Posts tagged ‘god’

July 1st, 2010

See You on the Other Side of the Fence

Priest’s off to the disco and dean’s asleep
The age has its calling
You tell me there aint gonna be a better chance
We’re but to make it past the sentry
And over the fence a solid plan still
A plan to spoil
These post pubescent flings left but
A dent upon the membrane of daily
Parceled rational
With all its harmonic pell-mell
I did manage to pick up
Some wisdom along the way old gal
Albeit empirical observation would
Have chaos prevail over law
Now days I often find myself considering
That which I did not
Hesitate to discard before
Minute additions to the hoarded repetition
Reckon it all gone south with the
Arrival of the soter shouldn’t have
God instead of son had had a daughter
From atop crest of the useless
Hill the dwellers of sequestered within descend
Towards the cowards’ den eternal
Woman enlightened man

Alex, 28, Bellevue Washington.

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March 17th, 2010

Staggering Toward Nirvana

Eva had been dead for twenty years before Joaquin got to La Tierra Sangre. By the time he got there, she was nothing but a bare, yellowed skeleton, leaning against the top of her husband Castaneda’s piano in their old bar called Nirvana, across from the town water tower. Castaneda put small wreaths of flowers on her head and wrapped her shoulders with the same shawl she had been buried with, the same shawl that had the small black hole seared into the back of it. It was illegal in that county to exhume the dead but nobody ever ratted Castaneda out; the sheriff who came in for a drink more often then he took his gun out of the holster never even brought it up.
Joaquin was the first to mention it. He had started working at Nirvana in December and through the winter, he said nothing. He watched Castaneda change the flowers and fix the shawl, whisper to the skeleton when he sat at the piano yet never played, stare at the holes broken into the skull from the time and the weather; Joaquin just watched until one evening in March when he asked Nicandro. Nicandro was a local who seemed to be close to Castaneda and spent more money and time then he should have in Nirvana. When Joaquin brought up the skeleton across the room, Nicandro looked over at the piano then back to the mirror above the bar.
“What bones, kid?’ Nicandro drawled. “All I see over there is Eva.”
“There’s a skeleton, lying against the piano. You don’t see it? How much have you had today?”
Nicandro leaned forward. “I’m telling you this now because I like you some. Don’t bring this up no more. Ya hear? All I see over there is Eva and after a little while, that’s all y’all see too. Just good ol’ Eva.”
Joaquin left it at that and went back to pouring drinks. He wasn’t happy with the answer but Nicandro knew everything and wasn’t going to tell him any of it. Castaneda was the worst person to ask since all he seemed to do was speak in vibrations and nod to the loyal customers who praised his mescal. Joaquin was sure he was a drunk too though he never saw him go behind the bar but Joaquin knew that men like that just had to be drunks, that’s how they made it through life. Same for the workers and farmers he saw everyday; they don’t know any better, he figured. They were simple to him.
Eventually, Joaquin got the nerve to ask some other customers about the skeleton. All of them either warned him not to say anything about it around Castaneda or they made a joke and told him to pour them another.
One man said, “Why ya askin’ about her, kid? Think she’s pretty?” The man laughed boldly. “Eh, too skinny for me.”
As Joaquin was cleaning up, he noticed the man walk over toward the piano. He looked around quickly as if searching for ghosts then whispered to the skeleton, “I didn’t mean no disrespect by that, mi moreno. I was only playin’.” Then he touched the bones that he had undoubtedly once felt through tissue and ropes of veins.
Joaquin watched this, sensing something tighten in his chest. He was a logical young man, he had gone to school and learned about subjects these rural work mules couldn’t even pronounce so this made no sense to him, this was simply crazy superstition of some kind. Even still, with all his logic and his schooling, Joaquin felt goose bumps crawl up his back.
The man left presently, letting go of the yellowing ivory, staggering out the door, whose hinges were broken, leaving the golden and red painted wood hanging at an angle. Joaquin thought about fixing it for Castaneda, maybe getting a whole new door instead of one with peeling patterns that looked like a bloodstain on the surface of the sun. I’ll surprise the old man, Joaquin figured. Then maybe he’ll talk to me a bit.
He got some new hinges from the hardware store and bought a door that would swing when someone pushed it. As he was starting to take the old one down, Nicandro walked up and leaned against the carved sign above the bar.
“Fixing the door?”
Joaquin nodded. Nicandro took a flask out of his pocket and unscrewed it. “Best damn mescal around.” He offered it to Joaquin who refused it. “Dios mio, ya got no idea what you’re missin’.”
“I don’t need to know. I’ve got no use for any of that.” He managed to get the first hinge off. “I don’t need altered states.”
Nicandro took Joaquin’s arm quickly. “Kid, don’t take down that door. I’m pretty sure you’re trying to do something nice here but it ain’t gonna work.”
“What are you talking about? I’m fixing the bar to help-”
“No, I know ya think ya are but it’s gonna get you in a whole lotta trouble. Listen to me, niño. Castaneda wants this door to stay.”
“But it’s broken.”
“He wants this door to stay.”
There was a sudden rush of air out of the bar, a river that blew dust against legs and shook the hair next to Joaquin’s face. Joaquin tried to take a breath but he could get nothing in him. He felt a vacuum where his lungs were supposed to be then mounting pressure as Castaneda appeared out of some shadowy corner in the back, dark skin visibly burning, his shoulders straight, mouth frothing. Joaquin dropped the hammer by his foot as Castaneda got closer, and for the first time, he looked his boss directly in the eyes.
“What the hell are ya doing?” Castaneda shouted. “Who told you to take this door down?”
“Nobody,” Joaquin said trying desperately to breathe in. “Nobody told me to. I was trying to help.”
Castaneda’s voice sent shocks into the ground. The dirt under Joaquin’s toes turned to dust and a snake breeched the land between his legs. It stared up at him for a moment then curled over his foot and moved away.
“Don’t touch this door, ya sonofa bitch. Ya hear me?” Joaquin nodded. “Ya got something to say for yaself, ya li’l bastard?”
“I didn’t know you had blue eyes,” Joaquin stammered. He recoiled, waiting for Castaneda to hit him but the man just walked away, back into his shadows.
Nicandro laughed. When Joaquin had stopped shaking, he glared over at him. Nicandro laughed harder at the wide-eyed expression. He picked up the hammer and put it back in Joaquin’s hand.
“I told ya, kid, just leave it be.”
Joaquin walked back inside, his spine stiff and straight. He was too nervous to speak or cough. He was behind the bar before he took another breath.
“What was that? What did I do?”
Nicandro took a seat at the bar. He waited for Joaquin to pour him a shot of mescal before he started talking.
“Ya know what this place was, probably before you were born, years and years ago? We used to do peyote in here. The whole damn town did. Then again, town back then was a whole lot smaller.” He drank the mescal and smiled. “Castaneda always had the best peyote too.”
“He used to serve people peyote?”
“Well, he opened this place before there wasn’t much else so he grew hisself a garden of peyote that the chicanos and the Indians around here were always trying to get into so he started selling it to protect it. I musta been younger than you first time I came in here. Hell, I musta been about fourteen, I guess.”
“Castaneda opened this place when you were fourteen? How old is he? I thought you two were the same age.”
Nicandro leaned back into his stool. “Listen, kid, ya don’t get to ask questions.” He glanced over his shoulder. “I gotta say, I dunno if ya’ll ever get this place. This might just be a waste of my breath.”
“What wouldn’t I get?”
Nicandro folded his chapped hands together, closed his eyes, lined and tired, and leaned his head against the pyramid of his fingers.
“There’s a lot here that can’t be explained, there’s a lot here that I don’t even understand. Now, I know kids like you and ya just ain’t gonna believe the sights we seen. Ya just too damned smart to believe in a buncha horseshit stories.”
Joaquin turned his back to Nicandro, frustrated and still sore from being yelled at by Castaneda. He began to rearrange the bottles that leaned against the mirror. Something out of focus crossed his vision and he raised his head. Beyond his own reflection, he saw the empty eyes of Eva staring back at him. She had her elbow bent against the piano and her chin propped up against her hand. Joaquin could swear she was smiling but her loose jaw dangled open, a full mouth of teeth bared. He spun on his heels, hoping the mirror was reflecting light, playing games on him, but when he faced Eva, she was still gazing with open orifices, directly at him.
“Nicandro, what the hell is going on? That skeleton is looking at me.”
Nicandro glanced over at Eva. He didn’t laugh the way Joaquin had hoped he would. Instead, he walked to the piano and lowered his face to the skeletal eyes.
“Hello there, mi moreno,” he sighed. “I knew the kid wouldn’t get this place.” He stood upright and crossed back to the bar, talking over his shoulder as he went. “You look very lovely today, Eva. Some of your friends should be coming by soon.”
Outside, clouds the color of wine began to gather, casting crimson shadows along the ground. A young girl in a pale pink dress stood underneath one and reached her hand upward.
“What is she doing?” Joaquin pointed out the window. Nicandro walked toward the door and leaned out to her.
“Mi corazon, chiquita, it’s too early for that!”
The girl shook her head rapidly. “It’s March, Nicandro. You’re always telling me what to do. Since the day I met you, viejo.”
“Fine then. If you won’t listen to reason-”
The girl smiled and stood up on to her tiptoes. With one long finger, she punctured a low hanging cloud above her then stepped off to the side as a stream of scarlet flooded out into the ground. The dirt and sand swelled as the clouds deflated, rivers of red beading and snaking through the granules next to her feet. When the last of it had been absorbed, she looked at Nicandro and smirked.
“I know better than you do, viejo.” She pointed at her chest, right above her heart. “This is me. Go get drunk!”
Joaquin was standing next to the window, face to the glass, following the valleys and brooks the bright downpour had traced under the sand. He had seen that girl around before, the town was pretty small, but this was the first time he noticed her. She was darker than anyone else he had seen, black hair and skin that looked like the center of flame. Her eyes were light, he had never gotten close enough to see what color they were. As she walked away, Joaquin was aware of how old her steps were, every footprint looking a little too big for her.
This was not the first time he had seen something in that town that took him by surprise but this was the first time that he couldn’t deny it. In January, after the New Year, he could swear he saw an old man sitting on top of the water tower, hugging his arms around himself and singing a lullaby. Later, when he looked up to see if he was still there, he saw a baby on all fours perched above the town. He called the other people in the bar over to the window but the baby was gone as they looked out.
“Hey, niño, this might be too strong for you,” Nicandro told him, raising his flask. “How’s a baby get on the water tower?”
Joaquin convinced himself he saw some sort of mirage or maybe someone had slipped him a little liquor when he wasn’t looking. Either way, he ignored the doubt he suddenly felt and the urge he had to buy a train ticket home. It was too late to go back; that bridge had been burnt.
It had only been a few months but Joaquin knew that his family was done with him. The night he left, he passed his sister sitting on the porch on the way out. She was rolling a cigarette and staring off into the city in the distance. She could see the shadows of the buildings, the fading lights, the sin, the excitement, all the terrible and wonderful things that could happen to her there. As her brother stepped off the porch, she hardly even turned to look at him.
“He’ll probably find you.”
“No, he won’t even look for me.”
“They found me.”
“It was different.”
His sister licked the cigarette then leaned toward the candle next to the window and lit the end.
“Different.”
“He had to look for his daughter. What the hell does he care about his son?”
She shook her head. Her shoulders sloped, she looked older than he had ever seen her. Two years before hand, she had run away to New York and in less than six months, their father had tracked her down, had her arrested, and brought her home.
“He doesn’t even have to care. He’s going to look for you because he spent so much money on you, you’re his, you’re property.” She inhaled. “That’s all we are to him.”
As she exhaled, those stories she had held in her lungs and under her tongue seem to curl out with the smoke, snaking away from her lips, trying in vain to reach someone else’s ears. The scent of her cigarette dissipated into the blackness, the darkness, falling short of the metropolis they could watch still pulsing slowly. Joaquin saw everything inside that smoke, he saw her running from the police, drinking, tearing off her dress, and jumping on to trains. He saw a man who must have loved her and he saw his sister refusing to be what he expected her to be. He saw her vitality, her energy, and he saw it dissolve into the broken girl keeping watch over the sex and the sin of the cities, her guard station, her lookout, her fetters.
Without addressing her, he said goodbye. He left her there, left her as nothing but a shell, silent and shattered. But Joaquin thought he had it figured out. He didn’t want the wild nights, the debauchery and the insanity his sister had searched for. He was looking for an escape out of his father’s plan for him. He just didn’t want to exist in that house any longer.
But the reality of the world he had entered slipped through his fingers as he watched the sand shift and the sun burn red and yellow on to everything, the people around him eyes glowed and changed and more and more, Joaquin felt his ability to think and to reason run out of him like blood.
He attempted to rationalize everything he saw, the woman who seemed to raise the ground when she inhaled or the man who cried clean water when he sat in a mud puddle that slowly dried up around him. Joaquin pretended not to notice any of this.
Nicandro acted like Joaquin was crazy whenever he brought anything up. He would shrug as the questions came then say, “I thought ya were supposed to be smart. Go figure it out.”
Joaquin, embarrassed that he was being ridiculed by a common laborer, decided that everything he saw was just a side effect of fatigue or the dryness of the desert. Back at home, he never worked and the city didn’t seem as hot as that little town. They were in areas less than an few hours apart by train, separated by a handful of army outposts, a river, and a sense of the absurd. At some point, Joaquin assumed he had inhaled enough fumes from the mescal that he was starting to see things.
There was more to that town then he could explain; he knew that. One evening, a woman sat down at the bar and stared over Joaquin’s head.
“Castaneda here?” she asked, her voice so thick and smoky it shocked Joaquin when he heard it.
“Yes,” he answered lowly. “But he’s in the back.”
The woman locked eyes with him. “Go get him. Tell him Esperanza’s here to see him.”
Joaquin didn’t move. The woman looked old, her face heavily lined, her hair gray but her eyes were clear and pure and they absorbed Joaquin’s energy into them. He felt paralyzed, his body out of his command.
When he didn’t move, the woman leaned forward and snarled, “Go, you li’l bastard.”
“Don’t say that to him, Esperanza,” came the vibrations from behind her. “Who taught you to be so rude?”
Esperanza turned to face Castaneda, standing with his arms crossed over his chest. His expression was strange, endearingly bothered by her presence. She smiled at him gently and stood up. When they were side by side, Joaquin realized how much older she looked.
“Hi papa,” she said. “You’re not too happy to see me, huh?”
Castaneda put a hand on her shoulder but didn’t move toward his daughter. He nodded slightly then told her, “you’re practically an old woman now.”
“Not all of us are as lucky as you, papa,” she replied then stepped forward to hug him but Castaneda pushed her away.
“I haven’t forgiven you yet. She needed you, Esperanza.”
“But I couldn’t have stopped it, why don’t you understand that? You were here, you saw it happen. You were supposed to be the muscle of this town, the mighty Juan Pedro and even you couldn’t stop it.”
Castaneda took his hand off her shoulder. “That’s how you talk to your father? Look at me, Esperanza. The muscle of this town? If I could die right now I would but I haven’t even got the muscle in my hand to pull the trigger.”
“I don’t want to have this fight with you. I wanted to talk to you again. Before…” She trailed off.
“Before you die,” Castaneda finished for her. “See now, we’ve talked. You can rest easy if your guilt will let you.”
Esperanza turned back to the bar and sat down. “Never mind then, forget it. I’m gonna get good and drunk if you don’t mind.”
Castaneda watched her for a moment then nodded. “As long as you can pay.” He walked away as Esperanza started to cry. Joaquin gave her a shot of mescal. She laughed through a whimper then downed it.
“Do you know what that man used to be like?” she asked. “Do you know how much he loved me and my mother?”
Joaquin shook his head. He ignored the fact that Eva sat up. She was listening to her daughter, leaning forward with each word.
“Can I get you some more?” he asked.
Esperanza threw a handful of bills on the bar. “A lot more actually.” She looked over at Eva who stared back at her. Somehow, their eyes connected; Joaquin could see that. “Look at my mother. Look at what he’s doing to her. Do you know why he hates me? Because her blood ran through my fingers. I tried to hold it in but I couldn’t.”
“You tried to hold her blood in?”
“My mother was shot one night,” she explained, running her fingers around the rim of the glass. Joaquin refilled it promptly. “No one from this town did it, they were just Indians running through here. Everyone in this town used to fear my father.”
Eva put her head down on the piano. Joaquin pretended a draft had shaken her and caused her neck to bend.
“How can he be your father? You look older than he does.”
Esperanza paused. She took no offense to the statement. She smiled almost coyly. “You haven’t been here long, have you niño?” Her hands folded into her lap, she straightened her back. “That man hasn’t aged a day since my mother got shot.”
As delicate as crystal and as weathered as her skin, Esperanza stood up and went to Eva’s side. Eva didn’t move. “I tried to bury you, mama. He wouldn’t let me.” She wrapped the shawl tighter around Eva’s shoulders. “Dios mio, he won’t even take down that door.” She pointed to the entrance of the bar. “See niño, that’s where she got shot.”
Joaquin shuddered as he stared at the rust colored blemish, hoping that she was lying but knowing she wasn’t.
“The men who shot her. Did Castaneda catch them?”
Esperanza didn’t answer. She let go of Eva. Joaquin pretended he couldn’t see that Eva’s hand tried to hold on to her daughter for just another moment.
“Thank you for the mescal,” Esperanza said to Joaquin though she couldn’t take her eyes off Eva. “I don’t think papa wants to see me here anymore.” She kissed the top of Eva’s skull then walked toward that door that hung crooked off the hinges. She walked heavy and old, disappearing into the desert like a glint of sun against the glass in the sand.
Castaneda never said a word to Joaquin about Esperanza showing up that day, desolate and tired. Joaquin wondered if he had imagined the entire thing. He was beginning to doubt his senses, his sanity seemed strangely finite.
The first night that he really thought he was hallucinating was also the night Castaneda actually addressed him, man to man. It was raining a lot more than it was supposed to and the customers were watching it thoughtfully. Castaneda was sitting at the piano, sending vibrations into Eva’s absent marrow.
“Hey Castaneda,” a young laborer called from the bar. “I heard this place used to have the best peyote.”
Castaneda raised his head to face the man. The other customers were still staring out at the rain. Castaneda stood up, and Joaquin could swear he felt the entire room contract into itself then release.
“This place had peyote so good, you’d talk to god, niño,” one of the older men told the laborer. “I met my wife because of his peyote.”
“I’d have to say that’s a damn lie,” the laborer said back. “I’d love to try some though.”
“Damn lie? Boy, you don’t know a thing about it. I was sittin’ right here and it was raining right out there and there were so many people in this place, you couldn’t get a breath in. See, before then, I would never set foot outside in the rain ‘cause I’ve seen it come down red and I don’t give a damn what that little girl says, it ain’t good, it looks wicked.”
“You’re a bit soft, viejo,” the laborer interrupted. “Me, I work in the rain, no matter what the color.”
“I don’t care about you, I care about me.” The older man leaned toward the young laborer and stared into his eyes. “Red rain just ain’t good. But I went outside because the peyote made me feel like nothing could hurt me and all of this-” he motioned to everything inside and outside the bar- “this was something I was a part of, understand niño? I was connected to it like veins and muscle. Outside, everything was pulling me in so many directions I was sure I was goin’ to tear apart into pieces then I heard a girl whisper to me. I heard it, through the rain and the crowd, I heard it like she had her hand on my shoulder but she was kneeling in the street, out there in the mud and do you know what she was doing?”
“Tell us viejo. What was the girl doing?”
“She was praying. She wasn’t praying for strength or to make peace with god. She told me she was praying to her lungs, thanking them for workin’. Just thankin’ her lungs for filling with air. Married that girl a week later.”
“Horse shit,” the young laborer replied. “That story ain’t true.”
Castaneda approached the bar. He leaned over it, his sights locked on to Joaquin’s. “There’s a silver box under that floor board. Get it.”
Joaquin hurriedly pulled up the board and lifted a decorative box up onto the bar. Castaneda took it then pointed to a tea kettle against the mirror. “Give that to me.” Joaquin did as he said as Castaneda turned to the group, watching the rain.
“Is that it?” the older man asked when he saw Castaneda walking toward a room in the back of the bar with the box and the kettle. “Is he goin’ make some of that tea?”
“Tea?” Joaquin inquired but the older man was all ready running across the room, throwing open the door, and shouting into the downpour.
“Castaneda’s making tea! Castaneda’s making tea!”
Joaquin watched as people appeared out of the rain, their faces slick and glowing as they stepped over the threshold into Nirvana. Some look haunted, lost, as if they were formed from the mist that grew over the sand when it rained, spectral as fog. Others melted out of their skins, threw wrinkles and arthritic joints to the floor below them, stepping brightly, younger than they had in years. Still, a few were simply silent, leaning against the bar, watching as Castaneda brought a tray filled with tiny silver goblets then paused in front of the mass that materialized in his bar. His eyes opened wider than Joaquin thought they could as he took the first goblet off the tray and raised it above him.
Each person stepped forward to take a glass. They all faced Castaneda as if waiting for their signal. Their hands and cups were raised.
“To Eva,” Castaneda toasted, and the crowd applauded it. Joaquin felt the energy in every hand push the heat in the room and spark waves of electricity in the air. Dozens of mouths opened, the goblets were emptied.
Through the tangle of limbs that were crowded together, Joaquin saw the movement of a once ivory digit, of a bone that had started to yellow but was folded in a lap politely. Eva’s face appeared from between the bodies, appeared in the vibrant barrage of fervor and verve that poured into the spaces absent of the corporal, filling the cracks so that no one among them would have to stand for a moment outside of the overwhelming current that pulsed from lips to lips, hand to hand, skin to skin. A ring formed around her, standing so still, watching her own image in the mirror above the bar. No one seemed to mind, no one seemed to notice.
No one except Joaquin.
Eva’s hand unfolded to him, her arm stretched out but she didn’t move any closer. Joaquin was frozen, terrified and curious, unable to reach back to her, unable to find out what she wanted or who she was. He could feel a draw to her, as if she was asking him for something that no one else there had. When he didn’t move, Eva sat back down, leaned against the piano, put her hands back in her lap. The crowd radiated colors and sound between the two of them. Bodies grasped one another, consuming the brilliance they felt pushing out from each other.
A young girl with crystalline eyes and thick brown hair held the last little goblet out for Joaquin.
“It’s okay,” she told him, her lips coarse and sensual. “Castaneda wants you to try it.”
“I think I’m going crazy,” he whispered though not to her. “I see things every where in this town. Nothing makes sense here.”
The girl moved closer. She put one hand along the side of his face and pressed the goblet into his lower lip. “It’s okay. Just try this.”
Joaquin watched her face as she poured the liquid over his tongue. Her mouth opened with each contraction of his throat, her hand pushed a little harder as his head tilted back. She lowered the cup to the bar.
“I saw that skeleton stand up,” he said, feeling a few small drops of peyote run down his lips. The girl caught them with her own swiftly. “Am I going crazy?”
“She’s only trying to welcome you,” the girl answered, pulling away from his mouth. “She says you’ve never even said hi to her.”
Then a rapid torrent of blood rushed to Joaquin’s head, and his eyes suddenly hurt from the zeal and the light. He felt every muscle in his body tighten as the girl took him by his hands and led him forward. Her fingers traced up his arm then up to his neck, half teasing his goose bumps, half coaxing them into existence.
Joaquin drew the girl into him. Under his palms, tissue twitched and throbbed, the strongest evidence of life he had ever found. He was fascinated with the fact that each and every day until he was dead, there would be an entire world of life and energy inside of him, working without him ever thinking about it, invisible, unseen. Now he could feel hers, through her skin, he traced the bones he could find, dug his fingers into muscle that braced, pushed his palm against her chest to watch the rising of her lungs.
“I think I need to lie down,” Joaquin whispered to her as his face flushed red and he felt so carnal and ethereal all at the same time. He felt ready to shed his skin yet he had never been so close to it before, so aware of its presence; it breathed and moved as he did but it didn’t belong to him.
The crowd that encircled him shook raw and uninhibited. There was no noise anymore. There was no toasting or applauding. Lips moved; throats expanded. No one said anything.
Joaquin turned the girl’s arm upward so that the soft underside, rivered blue with veins, reflected the warmth he could see emanating from her face. When she moved, he followed; when she breathed, he breathed. He felt life in no other form but her breath and her blood.
“I think I need to lie down.”
The room around him grew and shrank rhythmically; the people near him sweat intensity through flesh. Without his permission, his hand wrapped as tightly as it could around the girl’s wrist. He was afraid that he would lose his balance and not be able to fall.
Castaneda was sitting next to the skeleton when it stood up and walked toward Joaquin. There was no logic in his mind any longer, there was no rhyme or reason, everything once physical was made of smoke and radiance. When he turned to face the crowd and saw Eva standing behind him, he shouted a noise that sounded animal and instinctive, a noise that vibrated viscerally in his stomach. He put a hand out to protect himself but he moved with force he didn’t know he had, and he struck the side of Eva’s skull.
The bar went silent as Eva crumpled to a pile of dust and shards of a frame. Castaneda rose. The room contracted. Joaquin became aware of how fragile his body was, how he was no less meat than an animal, a creature, and he was sure that’s what Castaneda saw too. Just a piece of tissue who had broken apart what was left of the woman he had forced life on to for so long.
“You sonofa bitch!”
The crowd parted to let him through. Joaquin took a step backward and ran into Nicandro who just shook his head gently.
“Nicandro, oh god, tell him I’m sorry. Please, tell him I didn’t mean to.”
“I’m gonna kill you, you devil. I’m gonna kill you!”
Nicandro pushed Joaquin closer to the door and moved toward Castaneda. He kept shaking his head as he did.
“Give the kid a head start,” he said. “Castaneda, let him run first.”
Castaneda pulled the top off the piano and yanked a gun from between the strings. Joaquin’s body convulsed violently and took off running out into the street. The rain had dried up but there were puddles everywhere, filling his shoes with red clay and water. Each step got slower, heavier. There was a force, a noticeable change in the air, as Castaneda charged out of the bar after him.
Joaquin couldn’t move his legs fast enough. Every time he looked over his shoulder, Castaneda was gaining on him, backed by unfurling clouds that rippled in layers of crimson and amethyst. Castaneda had nature on his side.
The desert rose out of the horizon so abruptly that Joaquin forgot that that’s where he was headed. Cacti twisted out to him as he brushed past, their needles catching him briefly then releasing as Castaneda approached. The sand buckled underneath his feet, trapping his footing as the anger closed in on him.
Vibrations coursed through the grains. Joaquin felt the bullet break his skin before he heard the shot go off. His right leg began to cramp and twitch as he fell forward into a cactus that stood like a man. He reached to the back of his thigh where the pang rose, spit, then fell. The bullet missed the bone and burrowed into the thick of the muscle.
“Oh god!” Joaquin cried as he brought his hand up to his face and almost fainted at the sight of his own blood. He turned as well as he could but the cactus seemed to be holding him as Castaneda stepped closer, closer.
“You’ve done wrong by me, baboso,” Castaneda growled as he loomed in front of him, his gun resting against his hip. “You’ve done wrong by my wife too.”
“This is a dream,” Joaquin wondered out loud. “This isn’t really happening.”
“No dream,” Castaneda said, raising the business end of the gun to the minute, exposed spot in between Joaquin’s eyes.
“Oh god, please, don’t kill me. Castaneda, I didn’t mean to, she frightened me.”
“What did you say?!”
“She appeared out of nowhere.” Castaneda touched the barrel to the spot. “Oh god, she’s been beckoning to me, she’s been trying to talk to me. Castaneda, please don’t kill me. I think I’m going crazy.”
“What are you talking about?”
“She keeps looking at me in the mirror, she keeps reaching her hands out to me. Castaneda, I swear to you, I didn’t mean to hit her but she wanted me to. Jesus Christ, don’t shoot me. She told me to, I swear, she told me to. Please don’t kill me.”
Castaneda lowered the gun. The undulating sky stilled and ran together as one color. Joaquin’s eyes were shut tightly. He heard something settle in the sand, and the cactus released him. When he opened his eyes, the gun was next to his foot and Castaneda stood there with his arms at his sides.
“I’m not going to kill you, Joaquin,” Castaneda said. “Tell me what she told you.”
“She didn’t tell me anything in words but I-” Joaquin stopped, bit his tongue, and took a breath. “I just knew that she…She didn’t want to be here anymore.”
Castaneda extended his hand. Joaquin took it warily. He let Castaneda bring him upright. They stood as men, as equals for a moment then Castaneda took a breath and the sky, the ground, the air constricted and discharged.
“It’s okay, Joaquin,” Castaneda said. “I think you may have done something right today.”
Joaquin’s body quivered. Castaneda turned back toward the town and walked away. Joaquin followed a little behind him, carefully stepping in Castaneda’s footprints, each one getting older and older. For a second, he paused and tried to laugh as he clasped his hand to the back of his thigh and staggered back toward Nirvana.

PROSE_Veronica Dolginko

April 24th, 2009

Vanities and Victories of the Flesh

Freedom is the bottle broken of spirits lying on the splintered hardwood floor of an artist’s studio in 1890s Montmartre, scented with lilies drenched in the coma of melancholia. Liberty blushes in the slapped face of a guillotined Frenchwoman, once fettered to three starving, yelping children who trudge along the blood-spattered cobblestone paths of Terror-stricken Paris alone, their hands and lips begging for bread in the endless season of poverty. Freedom is in the silence that answers a question in the search for truth. Liberty is victorious in the right to free speech denied by the hypocrites meant to uphold and enforce these constitutional rights. Freedom is in the act of martyrdom that leads one to externalize their suffering. It is in the raising and rooting of a rotting crucifix into the earth that one chooses to set aflame and dance around in vulgar ecstasy or to climb upon and cling to, nails rusting in their frail fulsome flesh, and in this ensuing extinction still quiver with ecstasy. The liberated spirit is in the medieval French mystic whose last words, “Hold the cross high so I may see it through the flames”, rose in the plumes of smoke that ascended to the heavens after she was bound to the stake and put on fire.

Freedom is in the scene that Nature, the true artist of the beautiful, paints, when a philosopher-poet falls asleep in wheat fields lapping around him like waves in the wind-rush, and he wakes, having only realized the true meaning of existence in the unconscious abyss of Sleep, the twin brother of Death. An autonomous moment is in the contemplation of a work of art created out of the artist’s own brief moment of self-empowerment when he has permitted himself to bathe and pleasure in the triumph of his seemingly unchristian passions. Liberty blazons in the heart of man when he discovers his solitude in the ancient, ever-enduring struggle of every individual to transcend and conquer forces far greater than his own species throughout the history of the cosmos in its sojourn towards resolution and dissolution. Freedom comes in the full knowledge of living and breathing the romance that is life.

Personhood asserts itself when one defies convention and the historically engrained biases of gender, race, and sexuality, and walks slowly, steadily, and confidently into the womb of the sea to drown. The ever-revolving wheel of human bondage is shattered when one reaches the moment of enlightenment that echoes, “You are your own Messiah.” Freedom, what the religiously minded call salvation or redemption, is in the dying words of the Roman Emperor Vespasian, “Woe is me, I think I am becoming a god.” Freedom is in the protection of Death that harmonizes the unshackled soul of the human frame with the eternal spirit of God that the truly wise man knows by the name and doctrine of Love, or self-sacrifice.

DOMINICK MONTALTO is a freelance copy editor pursuing full-time work in the publishing industry in an editorial capacity. His educational background is in Literature, Art History, Philosophy, and Religion. He is a poet and critical prose essayist, with several publishing credits in both genres in print and on the web. His literary field specialization is the long 19th century from the French Revolution through the early Modern novel, with particular focus on the evolutionary changes of the Gothic, British Romanticism, French Symbolism, British and French Decadence and Aestheticism, and Orientalism. His religious and philosophical interests focus on the various sects of mysticism, as well as Christianity, Hinduism, and Buddhism. Overall, he continues to hold a strong interest and love for the different aspects of the arts and humanities.

April 18th, 2009

Blue Shadow

Southern city streets are silent on Sundays. Churches shake with the sounds of heaving organs, fervent clapping, and tearful screams of praise, but the roads remain deserted. Even the squirrels rest from collecting their acorns. Sunday, the Bible reminds Virginia through Texas, is sacred. Only atheists, Jews, and Candy Loo ignore this.
Candy Loo parked himself on a rickety bench just facing Sacred Heart Cathedral. The final bell rang as a five-member family scrambled inside, the mother dragging the smallest and most reluctant child by the hand. The father held the door open for them all. Then the five of them disappeared into the house of wafers and wine. Candy Loo popped an unsalted peanut into his mouth. The salted kind cost too many pennies extra. He would rather spend that money on the outside of his mouth.
The mouth boasted full lips, the kind that even saltiest peanuts could only slightly deflate. The lips looked soft and smooth. And for all the time Candy Loo spent exfoliating and applying strange, European creams to them, it was no surprise. Candy Loo colored his lips the most tempting shade of red—not vampishly red or red light district red. It was a lush red, like fresh fruit syrup. His lips deserved to be kissed. And you wanted to kiss them.
You did not, however, want to kiss the rest of the face. The small eyes gleamed black and nasty, even when Candy Loo smiled the sincerest of smiles. Nobody could trust those eyes under any circumstances. The large, crooked nose craned over the fruity lips. A blue shadow darkened the cheeks and chin. Shaggy, bleach blonde hair hung straight down the sides of Candy Loo’s face, making it appear even longer and thinner. It was a witch’s face, minus the unfortunate warts.
As one’s eyes traveled downward, they noted the thick neck that also bore a blue shadow of stubble. Nothing about it alluded to the white and slender neck of a swan. The Adam’s apple protruded as if Candy Loo himself had gagged on a bite from the Tree of Knowledge. The broad, bony shoulders nearly burst out of the women’s extra-large blouse the man usually wore. A stray hair or two poked out from the holes in the blouse’s delicate lace. The chest was a man’s, the hands were a man’s. The invisible waist, the narrow hips…they all belonged to a man.
Yet Candy Loo never identified himself as a man. At least not anymore. Ever since high school, he shaved his legs, pulled on pantyhose, and wore the biggest stilettos you ever saw. So desperately did he want to shed his birth given sex and shine at his senior prom in a taffeta gown. He dreamed of a shimmering silver dress with a luxurious train. And in his dreams that gown remained. His parents said he would either go in a tux with a nice neighborhood girl or not at all. Candy Loo made his choice and, thus, did not attend his prom.
Then, the day of graduation, he dropped his birth name and became Candy Loo, the most pathetic drag queen in all of Richmond. When the school principal called out “Harvey Lomax, Salutatorian” during the ceremony, Candy Loo remained seated. The auditorium’s mood fell from celebratory to horrified. The Valedictorian extended his speech on the whim as a quick cover-up but nobody listened. They only peered over at Harvey, with their confusion slowly evolving into pure disgust.
His father never forgave him. His mother skipped the graduation reception afterward and walked to the car, crying. Candy Loo’s parents revoked his college tuition and told him to pay his own way. So Candy Loo decided not to go at all. Instead, he hitchhiked across the country for a few years, supporting himself as a dancer for gay bars and a waiter for straight ones. Every drag queen he saw surpass him in their glorious femininity. Fatigued and thoroughly jealous of all the she-men stars that outshone him, Candy Loo eventually returned to Virginia. No one asked where he had been because no one remembered him. Only Harvey Lomax existed in their minds.
But Candy Loo was no longer Harvey Lomax. Harvey Lomax wore cool Levi’s jeans and impeccable polos, with his hair gelled back, just as his mother expected. Harvey Lomax made out with tittering girls to convince his father that he had a libido. Harvey Lomax was a track star and Honor Roll student because that’s what his older brother had been. Harvey Lomax was a liar and a huge disappointment only to himself.
Candy Loo abandoned polos and girls and conventional education and organized sports. Rather, Candy Loo embraced thrift store duds, sloppy men, his public library card, and walking around city streets for exercise. That may have worked for him in Baltimore, New York, Philadelphia, Portland, Seattle, and San Francisco, but it would not work for him in Richmond. Not if he wanted a roof over his head.
“I’ve had a roof over my head long enough,” Candy Loo hissed when the twelfth potential landlord with whom he had scheduled an apartment tour slammed the door in his face.
Two facts existed: 1) No respectful Christian Southerner would tolerate a drag queen in his building. 2) Candy Loo would not change.
So Candy Loo begged during the day and slept in the park at night. He carried around a coffee can he had painted pink, shaking it at all passersby and putting on his best falsetto:
“Ma’am, mister—ya got some change ta spare? Anythin’! Anythin’ will do!”
People either responded with pity at his crooked fake eyelashes and overwhelming perfume, or they condemned him for pretending to be what they believed he was not.
“Such a sick man.”
“Look at him. He think he a woman.”
“Couldn’t he at least shave the hair off his face?”
“Faggot. Fucking faggot.”
Sometimes, after a long day of begging, Candy Loo would walk past his childhood home and wonder about his family. Had his father finally retired from the university? Had his mother started up that catering business like she always hoped? Was his brother married, living out in the suburbs somewhere? Maybe they had all died and Candy Loo was the only surviving member of the Lomax clan. Yet he was no longer a Lomax.
On this gray Sunday, Candy Loo had already been awake for hours as pious Richmonders scrambled into church. He had already surveyed all of the empty stores with their richly adorned windows, reapplied his lipstick sixteen times, and gone through two bags of plain peanuts. Since the public library was closed, the only thing left to do was beg. People, he knew, usually exhibited vain generosity on the Sabbath.
At noon, the congregation scuttled out of Sacred Heart, filling the street like James River crabs in the summertime. Candy Loo threw his empty peanut bag on the ground and picked up his pink can. Time to go crabbing.
“Ma’am!” he called out in his high-pitched drawl. A short, middle-aged woman sporting a garish lavender hat spun around.
“Can I help you?” she asked through tightly pursed lips.
“Got any change to spare, please?”
The woman instinctively clutched her purse. “I just gave to the church.”
“The church doesn’t help me, ma’am.”
“If they don’t help people like you, who do they help?” The implication being, of course, that people like her did not require help of any kind.
Before Candy Loo could respond, the woman’s bald, sharply suited husband put his arm around her. “Is this…creature…bothering you, Coretta?”
“It asked for money.”
The bald man snorted. “It thinks money can help it?” Then he paused and looked directly at Candy Loo as he spoke. “Let’s go, dear. We have to get to the country club.”
The couple turned away from Candy Loo just as he turned from them. Globs of mascara streamed down the drag queen’s powder-caked cheeks. He walked back to his bench and pulled out another bag of peanuts. It was not the first time such a nasty episode had transpired, nor would it be the last.
“To be a peanut,” Candy Loo sighed, “To grow up with only one path and no options. But at least it’s a path nobody objects to. After all, there’s a whole industry that supports what you grow up to be.”
He sucked on the peanut until all he could taste was the fleshiness of his tongue. Then he crunched through the nut, scraped the sticky skin off of his teeth, and swallowed it. He shoved another in his mouth, grew bored with it, and resorted to pouring an entire handful into that black hole of teeth and gums.
The peanuts now gone, Candy Loo scooped up his can and delved into the Fan District, the nearest residential neighborhood. Victorian era townhouses lined the narrow roads. Flowers sprouted from the contained gardens. Trees appeared eloquently reserved. Cars were perfectly parked. Paint did not shed and grass did not fade in the Fan.
Candy Loo rapped on the first door he came to. An art student answered and jammed a few $1 bills into Candy Loo’s can.
“Don’t get drunk,” the skinny man muttered. He had on some hip band T-shirt and balanced a cigarette on his bottom lip. Billows of smoke partially obscured his chiseled chin and flapping ears.
Candy Loo cleared his throat. “I don’t drink, but thank you.”
The man nodded and closed the door, shutting Candy Loo out of the house that smelled of a dozen cats and cookie dough.
Candy Loo proceeded to the next house and then the next one, and the one after that. Most of the houses he tried were occupied. People came to the door, often gave him change to appease him, and possibly made a disapproving remark. That constituted the extent of their interactions. Nobody asked Candy Loo for his life story or even a tiny explanation. They did not care about the human behind the gaudy clothes and make-up. All they saw was tacky glitter and bad nails.
This did not particularly offend Candy Loo. He accepted it as part of his lifestyle. Only the most golden of souls would inquire about his health or happiness and perhaps invite him in for a warm cup of tea, perhaps even dinner. If Candy Loo shed a tear or two, it was involuntarily. His body reacted when his heart felt nothing. No one could offend him after all these years, he reasoned.
The drag queen adjusted his velvet skirt. The top button kept popping open. Once certain that he looked his most presentable, he continued knocking on doors. He had to compensate for his lackluster earnings outside of Sacred Heart, after all.
Hours passed before Candy Loo found himself strutting around Jackson Ward, one of the scariest neighborhoods in that part of the city by all too many accounts. Yet reputation does not deter a truly hungry man.
Weaving in and out of streets renowned for sins both archaic and modern, Candy Loo fixed his black eyes to the ground. It was safer than catching a gangster’s gaze. When a pimp greeted Candy Loo, he mumbled hello but kept going.
“Wait!” the pimp cried.
Candy Loo froze, prepared to say he would not sell his body at any price. He bit his red lower lip.
“You need a buck?”
Candy Loo hesitated but pivoted around to face the pimp. The pimp reached his ringed fingers into his deep pockets.
“I don’t like carrying around change,” the pimp said. “Too heavy.” He dumped a clump of quarters into the can. Like rain on a tin roof, the quarters plinked.
Candy Loo half-grinned. “Thank you.”
“Sure. Have a nice day, ya hear?”
The pimp rounded the corner and vanished. Candy Loo shook his can just to hear the coins jingle. The sound pleased him, as did the thought that even a pimp could be kind. Suddenly the drag queen’s blouse did not feel so tight.
Candy Loo stood slightly taller. He thrust out his chest, in his mind a buxom D-cup. He would buy a beautiful dinner at a stylish restaurant in Carytown, one of the fanciest parts of Richmond.
“No peanuts tonight,” he whispered to himself. The corners of his lips curled up.
Renewed, Candy Loo knocked on the next house along the street. It was a naked brick, single-family home with a porch. Two wicker chairs and a table displaying pots full of ferns adorned the porch. A dirty Welcome mat was situated before the door. The stench of mothballs hovered in the air.
Nobody answered when Candy Loo knocked so he rang the doorbell. A dog began to bark. Candy Loo waited a beat before he heard the keys on the inside of the house dance around. Someone was attempting to unlock the door.
Finally, that someone cracked the door open.
“Git!” a man’s voice shouted at the jumping dog. The dog whined and scampered away. The man opened the door full, completely exposing himself to Candy Loo.
“Afternoon,” the man said. He was heavy-set and missing a finger or two.
“Good afternoon, sir.”
“What you need?”
“Could you spare any change, please? I need some—“
“No, I got it,” the man murmured as he looked Candy Loo up in down with a voracious curiosity. “I got it. I mean, I have a daughter.”
Candy Loo raised his eyebrow.
“I know what you pretty things like and need.”
Candy Loo laughed a nervous laugh, still perplexed.
“Matter of fact, my daughter—Forrest, that’s her name—was just cleanin’ out her room today. Found a bunch of stuff she didn’t need or want anymore. Let me go and see what I can bring you.” He pointed to the inside of his house and softly closed the door.
The breeze rustled Candy Loo’s stiff hair. He tapped his foot and hummed a tune his mother used to sing. Never did she imagine her son singing the same song while dressed in drag, though. She must have imagined him singing it to his newborn child as he crouched over the baby’s crib, no doubt holding his wife’s hand. Harvey Lomax would have a comely wife and a flawless son or daughter.
“Okay,” the man of the house said as he opened the front door again. “I got just what you need.” He extended his arm and gave Candy Loo an envelope.
“Thank you kindly, sir,” he said as he took the envelope. He was too shy to open it right there.
“Not at all. God be with you.”
The two men looked at each other for a moment. Then Candy Loo thanked the man again and left the porch.
Once Candy Loo made it off the street, he sat down at a bus stop. The envelope was new, the whitest of whites. Candy Loo dug his index finger into the back flap to tear it open and revealed a piece of pastel-colored paper. It brandished elaborate curlicue script that Candy Loo had trouble deciphering. He squinted his eyes.
It was a gift certificate to a local beauty salon.
Candy Loo crumbled up the paper, tossed it to the ground, and spat on it. Then he waved down the approaching bus and headed to Carytown. He would order something French and expensive, even if he could not pronounce its name. Better than the greasy cheeseburger Harvey Lomax always fell back on in times of stress or disillusionment.

CHRISTINE STODDARD is a writer and interdisciplinary artist from the Washington, D.C. area. Currently she is studying Art History and English with minors in Creative Writing and French at VCU Arts in Richmond, VA. Previously, her work has appeared in a variety of university literary magazines (such as ones from George Mason, Howard, Grinnell College), newspapers (Benton Courier, Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive), and many magazines, ‘zines, and websites. To learn more about her and her creative projects, visit www.christinestoddard.com

April 2nd, 2009

Three F’s of Fellowship

Recently, I had attended the fellowship at a local church. That night, however, wasn’t just any fellowship session; instead it featured a workshop about “What is Fellowship?” In it, a church elder surnamed Chan, discussed to us the importance of fellowship especially to college students. During the speech, he emphasized the three F’s of fellowship: function, foundation and fruit. He was able to articulately explain and even market the significance of the fellowship in the Christian church.

First, he asked “Why do you all participate in fellowship?” By being interactive with the audience, he was able to sway away from the stereotypical church workshop and lectures, with over an hour of one-way verbal communication. By adding our participation to the speech with the use of the overhead projector, he created a group-oriented feel, focusing on learning through discussion and participation. In response to his question, many participants responded with the usual, “to eat, to have fun, to spend more time with God and his teachings.” Soon, Elder Chan developed a long list on the transparency, which was displayed using the overhead projector. The long list evolved into what he called the function of the fellowship.

In support of his purpose, he also mentioned numerous verses from the Bible, including from chapter one from the First Epistle of John. “That which we have seen and heard we declare to you, that you also may have fellowship with us; and truly our fellowship is with the Father and with His Son Jesus Christ (I John 1:3)” and continuing until “But if we walk in the light as He is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus Christ His Son cleanses us from all sin.” (I John 1:7). By using the Bible to support his views, Elder Chan was able to be more persuasive in his talk, as even if one does not choose to believe his words, one would be more swayed to trust the words of the Bible.

Next, he compared it to secular applications as well. There are many entities that have groups that are like fellowships, from companies with board of directors to associations who meet together and talk, as well as support groups of all sorts for different purposes. All of these function as a extension of oneself, as a way to join with others to achieve a common goal.

The common goal in terms of fellowship is reinforced by the foundation of fellowship, another characteristic of fellowship. According to Elder Chan, the fellowship’s foundation is represented by the teachings of God. As stated above, there are many verses from the Bible that highlight the importance of fellowship, from Ephesians to I John. Even long ago, the fellowship existed as ones mean to further relate with God.

Lastly, Elder Chan emphasized the fruit of fellowship. The fruit represents one’s reward for participating in fellowships. He continued his interaction with us by asking us what we think the fruit is. “What kinds of fruit do you see here at the fellowship? Apples? Oranges?” The participants in the room laughed. The fruits of fellowship were simply a combination of the effects of the function and the foundation. Many functions were designed and tweaked to meet the needs of the members. He also mentioned numerous practical advantages to fellowships such as the ability to allow its members (especially the younger and more vulnerable) to avoid participating in improper events and gatherings or illegal activities. He also mentioned the significant degree of gratification involved when talking about his experience of his fellowship in Tacoma, Washington over 30 years ago becoming a significant church today.

Overall, Elder Chan did a wonderful job in presenting to us “What is fellowship?” He simplified it in three categories: Function, the Foundation and the Fruit. For the most part, I found his speech very inspirational and encouraging participating in fellowships more often to further relate with God. His articulate and interactive way of presentation was helpful, using media and verbal interaction with good tone of voice. One thing that he lacked was providing handouts. If a handout that summarized his presentation was provided, then I would have taken in more from his workshop.