to remain virginal, at least in public. In 2007, the same year as Gwen’s Sweet Escape tour, group member Yaguchi Mari (Morning Musume, founder of Minimoni) was caught in a relationship with a member of a boy band. She was eventually ejected from Hello! Project. Despite their enforced purity, the girls are each expected to publish swimsuit photo books for their fans, the sales of which are so popular that they require their own charts.
Tsunku says his role is benevolent. He has said that his girls are so busy with their performing lives, that they don’t have time to experience the normal emotions of adolescence—so he recreates those emotions for them in the lyrics, the thoughts of a teenage girl written by a middle-aged man. A typical Musume music video involves choreographed group dance with kawaii hand gestures, elaborate baby-doll dresses, simple upbeat lyrics, and plenty of computer-generated sparkles. The singing is nearly purely choral. Everyone opens their mouths at the same time, and even if one voice is singing, it comes as an overlay as the performers strike poses and smile into the camera. Like the performers themselves, the songs resist time. A section of 1997’s “Morning Coffee” could be transplanted into 2014’s “What is Love” with little notice from fans.
Tsunku’s imaginings must strike some marketable chord. Morning Musume has sold about 18 million album copies in Japan alone. The American market, however, has proven harder to crack. Morning Musume’s second ever concert in the States was held at the Best Buy Theater in New York on October 2014—a single 4 p.m. show on a Sunday, it was hardly a knockout event. Perhaps American audiences are uncomfortable with the power dynamics and sexual politics governing the group members. More likely, though, the ultra-cute aesthetic and ultra-synchronization, not even translated from Japanese language, had not quite found their place in the American pop lexicon.
This miscommunication has forced American audiences to depend on the cultural translation of performers such as Gwen Stefani. Like Tsunku, she becomes the intermediary between reality and representation. The lyrics to her song “Harajuku Girls” are easy to understand:
You’re looking so distinctive like D.N.A.,
?Like nothing I’ve ever seen in the U.S.A.?
Your underground culture, visual grammar?
The language of your clothing is something to encounter
A Ping-Pong match between eastern and western
Did you see your inspiration in my latest collection?
Just wait ‘til you get your little hands on L.A.M.B.
’Cause it’s super kawaii, that means super cute in Japanese.?
The streets of Harajuku are your catwalk, bishoujo you’re so vogue.
But what exactly is she translating? Does she draw upon the aesthetics of Morning Musume or the titular Harajuku district? If so, are the girls of the real Harajuku district mimicking a mass produced pop culture, or are they subverting it through excess? Japan is silent on the matter; few people in the country are fans of Gwen. Like Morning Musume’s lackluster appearance in the States, Gwen’s Japanese platform never quite took off.
None of these thoughts came into my mind in the summer of 2007, as I lay on the cool sheets, mouthing the words to “Hollaback Girl.” In the music video, Gwen and the group perform “American High School” the way pop culture imagines it to be. Like Tsunku, Gwen dresses her girls in school uniform, albeit in short cheerleader skirts instead of sailor suits. They prance their way through the traditional high school type spectrum, from punk girls to jocks to band geeks, though, in this high school, everyone is inexpressibly cool. My thirteen-year-old self would have wanted to be a part of her posse, even if I’d have to remain (contractually) silent.
The Harajuku Girls have dispersed now, gone their own ways. Their real names are Maya Chino, Jennifer Kita, Rino Nakasone-Razalan, and Mayuko Kitayama. Maya lives in Los Angeles and teaches at a dance academy, Jennifer performs in hip-hop companies, Rino is now a choreographer, and Mayuko was a backup dancer for Britney Spears’ Onyx Hotel tour—after that her internet trail is lost. In memory, Gwen’s girls are as virginal as Tsunku’s. They never had a life, save that brief one lived as silent priestesses at the altar of pop rock.
Two years after the concert, my friend is working at a local ice cream store, when she swears Gwen Stefani walks in the door and orders a chocolate sundae. She wore sunglasses and sweats, but she had her trademark hair and signed her name on the receipt “G. Stef.” I don’t believe her, because of the unlikelihood of Gwen Stefani visiting a Coldstone Creamery in a Nebraskan strip mall, but it’s a pleasant fantasy.
***
There is an antiquated philosophical concept that regards the movement of the celestial bodies—planets, sun, and moon—as the movement of glass spheres. When ancient astronomers looked to the arc of these bodies across the sky, it must indeed have seemed like they were attached to invisible surfaces in the sky. The concept explains that as these glass spheres move, they rub against each other and emit harmonics: musica universalis, the music of the spheres. This music is imperceptible to human ears, but it resonates under all of nature. For the Pythagoreans, followers of Pythagoras in the 5th century B.C, mathematical patterns governed the music of the spheres and, in turn, mortal harmonics and rhythms.
The 2014 Morning Musume song “Beyond Space and Time” takes a very literal interpretation of this astronomical concept. The music video begins with the girls, dressed in gauzy blue dresses, pretending to play invisible instruments. It pans out to reveal a galactic background, filled with floating chrome spheres and a rotating vortex of stars. The girls dance with mathematical precision. They form a line and arc their arms in perfect succession. The lyrics go:
By the time we are united
Beyond the time and space
I wonder if this planet?
Will be purified.
Gwen never released any outer-space-themed songs. That mantle was taken up by another bleach blonde and fellow Japanophile by the name of Lady Gaga, whose given first name, coincidentally, is Stefani (the two could be twins) and who became the next big thing with the release of her 2008 album The Fame. By that time, I had graduated from my first concert to awkward eighth grades dances, almost always tuned to the beat of “Poker Face” and “Just Dance.” In the big gym decorated with fairy lights, my classmates and I would sway in circles facing each other, staring from face to sweaty face, uncertain in our femininity, if that was even the right word. Eventually, the more bold among us would pair up and drift into the interior circle (where the chaperones couldn’t do a thing), enacting a carnal ritual which Morning Musume’s cheery choreography never reveals, though it pulses under the surface.
Five years later, Lady Gaga released her third studio album, Artpops. The cover, designed by artist Jeff Koons of balloon animal fame, features Gaga with a shiny blue sphere wedged between her legs, surrounded by fragments of Botticelli’s The Birth of Venus. Gaga promoted the album as a cross between pop culture and high culture, an elevation of her music and a catapulting of her body into the realm of art.
By comparative metrics, Artpops flopped, with first week sales at less than a third of Born This Way’s. Critical opinion on the album is divided; some call it over-the-top and euphoric, while others find it relentless and exhausting.
While Artpops’ sales chart followed a downward trend, Gwen Stefani updated her Harajuku Lovers fragrance collection, giving it a new look and a new name: Pop Electric. The perfume bottles are the same bobble-headed figures of Love, Angel, Music, and Baby, but with what she calls a modernized design. In a 2014 interview with the Home Shopping Network, Gwen officially lexiconized “artpop” by using the word to describe her collection. This prompted an ecstatic tweet from Gaga: “I love you even more Gwen Stefani. Thank you for using ARTPOP as an adjective. It made me smile #ARTPOP.” The collection’s sales description reads, “Harajuku Lovers Pop Electric are inspired by modern street murals and sculpture, looking like they were formed in simple vinyl, dipped in molten, lustrous color scheme, then frozen in time as the metal drips over the doll’s body.” A full set sells for $200, retail. The scent of each perfume is still tailored to each Harajuku Girl, as if a perfume could capture the essence of a person.
But maybe all this is crying wolf. It’s been a decade, and Gwen regrets nothing about the Harajuku Girls. Maybe the Girls don’t have any regrets, either. For all I know, they could be making a killing on their former names; Gwen’s clothing line, L.A.M.B (Love, Angel, Music, Baby) can still be found on the occasional preteen at the shopping mall. And Lady Gaga, unlike Gwen, has succeeded in becoming popular in Japan. In 2013, wearing anime eye makeup and a bow bigger than her head, she participated in and won a kawaii-contest on Japanese television—defeating Kyary Pamyu Pamyu, Japan’s current Decora queen bee. Maybe cultural translation has become easier since Gwen’s heyday in the summer of 2007. Maybe they’re doing the world a service. How many, like me, have listened to their music in the late afternoon, watching dust motes dancing in the light, imagining planets singing in their perpetual motion?
As for the immortal Tsunku: On April 4, 2015, he was invited onstage for the entrance ceremony at Kinki University, his alma mater. The new students were expecting him to sing some hit songs from Sharam Q. Instead he stood there for nearly a minute, saying not a word. Then a big monitor displayed a message: “I’ve chosen to live by throwing away my voice, the thing I had treasured most,” it read, “Regret would have no meaning. I will go forward from now on.” Tsunku’s vocal cords had been removed due to laryngeal cancer. While the audience looked on, he blinked under the blue stage lights, a tear shed or two, shy, smiling, silent.
Despite this setback, Kinki University was treated to a performance after all. When the message ended, Tsunku strummed a guitar, and his girls sang for him.
Fiction • Commencement 2009
Two men, both shirtless, each holding an axe, and one, a gnarled saw, waded through waist-deep water toward a two-story house that emerged, strained, heavy with each waterlogged board and each rusted nail that pinned it together, from the soggy earth. When they reached the doorway of the house, the first man laid his hand flat against the front door. With effort, he pressed against the damp wood, and from the exposed upper hinge a shriek, the spoiled union of iron and air, echoed shrilly down an empty street, piercing the soft surfaces of damp wood and bouncing freely off the dark, swirling surface of the river.
The water had been rising, now, for seven days. On the first morning, without a sound, the cattle in the fields had begun to walk away from the river. For three days they walked, slowly, heavily, as cows do, each purposeful step crumpling the grass and pressing down the wet soil beneath it, leaving an ever-growing half moon of pockmarked earth behind. The townspeople noticed the cows before they noticed the rising water.
On the fourth day, the mill reversed direction. The water, thick and dark, had risen above the axle of the wooden wheel, and when the swirling surface water overpowered the quiet channel below, the wheel slowed, and creaked, and began to turn again in reverse, snapping gears and mutilating machinery. Then, when the sullen current licked a final splash up over the churning woodwork, it groaned to a stop, and everything was quiet.
On the fifth day, the doctor could be seen piling armloads of damp clothing into the back of an old horse cart. Next to the cart, his wife and her four daughters, all barefoot and muddy up to their ankles, stared upward without speaking. They watched for rain, but there was none to be seen, only clouds, and crows. Most flew west, with the current, but some could be seen returning, circling and watching the river as it sucked up the land and pulled anxiously at the lowest boards of houses. When the doctor’s wife drove his horse toward the road, the women clinging tightly to the dripping cargo, the wheels of the cart left grooves as deep as a man’s hand in the black ground.
On the sixth day the water turned salty. Now, bits of splintered board could be seen drifting down the river, passing through the sunken windows of riverside sheds and picking up thick tangles of weeds. The water, now spilling through doorways and puddling in dirty circles on the floors of empty houses, had washed away the grooves of a dozen horse carts, and twenty miles west, along the river, hungry donkeys dragged hungry families through thick mud, toward desperate hopes of dry inns and warm meals. The cattle, which had been migrating steadily, ignored by humans, for almost a week, huddled on a hill two miles from the muddy bank of the river, chewing mouthfuls of muddy grass and blinking dumbly at the flat sky.
Single-story houses, which had once housed small families, looms, and coal stoves, now lilted against the current, until one by one they collapsed gently into the murky water. Only the drunks and their whores still walked among the heavy, stained structures, checking bedrooms for gold and kitchens for wine. In the daytime, they huddled together on the side of the hill above town, where the cows had once stood, and where small piles of scrap wood now sat in piles, some of it lashed together in futile rafts, most of it loose and damp. They drank from bottles and crossed themselves under the grey sky. Half of the town lay underwater; the other half, void of life, leaned quietly under its damp empty weight.
The two men, holding their tools high above their heads, waded through the doorway and into a small room, filled to the mantle with water, and from the mantle to the ceiling with thick, wet air. The surface of a table drifted slowly on the water, propelled toward the far wall by the rippling progress of the two bodies. When one of the men swung the head of his axe down onto a corner of the table, it dipped effortlessly down into the black water, lifting another dripping leg into the air. The leg looked grey in the grey light, and it was lined with veins of green. The man shifted his weight, lifting an obscured foot to brace against the corner of the table, and when he pulled the axe from the wood it bobbed back up into the air, sending ripples bouncing in patterns off the walls and the bare chests.
Against the far wall the men stepped carefully up a wooden staircase. As they rose out of the water, green weeds clung to the belt loops of dark brown pants, and dark dripping leather of cracked boots curled down to expose white ankles streaked with straight black hair. Their heads disappeared, followed by the tops of their pants, their ankles, the soles of their cracked boots, and then they were gone, creaking across the floor above the empty room.
In the single room, into which the men emerged part by part, a single body sat as still as petrified wood on a wooden chair. It was the body of an old man, with small tufts of white hair growing from his sagging ears, clothed in a dirty white shirt and brown linen trousers. Its eyes were half open, as still as marbles stuck in mud, and the men ignored it as they moved about the room, testing the softness of the wood of a small bureau, now a square dining table, now a painted cradle, now a small end table, on which a Bible lay, coverless. The wood was damp but hard, and they took to it with the axes, snapping the legs from the larger table and splintering the flat boards and hitting at the bureau with overhand swings until it lay crushed in a pile on the floor. They took apart the crib with their hands, and this wood, protected by the white paint, made loud snapping noises as they bent and broke its spokes. When all but the end table lay in a pile by one wall, behind the seated body, the men lay down their axes and stood, breathing heavily, by the only window in the room. Through it, they watched the river move quietly through town. Crows stood on the branches of trees, and now and then one or two would take flight and drift over the black water to another tree to stand on another branch. There were no sounds for a quarter of an hour, during which the river rose imperceptibly.
Both men had coils of wet yellow twine in each of their pockets. They knotted the wood together in bundles, and when the third bundle was taut one of the men moved over to the small end table. The Bible felt damp and heavy. Inside, the inked letters were swollen. He touched the top of the table again, and then motioned for the other man, who brought his axe and took to it with dull swings. The man with the Bible carried it over to the seated body. The floor in front of the chair was dry, and he placed the heavy book at a reverent angle in front of the feet. Each man then took two bundles, wedging the tools between the twine and the splintered boards, and they stepped carefully back down the stairwell, disappearing part by part, leaving behind, among piles of splinters and small dirty puddles, only the still body in its chair and the wet book.
They had not known that he was alive. The following morning his eyes drifted down to gaze at the Bible. It had swollen slightly since the previous afternoon when the men had come into the house to take the furniture for futile rafts. During the night, one of the puddles left in the center of the room by the men had trickled across the floorboards, snaking past sawdust deposits until it touched up against one corner of the book, where it was quickly absorbed by the already damp pages. Now, in the grey light leaking through the window—although it had been cloudy for weeks, there was a certain heightened color in the room when the sun ought to have been shining in—he watched the book grow.
His name was Levi. Like the cattle, he had known about the flood, sensed it, before the young and active townspeople. It had been coming for months, perhaps always, and when his bones began to crystallize he knew that this was how it would end, still, petrified, in the rising water.
At first it was his fingers. As a boy he had thrown stones and flicked insects, as all boys do, and as a young man he had run nervous fingertips over the laces of corsets. But when he grew older his bones hardened and began to scrape against one another, until his wife and sister began to feed him, dragging a spoon roughly over the coarse white hair on his chin to catch the droplets of broth that ran down from his lips.
When he stopped eating, after his knees froze and his fingers closed permanently around the arms of his chair, his jaw, too, grew coarse and chipped inside, and his last few words had sent sounds like crunching gravel tearing through his skull.
And, as his bones rusted like the hinges of old doors he began to notice the moistness in the air, the dampening of noises in their wooden house and the sheen on his sister’s forehead as she pleaded with him to eat.
‘I do not need food,’ he had thought to himself; ‘hunger will not kill me, as it will them.’ He had waited patiently as the air thickened in his room, and when the cattle left he was the happiest he had been in weeks. They would all leave, now, he thought, and when his wife came into his room, weeping, followed later by his sister, to talk in loud sobs about the flood, he had been happy that he could not speak, and hoped that they would not draw out their departure.
When the water finally crossed their hearth the women had already packed their bundles of moldy clothing into the broken oxcart and foraged what dry foods and fresh water remained in the house and the looted storerooms of their neighbors. He wished for the women to leave, to forget to kiss the damp skin of his forehead and not to promise him that they would return with a boat and food, not to try to carry his rigid body somewhere dryer to die. He had pretended to be dead, closing his eyes and slowing his breathing for hours until the small purple snakes that always clouded his vision had filled the room. And then his wife had come upstairs to kiss him guiltily and hold his hand, weeping quietly, while his vision cleared.
They had left dry food in jars beside his chair. The first time that men came upstairs, he had pretended to be dead, and they took all of the food in wet brown sacks that they tied shut with twine and carried over their shoulders. That was when the men still wore shirts, when some decent women still lingered, when it was still a sinful thing to go into another man’s bedroom, to stare at a rigid body and be glad it was not one’s own. He did not need to eat; he felt his end at hand, and with each tired beat of his heart, his crystalline body clenched tighter at the tunnels of watery blood that snaked through it. The day after the men came for the last of the furniture, blue mold began to creep up the walls.
For two days he sat still, awake, no longer sleeping or blinking. Each hour brought new growth to the walls, which smelled sour, and though Levi could not turn his head to look out the window, he heard and smelled the flood. There were fish now, in the room below him, giant ocean fish, with stiff fins on their backs and thick red gills. As they swam, he listened to the ripples echo off the walls in the ever shrinking cavern between the water and the ceiling. ‘There are only a few inches of air left beneath me,’ he told himself, and through the window he could smell sea turtles and hear the dipping flight of pelicans.
The nails that held the walls together smelled like rust. With the first effort he had made since moving to the chair, and with what he knew would be the final shift of bone on bone in his crystalline body, he let his head drop slightly until he was staring straight at the swollen book on the floor in front of him. As his vertebrae shifted, they made the sound of stones colliding, and he blinked with the sharp pain of friction. Then, still again, he felt the last of his unfixed joints fuse into place, as brittle now as a sprung and forgotten bear trap, crimson with rust, no longer metal, ancient latticed powder of no use to nature.
‘I will not drown, either,’ he told himself, for he felt, too, that he had ceased to breathe. The only motion in the room, in which dilated time made a puppet-show of mold and rust, was the growth of the blue streaks on the walls, and the steady crowning of the book that sat wet on the wet floor.
What lasted? Bone would outlive muscle. What of fingernails? He stared at the book. How long would language persevere, and when would it be forgotten? He thought of human bodies, and then of other animals, and then plants. Wood was no better than flesh or bone, or tusk, or tooth. No living thing would outlast stone; nothing that had been nourished by sunlight or that had coursed with blood would be any more than dust when cool pebbles still lay quietly in piles on mountaintops. Was life itself the fatal flaw, the dooming touch? What was bone, or muscle?
‘God has grown tired of men,’ Levi thought, as he listened to the barnacles bite slowly and tightly into the floorboards of his kitchen.
Later, he noticed the first black swirl trickle out of the round pile of pages, into the puddle that surrounded it. Slowly, the ink was sucked out of the book, and the water darkened, then the wood beneath it. ‘If I could move,’ thought Levi, ‘I would taste that water.’ The water was dark, and the pages, which had swollen and melted together, had grown lighter, inkless, like a slab of butter.
At a certain moment, consciousness itself crystallized into mere architecture. When the water finally rose carefully over the last step, it entered the room slowly, in a thin, rounded film. It rolled over exposed nails and joined in quick asymmetrical embraces with the puddles that stood in ruts, and when it arrived at the old book the clean mound dissolved without resistance in creamy swirls. Levi, too, succumbed quickly to the rising water, and his powdered bones and paper skin swirled about the room, mere pigments, coloring the water as it overtook the blue mold and sucked up the splinters.
The following morning nothing could be seen of the town. Forty miles west, in a similar town, distant cousins and flushed innkeepers ate candlelit dinners on sturdy tables, while their cattle, with a sudden sense of purpose, blinked dumbly at the hills that rose up against the grey horizon.
Fiction • Fall 2014
He’s got utilization behavior problems, see, and so it’s no surprise to me that Garney is gonna fondle some sweet girl eventually. He’s done it before, even, so it’s not unexpected and far as I know there’s no resolving a mental situation like his, so sometimes he’s gonna automatically fix a spoke with tools no stopping and sometimes he’s gonna fondle a set of breasts and the fallout of the latter situation is where I come in with the mediation business. The former just ends up with useful hands, a fixed spoke and no need for mediation, so seems clear which of them I’d prefer. As they vow.
Fiction • Commencement 2009
I
That night, as they did regularly on Friday evenings, James and Elizabeth made love before going to sleep.
Their bedroom, which Elizabeth had done up, was timidly, tastefully decorated. Next to the window that faced the bed hung a reproduction of a Van Gogh which Elizabeth had purchased after an exhibition at the Museum of Fine Arts. Next to it, in silver frames, their son Adam’s grammar-school efforts were arranged vertically, and a photograph of Adam standing naked with a wiffle bat in his hand stood on James’s dresser. There was a fire place, seldom used, and an electric heater because Elizabeth was frequently cold at night. James kept a night table next to the bed, in which were birthday cards from Adam, old batteries, scraps of paper on which he sometimes wrote down his dreams (“Dad slips on the ice and I just let him fall”), and all of the other indicators a man accumulates which show what he has done and what he has failed to do.
Atop the nightstand was James’s bedside light. He switched it off. Now the room was quiet, dark, the bed inviting and warm. Wordlessly he reached his arm across under the covers, where he knew her body would be waiting for his fingers, his hands, his legs and belly and cock. For this was the baffling wing which kept their marriage aloft—the outboard motor that growled them to harbor each night when sails ripped: no matter what happened during the day, they were in one another’s arms each night with the same passion. Of course he had desired younger women—what man his age hadn’t?—and he had, it was true, sometimes fantasized about his patients. But not the way he desired Elizabeth. And now, with his hot hands cupping her breasts and his lips against the soft, cool skin of her cheek, he was reminded once again of the complexity of the whole situation. That, and how much he looked forward to the sex, complexity be damned.
Gently, skillfully, he kissed down her neck. Did he think about how her body used to be, these evenings when they lay together, a man of 66 and a woman of 55, and made love? How could he avoid remembering? And it was true: he readily made pictures in his mind of his wife’s younger body, the harder belly, firmer breasts and lighter-colored nipples, the wetness between her legs which had come sooner and more completely. Yet he forced himself to be reasonable. His own body no longer worked in the efficient, forceful way that it had when he was young. That was what happened: age set in like a hard, hard frost. You watched yourself get colder and weaker, watched your once-strong limbs wrinkle and lose their agility, were kicked and beaten like a dog, until finally, towards the end, just when you couldn’t believe it would get any worse, any less bearable, it did: and that was death. Boom. Just like that.
“Lizzie,” he said. “Have you been waiting for me to come to bed?”
“I may have been,” she said. “I may have gone to sleep if you hadn’t come in when you did.” They both laughed. All of the things that were ponderously difficult in daylight -- teasing, competing, being vulnerable -- were pure ease when they were in bed together. Sex was easy between them.
“Is that so? I guess you really make the rules around here,” he said.
“Mmmm,” she murmured, and then she took him in her hand. Rather than hurry, as they had when they were younger, James and Elizabeth made love with dilatory patience, they had learned to enjoy the details of each other’s bodies, even though, James thought, their bodies were fast becoming flabby-assed and worthless. How nice it felt to slip himself uncovered into his wife of 28 years! They made love traditionally, with Elizabeth lying on her back and he on top of her. That way, there were no decisions to be made when they went to bed. She pressed her body into his, and with her hands she worked the skin of his back. When he bent his head to lick the impression between her collarbones, he tasted salt, and he could smell his own smell, too, coming from underneath his arms, when he turned his head, and he liked it—the salt and the sweat—because, well, he wasn’t certain why. As a boy, in the schools he attended near his father’s air force bases, he would bathe himself meticulously; he was not one of the boys, even at nine or ten years old, who had to be reprimanded for failing to clean behind his ears. (In fact, he liked it—in the whirling sequence of homes and schools that had made of his boyhood an endless learning and relearning, it had been his body, his own, compact body, which had come to be consistent and familiar. Perhaps this was why, when he showered, he never deviated from his washing routine.) Elizabeth made a wonderful, whimpering sound; he spoke her name.
Sweat. The smell of it, the feeling of it. Flag football outside bases in Virginia, Colorado, the hot wind cold against his damp face as he rode his bicycle through blooming, fragrant fields in optimistic martial towns. Again he brought his lips to her throat, and again the saltiness exhilarated him. They began to crush into one another quicker and more closely, until, without warning, he felt the familiar feeling, the atavistic whorl in his belly which told him that it was about to be over. “Lizzie,” he said. Begging, ragged hat in eager hand, his body shivered against hers. It was happening, he could feel it, and he could feel her own orgasm gathering itself together like summer wind whipping at hot air. Here it came again, that knock-out sound!
As a young woman, she had come self-consciously, as though surprised by the way her body responded to his. Now she was older, the shame didn’t matter. And god, that sound, that sound. The whorl in his belly tightened, until, finally, it raveled unbearably and, just as quickly, unraveled; everything ran out of him. A moment later, Elizabeth drew her breath deep into her lungs, cried out, and fell back against the bed, her muscles loosened and her eyes closed. “Oh, baby doll,” he said.
In the bathroom afterwards, washing his face and fixing his pajamas, he felt in his hands a kind of blood-spun throb. Again they were no longer the hands of an old man, but the powerful implements of a youth, filled and animated with marvelous liquid from his old, pathetic heart.
One week later he was diagnosed with prostate cancer. He received a call from Adam, who sounded concerned.
“Champ!”
“Hi, Dad,” said Adam.
“So. Mom told you what’s happening? My goddamn prostate is eating me alive.”
“What are you talking about? When did you find this out?”
“I went in for a PSA last Thursday, because my cardiologist recommended it. I am sixty-six, you see, so I am at elevated risk. Now the cardiologist, having nothing to do with my prostate, did some blood work, and the PSA came back higher than it ought to be. Four days later, here I am. They’re doing another blood work-up, then I have an MRI this afternoon. Dr. Blumenthal says he should know by Wednesday morning whether it’s wise to operate. He said it doesn’t seem to have spread, so a short surgery should take care of it.”
Adam knew his father’s medical history as a cautionary tale against which doctors annually compared the workings of his own body. But in crisis his father always chose the most clinical language possible, which led Adam to feel, when James talked about his heart problems or, now, a high PSA, as though they weren’t talking about James’s body or even Adam’s but about a third, hypothetical body, which contained cholesterol plaque rather than a heart and produced seminal fluid rather than come.
“And if it has spread,” Adam said, “what then?”
“Well, then we’ll deal with that problem. It really is an easy surgery, you know. They remove the prostate in what are called ‘frozen sections,’ making biopsies as they go.” James had a deep and longstanding appreciation of advancements made by the medical profession, even though he himself had practiced psychology and knew nothing of the human anatomy. “If it hasn’t spread beyond the prostate itself, then they take it out and I survive.”
“Listen, dad, I’ll be on the next bus to Sweet Haven.”
“You will not come home for this. In two weeks, when I’m all better, Liz and I will come to Montreal, like we planned. That’s when I want to see you, and not before. What’s going on here is not really life-threatening surgery.”
“Are you sure? I would come down in a heartbeat.”
“I’m sure,” James said. His voice sounded confident, comfortable.
“I love you, dad. Can’t wait to see you in a few weeks.”
“Love you too, champ. Thank you for calling.”
James put the phone back in the breast pocket of his sport jacket, along with his money clip and his two-by-two-inch leather book of photographs. It was only six in the evening, still too early to go to the bar for a drink, and so he spent an hour rearranging furniture in the small office that he’d made for himself in the back room of his house. He switched the Matisse collage with the print of Paul Klee, then switched them back. He gave the squat Moroccan cushion a kick with the tip of his shoe, to move it further from the armchair, then sat down on the floor with his back against the wall and put his head in his hands and wept inconsolably for half an hour, brushing the tears away roughly, angrily, with the heels of his hands.
At this moment, James wanted nothing more deeply than the company of his son Adam. How truly stupid he had been on the phone a moment ago. If he died in surgery, and Adam heard of it over the phone from Elizabeth, what then? To what end would he have prevented his only son from returning to Sweet Haven to see him through departure on what might be his final journey into anesthesia? Yet if he made it through alright, and really did come to Montreal in only three weeks’ time, how proud he would feel to have exhibited such bravery and composure before his wife and son!
Inside his the closet hung a full-length mirror. Now he rose and went to it and lifted up his shirt. A thicket of black and white hairs sprung into view. He had seen the diagrams in Dr. Blumenthal’s office; he knew that four inches back from the root of his penis cells were dividing maniacally at fantastic, exponential rates. Hating his body, and frightened of it, he had the urge to reach his hand through his stomach and rip the bloody red gland out with his fist. James wondered whether every sick man felt this way about the horrible organ which was the source of his affliction, and it occurred to him that surgery was simply the realization of the desire to bite off the trapped paw, to rip out the failing liver or lung or kidney and once more be uncontaminated by disease.
Inside his desk drawer, his copy of *Anna Karenina* waited for him. He had only made it half-way through before giving up, but he remembered a particular passage which he had been wanting to consult since first hearing the diagnosis. James took it out and flipped to page 461:
He knew that for this, for the very fact that his heart was torn with grief, they would be merciless to him. He felt that men would crush him as dogs strangle a torn dog yelping with pain. He knew that his sole means of security against people was to hide his wounds from them, and instinctively he tried to do this for two days, but now he felt incapable of keeping up the unequal struggle.
This had struck James hard. He agreed with Tolstoy when he said, “His sole means of security against people was to hide his wounds from them,” but then he disagreed when he said, “He felt incapable of keeping up the unequal struggle.” Wasn’t everyone hiding their wounds from everyone else? What was so goddamn unequal about it?
Even thinking rationally like this calmed him. There were other things in his office as well which took his mind off his traitorous prostate. For instance: the keys to Adam’s 26th birthday gift lay in the drawer next to Anna Karenina. A strong, beautiful stallion emblazoned the head of the silver key, and in James’s garage the red 1967 Mustang awaited its hour. He’d found it online for only $19,700 – not too bad now that Elizabeth’s restaurant was doing well. For months he’d spent afternoons with the car, redoing the paint job entirely by himself and fixing the roof and cleaning the engine. Nearly every day he considered keeping the car for himself, but a Mustang in the hands of a young man who was just starting out was a powerful thing. He wanted Adam to have it, with no strings attached, and be free.
When he came home from his walk, Elizabeth was waiting for him in the kitchen, holding a cup of coffee with two hands.
“Adam called me today,” he said. “I told him that I didn’t want him to come home.”
“I think you’re being silly,” she said, “but if that’s what you want…”
“What I’m afraid of is that when I’m in surgery they will find cancer cells on the surface,” he said. “Then I’ll wake up and hear the bad news. It sounds as though that hormone therapy is really a death sentence. He said that some people decide to do nothing, they just do ‘watchful waiting.’ There’s a euphemism if I ever heard one.”
“Either way, I will be there next to you when you wake up.”
“I think the surgery is the best thing. Radiation has too many side effects. I’m old fashioned, Liz; I said to him, ‘Let’s just go in and get it out.’”
“That’s what I would do too, honey,” she said.
“Do you want to eat something? I made a roast chicken.”
When they had eaten, and finished a bottle of wine between them, James and Elizabeth went upstairs to the bedroom. That night they made love as though it were the last time. It would really be a shame, he thought, never to feel this way again.
On Wednesday morning Elizabeth woke him up at four and drove him to the hospital. He was hungry, because the doctors had prohibited him from eating dinner on Tuesday, and he sat upright in the passenger seat with his hands in his lap, trying to keep his breathing even. What happened next he would remember only in shreds, in the feeling of the blue gown tied around his back and the look of the florescent lights above him when the anesthesiologist administered the shot. Then nothing. The operation would take four hours.
When he came to his mouth was dry, and he asked for a glass of water. Elizabeth was there, smiling. “Everything is fine,” she said. “They got it all.”
But everything was not fine. Though he may have been, as Dr. Blumenthal told him, a very lucky man, he had not escaped prostate cancer entirely unscathed. The in-surgery biopsies had revealed cancer cells dangerously close to the surface of the prostate, and the urologist had decided to remove both neurovascular bundles rather than only one, as they had discussed before the operation. James Loveland would be impotent from now on. “Both?” he said. He was still groggy from the anesthesia but his eyes sprung open and he drew a hard breath. He could barely get it out: “More water, please. Cold water, if you have it.” But he was thinking: no, no, no, no, please, no.
What is there to do in a hospital bed, such as the one in which James found himself for three days after his surgery, when you’ve turned the lights out for the night? What is there to do if you can’t sleep? If, even when you can, your terrible dream comes back, same as it was when you were a young man? James Loveland woke at 2, 3, 4, 5 a.m., furious with himself for arriving late and missing the train. It took him a moment, whenever he woke up, to remember where he was and why he was there. It took him a moment to remember that he would never know what sex was like again. What would he have done differently if he’d known that sixty-six was to be his unlucky year?
James tried to remember the women he’d slept with as a young man. The list with pitifully small, and he found it difficult to retrieve details -- particular beds, bodies, smells. He’d always assumed he would have more.
II
In November, Adam went to visit his father. It really was an incredible inconvenience; Zoe, his girlfriend, hadn’t wanted him to come.
The taxi shivered up the driveway, crunching down leaves from the oak, elm, dogwood, beech and maple. He slammed the door and shouldered his overnight bag, then walked up the curving brick path to the front door. It was after ten in the evening. He pressed the gold button. From inside its white plastic housing on the kitchen wall, the electric doorbell rang. It had been one of Adam’s first lessons in carpentry and electronics to replace, as an eight-year-old boy, the family’s old tube-and-hammer doorbell with a speaker box.
A moment later, light spilled from the old iron fixture beside the door. James always turned the outdoor light on first, in part because he liked to identify his guests before being identified himself, and in part because he mistakenly considered it a courtesy to blast them with light while the vestibule was still in darkness. Adam imagined him standing in his slippered feet on the cold blue tile of the vestibule, cinching his robe more tightly around his waist. “Coming!” he called from inside. More lights came on. “Coming.” His voice was louder now, and the deadbolt burrowed into the side of the door. Adam was determined to stay only one day. He knew that if he lingered in Sweet Have too long, he might return to Montreal and find Zoë gone. His father’s voice called again. “Adam Sidney?”
“Hi, dad.”
It opened. “Adam!” His father’s arms had some of the old strength back, Adam could feel it when they embraced. “Boy, it’s cold out here. Come inside. I’ll make you a drink.”
The house was cold, too, because James, to save money, refused to run the heat higher than was absolutely necessary for the survival of biological organisms. It seemed to Adam that a man recovering from cancer might want his house heated to a reasonable temperature in autumn, but he resolved to say nothing; it had been six years since he’d lived in Sweet Haven—it was time to let the setting on the thermostat go unremarked.
“Why don’t we visit in the kitchen,” James said. “It’s cozy in there.”
“Is mom home?”
“She’s at work. What would you like? I’m having bourbon.”
“Bourbon’s fine.”
“We have so much to talk about! Here; I know you take ice. Sit down. So, tell me what’s up.” James pronounced “what’s up” as two separate words.
“Dad. I’m sorry we didn’t have much time together in Montreal. Is everything okay? It’s only been two months since the surgery.”
His father shifted in his seat. “That long? It feels like ages ago now.”
Neither man wanted to laugh; both laughed.
“Not ages, dad, only a little while. What do the doctors say?”
“Well Blumenthal refuses to say I’m cured, you see, he says we need to wait years to be certain. But I feel fine. Everything works almost like normal. Lizzie told you about what happened, I bet.”
“Mom didn’t tell me anything.”
“Of course she didn’t,” James said. The kitchen windows were black mirrors; Adam could see himself, holding his drink, reflected above his father’s head.
“What’s wrong? Did it spread?”
“No, no, no, no. They got it all.” His father shivered underneath his robe. It was too much for Adam: “Will you please turn the heat up, dad? If you don’t turn the fucking heat on then I’m going to leave.” Then, thinking his father might be more likely to act if he could preserve his dignity, he added: “I’m really getting cold.”
James shuffled across the room and turned the dial reluctantly to the right. In the basement, the furnace gasped. Then, rather than return to the table, he busied himself with an unnecessary inspection of the thermostat while he said, “They took out both neurovascular bundles. My”—he paused, looking for words, facing away from Adam—“my evening schedule has been considerably freed up.” James looked up from the thermostat. “It may take a few minutes before we get the benefit of it,” he said. “Would you like to make a fire with me? The living room can be much cozier with a good fire going.”
“Sure. Let’s make a fire.”
“We have plenty of kindling,” said James, leading the way to the living room.
When they had it burning, they sat close to the wire screen. Adam was gratified to see that his father no longer shivered. “I’m sorry, dad,” he said.
“Me too. It’s a hell of a thing.” He repeated, more to himself than to Adam: “A hell of a thing.”
“What time will mom be home?”
“She may be out late tonight,” said James. “But hey—now that you’re warm, I have something to show you. Something to give you.” He rubbed his hands together with eagerness, got up from the couch and left the room. So his own father—the father whose genes he carried—couldn’t make love. And now his mother was out at work? At 1am? Then James’s quick, slippered steps.
“This is something I’ve been working on for a long time. I know your birthday is still two weeks away, but who knows if you’ll be home for it, so tonight’s the night.” From across the room, he tossed Adam a small black box. Adam caught it in one hand. “Open it,” he said.
It was a silver key with a stallion on the head. “Come. I’ll show you what it does.” The garage was separated from the house by a small cobblestone path, which, like the driveway, lay under leaves. “Wait here,” said James, and raised up the overhead door. A shining red Mustang—probably 1966 or ’67—crouched in the dim light. “It’s for you. Isn’t it something? I’ve been restoring it. Start it up: listen to it!”
Adam had never owned a car before. When he turned the key, it purred beautifully.
“Dad, this is incredible! I can’t believe you did this.”
James was obviously pleased. “You see?” he said. “You can go anywhere. And this way you can come and visit me anytime you want. If you want, that is. No buses, no planes—you just get in and go. It’s a beautiful drive through New Hampshire if you cut through the White Mountain pass.”
“I’m sure it is,” said Adam. “We’ll have to go out in it sometime.”
“I thought tomorrow we could take a drive.”
“Tomorrow I can’t; I really have to get back to Zoë. I only meant to come for a night, to make sure you were doing okay.”
If James was hurt, he hid it well. “Yes, go back, definitely. Another time. And by the way: when you do go back, give this to Zoë. She’ll like it.” It was a photograph of him as a baby, which he had seen a thousand times, blown up the size of a postcard. “You want me to give Zoë a photo of myself?”
“Trust me,” said James. “She’ll love it.”
“Dad, are you sure you feel well? If mom isn’t going to be around that much, maybe you should get someone to come in once in a while. To clean up and all that.”
“I’m only sixty-six years old, Adam,” James said. “I’m not dead yet. So tell me more about Zoë.”
Adam told his father. It took a long time to explain everything; at four in the morning they were still going, talking and drinking together as though they were brothers. They stayed up until Elizabeth’s car came up the drive. Then they went upstairs and said goodnight, like brothers do.
Adam knew that his lover would be there for him when he got back to Montreal.
Poetry • Winter 2014 - Trial
That the sequelae of
such love has no
such effect can’t change
a bit where here
we are in this
coarse mood swing’s doldrums.
Tense is the season
where time usurps a
ginger snap, tachycardia enlists
the wrong man to
the job of whatever
job this really is—
a flank of venison
that outputs offshoots erratically
in tempered limb drop.
I fake back pain
and conceive of highjinks
suited to the rondure
of a crystal lapis
conference umbrella. There, love,
the park menu awaits.
Chilly denizens of fairy
bedtime stories do breaststrokes
in the heat of
fair espousal, gender removal,
plus and minus bargaining.
You must not love
me now nor ever
again says the creatine
injection with suave inflection.
Denuded for the evening,
suffering Bell’s Palsy, honored
by the draping hard-on
in the wind’s backtalk,
we settle up our
score and make way
on immobile yachts high
above the derby tides.
You move with prolix
spasms, inflated misdemeanors, even
a ringlet of pewter
that you place in
glass ashtrays for mother.
Today and tomorrow are
not polyandrous—in fact
suffrage comes in bins
on liners from token
deposits of a rough
Neanderthal mandarin. Oranges. Stencil
stashes. Sigh. Exhale. Scoop
the muscle tissue contraction
that has too its
Indo-European roots—we
all do, you know.
We all do. Yet
love has channeled the
age’s decorum into a
rare late-hour affect.
Pudgy bottom trawlers, all
of us and them.
When was it one
first heard the spray
at the back of
the throat that clicked
its graceshaped cap in
some kind of rhomboidal
romp? I don’t know.
O, verily, I don’t.
BP has continued setting
out its continued commitment
to environmental restoration efforts
in the Gulf region
despite the company’s legal
challenge to the misinterpretation
of the settlement’s agreement
with the Plaintiffs’ Steering
Committee. Arousal. Keystone Light.
Flick me with the
teeth of your smile
in the patchy dust
rigger you call home
my positive legacy love.
From small denomination bills
a wad is born.
And, your Highness, to
my utter amazement’s grotesque
patience, at least $4
billion donations a year
await gas development plans.
It’s Labor Day, 1935.
A tropical cyclone plunks
down its bushy arms
in Floridian climes, alas.
A flood burgeons its
safe bet, breaks its
belt, a statewide panic
claims anonymous residents lost
in their casual historicity.
Fire. Tornado outbreak. Exploitation.
Silicosis at Coconut Grove.
Explosion in Texas City.
Dam failure: Santa Clarita.
You can keep stemming
the laundry lists of
American disasters privately, which
is to say morosely,
or you can do
so in this poem
and be judged for
it—rightly?—I think.
USS *Indianapolis* goes
down—near Guam—direct
action (military)—drowning, shark
attack, hypothermia, 879 people
taken. The conceit is
plain, now, it exists
on a plain now.
A plane called Now.
Part of the tragedy
of dying in a
tragedy is losing one’s
dignity, one’s right to
personal, exclusive mourning—a
myth, yes, but one
we’d like not to
have robbed in front
of our very faces.
Rubbed out, the smokestack
plantation mill burned down
in the mudslide with
surprising caution, the witnesses,
onlookers, townsfolk, germs. Considerate.
It’s time. That terrible
time again. The scene
in the movie where
they must go and
part—and we’re not
even really sure the
tenuity of their... Bored
people are cruel because
now comes the momentum
of last resort. Hell
and habitude incurred by
salesgirls with failed aplomb,
pulling, milling, mulling, pilling.
I try to get
you to talk to
me and prop you
up and stuff you
with projected imagined speech.
The charming part is
you do not speak
even then what I
want you to—and
this is called something.
Junior jurors run away.
The fact seems to
be, however, a bullet—
a heart attack, company
dinners, unrelated fifteenths trying
to begin the enterprise
quite. Too many call
this something—this resort—
I try to get
even then what I—
resilient green and shaky
the lives lengthen custodial
bliss, worthwhile forays, unsaid.
Like the Jewish homosexuals
in Proust, we were
poison-ivy heroes, forgotten
on outer limits, played
badly by cameo Demerol
memorials. Is it right
for the dim vision
before me to salute
the end of my
qualities with a glass
of gin? Sometimes, your
voice, an imitation, a
thing said, a point,
is enough to let
gentle nature have its
most ungentle way. The
thriller is ending.
The thriller has ended.
The thrills are gone.
Most profound and subtle sense
be with me, tonight—
my love has evacuated
their sentimental fluids in
borrowed clothes from another
generation—one I hear
about so often, never
see, and this makes
me very lonely, depraved,
abject, foregone, a wasp
and wisp and gasp
with lisp. The cusp
of my love is
love, I think. A
kind of Calvinism in
reverse, if you think
about it. Love, goodnight.




