'Damnit.'
Spotty
lights on the rims of tires spin corners outside the window, past the boulevard
and dragging on.
'Goddamnit.
Godfuckingdamnit.'
Twin heads
of ravendrapes on tiny female frames come spooling out the wireframe door of a
barren soggy house, pressured like a boiler, steam rising ashy from their
heads. The girls make their way through the doors and onto the curb, through
the clutter of the duskwalkers in the brown and fogless prenight. Sightless
crawls a touch of stovegas from without the innards of the gnarled dying house,
gathered up in plumes like cotton candy, sightless then.
'Damn it
all to hell. Motherfuckers claim they seen that shit last night. Motherfuckers
think they know shit, talking like they seen shit. Like they seen us there. Like
they was there, man. Godfucking damnit all to hell and back. My skin's crawlin'
with spiders, now, and I can't see a thing. Soul's stirring something mighty
and fierce. There's an evil wind, man. An evil wind racing in and my bones are
shaking, motherfucker. Spit out a word, goddamnit.'
'Flouride.'
They're
working their way past the alley and down the block, the girls, asscheeks
jeanswathed and bouncing rhythmic like apples in the hands of elder gods.
Cockeyed sleaze and meatjawed slime come
looming up like thunderheads and watch sly their asses like ravens with
buckled knees for worms. Pitter, patter, sounds the dropping of the first of
storm and the eyes of the girls see heaven and the sun at dusk. A corner's
turned. The eyes of the loveless draw back shrieking into hollows for the
nightstay. The cornerlights jump from red to green. On crawl the scattered
autos. Solomon lights a smoke.
'What is
that?'
'A
cigarette.'
His caramel
skin flushes subtle red as he puffs deep on the dried pressed farmgrown.
'Fuck off,
.'
'Can do
that, boy. Can do that rightly and can do that now. Best to coyly watch those
words. You're prime for a bitch-lashing from the old fists, Kilroy.'
'Just tell
me they ain't seen shit.'
'What was it so god almighty wretched that
you're here like this, that thick nigger skull of yours masked up with those
droopy eyes, those pouty lips. What the fuck was it exactly that you did.'
'Tell me
and I leave and I never say a word to your old nappy ass again. Just tell me
that shit and I walk away, walk away and for forever, motherfucker. Whatever
the fuck it is you want. Give me some assurance. Tell me they asses are blind.
Tell me you didn't get a call. There are spiders on my skin, motherfucker.'
'Have a
seat, boy. There's tea on the stove. Shut the fuck up promptly and with a
vengeance.'
Donny
Kilroy has his eyes on the corner just half a block down westward. They had
moved from sight to the onrushing, the girls. They had seen the sun and they
were now far from the knowing, some corner out yonder they had passed and would
pass again, further out and all lost to the knowing. Past the yawning gutter
streets and the inner city hollow where the blues lay nightly like a blanket
over aching heads, they were far and growing farther. Donny Kilroy sees the sun
no longer and the shitbrown fog of dusk lies heavy in the air like smog, the
taste of turpentine. A telephone rings loudly several miles down the hallway,
past the closet door, in some enormous cavern.
'I ain't
that old, Donny boy. Folks presumedly'd call me middle-aged.'
Solomon creaks up from his cushioned chair and
makes his way hallward toward the phone.
'Motherfucker,'
a whisper. 'Blind savage motherfucker. Old as shit too.'
Moving from
the window, cautious, Donny grabs a cigarette from the old man's pack and,
feigning brashness in lieu of posterity, cocks the smoke at angle, tearing the
filter from the rest. He stuffs the smoke in lip and lights it with an ancient
Zippo, somehow lusty for the reek of canvassed butane. He puffs hard and
immediately bellows an enormous cough, hunched over, spitting little sprigs of
dried pressed farmgrown from sticky lips.
'Solomon
here.'
Donny
Kilroy pricks up his ears, batlike, he thinks. He pats out the cigarette in an
ancient wrought spitoon, listening.
'Yes, Dr.
Reilly Solomon.'
Tires spin
a hollow gleam, just outside the window of the den, as a lux speckled green
Camino comes up screeching, lightly, frame set low and angled up, canine
somehow, grilleteeth barren and lathed in slobbered foam, raucous, and from the
twin twelve inch cannons lying dugout in the rear:
gone say
the bitches with they eyes on they heartstrings
a fever
for a fevered head like dust settle daydreams
and
motherfuckers step up
keep
they crook monkey necks up
a siren
is a dope fiend with a felled angel's getup
and what
is the word
'Yes.
It is you. I thought it might be. You, that is. The boy's here now.'
A pause.
Eternal. A dawnish dusklight comes threshing through the center of the warped
and mired glasspane. Donny Kilroy sees this and he does not see the sun. The
Camino sprints off posthaste post a hasty stinted stop, the words coy and naked
drench the avenue in limelight: all the boys in hooded sweatsleeves haunch
themselves to keeling over railposts with their cigarettes and bowls of hash,
caughtup dry and eaglespread in one thousand and one tomorrows as the days fall
all to yester.
'Dew on
that brow, yes there is. Dew there is and plenty. He'd make a salter for a
hamfarm with that soggy monkey skull of his. And what you're telling me is
true, I'll take it for granted and for truth.'
…
'Alright.
Keep those boys in city red from lashing out at the kid. He's just that, after
all. A kid.'
Donny feels
he hears the cresting of the carpet's fingers as they're lashed to bending by
the footfall of the old man's leather shoes. A lockstep one-and-two like
march-band's metered drum, he feels he hears the footfalls and the cresting of
the fingers bent, undertoe, metric, patterned, a step each draws the phantom
closer to the knowing and further down the miles spacious empty of the cavern
and the hall. The ghost he feels is smiling. The wind breathes like a
lanternjack, glowing eyes all green, some dutchman flying in on nights of cold
and wind, culling in the children and lashing out in footfalls strident.
and what
is the word
Clickstop
sounds the phone's receiver as the man steps out the door, graying spots of
curled nappy hair dusted gracefully through black and brown, sweeped back and
over, the man a relic of some ancient wizard beatnik hoven, a postboard for the
jazz-inclined incumbent, the air around him tempered with the odor stale of
guru. Hat in hand, the man walks up. Donny turns again from the window and
looks over, patting dew from off his thick and hided brow.
'That was
him, that zealot, Eddie. Says he heard from one or another just a thing or two,
vague, it was, it all. I take it it's the call you feared I'd get.'
Donny looks
down, at the ashbutt in the spitoon, resting fecund in a touch of muddied cud.
'Can I get
a cigarette, Solomon?'
A pause,
the palm of his right hand gently stroking his neck's anterior.
'Sure, boy.
Light on up. Have a seat.'
Donny
breathes heavy in the fumey musk of butane as he sets the smoke to weary
flickered flame.
'Said he
couldn't tell me a thing, Eddie. Said it'd be likely best you get to stepping
over there and quicklike too. Like the wind, he said. Meant to say.'
'That's it.
That's all he said. That he heard a fuckin thing or two. Thing or fuckin two my
fuckin ass, is all. And that I best get to steppin over. Motherfucker sees the
night and on the phone it's dawn. The wind is breathing, Sol, and I feel it.
Evil and it's coming. And I never had a shot.'
'Hush that
pygmy mouth. Dross, the lot of it.'
Solomon
cranes backassed into resting deep among the cushions in the ancient wooden
chair. Donny paces nervously, twitching a 6/4 with the cigarette in his left
hand, his right still set to stroking on his neck. His brow spots dew in
touches and the few that fall to ground get dried up by the shrieking carpet
fingers.
'So what,
then? Joker-Lee and Eddie and the rest just sit there and wait while I shit
myself all night not knowing?'
'Say you're
in deep shit, they did. Say there's only options few now left to take. They got
called up last night by some bitchass sayin that skull of yours is ripe for a
dirty leadfuck. Dry and swift, that pillow beggin for a bite. You get the
drift. This is your mess, you shitheel kid, and it's best you clean it up in
whatever which way rightly you so deftly choose to take. Give me a word, kid.'
'Flow
ride.'
'Flow ride.
That's what they'll call you kid, the Flow Rider, golden with a sash of velvet
laced around that aching neck. They'll say it as you flow on down to lockstep,
ankle chains biting at your kankles like a bleedy teethplucked cankersore,
plucking soggy styrofoam with wooden sticks and spikeends, making lost time up
for all the cancer you've let spread in time of freedom. The word you're
looking for is Flouride. With an o-u-. Step the fuck on up.'
The air
along the boulevard is shitbrown with the stench and breath of smog and cloudy
dust. The city breathes out in and out like flipping shutters, flocking
splotchy hooded orbs of tiresmoke and nicotine and spittle from the open ends
of iron pipes into tiny crawls of yard and step and walkway.
'I've gotta
go, Sol. I've gotta get out. Far out of here, somewhere eyes won't look.
Somewhere those eyes that look won't see. I don't fucking know, Sol. I've gotta
go. J-Lee and Eddie keep to waiting long, they boil over. And this is a storm
of shit. I don't know fuckall but I need to fucking go.'
Solomon
looks the boy over, distant, sipping chai from candied porcelain, watching.
Donny looks about the room. Carpet grey and ceiling grey and world around all
grey but walls of blue. Keep those walls to blue, she had said, kneeling over
like a wounded child.
keep em
blue so clouds too have a home, and when come clouds know son you're not alone
She had
said.
'What was
it exactly that you did, child.'
Donny Kilroy
takes a mighty puff, breathing out a cloud of cancer, eyes in tango with the
ceiling's cottage cheese.
'There was
a man and a woman and there was I and a gun. I still have the gun. It's in the
trunk. I need to go, Solomon.'
Donny's
phone rings out a treble cackle. A shoddy old Honda draws up puttering along
the curb outside.
'That's
Shawn now. He's taking me to Leezy's directly.'
A teasaucer
lands gently on a weave of knitted cloth. Solomon creaks up and haunches over,
elbows resting on knees and chin on closed left palm, he looks into Donny:
'If you've
taken from her, soon she'll have her settled score, you know. The Earth. She
gives all. All but if you've taken then in reaping comes the blowing of that
evil wind: the wind you feel inside those bones. I know you feel it now.'
Reilly
Solomon creaks up fully from the wooden ancient rocker. He spools around and
shuffles quietly over to the door, hat in hand again, unlocking the screen
door.
'Go, and
tell those boys it's in the interest of all to do everything they can. They
know this. So do I and you. Keep those eyes to narrow heaven, boy.'
The door
props open with a heavy wayward pull. The last of dusklight comes in lapping
like a dog's tongue, slowly. The porchlight flickers on.
'Cry
Havoc.' says Donny Kilroy.
'Keep those
motherfuckers leashed, son.'
The city's
a virgin.
Keep it
quiet, Goldilocks.
'She's a
tempest, brewin. That she is.'
Hush it
narrow. Hush it narrow.
The city
she is beltlash and hellfire. Gomorrah's cousin in the basement with his lips
around a tetherpole, stroking prickled gristle with a knavethumb and a shakey
brush.
'Speak up?'
Hush.
Lightly brush the words off. Calloused tongue. Keep it quiet back there.
'Not a
word. Not a word. Inner city in we is. Two blocks past and we home free and
finally, just past shithole after holeshit after track train after gutter we'll
be free. Keep it quiet, Goldilocks.'
'Yes and
out from middletown, the okay part of town. Why we live in city dirt and call
us City Blue knows Lord Almighty only.'
'And what
is the word.'
'It seems
when mansions cozy up with shacks they spawn out something nasty.'
Goldie sits
up perched there in the corner of the back seat, tying footlong laces into
layered bunchy knots.
'Blackberries.
If they were black. I could see it. They could see it too.'
'Not a
word, nigger. The city she is deaf as well.'
'The city.
The naked Earth. All the villages and people all, farmers peasants pygmys,
short and tribal savage motherfuckers with they ears all pulled and they lips
all stretched. All the world. Everything. Deaf, ya heard.'
Shawn Truey
kicks the gas up, yawning.
'Berries
black and we'd pick them up in baskets. Green paint on the baskets sometimes.
Yellow too. The laces. If you could see it I could see it too. If they were
black like berries.'
Shawn &
Donny, unison:
'Shut the
fuck up, Goldilocks.'
The
churchbells call out natural a minor sharp in mellow tone. Eight p.m. and final
bell fore sunrise. Gathered groups of kindred flock round tables for the gorging
on a heavy meal just four blocks uptown proper. Down and southern past the
tracks and further, beyond the rows of dregs and hovels, pissgutter creaky
ancient homes keep sheltered the unliving from the world without their doors. Fecund plots grown miletall near with weedy
grass line curbsides through to downtown. Donny Kilroy buckles up. Goldie sighs
emphatic as Truey eases lightly on the gas. Cole croons velvet from the auto's
speaker's horns.
'You hear
anything?'
Another
little sigh. Feline, somehow.
'About last
night?'
'What you
think.'
'Just that
you in heavy shit, maybe. Is all.'
Husky dark
and brown the limbs like elbows thighs and kneebones of a thousand little
sprigs of bush and undertree reach west and toward the painted white old church.
The bells are lapping final rings of oaken harmony from without bricktowers.
The church rests deep and sogging in the mayearth, tilted slight in kindred
with its backhouse, sluggard in the field of o'ergrown weed and seedgrass. The
house out back bridged narrowly to church by little narrow upward angled halls,
the steps inside made whole in slabs of dried up ancient wood, pinned hard fast
and to the underboard by rusty ancient nails. The old and oakdoored backhouse
lies twenty feet dugout up under, carved into the little hill that crawls from
out beneath the church. The rears of the foundation nude and weathertarnished
lay in bake through summer sun and bathe through winter rain as all those years
pass on unnoticed. Naddy said to not move lying chairs. That there are things
you should not touch.
'Yeah. Is
all. You and the rest. My ass, is all. All is all and my ass is.'
'The sun i
think was yellow or was orange or red I can't remember I can't...'
'There she
is. Sixth and Orleans, hoss. Three blocks up. I can see them twin and blinking
lights.'
Naddy said
to not move lying chairs. Naddy said to never move them. They were stacked
against and up along the blackwall near the backside of the church. A thrush of
them all pinned and grey like armies stacked for packing fast in barracks,
heavy and against the wall. She had said to never move them. Fingers danced
their borders gracing curious in jigsaw lust. A patch of greylight through the
dusted glass and flying came in three young doves in white. Two of them leapt
bellyup and swollen out the window, falling down and out and without moving
came to nothingness at ground. The remnant dove danced left to right in pacing
starling stasis. Not a breath. Not a breath. Wind came rushing through the
window. Lanternjack and Spiderskin. An evil blowing wind.
She had
said it but you pulled the seat out screeching just a touch and just to see.
The tackmetal shriek screamed out for just a little as you pulled it through
the backframe of the wooden seat. The thin and angled hinges bucked up popping,
stuck out straight and lockjawed and you
pulled on it and just a touch to see and saw it wouldn't easy move. A nudge and
just the stuck hinge buckled cocked. With just a tiny nudge a push and just to
see a little you pushed harder just a little and the chairback didn't move. A
sudden rush and hinges popped out fast again and hard the other way. The
sandwiched seat in hands moved swift out toward the chairstack and the wall,
tugging with your sandwiched hands and body, plopping hard your frame against
the rows of fastpacked soldier's barrackschairs. You tumbled on and down and
loose came like a string the grey and woodframed thrush: spooling out like
dominoes and rushing down in avalanched adrenaline, plucking savage out the
backdoor's lock and handle, leaving open miles of narrow angled stairstep hall
for you to deftly backwards heavy fall.
Truey steps
the gas on. Donny lights a smoke. Goldie's neck is craned and downward.
'...but
then we couldn't see the sun or see a thing. The bucket's paint was green, I
think. The color of the day it was and...'
'Grundy
says it's heavy shit. Says someone somehow something saw and now they know is
all. Is fuckin all, says Sol.'
'Who and
what and what is it they saw. Say they they saw.'
'In time you'll
know, True. Know and more. And soon.'
'...where
were they I don't know I don't know I don't know...'
...
'Dark,
outside, it is. I wish it wasn't night as much as this.'
'Kept
eating all the pudding all the ones with little bunches like the knots. I said
I loved them and I said it but you ate them and you got all fat and still are,
Donny.' Goldie says, angry just a little.
'I always
made sure you had one left after. I'd only ever take them all but one. And you
never said you liked them.'
The cart's
wheels cartwheel spun in jingoed frenzy with the palmoil lacquered floor. A
rush of men with tanker shoulders lashed the corners of the necro box to safety
with their elbows fore the fall. The cart spun out from under toward the
stooping wall with velvet plush, lined for brows bent raw before the eyes of
watching Father. Shrugging up a few feet and a final pull, the box got up on
stage, sliding on and to the stage's softwood runners. Licks of sweat screamed
flinging from the flicker of a dozen meaty wrists, their clothes unmucked but
spotted with the touch of spotty firstrain. A heavy sigh or two. The sound of
clacking metal, loud as bellows from the mouths of babes. The ruckus back out
further than the arms of Christ uplifted, high and reigning on the backwall: a
clatter like the storm outside in virgin brew. Tempest, God Almighty. Lift the
tempest.
let the
rain not downward fall
let they
heads in grief stay dry
as lucky
summer all
Though the
wind will come as always. Clatter like the shots from out a muddy trigger:
ruddy bloodied mess, the hounds of hell with teeth all bared for gutting: the
city in her sorry virgin sleep. All deaf and beltlashed naked, she. Come sorry
wind what may. Keep calling out for something sorry other. Paint them as you painted home. Dust and
plenty of it. The men in rushing trip on each the other, stacking high a
kneebruised lot of three men tankershouldered. A clatterlurch in back of
church. Firstrain on the mayearth.
'Leezy
keeps a little stack of numbers. Maybe someone he could call,' says Truey.
'Maybe so.
Likely send me packing back to Reilly's.'
'He is
untouched. Not a touch on Solomon.'
'Yes. And
the old story:
'So it
stays until old Gabe comes leaping from his morning shit to blow the dusty horn
from out his window. And God says eidi-eidi-ho. The people dance down under,
all feathered tarred and soggy, clucking jestbells for a nightstay. Asscracked
maggots dustin' they jackets, clean like city faggots, bustin' they ass for a
spot in line:
'The Great
and Gilded Welfare Line in the Sky.'
Shawn and
Donny chuckle lightly just a bit.
'...not a
word not a word he said it not a word...'
'Drop me
here. Pull up curbside. Take Goldie on down south to Sagie's. Meet me back here
after.'
'You could
see if it was black. The berries. Even without the sun, I'd see it. They could
see it too and I'd show them. The laces. But you'd eat them all and keep them
and leave none for me.' Goldie says.
'Shut that
rattled cage up swift, Gold. We kin at heart I know but you a crazy mess. Unfog
those wire rims and see the world.'
'Mind
yourself, cowboy. That skin you're in is only lizard thick. ' says Truey.
Donny nods
them off out towards the highway. Truey steps the gas and Goldilocks beams
cheekflushed through the window, breathing mouthout spots of icey fog on
window's pane. Donny Kilroy waves them off and kicks a touch of knotted grass
from underfoot. Making east and for the door,
in lockstep and in kindred with the throbbing flush: the seasick
flushing throb of open night lays night and droopy eyes wide open: Donny sees
this and he does not see the sun.