"Palahniuk, Chuck - Invisible Monsters" - читать интересную книгу автора (Palahniuk Chuck)INVISIBLE MONSTERS Chuck
Palahniuk W. W. Norton &
Company New York • London For
Geoff, who said, "This is how to steal drugs." And
Ina, who said, "This is lip liner." And
Janet, who said, "This is silk georgette." And my
editor, Patricia, who kept saying, "This is not good,
enough." CHAPTER ONEWhere you're
supposed to be is some big West Hills wedding reception in a big manor house with flower arrangements and stuffed mushrooms all over the
house. This is called scene setting:
where everybody is, who's alive, who's dead. This is Evie Cottrell's big
wedding reception moment. Evie is standing
halfway down the big staircase in the manor house foyer, naked inside
what's left of her wedding dress, still holding her rifle. Me,
I'm standing at the bottom of the stairs but only in a
physical way. My mind is, I don't know where. Nobody's
all-the-way dead yet, but let's just say the clock is ticking. Not
that anybody in this big drama is a real alive per-son,
either. You can trace everything about Evie Cottrell's look
back to some television commercial for an organic shampoo,
except right now Evie's wedding dress is burned down to just the
hoopskirt wires orbiting her hips and just the little wire skeletons
of all the silk flowers that were in her hair. And Evie's blonde hair, her big,
teased-up, backcombed rainbow in every shade of blonde blown up with hairspray,
well, Evie's hair is burned off, too. The
only other character here is Brandy Alexander, who's laid out,
shotgunned, at the bottom of the staircase, bleeding to death. What I
tell myself is the gush of red pumping out of Brandy's bullet hole is less like blood than
it's some sociopolitical tool. The thing
about being cloned from all those shampoo commercials, well, that goes
for me and Brandy Alexander, too. Shotgunning
anybody in this room would be the moral equivalent of killing a car, a vacuum cleaner, a Barbie doll. Erasing a computer
disk. Burning a book. Probably that
goes for killing anybody in the
world. We're all such products. Brandy
Alexander, the long-stemmed latte queen supreme of the top-drawer party girls,
Brandy is gushing her insides out through a bullet hole in her amazing suit jacket.
The suit, it's this white Bob Mackie knock-off Brandy bought in Seattle with a
tight hobble skirt that squeezes her ass
into the perfect big heart shape. You would
not believe how much this suit cost. The mark-up is about a zillion percent. The suit jacket has a
little peplum skirt and wide lapels and shoulders. The single-breasted cut is symmetrical except for the
hole pumping out blood. Then Evie starts to sob,
standing there halfway up the staircase. Evie, that deadly virus of the moment.
This is our cue to all look at poor Evie,
poor, sad Evie, hairless and wearing
nothing but ashes and circled by the wire cage of her burned-up hoop skirt.
Then Evie drops the rifle. With her
dirty face in her dirty hands, Evie sits down and starts to boo-hoo, as if
crying will solve anything. The rifle, this is a loaded thirty-aught rifle, it clatters down the stairs and skids out into the middle of the foyer floor,
spinning on its side, pointing at
me, pointing at Brandy, pointing at Evie,
crying. It's not that I'm some
detached lab animal just conditioned to ignore violence, but my first instinct
is maybe it's not too late to dab club soda
on the bloodstain. Most of my adult life so
far has been me standing on seamless paper
for a raft of bucks per hour, wearing clothes
and shoes, my hair done and some famous fashion photographer telling me
how to feel. Him
yelling, Give me lust, baby. Flash. Give
me malice. Flash. Give
me detached existentialist ennui. Flash. Give
me rampant intellectualism as a coping mechanism. Flash. Probably
it's the shock of seeing my one worst enemy shoot my other worst
enemy is what it is. Boom, and it's a win-win situation. This and being around
Brandy, I've developed a pretty big Jones for drama. It
only looks like I'm crying when I put a handkerchief up
under my veil to breathe through. To filter the air since you can about not
breathe for all the smoke since Evie's big manor house is burning down around
us. Me,
kneeling down beside Brandy, I could put my hands anywhere in my gown and find
Darvons and Demerols and Darvocet 100s. This is everybody's cue to look
at me. My gown is a knock-off print of the Shroud of Turin, most of it brown and
white, draped and cut so the shiny red buttons will button through the
stigmata. Then I'm wearing yards and yards of
black organza veil wrapped around my
face and studded with little hand-cut Austrian
crystal stars. You can't tell how I look, face-wise, but that's the whole idea. The look is elegant
and sacrilegious and makes me feel sacred and immoral. Haute
couture and getting hauler. Fire inches
down the foyer wallpaper. Me, for added set dressing I started the
fire. Special effects can go a long way to heighten a mood, and it's not as if this is a real house. What's burning down is a re-creation of a period
revival house patterned after a copy
of a copy of a copy of a mock-Tudor big manor house. It's a hundred generations
removed from anything original, but
the truth is aren't we all? Just
before Evie comes screaming down the stairs and shoots Brandy Alexander,
what I did was pour out about a gallon of Chanel Number Five and put a burning wedding invitation
to it, and boom, I'm recycling. It's funny, but when you
think about even the biggest tragic fire
it's just a sustained chemical reaction. The oxidation of Joan of Arc. Still
spinning on the floor, the rifle points at me, points at
Brandy. Another
thing is no matter how much you think you love somebody, you'll step back when the
pool of their blood edges up too close. Except
for all this high drama, it's a really nice day. This is a warm, sunny day and
the front door is open to the porch and the lawn outside. The fire upstairs
draws the warm
smell of the fresh-cut lawn into the foyer, and you can hear all the wedding guests outside. All the guests, they took the gifts they wanted, the
crystal and silver and went out to wait on the lawn for the firemen and
paramedics to make their entrance. Brandy,
she opens one of her huge, ring-beaded hands and she touches the hole pouring her blood all
over the marble floor. Brandy,
she says, "Shit. There's no way the Bon Marche will take this suit
back." Evie lifts her face, her
face a finger-painting mess of soot and snot
and tears from her hands and screams, "I hate my life being so boring!” Evie
screams down at Brandy Alexander, "Save me a window table in hell!" Tears rinse clean lines
down Evie's cheeks, and she screams,
"Girlfriend! You need to be yelling some back at me!" As if this isn't already
drama, drama, drama, Brandy looks up at me
kneeling beside her. Brandy's aubergine eyes dilated out to full flower, she
says, "Brandy Alexander is
going to die now?" Evie, Brandy and me, all
this is just a power struggle for the spotlight. Just each of us being me, me,
me first. The murderer, the victim, the witness, each of us thinks our role is the lead. Probably
that goes for anybody in the world. It's all mirror, mirror
on the wall because beauty is power the
same way money is power the same way a gun is power. Anymore,
when I see the picture of a twenty-something in the newspaper who was abducted and
sodomized and robbed and then killed and here's a front-page
picture of her young and smiling, instead of me dwelling on this
being a big, sad crime, my gut reaction is, wow, she'd be really
hot if she didn't have such a big honker of a nose. My
second reaction is I'd better have some good head and shoulders
shots handy in case I get, you know, abducted and sodomized to death.
My third reaction is, well, at least that cuts down on the competition. If
that's not enough, my moisturizer I use is a suspension
of inert fetal solids in hydrogenated mineral oil. My point
is that, if I'm honest, my life is all about me. My
point is, unless the meter is running and some photographer
is yelling: Give me empathy. Then
the flash of the strobe. Give
me sympathy. Flash. Give
me brutal honesty. Flash. "Don't let me die here
on this floor," Brandy says, and her
big hands clutch at me. "My hair," she says, "My hair will
be flat in the back." My
point is I know Brandy is maybe probably going to die,
but I just can't get into it. Evie
sobs even louder. On top of this, the fire sirens from way outside are
crowning me queen of Migraine Town. The
rifle is still spinning on the floor, but slower and slower. Brandy
says, "This is not how Brandy Alexander wanted her
life to go. She's supposed to be famous, first. You know,
she's supposed to be on television during Super Bowl halftime, drinking
a diet cola naked in slow motion before she died." The
rifle stops spinning and points at nobody. At
Evie sobbing, Brandy screams, "Shut up!" "
You shut up," Evie screams back. Behind her, the fire is eating its way down the
stairway carpet. The
sirens, you can hear them wandering and screaming all over the West
Hills. People will just knock each other down to dial 9-1-1 and be the big hero.
Nobody looks ready for the big television crew that's due to
arrive any minute. "This
is your last chance, honey," Brandy says, and her blood is getting all
over the place. She says, "Do you love me?" It's
when folks ask questions like this that you lose the spotlight. This is
how folks trap you into a best-supporting role. Even
bigger than the house being on fire is this huge expectation that I have to say
the three most worn-out words you'll find in any script. Just the
words make me feel I'm severely fingering myself. They're just words is all. Powerless. Vocabulary.
Dialogue. "Tell
me," Brandy says. "Do you? Do you really love me?" This is
the big hammy way Brandy has played her whole life. The Brandy Alexander nonstop
continuous live action theater, but less and less live by the moment. Just
for a little stage business, I take Brandy's hand in mine.
This is a nice gesture, but then I'm freaked by the whole
threat of blood-borne pathogens, and then, boom, the ceiling in the dining
room crashes down and sparks and embers rush out at us from the dining
room doorway. "Even
if you can't love me, then tell me my life,” Brandy says. "A girl
can't die without her life flashing before
her eyes." Pretty
much nobody is getting their emotional needs met. It's
then the fire eats down the stairway carpet to Evie's bare
ass, and Evie screams to her feet and pounds down the
stairs in her burned-up white high heels. Naked and hairless, wearing wire and
ashes, Evie Cottrell runs out the front door to a larger audience, her wedding guests, the
silver and crystal and the arriving fire trucks. This is the world we live in. Conditions change and we
mutate. So of
course this'll be all about Brandy, hosted by me, with guest appearances by
Evelyn Cottrell and the deadly AIDS virus. Brandy, Brandy, Brandy. Poor sad
Brandy on her back, Brandy touches the hole pouring her life out onto
the marble floor and says, "Please. Tell me my life. Tell me how we got
here." So me, I'm here eating
smoke just to document this Brandy Alexander
moment. Give
me attention. Flash. Give
me adoration. Flash. Give
me a break. Flash. CHAPTER TWODon't expect this to
be the kind of story that goes: and then,
and then, and then. What
happens here will have more of that fashion magazine feel, a Vogue
or a Glamour magazine chaos with page numbers on every second or fifth or third
page. Perfume cards falling out, and full-page naked women coming out of nowhere to sell you make-up. Don't
look for a contents page, buried magazine-style twenty pages back from the front. Don't expect
to find anything right off. There isn't a real pattern to anything, either. Stories will start and then, three
paragraphs later: Jump
to page whatever. Then,
jump back. This
will be ten thousand fashion separates that mix and match to create maybe
five tasteful outfits. A million trendy accessories, scarves and belts, shoes
and hats and gloves, and no real clothes to wear them with. And
you really, really need to get used to that feeling, here,
on the freeway, at work, in your marriage. This is the
world we live in. Just go with the prompts. Jump
back twenty years to the white house where I grew up
with my father shooting super-8 movies of my brother and
me running around the yard. Jump
to present time with my folks sitting on lawn chairs at night, and watching
these same super-8 movies projected on the
white side of the same white house, twenty years later. The house the same, the yard the same, the windows projected in the movies lined up just
perfect with the real windows, the
movie grass aligned with the real grass, and my movie-projected brother and me
being toddlers and running around
wild for the camera. Jump to
my big brother being all miserable and dead from the big plague of AIDS. Jump to
me being grown up and fallen in love with a police detective and
moved away to become a famous supermodel. Just
remember, the same as a spectacular Vogue magazine,
remember that no matter how close you follow the jumps: Continued
on page whatever. No matter how careful you
are, there's going to be the sense you
missed something, the collapsed feeling under your skin that you didn't experience it all. There's that fallen heart feeling that you rushed right through
the moments where you should've been paying attention. Well, get used to that
feeling. That's how your whole life will
feel some day. This is all practice. None
of this matters. We're just warming up. Jump
to here and now, Brandy Alexander bleeding to death on the floor with me
kneeling beside her, telling this story before here come the paramedics. Jump
backward just a few days to the living room of a rich house in Vancouver,
British Columbia. The room is lined with the rococo hard candy of carved
mahogany paneling with marble baseboards and marble flooring and a very
sort-of curlicue carved marble fireplace. In rich houses
where old rich people live, everything is just what you'd think. The
rubrum lilies in the enameled vases are real, not silk.
The cream-colored drapes are silk, not polished cotton. Mahogany is not pine
stained to look like mahogany. No pressed-glass chandeliers posing as cut
crystal. The leather
is not vinyl. All
around us are these cliques of Louis-the-Fourteenth chair-sofa-chair. In
front of us is yet another innocent real estate agent, and
Brandy's hand goes out: her wrist thick with bones and veins, the mountain
range of her knuckles, her wilted fingers, her rings in their haze of
marquise-cut green and red, her porcelain
nails painted sparkle pink, she says, "Charmed,
I'm sure." If you have to start with
any one detail, it has to be Brandy's hands.
Beaded with rings to make them look even
bigger, Brandy's hands are enormous. Beaded with rings, as if they could be
more obvious, hands are the one part
about Brandy Alexander the surgeons couldn't change. So Brandy doesn't even try
and hide her hands. We've
been in too many of this kind of house for me to count, and the realtor we meet
is always smiling. This one is wearing the standard uniform, the navy blue suit with the red,
white, and blue scarf around the neck. The blue heels are on her feet and the blue bag is hanging at the crook of her elbow. The
realty woman looks from Brandy Alexander's big hand to Signore Alfa Romeo
standing at Brandy's side, and the power blue eyes of Alfa attach
themselves; those blue eyes you never see close or look away,
inside those eyes is the baby or the bouquet of flowers, beautiful or
vulnerable,
that make a beautiful man someone safe to love. Alfa's
just the latest in a year-long road trip of men obsessed with Brandy, and any
smart woman knows a beautiful man is her best fashion accessory.
The same way you'd product model a new car or a toaster, Brandy's
hand draws a
sight line through the air from her smile and big boobs to Alfa. "May I introduce," Brandy says, "Signore Alfa Romeo, professional male consort to the
Princess Brandy Alexander." The
same way, Brandy's hand swings from her batting eyelashes and rich hair in an invisible sight
line to me. All
the realty woman is going to see is my veils, muslin and
cut-work velvet, brown and red, tulle threaded with silver,
layers of so much you'd think there's nobody inside. There's
nothing about me to look at so most people don't. It's a look that says: Thank
you for not sharing. "May
I introduce," Brandy says, "Miss Kay Maclsaac, personal
secretary to the Princess Brandy Alexander." The
realty woman in her blue suit with its brass Chanel buttons and the
scarf tied around her neck to hide all her loose skin, she smiles at Alfa. When
nobody will look at you, you can stare a hole in them. Picking out all the
little details you'd never stare long enough to get if she'd ever just return
your gaze, this, this is your revenge. Through my veils, the realtor's glowing
red and gold, blurred at her edges. "Miss
Maclsaac," Brandy says, her big hand still open toward
me, "Miss Maclsaac is mute and cannot speak." The
realty woman with her lipstick on her teeth and her powder and concealer
layered in the crepe under her eyes, her pret-a-porter teeth and
machine-washable wig, she smiles at Brandy Alexander. "And
this . . . ," Brandy's big ring-beaded hand curls up to
touch Brandy's torpedo breasts. "This
. . . ," Brandy's hand curls up to touch pearls at her
throat. "This
. . . ," the enormous hand lifts to touch the billowing
piles of auburn hair. "And
this . . . ," the hand touches thick moist lips. "This,"
Brandy says, "is the Princess Brandy Alexander." The
realty woman drops to one knee in something between a curtsy and what
you'd do before an altar. Genuflecting. "This is such an honor," she
says. "I'm so sure this is the house for you. You just have
to love this house." Icicle
bitch she can be, Brandy just nods and turns back toward
the front hall where we came in. "Her
Highness and Miss Maclsaac," Alfa says, "they would
like to tour the house by themselves, while you and I
discuss the details." Alfa's little hands flutter up to explain,
"... the transfer of funds ... the exchange of lira for
Canadian dollars." "Loonies,"
the realty woman says. Brandy
and me and Alfa are all flash frozen. Maybe this woman has seen
through us. Maybe after the months we've been on the road and the dozens of big
houses we've hit, maybe somebody has finally figured out our scam. "Loonies,"
the woman says. Again, she genuflects. "We call our dollars
'Loonies'," she says and jabs a hand in her blue purse. "I'll show you. There's a
picture of a bird on them," she says.
"It's a loon." Brandy and me, we turn
icicle again and start walking away, back
to the front hall. Back through the cliques of chair-sofa-chair, past the carved
marble. Our reflections smear, dim,
and squirm behind a lifetime of cigar smoke on the mahogany paneling. Back to the front hallway, I follow the Princess Brandy Alexander while Alfa's
voice fills the realtor's blue-suited
attention with questions about the angle of the morning sun into the
dining room and whether the provincial
government will allow a personal heliport behind the swimming pool. Going
toward the stairs is the exquisite back of Princess Brandy, a
silver fox jacket draped over Brandy's shoulders and yards of a silk brocade
scarf tied around her billowing pile of Brandy Alexander auburn
hair. The queen supreme's voice and the shadow of L'Air du Temps are
the invisible train behind everything that is the world of
Brandy Alexander. The billowing auburn hair
piled up inside her brocade silk scarf
reminds me of a bran muffin. A big cherry cupcake. This is some
strawberry auburn mushroom cloud rising
over a Pacific atoll. Those
princess feet are caught in two sort of gold lame leg-hold
traps with little gold straps and gold chains. These are the trapped-on,
stilted, spike-heeled feet of gold that mount the first of about three
hundred steps from the front hall to the second floor. Then she mounts
the next step, and the next until all of her is far enough above
me to risk looking back. Only then will she turn the whole strawberry cupcake
of her head. Those big torpedo, Brandy Alexander breasts silhouetted, the
wordless beauty of that professional mouth in full face. "The owner of this
house," Brandy says, "is very old and
supplementing her hormones and still lives here." The
carpet is so thick under my feet I could be climbing
loose dirt. One step after another, loose and sliding and unstable. We, Brandy
and Alfa and me, we've been speaking English
as a second language so long that we've forgotten it as our first. I have no native tongue. We're
eye level with the dirty stones of a dark chandelier. On the other side of the handrail, the
hallway's gray marble floor looks as if
we've climbed a stairway through the
clouds. Step after step. Far away, Alfa's demanding talk goes on about
wine cellars, about kennels for the Russian
wolfhounds. Alfa's constant demand for the realty woman's attention is
as faint as a radio call-in show bouncing
back from outer space. "... the Princess Brandy Alexander," Alfa's warm, dark words float up, "she is probable to
remove her clothes and scream like
the wild horses in even the crowded
restaurants ..." The
queen supreme's voice and the shadow of L'Air du Temps says, "Next
house," her Plumbago lips say, "Alfa will be the mute." "... your breasts," Alfa is telling the realty woman, "you have two of the breasts of a young
woman ..." Not
one native tongue is left among us. Jump
to us being upstairs. Jump
to now anything being possible. After
the realtor is trapped by the blue eyes of Signore Alfa
Romeo, jump to when the real scamming starts. The master
bedroom will always be down the hallway in the direction of the best view. This
master bathroom is paneled in pink mirror, every wall, even the
ceiling. Princess Brandy and I are everywhere, reflected on
every surface. You can see Brandy sitting on the pink counter at one side of the vanity sink, me
sitting at the other side of the sink. One
of us is sitting on each side of all the sinks in all the mirrors. There are just
too many Brandy Alexanders to count, and they're all being the boss of me. They
all open their white calfskin clutch bags, and hundreds of those big
ring-beaded Brandy Alexander hands take out new copies of the Physicians' Desk Reference with its red cover, big as a Bible. All
her hundreds of Burning Blueberry eye shadow eyes look at me from all
over the room. "You
know the drill," all her hundreds of Plumbago mouths
command. Those big hands start pulling open drawers and cabinet
doors. "Remember where you got everything, and put it back exactly where you found it," the
mouths say. "We'll do the drugs first, then the makeup. Now start
hunting." I take
out the first bottle. It's Valium, and I hold the bottle
so all the hundred Brandys can read the label. "Take
what we can get away with," Brandy says, "then get on
to the next bottle." I
shake a few of the little blue pills into my purse pocket
with the other Valiums. The next bottle I find is Darvons. "Honey,
those are heaven in your mouth," all the Brandys look up to peer
at the bottle I'm holding. "Does it look safe to take too many?" The
expiration date on the label is only a month away, and
the bottle is still almost full. I figure we can take about
half. "Here,"
a big ring-beaded hand comes at me from every direction. One hundred big hands come
at me, palm up. "Give Brandy a couple. The princess is having
lower back pain again." I
shake ten capsules out, and a hundred hands toss a thousand
tranquilizers onto the red carpet tongues of those Plumbago mouths. A
suicide load of Darvon slides down into the dark interior of the continents
that make up a world of Brandy Alexander. Inside the next bottle are
the little purple ovals of 2.5-milligram—sized
Premarin. That's
short for Pregnant Mare Urine. That's short for thousands of miserable
horses in North Dakota and Central Canada, forced to stand in cramped
dark stalls with a catheter stuck on them to catch every drop of
urine and only getting let outside to get fucked again. What's funny
is that describes pretty much any good long stay in a
hospital, but that's only been my experience. "Don't
look at me that way," Brandy says. "My not taking
those pills won't bring any baby horses back from the dead." In the
next bottle are round, peach-colored little scored tablets
of 100-milligram Aldactone. Our homeowner must be a junkie for female
hormones. Painkillers
and estrogen are pretty much Brandy's only two food groups, and she
says, "Gimme, gimme, gimme." She snacks on some little pink-coated
Estinyls. She pops a few of the turquoise-blue Estrace tablets.
She's using some
vaginal Premarin as a hand cream when she says, "Miss Kay?" She says, "I can't seem to make a fist, Sweetness. Do you think, maybe you can wrap
things up without me while I lie down?" The
hundreds of me cloned in the pink bathroom mirrors, we check out the
make-up while the princess goes off to cat nap in the cabbage rose and old canopy
bed glory of the master bedroom. I find Darvocets and Percodans and Compazines,
Nembutals and Percocets. Oral estrogens. Anti-androgens. Progestons.
Transdermal estrogen patches. I find none of Brandy's colors, no Rusty
Rose blusher. No Burning Blueberry eye shadow. I find a vibrator with the
dead batteries swollen and leaking acid inside. It's
an old woman who owns this house, I figure. Ignored and aging and
drugged-out old women, older and more invisible to the world every minute,
they must not wear a lot of make-up. Not go out to fun hot spots. Not boogie
to a party froth. My breath smells hot and sour inside my veils, inside
the damp layers of silk and mesh and cotton georgette I lift for the first
time all day; and in the mirrors, I look at the pink reflection of
what's left of my face. Mirror,
mirror on the wall, who's the fairest one of all? The
evil queen was stupid to play Snow White's game. There's an age where a
woman has to move on to another kind of power. Money, for example. Or a
gun. I'm
living the life I love, I tell myself, and loving the life I
live. I tell
myself: I deserved this. This
is exactly what I wanted. CHAPTER THREEUntil I
met Brandy, all I wanted was for somebody to ask me what happened to my
face. "Birds
ate it," I wanted to tell them. Birds
ate my face. But
nobody wanted to know. Then nobody doesn't include Brandy Alexander. Just
don't think this was a big coincidence. We had to meet,
Brandy and me. We had so many things in common. We had close to
everything in common. Besides, it happens fast for some people and slow for some, accidents or gravity, but we all end up mutilated. Most women
know this feeling of being more and more invisible everyday. Brandy was in the hospital for months and
months, and so was I, and there's
only so many hospitals where you can go for major cosmetic surgery. Jump
back to the nuns. The nuns were the worst about always pushing, the nuns
who were nurses. One nun would tell me about some patient on a
different floor who was funny and charming. He was a lawyer and could do magic
tricks with just his hands and a paper napkin. This day nurse was the kind of
nun who wore a white nursing version of her regular nun uniform, and she'd
told this lawyer all about me. This was Sister Katherine. She told him I
was funny and bright, and she said how sweet it would be if the two of us
could meet and fall madly in love. Those
were her words. Halfway
down the bridge of her nose, she'd look at me through wire-framed
glasses, their lenses long and squared the way microscope slides look. Little
broken veins kept the end of her nose red. Rosacea, she called this.
It would be easier to see her living in a gingerbread house
than a convent. Married to Santa Claus instead of God.
The starched apron she wore over her habit was so glaring
white that when I'd first arrived, fresh from my big car accident, I
remembered how all the stains from my blood looked black. They
gave me a pen and paper so I could communicate. They wrapped my head in
dressings, yards of tight gauze holding wads of cotton in place, metal butterfly sutures gripping all over so I wouldn't unravel. They
fingered on a thick layer of antibiotic gel, claustrophobic and toxic under
the wads of cotton. My hair they pulled back,
forgotten and hot under the gauze where I couldn't get at it. The invisible
woman. When Sister Katherine
mentioned this other patient, I wondered if
maybe I'd seen him around, her lawyer, the cute, funny magician. "I
didn't say he was cute," she said. Sister
Katherine said, "He's still a little shy." On
the pad of paper, I wrote: still? "Since his little
mishap," she said and smiled with her eyebrows arched and all her chins
tucked down against her neck. "He wasn't wearing his seatbelt." She said, "His car
rolled right over the top of him." She
said, "That's why he'd be so perfect for you." Early
on, while I was still sedated, somebody had taken the
mirror out of my bathroom. The nurses seemed to steer me away from
polished anything the way they kept the suicides away from knives. The drunks
away from drinks.
The closest I had to a mirror was the television, and it only showed how I used to look. If I
asked to see the police photos from the accident, the
day nurse would tell me, "No." They kept the photos in a
file at the nursing station, and it seemed anybody could
ask to see them except me. This nurse, she'd say, "The
doctor thinks you've suffered enough for the time being." This
same day nurse tried to fix me up with an accountant whose hair and ears
were burned off in a propane blunder. She introduced me to a graduate student
who'd lost his throat and sinuses to a touch of cancer. A window
washer after his three-story tumble head first onto concrete. Those
were all her words, blunder, touch, tumble. The lawyer's mishap. My
big accident. Sister
Katherine would be there to check my vital signs every six hours. To check my
pulse against the sweep second hand on her man's wristwatch, thick and
silver. To wrap the blood pressure cuff around my arm. To check my
temperature, she'd push some kind of electric gun in my ear. Sister
Katherine was the kind of nun who wears a "wedding
ring. And
married people always think love is the answer. Jump
back to the day of my big accident, when everybody was so considerate. The
people, the folks who let me go ahead of them in the emergency room. What the
police insisted. I mean, they gave me this hospital sheet with "Property
of La Paloma Memorial Hospital" printed along the
edge in indelible blue. First they gave me morphine, intravenously.
Then they propped me up on a gurney. I don't remember much of
this, but the day nurse told me about the
police photos. In the
pictures, these big eight-by-ten glossies as nice as anything
in my portfolio. Black and white, the nurse said. But in
these eight-by-tens I'm sitting up on a gurney with my
back against the emergency room wall. The attending nurse
spent ten minutes cutting my dress off with those tiny
operating room manicure scissors. The cutting, I remember. It was my
cotton crepe sundress from Espre. I remember that when I ordered this dress from
the catalogue I almost ordered two, they're so comfortable, loose
with the breeze trying to get inside the arm holes and lift the
hem up around your waist. Then you'd sweat if there wasn't a breeze, and the
cotton crepe stuck on you like eleven herbs and spices, only on you the
dress was almost transparent. You'd walk onto a patio, it was
a great feeling, a million spotlights picking you out of the crowd,
or walk into a restaurant when outside it was ninety degrees, and
everyone would turn and look as if you'd just been awarded
some major distinguished award for a major lifetime achievement. That's
how it felt. I can remember this kind of attention. It always felt
ninety degrees hot. And I remember my
underwear. Sorry,
Mom, sorry, God, but I was wearing just this little patch up front with
an elastic string waist and just one string running down the crack and back around
to the bottom of the patch up front. Flesh-tone. That one
string, the one down the crack, butt floss is what everybody
calls that
string. I wore the patch underwear because of when the cotton crepe sundress goes almost transparent. You just don't plan on ending up in the emergency room
with your dress cut off and
detectives taking your picture, propped
up on a gurney with a morphine drip in one arm and a Franciscan nun
screaming in one ear. "Take your pictures!
Take your pictures, now! She's still losing blood!" No,
really, it was funnier than it sounds. It
got funny when there I was sprawled on this gurney, this
anatomically correct rag doll with nothing but this little
patch on and my face was the way it is now. The
police, they had the nun hold this sheet up over my breasts. It's so they
can take pictures of my face, but the detectives are so embarrassed for me,
being sprawled there topless. Jump
to when they refuse to show me the pictures, one of the detectives says that if
the bullet had been two inches higher, I'd be dead. I couldn't see their point. Two
inches lower, and I'd be deep fried in my spicy cotton
crepe sundress, trying to get the insurance guy to waive
the deductible and replace my car window. Then, I'd be by a swimming pool,
wearing sunblock and telling a couple cute guys how I was driving on the
freeway in Stingray when a rock or I don't know what, but my dri-ver's-side
window just burst. And
the cute guys would say, "Whoa." Jump
to another detective, the one who'd searched my car for
the slug and bone fragments, that stuff, the detective saw
how I'd been driving with the window half open. A car
window, this guy tells me over the eight-by-ten glossies of me wearing a
white sheet, a car window should always be all the way open or shut. He
couldn't remember how many motorists he'd seen decapitated by windows in car
accidents. How
could I not laugh. That
was his word: Motorists. The
way my mouth was, the only sound left I could do was laugh. I couldn't not laugh. Jump to after there were
the pictures, when people stopped looking
at me. My
boyfriend, Manus, came in that evening, after the emergency room, after I'd
been wheeled off on my gur-ney to surgery, after the bleeding had stopped and I
was in a private room. Then Manus showed up.
Manus Kelley who was my fiance until
he saw what was left. Manus sat looking
at the black-and-white glossies of my new face, shuffling and reshuffling them, turning them upside-down and right side up the way you would one of
those mystery pictures where one
minute you have a beautiful woman, but when you look again you have a hag. Manus
says, "Oh, God." Then
says, "Oh, sweet, sweet Jesus." Then says,
"Christ." The first date I ever had
with Manus, I was still living with my
folks. Manus showed me a badge in his wallet. At home, he had a gun. He was a
police detective, and he was really
successful in Vice. This was a May and December thing. Manus was twenty-five and I was eighteen, but we went out. This is the world we live in. We went
sailing one time, and he wore a Speedo, and any smart woman should know
that means bisexual at least. My
best friend, Evie Cottrell, she's a model. Evie says that
beautiful people should never date each other. Together, they just
don't generate enough attention. Evie says there's a whole shift in the beauty
standard when they're together. You can feel this, Evie says. When
both of you are beautiful, neither of you is beautiful.
Together, as a
couple, you're less than the sum of your parts. Nobody
really gets noticed, not any more. Still,
there I was one time, taping this infomercial, one of those long-long
commercials you think will end at any moment because after all it's just a commercial, but it's actually
thirty minutes long. Me and Evie, we're hired to be walking sex furniture to wear tight evening dresses all afternoon and entice the television audience into
buying the Num Num Snack Factory.
Manus comes to sit in the studio audience, and after the shoot he goes,
"Let's go sailing," and I go,
"Sure!" So we went sailing, and I
forgot my sunglasses, so Manus buys me a
pair on the dock. My new sunglasses are the exact same as Manus's
Vuarnets, except mine are made in Korea not
Switzerland and cost two dollars. Three
miles out, I'm walking into deck things. I'm falling down. Manus
throws me a rope, and I miss it. Manus throws me a beer and I miss the beer.
A headache, I get the kind of headache God would smote you with in the
Old Testament. What I don't know is that one of my sunglass lenses is darker
than the other, almost opaque. I'm blind in
one eye because of this lens, and I have no depth perception. Back then I don't know
this, that my perception is so fucked up.
It's the sun, I tell myself, so I just keep wearing the sunglasses and stumbling around blind and in pain. Jump
to the second time Manus visits me in the hospital, he
tells the eight-by-ten glossies of me in my sheet, Property
of La Paloma Memorial Hospital, that I should think about getting back into my
life. I should start making plans. You know, he says, take some
classes. Finish my degree. He
sits next to my bed and holds the photos between us so I
can't see either them or him. On my pad, with my pencil I ask Manus in
writing to show me. "When
I was little, we raised Doberman puppies," he says
from behind the photos. "And when a puppy is about six
months old you get its ears and tail cropped. It's the style
for those dogs. You go to a motel where a man travels
from state to state cutting the ears and tails off thousands of Doberman
puppies or boxers or bull terriers." On my
pad with my pencil, I write: your
point being? And I
wave this in his direction. "The point is whoever
cuts your ears off is the one you'll hate
for the rest of your life," he says. "You don't want your regular veterinarian to do the job so you pay a
stranger." Still
looking at picture after picture, Manus says, "That's the reason I
can't show you these." Somewhere
outside the hospital, in a motel room full of bloody towels with his
tool box of knives and needles, or driving down the highway to his next victim,
or kneeling over a dog, drugged and cut up in a dirty bathtub, is the man a
million dogs must hate. Sitting
next to my bed, Manus says, "You just need to archive
your cover-girl dreams." The
fashion photographer inside my head, yells: Give
me pity. Flash. Give me
another chance. Flash. That's
what I did before the accident. Call me a big liar, but
before the accident I told people I was a college student.
If you tell folks you're a model, they shut down. Your being a model will
mean they're networking with some lower life
form. They start using baby talk. They dumb
down. But if you tell folks you're a college student, folks are so impressed. You can be a student in
anything and not have to know
anything. Just say toxicology or marine
biokinesis, and the person you're talking to will change the subject to himself. If this doesn't
work, mention the neural synapses of embryonic pigeons. It
used to be I was a real college student. I have about sixteen hundred credits
toward an undergraduate degree in personal
fitness training. What I hear from my parents is that I could be a doctor by now. Sorry,
Mom. Sorry,
God. There
was a time when Evie and me went out to dance clubs and bars and men would
wait outside the ladies' room door to catch us. Guys would say they
were casting a television commercial. The guy would give me a business
card and ask what agency I was with. There
was a time when my mom came to visit. My mom smokes, and the first afternoon I came
home from a shoot,
she held out a matchbook and said, "What's the meaning of this?" She
said, "Please tell me you're not as big a slut as your poor
dead brother.” In the
matchbook was a guy's name I didn't know and a telephone number. "This
isn't the only one I found," Mom said. "What are you
running here?" I
don't smoke. I tell her that. These matchbooks pile up because
I'm too polite not to take them and I'm too frugal to just
throw them away. That's why it takes a whole kitchen drawer to hold
them, all these men I can't remember and their telephone numbers. Jump
to no day special in the hospital, just outside the office of the hospital
speech therapist. The nurse was leading me around by my elbow for exercise, and as we came around this one corner, just inside the open
office doorway, boom, Brandy
Alexander was just so there, glorious
in a seated Princess Alexander pose, in an iridescent Vivienne Westwood cat suit changing colors with her
every move. Vogue on
location. The fashion photographer
inside my head, yelling: Give
me wonder, baby. Flash. Give me amazement. Flash. The speech therapist said,
"Brandy, you can raise the pitch of your voice if you raise your laryngeal
cartilage. It's that bump in your throat you
feel going up as you sing ascending
scales." She said, "If you can keep your voice-box raised high in your throat, your voice should
stay between a G and a middle C. That's about 160 Hertz." Brandy
Alexander and the way she looked turned the rest of the world into virtual reality. She
changed color from every new angle. She
turned green with my one step. Red
with my next. She turned silver and gold and then she was dropped behind us, gone. "Poor,
sad misguided thing," Sister Katherine said, and she
spat on the concrete floor. She looked at me craning my
neck to see back down the hall, and she asked if I had any
family. I
wrote: yeah, there's my gay brother but he's dead from
AIDS. And
she says, "Well, that's for the best, then, isn't it?" Jump
to the week after Manus's last visit, last meaning final,
when Evie drops by the hospital. Evie looks at the glossies
and talks to God and Jesus Christ. "You
know," Evie tells me across a stack of Vogues, and Glamour
magazines in her lap she brings me, "I talked to the agency and they said
that if we re-do your portfolio they'll
consider taking you back for hand work." Evie
means a hand model, modeling cocktail rings and diamond tennis bracelets and shit. Like I
want to hear this. I can't talk. All I
can eat is liquids. Nobody
will look at me. I'm invisible. All I
want is somebody to ask me what happened. Then, I'll get on with my life. Evie
tells the stack of magazines, "I want you to come live with me at my house
when you get out." She unzips her canvas bag on the edge of my bed and goes
into it with both hands. Evie says, "It'll be fun. You'll
see. I hate living all by my lonesome." And
says, "I've already moved your things into my spare
bedroom." Still
in her bag, Evie says, "I'm on my way to a shoot. Any chance you have any
agency vouchers you can lend me?" On my
pad with my pencil, I write: is
that my sweater you're wearing? And I
wave the pad in her face. "Yeah,"
she says, "but I knew you wouldn't mind." I
write: but
it's a size six. I
write: and
you're a size nine. "Listen,"
Evie says. "My call is for two o'clock. Why don't I stop by some time when
you're in a better mood?" Talking
to her watch, she says, "I'm so sorry things had to go
this way. It wasn't all of it anybody's fault.” Every
day in the hospital goes like this: Breakfast.
Lunch. Dinner. Sister Katherine falls in between. On television is one
network running nothing but infomercials
all day and all night, and there we are, Evie and me, together. We got a raft
of bucks. For the snack factory
thing, we do these big celebrity spokesmodel smiles, the ones where you make your face a big space heater.
We're wearing these sequined dresses that when you get them under a spotlight,
the dress flashes like a million reporters taking your picture. So glamorous.
I'm standing there in this twenty-pound dress, doing this big smile and dropping animal wastes into the
Plexiglas funnel on top of the Num
Num Snack Factory. This thing just
poops out little canapes like crazy, and Evie has to wade out into the studio audience and get folks to
eat the canapes. Folks
will eat anything to get on television. Then,
off camera, Manus goes, "Let's go sailing." And I
go, "Sure." It was
so stupid, my not knowing what was happening all along. Jump
to Brandy on a folding chair just inside the office of the
speech therapist, shaping her fingernails with the scratch
pad from a book of matches. Her long legs could squeeze a motorcycle in half, and the legal
minimum of her is shrink wrapped in leopard-print
stretch terry just screaming
to get out. The
speech therapist says, "Keep your glottis partially open
as you speak. It's the way Marilyn Monroe sang "Happy Birthday" to
President Kennedy. It makes your breath bypass your vocal chords for a more
feminine, helpless quality." The
nurse leads me past in my cardboard slippers, my tight bandages and deep funk,
and Brandy Alexander looks up at the last possible instant and
winks. God should be able to wink that good. Like somebody
taking your picture. Give me joy. Give me fun. Give me love. Flash. Angels
in heaven should blow kisses the way Brandy Alexander does and lights
up the rest of my week. Back in my room, I write: who is
she? "No
one you should have any truck with," the nurse says.
"You'll have problems enough as it is." but
who is she? I write. "If
you can believe it," the nurse says, "that one is someone
different every week." It's
after that Sister Katherine starts matchmaking. To save
me from Brandy Alexander, she offers me the lawyer without
a nose. She offers a mountain climbing dentist whose fingers and facial
features are eaten down to little hard shining bumps by frostbite. A missionary
with dark patches of some tropical fungus just under his skin. A mechanic
who leaned over a battery the moment it exploded and the acid left his lips and
cheeks gone and his yellow teeth showing in a permanent snarl. I look at the nun's wedding
ring and write: i
guess you got the last really buff guy. The
whole time I was in the hospital, no way could I fall in love. I just couldn't go there yet.
Settle for less. I didn't want to process through anything. I didn't want to pick up any pieces. Lower my expectations. Get on
with my less-than life. I didn't want to feel better about being still alive. Start compensating. I just wanted my
face fixed, if that was possible,
which it wasn't. When it's time to
reintroduce me to solid foods, their words
again, it's pureed chicken and strained carrots. Baby foods. Everything mashed or pulverized or crushed. You
are what you eat. The
nurse brings me the personal classified ads from a newsletter. Sister
Katherine peers down her nose and through
her glasses to read: Guys seeking slim, adventurous girls for fun and romance. And, yes, it's true, not one single guy
specifically excludes hideous mutilated girls with growing medical bills. Sister
Katherine tells me, "These men you can write to in
prison don't need to know how you really look." It's
just too much trouble to try and explain my feelings to her in writing. Sister Katherine reads me
the singles columns while I spoon up my
roast beef. She offers arsonists. Burglars. Tax cheats. She says, "You
probably don't want to date a rapist, not
right off. Nobody's that desperate." Between
the lonely men behind bars for armed robbery and second-degree
manslaughter, she stops to ask what's the matter. She takes my hand and talks to
the name on my plastic bracelet, such a hand model I am already, cocktail
rings, plastic I.D. bracelets so beautiful even a bride of Christ
can't take her eyes off them. She says, "What're you
feeling?" This
is hilarious. She
says, "Don't you want to fall in love?" The photographer in my head
says: Give me patience. Flash. Give
me control. Flash. The
situation is I have half a face. Inside
my bandages, my face still bleeds tiny little spots of
blood onto the wads of cotton. One doctor, the one making rounds every morning
who checks my dressing, he says my wound is
still weeping. That's his word. I
still can't talk. I have
no career. I can
only eat baby food. Nobody will ever look at me like I've won a big
prize ever again. nothing,
I write on my pad. nothing's
wrong. "You
haven't mourned," Sister Katherine says. "You need to have a good cry and
then get on with your life. You're being too
calm about this." I
write: don't make
me laugh, my face, I write, the doctor sez my
wound will weep. Still,
at least somebody had noticed. This whole time, I was calm. I was the picture
of calm. I never, never panicked. I saw my
blood and snot and teeth splashed all over the dashboard the moment after the accident, but hysteria is impossible without an audience. Panicking
by yourself is the same as laughing
alone in an empty room. You feel
really silly. The
instant the accident happened, I knew I would die if I didn't take the next
exit off the freeway, turn right on Northwest Gower, go twelve blocks, and turn
into the La Paloma Memorial Hospital Emergency Room parking lot. I parked. I took my
keys and my bag and I walked. The glass doors
slid aside before I could see myself reflected
in them. The crowd inside, all the people waiting with broken legs and choking babies, they all slid aside, too, when they saw me. After that, the intravenous
morphine. The tiny operating room manicure scissors cut my dress up. The
flesh-tone little patch panties. The police
photos. The detective, the one who
searched my car for bone fragments, the guy
who'd seen all those people get their heads cut off in half-open car window's,
he comes back one day and says there's nothing left to find. Birds, seagulls,
maybe magpies, too. They got into the car where it was parked at the hospital,
through the broken window. The
magpies ate all of what the detective calls the soft tissue
evidence. The bones they probably carried away. "You
know, miss," he says, "to break them on rocks. For the
marrow." On the
pad, with the pencil, I write: ha, ha, ha. Jump
to just before my bandages come off, when a speech therapist
says I should get down on my knees and thank God for leaving my
tongue in my head, unharmed. We sit in her cinderblock office with half the room
filled by her steel
desk between us, and the therapist, she teaches me how a ventriloquist makes a dummy talk. You see, the ventriloquist
can't let you see his mouth move. He can't really use his lips, so he presses his tongue against the roof of
his mouth to make words. Instead
of a window, the therapist has a poster of a kitten
covered in spaghetti above the words: Accentuate
the Positive She
says that if you can't make a certain sound without using your lips, substitute
a similar sound, the therapist says; for
instance, use the sound eth instead of the sound eff. The
context in which you use the sound will make you understandable. "I'd
rather be thishing," the therapist says. then
go thishing, I write. thank
you. And
then I ran away. This is after my new cotton crepe sundress
arrives from Espre. Sister Katherine stood over me all morning with a curling
iron until my hair was this big butter creme frosting hairdo, this big
off-the-face hairdo. Then Evie brought some make up and did my eyes.
I put on my spicy new dress and couldn't wait to start sweating.
This whole summer, I hadn't seen a mirror or if I did I never realized the
reflection was me. I hadn't seen the police photos. When Evie and Sister
Katherine were done, I say, "De foil iowa fog geoff." And
Evie says, "You're welcome." Sister
Katherine says, "But you just ate lunch." It's
clear enough, nobody understands me here. I say,
"Kong wimmer nay pee golly." And
Evie says, "Yeah, these are your shoes, but I'm not hurting
them any." And
Sister Katherine says, "No, no mail yet, but we can write
to prisoners after you've had your nap, dear." They
left. And. I left, alone. And. How bad could it be, my
face? And
sometimes being mutilated can work to your advantage. All those
people now with piercings and tattoos and brandings and scarification . . .
What I mean is, attention is attention. Going
outside is the first time I feel I've missed something.
I mean, a whole summer had just disappeared. All those pool parties and
lying around on metal-flake speed-flesh-tone
lumps of ice in the freezer bin. I dig around until I find the biggest turkey, and I heft it up baby style in
its yellow plastic netting. I haul myself up to the
front of the store, right through the check
stands, and nobody stops me. Nobody's even looking. They're all reading those tabloid newspapers as if there's hidden gold there. "Sejgfn
di ofo utnbg," I say. "Nei wucj iswisn sdnsud." Nobody
looks. "EVSF
UYYB IUH," I say in my best ventriloquist voice. Nobody
even talks. Maybe just the clerks talk. Do you have two pieces of I.D.?
they're asking people writing checks. "Fgjrn
iufnv si vuv," I say. "Xidi cniwuw sis sacnc!" Then
it is, it's right then a boy says, "Look!" Everybody who's not looking
and not talking stops breathing. The
little boy says, "Look Mom, look over there! That monster's stealing
food!" Everybody
gets all shrunken up with embarrassment. All their heads drop down into their
shoulders the way they'd look on crutches. They're reading
tabloid headlines harder than ever. Monster
Girl Steals Festive Holiday Bird And there I am, deep fried
in my cotton crepe dress, a twenty-five
pound turkey in my arms, the turkey sweating, my dress almost transparent. My nipples are rock kind is wearing this sleeveless Versace kind of
tank dress with this season's
overwhelming feel of despair and corrupt
resignation. Body conscious yet humiliated. Buoyant but crippled. The queen supreme is the most
beautiful anything I've ever seen so
I just vogue there to watch from the
doorway. "Men,"
the therapist says, "stress the adjective when they
speak." The therapist says, "For instance, a man would say, 'You are so attractive,
today'." Brandy
is so attractive you could chop her head off and put it on blue velvet in the
window at Tiffany's and somebody would buy it for a million dollars. "A woman would say,
'You are so attractive, today'," the therapist says. "Now, you, Brandy. You say it. Stress the modifier, not the adjective." Brandy
Alexander looks her Burning Blueberry eyes at me in the doorway and
says, "Posing girl, you are so Godawful ugly. Did you let an
elephant sit on your face or what?" Brandy's
voice, I barely hear what she says. At that instant, I just adore
Brandy so much. Everything about her feels as good as being beautiful and
looking in a mirror. Brandy is my instant royal family. My
only everything to live for. I go,
"Cfoieb svns ois," and I pile the cold, wet turkey into
the speech therapist's lap, her sitting pinned under twenty-five
pounds of dead meat in her roll-around leather desk chair. From
closer down the hallway, Sister Katherine is yelling, "Yoo-hoo!" "Mriuvn
wsi sjaoi aj," I go, and wheel the therapist and her
chair into the hallway. I say, "Jownd wine sm fdo dcncw." The
speech therapist, she's smiling up at me and says, "You
don't have to thank me, it's just my job is all." The
nun's arrived with the man and his I.V. stand, a new man with no skin or
crushed features or all his teeth bashed out, a man who'd be perfect for me. My
one true love. My deformed or mutilated or diseased prince charming.
My unhappily ever after. My hideous future. The monstrous rest of my life. I slam
the office door and lock myself inside with Brandy Alexander. There's the
speech therapist's notebook on her desk, and I grab it. save
me, I write, and wave it in Brandy's face. I write: please. Jump
to Brandy Alexander's hands. This always starts with her hands. Brandy
Alexander puts a hand out, one of those hairy pig-knuckled hands with the veins
of her arm crowded and squeezed to the elbow with bangle bracelets of
every color. Just by herself, Brandy Alexander is such a shift
in the beauty standard that no one thing stands out. Not
even you. "So, girl,"
Brandy says. "What all happened to your face?" Birds. I
write: birds,
birds ate my face. And I
start to laugh. Brandy doesn't laugh.
Brandy says, "What's that supposed to
mean?" And
I'm still laughing. i was
driving on the freeway, I write. And
I'm still laughing. someone
shot a 30-caliber bullet from a rifle. the
bullet tore my entire jawbone off my face. Still
laughing. i came
to the hospital, I write. i did
not die. Laughing. they
couldn't put my jaw back because seagulls had eaten it. And I
stop laughing. "Girl,
your handwriting is terrible," Brandy says. "Now tell me what else." And I
start to cry. what
else, I write, is i have to eat baby food. i can't talk. i have
no career. i
have no home. my
fiance left me. nobody
will look at me. all my
clothes, my best friend ruined them. I'm
still crying. "What
else?" Brandy says. "Tell me everything." a boy,
I write. a
little boy in the supermarket called me a monster. Those
Burning Blueberry eyes look right at me the way no eyes have all summer.
"Your perception is all fucked up," Brandy says. "All you can
talk about is trash that's already happened." She
says, "You can't base your life on the past or the present." Brandy
says, "You have to tell me about your future." Brandy
Alexander, she stands up on her gold lame leg-hold trap shoes. The queen
supreme takes a jeweled compact out of her clutch bag and snaps the compact
open to look at the mirror inside. "That
therapist," those Plumbago lips say, "the speech therapist can be so
stupid about these situations." The
big jeweled arm muscles of Brandy sit me down in the seat still hot from
her ass, and she holds the compact so I can see inside. Instead of face powder,
it's full of white capsules. Where there should be a mirror, there's a close
up photo of Brandy Alexander smiling and looking terrific. "They're
Vicodins, dear," she says. "It's the Marilyn Monroe
school of medicine where enough of any drug will cure any
disease." She
says, "Dig in. Help yourself." The
thin and eternal goddess that she is, Brandy's picture
smiles up at me over a sea of painkillers. This is how I met Brandy Alexander.
This is how I found the strength not to get on with my former life. This
is how I found the courage not to pick up the same old pieces. "Now,"
those Plumbago lips say, "You are going to tell me your story like you
just did. Write it all down. Tell that story over and over. Tell me your sad-assed
story all night." That Brandy queen points a long bony finger
at me. "When you understand," Brandy says, "that
what you're telling is
just a story. It isn't happening anymore. When you realize the story you're
telling is just words, when you can just crumble it up and throw your past in
the trashcan," Brandy says, "then we'll figure out who you're going to be.” CHAPTER FOURJump to
the Canadian border. Jump
to the three of us in a rented Lincoln Town Car, waiting to drive south
from Vancouver, British Columbia, into the United States, waiting, with Signore
Romeo in the driver's seat, waiting with Brandy next to him in the
front, waiting, with me alone in the back. "The
police have microphones," Brandy tells us. The
plan is if we make it through the border, we'll drive south to Seattle
where there are nightclubs and dance clubs where go-go boys and go-go girls
will line up to buy the pockets of my purse clean. We have to be quiet because
the police, they have microphones on both sides of the border, United
States and Canadian. This way, they can
listen in on people waiting to cross. We could have Cuban
cigars. Fresh fruit. Diamonds. Diseases. Drugs, Brandy says. Brandy, she
tells us to shut up a mile before the border, and we wait in line, quiet. Brandy
unwinds the yards and yards of brocade scarf around her head. Brandy,
she shakes her hair down her back and ties the scarf over her shoulders to
hide her torpedo cleavage. Brandy switches to simple gold earrings. She takes
off her pearls and puts on a little chain with a gold cross. This is a moment
before the border guard. "Your
nationalities?" the border-guard guy sitting inside
his little window, behind his computer terminal with his clipboard and his blue
suit behind his mirrored sunglasses, and behind his gold badge says. "Sir,"
Brandy says, and her new voice is as bland and drawled out as grits without
salt or butter. She says, "Sir, we are citizens of the United States of
America, what used to be called the greatest country on earth until the
homosexuals and child pornographers— "Your
names?" says the border guy. Brandy
leans across Alfa to look up at the border guy, "My husband,"
she says, "is an innocent man." "Your
name, please," he says, no doubt looking up our license
plate, finding it's a rental car, rented in Billings, Montana,
three weeks ago, maybe even finding the truth about who we really are.
Maybe finding bulletin after bulletin from all over western Canada about
three nut cases stealing drugs at big houses up for sale. Maybe all
this is spooling onto his computer screen, maybe none of it. You never know. "I
am married," Brandy is almost yelling to get his attention.
"I am the wife of the Reverend Scooter Alexander," she says,
still half laid across Alfa's lap. "And
this," she says and draws the invisible line from her smile to Alfa,
"this is my son-in-law, Seth Thomas." Her big hand flies toward me in
the backseat. "This," she says, "is my daughter, Bubba-Joan." Some
days, I hate it when Brandy changes our lives without warning. Sometimes, twice
in one day, you have to live up to a new identity. A new name. New
relationships. Handicaps. It's hard to remember who I started
this road trip being. No
doubt, this is the kind of stress the constantly mutating AIDS virus must
feel. "Sir?"
the border guy says to Seth, formerly Alfa Romeo, formerly Chase
Manhattan, formerly Nash Rambler, formerly Wells Fargo, formerly
Eberhard Faber. The guard says, "Sir, are you bringing any purchases back with
you into the United States?" My
pointed little toe of my shoe reaches under the front seat
and gooses my new husband. The details of everything have us surrounded.
The mud flats left by low tide are just over there, with little waves
arriving one after another. The flower beds on our other side are planted to spell out words you can
only read from a long ways off. Up close,
it's just so many red and yellow wax begonias. "Don't
tell me you've never watched our Christian Healing
Network'?" Brandy says. She fiddles with the little gold
cross at her throat. "If you just watched one show, you'd
know that God in his wisdom has made my son-in-law a mute, and he cannot
speak." The
border guy keyboards some quick strokes. This could be
"CRIME" he's typed. Or "DRUGS." Or SHOOT. It
could be SMUGGLERS. Or ARREST. "Not
a word," Brandy whispers next to Seth's ear, "You talk
and in Seattle, I'll change you into Harvey Wallbanger." The
border guy says, "To admit you to the United States,
I'm going to have to see your passports, please." Brandy
licks her lips wet and shining, her eyes moist and bright. Her brocade
scarf slips low to reveal her cleavage as she looks up at the border guy and
says, "Would you excuse us a moment." Brandy
sits back in her own seat, and Seth's window hums all the way up. Brandy's
big torpedoes inhale big and then exhale. "Don't anybody panic," she says,
and pops her lipstick open. She makes a kiss in the rearview mirror
and pokes the lipstick around the edge of her big Plumbago mouth, trembling
so much that her one big hand has to hold her lipstick hand steady. "I
can get us back into the States," she says, "but I'm going
to need a condom and a breath mint." Around
her lipstick she says, "Bubba-Joan, be a sweetheart
and hand me up one of those Estraderms, will you?" Seth
gives her the mint and a condom. She
says, "Let's guess how long it takes him to find a week's
supply of girl juice soaking into his ass." She
pops the lipstick shut and says, "Blot me, please." I
hand her up a tissue and an estrogen patch. CHAPTER FIVEJump way back to one day
outside Brumbach's Department Store where
people are stopped to watch somebody's dog
lift its leg on the Nativity scene, Evie and me included. Then the dog sits
and rolls back on its spine, licks its own lumpy dog-flavored butthole, and
Evie elbows me. People applaud and throw money. Then we're inside
Brumbach's, testing lipsticks on the back of our hands, and I say, "Why is
it dogs lick themselves?" "Just
because they can . . . ," Evie says. "They're not like
people." This
is just after we've killed an eight-hour day in modeling
school, looking at our skin in mirrors, so I'm like, "Evie, do not even kid yourself." My
passing grade in modeling school was just because Evie'd
dragged down the curve. She'd wear shades of lipstick you'd expect to see
around the base of a penis. She'd wear so much eye shadow you'd think she was
a product testing animal. Just from her hair spray, there's a hole
in the ozone over the Taylor Robberts Modeling Academy. This
is way back before my accident when I thought my life was so good. At
Brumbach's Department Store, where we'd kill time after class, the whole
ninth floor is furniture. Around the edges
are display rooms: bedrooms, dining rooms, living rooms, dens,
libraries, nurseries, family rooms, china hutches,
home offices, all of them open to the inside of the store. The invisible fourth
wall. All of them perfect, clean and
carpeted, full of tasteful furniture, and hot with track lighting and too many lamps. There's the hush
of white noise from hidden speakers.
Alongside the rooms, shoppers pass in
the dim linoleum aisles that run between the display rooms and the down-lighted islands that fill the center of the floor, conversation pits and
sofa suites grouped on area rugs with coordinated floor lamps arid fake
plants. Quiet islands of light and color in the darkness teeming with
strangers. "It's
just like a sound stage," Evie would say. "The little
sets all ready for somebody to shoot the next episode. The
studio audience watching you from the dark.” Customers
would stroll by and there would be Evie and me sprawled on a pink
canopy bed, calling for our horoscopes on her cell phone. We'd be curled on a
tweedy sofa sectional, munching popcorn and watching our soaps on a console
color television. Evie -will pull up her T-shirt to show me
another new belly button piercing. She'll pull down the armhole of her
blouse and show me the scars from her implants. "It's
too lonely at my real house," Evie would say, "And I hate
how I don't feel real enough unless people are watching." She
says, "I don't hang around Brumbach's for privacy." At
home in my apartment I'd have Manus with his magazines. His guy-on-guy
porno magazines he had to buy for his job, he'd say. Over breakfast
every morning, he'd show me glossy pictures of guys self-sucking. Curled up
with their elbows hooked behind their knees and craning
their necks to choke on themselves, each guy would be lost in
his own little closed circuit. You can bet almost every
guy in the world's tried this. Then Manus would tell me,
"This is what guys want." Give
me romance. Flash. Give
me denial. Each
little closed loop of one guy flexible enough or with a dick so big he doesn't
need anybody else in the world, Manus would point his toast at these pictures
and tell me, "These guys don't need to put up with jobs or relationships."
Manus would just chew, staring at each magazine. Forking up his scrambled egg
whites, he'd say, "You could live and die this way." Then
I'd go downtown to the Taylor Robberts Modeling Academy to get myself perfected. Dogs
will lick their butts. Evie will self-mutilate. All this navel
gazing. At home, Evie had nobody except she had a ton of family
money. The first time we rode a city bus to Brumbach's, she offered the driver
her credit card and asked for a window seat. She was worried her
carry-on was
too big. Me with
Manus or her alone, you don't know who of us had it worse at home. But at
Brumbach's, Evie and me, we'd cat nap in any of the dozen perfect
bedrooms. We'd stuff cotton between our toes and paint our nails in
chintz-covered club chairs. Then we'd study our Taylor Robberts modeling
textbook at a long polished dining table. "Here's
the same as those fakey reproductions of natural habitats they build at
zoos," Evie would say. "You know, those concrete polar ice caps and those
rainforests made of welded pipe trees holding sprinklers." Every
afternoon, Evie and me, we'd star in our own personal unnatural
habitat. The clerks would sneak off to find sex in the men's room. We'd all soak up
attention in our own little matinee life. All's
I remember from Taylor Robberts is to lead with my pelvis when I walk. Keep
your shoulders back. To model different-sized products, they'd tell
you to draw an invisible sight line from yourself to the item. For
toasters, draw a line through the air from your smile to the
toaster. For a stove, draw the line from your breasts. For a
new car, start the invisible line from your vagina. What it boils down to
is professional modeling means getting paid to overreact to stuff like
rice cakes and new shoes. We'd
drink diet colas on a big pink bed at Brumbach's. Or sit
at a vanity, using contouring powder to change the shape
of our faces while the faint outline of people watched us from the
darkness a few feet away. Maybe the track lights would flash off somebody's
glasses. With our every little move getting attention, every gesture, everything
we said, it's easy to pick up on the rush you'd get. "It's
so safe and peaceful, here," Evie'd say, smoothing the
pink satin comforter and fluffing the pillows. "Nothing very bad
could ever happen to you here. Not like at school. Or at home." Total
strangers would stand there with their coats on, watching us. The same's
those talk shows on television, it's so easy to be honest with a big enough
audience. You can say anything if enough people will listen. "Evie,
honey," I'd say. "There's lots worse models in our
class. You just need to not have an edge to your blusher."
We'd be looking at ourselves in a vanity mirror, a triple
row of nobodies watching us from behind. "Here,
sweetie," I'd say, and give her a little sponge, "blend." And
Evie would start to cry. Your every emotion goes right over the top with a
big audience. It's either laughter or tears, with no in-between. Those tigers
in zoos, they must just live a big opera all the time. "It's
not just my wanting to be a glamorous fashion model," Evie would
say. "It's when I think of my growing up, I'm so sad." Evie
would choke back her tears. She'd clutch her little sponge and say, "When
I was little, my parents wanted me to be a boy." She'd
say, "I just never want to be that miserable again." Other
times, we'd wear high heels and pretend to slap each other hard across the
mouth because of some guy we both wanted. Some afternoons we'd confess to each
other that we were vampires. "Yeah,"
I'd say. "My parents used to abuse me, too." You had
to play to the crowd. Evie
would turn her fingers through her hair. "I'm getting
my guiche pierced," she'd say. "It's that little ridge of skin
running between your asshole and the bottom of your vagina." I'd go
to flop on the bed, center stage, hugging a pillow and
looking up into the black tangle of ducts and sprinkler
pipes you had to imagine was a bedroom ceiling. "It's
not like they hit me or made me drink satanic blood or anything,"
I'd say. "They just liked my brother more because he was mutilated.” And
Evie would cross to center stage by the Early American nightstand to
upstage me. "You
had a mutilated brother?" she'd say. Somebody
watching us would cough. Maybe the light would glint off a wrist-watch. "Yeah,
he was pretty mutilated, but not in a sexy way. Still, there's a happy
ending," I'd say. "He's dead now." And
really intense, Evie would say, "Mutilated how? Was he
your only brother? Older or younger?" And
I'd throw myself off the bed and shake my hair. "No, it's too
painful." "No,
really," Evie would say. "I'm not kidding." "He
was my big brother by a couple years. His face was all
exploded in a hairspray accident, and you'd think my folks
totally forgot they even had a second child," I'd dab my eyes
on the pillow shams and tell the audience. "So I just
kept working harder and harder for them to love me." Evie
would be looking at nothing and saying, "Oh, my shit! Oh,
my shit!" And her acting, her delivery would be so
true it would just bury mine. "Yeah,"
I'd say. "He didn't have to work at it. It was so easy.
Just by being all burned and slashed up with scars, he
hogged all the attention." Evie
would go close-up on me and say, "So where's he now,
your brother, do you even know?" "Dead,"
I'd say, and I'd turn to address the audience. "Dead of AIDS." And
Evie says, "How sure are you?” And
I'd say, "Evie!" "No,
really," she'd say. "I'm asking for a reason." "You
just don't joke about AIDS," I'd say. And
Evie'd say, "This is so next-to-impossible." This is
how easy the plot gets pumped out of control. With all these shoppers
expecting real drama, of course, I think Evie's just making stuff up. "Your
brother," Evie says, "did you really see him die? For real? Or did
you see him dead? In a coffin, you know, with music. Or a death certificate?" All
those people were watching. "Yeah,"
I say. "Pretty much." Like I'd want to get caught
lying? Evie's
all over me. "So you saw him dead or you didn't?" All
those people watching. "Dead
enough." Evie
says, "Where?" "This
is very painful," I say, and I cross stage right to the living room. Evie
chases after me, saying, "Where?" All
those people watching. "The
hospice," I say. "What
hospice?" I keep
crossing stage right to the next living room, the next
dining room, the next bedroom, den, home office, with Evie dogging me and
the audience hovering along next to us. "You
know how it is," I say. "If you don't see a gay guy for so
long, it's a pretty safe bet." And
Evie says, "So you don't really know that he's dead?" We're
sprinting through the next bedroom, living room, dining room,
nursery, and I say, "It's AIDS, Evie. Fade to black." And
then Evie just stops and says, "Why?" And the
audience has started to abandon me in a thousand directions. Because
I really, really, really want my brother to be dead. Because my folks
want him dead. Because life is just easier if he's dead. Because this
way, I'm an only child. Because it's my turn, damn it. My turn. And
the crowd of shoppers is bailed, leaving just us and the
security cameras instead of God watching to catch us when we fuck up. "Why
is this such a big deal to you?" I say. And
Evie's already wandering away from me, leaving me alone and saying,
"No reason." Lost in her own little closed circuit. Licking her own
butthole, Evie says, "It's nothing." Saying, "Forget it.” CHAPTER SIXOn the
planet Brandy Alexander, the universe is run by a fairly elaborate system
of gods and she-gods. Some evil. Some are ultimate goodness. Marilyn Monroe,
for example. Then there's Nancy Reagan and Wallis Warfield Simpson.
Some of the gods and she-gods are dead. Some are alive. A lot are
plastic surgeons. The
system changes. Gods and she-gods come and go and leapfrog each other for a
change of status. Abraham
Lincoln is in his heaven to make our car a floating bubble of
new-car—smelling air: driving as smooth as advertising copy. These days, Brandy
says Marlene Dietrich is in charge of the weather. Now is the autumn
of our ennui. We're carried down Interstate 5 under gray skies, inside
the blue casket interior of a rented Lincoln Town Car. Seth is driving. This is
how we always sit, with Brandy up front and me in the back. Three
hours of scenic beauty between Vancouver, British Columbia,
and Seattle is what we're driving through. Asphalt and internal
combustion carry us and the Lincoln Town Car south. Traveling
this way, you might as well be watching the world on television. The
electric windows are hummed all the way up so the planet Brandy Alexander has
an atmosphere of warm, still, silent blue. It's an even 70
degrees Fahrenheit, with the whole outside world of trees and rocks
scrolling by in miniature behind curved glass. Live by
satellite. We're the little world of Brandy Alexander rocketing past it all. Driving,
driving, Seth says, "Did you ever think about life as a metaphor for
television?" Our
rule is that when Seth's driving, no radio. What happens is a Dionne
Warwick song comes on, and Seth starts to cry so hard, crying those big
Estinyl tears, shaking with those big Provera sobs. If Dionne
Warwick comes on singing a Burt Bacharach song, we just have to pull
over or it's sure we'll get car wrecked. The
tears, the way his dumpling face is lost the chiseled
shadows that used to pool under his brow and cheekbones,
the way Seth's hand will sneak up and tweak his nipple through his shirt
and his mouth will drop open and his eyes roll backward, it's the hormones. The
conjugated estrogens, the Premarin, the estradiol, the ethinyl estradi-ol,
they've all found their way into Seth's diet cola. Of course, there's the
danger of liver damage at his current daily overdose levels. There could already be
liver damage or cancer or blood clots, thrombosis if you're a doctor,
but I'm willing to take that chance. Sure, it's all just for fun. Watching
for his breasts to develop. Seeing his macho babe-magnet swagger go to
fat and him taking naps in the afternoon. All that's great, but his being
dead would let me move on to explore other interests. Driving,
driving, Seth says, "Don't you think that somehow television makes
us God?" This
introspection is new. His beard growth is lightened up. It must be the
antiandrogens choking back his testosterone. The water retention, he can
ignore. The moodiness. A tear slips out of one eye in the rearview
mirror and rolls down his face. "Am
I the only one who cares about these issues?" he says.
"Am I the only one here in this car who feels anything real?" Brandy's
reading a paperback book. Most times, Brandy is reading some plastic surgeon's glossy
hard-sell brochure about vaginas complete
with color pictures showing the picture-perfect
way a urethra should be aligned to ensure a downward stream of urine. Other pictures show how a top-quality clitoris should be hooded. These are
five-figure, ten-and
twenty-thousand-dollar vaginas, better than the real thing, and most
days Brandy will pass the pictures around. Jump to
three weeks before, when we were in a big house in Spokane, Washington.
We were in a South Hill granite chateau with Spokane spread out under the
bathroom windows. I was shaking Percodans out of their brown bottle and
into my purse pocket for Percodans. Brandy Alexander, she was
digging around under the bathroom sink for a clean emery board when she
found this paperback book. Now
all the other gods and she-gods have been eclipsed by some new deity. Jump
back to Seth looking at my breasts in the rearview mirror.
"Television really does make us God," he says. Give
me tolerance. Flash. Give
me understanding. Flash. Even
after all these weeks on the road with me, Seth's glorious
vulnerable blue eyes still won't meet my eyes. His new
wistful introspection, he can ignore. The way the orals
have already side-effected his eyes, steepened the corneal
curve so he can't wear his contact lenses without them
popping out. This has to be the conjugated estrogens in his
orange juice every morning. He can ignore all that. This
has to be the Androcur in his iced tea at lunch, but he'll
never figure it out. He'll never catch me. Brandy
Alexander, her nylon stocking feet up on the dashboard, the queen supreme's
still reading her paperback. "When
you watch daytime dramas," Seth tells me, "you can look in on
anybody. There's a different life on every channel, and almost every hour the lives
change. It's the same as those live video Web sites. You can
watch the whole world without it knowing." For
three weeks, Brandy's been reading that book. "Television
lets you spy on even the sexy parts of everybody's life," Seth says.
"Doesn't it make sense?" Maybe,
but only if you're on 500 milligrams of micronized progesterone every day. A few
minutes of scenery go by behind glass. Just some towering mountains, old
dead volcanoes, mostly the kind of stuff you find outside. Those timeless
natural nature themes. Raw materials at their rawest. Unrefined. Unimproved
rivers. Poorly maintained mountains. Filth. Plants growing in dirt.
Weather. "And
if you believe that we really have free will, then you
know that God can't really control us," Seth says. Seth's
hands are off the steering wheel and flutter around to
make his point. "And since God can't control us," he says, "all
God does is watch and change channels when He gets bored." Somewhere
in heaven, you're live on a video Web site for God to surf. Brandycam. Brandy
with her empty leg-hold trap shoes on the floor, Brandy licks an index finger and slow turns a
page. Ancient
aboriginal petroglyphs and junk are just whizzing past. "My
point," Seths says, "is that maybe TV makes you God."
Seth says, "And it could be that all we are is God's television." Standing
on the gravel shoulder are some moose or whatnot just trudging along on all four feet. "Or
Santa Glaus," says Brandy from behind her book. "Santa
Glaus sees everything." "Santa
Glaus is just a story," says Seth. "He's just the opening
band to God. There is no Santa Glaus." Jump
to drug hunting three weeks ago in Spokane, Washington, when Brandy
Alexander flopped down in the master bedroom and started reading. I
took thirty-two Nembutals. Thirty-two Nembutals went in my purse. I don't
eat the merchandise. Brandy was still reading. I tried all the lipsticks
on the back of my hand, and Brandy was still propped on a zillion eyelet lace
pillows in the center of a king-sized waterbed. Still reading. I put
some expired estradiol and a half stick of Plumbago in my bag. The
realtor called up the stairs, was everything all right? Jump to us on Interstate 5
where a billboard goes by. Clean
Food and Family Prices Coming Up at the Karver Stage Stop Cafe Jump
to no Burning Blueberry, no Rusty Rose or Aubergine Dreams in Spokane. He
didn't want to rush us, the realtor called up the stairs,
but was there anything we needed to know? Did we have any questions about
anything? I
stuck my head in the master bedroom, and the water-bed's white duvet held a
reading Brandy Alexander that was dead for as much as she was breathing. Oh,
clipped lilac satin of the beaded rice pearl hemline. Oh,
layered amber cashmere trimmed in faceted topaz marabou. Oh, slithering underwired
free-range mink bolero. We
had to go. Brandy
clutched her paperback open against her straight-up torpedo boob job. The Rusty Rose
face pillowed in auburn hair and eyelet lace pillow shams, the aubergine
eyes had the dilated look of a Thorazine overdose. First
thing I want to know is what drug she's taken. The
paperback cover showed a pretty blonde babe. Thin as a spaghetti
strap. With a pretty, thin little smile. The babe's hair was a satellite photo of
Hurricane Blonde just off the west coast of her face. The face
was a Greek she-god with great lash, big eyeliner eyes the same as
Betty and Veronica and all the other Archie gals had at Riverdale
High. White pearls are wrapped up her arms and around her neck. What could be diamonds
sparkle here and there. The
paperback cover said Miss Rona. Brandy
Alexander, her leg-hold trap shoes were getting dirt all over the
waterbed's white duvet, and Brandy said, "I've found out who the real God
is." The
realtor was ten seconds away. Jump
to all the wonders of nature blurring past us, rabbits,
squirrels, plunging waterfalls. That's the worst of it. Gophers digging
subterranean dens underground. Birds nesting
in nests. "The
Princess B. A. is God," Seth tells me in the rearview
mirror. Jump
to where the Spokane realtor yelled up the stairs. The
people who owned the granite chateau were coming up the driveway. Brandy
Alexander, her eyes dilated, barely breathing in a Spokane waterbed, said
"Rona Barrett. Rona Barrett is my new Supreme Being.” Jump
to Brandy in the Lincoln Town Car saying, "Rona Barrett
is God." All
around us, erosion and insects are just chewing up the
world, never mind people and pollution. Everything biodegrades
with or without you pushing. I check my purse for enough spironolactone for Seth's
afternoon snack. Another billboard goes by: Tasty
Phase Magic Bran—Put Something Good In Your Mouth "In
her autobiography," Brandy Alexander testifies, "in
Miss Rona, published by Bantam Books by arrangement
with the Nash Publishing Corporation on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles,
California . . . ," Brandy takes a deep breath of new-car—smelling air, "...
copyright 1974, Miss Rona tells us how she started life as a fat
little Jewish girl from Queens with a big nose and a mysterious muscle
disease." Brandy says,
"This little fat brunette re-creates herself as a top celebrity
superstar blonde whom a top sex symbol then
begs to let him stick his penis in her just one inch." There
isn't one native tongue left among us. Another
billboard: Next
Sundae, Scream For Tooter's Ice Milk! "What
that woman has gone through," says Brandy. "Right here on page
one hundred and twenty-five, she almost drowns in her own blood! Rona's just
had her nose job. She's only making fifty bucks a story, but this woman saves
enough for a thousand-dollar nose job! It's her first miracle.
So, Rona's in the hospital, post—nose job, with her head
wrapped up like a mummy when a friend comes in and says how Hollywood says she's a lesbian.
Miss Rona, a lesbian! Of course this isn't
true. The woman is a she-god so she screams and screams and screams until an
artery in her throat just
bursts." "Hallelujah,"
Seth says, all teared up again. "And
here," Brandy licks the pad of a big index finger and flips ahead a few
pages, "on page two hundred and twenty-two, Rona is once more rejected by her
sleazy boyfriend of eleven years. She's been coughing for weeks so she
takes a handful of pills and is found semicomatose and
dying. Even the ambulance— "Praise
God," Seth says. Various
native plants are growing just wherever they want. "Seth,
sweetness," Brandy says. "Don't step on my lines."
Her Plumbago lips say, "Even the ambulance driver
thought our Miss Rona would be DOA." Clouds
composed of water vapor are up in the, you know, sky. Brandy
says, "Now, Seth." And
Seth says, "Hallelujah!" The
wild daisies and Indian paintbrush whizzing past are just the genitals of a
different life form. And
Seth says, "So what are you saying?" "In
the book Miss Rona, copyright 1974," Brandy says, "Rona
Barrett—who got her enormous breasts when she was nine years old and
wanted to cut them off with scissors—she tells us in the prologue of her book
that she's like this animal, cut open with all its vital organs
glistening and quivering, you know, like the liver and the large
intestine. Such visuals, everything sort of dripping and pulsating.
Anyway, she could wait for someone to sew her back up, but she knows no one
will. She has to take a needle and thread and sew herself up" "Gross,"
says Seth. "Miss
Rona says nothing is gross," Brandy says. "Miss Rona
says the only way to find true happiness is to risk being completely cut
open." Flocks
of self-absorbed little native birds seem obsessed with
finding food and picking it up with their mouths. Brandy
pulls the rearview mirror around until she finds me reflected and
says, "Bubba-Joan, sweetness?" It's
obvious the native birds have to build their own do-it-yourself
nests using materials they source locally. The little sticks and leaves are
just sort of heaped together. "Bubba-Joan,"
Brandy Alexander says. "Why don't you open up to us with a
story?" Seth
says, "Remember the time in Missoula when the princess got so ripped she
ate Nebalino suppositories wrapped in gold foil because she thought they
were Almond Roca? Talk about your semiconscious DOAs." Pine
trees are producing pine cones. Squirrels and mammals of all sexes spend
all day trying to get laid. Or giving birth live. Or eating their young. Brandy says,
"Seth, sweetness?" "Yes, Mother." What
only looks like bulimia is how bald eagles feed their young. Brandy
says, "Why is it you have to seduce every living thing
you come across?" Another
billboard: Nubby's
Is the BBQ Gotta-Stop for Savory, Flavory Chicken Wings Another
billboard: Dairy
Bite—The Chewing Gum Flavored With the Low-Fat Goodness of Real Cheese Seth
giggles. Seth blushes and twists some of his hair around
a finger. He says, "You make me sound so sexually
compulsive." Mercy.
Next to him, I feel so butch. "Oh,
baby," Brandy says, "You don't remember half of who
you've been with." She says, "Well, I only wish I could
forget it." To my
breasts in the rearview mirror, Seth says, "The only
reason why we ask other people how their weekend was is so we can tell them
about our own weekend." I
figure, a few more days of increased micronized progesterone,
and Seth should pop out his own nice rack of hooters. Side effects I need to
watch for include nausea, vomiting, jaundice, migraine, abdominal
cramps, and dizziness. You try to remember the exact toxicity levels,
but why bother. A sign
goes by saying: Seattle 130 miles. "Come
on, let's see those glistening, quivering innards, Bubba-Joan,"
Brandy Alexander, God and mother of us all, commands. "Tell us a gross personal
story." She
says, "Rip yourself open. Sew yourself shut," and she hands a prescription pad and an Aubergine
Dreams eyebrow pencil to me in the
backseat. CHAPTER SEVENJump
way back to the last Thanksgiving before my accident when I go home to eat dinner with my
folks. This is back when I still had a face so I wasn't so confronted by solid
food. On the dining room table, covering it all over is a tablecloth I don't remember, a really nice dark blue damask with a lace edge. This isn't something I'd
expect my mom to buy so I ask, did somebody give this to her? Mom's
just pulling up to the table and unfolding her blue damask napkin with
everything steaming between us: her, me, and my dad. The sweet potatoes
under their layer of marshmallows. The big brown turkey. The rolls are
inside a quilted cozy sewed to look like a hen. You lift the wings to take a roll out. There's the cut-glass tray of sweet
pickles and celery filled with peanut butter. "Give
what?" my mom says. The
new tablecloth. It's really nice. My
father sighs and plunges a knife into the turkey. "It
wasn't going to be a tablecloth at first," Mom says. "Your
father and I pretty much dropped the ball on our original project." The
knife goes in again and again and my father starts to dismember our dinner. My mom
says, "Do you know what the AIDS memorial quilt is all about?" Jump to
how much I hate my brother at this moment. "I
bought this fabric because I thought it would make a nice
panel for Shane," Mom says. "We just ran into some
problems with what to sew on it." Give
me amnesia. Flash. Give me
new parents. Flash. "Your
mother didn't want to step on any toes," Dad says. He twists a drumstick
off and starts scraping the meat onto a plate. "With gay stuff you
have to be so careful since everything means something in secret code. I
mean, we didn't want to give people the wrong idea." My mom
leans over to scoop yams onto my plate, and says, "Your father
wanted a black border, but black on a field of blue would mean Shane was excited by
leather sex, you know, bondage and discipline, sado and masochism."
She says, "Really these panels are to help the people left behind." "Strangers
are going to see us and see Shane's name," my dad
says. "We didn't want them thinking things." The
dishes all start their slow clockwise march around the table. The stuffing. The
olives. The cranberry sauce. "I
wanted pink triangles but all the panels have pink triangles,"
my mom says. "It's the Nazi symbol for homosexuals." She says,
"Your father suggested black triangles, but that would mean
Shane was a lesbian. It looks like the female pubic hair. The black triangle
does." My father says, "Then
I wanted a green border, but it turns out
that would mean Shane was a male prostitute." My
mom says, "We almost chose a red border, but that would
mean fisting. Brown would mean either scat or rimming, we couldn't figure which." "Yellow,"
my father says, "means watersports." "A
lighter shade of blue," Mom says, "would mean just regular
oral sex." "Regular white,"
my father says, "would mean anal. White
could also mean Shane was excited by men wearing underwear." He
says, "I can't remember which." My
mother passes me the quilted chicken with the rolls still
warm inside. We're
supposed to sit and eat with Shane dead all over the table in front of us. "Finally
we just gave up," my mom says, "and I made a nice
tablecloth out of the material." Between
the yams and the stuffing, Dad looks down at his plate and says,
"Do you know about rimming?" I know
it isn't table talk. "And
fisting?" my mom asks. I say,
I know. I don't mention Manus and his vocational porno magazines. We sit
there, all of us around a blue shroud with the turkey more like a big
dead baked animal than ever, the stuffing chock full of organs you can
still recognize, the heart and gizzard and liver, the gravy
thick with cooked fat and blood. The flower centerpiece could be a casket
spray. "Would
you pass the butter, please?" my mother says. To my
father she says, "Do you know what felchirig is?" This,
it's too much. Shane's dead, but he's more the center of attention than
he ever was. My folks wonder why I never come home, and this is why. All
this sick horrible sex talk over Thanksgiving dinner, I can't take
this. It's just Shane this and Shane that. It's sad, but what
happened to Shane was not something I did. I know everybody
thinks it's my fault, what happened. The truth is Shane
destroyed this family. Shane was bad and mean, and
he's dead. I'm good and obedient and I'm ignored. Silence. All
that happened was I was fourteen years old. Somebody put a full can of
hairspray in the trash by mistake. It was Shane's job to burn the trash.
He was fifteen. He
was dumping the kitchen trash into the burning barrel while the bathroom trash
was on fire, and the hair-spray exploded.
It was an accident. Silence. Now
what I wanted my folks to talk about was me. I'd tell them how Evie and me
were shooting a new infomer-cial. My modeling career was taking off. I
wanted to tell them about my new boyfriend, Manus, but no. Whether he's
good or bad, alive or dead, Shane still gets all the attention.
All I ever get is angry. "Listen," I say.
This just blurts out. "Me," I say, "I'm the last child you
people have left alive so you'd better start paying me some attention." Silence. "Felching,"
I lower my voice. I'm calm now. "Felching is when a man fucks you up the
butt without a rubber. He shoots his load, and then plants his mouth on your anus and sucks out his own warm sperm, plus whatever
lubricant and feces are present.
That's felching. It may or may not," I add, "include kissing
you to pass the sperm and fecal matter into your mouth." Silence. Give
me control. Give me calm. Give me restraint. Flash. The
yams are just the way I like them, sugary sweet but crunchy
on top. The stuffing is a little dry. I pass my mother the butter. My father clears his
throat. "Bump," he says, "I think 'fletching' is the word your
mother meant." He says, "It means to slice the turkey into very thin
strips." Silence. I
say, oh. I say, sorry. We
eat. CHAPTER EIGHTDon't
look for me to ever tell my folks about the accident. You
know, a whole long-distance telephone crying jag about the bullet and the
emergency room. That's not anywhere we're going. I told my folks, as soon as I could write them a letter that I was going on a catalogue
shoot in Cancun, Mexico, for Espre. Six
months of fun, sand, and me trying to suck the lime wedges out of long-necked
bottles of Mexican beer. Guys just love watching babes do that. Go figure.
Guys. She
loves clothes from Espre, my mom writes back. She writes
how, since I'll be in the Espre catalogue, could I maybe
get her a discount on her Christmas order. Sorry, Mom. Sorry, God. She writes back: Well, be
pretty for us. Love and kisses. Most times, it's just a lot
easier not to let the world know what's
wrong. My folks, they call me Bump. I was the bump inside my Mom's stomach for nine months; they've called me Bump from since before I was born. They
live a two-hour drive from me, but I
never visit. What I mean is they don't
need to know every little hair about me. In one
letter my mom writes: "At
least with your brother, we know whether he's dead or alive." My
dead brother, the King of Fag Town. The voted best at
everything. The basketball king until he was sixteen and
his test for strep throat came back as gonorrhea, I only
know I hated him. "It's
not that we don't love you," my mom writes in one letter,
"it's just that we don't show it." Besides,
hysteria is only possible with an audience. You know what you need to do
to keep alive. Folks will just screw you up with their reactions about how
what happened is so horrible. First the emergency room folks letting
you go ahead of them. Then the Franciscan nun screaming. Then the
police with their hospital sheet. Jump
to how life was when you were a baby and you could only eat baby food.
You'd stagger over to the coffee table. You're up on your feet and you have to
keep waddling along on those Vienna sausage legs or fall down. Then
you get to the coffee table and bounce your big soft baby
head on the sharp corner. You're
down, and man, oh man, it hurts. Still it isn't anything tragic until Morn and Dad run over. Oh, you poor, brave thing. Only then do you cry. Jump to Brandy and me and
Seth going to the top of the Space Needle
thing in Seattle, Washington. This is our first stop after the Canadian border except us stopping so I could run buy Seth a coffee—cream, sugar and Climara—and a Coca Cola—extra Estrace, no ice.
It's eleven, and the Space Needle
closes at midnight, and Seth says
there are two types of people in the world. The
Princess Alexander wanted to find a nice hotel first, some place with valet parking and tile
bathrooms. We might have time for a nap
before she has to go out and sell
medications. "If
you were on a game show," Seth says about his two types
of people. Seth has already pulled off the freeway and
we're driving between dark warehouses, turning toward every glimpse we
get of the Space Needle. "So you're the winner of this game show,"
Seth says, "and you get a choice between a five-piece living room
set from Broyhill, suggested retail price three thousand dollars—
or—a ten-day trip to the old world charm of Europe." Most
people, Seth says, would take the living room set. "It's just that people
want something to show for their effort,"
Seth says. "Like the pharaohs and their pyramids. Given
the choice, very few people would choose the trip even
if they already had a nice living room set." No
one's parked on the streets around Seattle Center, people are all home watching
television, or being television if you believe in God. "I
have to show you where the future ended," says Seth.
"I want us to be the people who choose the trip." According
to Seth, the future ended in 1962 at the Seattle World's Fair. This was everything we
should've inherited: the whole man on the moon within this decade—asbestos
is our miracle friend—nuclear-powered and fossil-fueled world of the Space Age
where you could go up to visit the Jetsons' flying saucer apartment building
and then ride the monorail downtown for fun pillbox hat fashions at the Bon
Marche. All
his hope and science and research and glamour left here in
ruins: The
Space Needle. The
Science Center with its lacy domes and hanging light globes. The
Monorail streaking along covered in brushed aluminum. This is
how our lives were supposed to turn out. Go
there. Take the trip, Seth says. It will break your heart
because the Jetsons with their robot maid, Rosie, and
their flying-saucer cars and toaster beds that spit you out in
the morning, it's like the Jetsons have sublet the Space
Needle to the Flintstones. "You
know," says Seth, "Fred and Wilma. The garbage
disposal that's really a pig that lives under the sink.
All their furniture made out of bones and rocks and tiger-skin
lampshades. Wilma vacuums with a baby elephant and fluffs the rocks. They named
their baby 'Pebbles'." Here
was our future of cheese-food and aerosol propel-lants, Styrofoam and Club
Med on the moon, roast beef served in a toothpaste tube. "Tang,"
says Seth, "you know, breakfast with the astronauts.
And now people come here wearing sandals they made themselves out of
leather. They name their kids Zilpah and Zebulun out of the Old Testament.
Lentils are a big deal." Seth
sniffs and drags a hand across the tears in his eyes. It's the Estrace is all. He
must be getting premenstrual. "The
folks who go to the Space Needle now," Seth says, "they
have lentils soaking at home and they're walking around the ruins of the
future the way barbarians did when they found Grecian ruins and told
themselves that God
must've built them." Seth parks us under one big
steel leg of the Space Needle's three legs. We get out and look up at the legs going up to the Space Needle, the low restaurant,
the high restaurant that revolves,
then the observation deck at the top. Then the stars.Jump to the sad moment when we buy our tickets and
get on the big glass elevator that slides up the middle of the Space
Needle. We're in this glass and brass go-go cage dance party to the stars.
Going up, I want to hear hypoal-lergenic Telestar music, untouched by
human hands. Anything computer-generated
and played on a Moog synthesizer. I
want to dance the frug on a TWA commuter flight go-go dance party to the moon where cool dudes and chicks
do the mash potato under zero gravity and eat delicious
snack pills. I want
this. I tell
Brandy Alexander this, and she goes right up to the brass and glass
windows and does the frug even though going up, the G forces make this like dancing the frug on Mars where you weigh eight hundred pounds. The
sad part is when the guy in a poly-blend uniform who runs the elevator
misses the whole point of the future. The whole fun, fun, fun of the moment
is wasted on him, and this guy looks at us as if we're those
puppies you see behind glass in suburban mall pet stores. Like we're
those puppies with yellow ooze on their eyes and buttholes, and you know they'll never have
another solid bowel movement but they're
still for sale for six hundred dollars apiece. Those puppies are so sad that
even the overweight girls with bad
beauty college perms will tap on the
glass for hours and say, "I loves you, little one. Mommy loves you, tiny one." The future is just wasted
on some people. Jump to
the observation deck at the top of the Space Needle, where you can't
see the steel legs so it's as if you're hovering over Seattle on a flying
saucer with a lot of souvenirs for sale. Still, most of this isn't souvenirs of
the future. It's the ecology T-shirts and batiks and tie-dyed
all-natural cotton fiber stuff you can't wash with anything
else because it's never really colorfast. Tapes of whales singing while they
do sex. More stuff I hate. Brandy goes off in search
of relics and artifacts from the future.
Acrylic. Plexiglas. Aluminum. Styrofoam. Radium. Seth goes to the railing
and leans out over the suicide nets and spits. The spit falls back down into
the twenty-first century. The wind blows my hair out over the darkness and Seattle and my hands are clutched white
on the steel railing where about a million hands before me have clutched
the paint off. Inside
his clothes, instead of the plates of hard muscle that used to drive me
crazy, now the fat pushes his shirt out over
the top of his belt. It's the Premarin. His sexy five o'clock shadow is fading from the Provera. Even his fingers
swell around his old letterman's ring. The photographer in my head
says: Give
me peace. Flash. Give
me release. She
gives us each an Aubergine Dreams eyebrow pencil and says, "Save the
world with some advice from the future." Seth
writes on the back of a card and hands the card to Brandy
for her to read. On game shows, Brandy reads, some
people will take the trip to France, but most
people will take the washer dryer pair. Brandy
puts a big Plumbago kiss on the little square for the
stamp and lets the wind lift the card and sail it off toward
the towers of downtown Seattle. Seth
hands her another, and Brandy reads: Game
shows are designed to make us feel better about the random,
useless facts that are all we have left of our education. A
kiss, and the card's on its way toward Lake Washington. From
Seth: When
did the future switch from being a promise to being
a threat? A kiss,
and it's off on the wind toward Ballard. Only
when we eat up this planet will God give us another.
We'll be remembered more for what we destroy than what
we create. Interstate
5 snakes by in the distance. From high atop the Space Needle, the
southbound lanes are red chase lights, and the northbound lanes are white
chase lights. I take a card and write: CHAPTER NINEJump to
us going down fast in a TWA return trip home from the moon, Brandy and
Seth and me dancing our dance party frug in the zero-gravity brass
and glass go-go cage elevator. Brandy makes a big ring-beaded fist and tells
the poly-blend service droid who tries to stop us to chill
out unless he wants to die on reentry. Back
on earth in the twenty-first century, our rented Lincoln with its blue
casket interior is waiting to take us to a nice hotel. On the windshield is a
ticket, but when Brandy storms over to tear it up, the ticket
is a postcard from the future. Maybe
my worst fears. For
Brandy to read out loud to Seth. I love Seth so much I have to destroy him . . . Even
if I overcompensate, nobody will ever want me. Not Seth. Not my folks.
You can't kiss someone who has no lips. Oh, love me, love me, love me, love me, love me, love me, love me, love me. I'll be anybody you want me
to be. Brandy
Alexander, her big hand lifts the postcard. The queen supreme reads it to
herself, silent, and slips the postcard into her handbag. Princess Princess,
she says, "At this rate, we'll never get to the future.” the
fluorescent light coming through in broken exploded bits. "Veils," Brandy
says as each color settles over me. "You need
to look like you're keeping secrets," she says. "If you're going to
do the outside world, Miss St. Patience, you need to not let people see your face," she says. "You
can go anywhere in the world," Brandy goes on and on. You
just can't let people know who you really are. "You
can live a completely normal, regular life," she says. You
just can't let anybody get close enough to you to learn
the truth. "In
a word," she says, "veils." Take-charge
princess who she is, Brandy Alexander never does ask my real name. The name who I
was born. Miss Bossy Pants right away gives me a new name, a new past.
She invents another future for me with no connections, except to her, a
cult all by herself. "Your
name is Daisy St. Patience," she tells me. "You're the lost
heiress to the House of St. Patience, the very haute couture fashion showroom, and this
season we're doing hats," she says. "Hats with
veils." I ask
her, "Jsfssjf ciacb sxi?" "You
come from escaped French aristocrat blood," Brandy says. "Gwdcn
aixa gklgfnv?" "You
grew up in Paris, and went to a school run by nuns," Brandy says. Give me
homesickness. Flash. Give
me nostalgic childhood yearnings. Flash. What's
the word for the opposite of glamour? Brandy
never asked about my folks, were they living or dead, and why weren't they
here to gnash their teeth. "Your
father and mother, Rainier and Honoraria St. Patience, were assassinated by fashion
terrorists," she says. B.B.,
before Brandy, my father took his pigs to market every fall. His secret is
to spend all summer driving his flatbed truck around Idaho and the other upper,
left-hand corner states, stopping at all the day-old bakery outlets selling
expired snack foods, individual fruit pies and cupcakes with creamy fillings,
little loaves of sponge cake injected with artificial whipped cream and
lumps of devil's food cake covered with marshmallow and shredded coconut
dyed pink. Old birthday cakes that didn't sell. Stale cakes wishing
Congratulations. Happy Mother's Day. Be My Valentine. My father still brings
it all home, heaped in a dense sticky pile or heat-sealed inside cellophane.
That's the hardest part, opening these thousands of old snacks and
dropping them to the pigs. My
father who Brandy didn't want to hear about, his secret is to feed the
pigs these pies and cakes and snacks the last two weeks before they go to market.
The snacks have no nutrition, and the pigs gobble them until there isn't
an expired snack left within five hundred miles. These
snacks don't have any real fiber to them so every fall,
every three-hundred-pound pig goes to market with an extra ninety pounds in its
colon. My father makes a fortune at auction, and who knows how long
after that, but the pigs all take a big sugary crap when they see inside
whatever slaughterhouse where they end up. I say,
"Kwvne wivnuw fw sojaoa." "No,"
Brandy says and puts up her foot-long index finger, six cocktail rings
stacked on just this one finger, and she presses her jeweled hotdog up and down
across my mouth the moment I try and say anything. "Not
a word," Brandy says. "You're still too connected to your past. Your
saying anything is pointless." From
out of her sewing basket, Brandy draws a streamer of white and gold, a
magic act, a layer of sheer white silk patterned with a Greek key design in gold
she casts over my head. Behind
another veil, the real world is that much farther away. "Guess
how they do the gold design," Brandy says. The
fabric is so light my breath blows it out in front; the
silk lays across my eyelashes without bending them. Even my
face, where every nerve in your body comes to an end, even my face can't feel
it. It
takes a team of kids in India, Brandy says, four- and five-year-old
kids sitting all day on wooden benches, being vegetarians, they have to tweeze out most of
about a zillion gold threads to leave the
pattern of just the gold left behind. "You
don't see kids any older than ten doing this job," Brandy
says, "because by then most kids go blind." Just
the veil Brandy takes out of her basket must be six feet
square. The precious eyesight of all those darling children, lost. The precious
days of their fragile childhood spent tweezing silk threads out. Give
me pity. Flash. Give
me empathy. Flash. Oh, I
wish I could make my poor heart just bust. I say,
"Vswf siws cm eiuvn sines." No,
it's okay, Brandy says. She doesn't want to reward anybody
for exploiting children. She got it on sale. Caged
behind my silk, settled inside my cloud of organza and georgette, the
idea that I can't share my problems with other people makes me not give a
shit about their problems. "Oh,
and don't worry," Brandy says. "You'll still get attention.
You have a dynamite tits and ass combo. You just can't talk to
anybody." People
just can't stand not knowing something, she tells me. Especially men
can't bear not climbing every mountain, mapping everywhere. Labeling
everything. Peeing on every tree and then never calling you back. "Behind
a veil, you're the great unknown," she says. "Most
guys will fight to know you. Some guys will deny you're a real person, and
some will just ignore you.” The
zealot. The atheist. The agnostic. Even
if somebody is only wearing an eye patch, you always want to look. To
see if he's faking. The man in the Hathaway Shirt. Or to see the horror underneath. The
photographer in my head says: Give
me a voice. Flash. Give me
a face. Brandy's
answer was little hats with veils. And big hats with veils. Pancake hats and
pillbox hats edged all around with clouds of tulle and gauze. Parachute silk
or heavy crepe or dense net dotted with chenille pompoms. "The
most boring thing in the entire world," Brandy says,
"is nudity." The
second most boring thing, she says, is honesty. "Think
of this as a tease. It's lingerie for your face," she says. "A
peekaboo nightgown you wear over your whole identity." The
third most boring thing in the entire world is your sorry-assed past. So Brandy
never asked me anything. Bulldozer alpha
bitch she can be, we meet again and again
in the speech therapist office and Brandy tells me everything I need to know about myself. CHAPTER TENJump to
Brandy Alexander tucking me into a Seattle bed. This is the night of
the Space Needle, the night the future doesn't happen. Brandy, she's wearing
yards and yards of black tulle wrapped around her legs, twisted up and
around her hourglass waist. Black veil crosses her torpedo
breasts and loops up and over the top of her auburn hair.
All this sparkle that bends over beside my bed could be the
trial-sized mock-up for the original summer night sky. Little
rhinestones, not the plastic ones pooped out by a factory
in Calcutta but the Austrian crystal ones cut by elves in the Black
Forest, these little star-shaped rhinestones are set all over the black tulle. The
queen supreme's face is the moon in the night sky that
bends over and kisses me
good night. My hotel room is dark, and the television at the foot of my bed is turned
on so the handmade stars twinkle in all the colors the television is trying to show us. Seth's
right, the television does make me God. I can look in on anybody and
every hour the lives change. Here in the real world, that's not always the case. "I
will always love you," the queen of the night sky says,
and I know which postcard she's found. The
hotel sheets feel the same as the hospital sheets. This is
thousands of miles since we met, and the big fingers of Brandy are still
smoothing the blankets under where my chin used to be. My face is the last thing the go-go boys and girls want to meet when they go into a
dark alley looking to buy drugs. Brandy
says, "We'll be back as soon as we sell out." Seth is
silhouetted in the open doorway to the hall. How he looks from my bed
is the terrific outline of a superhero against the neon green and gray and pink
tropical leaves of the hallway wallpaper. His coat, the long black
leather coat Seth wears, is fitted tight until the waist
and then flares from there down so in outline you think it's a cape. And
maybe when he kisses Brandy Alexander's royal butt he's not just
pretending. Maybe it's the two of them in love when I'm not around. This wouldn't be
the first time I've lost him. The
face surrounded in black veil that leans over me is a surprise of color. The
skin is a lot of pink around a Plumbago mouth, and the eyes are too
aubergine. Even these colors are too garish right now, too saturated,
too intense. Lurid. You think of cartoon characters. Fashion dolls
have pink skin like this, like plastic bandages. Flesh tone.
Too aubergine eyes, cheekbones too defined by Rusty Rose blusher.
Nothing is left to your imagination. Maybe this is what guys
want. I just want Brandy Alexander to
leave. I want
Seth's belt around my neck. I want Seth's fingers in my mouth and his hands pulling my
knees apart and then his wet fingers prying
me open. "If
you want something to read," Brandy says, "that Miss
Rona Barrett book is in my room. I can run get it." I
want to be rubbed so raw by the stubble around Seth's mouth
that it will hurt when I pee. Seth
says, "Are you coming?" A
ring-beaded hand tosses the television remote control onto
the bed. "Come
on, Princess Princess," Seth says. "The night's not
getting any younger." And I
want Seth dead. Worse than dead, I want him fat and bloated with water and
insecure and emotional. If Seth doesn't want me, I want to not want him. "If
the police or anything happens," the moon tells me, "the money is all in
my make-up case." The one I love is already
gone out to warm up the car. The
one who will love me forever says, "Sleep tight," and closes the door
behind her. Jump
to once a long time ago, Manus, my fiance who dumped me, Manus Kelley,
the police detective, he told me that your folks are like God because you
want to know they're out there and you want them to approve of your life,
still you only call them when you're in crisis and need something. Jump
back to me in bed in Seattle, alone with the TV remote control I hit a
button on and make the television mute. On
television are three or four people in chairs sitting on a
low stage in front of a television audience. This is on television
like an infomercial, but as the camera zooms in on each person for a
close-up, a little caption appears across the person's chest. Each caption on
each close-up is a first name followed by three or four words
like a last name, the sort of literal who-they-really-are last names that
Indians give to each other, but instead of Heather Runs
With Bison . . . Trisha Hunts By Moonlight, these names
are: Cristy
Drank Human Blood Roger
Lived With Dead Mother Brenda
Ate Her Baby I
change channels. I
change channels. I
change channels and here are another three people: Gwen
Works As Hooker Neville
Was Raped In Prison Brent
Slept With His Father People are all over the
world telling their one dramatic story and
how their life has turned into getting over this one event. Now their
lives are more about the past than their
future. I hit a button and give Gwen WorksAsHooker
her voice back for a little soundbite of prostitute talk. Gwen
shapes her story with her hands as she talks. She leans forward out of her
chair. Her eyes are watching something up
and to the right, just off camera. I know it's the monitor. Gwen's
watching herself tell her story. Gwen balls her fingers
until only the left index finger is out,
and she slowly twists her hand to show both sides of her fingernail as
she talks. " ... to protect themselves, most girls on
the street break off a little bit of razor
blade and glue it under their fingernail.
Girls paint the razor nail so it looks like a regular fingernail." Here,
Gwen sees something in the monitor.
She frowns and tosses her red hair back off what look like pearl earrings. "When
they go to jail," Gwen tells herself in the monitor, "or when they're
not attractive anymore, some girls use the
razor nails to slash their wrists.” I make
Gwen WorksAsHooker mute again. I
change channels. I
change channels. I change channels. Sixteen
channels away, a beautiful young woman in a sequined dress is
smiling and dropping animal wastes into a Num. Num Snack Factory. Evie
and me, we did this infomercial. It's one of those television commercials you
think is a real program except it's just a thirty-minute pitch. The
television camera cuts to another girl in a sequined dress, this one is wading through an audience of snow birds and Midwest
tourists. The girl offers a golden anniversary couple in matching Hawaiian
shirts a selection of canapes from a silver tray, but the couple and everybody else in their double
knits and camera necklaces, they're staring up and to the right at
something off camera. You
know it's the monitor. It's
eerie, but what's happening is the folks are staring at themselves in the
monitor staring at themselves in the monitor
staring at themselves in the monitor, on and on, completely trapped in a
reality loop that never ends. The
girl with the tray, her desperate eyes are contact lens
too green and her lips are heavy red outside the natural lip line. The blonde
hair is thick and teased up so the girl's shoulders don't look so big-boned. The
canapes she keeps waving under all the old noses are soda crackers pooped
on with meat by-products. Waving her tray, the girl wades further up into
the studio audience bleachers with her too green eyes and big-boned hair.
This is my best friend, Evie Cottrell. This
has to be Evie because here comes Manus stepping up to save her with his
good looks. Manus, special police vice operative that he is, he takes one of
those pooped-on soda crackers and puts it between his capped teeth. And chews.
And tilts his handsome square-jawed face back and closes
his eyes, Manus closes his power-blue eyes and twists his head just so
much side to side and swallows. Thick
black hair like Manus has, it reminds you how people's hair is just
vestigial fur with mousse on it. Such a sexy hair dog, Manus is. The
square-jawed face rocks down to give the camera a full-face
eyes-open look of complete and total love and satisfaction. So deja vu.
This was exactly the same look Manus used to give me when he'd ask if I got
my orgasm. Then
Manus turns to give the exact same look to Evie while the studio audience all
looks off in another direction, watching themselves watch themselves
watch themselves watch Manus smile with total and complete love and
satisfaction at Evie. Evie
smiles back her red outside the natural lipline smile at Manus, and I'm
this tiny sparkling figure in the background. That's me just over Manus's
shoulder, tiny me smiling away like a space heater and dropping animal matter
into the Plexiglas funnel on top of the Num Num Snack Factory. How
could I be so dumb. Let's go sailing. Sure. I
should've known the deal was Manus and Evie all the time. Even
here, lying in a hotel bed a year after the whole story
is over, I'm making fists. I could've just watched the stupid
infomercial and known Manus and Evie had some tortured sick relationship
they wanted to think was true love. Okay, I
did watch it. Okay, about a hundred times I watched it, but I was
only watching myself. That reality loop thing. The
camera comes back to the first girl, the one on stage, and she's me. And
I'm so beautiful. On television, I demonstrate the easy cleanability of the snack
factory, and I'm so beautiful. I snap the blades out of the
Plexiglas cover and rinse off the chewed-up animal waste under running
water. And, jeez, I'm beautiful. The
disembodied voiceover is saying how the Num Num Snack Factory takes
meat by-products, whatever you have—your tongues or hearts or lips or
genitals—chews them up, seasons them, and poops them out in the shape of a
spade or a diamond or a club onto your choice of cracker for you to eat
yourself. Here in bed, I'm crying. Bubba-Joan
GotHerJawShotOff. All these thousands of
miles later, all these different people I've
been, and it's still the same story. Why is it you feel like a dope if you laugh alone, but that's
usually how you end up crying? How is
it you can keep mutating and still
be the same deadly virus? CHAPTER ELEVENJump
back to when I first got out of the hospital without a
career or a fiance or an apartment, and I had to sleep at
Evie's big house, her real house where even she didn't like
to live, it was so lonely, stuck way out in some rainforest
with nobody paying attention. Jump to
me being on Evie's bed, on my back that first night, but I can't sleep. Wind
lifts the curtains, lace curtains. All Evie's furniture
is that curlicue Frenchy provincial stuff painted white
and gold. There isn't a moon, but the sky is full of stars,
so everything—Evie's house, the rose hedges, the bedroom curtains, the
backs of my hands against the bedspread—are all either black or gray. Evie's
house was what a Texas girl would buy if her parents kept giving her
about ten million dollars all the time. It's like the Cottrells know Evie will
never make the big-time runways. So Evie, she lives here. Not New York.
Not Milan. The suburbs, right out in the nowhere of professional
modeling. This is pretty far from doing the Paris collections. Being stuck in
nowhere is the excuse Evie needs, living here is, for a big-boned girl who'd
never be a big-time success anywhere. The
doors are locked tonight. The cat is inside. When I look,
the cat looks back at me the way dogs and some cars look
when people say they're smiling. Just
that afternoon, Evie was on the telephone begging me to check myself
out of the hospital and come visit. Evie's
house was big—white with hunter green shutters, a three-story
plantation house fronted with big pillars. Needlepoint ivy and climbing
roses—yellow roses— were climbed up around the bottom ten feet of each big pillar.
You'd imagine Ashley Wilkes mowing the grass here,
or Rhett Butler taking down the storm windows, but Evie, she has these
minimum-wage slave Laotians who refuse to
live in. Jump
to the day before, Evie driving me from the hospital. Evie really is Evelyn
Cottrell, Inc. No, really. She's traded publicly now. Everybody's favorite
write-off. The Cottrells made a private
stock offering in her career when Evie
was twenty-one, and all the Cottrell relatives with their Texas land and oil money are heavily invested
in Evie's being a model failure. Most
times it was an embarrassment going to modeling look-see auditions with Evie.
Sure, I'd get work, but then the art director or the stylist would start
screaming at Evie that, no, in his expert opinion she was not a perfect
size six. Most times, some assistant stylist had to wrestle Evie
out the door. Evie would be screaming back over her shoulder
about how I shouldn't let them treat me like a piece of meat. I should
just walk out. "Fuck
'em," Evie's screaming by this point. "Fuck 'em all." Me, I'm
not angry. I'd be getting strapped into this incredible leather corset by
Poopie Cadole and leather pants by Chrome Hearts. Life was good back
then. I'd have three hours of work, maybe four or five. At the
photo studio doorway, before she'd get thrown out of the shoot, Evie
would swing the assistant stylist into the door jamb, and the little guy would
just crumple up at her feet. It's then Evie would scream, "You
people can all suck the crap out of my sweet Texas ass."
Then she'd go out to her Ferrari and wait the three or four or five
hours so she could drive me home. Evie,
that Evie was my best friend in the whole world. Moments like that, Evie
was fun and quirky, almost like she had a life of her own. Okay,
so I didn't know about Evie and Manus and their complete and total love
and satisfaction. So kill me. Jump to
before that, Evie calling me at the hospital and begging me, please, could
I discharge myself and come stay at her house, she was so lonely, please. My
health insurance had a two-million-dollar lifetime ceiling,
and the meter had just run and run all summer. No social service contact had
the guts to transition me into God only knows where. Begging
me on the telephone, Evie said she had plane reservations. She was going to
Cancun for a catalogue shoot so would I, could I, please, just
house-sit for her? When
she picked me up, on my pad I wrote: is
that my halter top? you know you're stretching it. "You'll
need to feed my cat is all," Evie says. i don't
like being alone so far out from town, I write, i don't know how you can live
here. Evie
says, "It's not living alone if you keep a rifle under the
bed." I
write: i know
girls who say that about their dildos. And
Evie says, "Gross! I'm not that way at all with my rifle!” So
jump to Evie being flown off to Cancun, Mexico, and when I go to look under her
bed, there's the thirty-aught rifle and
scope. In her closets are what's left of my clothes, stretched and tortured to death and hanging there
on wire hangers, dead. Then jump to me in Evie's bed that night. It's midnight. The wind lifts the bedroom
curtains, lace curtains, and the cat jumps
up on the windowsill to see who's just pulled up in the gravel driveway. With
the stars behind it, the cat looks
back at me. Downstairs, you hear a window break. CHAPTER TWELVEJump
way back to the last Christmas before my accident, when I
go home to open presents with my folks. My folks put up the same fake tree
every year, scratchy green and making that hot poly-plastic smell that gives
you a dizzy flu headache when the lights are plugged in too long. The
tree's all magic and sparkle, crowded with our red and gold
glass ornaments and those strands of silver plastic loaded
with static electricity that people call icicles. It's the
same ratty angel with a rubber doll face on top of the tree.
Covering the mantel is the same spun fiberglass angel
hair that works into your skin and gives you an infected
rash if you even touch it. It's the same Perry Como Christmas album on
the stereo. This is back when I still had a face so I wasn't so confronted
by singing Christmas carols. My
brother Shane's still dead so I try not to expect much
attention, just a quiet Christmas. By this point, my boyfriend,
Manus was getting weird about losing his police job, and what I needed was a couple days out of the spotlight. We all talked, my mom, my dad, and me,
and agreed to not buy big gifts for
each other this year. Maybe just little gifts, my folks say, just stocking
stuffers. Perry
Como is singing "It's Beginning to Look a Lot Like
Christmas." The
red felt stockings my mom sewed for each of us, for Shane and me, are
hanging on the fireplace, each one red felt with our names spelled out, top to
bottom, in fancy white felt letters. Each one lumpy with the gifts
stuffed inside. It's Christmas morning, and we're all sitting around the tree,
my father ready with his jackknife for the knotted ribbons. My mom has a brown
paper shopping bag and says, "Before things get out of hand,
the wrapping paper goes in here, not all over the place." My mom
and dad sit in recliner chairs. I sit on the floor in
front of the fireplace with the stockings by me. This scene
is always blocked this way. Them sitting with coffee, leaned down over me,
watching for my reaction. Me Indian-sitting on the floor. All of us in
bathrobes and pajamas still. Perry
Como is singing "I'll Be Home for Christmas." The
first thing out of my stocking is a little stuffed koala
bear, the kind that grips your pencil with its spring-loaded
hands and feet. This is who my folks think I am. My mom hands me hot
chocolate in a mug with miniature marshmallows floating on top. I say,
"Thanks." Under the little koala is a box I take out. My
folks stop everything, lean over their cups of coffee, and
just watch me. Perry
Como is singing "Oh, Come, All Ye Faithful." The
little box is condoms. Sitting
right next to our sparkling, magic Christmas tree, my father says,
"We don't know how many partners you have every year, but we want you to
play safe." I stash the condoms in my
bathrobe pocket and look down at the
miniature marshmallows melting. I say, "Thanks." "Those
are latex," says my mom. "You need to use only a
water-based sexual lubricant. If you need a lubricant at your age. Not petroleum
jelly or shortenings or any kind of
lotion." She says, "We didn't get you the kind made from sheep
intestines because those have tiny pores that can allow the transmission of
HIV." Next
inside my stocking is another little box. This is more
condoms. The color marked on the box is Nude. This
seems redundant. Next to that, the label says odorless and
tasteless. Oh, I
could tell you all about tasteless. "A
study," my father says, "a telephone survey of heterosexuals
in urban areas with a high incidence of HIV infection showed that
thirty-five percent of people are uncomfortable buying their own condoms." And
getting them from Santa Claus is better? I say, "Got it." "This
isn't just about AIDS," my mom says. "There's gonorrhea.
There's syphilis. There's the human papilloma virus. That's genital
warts." She says, "You do know to put the condom on as soon as
the penis is erect, don't you?" She
says, "I paid a fortune for bananas out of season in case
you need the practice." This
is a trap. If I say, Oh, yeah, I roll rubbers onto new dry
erections all the time, I'll get the slut lecture from my father. But if I tell
them, No, we'll get to spend Christmas Day practicing to protect me from fruit. My dad
says, "There's tons more to this than AIDS." He
says, "There's the herpes simplex virus II with symptoms that include
small painful blisters that burst on your genitals." He looks at Mom. "Body
aches," she says. "Yes, you get body
aches," he says, "and fever. You get vaginal discharge. It hurts to urinate." He looks at my mom. Perry
Como is singing "Santa Claus Is Coming to Town." Under
the next box of condoms is another box of condoms. Jeez, three boxes
should last me right into menopause. Jump to
how much I want my brother alive right now so I can kill him for
wrecking my Christmas. Perry Como is singing "Up on the Housetop." "There's hepatitis
B," my mom says. To my dad, she says,
"What's the others?" "Chlamydia," my
father says. "And lymphogranuloma." "Yes," my rnom
says, "and mucal purulent cervicitis and
nongonococcal urethritis." My dad
looks at my mom and says, "But that's usually caused
by an allergy to a latex condom or a spermicide." My
mom drinks some coffee. She looks down at both her hands around her cup,
then looks up at me sitting here. "What your father's trying to
say," she says, "is we realize now that we made some mistakes with
your brother." She says, "We're just trying to keep you
safe." There's
a fourth box of condoms in my stocking. Perry Como is singing "It
Came upon a Midnight Clear." The box is labeled . .. safe and strong enough
even for prolonged anal intercourse. . . . "There's granuloma
inguinale," my father says to my mother,
"and bacterial vaginosis." He opens one hand and counts the fingers, then counts them again, then
says, "there's molluscum contagiosum." Some
of the condoms are white. Some are assorted colors. Some are ribbed to
feel like serrated bread knives, I guess. Some are extra large. Some glow in
the dark. This is flattering in a creepy way. My folks must think I'm wildly
popular. Perry
Como is singing "Oh Come, Oh Come, Emmanuel." "We
don't want to scare you," my mom says, "but you're
young. We can't expect you to just sit home nights." "And
if you ever can't sleep," my father says, "it could be
pinworms." My
mom says, "We just don't want you to end up like your brother is all." My brother's dead, but he
still has a stocking full of presents and
you can bet they're not rubbers. He's dead, but you can bet he's laughing his
head off right now. "With
pinworms," my father says, "the females migrate
down the colon to the perianal area to lay their eggs at night." He
says, "If you suspect worm activity, it works best to press
clear adhesive tape against the rectum, then look at the tape under a magnifying
glass. The worms
should be about a quarter-inch long." My mom
says, "Bob, hush." My
dad leans toward me and says, "Ten percent of the men in
this country can give you these worms." He says, "You just remember
that." Almost
everything in my stocking is condoms, in boxes, in little gold foil
coins, in long strips of a hundred with perforations so you can tear them
apart. My only other gifts are a rape whistle and a pocket-sized spray canister of Mace. That looks like I'm set for the worst,
but I'm afraid to ask if there's
more. There could be a vibrator to keep
me at home and celibate every night. There could be dental dams in case of cunnilingus. Saran Wrap.
Rubber gloves. Perry Como is singing
"Nuttin' for Christmas." I look
at Shane's stocking still lumpy with presents and ask,
"You guys bought for Shane?" If
it's condoms, they're a little late. My
mom and dad look at each other. To my mom, my dad says, "You tell
her." "That's
what you got for your brother," my mom says. "Go
ahead and look." Jump to me being being
confused as hell Give
me clarity. Give me reasons. Give me answers. Flash. I
reach up to unhook Shane's stocking from the mantel, and
inside it's filled with crumpled tissue paper. "Keep
digging," my dad says. In with the tissue, there's
a sealed envelope. "Open
it," my mom says. Inside
the envelope is a printed letter with right at the top
the words "Thank You." "It's really a gift to
both our children," my dad says. I
can't believe what I'm reading. "Instead
of buying you a big present," my mom says, "we made a donation in your name to the
World AIDS Research Fund." Inside the stocking is a
second letter I take out. "That,"
my dad says, "is Shane's present to you." Oh,
this is too much. Perry
Como is singing "I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus." I say,
"That crafty old dead brother of mine, he's so thoughtful."
I say, "He shouldn't have. He really, really shouldn't
have gone to all this trouble. He needs to maybe move away from denial and
coping and just get on with being dead. Maybe reincarnate." I say,
"His pretending he's still alive can't be healthy." Inside,
I'm ranting. What I really wanted this year was a new Prada handbag. It
wasn't my fault that some hair-spray can exploded in Shane's face. Boom, and
he came staggering into the house with his forehead already turning
black and blue. The long drive to the hospital with his one eye swoll shut and
the face around it just getting bigger and bigger with every vein inside broken
and bleeding under the skin, Shane didn't say a word. It
wasn't my fault how the social service people at the hospital
took one look at Shane's face and came down on my father with both feet.
Suspicion of child abuse. Criminal neglect. Family intervention. It
wasn't any of it my fault. Police statements. A caseworker went around interviewing
our neighbors, our school friends, our teachers until everybody we
knew treated me like, you poor brave thing. Sitting
here Christmas morning with all these gifts I need a penis to enjoy,
everybody doesn't know the half of it. Even
after the police investigation was done, and nothing was
proved, even then, our family was wrecked. And everybody
still thinks I'm the one who threw away the hair-spray.
And since I started this, it was all my fault. The explosion.
The police. Shane's running away. His death. And it wasn't my fault. "Really," I say,
"if Shane really wanted to give me a present,
he'd come back from the dead and buy me the new wardrobe he owes me. That would give me a merry Christmas. That I could really say 'thank you'
for." Silence. As I
fish out the second envelope, my mom says, "We're officially
'outing' you." "In
your brother's name," my dad says, "we bought you a
membership in P.F.L.A.G. "Fee-flag?"
I say. "Parents
and Friends of Lesbians and Gays," my mom says. Perry Como is singing
"There's No Place Like Home for the
Holidays." Silence. My
mother starts up from her chair and says, "I'll go run get those bananas."
She says, "Just to be on the safe side,
your father and I can't wait to see you try on some of your presents.” CHAPTER THIRTEENJump to
around midnight in Evie's house where I catch Seth Thomas trying to
kill me. The way
my face is without a jaw, my throat just ends in sort of a hole with my
tongue hanging out. Around the hole, the skin is all scar tissue: dark red
lumps and shiny the way you'd look if you got the cherry pie in a pie eating
contest. If I let my tongue hang down, you can see the roof
of my mouth, pink arid smooth as the inside of a crab's back, and hanging
down around the roof is the white vertebrae horseshoe of the upper teeth I
have left. There are times to wear a veil and there are not. Other
than this, I'm stunning when I meet Seth Thomas breaking
into Evie's big house at midnight. What
Seth sees coming down the big circular staircase in Evie's foyer is me wearing
one of Evie's peachy-pink satin and lace peignoir sets pieced on the bias. Evie's bathrobe
is this peachy-pink retro Zsa Zsa number that hides
me the way cellophane hides a frozen turkey. At the cuffs and along the front of the bathrobe is the
peachy-pink ozone haze of ostrich feathers
that match the feathers on the
high-heeled mules I'm wearing. Seth
is just frozen at the foot of Evie's big circular staircase
with Evie's best sixteen-inch carving knife in his hand. A
pair of Evie's control top pantyhose is pulled down over Seth's head.
You can see Evie's hygienic cotton crotch sitting across Seth's face. The
pantyhose legs drape the way a cocker spaniel's ears would look down the front of his
otherwise mix-and-match army fatigues ensemble. And I
am a vision. Descending step by step toward the point of the carving knife, with the slow
step-pause-step of a showgirl in a
big Vegas revue. Oh, I am just that
fabulous. So sex furniture. Seth's
standing there, looking up, having a moment, afraid for the first time in his life
because I'm holding Evie's rifle. The butt is planted against my shoulder, and the
barrel is out in both hands in front of me. The sight's cross-haired right in
the middle of Evie Cottrell's cotton crotch. This
is just Seth and me in Evie's foyer with its beveled glass
windows broken around the front door and Evie's Austrian crystal
chandelier that sparkles like so much costume jewelry for a house. The only other
thing is a little desk in that Frenchy provincial white and gold. On the
little French desk is a tres ooh-la-la telephone where the receiver is as
big as a gold saxophone and sits in a gold cradle on top of an ivory box. In
the middle of the push-button circle is a cameo. So chic, Evie probably
thinks. With
the knife out in front of him, Seth goes, "I'm not going
to hurt you." I'm
doing that slow step-pause-step down the stairs. Seth
says, "Let's not anybody get killed, here." And
it's so deja vu. This
was the exact way Manus Kelley would ask if I'd gotten my orgasm. Not the
words, but the voice. Seth
says through Evie's crotch, "All's I did was sleep with
Evie." So deja vu. Let's
go sailing. It's the exact same voice. Seth
drops the carving knife and the tip of the blade sticks mumblety-peg
straight down next to his combat boot in Evie's foyer parquet floor. Seth says,
"If Evie says it was me that shot you, she was lying." On the
desk next to the telephone is a pad and pencil for taking down messages. Seth
says, "I knew the second I heard about you in the hospital that it was
Evie's doing." Balancing
the rifle with one arm, on the pad, I write: take
off your pantyhose. "I mean you can't kill
me," Seth says. Seth's pulling at the
waistband of his pantyhose. "I'm just the reason why Evie shot you." I step-pause-step the last
ten feet to Seth and hook the end of the
rifle barrel on the pantyhose waistband and pull them off Seth's square-jawed face. Seth Thomas who would be Alfa Romeo in Vancouver, British
Columbia. Alfa Romeo who was Nash
Rambler, formerly Bergdorf Goodman, formerly Neiman Marcus, formerly Saks Fifth
Avenue, formerly Christian Dior. Seth
Thomas who a long time before was named Manus Kelley, my fiance from the
infomercial. I couldn't tell you this until now because I want you to know how discovering this felt. In my heart. My fiance
wanted to kill me. Even when he's
that much an asshole, I loved Manus.
I still love Seth. A knife, it felt like a knife, and I'd discovered
that despite everything that's happened, I still had an endless untapped potential for getting hurt. It's from this night we
started on the road together and Manus
Kelley would someday become Seth Thomas. In between, in Santa Barbara
and San Francisco and Los Angles and Reno
and Boise and Salt Lake City, Manus was
other men. Between that night and now, tonight, me in bed in Seattle
still in love with him, Seth was Lance Corporal
and Chase Manhattan. He was Dow Corning and Herald Tribune and Morris
Code. All
courtesy of the Brandy Alexander Witness Reincarnation Project, as she calls it. Different
names, but all these men started out as Manus TryingToKillMe. Different
men, but there's always the same special police vice operative good looks. The same
power blue eyes. Don't shoot—Let's go sailing—it's the same voice. Different
haircuts but it's always the same thick black sexy dog hair. Seth
Thomas is Manus. Manus cheated on me with Evie, but I still love him so much I'll hide any amount of conjugated estrogen in his food. So much I'll do
anything to destroy him. You'd think I'd be smarter
now after, what? Sixteen hundred college
credits. I should be smarter. I could be a doctor by now. Sorry,
Mom. Sorry, God. Jump
to me not feeling anything but stupid, trying to balance
one of Evie's gold saxophone telephones against my ear.
Brandy Alexander, the inconvenient queen she is, isn't listed in the phone
book. All I know is she lives downtown at the Congress Hotel in a corner suite with
three roommates: Kitty
Litter. Sofonda
Peters. And
the vivacious Vivienne VaVane. AKA
the Rhea sisters, three drag guys who worship the quality
queen deluxe but would kill each other for more closet space. The Brandy
queen told me that much. It
should be Brandy I talk to, but I call my folks. What's gone on is I lock my killer
fiance in the coat closet, and when I go to put him inside there's more of my
beautiful clothes but all stretched out three
sizes. Those clothes were every penny
I ever made. After all that, I have to call somebody. For
so many reasons, no way can I just go back to bed. So I
call, and my call goes out across mountains and deserts to where my
father answers, and in my best ventriloquist voice, avoiding the consonants
you really need a jaw to say, I tell him, "Gflerb sorlfd
qortk, erd sairk. Srd. Erd, korts derk sairk? Kirdo!" Anymore, the telephone is
just not my friend. And
my father says, "Please don't hang up. Let me get my
wife." Away
from the receiver, he says, "Leslie, wake up, we're being
hate-crimed finally." And
in the background is my mother's voice saying, "Don't even talk to them. Tell them we
loved and treasured our dead homosexual
child." It's
the middle of the night here. They must be in bed. "Lot. Ordilj," I
say. "Serta ish ka alt. Serta ish ka alt!" "Here,"
my father says as his voice drifts away. "Leslie, you
give them what for." The
gold saxophone receiver feels heavy and stagy, a prop, as if this call
needs any more drama. From back in the coat closet, Seth yells, "Please.
Don't be calling the police until you've talked to Evie." Then
from the telephone, "Hello?" And it's my mother. "The
world is big enough we can all love each other." she
says, "There's room in God's heart for all His children.
Gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered. Just because it's anal
intercourse doesn't mean it's not love." She
says, "I hear a lot of hurt from you. I want to help you
deal with these issues." And
Seth yells, "I wasn't going to kill you. I was here to confront Evie
because of what she did to you. I was only trying to protect myself." On the
telephone, a two-hour drive from here, there's a toilet flush, then my
father's voice, "You still talking to those lunatics?" And my
mother, "It's so exciting! I think one of them says
he's going to kill us." And
Seth yells, "It had to be Evie who shot you." Then
in the telephone is my father's voice, roaring so loud
that I have to hold the receiver away from my ear, he says, "You, you're
the one who should be dead." He says, "You killed my son,
you goddamned perverts." And
Seth yells, "What I had with Evie was just sex." I might
as well not even be in the room, or just hand the phone to Seth. Seth
says, "Please don't think for one minute that I could
just stab you in your sleep.” And in the phone, my father
shouts, "You just try it, mister. I've
got a gun here and I'll keep it loaded and next to me day and night." He says, "We're through letting you
torture us." He says, "We're proud to be the parents of a dead gay son." And
Seth yells, "Please, just put the phone down." And I
go, "Aht! Oahk!" But
my father hangs up. My
inventory of people who can save me is down to just me. Not my best
friend. Or my old boyfriend. Not the doctors or the nuns. Maybe the police, but
not yet. It isn't time to wrap this whole mess into a neat legal package and get on with my less-than life. Hideous and
invisible forever and picking up
pieces. Things
are still all messy and up in the air, but I'm not ready
to settle them. My comfort zone was getting bigger by
the minute. My threshold for drama was bumping out. It was
time to keep pushing the envelope. It felt like I could
do anything, and I was only getting started. My
rifle was loaded, and I had my first hostage. CHAPTER FOURTEENJump
way back to the last time I ever went home to see my parents. It was my last
birthday before the accident. What with
Shane still being dead, I wasn't expecting presents. I'm not expecting a cake. This last time,
I go home just to see them, my folks.
This is when I still have a mouth so I'm not so stymied by the idea of
blowing out candles. The house, the brown living
room sofa and reclining chairs, everything is the same except my father's put
big Xs of duct tape across the inside of all
the windows. Mom's car isn't in the driveway where they usually park it. The car's locked in the garage. There's a big
deadbolt I don't remember being on
the front door. On the front gate
is a big "Beware of Dog" sign and a smaller
sign for a home security system. When I
first get home, Mom waves me inside fast and says, "Stay back
from the windows, Bump. Hate crimes are up sixty-seven percent this year over
last year." She
says, "After it gets dark at night, try and not let your
shadow fall across the blinds so it can be seen from outside." She
cooks dinner by flashlight. When I open the oven or the fridge, she panics
fast, body blocking me to one side and closing whatever I open. "It's
the bright light inside," she says. "Anti-gay violence
is up over one hundred percent in the last five years." My father comes home and
parks his car a half block away. His keys
rattle against the outside of the new dead-bolt while Mom stands frozen
in the kitchen doorway, holding me back.
The keys stop, and my father knocks, three
fast knocks, then two slow ones. "That's his
knock," Mom says, "but look through the peephole, anyway." My
father comes in, looking back over his shoulder to the
dark street, watching. A car passes, and he says, "Romeo
Tango Foxtrot six seven four. Quick, write it down." My
mother writes this on the pad by the phone. "Make?" she
says. "Model?" "Mercury,
blue," my father says. "Sable.” Mom
says, "It's on the record." I say
maybe they're overreacting some. And my father says,
"Don't marginalize our oppression." Jump to what a big mistake
this was, coming home. Jump to how Shane
should see this, how weird our folks are
being. My father turns off the lamp I turned on in the living room. The
drapes on the picture window are shut and
pinned together in the middle. They know all the furniture in the dark, but me, I stumble against
every chair and end table. I knock a
candy dish to the floor, smash, and my
mother screams and drops to the kitchen linoleum. My
father comes up from where he's crouched behind the sofa and says, "You'll
have to cut your mother some slack. We're expecting to get hate-crimed any day
soon." From
the kitchen, Mom yells, "Was it a rock? Is anything on fire?" And my
father yells, "Don't press the panic button, Leslie. The next false
alarm, and we have to start paying for them." Now I
know why they put a headlight on some kinds of vacuum cleaners. First,
I'm picking up broken glass in the pitch dark. Then I'm asking my father for
bandages. I just stand in one place, keeping my cut hand raised above my heart, and wait. My father
comes out of the dark with alcohol and
bandages. "This is a war we're
fighting," he says, "all of us in pee-flag.” P.F.L.A.G.
Parents and Friends of Lesbians and Gays. I know. I know. I know. Thank
you, Shane. I say,
"You shouldn't even be in PFLAG. Your gay son is dead,
so he doesn't count anymore." This sounds pretty hurtful, but I'm bleeding
here. I say, "Sorry." The
bandages are tight and the alcohol stings in the dark, and my father says,
"The Wilsons put a PFLAG sign in their yard. Two nights later, someone drove
right through their lawn, ruined everything." My
folks don't have any PFLAG signs. "We took ours down,"
my father says. "Your mother has a PFLAG bumper sticker, so we keep her
car in the garage. Us taking pride in your
brother has put us right on the front
lines." Out of
the dark, my mother says, "Don't forget the Bradfords. They got a burning bag of dog feces
on their front porch. It could've burned their whole house down with them
sleeping in bed, all because they hung a rainbow PFLAG wind sock in their
backyard." Mom says, "Not even their front yard, in their backyard." "Hate,"
my father says, "is all around us, Bump. Do you know that?" My mom
says, "Come on, troops. It's chow time." Dinner
is some casserole from the PFLAG cookbook. It's good, but God only knows what
it looks like. Twice, I knock over my glass in the dark. I sprinkle salt in my
lap. Any time I say a word, my folks shush me. My mom says, "Did
you hear something? Did that come from outside?” In a whisper, I ask if they remember what tomorrow is. Just to see if they remember, what with
all the tension. It's not
as if I'm expecting a cake with candles and a present. "Tomorrow,"
my dad says. "Of course, we know. That's why we're nervous as
cats." "We
wanted to talk to you about tomorrow," my mom says.
"We know how upset you are about your brother still,
and we think it would be good for you if you'd march with
our group in the parade." Jump
to another weird sick disappointment just coming over the horizon. Jump to
me getting swept up in their big compensation, their big penance for all those years
ago, my father yelling, "We don't know what kind of filthy diseases you're
bringing into this house, mister, but you can just find another place to sleep,
tonight." They
called this tough love. This
is the same dinner table where Mom told Shane, "Doctor Peterson's
office called today." To me she said, "You can go to your room and
read, young lady." I
could've gone to the moon and still heard all the yelling. Shane
and my folks were in the dining room, me, I was behind my bedroom door. My
clothes, most of my school clothes were outside on the clothesline.
Inside, my father said, "It's not strep throat you've got,
mister, and we'd like to know where you've been and what you've been
up to.” "Drugs,"
my mom said, "we could deal with." Shane
never said a word. His face still shiny and creased with scars. "Teenage
pregnancy," my mom said, "we could deal with." Not
one word. "Doctor
Peterson," she said. "He said there's just about only
one way you could get the disease the way you have it, but I told him, no, not
our child, not you, Shane." My
father said, "We called Coach Ludlow, and he said you
dropped basketball two months ago." "You'll need to go
down to the county health department,
tomorrow," my mom said. "Tonight,"
my father said. "We want you out of here." Our
father. These
same people being so good and kind and caring and involved, these same people
finding identity and personal fulfillment in the fight on the front lines for equality and personal dignity and equal rights for
their dead son, these are the same people I hear yelling through
my bedroom door. "We
don't know what kind of filthy diseases you're bringing into this house, mister, but you can
just find another place to sleep tonight." I
remember I wanted to go out and get my clothes, iron then, fold them, and put
them away. Give
me any sense of control. Flash. I
remember how the front door just opened and shut, it didn't
slam. With the light on in my room, all I could see was myself reflected in my
bedroom window. When I turned out the light, there was Shane, standing just outside the window, looking in at me, his face all
monster movie hacked and distorted,
dark and hard from the hair-spray
blow-up. Give
rne terror. Flash. He didn't ever smoke that I
knew about, but he lit a match and put it to a cigarette in his mouth. He
knocked on the window. He
said, "Hey, let me in." Give
me denial. He
said, "Hey, it's cold." Give
me ignorance. I
turned on the bedroom light so I could only see myself in the window.
Then I shut the curtains. I never saw Shane again. Tonight,
with the lights off, with the curtains shut and the front door locked,
with Shane gone except for the ghost of him, I ask, "What parade?" My
mom says, "It's the Gay Pride Parade." My dad
says, "We're marching with PFLAG." And
they'd like me to march with them. They'd like me to sit here in the
dark and pretend it's the outside world we're hiding from. It's some hateful
stranger that's going to come get us in the night. It's some alien fatal
sex disease.
They'd like to think it's some bigoted homophobe they're terrified of.
It's not any of it their fault. They'd like me to think I have something to make up
for. I did
not throw away that can of hairspray. All I did was turn
out the bedroom lights. Then there were the fire engines coming in the
distance. There was orange flashing across the outside of my curtains, and
when I got out of bed to look, there were my school clothes on fire. Hanging
dry on the clothesline and layered with air. Dresses and jumpers and
pants and blouses, all of them blazing and coming apart in the breeze. In a
few seconds, everything I loved, gone. Flash. Jump
ahead a few years to me being grown up and moving out. Give me a new start. Jump
to one night, somebody calling from a pay phone to ask my folks, were
they the parents of Shane McFarland? My parents saying, maybe. The
caller won't say where, but he says Shane is dead. A voice
behind the caller saying, tell them the rest. Another
voice behind the caller saying, tell them Miss Shane hated their hateful
guts and her last words -were: this isn't over yet, not by a long shot. Then
somebody laughing. Jump to
us alone here in the dark with a casserole. My
father says, "So, honey, will you march with your mother
and me?" My
mom says, "It would mean so much for gay rights.” CHAPTER FIFTEENJump
to the moment around one o'clock in the morning in Evie's big silent house when
Manus stops screaming and I can finally think. Evie
is in Cancun, probably waiting for the police to call her and say: Your
house-sitter, the monster without a jaw, well, she's shot your secret boyfriend
to death when he broke in with a butcher knife is our best guess. You
know that Evie's wide awake right now. In some Mexican hotel room,
Evie's trying to figure out if there's a three-hour or a four-hour time
difference between her big house where I'm stabbed to death, dead,
and Cancun, where Evie's supposed to be on a catalogue shoot. It's
not like Evie is entered in the biggest brain category. Nobody shoots
a catalogue in Cancun in the peak season, especially not
with big-boned cowgirls like Evie Cottrell. But me
being dead, that opens up a whole world of possibility. I'm an
invisible nobody sitting on a white damask sofa facing another white sofa
across a coffee table that looks like a big block of malachite from Geology
101. Evie
slept with my fiance, so now I can do anything to her. In the
movie, where somebody is invisible all the sudden—you know, a nuclear
radiation fluke or a mad scientist recipe—and you think, what would I do
if I was invisible . . . ? Like go into the guy's locker room at
Gold's gym or, better yet, the Oakland Raiders' locker room. Stuff
like that. Scope things out. Go to Tiffany's and shoplift diamond tiaras and
stuff. Just by
his being so dumb, Manus could've stabbed me, tonight, thinking I was
Evie, thinking Evie shot me, while I was asleep in the dark in her bed. My dad,
he'd go to my funeral and talk to everybody about how I was always
about to go back to college and finish my personal fitness training degree and
then no doubt go on to medical school. Dad, Dad, Dad, Dad, Daddy,
I couldn't get past the fetal pig in Biology 101. Now
I'm the cadaver. Sorry, Mom. Sorry, God. Evie
would be right next to my Mom, next to the open casket. Evie would stagger
up leaning on Manus. You know, Evie would've found something totally
grotesque for the undertaker to dress me in. So Evie throws an arm around
my mom, and Manus can't get away from the open casket fast enough, and I'm laying there
in this blue velveteen casket like the interior of a Lincoln Town Car.
Of course, thank you, Evie, I'm wearing this concubine evening
wear Chinese yellow silk kimono slit up the side to my waist with black fishnet
stockings and red Chinese dragons embroidered across the pelvic region
and my breasts. And red
high heels. And no jawbone. Of course, Evie says to my
mom: "She always loved this dress. This
kimono was her favorite." Sensitive Evie would say, "Guess this makes you oh for two." I
could kill Evie. I
would pay snakes to bite her. Evie
would be wearing this little black cocktail number with an
asymmetrical hemline satin skirt and a strapless bodice by Rei Kawakubo.
The shoulders and sleeves would be sheer black chiffon. Evie, you know
she has jewelry, big emeralds for her too green eyes and a change of
accessories in her black clutch bag so she can wear this dress
later, dancing. I hate
Evie. Me, I'm
rotting with my blood pumped out in this slut-ty Suzie Wong Tokyo Rose
concubine drag dress where it didn't fit so they had to pin all the extra
together behind my back. I look
like shit, dead. I look
like dead shit. I
would stab Evie right now over the telephone. No,
really, I'd tell Mrs. Cottrell as we placed Evie's urn in a
family vault somewhere in Godawful, Texas. Really, Evie
wanted to be cremated. Me, at
Evie's funeral, I'd be wearing this tourniquet-tight black leather mini
dress by Gianni Versace with yards and yards of black silk gloves bunched
up on my arms. I'd sit next to Manus in the back of the mortuary's
big black Caddy, and I'd have on this wagon wheel of a black
Christian Lacroix hat with a black veil you could take
off later and go to a swell auction preview or estate sale or
something and then, lunch. Evie,
Evie would be dirt. Okay, ashes. Alone
in her living room, I pick up a crystal cigarette box off the table that looks
like a block of malachite, and I overhand fast-pitch this little treasure
against the fireplace bricks. There's a smash with cigarettes
and matches everywhere. Bourgeoise
dead girl that I am, I wish all of the sudden I hadn't done this, and I
kneel down and start to pick up the mess. The glass and cigarettes. Only Evie
... a cigarette box. It's just so last-generational. And
matches. A
little tug hits my finger, and I'm cut on a shard so thin
and clear it's invisible. Oh,
this is dazzling. Only
when the blood comes out to outline the shard in red, only then can I see
what cut me. It's my blood on the broken glass I pull out. My blood on a book
of matches. No,
Mrs. Cottrell. No, really, Evie wanted to be cremated. I get
up out of my mess, and run around leaving blood on every light switch and
lamp, turning them all off. I run past the coat closet, and Manus calls, "Please," but
what I have in mind is too exciting. I
turn out all the first-floor lights, and Manus calls. He has to go to the bathroom,
he calls. "Please." Evie's
big plantation house with its big pillars in front is all
the way dark as I feel my way back to the dining room. I can feel the
door frame and count ten slow, blind footsteps across the Oriental carpet to the dining room table with its lace tablecloth. I
light a match. I light one of the candles in the big silver
candelabra. Okay,
it's so Gothic Novel, but I light all five candles in the
silver candelabra so heavy it takes both hands for me to
lift. Still
wearing my satin peignoir set and ostrich feather bathrobe, what I am is the
ghost of a beautiful dead girl carrying this
candle thing up Evie's long circular staircase. Up past all the oil paintings, then down the second floor
hallway. In the master bedroom, the beautiful ghost girl in her candlelit satin opens the armoires and
the closets full of her own clothes, stretched to death by the giant evil Evie Cottrell. The tortured bodies of dresses
and sweaters and dresses and slacks
and dresses and jeans and gowns
and shoes and dresses, almost everything mutilated and misshapen and begging
to be put out of its misery. The
photographer in my head says: Give me anger. Flash. Give
me vengeance. Flash. Give me total and complete
justified retribution. Flash. The
already dead ghost I am, the not-occurring, the completely empowered invisible nothing I've
become, I wave the candelabra past all that fabric and: Flash. What
we have is Evie's enormous fashion inferno. Which
is dazzling. Which
is just too much fun! I try the bedspread, it's this antique Belgian lace duvet,
and it burns. The
drapes, Miss Evie's green velvet portieres, they burn. Lampshades burn. Big
shit. The chiffon I'm wearing, it's burning, too. I slap
out my smoldering feathers and step backwards from Evie's
master bedroom fashion furnace and into the second-floor hallway. There
are ten other bedrooms and some bathrooms, and I go room to room.
Towels burn. Bathroom inferno! Chanel Number Five, it burns. Oil paintings of
race horses and dead pheasants burn. The reproduction Oriental carpets
burn. Evie's bad dried flower arrangements, they're these little
tabletop infernos. Too cute! Evie's Katty Kathy doll, it melts, then it burns.
Evie's collection of big carnival stuffed animals—Cootie, Poochie, Pam-Pam,
Mr. Bunnits, Choochie, Poo Poo, and Ringer—it's a fun-fur
holocaust. Too sweet. Too precious. Back
in the bathroom, I snatch one of the few things not on fire: A
bottle of Valiums. I
start down the big circular staircase. Manus, when he broke
in to kill me, he left the front door open, and the second-floor inferno sucks
a cool breeze of night air up the stairs
around me. Blowing my candles out. Now, the only light is the inferno, a giant space heater smiling down on me, me deep fried in my eleven herbs and
spices of singed chiffon. The feeling is that I've
just won some major distinguished award for a major lifetime achievement. Like,
here she is, Miss America. Come
on down. And
this kind of attention, I still love it. At the
closet door, Manus is whining about how he can smell smoke, and please, please,
please don't let him die. As if I could even care right now. No,
really, Manus wanted to be cremated. On the telephone message
pad, I write in a
minute ill open the door, but i still have the gun. before
that, i'm shoving valiums under the door, eat them, do
this or I'll kill you. And I put the note under
the door. We're
going out to his car in the driveway. I'm taking him away. He'll do everything
I want, or wherever we end up, I'll tell the police that he broke into
the house. He set the fire and used the rifle to kidnap me.
I'll blab everything about Manus and Evie and their sick love affair. The
word love tastes like earwax when I think it about Manus and Evie. I
slam the butt of the rifle against the closet door, and the
rifle goes off. Another inch, and I'd be dead. With me dead outside the locked
door, Manus would burn. "Yes,"
Manus screams. "I'll do anything. Just, please, don't
let me burn to death or shoot me. Anything, just open the door!" With
my shoe, I shove the poured-out Valiums through the crack under the
closet door. With the rifle out in front of me, I unlock the door and stand
back. In the light from the upstairs fire, you can see how the house is filling up with smoke. Manus stumbles out, power blue
bug-eyed with his hands in the air,
and I march him out to his car with
the rifle pressed against his back. Even at the end of a rifle, Manus's skin
feels tight and sexy. Beyond this, I have
no plan. All I know is I don't want anything resolved for a while. Wherever we end up, I just won't go
back to normal. I
lock Manus in the trunk of his Fiat Spider. A nice car, it's
a nice car, red, with the convertible top down. I slam the
butt of the rifle against the trunk lid. Nothing
comes back from my love cargo. Then I wonder if he still has to pee. I
toss the rifle into the passenger seat and I go back into Evie's plantation inferno.
In the foyer, only now it's a chimney, it's
a wind tunnel with the cold air rushing in the front door and up into the heat
and light above me. The foyer still
has that desk with the gold saxophone telephone. Smoke is everywhere, and a chorus of every smoke detector siren sirening is so loud it hurts. It's
just plain mean, making Evie in Cancun lay awake so long for her good
news. So I
call the number she left. You know Evie picks up on the first ring. And
Evie says, "Hello?" There's
nothing but the sound of everything I've done, the smoke detectors and
the flames, the tinkle of the chandelier as the breeze chimes through it,
that's all there is to hear from her end of the conversation. Evie
says, "Manus?" Somewhere,
the dining room maybe, the ceiling crashes down and sparks and embers rush out the
dining room doorway and over the foyer floor. Evie says, "Manus,
don't play games. If this is you, I said I
didn't want to see you anymore." And
right then: Crash. A
half ton of sparkling, flashing, white-light, hand-cut Austrian
crystal, the big chandelier drops from the center of
the foyer ceiling and explodes too close. Another inch, and I'd be
dead. How can I not laugh. I'm
already dead. "Listen,
Manus," Evie says. "I told you not to call me or I'll tell the police
about how you put my best friend in the hospital without a face. You got
that?" Evie
says, "You just went too far. I'll get a restraining order if I have
too." Manus
or Evie, I don't know who to believe, all I know is my feathers are on fire. CHAPTER SIXTEENJump
way back to a fashion shoot at this junkyard full of dirty
wrecked cars where Evie and me have to climb around on the wrecks wearing
Hermaun Mancing thong swimwear so narrow you have to wear a
"pussy strip" of surgical tape underneath, and Evie starts in
with, "About your mutilated brother . . . ?" It's
not my favorite photographer or art director, either. And
I'm going back to Evie, "Yeah?" Busy sticking out my
butt. And the
photographer goes, "Evie? That's not pouting! The
uglier the fashions, the worse places we'd have to pose to make them look
good. Junkyards. Slaughterhouses. Sewage
treatment plants. It's the ugly bridesmaid tactic where
you only look good by comparison. One shoot for Industry Jeans Wear, I
was sure we'd have to pose kissing dead bodies. These
junked cars all have rusted holes through them, serrated edges, and I'm this close to
naked and trying to remember when was my
last tetanus shot. The photographer
lowers his camera and says, "I'm only wasting film until you girls decide to pull in your
stomachs." More and more, being
beautiful took so much effort. Just the razor bumps would make you want to cry.
The bikini waxes. Evie came out of her
collagen lip injection saying she no
longer had any fear of hell. The next worse thing is Manus yanking off
your pussy strip if you're not close-shaved. About
hell, I told Evie, "We're shooting there tomorrow." So,
now the art director says, "Evie, could you climb up a
couple cars higher on the pile?" And this is wearing high
heels, but Evie goes up. Little diamonds of safety glass
are scattered on everywhere you might fall. Through
her big cheesy smile, Evie says, "How exactly did
your brother get mutilated?" You can only hold a real smile for so long, after
that it's just teeth. The
art director steps up with his little foam applicator and retouches where the
bronzer is streaked on my butt cheeks. "It
was a hairspray can somebody threw away in our family's burning
barrel," I say. "He was burning the trash and it exploded." And
Evie says, "Somebody?" And I say, "You'd
think it was my mom, the way she screamed and tried to stop him bleeding." And the photographer says,
"Girls, can you go up on your toes
just a little?" Evie
goes, "A big thirty-two-ounce can of HairShell hairspray? I bet it peeled
half his face off." We
both go up on our toes. I go, "It wasn't so
bad." "Wait
a sec," the art director says, "I need your feet to be not
so close together." Then he says, "Wider." Then, "A little wider, please."
Then he hands up big chrome tools for us to
hold. Mine must weigh fifteen
pounds. "It's
a ball-peen hammer," Evie says, "and you're holding
it wrong." "Honey,"
the photographer says to Evie, "could you hold the chainsaw a bit closer to your mouth,
please?" The
sun is warm on the metal of the cars, their tops crushed under the weight
of being piled on top each other. These are cars with buckled front ends you know nobody walked away from. Cars with T-boned sides
where whole familes died together.
Rear-ended cars with the back seats
pushed up tight against the dashboard. Cars from before seatbelts. Cars from before air bags. Before the Jaws of Life. Before paramedics. These are
cars peeled open around their exploded
gas tanks. "This
is so rich," Evie says, "how this is the place I've worked my
whole life to get." The art
director says to go ahead and push our breasts against the cars. "The
whole time, growing up," Evie says, "I just thought
being a woman would be ... not such a disappointment." All I
ever wanted was to be an only child. The
photographer says, "Perfecto.” CHAPTER SEVENTEENWhat
you get with the Rhea sisters is three skin-and-bone white men who sit around a suite at the
Congress Hotel all day in nylon slips with
the shoulder straps fallen off one shoulder or the other, wearing high heels
and smoking cigarettes. Kitty Litter, Sofonda Peters, and the Vivacious Vivienne VaVane, their faces shining
with moisturizer and egg-white facials, they listen to that step-to-three cha-cha music you only hear on elevators
anymore. The Rhea sister hair, their
hair is short and flat with grease
and matted down bristling with bobby pins, flat on their heads. Maybe they have a wig cap stretched
on over the pins if it's not summer outside. Most of the time, they don't know
what season it is. The blinds aren't ever open, and there are maybe a
dozen of those cha-cha records stacked on
the automatic record changer. All
the furniture is blonde and the big four-legged RCA Philco
console stereo. The stereo, you could plow a field with that
old needle, and the metal tone arm weighs about two pounds. May I present them: Kitty Litter. Sofonda
Peters. The
Vivacious Vivienne VaVane. AKA the Rhea sisters when
they're onstage, these are her family,
Brandy Alexander told me in the speech therapist office. Not the first time we met, this wasn't the time I cried and told Brandy how I lost my face. This
wasn't the second time, either, the
time Brandy brought her sewing basket
full of ways to hide my being a monster. This was one of the other tons of
times we snuck off while I was still in the hospital. The speech therapist
office was just where we'd meet. "Usually," Brandy
tells me, "Kitty Litter is bleaching and tweezing away unwanted facial
hair. This unsightly hair thing can tie up a
bathroom for hours, but Kitty would
wear her Ray-Bans inside out, she loves looking at her reflection so much." The
Rheas, they made Brandy what she is. Brandy, she owes them everything. Brandy
would lock the speech therapist door, and if somebody would knock, Brandy and
me, we'd fake loud orgasm noises. We'd scream and yip and slap
the floor. I'd clap my hands to make that special spanking sound that everybody
knows. Whoever knocks, they'd go away fast. Then
we'd go back to just us using up make-up and talking. "Sofonda,"
Brandy would tell me, "Sofonda Peters, she's the brains, Sofonda
is. Miss Peters is all day with her porcelain nails stuck in the rotary-dial
princess phone to an agent or a merchandiser, selling, selling,
selling." Somebody
would knock on the speech therapist door, so I'd give out with a cat
scream and slap my thigh. The
Rhea sisters, Brandy would tell me, she'd be dead without
them. When they'd found her, the princess queen supreme, she'd been a size twenty-six, lip-synching
at amateur-night, open-mike shows. Lip-synching "Thumbelina." Her
hair, her figure, her hippy, hippy forward Brandy Alexander walk, the Rhea
sisters invented all that. Jump to
two fire engines passing me in the opposite direction as
I drive the freeway toward downtown, away from Evie's house on fire. In
the rearview mirror of Manus's Fiat Spider, Evie's house is a smaller and
smaller bonfire. The peachy-pink hem of Evie's bathrobe is shut in the car door,
and the ostrich feathers whip me in the cool night air pouring around the
convertible's windshield. Smoke
is all I smell like. The rifle on the passenger seat is
pointing at the floor. There's
not one word from my love cargo in the trunk. And
there's only one place left to go. No way
could I call and just ask the operator to ring Brandy. No way would the
operator understand me, so we're on our way downtown to the Congress
Hotel. Jump
to how all the Rhea sister money comes from a doll named
Katty Kathy. This is what else Brandy told me between faking orgasms
in the speech therapist office. She's a doll, Katty Kathy is one of those foot-high
flesh-tone dolls with the impossible measurements. What she would be as a real woman is 46-16-26. As a real woman, Katty
Kathy could buy a total of nothing off the rack. You know you've seen this doll. Comes naked in a plastic bubble
pack for a dollar, but her clothes
cost a fortune, that's how realistic she is. You can buy about four hundred tiny fashion separates that mix and match to create three tasteful
outfits. In that way, the doll is
incredibly lifelike. Chilling, even. Sofonda
Peters came up with the idea. Invented Katty Kathy, made the prototype, sold
the doll, and cut all the deals. Still, Sofonda is about married to Kitty
and Vivian and there's enough money to support them all. What
sold Katty Kathy is that she's a talking doll, but instead
of a string, she's got this little gold chain coming out of her back. You pull
her chain, and she says: "That
dress is fine, I mean, if that's really how you want
to look.” "Your
heart is my pinata." "Is that what you're
going to wear?" "I
think it would be good for our relationship if we dated
other people." "Kiss
kiss." And,
"Don't touch my hair!" The
Rhea sisters, they made a bundle. Katty Kathy's little bolero jacket
alone, they have that jacket sewn in Cambodia for a dime and sell it here in
America for sixteen dollars. People pay that. Jump
to me parking the Fiat with its trunk full of my love cargo
on a side street, and me walking up Broadway toward the doorman at the
Congress Hotel. I'm a woman with half a face arriving at a luxury hotel,
one of those big glazed terra cotta palace hotels built a hundred
years ago, where the doormen wear tailcoats with gold braid on the shoulders. I'm wearing
a peignoir set and a bathrobe. No veils.
Half the bathrobe has been shut in a car door, dragging on the freeway for the past twenty miles. My ostrich
feathers smell like smoke, and I'm trying to keep it a big secret that I have a rifle tucked up crutch-like under my arm. Yeah,
and I lost a shoe, one of those high-heeled mules, too. The
doorman in his tailcoat doesn't even look at me. Yeah, and my hair, I see
it reflected in the big brass plaque that says The Congress Hotel. The cool night
air has pulled my butter creme frosting hairdo out into a ratted stringy
mess. Jump
to me at the front desk of the Congress Hotel where I try and make my eyes alluring.
They say what people notice first about you
is your eyes. I have the attention
of what must be the night auditor, the bellman, the manager, and a clerk. First impressions are so
important. It must be the way I'm
dressed or the rifle. Using the hole that's
the top of my throat, my tongue sticking out of it and all the scar tissue
around it, I say, "Gerl terk nahdz gah sssid." Everybody
is just flash frozen by my alluring eyes. I
don't know how, but then the rifle's up on the desk, pointing at nobody in
particular. The manager steps up in his
navy blue blazer with its little brass Mr.
Baxter name tag, and he says, "We can give you all the money in the drawer, but no one here can open the safe in the office." The
gun on the desk points right at the brass Mr. Baxter nametag, a fact that hasn't
gone unnoticed. I snap my fingers and point at a piece of paper for him to give
me. With the guest pen on a chain, I write: which
suite are the rhea sisters in? don't make me knock on every door on
the fifteenth floor, it's the middle of the night. "That
would be Suite 15-G," says Mr. Baxter, both his hands
full of cash I don't want and reached out across the desk
toward me. "The elevators," he says, "are to your right." Jump to
me being Daisy St. Patience the first day Brandy and I sat together. The
day of the frozen turkey after the whole summer I waited for somebody to ask me
what happened to my face, and I told Brandy everything. Brandy,
when she sat me in the chair still hot from her ass and she locked the
speech therapist door that first time, she named me out of my future. She named
me Daisy St. Patience and never wanted to know what name I
walked in the door with. I was the rightful heir to the international
fashion house, the House of St. Patience. Brandy
she just talked and talked. We were running out of air, she talked so
much, and I don't mean just we, Brandy and me. I mean the world. The world was
running out of air, Brandy talked that much. The Amazon Basin
just could not keep up. "Who
you are moment to moment," Brandy said, "is just a
story." What I
needed was a new story. "Let
me do for you," Brandy said, "what the Rhea sisters did for
me." Give me
courage. Flash. Give
me heart. Flash. So
jump to me being Daisy St. Patience going up in that elevator,
and Daisy St. Patience walking down that wide carpeted hallway to
Suite 15-G. Daisy knocks and nobody answers. Through the door, you can hear that cha-cha music. The
door opens six inches, but the chain is on so it stops. Three white faces appear in
the six-inch gap, one on top of the other,
Kitty Litter, Sofonda Peters, and the vivacious
Vivienne VaVane, their faces shining with moisturizer. Their short dark hair is matted down flat with bobby pins and wig caps. The
Rhea sisters. Who's
who, I don't know. The drag queen totem pole in the door crack says: "Don't take the queen
supreme from us." "She's
all we have to do with our lives." "She
isn't finished yet. We're not half done, and there's just
so much more we have to do on her." I give
them a peekaboo pink chiffon flash of the rifle, and the door slams. Through the door, you can
hear the chain come off. Then the door opens
all the way. Jump
to one time, late one night, driving between Nowhere,
Wyoming, and WhoKnowsWhere, Montana, when Seth says how your being born makes your
parents God. You owe them your life, and they can control you. "Then
puberty makes you Satan," he says, "just because
you want something better." Jump to
inside suite 15-G with its blonde furniture and the bossa-nova cha-cha music and cigarette smoke, and the Rhea sisters are flying around the room in
their nylon slips with the shoulder
straps off one shoulder or the other.
I don't have to do anything but point the rifle. "We
know who you are, Daisy St. Patience," one of them
says, lighting a cigarette, "With a face like that, you're
all Brandy talks about anymore." All
over the room are these big, big 1959 spatter glaze ashtrays
so big you only have to empty them every couple years. The
one with the cigarette gives me her long hand with its porcelain nails
and says, "I'm Pie Rhea." "I'm
Die Rhea," says another one, near the stereo. The
one with the cigarette, Pie Rhea, says, "Those are our
stagenames." She points at the third Rhea, over on the sofa, eating
Chinese out of a takeaway carton. "That," she says
and points, "This Miss Eating Herself To Fat, you can
call her Gon Rhea." With
her mouth full of nothing you'd want to see, Gon Rhea says,
"Charmed, I'm sure." Putting her cigarette
everywhere but in her mouth, Pie Rhea says,
"The queen just does not need your problems, not tonight." She
says, "We're all the family the top girl needs." On the stereo is a picture
in a silver frame of a girl, beautiful in
front of seamless paper, smiling into an unseen camera, an invisible
photographer telling her: Give
me passion. Flash. Give
me joy. Flash. Give me youth and energy
and innocence and beauty. Flash. "Brandy's
first family, her birth family, didn't want her, so we adopted her,"
says Die Rhea. Pointing her long finger at the picture smiling on the blonde stereo, Die Rhea says,
"Her birth family thinks she's dead." Jump to
one time back when I had a face and I did this magazine cover shoot for
BabeWear magazine. Jump
back to Suite 15-G and the picture on the blonde stereo is me, my cover,
the BabeWear magazine cover, framed with Die Rhea pointing her finger at
me. Jump
back to us in the speech therapist office with the door locked and Brandy
saying how lucky she was the Rhea sisters found her. It's not everybody
who gets a second chance to be born again and raised a second time, but this
time by a family that loves her. "Kitty
Litter, Sofonda, and Vivienne," Brandy says, "I owe them
everything." Jump
to Suite 15-G and Gon Rhea waving her chopsticks at me and saying,
"Don't you try and take her from us. We're not finished with her yet." "If
Brandy goes with you," says Pie Rhea, "she can pay for her own
conjugated estrogens. And her vaginoplasty. And her labiaplasty. Not
to mention her scrotal electrolysis." To
the picture on the stereo, to the smiling stupid face in the
silver frame, Die Rhea says, "None of that is cheap."
Die Rhea lifts the picture and holds it up to me, my
past looking me eye to eye, and Die Rhea says, "This, this is how Brandy wanted
to look, like her bitch sister. That was
two years ago, before she had laser surgery to thin her vocal cords and
then her trachea shave. She had her scalp
advanced three centimeters to give her the right hairline. We paid for her brow shave to get rid of the bone ridge above her eyes that the Miss Male used to
have. We paid for her jaw contouring and her forehead feminiza-tion." "And,"
Gon Rhea says with her mouth full of chewed-up Chinese, "and
every time she came home from the hospital with her forehead broken and
realigned or her Adam's apple shaved down to a ladylike
nothing, who do you think took care of her for those two years?" Jump
to nay folks asleep in their bed across mountains and deserts
away from here. Jump to them and their telephone and years ago some
crazy man, some screeching awful pervert, calling them and screaming
that their son was dead. Their son they didn't want, Shane, he was dead of AIDS
and this man wouldn't say where or when and then he laughed and hung
up. Jump
back to inside Suite 15-G and Die Rhea waving an old picture of me in my
face and saying, "This is how she wanted to look, and tens of thousands of Katty
Kathy dollars later, this is how she looks." Gon
Rhea says, "Hell. Brandy looks better than that." "We're
the ones who love Brandy Alexander," says Pie Rhea. "But
you're the one Brandy loves because you need her,"
says Die Rhea. Gon
Rhea says, "The one you love and the one who loves
you are never, ever the same person." She says, "Brandy will leave us
if she thinks you need her, but we need her, too.” The
one I love is locked in the trunk of a car outside with a stomach full of
Valiums, and I wonder if he still has to
pee. My brother I hate is come back from the dead. Shane's being dead was just too good to be true. First
the exploding hairspray can didn't kill him. Then our family couldn't
just forget him. Now
even the deadly AIDS virus has failed me. My
brother is nothing but one bitter fucking disappointment after another. You
can hear a door opening and shutting somewheres, then another door, then
another door opens and Brandy's there saying, "Daisy, honey," and
steps into the smoke and cha-cha music wearing this amazing sort of
Bill Blass First Lady type of traveling suit made out of solid
kelly green trimmed with white piping and green high heels and a really smart green
purse. On her head is an eco-incorrect tasty sort of spray of rainforest green
parrot feathers made into a hat, and Brandy
says, "Daisy, honey, don't point a gun at the people who I
love." In
each of Brandy's big ring-beaded hands is a sassy off-white American Tourister
luggage. "Give us a hand, somebody. These are just the royal
hormones." She says, "My clothes I need are in the other room." To
Sofonda, Brandy says, "Miss Pie Rhea, I have just got to get." To
Kitty, Brandy says, "Miss Die Rhea, I've done everything
we can do for now. We've done the scalp advance-merit, the brow lift, the brow
bone shave. We've done the trachea shave, the nose contouring, the jawline contouring, the forehead realignment ..." Like
it's any wonder I didn't recognize my old mutilated
brother. To
Vivienne, Brandy says, "Miss Gon Rhea, I've got months
left on my Real Life Training and I'm not spending them holed up here in
this hotel." Jump to us driving away
with the Fiat Spider just piled with luggage. Imagine desperate refugees from
Beverly Hills with seventeen pieces of matched luggage migrating cross-country to start a new life in the Okie
Midwest. Everything very elegant and
tasteful, one of those epic Joad
family vacations, only backwards. Leaving a trail of cast-off accessories, shoes and gloves and chokers
and hats to lighten their load so's
they can cross the Rocky Mountains, that would be us. This
is after the police showed up, no doubt after the hotel manager called and
said a mutilated psycho with a gun was menacing everybody up on the fifteenth
floor. This is after the Rhea sisters ran
all Brandy's luggage down the fire stairs. This is after Brandy says she
has to go, she needs to think about things,
you know, before her big surgery. You
know. The transformation. This is after I keep
looking at Brandy and wondering, Shane? "It's just such a big commitment," Brandy says, "being a girl, you know. Forever." Taking
the hormones. For the rest of her life. The pills, the patches, the
injections, for the rest of her life. And what
if there was someone, just one person who would love her, who could make her life happy, just the way she was, without the hormones and make-up and the
clothes and shoes and surgery? She
has to at least look around the world
a little. Brandy explains all this, and the Rhea sisters start to cry and wave and pile the American Touristers into the car. And
the whole scene would be just heartbreaking, and I would be boo-hooing too, if
I didn't know Brandy was my dead brother and the person he wants to
love him is me,
his hateful sister, already plotting to kill him. Yes. Plotting me, plotting to kill Brandy Alexander. Me with nothing
left to lose, plotting my big revenge in the spotlight. Give
me violent revenge fantasies as a coping mechanism. Flash. Just
give me my first opportunity. Flash. Brandy
behind the wheel, she turns to me, her eyes all spidery with tears and
mascara, and says, "Do you know what the Benjamin Standard Guidelines are?" Brandy
starts the car and puts it in gear. She drops the parking brake and cranes
her neck to see for traffic. She says,
"I have to live one whole year on hormones in my new gender role before my vaginoplasty. They call
it Real Life Training." Brandy
pulls out into the street and we're almost escaped. Police SWAT
teams in chic basic black accessorized with tear gas and semiautomatic
weapons are charging in past the doorman holding the door in his gold
braid. The Rheas run after us, waving and throwing kisses and doing
pretty much ugly bridesmaid behavior until they stumble, panting, in the street, their
high heels shot to hell. There's
a moon in the sky. Office buildings are canyoned along either side of the street.
There's still Manus
in the trunk, and we're already putting gross distance between me and my getting caught. Brandy
puts her big hand open on my leg and squeezes. Arson,
kidnapping, I think I'm up to murder. Maybe all this will get me just a
glimmer of attention, not the good, glorious kind, but still the national media kind. Monster
Girl Slays Secret Brother Gal Pal "I've
got eight months left to my R.L.T. year," Brandy says. "Think you can
keep me busy for the next eight months?” CHAPTER EIGHTEENHalf
my life I spend hiding in the bathrooms of the rich. Jump
back to Seattle, to the time Brandy and Seth and I are on the road hunting
drugs. Jump to the day after the night we went to the Space Needle, where
right now Brandy is laid out flat on a master bathroom floor. First
I helped her off with her suit jacket and unbuttoned the back
of her blouse, and now I'm sitting on a toilet overdosing
Valiums as steady as Chinese water torture into her Plumbago
mouth. The thing about Valiums, the Brandy girl says, is they don't kill the
pain but at least you're not pissed off about being hurt. "Hit
me," Brandy says and makes a fish lips. The
thing about Brandy is she's got such a tolerance for drugs
it takes forever to kill her. That, and she's so big, most of her being muscle,
it would take bottles and bottles of anything. I drop
a Valium. A little baby-blue Valium, another powder blue Valium,
Tiffany's light blue, like a gift from Tiffany's, the Valium falls end over end into
Brandy's interior. This
suit I help Brandy out of, it's a Pierre Cardin Space Age style of just
bold white, the straight tube skirt being fresh and sterile to just above her
knees, the jacket being timeless and clinical in its simple cut
and three-quarter sleeves. Her blouse underneath is sleeveless. Her
shoes are box-toe white vinyl boots. It's an outfit you'd accessorize
with a Geiger counter instead of a purse. At the
Bon Marche, when she catwalks out of the fitting room, all I can do
is applaud. There's going to be postpartum depression next week when she goes
to take this one back. Jump to
breakfast, this morning when Brandy and Seth were flush with drug
money, we were eating room service and Seth says Brandy could time travel to Las
Vegas on another planet in the 1950s and fit right in. The planet Krylon,
he says, where synthetic bendable glam-bots would lipo-suck your fat
and makeover you. And Brandy says, "What fat?” And
Seth says, "I love how you could just be visiting from the distant future via
the 1960s." And I
put more Premarin in Seth's next coffee refill. More Darvon in Brandy's
Champagne. Jump
back to us in the bathroom, Brandy and me. "Hit
me," Brandy says. Her
lips look all loose and stretched-out, and I drop another
gift from Tiffany's. This
bathroom we're hiding in, it goes way the other side of decorative
touches. The whole deal is an undersea grotto. Even the princess phone is aqua, but when you look out the big brass porthole windows, you see
Seattle from the top of Capitol
Hill. The
toilet I'm sitting on, just sitting, the lid's closed under
my ass thank you, but the toilet's a big ceramic snail shell
bolted to the wall. The sink is a big ceramic half a clam
bolted to the wall. Brandy-land,
sexual playground to the stars, she says, "Hit me." Jump
to when we got here and the realtor was just a big tooth. One of those football
scholarships where the eyebrows grow together in the middle and they
forget to get a degree in anything. As if I can talk, me with
sixteen hundred credits. Here's
this million-dollar-club realtor who got thrown his job by a grateful alumnus
who just wanted a son-in-law who could stay awake through six or seven holiday bowl
games. But maybe I'm being a touch judgmental. Brandy
was beside herself for feminine wetness. Here's this extra-Y chromosome
guy in a double-breasted blue serge suit, a guy whose paws make even
Brandy's big hands look little. "Mr.
Parker," Brandy says, her hand hidden inside his big
paw. You can see the Hank Mancini soundtrack of love in her eyes. "We
spoke this morning." We're
in the drawing room of a house on Capitol Hill. This is another rich
house where everything is exactly what it looks like. The elaborate Tudor roses carved in the ceilings are plaster, not pressed tin, not
fiberglass. The torsos of battered
Greek nudes are marble, not marbleized plaster.
The boxes in the breakfront are not enameled in the manner of Faberge. The boxes are Faberge pillboxes, and there are eleven of them. The lace under the
boxes was not tatted by a machine. Not
just the spines, but the entire front and back covers of all
the books on all the shelves in the library are bound in leather, and the pages
are cut. You don't have to pull a single book to know this. The
realtor, Mr. Parker, his legs are still flat on the sides of his
ass. In the front, there's just enough more in one pant
leg to spell boxers instead of briefs. Brandy nods my way.
"This is Miss Arden Scotia, of the Denver
River Logging and Paper Scotias." Another victim of the Brandy Alexander Witness Reincarnation Project. Parker's
big hand swallows my little hand, big fish and little fish, whole. Parker's
starched white shirt makes you think of eating off a clean tablecloth,
so flat and stuck out you could serve drinks off the shelf of his barrel chest. "This,"
Brandy nods toward Seth, "is Miss Scotia's half-brother, Ellis
Island." Parker's
big fish eats Ellis's little fish. Brandy
says, "Miss Scotia and I would like to tour the house ourselves. Ellis is
mentally and emotionally disturbed." Ellis
smiles. "We
had hoped you would watch him," Brandy says. "It's
a go," Parker says. He says, "Sure thing." Ellis smiles and tugs with
two fingers at the sleeve of Brandy's suit
jacket. Ellis says, "Don't leave me too long, miss. If I don't get enough
of my pills, I'll have one of my fits." "Fits?"
says Parker. Ellis
says, "Sometimes, Miss Alexander, she forgets I'm waiting,
and she doesn't get me any medication." "You
have fits?" Parker says. "This
is news to me," Brandy says and smiles. "You will not
have a fit," Brandy tell my new half-brother. "Ellis, I forbid
you to have a fit.” Jump to
us camped out in the undersea grotto. "Hit
me." The
floor under Brandy's back, it's cold tile shaped like fish and laid out so they
fit together, one fish tail between the heads of two fish, the way some sardines
are canned, all the way across the bathroom floor. I drop
a Valium between Plumbago lips. "Did
I ever tell you how my family threw me out?" says
Brandy after her little blue swallow. "My original family,
I mean. My birth family. Did I ever tell you that messy
little story?" I put
my head between my knees and look straight down at the queen supreme
with her head between my feet. "My
throat was hurting for a couple of days, so I got out of
school and everything," Brandy says. She says, "Miss
Arden? Hello?" I look
down at her. It's so easy to imagine her dead. "Miss
Arden, please," she says. "Hit me?" I drop
another Valium. Brandy
swallows. "It was like I couldn't swallow for days," she says.
"My throat 'was that sore. I could barely talk. My folks, they
thought, of course, it was strep throat." Brandy's
head is almost straight under mine as I look down. Only Brandy's face
is upside down. My eyes look right into the dark interior of her Plumbago mouth, dark wet going inside to her works and organs and
everything behind the scenes. Brandy
Alexander Backstage. Upside down she
could be a complete stranger. And
Ellis was right, you only ask people about themselves so you can tell
them about yourself. "The
culture," Brandy says. "The swab they did for Strep
Throat came back positive for the clap. You know, the
third Rhea sister. Gonorrhea," she says. "That little tiny
gonococcus bug. I was sixteen years old and had the clap. My folks did not deal
with it well." No.
No, they didn't. "They
freaked," Brandy says. They
threw him out of the house. "They
yelled about how diseased I was being," Brandy says. Then
they threw him out. "By
'diseased' I think they meant 'gay'," she says. Then
they threw him out. "Miss
Scotia?" she says. "Hit me." So I
hit her. "Then
they threw me out of the damn house." Jump
to Mr. Parker outside the bathroom door saying, "Miss Alexander?
It's me, Miss Alexander. Miss Scotia, are you in there?" Brandy
starts to sit up and props herself on one elbow. "It's
Ellis," Mr. Parker says through the door. "I think you
should come downstairs. Miss Scotia, your brother's having a seizure or
something." Drugs
and cosmetics are spread out all over the aquamarine countertops, and
Brandy's sprawled half-naked on the floor in a sprinkling of pills and capsules
and tablets. "He's
her half-brother," Brandy calls back. The
doorknob rattles. "You have to help me," Parker says. "Stop
right there, Mr. Parker!" Brandy shouts and the doorknob
stops turning. "Calm yourself. Do not come in here,"
Brandy says. "What you need to do," Brandy looks at me
while she says this, "what you need to do is pin Ellis to the
floor so he doesn't hurt himself. I'll be down in a moment." Brandy
looks at me and smiles her Plumbago lips into a big bow. "Parker?"
she says, "Are you listening?" "Please,
hurry," comes through the door. "After
you have Ellis pinned to the floor," Brandy says, "wedge
his mouth open with something. Do you have a wallet?" There's
a moment. "It's
eel skin, Miss Alexander." "Then
you must be very proud of it," says Brandy. "You're going to
have to jam it between his teeth to keep his mouth open. Sit on him if you have
to," Brandy, she's just smiling evil incarnate at my feet. The
shatter of some real lead crystal comes through the door from downstairs. "Hurry!" Parker
shouts. "He's breaking things!" Brandy
licks her lips. "After you have his mouth pried open,
Parker, reach in and grab his tongue. If you don't, he'll choke, and then
you'll be sitting on a dead body." Silence. "Do
you hear me?" Brandy says. "Grab
his tongue?" Something
else real and expensive and far away shatters. "Mr.
Parker, honey, I hope you're bonded," the Princess Alexander says, her
face all bloated red with choking back laughter. "Yes," she says,
"grab Ellis's tongue. Pin him to the floor, keep his mouth open, and pull
his tongue out as far as you can until I come down to help
you." The
doorknob turns. My
veils are all on the vanity counter out of my reach. The door opens far enough
to hit the high-heeled foot of Brandy,
sprawled giggling and half full of Valiums, there half-naked in drugs on the
floor. This is far enough for me to see Parker's face with its one
grown-together eyebrow, and far enough for
the face to see me sitting on the toilet. Brandy
screams, "I am attending to Miss Arden Scotia!" Given the choice between
grabbing a strange tongue and watching a
monster poop into a giant snail shell, the face retreats and slams the door
behind it. Football
scholarship footsteps charge off down the hallway. Then
pound down the stairs. The
big tooth that Parker is, his footsteps pound across the
foyer to the living room. Ellis's
scream, real and sudden and far away, comes through the floor from
downstairs. And, suddenly, stops. "Now,"
says Brandy, "where were we?" She
lies back down with her head between my feet. "Have
you thought any more about plastic surgery?" Brandy says. Then she says,
"Hit me.” CHAPTER NINETEEN When you go out with a drunk, you'll notice how a drunk fills your glass so he can empty
his own. As long as you're
drinking, drinking is okay. Two's company. Drinking is fun. If there's a bottle, even if your glass
isn't empty, a drunk, he'll pour a little in
your glass before he fills his own. This
only looks like generosity. That
Brandy Alexander, she's always on me about plastic surgery. Why don't
I, you know, just look at what's out there. With her chest siliconed, her hips lipo-sucked, the 46-16-26 Katty Kathy hourglass thing she is, the
fairy godmother makeover, my fair
lady, Pygmalion thing she is, my
brother back from the dead, Brandy Alexander is very invested in plastic surgery. And
visa versa. Bathroom
talk. Brandy's
still laid out on the cold tile floor, high atop Capitol Hill in Seattle.
Mr. Parker has come and gone. Just Brandy and me all afternoon. I'm still
sitting on the open end of a huge ceramic snail shell bolted to the wall.
Trying to kill her in my half-assed way. Brandy's auburn head
of hair is between my feet. Lipsticks and Demerols, blushes
and Percocet-5, Aubergine Dreams and Nembutal Sodium capsules are
spread out all over the aquamarine countertops around the vanity sink. My
hand, I've been holding a handful of Valiums so long my palm has gone Tiffany's
light blue. Just Brandy and me all afternoon with the sun coming in at
lower and lowers angles through the big brass porthole windows. "My
waist," Brandy says. The Plumbago mouth looks a little
too blue, Tiffany's light blue if you ask me. Overdose baby blue.
"Sofonda said I had to have a sixteen -inch waist," Brandy
says. "I said, 'Miss Sofonda, I am big-boned. I am six feet
tall. No way am I getting down to a sixteen-inch waistline." Sitting
on the snail shell, I'm only half listening. "Sofonda,"
Brandy says, "Sofonda says, there's a way, but I have to trust her.
When I wake up in the recovery room, I'll have a sixteen-inch waist." It's
not like I haven't heard this story in a dozen other bathrooms.
Another bottle off the countertop, Bilax capsules, I look it up in
the Phyicians'Desk Reference book. Bilax
capsules. A bowel evacuant. Maybe
I should drop a few of these into that nonstop mouth between my feet. Jump to
Manus watching me do that infomercial. We were so beautiful. Me with a face. Him not
so full of conjugated estrogens. I
thought we were a real love relationship. I did. I was very invested in love, but
it was just this long, long sex thing that
could end at any moment because, after all, it's just about getting off.
Manus would close his power blue eyes and twist his head just so, side to side,
and swallow. And,
Yes, I'd tell Manus. I came right when he did. Pillow
talk. Almost all the time, you
tell yourself you're loving somebody when
you're just using them. This
only looks like love. Jump
to Brandy on the bathroom floor, saying, "Sofonda and
Vivienne and Kitty were all with me at the hospital." Her hands curl up off the
tile, and she runs them up and down the sides of her blouse. "All three of
them wore those baggy green scrub suits,
wearing hairnets over their
wigs and with those Duchess of
Windsor costume jewelry
brooches pinned on their scrub suits," Brandy says. "They were flying around behind
the surgeon and the lights,
and Sofonda was telling me to count backwards from one hundred. You know ... 99 ... 98 ...
97 ..." The
Aubergine Dreams eyes close. Brandy, pulling long, even breaths, says,
"The doctors, they took out the bottom rib on each side of my chest." Her
hands rub where, and she says, "I couldn't sit up in bed for
two months, but I had a sixteen-inch waist. I still have a six-teen-inch
waist." One of
Brandy's hands opens to full flower and slides over the flat land where
her blouse tucks into the belt of her skirt. "They cut out two of my ribs,
and I never saw them again," Brandy says. "There's something in
the Bible about taking out your ribs." The
creation of Eve. Brandy
says, "I don't know why I let them do that to me." And
Brandy, she's asleep. Jump
back to the night Brandy and I started this road trip, the night we left
the Congress Hotel with Brandy driving the way you can only drive at
two-thirty AM in an open sports car with a loaded rifle and an
overdosed hostage. Brandy hides her eyes behind Ray-Bans so she can
drive in a little privacy. Instant glamour from another
planet in the 1950s, Brandy pulls an Hermes scarf over her
auburn hair and ties it under her chin. All I
can see is myself reflected in Brandy's Ray-Bans, tiny
and horrible. Still strung out and pulled apart by the cold
night air around the windshield. Bathrobe still dragging
shut in the car door. My face, you touch my blasted, scar-tissue
face and you'd swear you were touching chunks of orange peel and
leather. Driving
east, I'm not sure what we're running from. Evie or the police or Mr. Baxter or the Rhea
sisters. Or nobody. Or the future. Fate.
Growing up, getting old. Picking up
the pieces. As if by running we won't have to get on with our lives. I'm with
Brandy right now because I can't
imagine getting away with this without Brandy's help. Because, right now, I need her. Not
that I really love her. Him. Shane. Already
the word love is sounding pretty thin. Hermes scarf on her head,
Ray-Bans on her head, make-up on her face,
I look at the queen supreme in the pulse-pulse,
then pulse-pulse, then pulse-pulse of oncoming headlights. What I see when I look at Brandy, this is what Manus saw when he took me sailing. Right
now, looking at flashes of Brandy beside me in Manus's car, I know what it is I loved about
her. What I love is myself. Brandy Alexander
just looks exactly the way I looked
before the accident. Why wouldn't she? She's my brother, Shane. Shane and I were almost the same height, born one year apart. The same coloring.
The same features. The same hair,
only Brandy's hair is in better shape. Add to
this her lipo, her silicone, her trachea shave, her brow
shave, her scalp advance, her forehead realignment, her
rhino contouring to smooth her nose, her maxomil-liary operations to shape
her jaw. Add to all that years of electrolysis and a handful of hormones and
antiandrogens every day, and it's no wonder I didn't recognize her. Plus
the idea my brother's been dead for years. You just don't
expect to meet dead people. What I
love is myself. I was so beautiful. My
love cargo, Manus LockedInTheTrunk, Manus TryingToKillMe, how can I keep thinking I
love Manus? Manus is just the last man who thought I was beautiful. Who
kissed me on the lips. Who touched me. Manus is just the last man who ever told
me he loved me. You
count down the facts and it's so depressing. I can
only eat baby food. My best
friend screwed my fiance. My
fiance almost stabbed me to death. I've
set fire to a house and been pointing a rifle at innocent
people all night. My
brother I hate has come back from the dead to upstage me. I'm an
invisible monster, and I'm incapable of loving anybody. You don't know
which is worse. Jump to me wetting a washcloth in the
vanity sink. In the undersea
bathroom grotto even the towels and washcloths are aqua and blue, with a scalloped shell motif along
the hems. I put the cold,
wet washcloth on Brandy's forehead and wake
her up, so's she can take more pills. Die in the car instead of this bathroom. I haul
Brandy to her feet and stuff the princess back into her suit jacket. We
have to walk her around before anybody sees her this way. I strap
her high heels back on her feet. Brandy, she leans on me. She leans
on the edge of the countertop. She picks up a handful of Bilax capsules and
squints down at them. "My
back is killing me," Brandy says. " Why'd I ever let them
give me such big tits?" The
queen supreme looks ready to swallow a handful of anything. I
shake my head, No. Brandy squints at me,
"But I need these." In
the Physicians' Desk Reference, I show her Bilax, bowel
evacuant. "Oh,"
Brandy turns her hand over to spill the Bilax into her purse, and some capsules fall but
some stick to the sweat on her palm.
"After they give you the tits, your nipples are cockeyed and way too
high," she says, "they use a razor to shave the nipples off,
and they relocate them.” That's
her word. Relocate. The
Brandy Alexander Nipple Relocation Program. My dead
brother, the late Shane, shakes the last bowel evacuant off her damp
palm. Rrandy says, "I have no sensation in my nipples." Off
the counter, I get my veils and put layer after layer over my head. Thank
you for not sharing. We walk
up and down the second floor hallways until Rrandy says she's ready
for the stairs. Step at a time, quiet, we go down to the foyer. Across the foyer,
through the double doors closed on the drawing room, you can hear Mr.
Parker's deep voice saying something soft, over and over. Brandy
leaning on me, we tiptoe a slow three-legged race across the foyer,
from the foot of the stairs to the drawing room doors. We crack the doors open
some inches and poke our faces through the crack. Ellis
is laid out on the drawing room carpet. Mr.
Parker is sitting on Ellis's chest with a size seventeen
wingtip planted on each side of Ellis's head. Ellis's
hands slap Parker's big ass, claw at the back of the double-breasted
jacket. The single vent in Mr. Parker's jacket is torn open along the seam up
the middle of his back to his collar. Mr.
Parker's hands, the heel of one hand crams a soggy, gnawed
eel-skin wallet between Ellis's capped teeth. Ellis's
face is dark red and shining the way you'd look if you got the cherry pie
in the pie eating contest. A runny finger painting mess of nosebleed and tears,
snot and drool. Mr.
Parker, his hair is fallen over his eyes. His other hand is
a fist around five inches of Ellis's pulled out-tongue. Ellis's
slapping and gagging between Mr. Parker's thick legs. Broken
Ming vases and other collectibles are all around them on the floor. Mr.
Parker says, "That's right. Just do that. That's nice. Just relax." Brandy
and me, watching. Me
wanting Ellis destroyed, this is all just too perfect to spoil. I tug
on Brandy. Brandy, honey. We better walk you back upstairs. Rest you
some more. Give you a nice fresh handful of Benzedrine spansules. and
want to make them happy, but you still want to make up
your own rules. The
surgeons said, you can't just cut off a lump of skin one
place and bandage it on another. You're not grafting a tree. The blood supply,
the veins and capillaries just wouldn't be hooked up to keep the graft alive.
The lump would just die and fall off. It's
scary, but now when I see somebody blush, my reaction
isn't: oh, how cute. A blush only reminds me how blood is just under the
surface of everything. Doing dermabrasion, this
one plastic surgeon told me, is about the
same as pressing a ripe tomato against a belt sander. What you're paying
for most is the mess. To
relocate a piece of skin, to rebuild a jaw, you have to flay a long strip of skin
from your neck. Cut up from the base of your
neck, but don't sever the skin at the top. Picture a sort of banner or
strip of skin hanging down loose along your neck but still attached to the
bottom of your face. The skin is still attached to you, so it still gets blood. This strip of skin is still alive. Take the
strip of skin and roll it into a tube
or column. Leave it rolled until it heals
into a long, dangling lump of flesh, hanging from the bottom of your face. Living tissue. Full of
fresh, healthy blood, flapping and
dangling warm against your neck.
This is a pedicle. Just
the healing part, that can take months. Clatter
and tintinnabulation of ringing metal against metal chimes and gongs in the car
around us. "Sorry,
I guess," Brandy says. "There's shit on the floor, got
under the brake pedal when I tried to stop." Music
bright as silver rolls out from under our car seats. Napkin
rings and silver teaspoons rush forward against our feet. Brandy's got
candlesticks between her feet. A silver platter bright with starlight is slid half
out from under the front of Brandy's seat, looking up between her
long legs. Brandy looks at me. Her
chin tucked down, Brandy lowers her
Ray-Bans to the end of her nose and arches her penciled eyebrows. I shrug. I get out to
liberate my love cargo. Even
with the trunk open, Manus doesn't move. His knees are against his
elbows, his hands clasped in his face, his feet tucked back under his butt; Manus
could be a fetus in army fatigues. All around him, I hadn't noticed.
I've been under a lot of stress tonight, so forgive me if I didn't notice back at
Evie's house, but all around Manus flash pieces of silverware. Pirate treasure
in the trunk of his Fiat, and other things. Relics. A long white candle,
there's a candle. Brandy
slams out of her seat and comes to look, too. "Oh
my shit," Brandy says and rolls her eyes. "Oh my shit." There's
an ashtray, no, it's a plaster cast of a little hand, "It's okay." There's
a little rushing sound, the sound of rain on the roof of a tent or a closed
convertible. "Oh,
God," Brandy steps back. "Oh, sweet Christ!" Manus
blinks and peers at Brandy, then at his lap. One leg of his army fatigues
goes darker, darker, darker to the knee. "Cute,"
Brandy says, "but he's just peed his pants." Jump
back to plastic surgery. Jump to the happy day you're healed. You've had
this long strip of skin hanging off your neck for a couple months, only it's
not just one strip. There are probably more like a half-dozen pedicles because
you might as well do a lot at once so the plastic surgeon has more tissue to
work with. For
reconstruction, you'll have these long dangling strips of skin hanging off
the bottom of your face for about two months. They
say that what people notice first about you is your eyes.
You'll give up that hope. You look like some meat byproduct
ground up and pooped out by the Num Num Snack Factory. A
mummy coming apart in the rain. A
broken pinata. These
strips of warm skin flapping around your neck are good, blood-fed
living tissue. The surgeon lifts each strip and attaches the healed end to your
face. This way, Now
Manus peers at me, sits up and scrapes his head on the
open trunk lid. Man, oh, man, you know this hurts, still
it isn't anything tragic until Brandy Alexander chimes in with her
overreaction. "Oh, you poor thing," she says. Then
Manus boo-hoos. Manus Kelley, the last person who has any right to, is crying. I hate
this. Jump to
the day the skin grafts take, and even then the tissue will need some support. Even if the
grafts heal to where they look like a crude, lumpy jaw, you'll still need a jawbone. Without a mandible, the soft mass of
tissue, living and viable as it is, might just reabsorb. That's the word the plastic
surgeons used. Reabsorb. Into
my face, as if I'm just a sponge made of skin. Jump
to Manus crying and Brandy bent over him, cooing and petting his sexy hair. In the trunk, there's a
pair of bronze baby shoes, a silver chafing
dish, a turkey picture made of macaroni glued to construction paper. "You
know," Manus sniffs and wipes the back of his hand
under his nose. "I'm high right now so it's okay if I tell you this." Manus
looks at Brandy bent over him and me crouched in the dirt. "First,"
Manus says, "your parents, they give
you your life, but then they try to give you their life." To
make you a jawbone, the surgeons will break off parts of your
shinbones, complete with the attached artery. First they expose the
bone and sculpt it right there on your leg. Another
way is the surgeons will break several other bones, probably long
bones in your legs and arms. Inside these bones is the soft cancellous bone
pulp. That was the surgeons' word
and the word from the books. Cancellous. "My
mom," Manus says, "and her new husband—my mom
gets married a lot—they just bought this resort condo in Bowling River in
Florida. People younger than sixty can't buy property there. That's a law they have." I'm
looking at Brandy, who's still the overreactive mother,
kneeling down, brushing the hair off Manus's forehead. I'm
looking over the cliff edge next to us. Those little blue lights
in all the houses, that's people watching television. Tiffany's
light blue. Valium blue. People in captivity. First
my best friend and now my brother is trying to steal my fiance. Jump
to Manus sitting in his piss and silver in the trunk of his
red sports car. Potty training flashback. It happens. Me,
I'm crouched in front of him, looking for the bulge of
his wallet. Manus
just stares at Brandy. Probably thinking Brandy's me, the old me with a face. Brandy's
lost interest. "He doesn't remember. He thinks I'm his mother," Brandy says.
"Sister, maybe, but mother?" So
deja vu. Try brother. We
need a place to stay, and Manus must have a new place. Not thp ??? "I
went to visit them at Christmas, last year," Manus says.
"My mom, their condo is right on the eighth green, and
they love it. It's like the whole age standard in Bowling
River is fucked. My mom and stepdad are just turned sixty, so they're
just youngsters. Me, all these oldsters are scoping me out like an odds-on car
burglary." Brandy
licks her lips. "According
to the Bowling River age standard," Manus says, "I haven't been
born yet." You
have to break out large enough slivers of this soft, bloody bone pulp. The
cancellous stuff. Then you have to insert these shards and slivers of bone into
the soft mass of tissue you've grafted onto your face. Really,
you don't do this, the surgeons do it all while you're asleep. If the
slivers are close enough together, they'll form fibroblast cells to bond with
each other. Again, a word from the books. Fibroblast. Again,
this takes months. "My
mom and her husband," Manus says, sitting in the open
trunk of his Fiat Spider on top of Rocky Butte, "for Christmas,
their biggest present to me is this box all wrapped up. It's the size
of a high-end stereo system or a wide-screen television. This is what I'm hoping. I mean, it could've been anything else, and I would've
liked it more." Manus slides one foot down
to the ground, then the other. On his feet,
Manus turns back to the Fiat full of silver. "No,"
Manus says, "they give me this shit." Manus
in his commando boots and army fatigues takes a big fat-belly silver
teapot out of the trunk and looks at himself reflected fat in the convex side.
"The whole box," Manus says, "is full of all this shit and heirlooms that nobody else wants." Just
like me pitching Evie's crystal cigarette box against the fireplace,
Manus hauls off and fast pitches the teapot out into the darkness. Over the cliff, out over the darkness and the lights of suburbia, the teapot
flies so far that you can't hear it
land. Not turning around, Manus
reaches back and grabs another something. A
silver candlestick. "This is my legacy," Manus says. Pitched overhand into the darkness, the
candlestick turns end over end, silent the way you imagine satellites fly. "You know," Manus
pitches a glittering handful of napkin
rings, "how your parents are sort of like God. Sure, you love them and want to know they're still
around, but you never really see them unless they want something." The
silver chafing dish flies up, up, up, to the stars and then
falls down to land somewhere among the blue TV lights. And
after the shards of bone have grown together to give you a new jawbone inside
the lump of grafted skin, then the surgeon can try to shape this into something you can talk with and eat with and keep slathered in
make-up. This is years of pain
later. Years
of living in the hope that what you'll get will be better
than what you have. Years of looking and feeling worse in the hope that you might look better. Manus
grabs the candle, the white candle from the trunk. "My mom," Manus
says, "her number two Christmas present to me was a box full of all the
stuff from when I was a kid that she
saved." Manus says, "Check it out," and holds up the
candle, "my baptism candle." Off into the darkness,
Manus pitches the candle. The
bronze baby shoes go next. Wrapped in a christening
gown. Then a
scattering handful of baby teeth. "Fuck," Manus
says, "the damn tooth fairy." A lock
of blond hair inside a locket on a chain, the chain swinging and let
go bola-style from Manus's hand, disappears into the dark. "She
said she was giving me this stuff because she just didn't
have any room for it," Manus says. "It's not that she didn't
want it." The
plaster print of the second-grade hand goes end over end, off into the
darkness. "Well,
Mom, if it isn't good enough for you," Manus says, "I don't want to
carry this shit around, either." Jump
to all the times when Brandy Alexander gets on me about
plastic surgery, then I think of pedicles. Reabsorb-tion.
Fibroblast cells. Cancellous bone. Years of pain and hope, and how can I not
laugh. Laughter is the only sound
left I can make that people will understand. Brandy,
the well-meaning queen supreme with her tits siliconed to the point
she can't stand straight, she says: Just look to see what's out there. How
can I stop laughing. I mean
it, Shane, I don't need the attention that bad. I'll
just keep wearing my veils. If I
can't be beautiful, I want to be invisible. Jump to the silver punch
ladle flying off to nowhere. Jump
to each teaspoon, gone. Jump
to all the grade school report cards and class pictures
sailed off. Manus
crumbles a thick piece of paper. His
birth certificate. And chucks it out of existence. Then
Manus stands rocking heel-toe, heel-toe, hugging himself. Brandy
is looking at me to say something. In the dirt, with my finger I write: manus
where do you live these days? Little
cold touches land on my hair and peachy-pink shoulders. It's raining. Brandy
says, "Listen, I don't want to know who you are, but if
you could be anybody, who would you be?" "I'm
not getting old, that's for sure" Manus says, shaking his head. "No
way." Arms crossed, he rocks heel-toe, heel-toe. Manus tucks his
chin to his chest and rocks, looking down at all the broken bottles. It's
raining harder. You can't smell my smoky ostrich feathers or Brandy's L'Air
du Temps. "Then
you're Mr. Denver Omelet," Brandy says. "Denver Omelet, meet
Daisy St. Patience." Brandy's ring-beaded hand opens to full flower and
lays itself across her forty-six inches of siliconed glory.
"These," she says, "this is Brandy Alexander.” Jump to this one time, nowhere special, just Brandy and me in
the speech therapist office when Brandy catches me with my
hands up under my veil, touching the seashells and ivory of my exposed
molars, stroking the embossed leather of my scar tissue, dry and polished
from my breath going back and forth across it. I'm touching the saliva
where it dries sticky and raw down the sides of my neck,
and Brandy says not to watch myself too close. "Honey,"
she says, "times like this, it helps to think of yourself
as a sofa or a newspaper, something made by a lot of
other people but not made to last forever." The
open edge of my throat feels starched and plastic, ribbed-knitted
and stiff with sizing and interfacing. It's the same feel as the top
edge of a strapless dress or maillot, held up with wire or plastic stays sewn inside. Hard but warm the way pink looks. Bony but covered in
soft, touchable skin. This
kind of acute traumatic mandibulectomy without reconstruction, before
decannulation of the tracheostomy tube can lead to sleep apnea, the doctors said. This was them talking to each other during morning rounds. And
people find me hard to understand. What
the doctors told me was unless they rebuilt me some kind of jaw, at
least some kind of flap, they said, I could die any time I fell asleep. I could
just stop breathing and not wake up. A quick, painless death. On my pad with my pen, I
wrote: don't
tease. Us in
the speech therapist office, Brandy says, "It helps to know
you're not any more responsible for how you look than a car is,"
Brandy says. "You're a product just as much. A product of a
product of a product. The people who design cars, they're products. Your
parents are products. Their parents were products. Your
teachers, products. The minister in your church, another
product," Brandy says. Sometimes
your best way to deal with shit, she says, is to not hold yourself as such a precious little
prize. "My
point being," Brandy says, "is you can't escape the world,
and you're not responsible for how you look, if you look
beauticious or butt ugly. You're not responsible for how you
feel or what you say or how you act or anything you do. It's all out of your
hands," Brandy says. The
same way a compact disk isn't responsible for what's recorded on it,
that's how we are. You're about as free to act as a programmed computer. You're
about as one-of-a-kind as a dollar bill. "There
isn't any Teal you in you," she says. "Even your physical
body, all your cells will be replaced within eight years." Skin,
bones, blood, and organs transplant from person to person. Even what's
inside you already, the colonies of microbes and bugs that eat your food for you,
without them you'd die. Nothing of you is all-the-way yours. All of you
is inherited. "Relax,"
Brandy says, "Whatever you're thinking, a million other folks are
thinking. Whatever you do, they're doing, and none of you is responsible. All of you is a cooperative effort." Up
under my veil, I finger the wet poking stub of a tongue from some
vandalized product. The doctors suggested using part of my small intestine to
make my throat longer. They suggested carving the shinbones, the fibulas of this
human product I am, shaping the bones and grafting them to build me,
build the product, a new jawbone. On my
pad, I wrote: the
leg-bone connected to the head-bone? The
doctors didn't get it. Now
hear the word of the Lord. "You're
a product of our language," Brandy says, "arid how our
laws are and how we believe our God wants us. Every bitty molecule about you
has already been thought out by some million people before you,"
she says. "Anything
you can do is boring and old and perfectly okay. You're safe because you're so trapped inside your culture. Anything
you can conceive of is fine because you can conceive of it. You can't
imagine any way to escape. There's no way you can get out," Brandy says. "The
world," Brandy says, "is your cradle and your trap." This
is after I backslid. I wrote to my hooker at the agency and
asked about my chances of getting hand or foot work. Modeling
watches and shoes. My hooker had sent me some flowers in the hospital early on. Maybe
I could pick up assignments as a leg model. How much Evie had blabbed
to them, I didn't know. To be
a hand model, he wrote back, you have to wear a size seven glove and a size
five ring. A foot model must have perfect toenails and wear a size six
shoe. A leg model can't play any sports. She can't have any visible veins. Unless your fingers and toes still look good
printed in a magazine at three times their normal size, or billboarded
at two hundred times their size, he wrote, don't count on body part work. My
hand's an eight. My foot, a seven. Brandy
says, "And if you can find any way out of our culture,
then that's a trap, too. Just wanting to get out of the trap reinforces the
trap." The
books on plastic surgery, the pamphlets and brochures all promised to help me live a more
normal, happy life; but less and less, this
looked like what I'd want. What I
wanted looked more and more like what I'd always been trained to want. What everybody wants. Give me attention. Flash. Give
me beauty. Flash. Give
me peace and happiness, a loving relationship, and a perfect home. Flash. Brandy
says, "The best way is not to fight it, just go. Don't
be trying all the time to fix things. What you run from
only stays with you longer. When you fight something, you only make it
stronger.” She
says, "Don't do what you want." She says, "Do what
you don't want. Do what you're trained not to want." It's
the opposite of following your bliss. Brandy
tells me, "Do the things that scare you the most.” In
Seattle, I've been watching Brandy nap in our undersea
grotto for more than one hundred and sixty years. Me, I'm sitting here with a
glossy pile of brochures from surgeons showing sexual reassignment surgeries.
Transitional transgender operations. Sex
changes. The
color pictures show pretty much the same shot of different-quality vaginas. Camera shots
focused straight into the dark vaginal introitus. Fingers with red nail polish cupped against each thigh to spread the labia.
The urethral meatus soft and pink.
The pubic hair clipped down to
stubble on some. The vaginal depth given as six inches, eight inches, two
inches. Unresected corpus spon-giosum
mounding around the urethral opening on some. The
clitoris hooded, the frenulum of the clitoris, the tiny folds
of skin under the hood that join the clitoris to the labia. Bad,
cheap vaginas with hair-growing scrotal skin used inside,
still growing hair, choked with hair. Picture
perfect, state-of-the-art vaginas lengthened using sections of colon,
self-cleaning and lubricated with its own mucosa. Sensate clitorises made by
cropping and rerouting bits of the glans penis. The Cadillac of vagino-plasty.
Some of these Cadillacs turn out so successful the flood
of colon mucosa means wearing a maxi-pad every day. Some
are old-style vaginas where you had to stretch and dilate them every day
with a plastic mold. All these brochures are souvenirs of Brandy's near future. After
we saw Mr. Parker sitting on Ellis, I helped the drug-induced dead body
Brandy might as well be back upstairs and took her out of her clothes
again. She coughed them back up when I tried to slip any more Darvons
down her throat, so I settled her back on the bathroom floor, and when
I folded her suit jacket over my arm there was something cardboard tucked in
the inside pocket. The Miss Rona book. Tucked in the book is a souvenir
of my own future. Kicked
back on the big ceramic snail shell, I read: Hove Seth Thomas so much
I have to destroy him. I over-compensate by worshiping the queen supreme.
Seth will never love me. No one will ever love me ever again. How
embarrassing. Give me needy emotional
whining bullshit. Flash. Give
me self-absorbed egocentric twaddle. Christ. Fuck me. I'm so tired of
being me. Me beautiful. Me ugly. Blonde.
Brunette. A million fucking fashion makeovers
that only leave me trapped being me. Who I
was before the accident is just a story now. Everything before now, before
now, before now, is just a story I carry around. I guess that would
apply to anybody in the world. What I need is a new story
about who I am. What
I need to do is fuck up so bad I can't save myself. CHAPTER TWENTY-THREESo
this is life in the Brandy Alexander Witness Reincarnation
Project. In Santa Barbara, Manus who
was Denver taught us how to get drugs. The
three of us were squeezed into that Fiat
Spider from Portland to Santa Barbara, and Brandy just wanted to die. All the time, holding both
hands pressed on her lower back,
Brandy kept saying, "Stop the car. I got to stretch. I am spaz-am-ing. We
have to stop." It
took us two days to drive from Oregon to California, and the
two states are right next door to each other. Manus being all the time
looking at Brandy, listening to her, in love with her so obvious I only
wanted to kill them in worse and more painful ways. In
Santa Barbara, we're just into town when Brandy wants to get out arid
walk a little. Trouble is, this is a really good neighborhood in California. Right up
in the hills over Santa Barbara. You walk around up here, the police or
some private security patrol cruises you and wants to know who you are and see
some I.D., please. Still,
Brandy, she's spasming again, and the hysterical princess has one leg over
the door, half climbed out of the Spider before Denver Omelet will even stop.
What Brandy wants are the Tylox capsules she left in Suite 15-G
at the Congress Hotel. "You
can't be beautiful," Brandy says about a thousand times,
"until you feel beautiful." Up here
in the hills, we pull up curbside to an OPEN HOUSE sign. The house
looking down on us is a big hacienda, Spanish enough to make you want to dance
the flamenco on a table, swing on a wrought-iron chandelier, wear a
sombrero and a bandoleer. "Here,"
Denver says to her. "Get yourselves pretty, and I'll
show you how we can scam some prescription painkillers." Jump
back to the three days we hid out in Denver's apartment
until we could get some cash together. Brandy, she's cooked
up some new plan. Before she goes under the knife she's
decided to find her sister. The me
who wants to dance on her grave. "A vaginoplasty is
pretty much forever," she says. "It can wait while I figure some
things out." She's
decided to find her sister and tell her everything, about the gonorrhea, about
why Shane's not dead, what happened,
everything. Make a clean break of it. Probably she'd be surprised how much her sister already knows. I just
want to be out of town in case a felony arson arrest warrant is in the
pipeline, so I threaten Denver, if he won't come with us, I'll run to the police
and accuse him. Of arson, of kidnapping, of attempted murder. To Evie, I mail a letter. To
Brandy, I write: let's
drive around some, see what happens, chill. This seems a little labor
intensive, but we've all got something to
run from. And when I say we, I mean everybody in the world. So Brandy thinks we're on tour to find her sister, and Denver's come along by blackmail.
My letter to Evie's sitting in her
mailbox at the end of her driveway
leading up to her burned-up ruins of a house. Evie's in Cancun, maybe. The letter
to Evie says: To
Miss Evelyn Cottrell, Manus
says he shot me and you helped him 'cuz of your filthy relationship.
In order for you to stay out of PRISON, please seek an insurance settlement for
the damage to your home and personal property as soon as possible.
Convert this entire settlement into United States
funds, tens and twenties, and mail them to me care
of General Delivery in Seattle, Washington. I am the person you are
responsible for being without a fiance, your
former best friend, no matter what lies you tell yourself. Send the money and I will consider
the matter dealt with and will not go
to the police and have you arrested
and sent to PRISON, where you will have to fight day and night for your
dignity and life but no doubt lose them
both. Yes, and I've had major reconstructive
surgery, so I look even better than myself,
and I have Manus Kelley with me and he still loves me and says he hates you and
will testify against you in court
that you're a bitch. Signed, Me Jump
to above the edge of the Pacific Ocean, parked curb-side at the Spanish
hacienda OPEN HOUSE. Denver tells Brandy and me how to go upstairs while he
keeps the realtor
busy. The master bedroom will have the best view, that's how to find it. The master bathroom will have the best drugs. Sure,
Manus used to be a police vice detective, if you consider wagging your butt
around the bushes in Washington Park wearing a Speedo bikini a
size too small and
hoping some lonely sex hound will whip his dick out, if that's detective work, then, sure, Manus was a detective. Because
beauty is power the way money is power the way a
loaded gun is power. And Manus with his square-jawed, cheekboned good
looks could be a Nazi recruiting poster. While
Manus was still fighting crime, I found him cutting the crust off a slice of bread one
morning. Bread without crust made me
remember being little. This was so
sweet, but I thought he was making me toast. Then Manus goes to in front of a
mirror in the apartment we used to
share, wearing his white Speedo, and he asks, if I were a gay guy would I want to bang him up the
butt? Then he changed to a red Speedo
and asked again. You know, he says,
really stuff his poop chute? Plow the cowboy? It's not a morning I would want on video. "What
I need," Manus said, "is for my basket to look big, but my ass to
look adolescent." He takes the slice of bread and stuffs it inside between
himself and the crotch of the Speedo. "Don't worry, this is
how underwear models get a better look," he says.
"You get a smooth unoffen-sive bulge this way." He stands sideways to
the mirror and says, "You think I need another slice?" His
being a detective meant he crunched around in good weather, in his sandals and his lucky red
Speedo, while two plainclothes men nearby
in a parked car waited for somebody
to take the bait. This happened more than
you'd imagine. Manus was a one-man campaign to clean up Washington Park. He'd never been this successful as a regular policeman and this way nobody ever
shot at him. It all
felt very Bond, James Bond. Very cloak and dagger. Very spy versus spy.
Plus he was getting a great tan. Plus he got to tax deduct his gym membership
and his buying new Speedos. Jump to
the realtor in Santa Barbara shaking my hand and saying my name, Daisy
St. Patience, over and over the way you do when you want to make a good
impression but not looking at me in my veils. He's looking at Brandy and
Denver. Charmed,
I'm sure. The
house is just what you'd expect from the outside. There's
a big scarred mission-style trestle table in the dining
room, under a wrought-iron chandelier you could swing on. Laid across the
table is a silver-embroidered, fringed Spanish shawl. We
represent a television personality who wishes to remain nameless, Denver
tells the realtor. We're an advance team scouting for a weekend home for
this nameless celebrity. Miss Alexander, she's an expert in
product toxicity, you know, the lethal fumes and secretions given off by
homes. "New
carpet," Denver says, "will exude poisonous formaldehyde
for up to two years after it's been laid." Brandy
says, "I know that feeling.” It
got so that when Manus's crotch wasn't leading men to their doom, Manus was three-piece-suited
in court on the witness stand, saying how the defendant approached him in
some lurid exposed public masturbating way and asked for a
cigarette. "Like
anybody could look at me and think I smoke," Manus
would say. You
didn't know what vice he objected to more. After
Santa Barbara, we drove to San Francisco and sold the Fiat Spider. Me, I'm
writing on cocktail napkins all the time: maybe your sister's in the next city, she
could be anywhere. In the Santa Barbara hacienda,
Brandy and me found Benzedrine and Dexedrine
and old Quaaludes and Soma and some Dialose capsules that turned out to
be a fecal softener. And some Solaquin
Forte cream that turned out to be a skin bleach. In
San Francisco, we sold the Fiat and some drugs and bought
a big red Physicians' Desk Reference book so we wouldn't be stealing
worthless fecal softeners and skin bleaches.
In San Francisco, old people are all over selling their big rich houses full of drugs and hormones.
We had Demerol and Darvocet-Ns. Not the puny little Darvocet-N 50s. Brandy was feeling beautiful with me trying
to O.D. her on big Darvocet
100-milligram jobbers. After
the Fiat, we rented a big Seville convertible. Just between
us, we were the Zine kids: Me, I
was Comp Zine. Denver
was Thor Zine. Brandy,
Stella Zine. It was
in San Francisco I started Denver on his own secret hormone therapy to destroy
him. Manus's
detective career had started to peter out when his arrest
rate dropped to one per day, then one per week, then zero, then still zero. The
problem was the sun, the tanning, and the fact he was getting older and he was a
known bait, none of the older men he had already arrested went near him.
The younger men just thought he was too old. So
Manus got bold. More and more his Speedos got smaller, which wasn't a
good look, either. The pressure was on to replace him with a new model. So
now he'd have to start conversations. Talk. Be funny. Really work
at meeting guys. Develop a personality, and still the younger men,
the only ones who didn't run when they saw him, a younger
man would still decline when Manus suggested they take a walk back into the
trees, into the bushes. Even
the most horny young men with their eyes scamming everybody else would say,
"Uh, no thanks." Or,
"I just want to be alone right now." Or
worse, "Back off, you old troll, or I'll call a cop.” After San Francisco and San
Jose and Sacramento, we went to Reno and
Brandy turned Denver Omelet into Chase Manhattan. We zigzagged
everywhere I thought we'd find enough
drugs. Evie's money could wait. Jump
to Las Vegas and Brandy turns Chase Manhattan into Eberhard Faber. We drive the
Seville down the gut of Las Vegas. All that spasming neon, the red chase lights going one direction, white chase lights going the
other direction. Las Vegas looks the
way you'd imagine heaven must look at
night. We never put the top up on the Seville, had it two weeks, never
put the top up. Cruising
the gut of Las Vegas, Brandy sat on the boot with her ass up on the
trunk lid and her feet on the back seat, wearing this strapless metallic brocade
sheath as pink as the burning center of a road flare with a bejeweled bodice and a
detachable long silk taffeta cape with balloon
sleeves. With
her looking that good, Las Vegas with all its flash and
dazzle was just another Brandy Alexander brand fashion accessory. Brandy
puts her arms up, wearing these long, pink opera gloves, and just
howls. She just looks and feels so good at that moment. And the detachable long
silk taffeta cape with balloon sleeves, it detaches. And
sails off into Las Vegas traffic. "Go
around the block," Brandy screams. "That cape has to
go back to Bullock's in the morning." After
Manus's detective career started downhill, we'd have to work out in the
gym every day, twice on some days. Aerobics, tanning, nutrition, every station
of the cross. He was a bodybuilder, if what that means is you drink
your meal replacement shakes right out of the blender six times a day
over the kitchen sink. Then Manus would get swimwear through the mail you
couldn't buy in this country, little pouches on strings and microfilament
technology he'd put on the moment we got home from the gym, then follow me around
asking, did I think his butt looked too flat? If I
was a gay guy, did I think he needed to trim back his
pubic hair? Me being a gay guy, would I think he looked too desperate? Too
aloof? Was his chest big enough? Too big, maybe? "I'd
hate for guys to think I'm just a big dumb cow is all,"
Manus would say. Did he
look, you know, too gay? Gay guys only wanted guys who acted straight. "I
don't want guys to see me as a big passive bottom," Manus
would say. "It's not like I'd just flop there and let just
any guy bone me." Manus
would leave a ring of shaved hairs and bronzer scum around the bathtub and
expect me to scrub. Always
in the background was the idea of going back to an assignment where
people shot at you, criminals with nothing to lose if you got killed. And
maybe Manus could bust some old tourist who found the cruisy part of
Washington Park by accident, but most days the precinct commander was on him to start training a
younger replacement. Most
days, Manus would untangle a silver metallic tiger stripe string bikini
out of the knotted mess in his underwear drawer. He'd strain his ass into
this little A-cup nothing and look at himself in the mirror
sideways, frontways, backwards, then tear it off and leave the
stretched, dead little animal print on the bed for me to find. This would
go on through zebra stripes, tiger stripes, leopard spots,
then cheetah, panther, puma, ocelot, until he ran out of time. "These
are my lucky lifeguard 'kinis," he'd tell me. "Be honest." And
this is what I kept telling myself was love. Be
honest? I wouldn't know where to start. I was so out of
practice. After
Las Vegas, we rented one of those family vans. Eberhard Faber became
Hewlett Packard. Brandy wore a long, white cotton pique dress with open
strappy sides and a high slit up the skirt that was totally inappropriate for the
entire state of Utah. We stopped and tasted the Great Salt Lake. This just seemed like the
thing to do. I was
always writing in the sand, writing in the dust on the
car: maybe
your sister is in the next town. Writing:
here, take a few more Vicodins. It
was after Manus couldn't get guys to approach him for sex
that he started into buying man-on-man sex magazines and going out to
gay clubs. "Research,"
he'd say. "You
can come with," he'd tell me, "but don't stand too close,
I don't want to send out the wrong signal." After
Utah, Brandy turned Hewlett Packard into Harper Collins in Butte. There
in Montana, we rented a Ford Probe and Harper drove with me squashed in the
back seat, and every once in a while Harper would say,
"We're going one hundred and ten miles an hour." Brandy
and me, we'd shrug. Speeding
didn't seem like anything in a place as big as Montana. maybe
your sister's not even in the united states, I wrote in lipstick on a
bathroom mirror in a motel in Great Palls, So to
keep Manus's job, we went out to gay bars, and I sat alone
and told myself that it was different for men, the good
looks thing was. Manus flirted and danced and sent drinks
down the bar to whoever looked like a challenge. Manus would slip onto the
bar stool next to mine and whisper out the side of his mouth. "I
can't believe he's with that guy," he'd say. Manus
would nod just enough for me to figure out which guy. "Last
week, he wouldn't give me the time of day," Manus would rant under his
breath. "I wasn't good enough, and that trashy, bottle-blonde piece
of garbage is supposed to be better?" Manus
would hunch over his drink and say, "Guys are so
fucked up." And
I'd be, like, no duh. And I
told myself it was okay. Any relationship I could be in
would have these rough times. Jump
to Calgary, Alberta, where Brandy ate Nebalino suppositories wrapped in
gold foil because she thought they were Almond Roca. She got so ripped, she
turned Harper Collins into Addison Wesley.
Most of Calgary, Brandy wore a white, quilted
ski jacket with a faux fur collar and a
white bikini bottom by Donna Karan. The look was fun and spirited and we
felt light and popular. Evenings
called for a black and white striped floor-length coat dress that
Brandy could never keep buttoned up, with black wool hot pants on underneath.
Addison Wesley turned into Nash Rambler, and we rented another
Cadillac. Jump
to Edmonton, Alberta, Nash Rambler turned into Alfa Romeo. Brandy wore
these crinoline shorty-short square dance petticoats over black tights
tucked into cowboy boots. Brandy wore this push-up bustier made of leather with local cattle
brands burned all over it. In a
nice hotel bar in Edmonton, Brandy says, "I hate it when
you can see the seam in your martini glass. I mean, I can feel the
mold line. It's so cheap." Guys
all over her. Like spotlights, I remember that kind of attention. That
whole country, Brandy never had to buy her own drinks, not once. Jump
to Manus losing his assignment as an independent special contract vice
operative to the detective division of the Metropolitan police department. My
point is, he never really got over it. He
was running out of money. It's not like there was a lot in the bank to begin
with. Then the birds ate my face. What I
didn't know is, there was Evie Cottrell living alone in her big
lonesome house with all her Texas land and oil money, saying, hey, she had some work
that needed
doing. And Manus with his driving need to prove he can still pee on every tree.
That mirror-mirror kind of power. The rest
you already know. Jump to us on the road,
after the hospital, after the Rhea sisters,
and I keep slipping the hormones, the Provera and Climara and Premarin, into what he ate and drank. Whiskey and estradiol. Vodka and ethinyl
estradiol. It was so easy it was
scary. He was all the time making big cow eyes at Brandy. We
were all running from something. Vaginoplasty. Aging. The future. Jump
to Los Angeles. Jump
to Spokane. Jump
to Boise and San Diego and Phoenix. Jump
to Vancouver, British Columbia, where we were Italian expatriates
speaking English as a second language until there wasn't a native tongue among us. "You
have two of the breasts of a young woman," Alfa Romeo told a realtor I
can't remember in which house. From
Vancouver, we reentered the United States as Brandy, Seth, and
Bubba-Joan via the Princess Princess's very professional mouth. All the way to Seattle,
Brandy read to us how a little Jewish girl with a mysterious muscle
disease turned herself into Rona Barrett. All of
us looking at big rich houses, picking up drugs, renting cars, buying
clothes, and taking clothes back. "Tell
us a gross personal story," Brandy says en route to Seattle.
Brandy all the time being the boss of me. Being this
close to death herself. Rip
yourself open. Tell me
my life story before I die. Sew yourself shut. CHAPTER TWENTY-FOURJump
way back to a fashion shoot at this slaughterhouse where
whole pigs without their insides hang as thick as fringe
from a moving chain. Evie and me wear Bibo Kelley stainless steel
party dresses while the chain zips by behind us at about a hundred pigs an hour,
and Evie says, "After your brother was mutilated, then what?" The
photographer looks at his light meter and says, "Nope. No
way." The art
director says, "Girls, we're getting too much glare
off the carcasses." Each
pig goes by big as a hollow tree, all red and shining
inside and covered in this really nice pigskin on the outside
just after someone's singed the hair off with a blowtorch.
This makes me feel all stubbly by comparison, and I have to count back to my last waxing. And
Evie goes, "Your brother?" And
I'm, like, counting Friday, Thursday, Wednesday, Tuesday . . . "How
did he go from being mutilated to being dead?" Evie
says. These
pigs keep going by too fast for the art director to powder down their shine.
You have to wonder how pigs keep their skin so nice. If now farmers use sunblock or what.
Probably, I figure it's been a month since I was as smooth as they are. The way
some salons use their new lasers, even with
the cooling gel, they might as well use a blowtorch. "Space
girl," Evie says to me. "Phone home." The
whole pig place is refrigerated too much to wear a stainless steel dress
around. Guys in white A-line coats and boots
with low heels get to spray super-heated steam in where the pigs insides were, and I'm ready to trade them jobs. I'm ready to trade jobs with the pigs,
even. To Evie, I say, "The
police wouldn't buy the hairspray story. They were sure my father had raged on
Shane's face. Or my mom had put the
hairspray can in the trash. They called it 'neglect.'" The
photographer says, "What if we regroup and backlight
the carcasses?" "Too
much strobe effect as they go past," the art director
says. Evie says,
"Why'd the police think that?" "Beats
me," I say. "Somebody just kept making anonymous
calls to them." The
photographer says, "Can we stop the chain?" The
art director says, "Not unless we can stop people from eating meat." We're still hours away from
taking a real break, and Evie says,
"Somebody lied to the police?" The pig guys are checking
us out, and some are pretty cute. They
laugh and slide their hands up and down fast on their shiny black steamhoses.
Curling their tongues at us.
Flirting. "Then
Shane ran away," I tell Evie. "Simple as that. A couple
years ago, my folks got a call he was dead." We
step back as close as we can to the pigs going by, still
warm. The floor seems to be really greasy, and Evie starts telling me about an
idea she has for a remake of Cinderella, only instead of the little
birds and animals making her a dress, they
do cosmetic surgery. Bluebirds give her a facelift. Squirrels give her
implants. Snakes, liposuction. Plus, Cinderella starts out as a lonely little boy. "As much attention as
he got," I tell Evie, "I'd bet my brother
put that hairspray can in the fire himself.” CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVEJump
to one time, nowhere special, just Brandy and me shopping along a main
street of stores in some Idaho town with a Sears outlet, a diner, a day-old
bakery store, and a realtor's office with our own Mr. White Westing-house
gone inside to hustle some realtor. We go into a secondhand
dress shop. This is next door to the day-old bargain bakery, and Brandy
says how her father used to pull this stunt with pigs just before he took them
to market. She
says how he used to feed them expired desserts he bought by the truckload from
this kind of bakery outlet. Sunlight comes
down on us through clean air. Bears and mountains are within walking
distance. Brandy
looks at me over a rack of secondhand dresses. "You
know about that kind of scam? The one with the pigs, sweetness?" she says. He
used to stovepipe potatoes, her father. You hold the burlap
bag open and stand a length of stovepipe inside. All around the pipe, you
put big potatoes from this year's crop. Inside the pipe you put last year's
soft, bruised, cut, and rotting potatoes so folks can't see them
from through the burlap. You pull the stovepipe out, and you stitch
the bag shut tight so nothing inside can shift. You sell them roadside
with your kids helping, and even at a cheap price, you're
making money. We had
a Ford that day in Idaho. It was brown inside and out. Brandy
pushes the hangers apart, checking out every dress on the rack and
says, "You ever hear of anything in your whole life so underhanded?" Jump to Brandy and me in a secondhand store on that same main street, behind a curtain,
crowded together in a fitting room the size of a phone booth. Most of the crowding is a ball gown Brandy needs me to
help get her into, a real Grace Kelly of a dress with Charles James written all
over it. Baffles and
plenums and all that high-stressed skeletoning engineered inside a skin of shot pink organza or ice blue velveteen. These
most incredible dresses, Brandy tells me, the constructed ball gowns,
the engineered evening dresses with their hoops and strapless bodices, their stand-up horseshoe
collars and flaring shoulders, nipped waists, their
stand-away peplums and bones, they never last very long. The tension, the push
and pull of satin and crepe de Chine
trying to control the wire and boning inside, the battle of fabric against metal, this tension will
shred them. As the outsides age, the
fabric, the part you can see, as it gets weak, the insides start to poke and
tear their way out. Princess Princess, she
says, "It will take at least three Darvons to get me into this
dress." She opens her hand, and I
shake out the prescription. Her father, Brandy says, he
used to grind his beef with crushed ice to
force it full of water before he sold it. He'd grind beef with what's
called bull meal to force it full of cereal. "He
wasn't a bad person," she says. "Not outside of following the rules a little
too much." Not
the rules about being fair and honest, she says, so much as
the rules about protecting your family from poverty. And disease. Some
nights, Brandy says, her father used to creep into her
room while she was asleep. I don't want to hear this.
Brandy's diet of Provera and Darvon has
side-effected her with this kind of emotional bulimia where she can't keep down any nasty secret. I smooth my veils over my ears. Thank you for
not sharing. "My
father used to sit on my bed some nights," she says,
"and wake me up." Our
father. The
ball gown is resurrected glorious on Brandy's shoulders,
brought back to life, larger than life and fairy tale impossible
to wear any place in the past fifty years. A zipper thick as my spine
goes up the side to just under Brandy's arm. The panels of the bodice pinch
Brandy off at
her waist and explode her out the top, her breasts, her bare arms and long neck. The skirt is layered pale yellow silk faille and tulle. It's so much gold
embroidery and seed pearls would
make any bit of jewelry too much. "It's
a palace of a dress," Brandy says, "but even with the
drugs, it hurts." The broke ends of the wire
stays poke out around the neck, poke in at the waist. Panels of plastic
whalebone, their corners and sharp edges
jab and cut. The silk is hot, the
tulle, rough. Just her breathing in and out makes the clashing steel and celluloid tucked inside,
hidden, just Brandy being alive makes it bite and chew at the fabric and her skin. Jump to
at night, Brandy's father, he used to say, hurry. Get
dressed. Wake your sister. Me. Get
your coats on and get in the back of the truck, he'd say. And we
would, late after the TV stations had done the national anthem and gone
off the air. Concluded their broadcast day. Nothing was on the road except us,
our folks in the cab of the pickup and us two in the back, Brandy
and his sister, curled on our sides against the corrugated
floor of the truck bed, the squeak of the leaf springs, the hum of the
driveline coming right into us. The potholes bounce our pumpkin heads hard on
the floor of the bed. Our hands clamp tight over our faces to keep
from breathing the sawdust and dried manure blowing around
leftover. Our eyes shut tight to keep out the same. We were going we didn't
know where, but tried to figure out. A right
turn, then a left turn, then a long straight stretch going we didn't
know how fast, then another right turn
would roll us over on our left sides. We didn't know how long. You couldn't sleep. Wearing
the dress to shreds and holding very still, Brandy says,
"You know, I've been on my own pretty much since I was sixteen." With
every breath, even her taking shallow Darvon overdosed little gulps
of air, Brandy winces. She says, "There was an accident when I was
fifteen, and at the hospital, the police accused my father of
abusing me. It just went on and on. I couldn't tell them anything
because there was nothing to tell." She
inhales and winces, "The interviews, the counseling, the intervention
therapy, it just went on and on." The
pickup truck slowed and bounced off the edge of the blacktop,
onto gravel or washboard dirt, and the whole truck bounced and rattled
a while farther, then stopped. This
is how poor we were. Still
in the truck bed, you took your hands off your face, and we'd be
stopped. The dust and manure would settle. Brandy's father would drop the
tailgate of the truck, and you'd be on a dirt road alongside a looming broken
wall of boxcars laying this way and that off their tracks.
Boxcars would be broken open. Flatcars would be rolled over with their
loads of logs or two-by-fours scattered. Tanker cars buckled and leaking.
Hoppers full of coal or wood chips would be heaved over and dumped out in
black or gold piles. The fierce smell of ammonia. The good
smell of cedar. The sun would be just under the horizon with light coming
around to us from underneath the world. There'd
be lumber to load on the truck. Cases of instant butterscotch pudding. Cases of typing
paper, toilet paper, double-A batteries, toothpaste, canned peaches, books.
Crushed diamonds of safety glass'd be everywhere around car carriers
tipped sideways with the brand-new cars inside wrecked, with their clean, black
tires in the air. Brandy
lifts the gown's neckline and peeks inside at her Estraderm
patch on one breast. She peels the backing off another patch and pastes it on
her other breast, then takes another stabbing breath and winces. "The
whole mess died down after about three months, the whole child abuse
investigation," Brandy says. "Then one basketball practice,
I'm getting out of the gym and a man comes up. He's with the police, he says,
and this is a confidential follow-up interview." Brandy
inhales, winces. She lifts the neckline again and takes out a Methadone
disket from between her breasts, bites off half of it and drops the
rest back inside. The
fitting room is hot and small with the two of us and that huge civil
engineering project of a dress packed together. Brandy
says, "Darvon." She says, "Quick, please." And she
snaps her fingers. I fish
out another red and pink capsule, and she gulps it dry. "This
guy," Brandy says, "he asks me to get in his car, to talk, just to
talk, and he asks if I have anything I'd like to say that maybe I was
too afraid to tell any of the child service people.” The
dress is coming apart, the silk opening at every seam, the tulle busting out, and Brandy says,
"This guy, this detective, I tell him,
'No,' and he says, 'Good.' He says he
likes a kid who can keep a secret." At a
train wreck you could pick up pencils two thousand at a time. Light bulbs still
perfect and not rattling inside. Key blanks by the hundreds. The pickup truck
could only hold so much, and by then other trucks would be arrived with people
shoveling grain into car backseats and people watching us with our
piles of too much as we decided what we needed more, the ten thousand shoelaces
or one thousand jars of celery salt. The five hundred fan belts all
one size we didn't need but could re-sell, or the double-A batteries.
The case of shortening we couldn't use up before it went
rancid or the three hundred cans of hairspray "The police guy,"
Brandy says, and every wire is rising out of
her tight yellow silk, "he puts his hand on me, right up the leg of my shorts, and he says we
don't have to re-open the case. We
don't have to cause my family any more problems." Brandy says,
"This detective says the police want to
arrest my father for suspicion. He can stop them, he says. He says, it's all up to me." Brandy inhales and the
dress shreds, she breathes and every breath
makes her naked in more places. "What
did I know," she says. "I was fifteen. I didn't know
anything." In a
hundred torn holes, bare skin shows through. At
the train wreck, my father said security would be here any minute. How I
heard this was: we'd be rich. We'd be secure. But what
he really meant was we'd have to hurry or we'd get caught and lose it all. Of course I remember. "The
police guy," Brandy says, "he was young, twenty-one or
twenty-two. He wasn't some dirty old man. It wasn't horrible," she says, "but it
wasn't love." With
more of the dress torn, the skeleton springs apart in different places. "Mostly,"
Brandy says, "it made me confused for a long time." That's
my growing up, those kind of train wrecks. Our only dessert from the
time I was six to the time I was nine was butterscotch pudding. It turns out I
loathe butterscotch. Even the color. Especially the color. And the
taste. And smell. How I
met Manus was when I was eighteen a great- looking
guy came to the door of my parents' house and asked, did we ever hear
back from my brother after he ran away? The guy was a little older,
but not out of the ballpark. Twenty-five,
tops. He gave me a card that said Manus Kelley. Independent Special Contract Vice Operative. The only
thing else I noticed was he didn't wear a wedding ring. He said, "You know, you look a lot like your brother." He had a glorious smile and said,
"What's your name?" "Before
we go back to the car," Brandy says, "I have to tell you something about your
friend. Mr. White Westing-house." Formerly
Mr. Chase Manhattan, formerly Nash Rambler, formerly Denver Omelet,
formerly independent special contract vice operative Manus
Kelley. I do the homework: Manus is thirty years old. Brandy's twenty-four. When Brandy was sixteen I was fifteen. When Brandy was sixteen, maybe Manus was already part
of our lives. I
don't want to hear this. The
most beautiful ancient perfect dress is gone. The silk and
tulle have slipped, dropped, slumped to the fitting room
floor, and the wire and boning is broken and sprung away,
leaving just some red marks already fading on Brandy's skin with Brandy
left standing way too close to me in just her underwear. "It's funny,"
Brandy says, "but this isn't the first time I've destroyed somebody's beautiful dress," and a big Aubergine
Dreams eye winks at me. Her breath and skin feel warm, she's that close. "The
night I ran away from home," Brandy says, "I burned almost every stitch
of clothing my family had hanging on the clothesline." Brandy
knows about me, or she doesn't know. She's confessing her heart, or she's teasing me. If she
knows, she could be lying to me about
Manus. If she doesn't know, then the man I love is a freaky creepy sexual
predator. Either
Manus or Brandy is being a sleazy liar to me, me, the paragon of virtue
and truth here. Manus or Brandy, I don't know who to hate. Me
and Manus or Me and Brandy. It wasn't horrible, but it wasn't love. CHAPTER TWENTY-SIXI
here had to be some better way to kill Brandy. To set me free.
Some quick permanent closure. Some kind of crossfire I could walk away
from. Evie hates me by now. Brandy looks just like I used to. Manus is
still so in love with Brandy he'd follow her anywhere, even if he's not sure why. All I'd have to do is get Brandy
cross-haired in front of Evie's rifle. Bathroom
talk. Brandy's
suit jacket with its sanitary little waist and mod three-quarter sleeves is still folded on
the aquamarine countertop beside the big
clamshell sink. I pick up the jacket, and my souvenir from the future
falls out. It's a postcard of clean,
sun-bleached 1962 skies and an opening
day Space Needle. You could look out the bathroom's porthole windows and see what's become of the
future. Overrun with Goths wearing
sandals and soaking lentils at home,
the future I wanted is gone. The future I was promised. Everything I expected.
The way everything was supposed to
turn out. Happiness and peace and love and
comfort. When
did the future, Ellis once wrote on the back of a postcard, switch from
being a promise to a threat? I tuck
the postcard between the vaginoplasty brochures and the labiaplasty
handouts stuck between the pages of the Miss Rona book. On the cover is a
satellite photo of Hurricane Blonde just off the West Coast of
her face. The blonde is crowded with pearls and what could be diamonds
sparkle here and there. She
looks very happy. I put the book back in the inside pocket
of Brandy's jacket. I pick up the cosmetics and drugs scattered across the
countertops and I put them away. Sun comes through the porthole windows
at a low, low angle, and the post office will be closing soon.
There's still Evie's insurance money to pick up. At least a half million
dollars, I figure. What you can do with all that money, I don't know, but
I'm sure I'll find out. Brandy's
lapsed into major hair emergency status so I shake her. Brandy's
Aubergine Dreams eyes flicker, blink, flicker, squint. Her hair, it's gotten all
flat in the back. Brandy
comes up on one elbow. "You know," she says, "I'm
on drugs so it's all right if I tell you this." Brandy looks
at me bent over her, offering a hand up. "I have to tell you," Brandy
says, "but I do love you." She says, "I can't
tell how this is for you, but I want us to be a family." My brother wants to marry
me. I
give Brandy a hand up. Brandy leans on me, Brandy, she
leans on the edge of the countertop. She says, "This wouldn't
be a sister thing." Brandy says, "I still have some days
left in my Real Life Training." Stealing drugs, selling
drugs, buying clothes, renting luxury cars,
taking clothes back, ordering blender drinks, this isn't what I'd call Real Life, not by a long shot. Brandy's
ring-beaded hands open to full flower and spread the fabric of her skirt across her
front. "I still have all my original equipment," she says. The
big hands are still patting and smoothing Brandy's crotch
as she turns sideways to the mirror and looks at her profile. "It was
supposed to come off after a year, but then I met you," she says.
"I had my bags packed in the Congress Hotel for weeks just hoping you'd
come to rescue me." Brandy turns her other side to the mirror
and searches. "I just loved you so much, I thought maybe it's not
too late?" Brandy
spreads pot gloss across her top lip and then her bottom
lip, blots her lips on a tissue, and drops the big lumbago
kiss into the snail shell toilet. Brandy says with her
new lips. "Any idea how to flush this thing?" Hours
I sat on that toilet, and no, I never saw how to flush it. I step out into the hallway so if
Brandy wants to blab at me she'll have to
follow. Brandy
stumbles in the bathroom doorway where the tile meets the hallway
carpet. Her one shoe, the heel is broken. Her stocking is run where it rubbed the doorframe. She's grabbed at a towel rack for balance
and chipped her nail polish. Shining
anal queen of perfection, she says, "Fuck." Princess
Princess, she yells after me, "It's not that I really
want to be a woman." She yells, "Wait up!" Brandy yells,
"I'm only doing this because it's just the biggest mistake
I can think to make. It's stupid and destructive, and
anybody you ask will tell you I'm wrong. That's why I have
to go through with it." Brandy
says, "Don't you see? Because we're so trained to do life the right way. To
not make mistakes" Brandy says,
"I figure, the bigger the mistake looks, the better chance I'll
have to break out and live a real life." Like
Christopher Columbus sailing toward disaster at the edge of the world. Like Fleming and his bread
mold. "Our
real discoveries come from chaos," Brandy yells, "from
going to the place that looks wrong and stupid and foolish." Her
imperial voice everywhere in the house, she yells, "You do not walk away from me when I take a minute to explain myself!" Her
example is a woman who climbs a mountain, there's no rational reason for climbing that
hard, and to some people it's a stupid folly, a misadventure, a
mistake. A mountain climber, maybe she starves and freezes, exhausted
and in pain for days, and climbs all the way to the top. And maybe she's
changed by that, but all she has to show for it is her story. "But
me," Brandy says, still in the bathroom doorway, still looking at her
chipped nail polish, "I'm making the same
mistake only so much worse, the pain, the money, the time, and being dumped by
my old friends, and in the end my
whole body is my story." A sexual reassignment
surgery is a miracle for some people, but
if you don't want one, it's the ultimate form of self-mutilation. She
says, "Not that it's bad being a woman. This might be wonderful, if I
wanted to be a woman. The point is," Brandy
says, "being a woman is the last thing I want. It's just the
biggest mistake I could think to make." So
it's the path to the greatest discovery. It's
because we're so trapped in our culture, in the being of
being human on this planet with the brains we have, and
the same two arms and two legs everybody has. We're so trapped that any way we
could imagine to escape would be just another part of the trap. Anything
we want, we're trained
to want. "My
first idea was to have one arm and one leg amputated, the left ones, or the
right ones," she looks at me and shrugs, "but no surgeon would agree to
help me." She
says, "I considered AIDS, for the experience, but then
everybody had AIDS and it looked so mainstream and trendy." She says, "That's what
the Rhea sisters told my birth family, I'm pretty sure. Those bitches can be so
possessive." Brandy
pulls a pair of white gloves out of her handbag, the kind of gloves with a
white pearl button on the inside of each wrist. She works each hand into a
glove and does the button. White is not a good color choice. In white,
her hands look transplanted from a giant cartoon mouse. "Then
I thought, a sex change," she says, "a sexual reassignment
surgery. The Rheas," she says, "they think they're
using me, but really I'm using them for their money, for their thinking they were in control
of me and this was all their idea." Brandy
lifts her foot to look at the broken heel, and she sighs. Then she reaches
down to take off the other shoe. "None
of this was the Rhea sisters' pushing. It wasn't. It
was just the biggest mistake I could make. The biggest challenge I could give
myself." Brandy
snaps the heel off her one good shoe, leaving her feet in two ugly
flats. She
says, "You have to jump into disaster with both feet." She
throws the broken heels into the bathroom trash. "I'm
not straight, and I'm not gay," she says. "I'm not bisexual.
I want out of the labels. I don't want my whole life crammed into a single word. A story. I
want to find something else, unknowable,
some place to be that's not on the map. A real adventure." A
sphinx. A mystery. A blank. Unknown. Undefined. Unknowable. Indefinable.
Those were all the words Brandy used to describe me in my veils. Not
just a story that goes and then, and then, and then, and then until
you die. "When
I met you," she says, "I envied you. I coveted your face. I thought
that face of yours will take more guts than any sex change operation. It will give
you bigger discoveries. It will make you stronger than I could ever
be." I start down the stairs.
Brandy in her new flats, me in my total confusion, we get to the foyer, and
through the drawing room doors you can hear
Mr. Parker's long, deep voice
belching over and over, "That's right. Just do that." Brandy
and me, we stand outside the doors a moment. We pick the lint and
toilet paper off each other, and I fluff up the flat back of Brandy's hair. Brandy
pulls her pantyhose up her legs a little and tugs down the front of her jacket. The
postcard and the book tucked inside her jacket, the dick tucked in her
pantyhose, you can't tell either one's there. We
throw open the drawing room double doors and there's Mr. Parker and
Ellis. Mr. Parker's pants are around
his knees, his bare hairy ass
is stuck up in the air. The rest of his bareness is stuck in Ellis's face. Ellis Island, formerly Independent Special Contract
Vice Operative Manus
Kelley. "Oh,
yes. Just do that. That's so good." Ellis's
getting an A in job performance, his hands are cupped around Parker's football scholarship power-clean bare
buns, pulling everything he can swallow into his square-jawed Nazi poster boy face. Ellis grunting and gagging, making his comeback from forced retirement. CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVENThe man
at General Delivery who asked to see my ID pretty much had to take
my word for it. The picture on my driver's license might as well be
Brandy's. This means a lot of writing on scraps of paper for me to
explain how I look now. This whole time I'm in the post office, I'm looking
sideways to see if I'm a cover girl up on the FBI's most
wanted poster board. Almost
half a million dollars is about twenty-five pounds of ten- and
twenty-dollar bills in a box. Plus, inside with the money is a pink stationery
note from Evie saying blah, blah, blah, I will kill you if I ever see
you again. And I couldn't be happier. Before
Brandy can see who it's addressed to, I claw off the label. One
part of being a model is my phone number was unlisted so I wasn't in
any city for Brandy to find. I was nowhere. And now we're driving back to Evie.
To Brandy's fate. The whole way back, me and Ellis, we're writing
postcards from the future and slipping them out the car windows as we go
south on Interstate 5 at a mile and a half every minute. Three miles closer to
Evie and her rifle every two minutes. Ninety miles closer to fate every
hour. Ellis
writes: Your birth is a mistake you'll spend your whole life trying to
correct. The
electric window of the Lincoln Town Car hums down a half inch, and Ellis drops
the card out into the I-5 slipstream. I
write: You spend your entire life becoming God and then you die. Ellis
writes: When you don't share your problems, you resent
hearing the problems of other people. I write: All God does is
watch us and kill us when we get boring. We
must never, ever be boring. Jump
to us reading the real estate section of the newspaper,
looking for big open houses. We always do this in a new
town. We sit at a nice sidewalk cafe and drink cappuccino
with chocolate sprinkles and read the paper, then Brandy
calls all the realtors to find which open houses have people still living
in them. Ellis makes a list of houses to hit tomorrow. We
check into a nice hotel, and we take a cat nap. After midnight
Brandy wakes me up with a kiss. She and Ellis are going out to sell
the stock we picked up in Seattle. Probably they're screwing. I don't care. "And
no," Brandy says. "Miss Alexander will not be calling
the Rhea sisters while she's in town. Anymore, she's determined the only
vagina worth having is the kind you buy yourself." Ellis is standing in the
open doorway to the hotel hallway, looking
like a superhero that I want to crawl in to bed and save me. Still, since Seattle, he's been my brother. And you
can't be in love with your brother. Brandy
says, "You want the TV remote control?" Brandy
turns on the television, and there's Evie scared and desperate with her
big pumped-up rainbow hair in every shade of blonde. Evelyn Cottrell, Inc.,
everybody's favorite writeoff, is stumbling through the studio audience
in her sequined dress begging folks to eat her meat by-products. Brandy
changes channels. Brandy
changes channels. Brandy
changes channels. Evie is everywhere after
midnight, offering what she's got on a silver
tray. The studio audience ignores her, watching
themselves on the monitor, trapped in the reality loop of watching
themselves watch themselves, trying the way we do every time we look in a mirror
to figure out exactly who that person is. That
loop that never ends. Evie and me, we did this infomercial. How could I
be so dumb? We're so totally trapped in ourselves. The
camera stays on Evie, and what I can almost hear Evie
saying is, Love me. Love
me, love me, love me, love me, love me, love me, love me, I'll be anybody
you want me to be. Use me. Change me. I can be thin with big breasts and big
hair. Take me apart. Make me into anything, but just love me. Jump
way back to one time, Evie and me did this fashion shoot
in a junk yard, in a slaughterhouse, in a mortuary. We'd
go anywhere to look good by comparison, and what I realize is mostly what
I hate about Evie is the fact that she's so vain and stupid and needy. But what
I hate most is how she's just like me. What I really hate is me so I
hate pretty much everybody. Jump
to the next day we hit a few houses, a mansion, a couple
palaces, and a chateau full of drugs. Around three o'clock
we meet a realtor in the baronial dining room of a West Hills manor house. All
around us are caterers and florists. The dining room table is spread and
heaping with silver and crystal, tea sets,
samovars, candelabras, stemware. A woman in dowdy scarecrow social secretary tweeds is unwrapping these gifts of silver and
crystal and making notes
in a tiny red book. A
constant stream of arriving flowers eddies around us, buckets of irises and
roses and stock. The manor house is sweet with the smell of flowers and rich
with the smell of little puff pastries and stuffed mushrooms. Not
our style. Brandy looks at me. Way too many folks around. But the
realtor's already there, smiling, fn a drawl as flat and drawn-out as
the Texas horizon, the realtor introduces herself as Mrs. Leonard Cottrell. And
she is so happy to meet us. This Cottrell woman takes
Brandy by the elbow and steers her around
the baronial first floor while I decide to fight or flight. Give
me terror. Flash. Give
me panic. Flash. This has to be Evie's
mother, oh, you know it is. And this must be
Evie's new house. And I'm wondering how it is we came here. Why today? What are the chances? The
realty Cottrell steers us past the tweedy social secretary
and all the wedding gifts. "This is my daughter's house.
But she spends almost all her days in the furniture department
at Brumbach's, downtown. So far we've gone
along with her little obsessions,
but enough's enough, so now
we're gonna marry her off to some jackass." She
leans in close, "It was more difficult than you'd ever
imagine, trying to settle her down. You know, she burned
down the last house we bought her." Beside
the social secretary, there's a stack of gold-engraved wedding
invitations. These are the regrets. Sorry, but we can't make it. There
seem to be a lot of regrets. Nice invitations, though, gold engraved,
hand-torn edges, a three-fold card with a dried violet inside. I steal one of the
regrets, and I catch up with the realty Cottrell woman and Brandy and Ellis. "No,"
Brandy's saying, "there are too many people around. We couldn't view
the house under these conditions." "Between
you and me," says the realty Cottrell, "The biggest wedding in the
world is worth the cost if we can shove Evie off onto some poor man." Brandy
says, "We don't want to keep you." "But,
then," the Cottrell woman says, "there's this subgroup
of 'men' who like their 'women' the way Evie is now." Brandy
says, "We really must be going." And
Ellis says, "Men who like insane women?" "Why,
it plum broke our hearts the day Evan came to us. Sixteen years old,
and he says 'Mommy, Daddy, I want to be a girl'," says Mrs. Cottrell. "But
we paid for it," she says. "A tax deduction is a tax deduction.
Evan wanted to be a world-famous fashion model, he told us. He started calling himself Evie, and I canceled my subscription to Vogue the next
day. I felt it had done enough damage to my family." Brandy says, "Well,
congratulations," and starts tugging
me toward the front door. And
Ellis says, "Evie was a man? " Evie
was a man. And I just have to sit down. Evie was a man. And I saw her
implant scars. Evie was a man. And I saw her naked in fitting rooms. Give
me a complete late-stage revision of my adult life. Flash. Give me anything in this
whole fucking world that is exactly what it
looks like! Flash! Evie's mother looks hard at
Brandy, "Have you ever done any
modeling?" she says. "You look so much like a friend of my son's." "Your
daughter," Brandy growls. And I
finger the invitation I stole. The wedding, the union of Miss Evelyn
Cottrell and Mr. Allen Skinner, is tomorrow. At eleven ante meridiem, according
to the gold engraving. To be followed by a reception at the bride's home. To be
followed by a house fire. To be
followed by a murder. Dress
formal. CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT My dress
I carry my ass around Evie's wedding in is tighter than skin tight.
It's what you'd call bone tight. It's that
knock-off print of the Shroud of Turin, most of it brown and white, draped and cut so the shiny red
buttons all button through the stigmata. Then I'm wearing yards and
yards of black silk gloves bunched up on my arms. My heels are nosebleed high. I wrap Brandy's half mile of black tulle studded with sparkle up around my
scar tissue, over the shining cherry
pie where my face used to be, wrapped
tight, until only my eyes are out. It's a look that's bleak and morbid.
The feeling is we've got a little out of control. It
takes more effort to hate Evie than it used to. My whole
life is moving farther away from any reason to hate her.
It's moving far away from reason itself. It takes a cup of coffee and a
Dexedrine capsule to feel even vaguely pissed about anything. Brandy,
she wears the knock-off Bob Mackie suit with the little peplum skirt
and the big, I don't know, and the thin, narrow I couldn't care less. She wears
a hat, since it's a wedding, after all. Got some shoes on her
feet made from the skin of some animal. Accessorized including
jewelry, you know, stones dug out of the earth, polished and cut to reflect
light, set in alloys of gold and copper, atomic weight, melted and beat with hammers,
all of it so labor intensive. Meaning, all of Brandy Alexander. Ellis,
he wears a double-breasted, whatever, a suit, a single vent in the back, black.
He looks the way you'd imagine yourself dead in a casket if you're a guy, not a problem for me, since Ellis has outlived his role
in my life. Ellis's
strutting around now that he's proved he can seduce something in every
category. Not that knobbing Mr. Parker makes him King of Fag Town, but now he's got Evie under his belt, and maybe enough time's
gone by Ellis can go back on duty, get
his old beat back in Washington
Park. So we
take the gold-engraved wedding invitation that I stole, Brandy and Ellis
each take a Percodan, and we go to Evie's wedding reception moment. Jump to
eleven o'clock ante meridiem at the baronial West Hills manor house of
crazy Evie Cottrell, gun-happy Evie, newly united Mrs. Evelyn Cottrell
Skinner, as if I could care at this point. And. This is oh so
dazzling. Evie, she could be the wedding cake, in tier on tier of sashes and
flowers rising around her big hoop skirt, up and up to her
cinched waist, then her big Texas breasts popped out the
top of a strapless bodice. There's so much of her to decorate,
the same as Christmas at a shopping mall. Silk flowers are bunched at
one side of her waist. Silk flowers over both ears anchor a veil thrown back
over her blonde on blonde sprayed-up hair. In that hoop skirt and those pushed-up
Texas grapefruit, the girl walks around riding her own parade float. Full of
Champagne and Percodan interactions, Brandy is looking at me. And
I'm amazed I never saw it before, how Evie was a man. A
big blonde, the same as she is here, but with one of
those ugly wrinkled, you know, scrotums. Ellis
is hiding from Evie, trying to scope out if her new husband
as yet another notch in his special contract vice operative
resume. Ellis, how this story looks from his point of view is he's
still major sport bait winning proof he can bust any man after the long fight.
Everybody here thinks the whole story is about them. Definitely that
goes for everybody in the world. Oh, and
this is gone way beyond sorry, Mom. Sorry, God. At this point, I'm not sorry for anything. Or anybody. No,
really, everybody here's just itching to be cremated. Jump to
upstairs. In the master bedroom, Evie's trousseau is laid out ready to be packed. I
brought my own matches this time, and I light the hand-torn edge of the gold-engraved
invitation, and I carry the invitation from the bedspread to the
trousseau to the curtains. It's the sweetest of moments when the fire takes control, and you're no longer responsible for anything. I
take a big bottle of Chanel Number Five from Evie's bathroom
and a big bottle of Joy and a big bottle of White Shoulders,
and I slosh the smell of a million parade float flowers all over the
bedroom. The
fire, Evie's wedding inferno finds the trail of flowers
in alcohol and chases me out into the hallway. That's what I love about fire, how
it would kill me as quick as anybody else. How it can't know I'm its mother.
It's so beautiful and powerful and beyond
feeling anything for anybody, that's
what I love about fire. You
can't stop any of this. You can't control. The fire in Evie's
clothes is just more and more every second, and now the plot moves along
without you pushing. And I
descend. Step-pause-step. The invisible showgirl. For once, what's happening
is what I want. Even better than I expected.
Nobody's noticed. Our
world is speeding straight ahead into the future. Flowers
and stuffed mushrooms, wedding guests and string quartet, we're all going there
together on the Planet Brandy Alexander. In the front hall, there's the Princess
Princess thinking she's still in control. The
feeling is of supreme and ultimate control over all. Jump
to the day we'll all be dead and none of this will matter.
Jump to the day another house will stand here and the
people living there won't know we ever happened. "Where
did you go?" Brandy says. The immediate future, I
would tell her. CHAPTER TWENTY-NINEJump
to Brandy and me, we can't find Ellis anywhere. Evie and all the Texas
Cottrells can't find their groom, either, everybody laughing that nervous
laughter. What bridesmaid has run off with him, everybody wants to know.
Ha, ha. I tug
Brandy toward the door, but she shushes me. Ellis and the groom both missing ... a
hundred Texans drinking hard . . . that ridiculous bride in her
big drag wedding dress . . . this is just too much fun for
Brandy to walk out now. Jump
to Evie riding her big parade float out of the butler's
pantry, her hands all fisted up, her veil and hair flying
straight out behind her. Evie's shouting about how she done found her butt-sucking fag-assed new husband face-downed enjoying butt sex with
everybody's old boyfriend in the butler's
pantry. Oh,
Ellis. I
remember all his porno magazines, and all the details of anal, oral, rimming,
fisting, felching. You could put yourself in the hospital trying to self-suck. Oh,
this is dazzling. Of course, Evie's answer to
everything is to heft her hoop skirt and run
upstairs after a rifle except by now most
of her bedroom is a Chanel Number Five perfumed wall of flames Evie has to ride her parade float right into. Everybody cell phones 9-1-1 for help. Nobody's
bothered enough to go into the
butler's pantry and check out the action.
Folks don't want to know what might be going on in there. Go
figure, but Texans seem to be a lot more comfortable around disastrous house fires than they
are around anal sex. I
remember my folks. Scat and water sports. Sado and masochism. Waiting
for Evie to burn to death, everybody gets a fresh drink and goes to
stand in the foyer at the foot of the stairs. You hear loud spanking from the butler's pantry. The
painful kind where you spit on your hand first. Brandy,
the socially inappropriate thing she is, Brandy starts laughing.
"This is going to be messy good fun," Brandy tells me out the side of
her Plumbago mouth. "I put a handful of Bilax bowel evacuant in
Ellis's last drink." Oh,
Ellis. With
all that's going on, Brandy could've gotten away if she hadn't started
laughing. You
see, since right then, Evie steps out of that wall of flame
at the top of the stairs. A rifle in her hands, her wedding dress burned down
to the steel hoops, the silk flowers in her hair burned down to their wire
skeletons, all her blonde hair burned off,
Evie does her slow step-pause-step down the stairs with a rifle pointed right
at Brandy Alexander. With
everybody looking up the stairs at Evie wearing nothing but wire and ashes,
sweat and soot smeared all over her lucious hourglass transgender bod,
we all watch Evelyn Cottrell in her big incorporated moment, and Evie
screams, "You!" She screams at Brandy
Alexander down the barrel of the rifle,
"You did it to me again. Another fire!" Step-pause-step. "I
thought we were best friends," she says. "Sure, yes, I slept
with your boyfriend, but who hasn't?" Evie says, with the gun and everything. Step-pause-step. "It's just not enough
for you to be the best and most beautiful,"
Evie says. "Most people, if they looked as good as you, they'd tread water for the rest of their
lives." Step-pause-step. "But
no," Evie says, "Here you have to destroy everyone else." The
second floor fire inches down the foyer wallpaper, and
wedding guests are scrambling for their wraps and bags,
all of them headed outdoors with the wedding gifts, the
silver and the crystal. You
hear that butt slapping sound from the butler's pantry. "Shut
up in there!" Evie yells. Back to Brandy, Evie says,
"So maybe I'll spend some years in prison, but you'll have a
big head start on me in hell!" You
hear the rifle cock. The
fire inches down the walls. "Oh,
God, yes, Jesus Christ," Ellis yells. "Oh, God, I'm coming!" Brandy
stops laughing. Bigger and prettier than ever, looking regal and annoyed
and put-upon as if this is all a big joke, Brandy Alexander lifts a giant hand
and looks at her watch. And
I'm about to become an only child. And I
could stop everything at this moment. I could throw off my veil, tell
the truth, save lives. I'm me. Brandy's innocent. Here's my second chance. I
could've opened my bedroom window years ago and let Shane inside.
I could've not called the police all those times to suggest
Shane's accident wasn't. What stands in my way is the
story how Shane burned my clothes. How being mutilated
made Shane the center of attention. And if I throw off my
veil now, I'll just be a monster, a less than perfect, mutilated victim. I'll be
only how I look. Just the truth, the whole
truth, and nothing but the truth. Honesty being the most boring thing in the
planet Brandy Alexander. And.
Evie aims. "Yes!"
Ellis yells from the pantry. "Yes, do it, big guy! Give
it to me! Shoot it!" Evie
squints down the barrel. "Now!"
Ellis is yelling. "Shoot it right in my mouth!" Brandy
smiles. And I
do nothing. And
Evie shoots Brandy Alexander right in the heart. CHAPTER THIRTYMy
life," Brandy says. "I'm dying, and I'm supposed to see my
whole life." Nobody's
dying here. Give me denial. Evie's
shot her wad, dropped the rifle, and gone outside. The
police and paramedics are on their way, and the rest of the wedding guests
are outside fighting over the wedding gifts, who gave what and who now has
the right to take it back. All of it good messy fun. Blood
is pretty much all over Brandy Alexander, and she says, "I want to
see my life." From
some back room, Ellis says, "You have the right to
remain silent.” Jump
to me, I let go from holding Brandy's hand, my hand warm red with
blood-born pathogens, I write on the burning wallpaper. Your
Name Is Shane McFarland. You
Were Born Twenty-Four Years Ago. You
Have A Sister, One Year Younger. The
fire's already eating my top line. You
Got Gonorrhea From A Special Contract Vice Operative
And Your Family Threw You Out. You
Met Three Drag Queens Who Paid You To Start A Sex
Change Because You Couldn't Think Of Anything You Wanted
Less. The
fire's already eating my second line. You
Met Me. I Am
Your Sister, Shannon McFarland. Me
writing the truth in blood just minutes ahead of the fire eating it. You
Loved Me Because Even If You Didn't Recognize Me,
You Knew I Was Your Sister. On Some Level, You Knew Right
Away So You Loved Me. We
traveled all over the West and grew up together again. I've
hated you for as long as I can remember. And
You Are Not Going To Die. I
could've saved you. And
you are not going to die. The
fire and my writing are now neck and neck. Jump
to Brandy half-bled on the floor, most of her blood wiped up by me to
write with, Brandy squints to read as the fire eats our whole family
history, line by line. The line And You Are Not Going To Die is
almost at the floor, right in Brandy's face. "Honey,"
Brandy says, "Shannon, sweetness, I knew all that.
It was Miss Evie's doing. She told me about you being in the hospital.
About your accident." Such a
hand model I am already. And such a rube. "Now,"
Brandy says. "Tell me everything." I
write: I've Been Feeding Ellis Island Female Hormones
For The Past Eight Months. And
Brandy laughs blood. "Me too!" she says. How
can I not laugh? "Now,"
Brandy says, "quick, before I die, what else?" I
write: Everybody Just Loved You More After The Hairspray
Accident. And: And I
Did Not Make That Hairspray Can Explode. Brandy
says, "I know. I did it. I was so miserable being a
normal average child. I wanted something to save me. I wanted
the opposite of a miracle." From
some other room, Ellis says, "Anything you say can and
may be used against you in a court of law." And on the baseboard, I write: The
Truth Is I Shot Myself In The Face. There's
no more room to write, no more blood to write with, and nothing left to say,
and Brandy says, "You shot your own face off?" I nod. "That,"
says Brandy, "that, I didn't know.” CHAPTER THIRTY-ONEJump
to this one time, nowhere special, just Brandy almost dead on the floor
and me kneeling over her -with my hands covered in her Princess Alexander
partytime blood. Brandy
yells, "Evie!" And
Evie's burned-up head sticks back in through the front doorway.
"Brandy, sugar," Evie says, "This all's been the
best disaster you've ever pulled off!" To me,
Evie runs up and kisses me with her nasty melted lipstick and says,
"Shannon, I just can't thank you enough for spicing up my boring old home life." "Miss
Evie," Brandy says, "you can act like anything, but,
girl, you just totally missed shooting the bulletproof part of my
vest." Jump
to the truth. I'm the stupid one. Jump
to the truth. I shot myself. I let Evie think it was Manus
and Manus think it was Evie. Probably it was their suspicion
of each other that drove them apart. It drove Evie to keep a loaded rifle
around in case Manus came after her. The same fear made Manus carry a
butcher knife the night he came over to confront her. The
truth is nobody here is as stupid or evil as I let on. Except
me. The truth is I drove out away from the city on the
day of the accident. With my driver's side window rolled
halfway up, I got out and I shot through the glass. On the way back into town,
on the freeway, I got in the exit lane for Growden Avenue, the exit for La Paloma Memorial Hospital. The
truth is I was addicted to being beautiful, and that's not something you
just walk away from. Being addicted to all that attention, I had to quit cold turkey. I could shave my head, but hair grows back. Even
bald, I might still look too good.
Bald, I might get even more attention. There was the option of getting fat or
drinking out of control to ruin my looks, but I wanted to be ugly, and I wanted
my health. Wrinkles and aging looked too far off. There had to be some way to get ugly in a flash. I had to deal with my looks in a fast, permanent way or I'd always be tempted to go back. You
know how you look at ugly hunchback girls, and they are so lucky. Nobody
drags them out at night so they can't finish their doctorate thesis papers.
They don't get yelled at by fashion photographers if they get infected
ingrown bikini hairs. You look at burn victims and think how
much time they save not looking in mirrors to check their skin for sun damage. I
wanted the everyday reassurance of being mutilated. The
way a crippled deformed birth-defected disfigured girl
can drive her car with the windows open and not care how
the wind makes her hair look, that's the kind of freedom I
was after. I was
tired of staying a lower life form just because of my
looks. Trading on them. Cheating. Never getting anything
real accomplished, but getting the attention and recognition anyway.
Trapped in a beauty ghetto is how I felt. Stereotyped. Robbed of my motivation. In this way, Shane, we are
very much brother and sister. This is the biggest mistake I could think would
save me. I wanted to give up the idea I had
any control. Shake things up. To be
saved by chaos. To see if I could cope, I wanted to force myself to grow again. To explode my comfort zone. I slowed
down for the exit and pulled over onto the shoulder, what they call the
breakdown lane. I remember thinking, how apropos. I remember thinking, this is
going to be so exciting. My makeover. Here was my life about to start
all over again. I could be a great brain surgeon this time
around. Or I could be an artist. Nobody would care how I'd look. People would
just see my art, what I made instead of just how I looked, and people would
love me. What I
thought last was, at last I'll be growing again, mutating, adapting, evolving.
I'll be physically challenged. I couldn't wait. I got the
gun from the glove compartment. I wore a
glove against powder burns, and held the gun at arm's length out my broken window. It wasn't even like aiming with the gun only about two feet away.
I might've killed myself that way, but by now that idea didn't seem very tragic. This
makeover would make piercings and tattoos and brandings look so lame,
all those little fashion revolts so safe that they themselves only become
fashionable. Those little paper tiger attempts to reject looking
good that only end up reinforcing it. The
shot, it was like getting hit hard is what I remember. The bullet. It took a
minute before I could focus my eyes, but there was my blood and snot, my
drool and teeth all over the passenger seat. I had to open the car door
and get the gun from where I'd dropped it outside the window. Being
in shock helped. The gun and the glove's in a storm drain
in the hospital parking lot where I dropped them, in case
you want proof. Then
the intravenous morphine, the tiny operating room manicure scissors
cut my dress off, the little patch panties, the police photos. Birds ate my
face. Nobody ever suspected the truth. The
truth is I panicked a little after that. I let everybody think the wrong
things. The future is not a good place to start lying and cheating all over
again. None of this is anybody's fault except mine. I ran because just
getting my jaw rebuilt was too much temptation to revert, to play that
game, the looking good game. Now my whole new future is still out there waiting for me. The truth is, being ugly
isn't the thrill you'd think, but it can be an opportunity for something better
than I ever imagined. The
truth is I'm sorry. CHAPTER THIRTY-TWOJump back to
the La Paloma emergency room. The intravenous morphine. The tiny operating room
manicure scissors cut Brandy's suit off. My brother's unhappy
penis there blue and cold for the whole world to see. The police
photos, and Sister Katherine screaming, "Take your pictures! Take your
pictures now! He's still losing blood!" Jump to surgery. Jump to
post-op. Jump to me taking Sister Katherine
aside, little Sister Katherine hugging me so hard around the knees I almost buckle to the floor. She looks at me, both of us stained with the blood,
and I ask her in writing: please. do this
one special thing for me. please, if you really want to make me happy. Jump to
Evie installed talk-show—style under the hot track lights, downtown
at Brumbach's, chatting with her mother and Manus and her new husband about how
she met Brandy years before all of us, in some transgender support
group. About how everybody needs a big disaster every now and then. Jump to
some day down the road soon when Manus will get his breasts. Jump
to me kneeling beside my brother's hospital bed. Shane's skin, you don't
know where the faded blue hospital gown ends and Shane begins, he's so
pale. This is my brother, thin and pale with Shane's thin arms and pigeon chest. The flat auburn hair across his forehead,
this is who I remember growing up
with. Put together out of sticks and
bird bones. The Shane I'd forgotten. The Shane from before the hairspray accident. I don't know why I
forgot, but Shane had always looked
so miserable. Jump to
our folks at home at night, showing home movies against the side of their white house.
The windows
from twenty years ago lined up perfect with the windows now. The grass lined up with the grass. The ghosts of Shane and me as toddlers running around, happy with each other. Jump
to the Rhea sisters crowded around the hospital bed. Hairnets pulled on
over their wigs. Surgical masks on their faces. They're wearing those faded
green scrub suits, the Rheas have those Duchess of Windsor
costume jewelry brooches pinned on their scrubs: leopards shimmering
with diamond and topaz spots. Hummingbirds with pave emerald
bodies. Me, I
just want Shane to be happy. I'm tired of being me, hateful me. Give
me release. I'm
tired of this world of appearances. Pigs that only look
fat. Families that look happy. Give
me deliverance. From
what only looks like generosity. What only looks like love. Flash. I
don't want to be me anymore. I want to be happy, and I
want Brandy Alexander back. Here's my first real dead end
in my life. There's nowhere to go, not the way I am right
now, the person I am. Here's my first real beginning. As
Shane sleeps, the Rhea sisters all crowd around, decorating him with little
gifts. They're misting Shane with L'Air du
Temps as if he were a Boston fern. New
earrings. A new Hermes scarf around his head. Cosmetics
are spread in perfect rows on a surgical tray that hovers next to the
bed, and Sofonda says, "Moisturizer!" and holds her hand out, palm up. "Moisturizer,"
Kitty Litter says, and slaps the tube into Sofonda's palm. Sofonda
puts her hand out and says, "Concealer!" And
Vivienne slaps another tube into her palm and says, "Concealer." Shane,
I know you can't hear, but that's okay, since I can't talk. With
short, light strokes, Sofonda uses a little sponge to spread
concealer on the dark bags under Shane's eyes. Vivienne pins a diamond
stick pin on Shane's hospital gown. Miss
Rona saved your life, Shane. The book in your jacket
pocket, it slowed the bullet enough that only your boobs
exploded. It's just a flesh wound, flesh and sili-cone. Florists
come in with sprays of irises and roses and stock. Your
silicone broke, Shane. The bullet popped your sil-icone
so they had to take it out. Now you can have any sized breasts you want.
The Rheas have said so. "Foundation!"
Sofonda says, blending the foundation into Shane's hairline. She
says, "Eyebrow pencil!" with sweat beading on her forehead. Kitty
hands over the pencil, saying, "Eyebrow pencil." "Blot
me!" Sofonda says. And
Vivienne blots her forehead with a sponge. Sofonda says,
"Eyeliner! STAT!" And I have to go, Shane,
while you're still asleep. But I want to
give you something. I want to give you life. This is my third chance, and I
don't want to blow it. I could've opened
my bedroom window. I could've stopped Evie shooting you. The truth is I didn't so I'm giving you my life
because I don't want it anymore. I tuck
my clutch bag under Shane's big ring-beaded hand. You see, the size
of a man's hands are the one thing a plastic surgeon can't change. The one thing
that will always give away a girl like Brandy Alexander. There's
just no way to hide those hands. This
is all my identification, my birth certificate, my everything.
You can be Shannon McFarland from now on. My career. The ninety-degree attention. It's yours. All of it.
Everyone. I hope it's enough for you. It's everything I have left. "Base
color!" Sofonda says, and Vivienne hands her the lightest
shade of Aubergine Dreams eye shadow. "Lid
color!" Sofonda says, and Kitty hands her the next eye
shadow. "Contour
color!" Sofonda says, and Kitty hands her the darkest
shade. Shane,
you go back to my career. You make Sofonda get you a top contract, no local charity benefit
runway shit. You're Shannon fucking
McFarland now. You go right to the
top. A year from now, I want to turn on the TV and see you drinking a diet cola naked in slow motion.
Make Sofonda get you big national contracts. Be
famous. Be a big social experiment in getting what you don't want. Find value
in what we've been taught is worthless. Find good in what the world says is
evil. I'm giving you my life because I want
the whole world to know you. I wish
the whole world would embrace what it hates. Find
what you're afraid of most and go live there. "Lash
Curler!" says Sofonda, and she curls Shane's sleeping
eyelashes. "Mascara!"
she says, combing mascara into the lashes. "Exquisite,"
says Kitty. And
Sofonda says, "We're not out of the woods yet." Shane,
I'm giving you my life, my driver's license, my old report
cards, because you look more like me than I can ever
remember looking. Because I'm tired of hating and preening and telling myself old stories that were never
true in the first place. I'm tired of always being me, me, me first. Mirror,
mirror on the wall. And
please don't come after me. Be the new center of attention. Be a big
success, be beautiful and loved and everything else I wanted to be. I'm over that now. I just want to be invisible. Maybe I'll become a belly
dancer in my veils. Become a nun and
work in a leper colony where nobody
is complete. I'll be an ice hockey goalie and wear a mask. Those big amusement parks will only hire women to wear the cartoon character costumes, since
folks don't want to chance a strange
molester guy hugging their kid. Maybe
I'll be a big cartoon mouse. Or a dog. Or a duck. I don't know, but I'm sure
I'll find out. There's no escaping
fate, it just keeps going. Day and night, the future just keeps coming at you. I
stroke Shane's pale hand. I'm
giving you my life to prove to myself I can, I really can
love somebody. Even when I'm not getting paid, I can give love and happiness
and charm. You see, I can handle the baby food and the not talking and
being homeless and invisible, but I have to know that I can love somebody.
Completely and totally, permanently and without hope of reward, just as an act
of will, I will love somebody. I
lean in, as if I could kiss my brother's face. I leave my purse and any idea of who I am tucked under Shane's hand. And I leave behind the story that I was ever this beautiful, that I could walk into a
room deep fried in a tight dress and
everybody would turn and look at me. A million reporters would take my picture.
And I leave behind the idea that this
attention was worth what I did to get it. What I
need is a new story. What
the Rhea sisters did for Brandy Alexander. What
Brandy's been doing for me. What
I need to learn to do for myself. To write my own story. Let my brother be Shannon
McFarland. I
don't need that kind of attention. Not anymore. "Lip
liner!" Sofonda says. "Lip
gloss!" she says. She
says, "We've got a bleeder!" And
Vivienne leans in with a tissue to blot the extra Plumbago off Shane's chin. Sister
Katherine brings me what I asked for, please, and it's
the pictures, the eight-by-ten glossies of me in my white sheet. They aren't
good or bad, ugly or beautiful. They're just
the way I look. The truth. My future. Just regular reality. And I take off my veils, the cut-work and muslin and lace, and leave them for Shane to find
at his feet. I don't
need them at this moment, or the next, or the next, forever. Sofonda
sets the make-up with powder and then Shane's gone. My brother, thin
and pale, sticks and bird bones and miserable, is gone. The
Rhea sisters slowly peel off their surgical masks. "Brandy
Alexander," says Kitty, "queen supreme." "Total
quality girl," Vivienne says. "Forever
and ever," says Sofonda, "and that's enough." Completely
and totally, permanently and without hope, forever and ever I love
Brandy Alexander. And that's enough. INVISIBLE MONSTERS Chuck
Palahniuk W. W. Norton &
Company New York • London For
Geoff, who said, "This is how to steal drugs." And
Ina, who said, "This is lip liner." And
Janet, who said, "This is silk georgette." And my
editor, Patricia, who kept saying, "This is not good,
enough." CHAPTER ONEWhere you're
supposed to be is some big West Hills wedding reception in a big manor house with flower arrangements and stuffed mushrooms all over the
house. This is called scene setting:
where everybody is, who's alive, who's dead. This is Evie Cottrell's big
wedding reception moment. Evie is standing
halfway down the big staircase in the manor house foyer, naked inside
what's left of her wedding dress, still holding her rifle. Me,
I'm standing at the bottom of the stairs but only in a
physical way. My mind is, I don't know where. Nobody's
all-the-way dead yet, but let's just say the clock is ticking. Not
that anybody in this big drama is a real alive per-son,
either. You can trace everything about Evie Cottrell's look
back to some television commercial for an organic shampoo,
except right now Evie's wedding dress is burned down to just the
hoopskirt wires orbiting her hips and just the little wire skeletons
of all the silk flowers that were in her hair. And Evie's blonde hair, her big,
teased-up, backcombed rainbow in every shade of blonde blown up with hairspray,
well, Evie's hair is burned off, too. The
only other character here is Brandy Alexander, who's laid out,
shotgunned, at the bottom of the staircase, bleeding to death. What I
tell myself is the gush of red pumping out of Brandy's bullet hole is less like blood than
it's some sociopolitical tool. The thing
about being cloned from all those shampoo commercials, well, that goes
for me and Brandy Alexander, too. Shotgunning
anybody in this room would be the moral equivalent of killing a car, a vacuum cleaner, a Barbie doll. Erasing a computer
disk. Burning a book. Probably that
goes for killing anybody in the
world. We're all such products. Brandy
Alexander, the long-stemmed latte queen supreme of the top-drawer party girls,
Brandy is gushing her insides out through a bullet hole in her amazing suit jacket.
The suit, it's this white Bob Mackie knock-off Brandy bought in Seattle with a
tight hobble skirt that squeezes her ass
into the perfect big heart shape. You would
not believe how much this suit cost. The mark-up is about a zillion percent. The suit jacket has a
little peplum skirt and wide lapels and shoulders. The single-breasted cut is symmetrical except for the
hole pumping out blood. Then Evie starts to sob,
standing there halfway up the staircase. Evie, that deadly virus of the moment.
This is our cue to all look at poor Evie,
poor, sad Evie, hairless and wearing
nothing but ashes and circled by the wire cage of her burned-up hoop skirt.
Then Evie drops the rifle. With her
dirty face in her dirty hands, Evie sits down and starts to boo-hoo, as if
crying will solve anything. The rifle, this is a loaded thirty-aught rifle, it clatters down the stairs and skids out into the middle of the foyer floor,
spinning on its side, pointing at
me, pointing at Brandy, pointing at Evie,
crying. It's not that I'm some
detached lab animal just conditioned to ignore violence, but my first instinct
is maybe it's not too late to dab club soda
on the bloodstain. Most of my adult life so
far has been me standing on seamless paper
for a raft of bucks per hour, wearing clothes
and shoes, my hair done and some famous fashion photographer telling me
how to feel. Him
yelling, Give me lust, baby. Flash. Give
me malice. Flash. Give
me detached existentialist ennui. Flash. Give
me rampant intellectualism as a coping mechanism. Flash. Probably
it's the shock of seeing my one worst enemy shoot my other worst
enemy is what it is. Boom, and it's a win-win situation. This and being around
Brandy, I've developed a pretty big Jones for drama. It
only looks like I'm crying when I put a handkerchief up
under my veil to breathe through. To filter the air since you can about not
breathe for all the smoke since Evie's big manor house is burning down around
us. Me,
kneeling down beside Brandy, I could put my hands anywhere in my gown and find
Darvons and Demerols and Darvocet 100s. This is everybody's cue to look
at me. My gown is a knock-off print of the Shroud of Turin, most of it brown and
white, draped and cut so the shiny red buttons will button through the
stigmata. Then I'm wearing yards and yards of
black organza veil wrapped around my
face and studded with little hand-cut Austrian
crystal stars. You can't tell how I look, face-wise, but that's the whole idea. The look is elegant
and sacrilegious and makes me feel sacred and immoral. Haute
couture and getting hauler. Fire inches
down the foyer wallpaper. Me, for added set dressing I started the
fire. Special effects can go a long way to heighten a mood, and it's not as if this is a real house. What's burning down is a re-creation of a period
revival house patterned after a copy
of a copy of a copy of a mock-Tudor big manor house. It's a hundred generations
removed from anything original, but
the truth is aren't we all? Just
before Evie comes screaming down the stairs and shoots Brandy Alexander,
what I did was pour out about a gallon of Chanel Number Five and put a burning wedding invitation
to it, and boom, I'm recycling. It's funny, but when you
think about even the biggest tragic fire
it's just a sustained chemical reaction. The oxidation of Joan of Arc. Still
spinning on the floor, the rifle points at me, points at
Brandy. Another
thing is no matter how much you think you love somebody, you'll step back when the
pool of their blood edges up too close. Except
for all this high drama, it's a really nice day. This is a warm, sunny day and
the front door is open to the porch and the lawn outside. The fire upstairs
draws the warm
smell of the fresh-cut lawn into the foyer, and you can hear all the wedding guests outside. All the guests, they took the gifts they wanted, the
crystal and silver and went out to wait on the lawn for the firemen and
paramedics to make their entrance. Brandy,
she opens one of her huge, ring-beaded hands and she touches the hole pouring her blood all
over the marble floor. Brandy,
she says, "Shit. There's no way the Bon Marche will take this suit
back." Evie lifts her face, her
face a finger-painting mess of soot and snot
and tears from her hands and screams, "I hate my life being so boring!” Evie
screams down at Brandy Alexander, "Save me a window table in hell!" Tears rinse clean lines
down Evie's cheeks, and she screams,
"Girlfriend! You need to be yelling some back at me!" As if this isn't already
drama, drama, drama, Brandy looks up at me
kneeling beside her. Brandy's aubergine eyes dilated out to full flower, she
says, "Brandy Alexander is
going to die now?" Evie, Brandy and me, all
this is just a power struggle for the spotlight. Just each of us being me, me,
me first. The murderer, the victim, the witness, each of us thinks our role is the lead. Probably
that goes for anybody in the world. It's all mirror, mirror
on the wall because beauty is power the
same way money is power the same way a gun is power. Anymore,
when I see the picture of a twenty-something in the newspaper who was abducted and
sodomized and robbed and then killed and here's a front-page
picture of her young and smiling, instead of me dwelling on this
being a big, sad crime, my gut reaction is, wow, she'd be really
hot if she didn't have such a big honker of a nose. My
second reaction is I'd better have some good head and shoulders
shots handy in case I get, you know, abducted and sodomized to death.
My third reaction is, well, at least that cuts down on the competition. If
that's not enough, my moisturizer I use is a suspension
of inert fetal solids in hydrogenated mineral oil. My point
is that, if I'm honest, my life is all about me. My
point is, unless the meter is running and some photographer
is yelling: Give me empathy. Then
the flash of the strobe. Give
me sympathy. Flash. Give
me brutal honesty. Flash. "Don't let me die here
on this floor," Brandy says, and her
big hands clutch at me. "My hair," she says, "My hair will
be flat in the back." My
point is I know Brandy is maybe probably going to die,
but I just can't get into it. Evie
sobs even louder. On top of this, the fire sirens from way outside are
crowning me queen of Migraine Town. The
rifle is still spinning on the floor, but slower and slower. Brandy
says, "This is not how Brandy Alexander wanted her
life to go. She's supposed to be famous, first. You know,
she's supposed to be on television during Super Bowl halftime, drinking
a diet cola naked in slow motion before she died." The
rifle stops spinning and points at nobody. At
Evie sobbing, Brandy screams, "Shut up!" "
You shut up," Evie screams back. Behind her, the fire is eating its way down the
stairway carpet. The
sirens, you can hear them wandering and screaming all over the West
Hills. People will just knock each other down to dial 9-1-1 and be the big hero.
Nobody looks ready for the big television crew that's due to
arrive any minute. "This
is your last chance, honey," Brandy says, and her blood is getting all
over the place. She says, "Do you love me?" It's
when folks ask questions like this that you lose the spotlight. This is
how folks trap you into a best-supporting role. Even
bigger than the house being on fire is this huge expectation that I have to say
the three most worn-out words you'll find in any script. Just the
words make me feel I'm severely fingering myself. They're just words is all. Powerless. Vocabulary.
Dialogue. "Tell
me," Brandy says. "Do you? Do you really love me?" This is
the big hammy way Brandy has played her whole life. The Brandy Alexander nonstop
continuous live action theater, but less and less live by the moment. Just
for a little stage business, I take Brandy's hand in mine.
This is a nice gesture, but then I'm freaked by the whole
threat of blood-borne pathogens, and then, boom, the ceiling in the dining
room crashes down and sparks and embers rush out at us from the dining
room doorway. "Even
if you can't love me, then tell me my life,” Brandy says. "A girl
can't die without her life flashing before
her eyes." Pretty
much nobody is getting their emotional needs met. It's
then the fire eats down the stairway carpet to Evie's bare
ass, and Evie screams to her feet and pounds down the
stairs in her burned-up white high heels. Naked and hairless, wearing wire and
ashes, Evie Cottrell runs out the front door to a larger audience, her wedding guests, the
silver and crystal and the arriving fire trucks. This is the world we live in. Conditions change and we
mutate. So of
course this'll be all about Brandy, hosted by me, with guest appearances by
Evelyn Cottrell and the deadly AIDS virus. Brandy, Brandy, Brandy. Poor sad
Brandy on her back, Brandy touches the hole pouring her life out onto
the marble floor and says, "Please. Tell me my life. Tell me how we got
here." So me, I'm here eating
smoke just to document this Brandy Alexander
moment. Give
me attention. Flash. Give
me adoration. Flash. Give
me a break. Flash. CHAPTER TWODon't expect this to
be the kind of story that goes: and then,
and then, and then. What
happens here will have more of that fashion magazine feel, a Vogue
or a Glamour magazine chaos with page numbers on every second or fifth or third
page. Perfume cards falling out, and full-page naked women coming out of nowhere to sell you make-up. Don't
look for a contents page, buried magazine-style twenty pages back from the front. Don't expect
to find anything right off. There isn't a real pattern to anything, either. Stories will start and then, three
paragraphs later: Jump
to page whatever. Then,
jump back. This
will be ten thousand fashion separates that mix and match to create maybe
five tasteful outfits. A million trendy accessories, scarves and belts, shoes
and hats and gloves, and no real clothes to wear them with. And
you really, really need to get used to that feeling, here,
on the freeway, at work, in your marriage. This is the
world we live in. Just go with the prompts. Jump
back twenty years to the white house where I grew up
with my father shooting super-8 movies of my brother and
me running around the yard. Jump
to present time with my folks sitting on lawn chairs at night, and watching
these same super-8 movies projected on the
white side of the same white house, twenty years later. The house the same, the yard the same, the windows projected in the movies lined up just
perfect with the real windows, the
movie grass aligned with the real grass, and my movie-projected brother and me
being toddlers and running around
wild for the camera. Jump to
my big brother being all miserable and dead from the big plague of AIDS. Jump to
me being grown up and fallen in love with a police detective and
moved away to become a famous supermodel. Just
remember, the same as a spectacular Vogue magazine,
remember that no matter how close you follow the jumps: Continued
on page whatever. No matter how careful you
are, there's going to be the sense you
missed something, the collapsed feeling under your skin that you didn't experience it all. There's that fallen heart feeling that you rushed right through
the moments where you should've been paying attention. Well, get used to that
feeling. That's how your whole life will
feel some day. This is all practice. None
of this matters. We're just warming up. Jump
to here and now, Brandy Alexander bleeding to death on the floor with me
kneeling beside her, telling this story before here come the paramedics. Jump
backward just a few days to the living room of a rich house in Vancouver,
British Columbia. The room is lined with the rococo hard candy of carved
mahogany paneling with marble baseboards and marble flooring and a very
sort-of curlicue carved marble fireplace. In rich houses
where old rich people live, everything is just what you'd think. The
rubrum lilies in the enameled vases are real, not silk.
The cream-colored drapes are silk, not polished cotton. Mahogany is not pine
stained to look like mahogany. No pressed-glass chandeliers posing as cut
crystal. The leather
is not vinyl. All
around us are these cliques of Louis-the-Fourteenth chair-sofa-chair. In
front of us is yet another innocent real estate agent, and
Brandy's hand goes out: her wrist thick with bones and veins, the mountain
range of her knuckles, her wilted fingers, her rings in their haze of
marquise-cut green and red, her porcelain
nails painted sparkle pink, she says, "Charmed,
I'm sure." If you have to start with
any one detail, it has to be Brandy's hands.
Beaded with rings to make them look even
bigger, Brandy's hands are enormous. Beaded with rings, as if they could be
more obvious, hands are the one part
about Brandy Alexander the surgeons couldn't change. So Brandy doesn't even try
and hide her hands. We've
been in too many of this kind of house for me to count, and the realtor we meet
is always smiling. This one is wearing the standard uniform, the navy blue suit with the red,
white, and blue scarf around the neck. The blue heels are on her feet and the blue bag is hanging at the crook of her elbow. The
realty woman looks from Brandy Alexander's big hand to Signore Alfa Romeo
standing at Brandy's side, and the power blue eyes of Alfa attach
themselves; those blue eyes you never see close or look away,
inside those eyes is the baby or the bouquet of flowers, beautiful or
vulnerable,
that make a beautiful man someone safe to love. Alfa's
just the latest in a year-long road trip of men obsessed with Brandy, and any
smart woman knows a beautiful man is her best fashion accessory.
The same way you'd product model a new car or a toaster, Brandy's
hand draws a
sight line through the air from her smile and big boobs to Alfa. "May I introduce," Brandy says, "Signore Alfa Romeo, professional male consort to the
Princess Brandy Alexander." The
same way, Brandy's hand swings from her batting eyelashes and rich hair in an invisible sight
line to me. All
the realty woman is going to see is my veils, muslin and
cut-work velvet, brown and red, tulle threaded with silver,
layers of so much you'd think there's nobody inside. There's
nothing about me to look at so most people don't. It's a look that says: Thank
you for not sharing. "May
I introduce," Brandy says, "Miss Kay Maclsaac, personal
secretary to the Princess Brandy Alexander." The
realty woman in her blue suit with its brass Chanel buttons and the
scarf tied around her neck to hide all her loose skin, she smiles at Alfa. When
nobody will look at you, you can stare a hole in them. Picking out all the
little details you'd never stare long enough to get if she'd ever just return
your gaze, this, this is your revenge. Through my veils, the realtor's glowing
red and gold, blurred at her edges. "Miss
Maclsaac," Brandy says, her big hand still open toward
me, "Miss Maclsaac is mute and cannot speak." The
realty woman with her lipstick on her teeth and her powder and concealer
layered in the crepe under her eyes, her pret-a-porter teeth and
machine-washable wig, she smiles at Brandy Alexander. "And
this . . . ," Brandy's big ring-beaded hand curls up to
touch Brandy's torpedo breasts. "This
. . . ," Brandy's hand curls up to touch pearls at her
throat. "This
. . . ," the enormous hand lifts to touch the billowing
piles of auburn hair. "And
this . . . ," the hand touches thick moist lips. "This,"
Brandy says, "is the Princess Brandy Alexander." The
realty woman drops to one knee in something between a curtsy and what
you'd do before an altar. Genuflecting. "This is such an honor," she
says. "I'm so sure this is the house for you. You just have
to love this house." Icicle
bitch she can be, Brandy just nods and turns back toward
the front hall where we came in. "Her
Highness and Miss Maclsaac," Alfa says, "they would
like to tour the house by themselves, while you and I
discuss the details." Alfa's little hands flutter up to explain,
"... the transfer of funds ... the exchange of lira for
Canadian dollars." "Loonies,"
the realty woman says. Brandy
and me and Alfa are all flash frozen. Maybe this woman has seen
through us. Maybe after the months we've been on the road and the dozens of big
houses we've hit, maybe somebody has finally figured out our scam. "Loonies,"
the woman says. Again, she genuflects. "We call our dollars
'Loonies'," she says and jabs a hand in her blue purse. "I'll show you. There's a
picture of a bird on them," she says.
"It's a loon." Brandy and me, we turn
icicle again and start walking away, back
to the front hall. Back through the cliques of chair-sofa-chair, past the carved
marble. Our reflections smear, dim,
and squirm behind a lifetime of cigar smoke on the mahogany paneling. Back to the front hallway, I follow the Princess Brandy Alexander while Alfa's
voice fills the realtor's blue-suited
attention with questions about the angle of the morning sun into the
dining room and whether the provincial
government will allow a personal heliport behind the swimming pool. Going
toward the stairs is the exquisite back of Princess Brandy, a
silver fox jacket draped over Brandy's shoulders and yards of a silk brocade
scarf tied around her billowing pile of Brandy Alexander auburn
hair. The queen supreme's voice and the shadow of L'Air du Temps are
the invisible train behind everything that is the world of
Brandy Alexander. The billowing auburn hair
piled up inside her brocade silk scarf
reminds me of a bran muffin. A big cherry cupcake. This is some
strawberry auburn mushroom cloud rising
over a Pacific atoll. Those
princess feet are caught in two sort of gold lame leg-hold
traps with little gold straps and gold chains. These are the trapped-on,
stilted, spike-heeled feet of gold that mount the first of about three
hundred steps from the front hall to the second floor. Then she mounts
the next step, and the next until all of her is far enough above
me to risk looking back. Only then will she turn the whole strawberry cupcake
of her head. Those big torpedo, Brandy Alexander breasts silhouetted, the
wordless beauty of that professional mouth in full face. "The owner of this
house," Brandy says, "is very old and
supplementing her hormones and still lives here." The
carpet is so thick under my feet I could be climbing
loose dirt. One step after another, loose and sliding and unstable. We, Brandy
and Alfa and me, we've been speaking English
as a second language so long that we've forgotten it as our first. I have no native tongue. We're
eye level with the dirty stones of a dark chandelier. On the other side of the handrail, the
hallway's gray marble floor looks as if
we've climbed a stairway through the
clouds. Step after step. Far away, Alfa's demanding talk goes on about
wine cellars, about kennels for the Russian
wolfhounds. Alfa's constant demand for the realty woman's attention is
as faint as a radio call-in show bouncing
back from outer space. "... the Princess Brandy Alexander," Alfa's warm, dark words float up, "she is probable to
remove her clothes and scream like
the wild horses in even the crowded
restaurants ..." The
queen supreme's voice and the shadow of L'Air du Temps says, "Next
house," her Plumbago lips say, "Alfa will be the mute." "... your breasts," Alfa is telling the realty woman, "you have two of the breasts of a young
woman ..." Not
one native tongue is left among us. Jump
to us being upstairs. Jump
to now anything being possible. After
the realtor is trapped by the blue eyes of Signore Alfa
Romeo, jump to when the real scamming starts. The master
bedroom will always be down the hallway in the direction of the best view. This
master bathroom is paneled in pink mirror, every wall, even the
ceiling. Princess Brandy and I are everywhere, reflected on
every surface. You can see Brandy sitting on the pink counter at one side of the vanity sink, me
sitting at the other side of the sink. One
of us is sitting on each side of all the sinks in all the mirrors. There are just
too many Brandy Alexanders to count, and they're all being the boss of me. They
all open their white calfskin clutch bags, and hundreds of those big
ring-beaded Brandy Alexander hands take out new copies of the Physicians' Desk Reference with its red cover, big as a Bible. All
her hundreds of Burning Blueberry eye shadow eyes look at me from all
over the room. "You
know the drill," all her hundreds of Plumbago mouths
command. Those big hands start pulling open drawers and cabinet
doors. "Remember where you got everything, and put it back exactly where you found it," the
mouths say. "We'll do the drugs first, then the makeup. Now start
hunting." I take
out the first bottle. It's Valium, and I hold the bottle
so all the hundred Brandys can read the label. "Take
what we can get away with," Brandy says, "then get on
to the next bottle." I
shake a few of the little blue pills into my purse pocket
with the other Valiums. The next bottle I find is Darvons. "Honey,
those are heaven in your mouth," all the Brandys look up to peer
at the bottle I'm holding. "Does it look safe to take too many?" The
expiration date on the label is only a month away, and
the bottle is still almost full. I figure we can take about
half. "Here,"
a big ring-beaded hand comes at me from every direction. One hundred big hands come
at me, palm up. "Give Brandy a couple. The princess is having
lower back pain again." I
shake ten capsules out, and a hundred hands toss a thousand
tranquilizers onto the red carpet tongues of those Plumbago mouths. A
suicide load of Darvon slides down into the dark interior of the continents
that make up a world of Brandy Alexander. Inside the next bottle are
the little purple ovals of 2.5-milligram—sized
Premarin. That's
short for Pregnant Mare Urine. That's short for thousands of miserable
horses in North Dakota and Central Canada, forced to stand in cramped
dark stalls with a catheter stuck on them to catch every drop of
urine and only getting let outside to get fucked again. What's funny
is that describes pretty much any good long stay in a
hospital, but that's only been my experience. "Don't
look at me that way," Brandy says. "My not taking
those pills won't bring any baby horses back from the dead." In the
next bottle are round, peach-colored little scored tablets
of 100-milligram Aldactone. Our homeowner must be a junkie for female
hormones. Painkillers
and estrogen are pretty much Brandy's only two food groups, and she
says, "Gimme, gimme, gimme." She snacks on some little pink-coated
Estinyls. She pops a few of the turquoise-blue Estrace tablets.
She's using some
vaginal Premarin as a hand cream when she says, "Miss Kay?" She says, "I can't seem to make a fist, Sweetness. Do you think, maybe you can wrap
things up without me while I lie down?" The
hundreds of me cloned in the pink bathroom mirrors, we check out the
make-up while the princess goes off to cat nap in the cabbage rose and old canopy
bed glory of the master bedroom. I find Darvocets and Percodans and Compazines,
Nembutals and Percocets. Oral estrogens. Anti-androgens. Progestons.
Transdermal estrogen patches. I find none of Brandy's colors, no Rusty
Rose blusher. No Burning Blueberry eye shadow. I find a vibrator with the
dead batteries swollen and leaking acid inside. It's
an old woman who owns this house, I figure. Ignored and aging and
drugged-out old women, older and more invisible to the world every minute,
they must not wear a lot of make-up. Not go out to fun hot spots. Not boogie
to a party froth. My breath smells hot and sour inside my veils, inside
the damp layers of silk and mesh and cotton georgette I lift for the first
time all day; and in the mirrors, I look at the pink reflection of
what's left of my face. Mirror,
mirror on the wall, who's the fairest one of all? The
evil queen was stupid to play Snow White's game. There's an age where a
woman has to move on to another kind of power. Money, for example. Or a
gun. I'm
living the life I love, I tell myself, and loving the life I
live. I tell
myself: I deserved this. This
is exactly what I wanted. CHAPTER THREEUntil I
met Brandy, all I wanted was for somebody to ask me what happened to my
face. "Birds
ate it," I wanted to tell them. Birds
ate my face. But
nobody wanted to know. Then nobody doesn't include Brandy Alexander. Just
don't think this was a big coincidence. We had to meet,
Brandy and me. We had so many things in common. We had close to
everything in common. Besides, it happens fast for some people and slow for some, accidents or gravity, but we all end up mutilated. Most women
know this feeling of being more and more invisible everyday. Brandy was in the hospital for months and
months, and so was I, and there's
only so many hospitals where you can go for major cosmetic surgery. Jump
back to the nuns. The nuns were the worst about always pushing, the nuns
who were nurses. One nun would tell me about some patient on a
different floor who was funny and charming. He was a lawyer and could do magic
tricks with just his hands and a paper napkin. This day nurse was the kind of
nun who wore a white nursing version of her regular nun uniform, and she'd
told this lawyer all about me. This was Sister Katherine. She told him I
was funny and bright, and she said how sweet it would be if the two of us
could meet and fall madly in love. Those
were her words. Halfway
down the bridge of her nose, she'd look at me through wire-framed
glasses, their lenses long and squared the way microscope slides look. Little
broken veins kept the end of her nose red. Rosacea, she called this.
It would be easier to see her living in a gingerbread house
than a convent. Married to Santa Claus instead of God.
The starched apron she wore over her habit was so glaring
white that when I'd first arrived, fresh from my big car accident, I
remembered how all the stains from my blood looked black. They
gave me a pen and paper so I could communicate. They wrapped my head in
dressings, yards of tight gauze holding wads of cotton in place, metal butterfly sutures gripping all over so I wouldn't unravel. They
fingered on a thick layer of antibiotic gel, claustrophobic and toxic under
the wads of cotton. My hair they pulled back,
forgotten and hot under the gauze where I couldn't get at it. The invisible
woman. When Sister Katherine
mentioned this other patient, I wondered if
maybe I'd seen him around, her lawyer, the cute, funny magician. "I
didn't say he was cute," she said. Sister
Katherine said, "He's still a little shy." On
the pad of paper, I wrote: still? "Since his little
mishap," she said and smiled with her eyebrows arched and all her chins
tucked down against her neck. "He wasn't wearing his seatbelt." She said, "His car
rolled right over the top of him." She
said, "That's why he'd be so perfect for you." Early
on, while I was still sedated, somebody had taken the
mirror out of my bathroom. The nurses seemed to steer me away from
polished anything the way they kept the suicides away from knives. The drunks
away from drinks.
The closest I had to a mirror was the television, and it only showed how I used to look. If I
asked to see the police photos from the accident, the
day nurse would tell me, "No." They kept the photos in a
file at the nursing station, and it seemed anybody could
ask to see them except me. This nurse, she'd say, "The
doctor thinks you've suffered enough for the time being." This
same day nurse tried to fix me up with an accountant whose hair and ears
were burned off in a propane blunder. She introduced me to a graduate student
who'd lost his throat and sinuses to a touch of cancer. A window
washer after his three-story tumble head first onto concrete. Those
were all her words, blunder, touch, tumble. The lawyer's mishap. My
big accident. Sister
Katherine would be there to check my vital signs every six hours. To check my
pulse against the sweep second hand on her man's wristwatch, thick and
silver. To wrap the blood pressure cuff around my arm. To check my
temperature, she'd push some kind of electric gun in my ear. Sister
Katherine was the kind of nun who wears a "wedding
ring. And
married people always think love is the answer. Jump
back to the day of my big accident, when everybody was so considerate. The
people, the folks who let me go ahead of them in the emergency room. What the
police insisted. I mean, they gave me this hospital sheet with "Property
of La Paloma Memorial Hospital" printed along the
edge in indelible blue. First they gave me morphine, intravenously.
Then they propped me up on a gurney. I don't remember much of
this, but the day nurse told me about the
police photos. In the
pictures, these big eight-by-ten glossies as nice as anything
in my portfolio. Black and white, the nurse said. But in
these eight-by-tens I'm sitting up on a gurney with my
back against the emergency room wall. The attending nurse
spent ten minutes cutting my dress off with those tiny
operating room manicure scissors. The cutting, I remember. It was my
cotton crepe sundress from Espre. I remember that when I ordered this dress from
the catalogue I almost ordered two, they're so comfortable, loose
with the breeze trying to get inside the arm holes and lift the
hem up around your waist. Then you'd sweat if there wasn't a breeze, and the
cotton crepe stuck on you like eleven herbs and spices, only on you the
dress was almost transparent. You'd walk onto a patio, it was
a great feeling, a million spotlights picking you out of the crowd,
or walk into a restaurant when outside it was ninety degrees, and
everyone would turn and look as if you'd just been awarded
some major distinguished award for a major lifetime achievement. That's
how it felt. I can remember this kind of attention. It always felt
ninety degrees hot. And I remember my
underwear. Sorry,
Mom, sorry, God, but I was wearing just this little patch up front with
an elastic string waist and just one string running down the crack and back around
to the bottom of the patch up front. Flesh-tone. That one
string, the one down the crack, butt floss is what everybody
calls that
string. I wore the patch underwear because of when the cotton crepe sundress goes almost transparent. You just don't plan on ending up in the emergency room
with your dress cut off and
detectives taking your picture, propped
up on a gurney with a morphine drip in one arm and a Franciscan nun
screaming in one ear. "Take your pictures!
Take your pictures, now! She's still losing blood!" No,
really, it was funnier than it sounds. It
got funny when there I was sprawled on this gurney, this
anatomically correct rag doll with nothing but this little
patch on and my face was the way it is now. The
police, they had the nun hold this sheet up over my breasts. It's so they
can take pictures of my face, but the detectives are so embarrassed for me,
being sprawled there topless. Jump
to when they refuse to show me the pictures, one of the detectives says that if
the bullet had been two inches higher, I'd be dead. I couldn't see their point. Two
inches lower, and I'd be deep fried in my spicy cotton
crepe sundress, trying to get the insurance guy to waive
the deductible and replace my car window. Then, I'd be by a swimming pool,
wearing sunblock and telling a couple cute guys how I was driving on the
freeway in Stingray when a rock or I don't know what, but my dri-ver's-side
window just burst. And
the cute guys would say, "Whoa." Jump
to another detective, the one who'd searched my car for
the slug and bone fragments, that stuff, the detective saw
how I'd been driving with the window half open. A car
window, this guy tells me over the eight-by-ten glossies of me wearing a
white sheet, a car window should always be all the way open or shut. He
couldn't remember how many motorists he'd seen decapitated by windows in car
accidents. How
could I not laugh. That
was his word: Motorists. The
way my mouth was, the only sound left I could do was laugh. I couldn't not laugh. Jump to after there were
the pictures, when people stopped looking
at me. My
boyfriend, Manus, came in that evening, after the emergency room, after I'd
been wheeled off on my gur-ney to surgery, after the bleeding had stopped and I
was in a private room. Then Manus showed up.
Manus Kelley who was my fiance until
he saw what was left. Manus sat looking
at the black-and-white glossies of my new face, shuffling and reshuffling them, turning them upside-down and right side up the way you would one of
those mystery pictures where one
minute you have a beautiful woman, but when you look again you have a hag. Manus
says, "Oh, God." Then
says, "Oh, sweet, sweet Jesus." Then says,
"Christ." The first date I ever had
with Manus, I was still living with my
folks. Manus showed me a badge in his wallet. At home, he had a gun. He was a
police detective, and he was really
successful in Vice. This was a May and December thing. Manus was twenty-five and I was eighteen, but we went out. This is the world we live in. We went
sailing one time, and he wore a Speedo, and any smart woman should know
that means bisexual at least. My
best friend, Evie Cottrell, she's a model. Evie says that
beautiful people should never date each other. Together, they just
don't generate enough attention. Evie says there's a whole shift in the beauty
standard when they're together. You can feel this, Evie says. When
both of you are beautiful, neither of you is beautiful.
Together, as a
couple, you're less than the sum of your parts. Nobody
really gets noticed, not any more. Still,
there I was one time, taping this infomercial, one of those long-long
commercials you think will end at any moment because after all it's just a commercial, but it's actually
thirty minutes long. Me and Evie, we're hired to be walking sex furniture to wear tight evening dresses all afternoon and entice the television audience into
buying the Num Num Snack Factory.
Manus comes to sit in the studio audience, and after the shoot he goes,
"Let's go sailing," and I go,
"Sure!" So we went sailing, and I
forgot my sunglasses, so Manus buys me a
pair on the dock. My new sunglasses are the exact same as Manus's
Vuarnets, except mine are made in Korea not
Switzerland and cost two dollars. Three
miles out, I'm walking into deck things. I'm falling down. Manus
throws me a rope, and I miss it. Manus throws me a beer and I miss the beer.
A headache, I get the kind of headache God would smote you with in the
Old Testament. What I don't know is that one of my sunglass lenses is darker
than the other, almost opaque. I'm blind in
one eye because of this lens, and I have no depth perception. Back then I don't know
this, that my perception is so fucked up.
It's the sun, I tell myself, so I just keep wearing the sunglasses and stumbling around blind and in pain. Jump
to the second time Manus visits me in the hospital, he
tells the eight-by-ten glossies of me in my sheet, Property
of La Paloma Memorial Hospital, that I should think about getting back into my
life. I should start making plans. You know, he says, take some
classes. Finish my degree. He
sits next to my bed and holds the photos between us so I
can't see either them or him. On my pad, with my pencil I ask Manus in
writing to show me. "When
I was little, we raised Doberman puppies," he says
from behind the photos. "And when a puppy is about six
months old you get its ears and tail cropped. It's the style
for those dogs. You go to a motel where a man travels
from state to state cutting the ears and tails off thousands of Doberman
puppies or boxers or bull terriers." On my
pad with my pencil, I write: your
point being? And I
wave this in his direction. "The point is whoever
cuts your ears off is the one you'll hate
for the rest of your life," he says. "You don't want your regular veterinarian to do the job so you pay a
stranger." Still
looking at picture after picture, Manus says, "That's the reason I
can't show you these." Somewhere
outside the hospital, in a motel room full of bloody towels with his
tool box of knives and needles, or driving down the highway to his next victim,
or kneeling over a dog, drugged and cut up in a dirty bathtub, is the man a
million dogs must hate. Sitting
next to my bed, Manus says, "You just need to archive
your cover-girl dreams." The
fashion photographer inside my head, yells: Give
me pity. Flash. Give me
another chance. Flash. That's
what I did before the accident. Call me a big liar, but
before the accident I told people I was a college student.
If you tell folks you're a model, they shut down. Your being a model will
mean they're networking with some lower life
form. They start using baby talk. They dumb
down. But if you tell folks you're a college student, folks are so impressed. You can be a student in
anything and not have to know
anything. Just say toxicology or marine
biokinesis, and the person you're talking to will change the subject to himself. If this doesn't
work, mention the neural synapses of embryonic pigeons. It
used to be I was a real college student. I have about sixteen hundred credits
toward an undergraduate degree in personal
fitness training. What I hear from my parents is that I could be a doctor by now. Sorry,
Mom. Sorry,
God. There
was a time when Evie and me went out to dance clubs and bars and men would
wait outside the ladies' room door to catch us. Guys would say they
were casting a television commercial. The guy would give me a business
card and ask what agency I was with. There
was a time when my mom came to visit. My mom smokes, and the first afternoon I came
home from a shoot,
she held out a matchbook and said, "What's the meaning of this?" She
said, "Please tell me you're not as big a slut as your poor
dead brother.” In the
matchbook was a guy's name I didn't know and a telephone number. "This
isn't the only one I found," Mom said. "What are you
running here?" I
don't smoke. I tell her that. These matchbooks pile up because
I'm too polite not to take them and I'm too frugal to just
throw them away. That's why it takes a whole kitchen drawer to hold
them, all these men I can't remember and their telephone numbers. Jump
to no day special in the hospital, just outside the office of the hospital
speech therapist. The nurse was leading me around by my elbow for exercise, and as we came around this one corner, just inside the open
office doorway, boom, Brandy
Alexander was just so there, glorious
in a seated Princess Alexander pose, in an iridescent Vivienne Westwood cat suit changing colors with her
every move. Vogue on
location. The fashion photographer
inside my head, yelling: Give
me wonder, baby. Flash. Give me amazement. Flash. The speech therapist said,
"Brandy, you can raise the pitch of your voice if you raise your laryngeal
cartilage. It's that bump in your throat you
feel going up as you sing ascending
scales." She said, "If you can keep your voice-box raised high in your throat, your voice should
stay between a G and a middle C. That's about 160 Hertz." Brandy
Alexander and the way she looked turned the rest of the world into virtual reality. She
changed color from every new angle. She
turned green with my one step. Red
with my next. She turned silver and gold and then she was dropped behind us, gone. "Poor,
sad misguided thing," Sister Katherine said, and she
spat on the concrete floor. She looked at me craning my
neck to see back down the hall, and she asked if I had any
family. I
wrote: yeah, there's my gay brother but he's dead from
AIDS. And
she says, "Well, that's for the best, then, isn't it?" Jump
to the week after Manus's last visit, last meaning final,
when Evie drops by the hospital. Evie looks at the glossies
and talks to God and Jesus Christ. "You
know," Evie tells me across a stack of Vogues, and Glamour
magazines in her lap she brings me, "I talked to the agency and they said
that if we re-do your portfolio they'll
consider taking you back for hand work." Evie
means a hand model, modeling cocktail rings and diamond tennis bracelets and shit. Like I
want to hear this. I can't talk. All I
can eat is liquids. Nobody
will look at me. I'm invisible. All I
want is somebody to ask me what happened. Then, I'll get on with my life. Evie
tells the stack of magazines, "I want you to come live with me at my house
when you get out." She unzips her canvas bag on the edge of my bed and goes
into it with both hands. Evie says, "It'll be fun. You'll
see. I hate living all by my lonesome." And
says, "I've already moved your things into my spare
bedroom." Still
in her bag, Evie says, "I'm on my way to a shoot. Any chance you have any
agency vouchers you can lend me?" On my
pad with my pencil, I write: is
that my sweater you're wearing? And I
wave the pad in her face. "Yeah,"
she says, "but I knew you wouldn't mind." I
write: but
it's a size six. I
write: and
you're a size nine. "Listen,"
Evie says. "My call is for two o'clock. Why don't I stop by some time when
you're in a better mood?" Talking
to her watch, she says, "I'm so sorry things had to go
this way. It wasn't all of it anybody's fault.” Every
day in the hospital goes like this: Breakfast.
Lunch. Dinner. Sister Katherine falls in between. On television is one
network running nothing but infomercials
all day and all night, and there we are, Evie and me, together. We got a raft
of bucks. For the snack factory
thing, we do these big celebrity spokesmodel smiles, the ones where you make your face a big space heater.
We're wearing these sequined dresses that when you get them under a spotlight,
the dress flashes like a million reporters taking your picture. So glamorous.
I'm standing there in this twenty-pound dress, doing this big smile and dropping animal wastes into the
Plexiglas funnel on top of the Num
Num Snack Factory. This thing just
poops out little canapes like crazy, and Evie has to wade out into the studio audience and get folks to
eat the canapes. Folks
will eat anything to get on television. Then,
off camera, Manus goes, "Let's go sailing." And I
go, "Sure." It was
so stupid, my not knowing what was happening all along. Jump
to Brandy on a folding chair just inside the office of the
speech therapist, shaping her fingernails with the scratch
pad from a book of matches. Her long legs could squeeze a motorcycle in half, and the legal
minimum of her is shrink wrapped in leopard-print
stretch terry just screaming
to get out. The
speech therapist says, "Keep your glottis partially open
as you speak. It's the way Marilyn Monroe sang "Happy Birthday" to
President Kennedy. It makes your breath bypass your vocal chords for a more
feminine, helpless quality." The
nurse leads me past in my cardboard slippers, my tight bandages and deep funk,
and Brandy Alexander looks up at the last possible instant and
winks. God should be able to wink that good. Like somebody
taking your picture. Give me joy. Give me fun. Give me love. Flash. Angels
in heaven should blow kisses the way Brandy Alexander does and lights
up the rest of my week. Back in my room, I write: who is
she? "No
one you should have any truck with," the nurse says.
"You'll have problems enough as it is." but
who is she? I write. "If
you can believe it," the nurse says, "that one is someone
different every week." It's
after that Sister Katherine starts matchmaking. To save
me from Brandy Alexander, she offers me the lawyer without
a nose. She offers a mountain climbing dentist whose fingers and facial
features are eaten down to little hard shining bumps by frostbite. A missionary
with dark patches of some tropical fungus just under his skin. A mechanic
who leaned over a battery the moment it exploded and the acid left his lips and
cheeks gone and his yellow teeth showing in a permanent snarl. I look at the nun's wedding
ring and write: i
guess you got the last really buff guy. The
whole time I was in the hospital, no way could I fall in love. I just couldn't go there yet.
Settle for less. I didn't want to process through anything. I didn't want to pick up any pieces. Lower my expectations. Get on
with my less-than life. I didn't want to feel better about being still alive. Start compensating. I just wanted my
face fixed, if that was possible,
which it wasn't. When it's time to
reintroduce me to solid foods, their words
again, it's pureed chicken and strained carrots. Baby foods. Everything mashed or pulverized or crushed. You
are what you eat. The
nurse brings me the personal classified ads from a newsletter. Sister
Katherine peers down her nose and through
her glasses to read: Guys seeking slim, adventurous girls for fun and romance. And, yes, it's true, not one single guy
specifically excludes hideous mutilated girls with growing medical bills. Sister
Katherine tells me, "These men you can write to in
prison don't need to know how you really look." It's
just too much trouble to try and explain my feelings to her in writing. Sister Katherine reads me
the singles columns while I spoon up my
roast beef. She offers arsonists. Burglars. Tax cheats. She says, "You
probably don't want to date a rapist, not
right off. Nobody's that desperate." Between
the lonely men behind bars for armed robbery and second-degree
manslaughter, she stops to ask what's the matter. She takes my hand and talks to
the name on my plastic bracelet, such a hand model I am already, cocktail
rings, plastic I.D. bracelets so beautiful even a bride of Christ
can't take her eyes off them. She says, "What're you
feeling?" This
is hilarious. She
says, "Don't you want to fall in love?" The photographer in my head
says: Give me patience. Flash. Give
me control. Flash. The
situation is I have half a face. Inside
my bandages, my face still bleeds tiny little spots of
blood onto the wads of cotton. One doctor, the one making rounds every morning
who checks my dressing, he says my wound is
still weeping. That's his word. I
still can't talk. I have
no career. I can
only eat baby food. Nobody will ever look at me like I've won a big
prize ever again. nothing,
I write on my pad. nothing's
wrong. "You
haven't mourned," Sister Katherine says. "You need to have a good cry and
then get on with your life. You're being too
calm about this." I
write: don't make
me laugh, my face, I write, the doctor sez my
wound will weep. Still,
at least somebody had noticed. This whole time, I was calm. I was the picture
of calm. I never, never panicked. I saw my
blood and snot and teeth splashed all over the dashboard the moment after the accident, but hysteria is impossible without an audience. Panicking
by yourself is the same as laughing
alone in an empty room. You feel
really silly. The
instant the accident happened, I knew I would die if I didn't take the next
exit off the freeway, turn right on Northwest Gower, go twelve blocks, and turn
into the La Paloma Memorial Hospital Emergency Room parking lot. I parked. I took my
keys and my bag and I walked. The glass doors
slid aside before I could see myself reflected
in them. The crowd inside, all the people waiting with broken legs and choking babies, they all slid aside, too, when they saw me. After that, the intravenous
morphine. The tiny operating room manicure scissors cut my dress up. The
flesh-tone little patch panties. The police
photos. The detective, the one who
searched my car for bone fragments, the guy
who'd seen all those people get their heads cut off in half-open car window's,
he comes back one day and says there's nothing left to find. Birds, seagulls,
maybe magpies, too. They got into the car where it was parked at the hospital,
through the broken window. The
magpies ate all of what the detective calls the soft tissue
evidence. The bones they probably carried away. "You
know, miss," he says, "to break them on rocks. For the
marrow." On the
pad, with the pencil, I write: ha, ha, ha. Jump
to just before my bandages come off, when a speech therapist
says I should get down on my knees and thank God for leaving my
tongue in my head, unharmed. We sit in her cinderblock office with half the room
filled by her steel
desk between us, and the therapist, she teaches me how a ventriloquist makes a dummy talk. You see, the ventriloquist
can't let you see his mouth move. He can't really use his lips, so he presses his tongue against the roof of
his mouth to make words. Instead
of a window, the therapist has a poster of a kitten
covered in spaghetti above the words: Accentuate
the Positive She
says that if you can't make a certain sound without using your lips, substitute
a similar sound, the therapist says; for
instance, use the sound eth instead of the sound eff. The
context in which you use the sound will make you understandable. "I'd
rather be thishing," the therapist says. then
go thishing, I write. thank
you. And
then I ran away. This is after my new cotton crepe sundress
arrives from Espre. Sister Katherine stood over me all morning with a curling
iron until my hair was this big butter creme frosting hairdo, this big
off-the-face hairdo. Then Evie brought some make up and did my eyes.
I put on my spicy new dress and couldn't wait to start sweating.
This whole summer, I hadn't seen a mirror or if I did I never realized the
reflection was me. I hadn't seen the police photos. When Evie and Sister
Katherine were done, I say, "De foil iowa fog geoff." And
Evie says, "You're welcome." Sister
Katherine says, "But you just ate lunch." It's
clear enough, nobody understands me here. I say,
"Kong wimmer nay pee golly." And
Evie says, "Yeah, these are your shoes, but I'm not hurting
them any." And
Sister Katherine says, "No, no mail yet, but we can write
to prisoners after you've had your nap, dear." They
left. And. I left, alone. And. How bad could it be, my
face? And
sometimes being mutilated can work to your advantage. All those
people now with piercings and tattoos and brandings and scarification . . .
What I mean is, attention is attention. Going
outside is the first time I feel I've missed something.
I mean, a whole summer had just disappeared. All those pool parties and
lying around on metal-flake speed-flesh-tone
lumps of ice in the freezer bin. I dig around until I find the biggest turkey, and I heft it up baby style in
its yellow plastic netting. I haul myself up to the
front of the store, right through the check
stands, and nobody stops me. Nobody's even looking. They're all reading those tabloid newspapers as if there's hidden gold there. "Sejgfn
di ofo utnbg," I say. "Nei wucj iswisn sdnsud." Nobody
looks. "EVSF
UYYB IUH," I say in my best ventriloquist voice. Nobody
even talks. Maybe just the clerks talk. Do you have two pieces of I.D.?
they're asking people writing checks. "Fgjrn
iufnv si vuv," I say. "Xidi cniwuw sis sacnc!" Then
it is, it's right then a boy says, "Look!" Everybody who's not looking
and not talking stops breathing. The
little boy says, "Look Mom, look over there! That monster's stealing
food!" Everybody
gets all shrunken up with embarrassment. All their heads drop down into their
shoulders the way they'd look on crutches. They're reading
tabloid headlines harder than ever. Monster
Girl Steals Festive Holiday Bird And there I am, deep fried
in my cotton crepe dress, a twenty-five
pound turkey in my arms, the turkey sweating, my dress almost transparent. My nipples are rock kind is wearing this sleeveless Versace kind of
tank dress with this season's
overwhelming feel of despair and corrupt
resignation. Body conscious yet humiliated. Buoyant but crippled. The queen supreme is the most
beautiful anything I've ever seen so
I just vogue there to watch from the
doorway. "Men,"
the therapist says, "stress the adjective when they
speak." The therapist says, "For instance, a man would say, 'You are so attractive,
today'." Brandy
is so attractive you could chop her head off and put it on blue velvet in the
window at Tiffany's and somebody would buy it for a million dollars. "A woman would say,
'You are so attractive, today'," the therapist says. "Now, you, Brandy. You say it. Stress the modifier, not the adjective." Brandy
Alexander looks her Burning Blueberry eyes at me in the doorway and
says, "Posing girl, you are so Godawful ugly. Did you let an
elephant sit on your face or what?" Brandy's
voice, I barely hear what she says. At that instant, I just adore
Brandy so much. Everything about her feels as good as being beautiful and
looking in a mirror. Brandy is my instant royal family. My
only everything to live for. I go,
"Cfoieb svns ois," and I pile the cold, wet turkey into
the speech therapist's lap, her sitting pinned under twenty-five
pounds of dead meat in her roll-around leather desk chair. From
closer down the hallway, Sister Katherine is yelling, "Yoo-hoo!" "Mriuvn
wsi sjaoi aj," I go, and wheel the therapist and her
chair into the hallway. I say, "Jownd wine sm fdo dcncw." The
speech therapist, she's smiling up at me and says, "You
don't have to thank me, it's just my job is all." The
nun's arrived with the man and his I.V. stand, a new man with no skin or
crushed features or all his teeth bashed out, a man who'd be perfect for me. My
one true love. My deformed or mutilated or diseased prince charming.
My unhappily ever after. My hideous future. The monstrous rest of my life. I slam
the office door and lock myself inside with Brandy Alexander. There's the
speech therapist's notebook on her desk, and I grab it. save
me, I write, and wave it in Brandy's face. I write: please. Jump
to Brandy Alexander's hands. This always starts with her hands. Brandy
Alexander puts a hand out, one of those hairy pig-knuckled hands with the veins
of her arm crowded and squeezed to the elbow with bangle bracelets of
every color. Just by herself, Brandy Alexander is such a shift
in the beauty standard that no one thing stands out. Not
even you. "So, girl,"
Brandy says. "What all happened to your face?" Birds. I
write: birds,
birds ate my face. And I
start to laugh. Brandy doesn't laugh.
Brandy says, "What's that supposed to
mean?" And
I'm still laughing. i was
driving on the freeway, I write. And
I'm still laughing. someone
shot a 30-caliber bullet from a rifle. the
bullet tore my entire jawbone off my face. Still
laughing. i came
to the hospital, I write. i did
not die. Laughing. they
couldn't put my jaw back because seagulls had eaten it. And I
stop laughing. "Girl,
your handwriting is terrible," Brandy says. "Now tell me what else." And I
start to cry. what
else, I write, is i have to eat baby food. i can't talk. i have
no career. i
have no home. my
fiance left me. nobody
will look at me. all my
clothes, my best friend ruined them. I'm
still crying. "What
else?" Brandy says. "Tell me everything." a boy,
I write. a
little boy in the supermarket called me a monster. Those
Burning Blueberry eyes look right at me the way no eyes have all summer.
"Your perception is all fucked up," Brandy says. "All you can
talk about is trash that's already happened." She
says, "You can't base your life on the past or the present." Brandy
says, "You have to tell me about your future." Brandy
Alexander, she stands up on her gold lame leg-hold trap shoes. The queen
supreme takes a jeweled compact out of her clutch bag and snaps the compact
open to look at the mirror inside. "That
therapist," those Plumbago lips say, "the speech therapist can be so
stupid about these situations." The
big jeweled arm muscles of Brandy sit me down in the seat still hot from
her ass, and she holds the compact so I can see inside. Instead of face powder,
it's full of white capsules. Where there should be a mirror, there's a close
up photo of Brandy Alexander smiling and looking terrific. "They're
Vicodins, dear," she says. "It's the Marilyn Monroe
school of medicine where enough of any drug will cure any
disease." She
says, "Dig in. Help yourself." The
thin and eternal goddess that she is, Brandy's picture
smiles up at me over a sea of painkillers. This is how I met Brandy Alexander.
This is how I found the strength not to get on with my former life. This
is how I found the courage not to pick up the same old pieces. "Now,"
those Plumbago lips say, "You are going to tell me your story like you
just did. Write it all down. Tell that story over and over. Tell me your sad-assed
story all night." That Brandy queen points a long bony finger
at me. "When you understand," Brandy says, "that
what you're telling is
just a story. It isn't happening anymore. When you realize the story you're
telling is just words, when you can just crumble it up and throw your past in
the trashcan," Brandy says, "then we'll figure out who you're going to be.” CHAPTER FOURJump to
the Canadian border. Jump
to the three of us in a rented Lincoln Town Car, waiting to drive south
from Vancouver, British Columbia, into the United States, waiting, with Signore
Romeo in the driver's seat, waiting with Brandy next to him in the
front, waiting, with me alone in the back. "The
police have microphones," Brandy tells us. The
plan is if we make it through the border, we'll drive south to Seattle
where there are nightclubs and dance clubs where go-go boys and go-go girls
will line up to buy the pockets of my purse clean. We have to be quiet because
the police, they have microphones on both sides of the border, United
States and Canadian. This way, they can
listen in on people waiting to cross. We could have Cuban
cigars. Fresh fruit. Diamonds. Diseases. Drugs, Brandy says. Brandy, she
tells us to shut up a mile before the border, and we wait in line, quiet. Brandy
unwinds the yards and yards of brocade scarf around her head. Brandy,
she shakes her hair down her back and ties the scarf over her shoulders to
hide her torpedo cleavage. Brandy switches to simple gold earrings. She takes
off her pearls and puts on a little chain with a gold cross. This is a moment
before the border guard. "Your
nationalities?" the border-guard guy sitting inside
his little window, behind his computer terminal with his clipboard and his blue
suit behind his mirrored sunglasses, and behind his gold badge says. "Sir,"
Brandy says, and her new voice is as bland and drawled out as grits without
salt or butter. She says, "Sir, we are citizens of the United States of
America, what used to be called the greatest country on earth until the
homosexuals and child pornographers— "Your
names?" says the border guy. Brandy
leans across Alfa to look up at the border guy, "My husband,"
she says, "is an innocent man." "Your
name, please," he says, no doubt looking up our license
plate, finding it's a rental car, rented in Billings, Montana,
three weeks ago, maybe even finding the truth about who we really are.
Maybe finding bulletin after bulletin from all over western Canada about
three nut cases stealing drugs at big houses up for sale. Maybe all
this is spooling onto his computer screen, maybe none of it. You never know. "I
am married," Brandy is almost yelling to get his attention.
"I am the wife of the Reverend Scooter Alexander," she says,
still half laid across Alfa's lap. "And
this," she says and draws the invisible line from her smile to Alfa,
"this is my son-in-law, Seth Thomas." Her big hand flies toward me in
the backseat. "This," she says, "is my daughter, Bubba-Joan." Some
days, I hate it when Brandy changes our lives without warning. Sometimes, twice
in one day, you have to live up to a new identity. A new name. New
relationships. Handicaps. It's hard to remember who I started
this road trip being. No
doubt, this is the kind of stress the constantly mutating AIDS virus must
feel. "Sir?"
the border guy says to Seth, formerly Alfa Romeo, formerly Chase
Manhattan, formerly Nash Rambler, formerly Wells Fargo, formerly
Eberhard Faber. The guard says, "Sir, are you bringing any purchases back with
you into the United States?" My
pointed little toe of my shoe reaches under the front seat
and gooses my new husband. The details of everything have us surrounded.
The mud flats left by low tide are just over there, with little waves
arriving one after another. The flower beds on our other side are planted to spell out words you can
only read from a long ways off. Up close,
it's just so many red and yellow wax begonias. "Don't
tell me you've never watched our Christian Healing
Network'?" Brandy says. She fiddles with the little gold
cross at her throat. "If you just watched one show, you'd
know that God in his wisdom has made my son-in-law a mute, and he cannot
speak." The
border guy keyboards some quick strokes. This could be
"CRIME" he's typed. Or "DRUGS." Or SHOOT. It
could be SMUGGLERS. Or ARREST. "Not
a word," Brandy whispers next to Seth's ear, "You talk
and in Seattle, I'll change you into Harvey Wallbanger." The
border guy says, "To admit you to the United States,
I'm going to have to see your passports, please." Brandy
licks her lips wet and shining, her eyes moist and bright. Her brocade
scarf slips low to reveal her cleavage as she looks up at the border guy and
says, "Would you excuse us a moment." Brandy
sits back in her own seat, and Seth's window hums all the way up. Brandy's
big torpedoes inhale big and then exhale. "Don't anybody panic," she says,
and pops her lipstick open. She makes a kiss in the rearview mirror
and pokes the lipstick around the edge of her big Plumbago mouth, trembling
so much that her one big hand has to hold her lipstick hand steady. "I
can get us back into the States," she says, "but I'm going
to need a condom and a breath mint." Around
her lipstick she says, "Bubba-Joan, be a sweetheart
and hand me up one of those Estraderms, will you?" Seth
gives her the mint and a condom. She
says, "Let's guess how long it takes him to find a week's
supply of girl juice soaking into his ass." She
pops the lipstick shut and says, "Blot me, please." I
hand her up a tissue and an estrogen patch. CHAPTER FIVEJump way back to one day
outside Brumbach's Department Store where
people are stopped to watch somebody's dog
lift its leg on the Nativity scene, Evie and me included. Then the dog sits
and rolls back on its spine, licks its own lumpy dog-flavored butthole, and
Evie elbows me. People applaud and throw money. Then we're inside
Brumbach's, testing lipsticks on the back of our hands, and I say, "Why is
it dogs lick themselves?" "Just
because they can . . . ," Evie says. "They're not like
people." This
is just after we've killed an eight-hour day in modeling
school, looking at our skin in mirrors, so I'm like, "Evie, do not even kid yourself." My
passing grade in modeling school was just because Evie'd
dragged down the curve. She'd wear shades of lipstick you'd expect to see
around the base of a penis. She'd wear so much eye shadow you'd think she was
a product testing animal. Just from her hair spray, there's a hole
in the ozone over the Taylor Robberts Modeling Academy. This
is way back before my accident when I thought my life was so good. At
Brumbach's Department Store, where we'd kill time after class, the whole
ninth floor is furniture. Around the edges
are display rooms: bedrooms, dining rooms, living rooms, dens,
libraries, nurseries, family rooms, china hutches,
home offices, all of them open to the inside of the store. The invisible fourth
wall. All of them perfect, clean and
carpeted, full of tasteful furniture, and hot with track lighting and too many lamps. There's the hush
of white noise from hidden speakers.
Alongside the rooms, shoppers pass in
the dim linoleum aisles that run between the display rooms and the down-lighted islands that fill the center of the floor, conversation pits and
sofa suites grouped on area rugs with coordinated floor lamps arid fake
plants. Quiet islands of light and color in the darkness teeming with
strangers. "It's
just like a sound stage," Evie would say. "The little
sets all ready for somebody to shoot the next episode. The
studio audience watching you from the dark.” Customers
would stroll by and there would be Evie and me sprawled on a pink
canopy bed, calling for our horoscopes on her cell phone. We'd be curled on a
tweedy sofa sectional, munching popcorn and watching our soaps on a console
color television. Evie -will pull up her T-shirt to show me
another new belly button piercing. She'll pull down the armhole of her
blouse and show me the scars from her implants. "It's
too lonely at my real house," Evie would say, "And I hate
how I don't feel real enough unless people are watching." She
says, "I don't hang around Brumbach's for privacy." At
home in my apartment I'd have Manus with his magazines. His guy-on-guy
porno magazines he had to buy for his job, he'd say. Over breakfast
every morning, he'd show me glossy pictures of guys self-sucking. Curled up
with their elbows hooked behind their knees and craning
their necks to choke on themselves, each guy would be lost in
his own little closed circuit. You can bet almost every
guy in the world's tried this. Then Manus would tell me,
"This is what guys want." Give
me romance. Flash. Give
me denial. Each
little closed loop of one guy flexible enough or with a dick so big he doesn't
need anybody else in the world, Manus would point his toast at these pictures
and tell me, "These guys don't need to put up with jobs or relationships."
Manus would just chew, staring at each magazine. Forking up his scrambled egg
whites, he'd say, "You could live and die this way." Then
I'd go downtown to the Taylor Robberts Modeling Academy to get myself perfected. Dogs
will lick their butts. Evie will self-mutilate. All this navel
gazing. At home, Evie had nobody except she had a ton of family
money. The first time we rode a city bus to Brumbach's, she offered the driver
her credit card and asked for a window seat. She was worried her
carry-on was
too big. Me with
Manus or her alone, you don't know who of us had it worse at home. But at
Brumbach's, Evie and me, we'd cat nap in any of the dozen perfect
bedrooms. We'd stuff cotton between our toes and paint our nails in
chintz-covered club chairs. Then we'd study our Taylor Robberts modeling
textbook at a long polished dining table. "Here's
the same as those fakey reproductions of natural habitats they build at
zoos," Evie would say. "You know, those concrete polar ice caps and those
rainforests made of welded pipe trees holding sprinklers." Every
afternoon, Evie and me, we'd star in our own personal unnatural
habitat. The clerks would sneak off to find sex in the men's room. We'd all soak up
attention in our own little matinee life. All's
I remember from Taylor Robberts is to lead with my pelvis when I walk. Keep
your shoulders back. To model different-sized products, they'd tell
you to draw an invisible sight line from yourself to the item. For
toasters, draw a line through the air from your smile to the
toaster. For a stove, draw the line from your breasts. For a
new car, start the invisible line from your vagina. What it boils down to
is professional modeling means getting paid to overreact to stuff like
rice cakes and new shoes. We'd
drink diet colas on a big pink bed at Brumbach's. Or sit
at a vanity, using contouring powder to change the shape
of our faces while the faint outline of people watched us from the
darkness a few feet away. Maybe the track lights would flash off somebody's
glasses. With our every little move getting attention, every gesture, everything
we said, it's easy to pick up on the rush you'd get. "It's
so safe and peaceful, here," Evie'd say, smoothing the
pink satin comforter and fluffing the pillows. "Nothing very bad
could ever happen to you here. Not like at school. Or at home." Total
strangers would stand there with their coats on, watching us. The same's
those talk shows on television, it's so easy to be honest with a big enough
audience. You can say anything if enough people will listen. "Evie,
honey," I'd say. "There's lots worse models in our
class. You just need to not have an edge to your blusher."
We'd be looking at ourselves in a vanity mirror, a triple
row of nobodies watching us from behind. "Here,
sweetie," I'd say, and give her a little sponge, "blend." And
Evie would start to cry. Your every emotion goes right over the top with a
big audience. It's either laughter or tears, with no in-between. Those tigers
in zoos, they must just live a big opera all the time. "It's
not just my wanting to be a glamorous fashion model," Evie would
say. "It's when I think of my growing up, I'm so sad." Evie
would choke back her tears. She'd clutch her little sponge and say, "When
I was little, my parents wanted me to be a boy." She'd
say, "I just never want to be that miserable again." Other
times, we'd wear high heels and pretend to slap each other hard across the
mouth because of some guy we both wanted. Some afternoons we'd confess to each
other that we were vampires. "Yeah,"
I'd say. "My parents used to abuse me, too." You had
to play to the crowd. Evie
would turn her fingers through her hair. "I'm getting
my guiche pierced," she'd say. "It's that little ridge of skin
running between your asshole and the bottom of your vagina." I'd go
to flop on the bed, center stage, hugging a pillow and
looking up into the black tangle of ducts and sprinkler
pipes you had to imagine was a bedroom ceiling. "It's
not like they hit me or made me drink satanic blood or anything,"
I'd say. "They just liked my brother more because he was mutilated.” And
Evie would cross to center stage by the Early American nightstand to
upstage me. "You
had a mutilated brother?" she'd say. Somebody
watching us would cough. Maybe the light would glint off a wrist-watch. "Yeah,
he was pretty mutilated, but not in a sexy way. Still, there's a happy
ending," I'd say. "He's dead now." And
really intense, Evie would say, "Mutilated how? Was he
your only brother? Older or younger?" And
I'd throw myself off the bed and shake my hair. "No, it's too
painful." "No,
really," Evie would say. "I'm not kidding." "He
was my big brother by a couple years. His face was all
exploded in a hairspray accident, and you'd think my folks
totally forgot they even had a second child," I'd dab my eyes
on the pillow shams and tell the audience. "So I just
kept working harder and harder for them to love me." Evie
would be looking at nothing and saying, "Oh, my shit! Oh,
my shit!" And her acting, her delivery would be so
true it would just bury mine. "Yeah,"
I'd say. "He didn't have to work at it. It was so easy.
Just by being all burned and slashed up with scars, he
hogged all the attention." Evie
would go close-up on me and say, "So where's he now,
your brother, do you even know?" "Dead,"
I'd say, and I'd turn to address the audience. "Dead of AIDS." And
Evie says, "How sure are you?” And
I'd say, "Evie!" "No,
really," she'd say. "I'm asking for a reason." "You
just don't joke about AIDS," I'd say. And
Evie'd say, "This is so next-to-impossible." This is
how easy the plot gets pumped out of control. With all these shoppers
expecting real drama, of course, I think Evie's just making stuff up. "Your
brother," Evie says, "did you really see him die? For real? Or did
you see him dead? In a coffin, you know, with music. Or a death certificate?" All
those people were watching. "Yeah,"
I say. "Pretty much." Like I'd want to get caught
lying? Evie's
all over me. "So you saw him dead or you didn't?" All
those people watching. "Dead
enough." Evie
says, "Where?" "This
is very painful," I say, and I cross stage right to the living room. Evie
chases after me, saying, "Where?" All
those people watching. "The
hospice," I say. "What
hospice?" I keep
crossing stage right to the next living room, the next
dining room, the next bedroom, den, home office, with Evie dogging me and
the audience hovering along next to us. "You
know how it is," I say. "If you don't see a gay guy for so
long, it's a pretty safe bet." And
Evie says, "So you don't really know that he's dead?" We're
sprinting through the next bedroom, living room, dining room,
nursery, and I say, "It's AIDS, Evie. Fade to black." And
then Evie just stops and says, "Why?" And the
audience has started to abandon me in a thousand directions. Because
I really, really, really want my brother to be dead. Because my folks
want him dead. Because life is just easier if he's dead. Because this
way, I'm an only child. Because it's my turn, damn it. My turn. And
the crowd of shoppers is bailed, leaving just us and the
security cameras instead of God watching to catch us when we fuck up. "Why
is this such a big deal to you?" I say. And
Evie's already wandering away from me, leaving me alone and saying,
"No reason." Lost in her own little closed circuit. Licking her own
butthole, Evie says, "It's nothing." Saying, "Forget it.” CHAPTER SIXOn the
planet Brandy Alexander, the universe is run by a fairly elaborate system
of gods and she-gods. Some evil. Some are ultimate goodness. Marilyn Monroe,
for example. Then there's Nancy Reagan and Wallis Warfield Simpson.
Some of the gods and she-gods are dead. Some are alive. A lot are
plastic surgeons. The
system changes. Gods and she-gods come and go and leapfrog each other for a
change of status. Abraham
Lincoln is in his heaven to make our car a floating bubble of
new-car—smelling air: driving as smooth as advertising copy. These days, Brandy
says Marlene Dietrich is in charge of the weather. Now is the autumn
of our ennui. We're carried down Interstate 5 under gray skies, inside
the blue casket interior of a rented Lincoln Town Car. Seth is driving. This is
how we always sit, with Brandy up front and me in the back. Three
hours of scenic beauty between Vancouver, British Columbia,
and Seattle is what we're driving through. Asphalt and internal
combustion carry us and the Lincoln Town Car south. Traveling
this way, you might as well be watching the world on television. The
electric windows are hummed all the way up so the planet Brandy Alexander has
an atmosphere of warm, still, silent blue. It's an even 70
degrees Fahrenheit, with the whole outside world of trees and rocks
scrolling by in miniature behind curved glass. Live by
satellite. We're the little world of Brandy Alexander rocketing past it all. Driving,
driving, Seth says, "Did you ever think about life as a metaphor for
television?" Our
rule is that when Seth's driving, no radio. What happens is a Dionne
Warwick song comes on, and Seth starts to cry so hard, crying those big
Estinyl tears, shaking with those big Provera sobs. If Dionne
Warwick comes on singing a Burt Bacharach song, we just have to pull
over or it's sure we'll get car wrecked. The
tears, the way his dumpling face is lost the chiseled
shadows that used to pool under his brow and cheekbones,
the way Seth's hand will sneak up and tweak his nipple through his shirt
and his mouth will drop open and his eyes roll backward, it's the hormones. The
conjugated estrogens, the Premarin, the estradiol, the ethinyl estradi-ol,
they've all found their way into Seth's diet cola. Of course, there's the
danger of liver damage at his current daily overdose levels. There could already be
liver damage or cancer or blood clots, thrombosis if you're a doctor,
but I'm willing to take that chance. Sure, it's all just for fun. Watching
for his breasts to develop. Seeing his macho babe-magnet swagger go to
fat and him taking naps in the afternoon. All that's great, but his being
dead would let me move on to explore other interests. Driving,
driving, Seth says, "Don't you think that somehow television makes
us God?" This
introspection is new. His beard growth is lightened up. It must be the
antiandrogens choking back his testosterone. The water retention, he can
ignore. The moodiness. A tear slips out of one eye in the rearview
mirror and rolls down his face. "Am
I the only one who cares about these issues?" he says.
"Am I the only one here in this car who feels anything real?" Brandy's
reading a paperback book. Most times, Brandy is reading some plastic surgeon's glossy
hard-sell brochure about vaginas complete
with color pictures showing the picture-perfect
way a urethra should be aligned to ensure a downward stream of urine. Other pictures show how a top-quality clitoris should be hooded. These are
five-figure, ten-and
twenty-thousand-dollar vaginas, better than the real thing, and most
days Brandy will pass the pictures around. Jump to
three weeks before, when we were in a big house in Spokane, Washington.
We were in a South Hill granite chateau with Spokane spread out under the
bathroom windows. I was shaking Percodans out of their brown bottle and
into my purse pocket for Percodans. Brandy Alexander, she was
digging around under the bathroom sink for a clean emery board when she
found this paperback book. Now
all the other gods and she-gods have been eclipsed by some new deity. Jump
back to Seth looking at my breasts in the rearview mirror.
"Television really does make us God," he says. Give
me tolerance. Flash. Give
me understanding. Flash. Even
after all these weeks on the road with me, Seth's glorious
vulnerable blue eyes still won't meet my eyes. His new
wistful introspection, he can ignore. The way the orals
have already side-effected his eyes, steepened the corneal
curve so he can't wear his contact lenses without them
popping out. This has to be the conjugated estrogens in his
orange juice every morning. He can ignore all that. This
has to be the Androcur in his iced tea at lunch, but he'll
never figure it out. He'll never catch me. Brandy
Alexander, her nylon stocking feet up on the dashboard, the queen supreme's
still reading her paperback. "When
you watch daytime dramas," Seth tells me, "you can look in on
anybody. There's a different life on every channel, and almost every hour the lives
change. It's the same as those live video Web sites. You can
watch the whole world without it knowing." For
three weeks, Brandy's been reading that book. "Television
lets you spy on even the sexy parts of everybody's life," Seth says.
"Doesn't it make sense?" Maybe,
but only if you're on 500 milligrams of micronized progesterone every day. A few
minutes of scenery go by behind glass. Just some towering mountains, old
dead volcanoes, mostly the kind of stuff you find outside. Those timeless
natural nature themes. Raw materials at their rawest. Unrefined. Unimproved
rivers. Poorly maintained mountains. Filth. Plants growing in dirt.
Weather. "And
if you believe that we really have free will, then you
know that God can't really control us," Seth says. Seth's
hands are off the steering wheel and flutter around to
make his point. "And since God can't control us," he says, "all
God does is watch and change channels when He gets bored." Somewhere
in heaven, you're live on a video Web site for God to surf. Brandycam. Brandy
with her empty leg-hold trap shoes on the floor, Brandy licks an index finger and slow turns a
page. Ancient
aboriginal petroglyphs and junk are just whizzing past. "My
point," Seths says, "is that maybe TV makes you God."
Seth says, "And it could be that all we are is God's television." Standing
on the gravel shoulder are some moose or whatnot just trudging along on all four feet. "Or
Santa Glaus," says Brandy from behind her book. "Santa
Glaus sees everything." "Santa
Glaus is just a story," says Seth. "He's just the opening
band to God. There is no Santa Glaus." Jump
to drug hunting three weeks ago in Spokane, Washington, when Brandy
Alexander flopped down in the master bedroom and started reading. I
took thirty-two Nembutals. Thirty-two Nembutals went in my purse. I don't
eat the merchandise. Brandy was still reading. I tried all the lipsticks
on the back of my hand, and Brandy was still propped on a zillion eyelet lace
pillows in the center of a king-sized waterbed. Still reading. I put
some expired estradiol and a half stick of Plumbago in my bag. The
realtor called up the stairs, was everything all right? Jump to us on Interstate 5
where a billboard goes by. Clean
Food and Family Prices Coming Up at the Karver Stage Stop Cafe Jump
to no Burning Blueberry, no Rusty Rose or Aubergine Dreams in Spokane. He
didn't want to rush us, the realtor called up the stairs,
but was there anything we needed to know? Did we have any questions about
anything? I
stuck my head in the master bedroom, and the water-bed's white duvet held a
reading Brandy Alexander that was dead for as much as she was breathing. Oh,
clipped lilac satin of the beaded rice pearl hemline. Oh,
layered amber cashmere trimmed in faceted topaz marabou. Oh, slithering underwired
free-range mink bolero. We
had to go. Brandy
clutched her paperback open against her straight-up torpedo boob job. The Rusty Rose
face pillowed in auburn hair and eyelet lace pillow shams, the aubergine
eyes had the dilated look of a Thorazine overdose. First
thing I want to know is what drug she's taken. The
paperback cover showed a pretty blonde babe. Thin as a spaghetti
strap. With a pretty, thin little smile. The babe's hair was a satellite photo of
Hurricane Blonde just off the west coast of her face. The face
was a Greek she-god with great lash, big eyeliner eyes the same as
Betty and Veronica and all the other Archie gals had at Riverdale
High. White pearls are wrapped up her arms and around her neck. What could be diamonds
sparkle here and there. The
paperback cover said Miss Rona. Brandy
Alexander, her leg-hold trap shoes were getting dirt all over the
waterbed's white duvet, and Brandy said, "I've found out who the real God
is." The
realtor was ten seconds away. Jump
to all the wonders of nature blurring past us, rabbits,
squirrels, plunging waterfalls. That's the worst of it. Gophers digging
subterranean dens underground. Birds nesting
in nests. "The
Princess B. A. is God," Seth tells me in the rearview
mirror. Jump
to where the Spokane realtor yelled up the stairs. The
people who owned the granite chateau were coming up the driveway. Brandy
Alexander, her eyes dilated, barely breathing in a Spokane waterbed, said
"Rona Barrett. Rona Barrett is my new Supreme Being.” Jump
to Brandy in the Lincoln Town Car saying, "Rona Barrett
is God." All
around us, erosion and insects are just chewing up the
world, never mind people and pollution. Everything biodegrades
with or without you pushing. I check my purse for enough spironolactone for Seth's
afternoon snack. Another billboard goes by: Tasty
Phase Magic Bran—Put Something Good In Your Mouth "In
her autobiography," Brandy Alexander testifies, "in
Miss Rona, published by Bantam Books by arrangement
with the Nash Publishing Corporation on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles,
California . . . ," Brandy takes a deep breath of new-car—smelling air, "...
copyright 1974, Miss Rona tells us how she started life as a fat
little Jewish girl from Queens with a big nose and a mysterious muscle
disease." Brandy says,
"This little fat brunette re-creates herself as a top celebrity
superstar blonde whom a top sex symbol then
begs to let him stick his penis in her just one inch." There
isn't one native tongue left among us. Another
billboard: Next
Sundae, Scream For Tooter's Ice Milk! "What
that woman has gone through," says Brandy. "Right here on page
one hundred and twenty-five, she almost drowns in her own blood! Rona's just
had her nose job. She's only making fifty bucks a story, but this woman saves
enough for a thousand-dollar nose job! It's her first miracle.
So, Rona's in the hospital, post—nose job, with her head
wrapped up like a mummy when a friend comes in and says how Hollywood says she's a lesbian.
Miss Rona, a lesbian! Of course this isn't
true. The woman is a she-god so she screams and screams and screams until an
artery in her throat just
bursts." "Hallelujah,"
Seth says, all teared up again. "And
here," Brandy licks the pad of a big index finger and flips ahead a few
pages, "on page two hundred and twenty-two, Rona is once more rejected by her
sleazy boyfriend of eleven years. She's been coughing for weeks so she
takes a handful of pills and is found semicomatose and
dying. Even the ambulance— "Praise
God," Seth says. Various
native plants are growing just wherever they want. "Seth,
sweetness," Brandy says. "Don't step on my lines."
Her Plumbago lips say, "Even the ambulance driver
thought our Miss Rona would be DOA." Clouds
composed of water vapor are up in the, you know, sky. Brandy
says, "Now, Seth." And
Seth says, "Hallelujah!" The
wild daisies and Indian paintbrush whizzing past are just the genitals of a
different life form. And
Seth says, "So what are you saying?" "In
the book Miss Rona, copyright 1974," Brandy says, "Rona
Barrett—who got her enormous breasts when she was nine years old and
wanted to cut them off with scissors—she tells us in the prologue of her book
that she's like this animal, cut open with all its vital organs
glistening and quivering, you know, like the liver and the large
intestine. Such visuals, everything sort of dripping and pulsating.
Anyway, she could wait for someone to sew her back up, but she knows no one
will. She has to take a needle and thread and sew herself up" "Gross,"
says Seth. "Miss
Rona says nothing is gross," Brandy says. "Miss Rona
says the only way to find true happiness is to risk being completely cut
open." Flocks
of self-absorbed little native birds seem obsessed with
finding food and picking it up with their mouths. Brandy
pulls the rearview mirror around until she finds me reflected and
says, "Bubba-Joan, sweetness?" It's
obvious the native birds have to build their own do-it-yourself
nests using materials they source locally. The little sticks and leaves are
just sort of heaped together. "Bubba-Joan,"
Brandy Alexander says. "Why don't you open up to us with a
story?" Seth
says, "Remember the time in Missoula when the princess got so ripped she
ate Nebalino suppositories wrapped in gold foil because she thought they
were Almond Roca? Talk about your semiconscious DOAs." Pine
trees are producing pine cones. Squirrels and mammals of all sexes spend
all day trying to get laid. Or giving birth live. Or eating their young. Brandy says,
"Seth, sweetness?" "Yes, Mother." What
only looks like bulimia is how bald eagles feed their young. Brandy
says, "Why is it you have to seduce every living thing
you come across?" Another
billboard: Nubby's
Is the BBQ Gotta-Stop for Savory, Flavory Chicken Wings Another
billboard: Dairy
Bite—The Chewing Gum Flavored With the Low-Fat Goodness of Real Cheese Seth
giggles. Seth blushes and twists some of his hair around
a finger. He says, "You make me sound so sexually
compulsive." Mercy.
Next to him, I feel so butch. "Oh,
baby," Brandy says, "You don't remember half of who
you've been with." She says, "Well, I only wish I could
forget it." To my
breasts in the rearview mirror, Seth says, "The only
reason why we ask other people how their weekend was is so we can tell them
about our own weekend." I
figure, a few more days of increased micronized progesterone,
and Seth should pop out his own nice rack of hooters. Side effects I need to
watch for include nausea, vomiting, jaundice, migraine, abdominal
cramps, and dizziness. You try to remember the exact toxicity levels,
but why bother. A sign
goes by saying: Seattle 130 miles. "Come
on, let's see those glistening, quivering innards, Bubba-Joan,"
Brandy Alexander, God and mother of us all, commands. "Tell us a gross personal
story." She
says, "Rip yourself open. Sew yourself shut," and she hands a prescription pad and an Aubergine
Dreams eyebrow pencil to me in the
backseat. CHAPTER SEVENJump
way back to the last Thanksgiving before my accident when I go home to eat dinner with my
folks. This is back when I still had a face so I wasn't so confronted by solid
food. On the dining room table, covering it all over is a tablecloth I don't remember, a really nice dark blue damask with a lace edge. This isn't something I'd
expect my mom to buy so I ask, did somebody give this to her? Mom's
just pulling up to the table and unfolding her blue damask napkin with
everything steaming between us: her, me, and my dad. The sweet potatoes
under their layer of marshmallows. The big brown turkey. The rolls are
inside a quilted cozy sewed to look like a hen. You lift the wings to take a roll out. There's the cut-glass tray of sweet
pickles and celery filled with peanut butter. "Give
what?" my mom says. The
new tablecloth. It's really nice. My
father sighs and plunges a knife into the turkey. "It
wasn't going to be a tablecloth at first," Mom says. "Your
father and I pretty much dropped the ball on our original project." The
knife goes in again and again and my father starts to dismember our dinner. My mom
says, "Do you know what the AIDS memorial quilt is all about?" Jump to
how much I hate my brother at this moment. "I
bought this fabric because I thought it would make a nice
panel for Shane," Mom says. "We just ran into some
problems with what to sew on it." Give
me amnesia. Flash. Give me
new parents. Flash. "Your
mother didn't want to step on any toes," Dad says. He twists a drumstick
off and starts scraping the meat onto a plate. "With gay stuff you
have to be so careful since everything means something in secret code. I
mean, we didn't want to give people the wrong idea." My mom
leans over to scoop yams onto my plate, and says, "Your father
wanted a black border, but black on a field of blue would mean Shane was excited by
leather sex, you know, bondage and discipline, sado and masochism."
She says, "Really these panels are to help the people left behind." "Strangers
are going to see us and see Shane's name," my dad
says. "We didn't want them thinking things." The
dishes all start their slow clockwise march around the table. The stuffing. The
olives. The cranberry sauce. "I
wanted pink triangles but all the panels have pink triangles,"
my mom says. "It's the Nazi symbol for homosexuals." She says,
"Your father suggested black triangles, but that would mean
Shane was a lesbian. It looks like the female pubic hair. The black triangle
does." My father says, "Then
I wanted a green border, but it turns out
that would mean Shane was a male prostitute." My
mom says, "We almost chose a red border, but that would
mean fisting. Brown would mean either scat or rimming, we couldn't figure which." "Yellow,"
my father says, "means watersports." "A
lighter shade of blue," Mom says, "would mean just regular
oral sex." "Regular white,"
my father says, "would mean anal. White
could also mean Shane was excited by men wearing underwear." He
says, "I can't remember which." My
mother passes me the quilted chicken with the rolls still
warm inside. We're
supposed to sit and eat with Shane dead all over the table in front of us. "Finally
we just gave up," my mom says, "and I made a nice
tablecloth out of the material." Between
the yams and the stuffing, Dad looks down at his plate and says,
"Do you know about rimming?" I know
it isn't table talk. "And
fisting?" my mom asks. I say,
I know. I don't mention Manus and his vocational porno magazines. We sit
there, all of us around a blue shroud with the turkey more like a big
dead baked animal than ever, the stuffing chock full of organs you can
still recognize, the heart and gizzard and liver, the gravy
thick with cooked fat and blood. The flower centerpiece could be a casket
spray. "Would
you pass the butter, please?" my mother says. To my
father she says, "Do you know what felchirig is?" This,
it's too much. Shane's dead, but he's more the center of attention than
he ever was. My folks wonder why I never come home, and this is why. All
this sick horrible sex talk over Thanksgiving dinner, I can't take
this. It's just Shane this and Shane that. It's sad, but what
happened to Shane was not something I did. I know everybody
thinks it's my fault, what happened. The truth is Shane
destroyed this family. Shane was bad and mean, and
he's dead. I'm good and obedient and I'm ignored. Silence. All
that happened was I was fourteen years old. Somebody put a full can of
hairspray in the trash by mistake. It was Shane's job to burn the trash.
He was fifteen. He
was dumping the kitchen trash into the burning barrel while the bathroom trash
was on fire, and the hair-spray exploded.
It was an accident. Silence. Now
what I wanted my folks to talk about was me. I'd tell them how Evie and me
were shooting a new infomer-cial. My modeling career was taking off. I
wanted to tell them about my new boyfriend, Manus, but no. Whether he's
good or bad, alive or dead, Shane still gets all the attention.
All I ever get is angry. "Listen," I say.
This just blurts out. "Me," I say, "I'm the last child you
people have left alive so you'd better start paying me some attention." Silence. "Felching,"
I lower my voice. I'm calm now. "Felching is when a man fucks you up the
butt without a rubber. He shoots his load, and then plants his mouth on your anus and sucks out his own warm sperm, plus whatever
lubricant and feces are present.
That's felching. It may or may not," I add, "include kissing
you to pass the sperm and fecal matter into your mouth." Silence. Give
me control. Give me calm. Give me restraint. Flash. The
yams are just the way I like them, sugary sweet but crunchy
on top. The stuffing is a little dry. I pass my mother the butter. My father clears his
throat. "Bump," he says, "I think 'fletching' is the word your
mother meant." He says, "It means to slice the turkey into very thin
strips." Silence. I
say, oh. I say, sorry. We
eat. CHAPTER EIGHTDon't
look for me to ever tell my folks about the accident. You
know, a whole long-distance telephone crying jag about the bullet and the
emergency room. That's not anywhere we're going. I told my folks, as soon as I could write them a letter that I was going on a catalogue
shoot in Cancun, Mexico, for Espre. Six
months of fun, sand, and me trying to suck the lime wedges out of long-necked
bottles of Mexican beer. Guys just love watching babes do that. Go figure.
Guys. She
loves clothes from Espre, my mom writes back. She writes
how, since I'll be in the Espre catalogue, could I maybe
get her a discount on her Christmas order. Sorry, Mom. Sorry, God. She writes back: Well, be
pretty for us. Love and kisses. Most times, it's just a lot
easier not to let the world know what's
wrong. My folks, they call me Bump. I was the bump inside my Mom's stomach for nine months; they've called me Bump from since before I was born. They
live a two-hour drive from me, but I
never visit. What I mean is they don't
need to know every little hair about me. In one
letter my mom writes: "At
least with your brother, we know whether he's dead or alive." My
dead brother, the King of Fag Town. The voted best at
everything. The basketball king until he was sixteen and
his test for strep throat came back as gonorrhea, I only
know I hated him. "It's
not that we don't love you," my mom writes in one letter,
"it's just that we don't show it." Besides,
hysteria is only possible with an audience. You know what you need to do
to keep alive. Folks will just screw you up with their reactions about how
what happened is so horrible. First the emergency room folks letting
you go ahead of them. Then the Franciscan nun screaming. Then the
police with their hospital sheet. Jump
to how life was when you were a baby and you could only eat baby food.
You'd stagger over to the coffee table. You're up on your feet and you have to
keep waddling along on those Vienna sausage legs or fall down. Then
you get to the coffee table and bounce your big soft baby
head on the sharp corner. You're
down, and man, oh man, it hurts. Still it isn't anything tragic until Morn and Dad run over. Oh, you poor, brave thing. Only then do you cry. Jump to Brandy and me and
Seth going to the top of the Space Needle
thing in Seattle, Washington. This is our first stop after the Canadian border except us stopping so I could run buy Seth a coffee—cream, sugar and Climara—and a Coca Cola—extra Estrace, no ice.
It's eleven, and the Space Needle
closes at midnight, and Seth says
there are two types of people in the world. The
Princess Alexander wanted to find a nice hotel first, some place with valet parking and tile
bathrooms. We might have time for a nap
before she has to go out and sell
medications. "If
you were on a game show," Seth says about his two types
of people. Seth has already pulled off the freeway and
we're driving between dark warehouses, turning toward every glimpse we
get of the Space Needle. "So you're the winner of this game show,"
Seth says, "and you get a choice between a five-piece living room
set from Broyhill, suggested retail price three thousand dollars—
or—a ten-day trip to the old world charm of Europe." Most
people, Seth says, would take the living room set. "It's just that people
want something to show for their effort,"
Seth says. "Like the pharaohs and their pyramids. Given
the choice, very few people would choose the trip even
if they already had a nice living room set." No
one's parked on the streets around Seattle Center, people are all home watching
television, or being television if you believe in God. "I
have to show you where the future ended," says Seth.
"I want us to be the people who choose the trip." According
to Seth, the future ended in 1962 at the Seattle World's Fair. This was everything we
should've inherited: the whole man on the moon within this decade—asbestos
is our miracle friend—nuclear-powered and fossil-fueled world of the Space Age
where you could go up to visit the Jetsons' flying saucer apartment building
and then ride the monorail downtown for fun pillbox hat fashions at the Bon
Marche. All
his hope and science and research and glamour left here in
ruins: The
Space Needle. The
Science Center with its lacy domes and hanging light globes. The
Monorail streaking along covered in brushed aluminum. This is
how our lives were supposed to turn out. Go
there. Take the trip, Seth says. It will break your heart
because the Jetsons with their robot maid, Rosie, and
their flying-saucer cars and toaster beds that spit you out in
the morning, it's like the Jetsons have sublet the Space
Needle to the Flintstones. "You
know," says Seth, "Fred and Wilma. The garbage
disposal that's really a pig that lives under the sink.
All their furniture made out of bones and rocks and tiger-skin
lampshades. Wilma vacuums with a baby elephant and fluffs the rocks. They named
their baby 'Pebbles'." Here
was our future of cheese-food and aerosol propel-lants, Styrofoam and Club
Med on the moon, roast beef served in a toothpaste tube. "Tang,"
says Seth, "you know, breakfast with the astronauts.
And now people come here wearing sandals they made themselves out of
leather. They name their kids Zilpah and Zebulun out of the Old Testament.
Lentils are a big deal." Seth
sniffs and drags a hand across the tears in his eyes. It's the Estrace is all. He
must be getting premenstrual. "The
folks who go to the Space Needle now," Seth says, "they
have lentils soaking at home and they're walking around the ruins of the
future the way barbarians did when they found Grecian ruins and told
themselves that God
must've built them." Seth parks us under one big
steel leg of the Space Needle's three legs. We get out and look up at the legs going up to the Space Needle, the low restaurant,
the high restaurant that revolves,
then the observation deck at the top. Then the stars.Jump to the sad moment when we buy our tickets and
get on the big glass elevator that slides up the middle of the Space
Needle. We're in this glass and brass go-go cage dance party to the stars.
Going up, I want to hear hypoal-lergenic Telestar music, untouched by
human hands. Anything computer-generated
and played on a Moog synthesizer. I
want to dance the frug on a TWA commuter flight go-go dance party to the moon where cool dudes and chicks
do the mash potato under zero gravity and eat delicious
snack pills. I want
this. I tell
Brandy Alexander this, and she goes right up to the brass and glass
windows and does the frug even though going up, the G forces make this like dancing the frug on Mars where you weigh eight hundred pounds. The
sad part is when the guy in a poly-blend uniform who runs the elevator
misses the whole point of the future. The whole fun, fun, fun of the moment
is wasted on him, and this guy looks at us as if we're those
puppies you see behind glass in suburban mall pet stores. Like we're
those puppies with yellow ooze on their eyes and buttholes, and you know they'll never have
another solid bowel movement but they're
still for sale for six hundred dollars apiece. Those puppies are so sad that
even the overweight girls with bad
beauty college perms will tap on the
glass for hours and say, "I loves you, little one. Mommy loves you, tiny one." The future is just wasted
on some people. Jump to
the observation deck at the top of the Space Needle, where you can't
see the steel legs so it's as if you're hovering over Seattle on a flying
saucer with a lot of souvenirs for sale. Still, most of this isn't souvenirs of
the future. It's the ecology T-shirts and batiks and tie-dyed
all-natural cotton fiber stuff you can't wash with anything
else because it's never really colorfast. Tapes of whales singing while they
do sex. More stuff I hate. Brandy goes off in search
of relics and artifacts from the future.
Acrylic. Plexiglas. Aluminum. Styrofoam. Radium. Seth goes to the railing
and leans out over the suicide nets and spits. The spit falls back down into
the twenty-first century. The wind blows my hair out over the darkness and Seattle and my hands are clutched white
on the steel railing where about a million hands before me have clutched
the paint off. Inside
his clothes, instead of the plates of hard muscle that used to drive me
crazy, now the fat pushes his shirt out over
the top of his belt. It's the Premarin. His sexy five o'clock shadow is fading from the Provera. Even his fingers
swell around his old letterman's ring. The photographer in my head
says: Give
me peace. Flash. Give
me release. She
gives us each an Aubergine Dreams eyebrow pencil and says, "Save the
world with some advice from the future." Seth
writes on the back of a card and hands the card to Brandy
for her to read. On game shows, Brandy reads, some
people will take the trip to France, but most
people will take the washer dryer pair. Brandy
puts a big Plumbago kiss on the little square for the
stamp and lets the wind lift the card and sail it off toward
the towers of downtown Seattle. Seth
hands her another, and Brandy reads: Game
shows are designed to make us feel better about the random,
useless facts that are all we have left of our education. A
kiss, and the card's on its way toward Lake Washington. From
Seth: When
did the future switch from being a promise to being
a threat? A kiss,
and it's off on the wind toward Ballard. Only
when we eat up this planet will God give us another.
We'll be remembered more for what we destroy than what
we create. Interstate
5 snakes by in the distance. From high atop the Space Needle, the
southbound lanes are red chase lights, and the northbound lanes are white
chase lights. I take a card and write: CHAPTER NINEJump to
us going down fast in a TWA return trip home from the moon, Brandy and
Seth and me dancing our dance party frug in the zero-gravity brass
and glass go-go cage elevator. Brandy makes a big ring-beaded fist and tells
the poly-blend service droid who tries to stop us to chill
out unless he wants to die on reentry. Back
on earth in the twenty-first century, our rented Lincoln with its blue
casket interior is waiting to take us to a nice hotel. On the windshield is a
ticket, but when Brandy storms over to tear it up, the ticket
is a postcard from the future. Maybe
my worst fears. For
Brandy to read out loud to Seth. I love Seth so much I have to destroy him . . . Even
if I overcompensate, nobody will ever want me. Not Seth. Not my folks.
You can't kiss someone who has no lips. Oh, love me, love me, love me, love me, love me, love me, love me, love me. I'll be anybody you want me
to be. Brandy
Alexander, her big hand lifts the postcard. The queen supreme reads it to
herself, silent, and slips the postcard into her handbag. Princess Princess,
she says, "At this rate, we'll never get to the future.” the
fluorescent light coming through in broken exploded bits. "Veils," Brandy
says as each color settles over me. "You need
to look like you're keeping secrets," she says. "If you're going to
do the outside world, Miss St. Patience, you need to not let people see your face," she says. "You
can go anywhere in the world," Brandy goes on and on. You
just can't let people know who you really are. "You
can live a completely normal, regular life," she says. You
just can't let anybody get close enough to you to learn
the truth. "In
a word," she says, "veils." Take-charge
princess who she is, Brandy Alexander never does ask my real name. The name who I
was born. Miss Bossy Pants right away gives me a new name, a new past.
She invents another future for me with no connections, except to her, a
cult all by herself. "Your
name is Daisy St. Patience," she tells me. "You're the lost
heiress to the House of St. Patience, the very haute couture fashion showroom, and this
season we're doing hats," she says. "Hats with
veils." I ask
her, "Jsfssjf ciacb sxi?" "You
come from escaped French aristocrat blood," Brandy says. "Gwdcn
aixa gklgfnv?" "You
grew up in Paris, and went to a school run by nuns," Brandy says. Give me
homesickness. Flash. Give
me nostalgic childhood yearnings. Flash. What's
the word for the opposite of glamour? Brandy
never asked about my folks, were they living or dead, and why weren't they
here to gnash their teeth. "Your
father and mother, Rainier and Honoraria St. Patience, were assassinated by fashion
terrorists," she says. B.B.,
before Brandy, my father took his pigs to market every fall. His secret is
to spend all summer driving his flatbed truck around Idaho and the other upper,
left-hand corner states, stopping at all the day-old bakery outlets selling
expired snack foods, individual fruit pies and cupcakes with creamy fillings,
little loaves of sponge cake injected with artificial whipped cream and
lumps of devil's food cake covered with marshmallow and shredded coconut
dyed pink. Old birthday cakes that didn't sell. Stale cakes wishing
Congratulations. Happy Mother's Day. Be My Valentine. My father still brings
it all home, heaped in a dense sticky pile or heat-sealed inside cellophane.
That's the hardest part, opening these thousands of old snacks and
dropping them to the pigs. My
father who Brandy didn't want to hear about, his secret is to feed the
pigs these pies and cakes and snacks the last two weeks before they go to market.
The snacks have no nutrition, and the pigs gobble them until there isn't
an expired snack left within five hundred miles. These
snacks don't have any real fiber to them so every fall,
every three-hundred-pound pig goes to market with an extra ninety pounds in its
colon. My father makes a fortune at auction, and who knows how long
after that, but the pigs all take a big sugary crap when they see inside
whatever slaughterhouse where they end up. I say,
"Kwvne wivnuw fw sojaoa." "No,"
Brandy says and puts up her foot-long index finger, six cocktail rings
stacked on just this one finger, and she presses her jeweled hotdog up and down
across my mouth the moment I try and say anything. "Not
a word," Brandy says. "You're still too connected to your past. Your
saying anything is pointless." From
out of her sewing basket, Brandy draws a streamer of white and gold, a
magic act, a layer of sheer white silk patterned with a Greek key design in gold
she casts over my head. Behind
another veil, the real world is that much farther away. "Guess
how they do the gold design," Brandy says. The
fabric is so light my breath blows it out in front; the
silk lays across my eyelashes without bending them. Even my
face, where every nerve in your body comes to an end, even my face can't feel
it. It
takes a team of kids in India, Brandy says, four- and five-year-old
kids sitting all day on wooden benches, being vegetarians, they have to tweeze out most of
about a zillion gold threads to leave the
pattern of just the gold left behind. "You
don't see kids any older than ten doing this job," Brandy
says, "because by then most kids go blind." Just
the veil Brandy takes out of her basket must be six feet
square. The precious eyesight of all those darling children, lost. The precious
days of their fragile childhood spent tweezing silk threads out. Give
me pity. Flash. Give
me empathy. Flash. Oh, I
wish I could make my poor heart just bust. I say,
"Vswf siws cm eiuvn sines." No,
it's okay, Brandy says. She doesn't want to reward anybody
for exploiting children. She got it on sale. Caged
behind my silk, settled inside my cloud of organza and georgette, the
idea that I can't share my problems with other people makes me not give a
shit about their problems. "Oh,
and don't worry," Brandy says. "You'll still get attention.
You have a dynamite tits and ass combo. You just can't talk to
anybody." People
just can't stand not knowing something, she tells me. Especially men
can't bear not climbing every mountain, mapping everywhere. Labeling
everything. Peeing on every tree and then never calling you back. "Behind
a veil, you're the great unknown," she says. "Most
guys will fight to know you. Some guys will deny you're a real person, and
some will just ignore you.” The
zealot. The atheist. The agnostic. Even
if somebody is only wearing an eye patch, you always want to look. To
see if he's faking. The man in the Hathaway Shirt. Or to see the horror underneath. The
photographer in my head says: Give
me a voice. Flash. Give me
a face. Brandy's
answer was little hats with veils. And big hats with veils. Pancake hats and
pillbox hats edged all around with clouds of tulle and gauze. Parachute silk
or heavy crepe or dense net dotted with chenille pompoms. "The
most boring thing in the entire world," Brandy says,
"is nudity." The
second most boring thing, she says, is honesty. "Think
of this as a tease. It's lingerie for your face," she says. "A
peekaboo nightgown you wear over your whole identity." The
third most boring thing in the entire world is your sorry-assed past. So Brandy
never asked me anything. Bulldozer alpha
bitch she can be, we meet again and again
in the speech therapist office and Brandy tells me everything I need to know about myself. CHAPTER TENJump to
Brandy Alexander tucking me into a Seattle bed. This is the night of
the Space Needle, the night the future doesn't happen. Brandy, she's wearing
yards and yards of black tulle wrapped around her legs, twisted up and
around her hourglass waist. Black veil crosses her torpedo
breasts and loops up and over the top of her auburn hair.
All this sparkle that bends over beside my bed could be the
trial-sized mock-up for the original summer night sky. Little
rhinestones, not the plastic ones pooped out by a factory
in Calcutta but the Austrian crystal ones cut by elves in the Black
Forest, these little star-shaped rhinestones are set all over the black tulle. The
queen supreme's face is the moon in the night sky that
bends over and kisses me
good night. My hotel room is dark, and the television at the foot of my bed is turned
on so the handmade stars twinkle in all the colors the television is trying to show us. Seth's
right, the television does make me God. I can look in on anybody and
every hour the lives change. Here in the real world, that's not always the case. "I
will always love you," the queen of the night sky says,
and I know which postcard she's found. The
hotel sheets feel the same as the hospital sheets. This is
thousands of miles since we met, and the big fingers of Brandy are still
smoothing the blankets under where my chin used to be. My face is the last thing the go-go boys and girls want to meet when they go into a
dark alley looking to buy drugs. Brandy
says, "We'll be back as soon as we sell out." Seth is
silhouetted in the open doorway to the hall. How he looks from my bed
is the terrific outline of a superhero against the neon green and gray and pink
tropical leaves of the hallway wallpaper. His coat, the long black
leather coat Seth wears, is fitted tight until the waist
and then flares from there down so in outline you think it's a cape. And
maybe when he kisses Brandy Alexander's royal butt he's not just
pretending. Maybe it's the two of them in love when I'm not around. This wouldn't be
the first time I've lost him. The
face surrounded in black veil that leans over me is a surprise of color. The
skin is a lot of pink around a Plumbago mouth, and the eyes are too
aubergine. Even these colors are too garish right now, too saturated,
too intense. Lurid. You think of cartoon characters. Fashion dolls
have pink skin like this, like plastic bandages. Flesh tone.
Too aubergine eyes, cheekbones too defined by Rusty Rose blusher.
Nothing is left to your imagination. Maybe this is what guys
want. I just want Brandy Alexander to
leave. I want
Seth's belt around my neck. I want Seth's fingers in my mouth and his hands pulling my
knees apart and then his wet fingers prying
me open. "If
you want something to read," Brandy says, "that Miss
Rona Barrett book is in my room. I can run get it." I
want to be rubbed so raw by the stubble around Seth's mouth
that it will hurt when I pee. Seth
says, "Are you coming?" A
ring-beaded hand tosses the television remote control onto
the bed. "Come
on, Princess Princess," Seth says. "The night's not
getting any younger." And I
want Seth dead. Worse than dead, I want him fat and bloated with water and
insecure and emotional. If Seth doesn't want me, I want to not want him. "If
the police or anything happens," the moon tells me, "the money is all in
my make-up case." The one I love is already
gone out to warm up the car. The
one who will love me forever says, "Sleep tight," and closes the door
behind her. Jump
to once a long time ago, Manus, my fiance who dumped me, Manus Kelley,
the police detective, he told me that your folks are like God because you
want to know they're out there and you want them to approve of your life,
still you only call them when you're in crisis and need something. Jump
back to me in bed in Seattle, alone with the TV remote control I hit a
button on and make the television mute. On
television are three or four people in chairs sitting on a
low stage in front of a television audience. This is on television
like an infomercial, but as the camera zooms in on each person for a
close-up, a little caption appears across the person's chest. Each caption on
each close-up is a first name followed by three or four words
like a last name, the sort of literal who-they-really-are last names that
Indians give to each other, but instead of Heather Runs
With Bison . . . Trisha Hunts By Moonlight, these names
are: Cristy
Drank Human Blood Roger
Lived With Dead Mother Brenda
Ate Her Baby I
change channels. I
change channels. I
change channels and here are another three people: Gwen
Works As Hooker Neville
Was Raped In Prison Brent
Slept With His Father People are all over the
world telling their one dramatic story and
how their life has turned into getting over this one event. Now their
lives are more about the past than their
future. I hit a button and give Gwen WorksAsHooker
her voice back for a little soundbite of prostitute talk. Gwen
shapes her story with her hands as she talks. She leans forward out of her
chair. Her eyes are watching something up
and to the right, just off camera. I know it's the monitor. Gwen's
watching herself tell her story. Gwen balls her fingers
until only the left index finger is out,
and she slowly twists her hand to show both sides of her fingernail as
she talks. " ... to protect themselves, most girls on
the street break off a little bit of razor
blade and glue it under their fingernail.
Girls paint the razor nail so it looks like a regular fingernail." Here,
Gwen sees something in the monitor.
She frowns and tosses her red hair back off what look like pearl earrings. "When
they go to jail," Gwen tells herself in the monitor, "or when they're
not attractive anymore, some girls use the
razor nails to slash their wrists.” I make
Gwen WorksAsHooker mute again. I
change channels. I
change channels. I change channels. Sixteen
channels away, a beautiful young woman in a sequined dress is
smiling and dropping animal wastes into a Num. Num Snack Factory. Evie
and me, we did this infomercial. It's one of those television commercials you
think is a real program except it's just a thirty-minute pitch. The
television camera cuts to another girl in a sequined dress, this one is wading through an audience of snow birds and Midwest
tourists. The girl offers a golden anniversary couple in matching Hawaiian
shirts a selection of canapes from a silver tray, but the couple and everybody else in their double
knits and camera necklaces, they're staring up and to the right at
something off camera. You
know it's the monitor. It's
eerie, but what's happening is the folks are staring at themselves in the
monitor staring at themselves in the monitor
staring at themselves in the monitor, on and on, completely trapped in a
reality loop that never ends. The
girl with the tray, her desperate eyes are contact lens
too green and her lips are heavy red outside the natural lip line. The blonde
hair is thick and teased up so the girl's shoulders don't look so big-boned. The
canapes she keeps waving under all the old noses are soda crackers pooped
on with meat by-products. Waving her tray, the girl wades further up into
the studio audience bleachers with her too green eyes and big-boned hair.
This is my best friend, Evie Cottrell. This
has to be Evie because here comes Manus stepping up to save her with his
good looks. Manus, special police vice operative that he is, he takes one of
those pooped-on soda crackers and puts it between his capped teeth. And chews.
And tilts his handsome square-jawed face back and closes
his eyes, Manus closes his power-blue eyes and twists his head just so
much side to side and swallows. Thick
black hair like Manus has, it reminds you how people's hair is just
vestigial fur with mousse on it. Such a sexy hair dog, Manus is. The
square-jawed face rocks down to give the camera a full-face
eyes-open look of complete and total love and satisfaction. So deja vu.
This was exactly the same look Manus used to give me when he'd ask if I got
my orgasm. Then
Manus turns to give the exact same look to Evie while the studio audience all
looks off in another direction, watching themselves watch themselves
watch themselves watch Manus smile with total and complete love and
satisfaction at Evie. Evie
smiles back her red outside the natural lipline smile at Manus, and I'm
this tiny sparkling figure in the background. That's me just over Manus's
shoulder, tiny me smiling away like a space heater and dropping animal matter
into the Plexiglas funnel on top of the Num Num Snack Factory. How
could I be so dumb. Let's go sailing. Sure. I
should've known the deal was Manus and Evie all the time. Even
here, lying in a hotel bed a year after the whole story
is over, I'm making fists. I could've just watched the stupid
infomercial and known Manus and Evie had some tortured sick relationship
they wanted to think was true love. Okay, I
did watch it. Okay, about a hundred times I watched it, but I was
only watching myself. That reality loop thing. The
camera comes back to the first girl, the one on stage, and she's me. And
I'm so beautiful. On television, I demonstrate the easy cleanability of the snack
factory, and I'm so beautiful. I snap the blades out of the
Plexiglas cover and rinse off the chewed-up animal waste under running
water. And, jeez, I'm beautiful. The
disembodied voiceover is saying how the Num Num Snack Factory takes
meat by-products, whatever you have—your tongues or hearts or lips or
genitals—chews them up, seasons them, and poops them out in the shape of a
spade or a diamond or a club onto your choice of cracker for you to eat
yourself. Here in bed, I'm crying. Bubba-Joan
GotHerJawShotOff. All these thousands of
miles later, all these different people I've
been, and it's still the same story. Why is it you feel like a dope if you laugh alone, but that's
usually how you end up crying? How is
it you can keep mutating and still
be the same deadly virus? CHAPTER ELEVENJump
back to when I first got out of the hospital without a
career or a fiance or an apartment, and I had to sleep at
Evie's big house, her real house where even she didn't like
to live, it was so lonely, stuck way out in some rainforest
with nobody paying attention. Jump to
me being on Evie's bed, on my back that first night, but I can't sleep. Wind
lifts the curtains, lace curtains. All Evie's furniture
is that curlicue Frenchy provincial stuff painted white
and gold. There isn't a moon, but the sky is full of stars,
so everything—Evie's house, the rose hedges, the bedroom curtains, the
backs of my hands against the bedspread—are all either black or gray. Evie's
house was what a Texas girl would buy if her parents kept giving her
about ten million dollars all the time. It's like the Cottrells know Evie will
never make the big-time runways. So Evie, she lives here. Not New York.
Not Milan. The suburbs, right out in the nowhere of professional
modeling. This is pretty far from doing the Paris collections. Being stuck in
nowhere is the excuse Evie needs, living here is, for a big-boned girl who'd
never be a big-time success anywhere. The
doors are locked tonight. The cat is inside. When I look,
the cat looks back at me the way dogs and some cars look
when people say they're smiling. Just
that afternoon, Evie was on the telephone begging me to check myself
out of the hospital and come visit. Evie's
house was big—white with hunter green shutters, a three-story
plantation house fronted with big pillars. Needlepoint ivy and climbing
roses—yellow roses— were climbed up around the bottom ten feet of each big pillar.
You'd imagine Ashley Wilkes mowing the grass here,
or Rhett Butler taking down the storm windows, but Evie, she has these
minimum-wage slave Laotians who refuse to
live in. Jump
to the day before, Evie driving me from the hospital. Evie really is Evelyn
Cottrell, Inc. No, really. She's traded publicly now. Everybody's favorite
write-off. The Cottrells made a private
stock offering in her career when Evie
was twenty-one, and all the Cottrell relatives with their Texas land and oil money are heavily invested
in Evie's being a model failure. Most
times it was an embarrassment going to modeling look-see auditions with Evie.
Sure, I'd get work, but then the art director or the stylist would start
screaming at Evie that, no, in his expert opinion she was not a perfect
size six. Most times, some assistant stylist had to wrestle Evie
out the door. Evie would be screaming back over her shoulder
about how I shouldn't let them treat me like a piece of meat. I should
just walk out. "Fuck
'em," Evie's screaming by this point. "Fuck 'em all." Me, I'm
not angry. I'd be getting strapped into this incredible leather corset by
Poopie Cadole and leather pants by Chrome Hearts. Life was good back
then. I'd have three hours of work, maybe four or five. At the
photo studio doorway, before she'd get thrown out of the shoot, Evie
would swing the assistant stylist into the door jamb, and the little guy would
just crumple up at her feet. It's then Evie would scream, "You
people can all suck the crap out of my sweet Texas ass."
Then she'd go out to her Ferrari and wait the three or four or five
hours so she could drive me home. Evie,
that Evie was my best friend in the whole world. Moments like that, Evie
was fun and quirky, almost like she had a life of her own. Okay,
so I didn't know about Evie and Manus and their complete and total love
and satisfaction. So kill me. Jump to
before that, Evie calling me at the hospital and begging me, please, could
I discharge myself and come stay at her house, she was so lonely, please. My
health insurance had a two-million-dollar lifetime ceiling,
and the meter had just run and run all summer. No social service contact had
the guts to transition me into God only knows where. Begging
me on the telephone, Evie said she had plane reservations. She was going to
Cancun for a catalogue shoot so would I, could I, please, just
house-sit for her? When
she picked me up, on my pad I wrote: is
that my halter top? you know you're stretching it. "You'll
need to feed my cat is all," Evie says. i don't
like being alone so far out from town, I write, i don't know how you can live
here. Evie
says, "It's not living alone if you keep a rifle under the
bed." I
write: i know
girls who say that about their dildos. And
Evie says, "Gross! I'm not that way at all with my rifle!” So
jump to Evie being flown off to Cancun, Mexico, and when I go to look under her
bed, there's the thirty-aught rifle and
scope. In her closets are what's left of my clothes, stretched and tortured to death and hanging there
on wire hangers, dead. Then jump to me in Evie's bed that night. It's midnight. The wind lifts the bedroom
curtains, lace curtains, and the cat jumps
up on the windowsill to see who's just pulled up in the gravel driveway. With
the stars behind it, the cat looks
back at me. Downstairs, you hear a window break. CHAPTER TWELVEJump
way back to the last Christmas before my accident, when I
go home to open presents with my folks. My folks put up the same fake tree
every year, scratchy green and making that hot poly-plastic smell that gives
you a dizzy flu headache when the lights are plugged in too long. The
tree's all magic and sparkle, crowded with our red and gold
glass ornaments and those strands of silver plastic loaded
with static electricity that people call icicles. It's the
same ratty angel with a rubber doll face on top of the tree.
Covering the mantel is the same spun fiberglass angel
hair that works into your skin and gives you an infected
rash if you even touch it. It's the same Perry Como Christmas album on
the stereo. This is back when I still had a face so I wasn't so confronted
by singing Christmas carols. My
brother Shane's still dead so I try not to expect much
attention, just a quiet Christmas. By this point, my boyfriend,
Manus was getting weird about losing his police job, and what I needed was a couple days out of the spotlight. We all talked, my mom, my dad, and me,
and agreed to not buy big gifts for
each other this year. Maybe just little gifts, my folks say, just stocking
stuffers. Perry
Como is singing "It's Beginning to Look a Lot Like
Christmas." The
red felt stockings my mom sewed for each of us, for Shane and me, are
hanging on the fireplace, each one red felt with our names spelled out, top to
bottom, in fancy white felt letters. Each one lumpy with the gifts
stuffed inside. It's Christmas morning, and we're all sitting around the tree,
my father ready with his jackknife for the knotted ribbons. My mom has a brown
paper shopping bag and says, "Before things get out of hand,
the wrapping paper goes in here, not all over the place." My mom
and dad sit in recliner chairs. I sit on the floor in
front of the fireplace with the stockings by me. This scene
is always blocked this way. Them sitting with coffee, leaned down over me,
watching for my reaction. Me Indian-sitting on the floor. All of us in
bathrobes and pajamas still. Perry
Como is singing "I'll Be Home for Christmas." The
first thing out of my stocking is a little stuffed koala
bear, the kind that grips your pencil with its spring-loaded
hands and feet. This is who my folks think I am. My mom hands me hot
chocolate in a mug with miniature marshmallows floating on top. I say,
"Thanks." Under the little koala is a box I take out. My
folks stop everything, lean over their cups of coffee, and
just watch me. Perry
Como is singing "Oh, Come, All Ye Faithful." The
little box is condoms. Sitting
right next to our sparkling, magic Christmas tree, my father says,
"We don't know how many partners you have every year, but we want you to
play safe." I stash the condoms in my
bathrobe pocket and look down at the
miniature marshmallows melting. I say, "Thanks." "Those
are latex," says my mom. "You need to use only a
water-based sexual lubricant. If you need a lubricant at your age. Not petroleum
jelly or shortenings or any kind of
lotion." She says, "We didn't get you the kind made from sheep
intestines because those have tiny pores that can allow the transmission of
HIV." Next
inside my stocking is another little box. This is more
condoms. The color marked on the box is Nude. This
seems redundant. Next to that, the label says odorless and
tasteless. Oh, I
could tell you all about tasteless. "A
study," my father says, "a telephone survey of heterosexuals
in urban areas with a high incidence of HIV infection showed that
thirty-five percent of people are uncomfortable buying their own condoms." And
getting them from Santa Claus is better? I say, "Got it." "This
isn't just about AIDS," my mom says. "There's gonorrhea.
There's syphilis. There's the human papilloma virus. That's genital
warts." She says, "You do know to put the condom on as soon as
the penis is erect, don't you?" She
says, "I paid a fortune for bananas out of season in case
you need the practice." This
is a trap. If I say, Oh, yeah, I roll rubbers onto new dry
erections all the time, I'll get the slut lecture from my father. But if I tell
them, No, we'll get to spend Christmas Day practicing to protect me from fruit. My dad
says, "There's tons more to this than AIDS." He
says, "There's the herpes simplex virus II with symptoms that include
small painful blisters that burst on your genitals." He looks at Mom. "Body
aches," she says. "Yes, you get body
aches," he says, "and fever. You get vaginal discharge. It hurts to urinate." He looks at my mom. Perry
Como is singing "Santa Claus Is Coming to Town." Under
the next box of condoms is another box of condoms. Jeez, three boxes
should last me right into menopause. Jump to
how much I want my brother alive right now so I can kill him for
wrecking my Christmas. Perry Como is singing "Up on the Housetop." "There's hepatitis
B," my mom says. To my dad, she says,
"What's the others?" "Chlamydia," my
father says. "And lymphogranuloma." "Yes," my rnom
says, "and mucal purulent cervicitis and
nongonococcal urethritis." My dad
looks at my mom and says, "But that's usually caused
by an allergy to a latex condom or a spermicide." My
mom drinks some coffee. She looks down at both her hands around her cup,
then looks up at me sitting here. "What your father's trying to
say," she says, "is we realize now that we made some mistakes with
your brother." She says, "We're just trying to keep you
safe." There's
a fourth box of condoms in my stocking. Perry Como is singing "It
Came upon a Midnight Clear." The box is labeled . .. safe and strong enough
even for prolonged anal intercourse. . . . "There's granuloma
inguinale," my father says to my mother,
"and bacterial vaginosis." He opens one hand and counts the fingers, then counts them again, then
says, "there's molluscum contagiosum." Some
of the condoms are white. Some are assorted colors. Some are ribbed to
feel like serrated bread knives, I guess. Some are extra large. Some glow in
the dark. This is flattering in a creepy way. My folks must think I'm wildly
popular. Perry
Como is singing "Oh Come, Oh Come, Emmanuel." "We
don't want to scare you," my mom says, "but you're
young. We can't expect you to just sit home nights." "And
if you ever can't sleep," my father says, "it could be
pinworms." My
mom says, "We just don't want you to end up like your brother is all." My brother's dead, but he
still has a stocking full of presents and
you can bet they're not rubbers. He's dead, but you can bet he's laughing his
head off right now. "With
pinworms," my father says, "the females migrate
down the colon to the perianal area to lay their eggs at night." He
says, "If you suspect worm activity, it works best to press
clear adhesive tape against the rectum, then look at the tape under a magnifying
glass. The worms
should be about a quarter-inch long." My mom
says, "Bob, hush." My
dad leans toward me and says, "Ten percent of the men in
this country can give you these worms." He says, "You just remember
that." Almost
everything in my stocking is condoms, in boxes, in little gold foil
coins, in long strips of a hundred with perforations so you can tear them
apart. My only other gifts are a rape whistle and a pocket-sized spray canister of Mace. That looks like I'm set for the worst,
but I'm afraid to ask if there's
more. There could be a vibrator to keep
me at home and celibate every night. There could be dental dams in case of cunnilingus. Saran Wrap.
Rubber gloves. Perry Como is singing
"Nuttin' for Christmas." I look
at Shane's stocking still lumpy with presents and ask,
"You guys bought for Shane?" If
it's condoms, they're a little late. My
mom and dad look at each other. To my mom, my dad says, "You tell
her." "That's
what you got for your brother," my mom says. "Go
ahead and look." Jump to me being being
confused as hell Give
me clarity. Give me reasons. Give me answers. Flash. I
reach up to unhook Shane's stocking from the mantel, and
inside it's filled with crumpled tissue paper. "Keep
digging," my dad says. In with the tissue, there's
a sealed envelope. "Open
it," my mom says. Inside
the envelope is a printed letter with right at the top
the words "Thank You." "It's really a gift to
both our children," my dad says. I
can't believe what I'm reading. "Instead
of buying you a big present," my mom says, "we made a donation in your name to the
World AIDS Research Fund." Inside the stocking is a
second letter I take out. "That,"
my dad says, "is Shane's present to you." Oh,
this is too much. Perry
Como is singing "I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus." I say,
"That crafty old dead brother of mine, he's so thoughtful."
I say, "He shouldn't have. He really, really shouldn't
have gone to all this trouble. He needs to maybe move away from denial and
coping and just get on with being dead. Maybe reincarnate." I say,
"His pretending he's still alive can't be healthy." Inside,
I'm ranting. What I really wanted this year was a new Prada handbag. It
wasn't my fault that some hair-spray can exploded in Shane's face. Boom, and
he came staggering into the house with his forehead already turning
black and blue. The long drive to the hospital with his one eye swoll shut and
the face around it just getting bigger and bigger with every vein inside broken
and bleeding under the skin, Shane didn't say a word. It
wasn't my fault how the social service people at the hospital
took one look at Shane's face and came down on my father with both feet.
Suspicion of child abuse. Criminal neglect. Family intervention. It
wasn't any of it my fault. Police statements. A caseworker went around interviewing
our neighbors, our school friends, our teachers until everybody we
knew treated me like, you poor brave thing. Sitting
here Christmas morning with all these gifts I need a penis to enjoy,
everybody doesn't know the half of it. Even
after the police investigation was done, and nothing was
proved, even then, our family was wrecked. And everybody
still thinks I'm the one who threw away the hair-spray.
And since I started this, it was all my fault. The explosion.
The police. Shane's running away. His death. And it wasn't my fault. "Really," I say,
"if Shane really wanted to give me a present,
he'd come back from the dead and buy me the new wardrobe he owes me. That would give me a merry Christmas. That I could really say 'thank you'
for." Silence. As I
fish out the second envelope, my mom says, "We're officially
'outing' you." "In
your brother's name," my dad says, "we bought you a
membership in P.F.L.A.G. "Fee-flag?"
I say. "Parents
and Friends of Lesbians and Gays," my mom says. Perry Como is singing
"There's No Place Like Home for the
Holidays." Silence. My
mother starts up from her chair and says, "I'll go run get those bananas."
She says, "Just to be on the safe side,
your father and I can't wait to see you try on some of your presents.” CHAPTER THIRTEENJump to
around midnight in Evie's house where I catch Seth Thomas trying to
kill me. The way
my face is without a jaw, my throat just ends in sort of a hole with my
tongue hanging out. Around the hole, the skin is all scar tissue: dark red
lumps and shiny the way you'd look if you got the cherry pie in a pie eating
contest. If I let my tongue hang down, you can see the roof
of my mouth, pink arid smooth as the inside of a crab's back, and hanging
down around the roof is the white vertebrae horseshoe of the upper teeth I
have left. There are times to wear a veil and there are not. Other
than this, I'm stunning when I meet Seth Thomas breaking
into Evie's big house at midnight. What
Seth sees coming down the big circular staircase in Evie's foyer is me wearing
one of Evie's peachy-pink satin and lace peignoir sets pieced on the bias. Evie's bathrobe
is this peachy-pink retro Zsa Zsa number that hides
me the way cellophane hides a frozen turkey. At the cuffs and along the front of the bathrobe is the
peachy-pink ozone haze of ostrich feathers
that match the feathers on the
high-heeled mules I'm wearing. Seth
is just frozen at the foot of Evie's big circular staircase
with Evie's best sixteen-inch carving knife in his hand. A
pair of Evie's control top pantyhose is pulled down over Seth's head.
You can see Evie's hygienic cotton crotch sitting across Seth's face. The
pantyhose legs drape the way a cocker spaniel's ears would look down the front of his
otherwise mix-and-match army fatigues ensemble. And I
am a vision. Descending step by step toward the point of the carving knife, with the slow
step-pause-step of a showgirl in a
big Vegas revue. Oh, I am just that
fabulous. So sex furniture. Seth's
standing there, looking up, having a moment, afraid for the first time in his life
because I'm holding Evie's rifle. The butt is planted against my shoulder, and the
barrel is out in both hands in front of me. The sight's cross-haired right in
the middle of Evie Cottrell's cotton crotch. This
is just Seth and me in Evie's foyer with its beveled glass
windows broken around the front door and Evie's Austrian crystal
chandelier that sparkles like so much costume jewelry for a house. The only other
thing is a little desk in that Frenchy provincial white and gold. On the
little French desk is a tres ooh-la-la telephone where the receiver is as
big as a gold saxophone and sits in a gold cradle on top of an ivory box. In
the middle of the push-button circle is a cameo. So chic, Evie probably
thinks. With
the knife out in front of him, Seth goes, "I'm not going
to hurt you." I'm
doing that slow step-pause-step down the stairs. Seth
says, "Let's not anybody get killed, here." And
it's so deja vu. This
was the exact way Manus Kelley would ask if I'd gotten my orgasm. Not the
words, but the voice. Seth
says through Evie's crotch, "All's I did was sleep with
Evie." So deja vu. Let's
go sailing. It's the exact same voice. Seth
drops the carving knife and the tip of the blade sticks mumblety-peg
straight down next to his combat boot in Evie's foyer parquet floor. Seth says,
"If Evie says it was me that shot you, she was lying." On the
desk next to the telephone is a pad and pencil for taking down messages. Seth
says, "I knew the second I heard about you in the hospital that it was
Evie's doing." Balancing
the rifle with one arm, on the pad, I write: take
off your pantyhose. "I mean you can't kill
me," Seth says. Seth's pulling at the
waistband of his pantyhose. "I'm just the reason why Evie shot you." I step-pause-step the last
ten feet to Seth and hook the end of the
rifle barrel on the pantyhose waistband and pull them off Seth's square-jawed face. Seth Thomas who would be Alfa Romeo in Vancouver, British
Columbia. Alfa Romeo who was Nash
Rambler, formerly Bergdorf Goodman, formerly Neiman Marcus, formerly Saks Fifth
Avenue, formerly Christian Dior. Seth
Thomas who a long time before was named Manus Kelley, my fiance from the
infomercial. I couldn't tell you this until now because I want you to know how discovering this felt. In my heart. My fiance
wanted to kill me. Even when he's
that much an asshole, I loved Manus.
I still love Seth. A knife, it felt like a knife, and I'd discovered
that despite everything that's happened, I still had an endless untapped potential for getting hurt. It's from this night we
started on the road together and Manus
Kelley would someday become Seth Thomas. In between, in Santa Barbara
and San Francisco and Los Angles and Reno
and Boise and Salt Lake City, Manus was
other men. Between that night and now, tonight, me in bed in Seattle
still in love with him, Seth was Lance Corporal
and Chase Manhattan. He was Dow Corning and Herald Tribune and Morris
Code. All
courtesy of the Brandy Alexander Witness Reincarnation Project, as she calls it. Different
names, but all these men started out as Manus TryingToKillMe. Different
men, but there's always the same special police vice operative good looks. The same
power blue eyes. Don't shoot—Let's go sailing—it's the same voice. Different
haircuts but it's always the same thick black sexy dog hair. Seth
Thomas is Manus. Manus cheated on me with Evie, but I still love him so much I'll hide any amount of conjugated estrogen in his food. So much I'll do
anything to destroy him. You'd think I'd be smarter
now after, what? Sixteen hundred college
credits. I should be smarter. I could be a doctor by now. Sorry,
Mom. Sorry, God. Jump
to me not feeling anything but stupid, trying to balance
one of Evie's gold saxophone telephones against my ear.
Brandy Alexander, the inconvenient queen she is, isn't listed in the phone
book. All I know is she lives downtown at the Congress Hotel in a corner suite with
three roommates: Kitty
Litter. Sofonda
Peters. And
the vivacious Vivienne VaVane. AKA
the Rhea sisters, three drag guys who worship the quality
queen deluxe but would kill each other for more closet space. The Brandy
queen told me that much. It
should be Brandy I talk to, but I call my folks. What's gone on is I lock my killer
fiance in the coat closet, and when I go to put him inside there's more of my
beautiful clothes but all stretched out three
sizes. Those clothes were every penny
I ever made. After all that, I have to call somebody. For
so many reasons, no way can I just go back to bed. So I
call, and my call goes out across mountains and deserts to where my
father answers, and in my best ventriloquist voice, avoiding the consonants
you really need a jaw to say, I tell him, "Gflerb sorlfd
qortk, erd sairk. Srd. Erd, korts derk sairk? Kirdo!" Anymore, the telephone is
just not my friend. And
my father says, "Please don't hang up. Let me get my
wife." Away
from the receiver, he says, "Leslie, wake up, we're being
hate-crimed finally." And
in the background is my mother's voice saying, "Don't even talk to them. Tell them we
loved and treasured our dead homosexual
child." It's
the middle of the night here. They must be in bed. "Lot. Ordilj," I
say. "Serta ish ka alt. Serta ish ka alt!" "Here,"
my father says as his voice drifts away. "Leslie, you
give them what for." The
gold saxophone receiver feels heavy and stagy, a prop, as if this call
needs any more drama. From back in the coat closet, Seth yells, "Please.
Don't be calling the police until you've talked to Evie." Then
from the telephone, "Hello?" And it's my mother. "The
world is big enough we can all love each other." she
says, "There's room in God's heart for all His children.
Gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered. Just because it's anal
intercourse doesn't mean it's not love." She
says, "I hear a lot of hurt from you. I want to help you
deal with these issues." And
Seth yells, "I wasn't going to kill you. I was here to confront Evie
because of what she did to you. I was only trying to protect myself." On the
telephone, a two-hour drive from here, there's a toilet flush, then my
father's voice, "You still talking to those lunatics?" And my
mother, "It's so exciting! I think one of them says
he's going to kill us." And
Seth yells, "It had to be Evie who shot you." Then
in the telephone is my father's voice, roaring so loud
that I have to hold the receiver away from my ear, he says, "You, you're
the one who should be dead." He says, "You killed my son,
you goddamned perverts." And
Seth yells, "What I had with Evie was just sex." I might
as well not even be in the room, or just hand the phone to Seth. Seth
says, "Please don't think for one minute that I could
just stab you in your sleep.” And in the phone, my father
shouts, "You just try it, mister. I've
got a gun here and I'll keep it loaded and next to me day and night." He says, "We're through letting you
torture us." He says, "We're proud to be the parents of a dead gay son." And
Seth yells, "Please, just put the phone down." And I
go, "Aht! Oahk!" But
my father hangs up. My
inventory of people who can save me is down to just me. Not my best
friend. Or my old boyfriend. Not the doctors or the nuns. Maybe the police, but
not yet. It isn't time to wrap this whole mess into a neat legal package and get on with my less-than life. Hideous and
invisible forever and picking up
pieces. Things
are still all messy and up in the air, but I'm not ready
to settle them. My comfort zone was getting bigger by
the minute. My threshold for drama was bumping out. It was
time to keep pushing the envelope. It felt like I could
do anything, and I was only getting started. My
rifle was loaded, and I had my first hostage. CHAPTER FOURTEENJump
way back to the last time I ever went home to see my parents. It was my last
birthday before the accident. What with
Shane still being dead, I wasn't expecting presents. I'm not expecting a cake. This last time,
I go home just to see them, my folks.
This is when I still have a mouth so I'm not so stymied by the idea of
blowing out candles. The house, the brown living
room sofa and reclining chairs, everything is the same except my father's put
big Xs of duct tape across the inside of all
the windows. Mom's car isn't in the driveway where they usually park it. The car's locked in the garage. There's a big
deadbolt I don't remember being on
the front door. On the front gate
is a big "Beware of Dog" sign and a smaller
sign for a home security system. When I
first get home, Mom waves me inside fast and says, "Stay back
from the windows, Bump. Hate crimes are up sixty-seven percent this year over
last year." She
says, "After it gets dark at night, try and not let your
shadow fall across the blinds so it can be seen from outside." She
cooks dinner by flashlight. When I open the oven or the fridge, she panics
fast, body blocking me to one side and closing whatever I open. "It's
the bright light inside," she says. "Anti-gay violence
is up over one hundred percent in the last five years." My father comes home and
parks his car a half block away. His keys
rattle against the outside of the new dead-bolt while Mom stands frozen
in the kitchen doorway, holding me back.
The keys stop, and my father knocks, three
fast knocks, then two slow ones. "That's his
knock," Mom says, "but look through the peephole, anyway." My
father comes in, looking back over his shoulder to the
dark street, watching. A car passes, and he says, "Romeo
Tango Foxtrot six seven four. Quick, write it down." My
mother writes this on the pad by the phone. "Make?" she
says. "Model?" "Mercury,
blue," my father says. "Sable.” Mom
says, "It's on the record." I say
maybe they're overreacting some. And my father says,
"Don't marginalize our oppression." Jump to what a big mistake
this was, coming home. Jump to how Shane
should see this, how weird our folks are
being. My father turns off the lamp I turned on in the living room. The
drapes on the picture window are shut and
pinned together in the middle. They know all the furniture in the dark, but me, I stumble against
every chair and end table. I knock a
candy dish to the floor, smash, and my
mother screams and drops to the kitchen linoleum. My
father comes up from where he's crouched behind the sofa and says, "You'll
have to cut your mother some slack. We're expecting to get hate-crimed any day
soon." From
the kitchen, Mom yells, "Was it a rock? Is anything on fire?" And my
father yells, "Don't press the panic button, Leslie. The next false
alarm, and we have to start paying for them." Now I
know why they put a headlight on some kinds of vacuum cleaners. First,
I'm picking up broken glass in the pitch dark. Then I'm asking my father for
bandages. I just stand in one place, keeping my cut hand raised above my heart, and wait. My father
comes out of the dark with alcohol and
bandages. "This is a war we're
fighting," he says, "all of us in pee-flag.” P.F.L.A.G.
Parents and Friends of Lesbians and Gays. I know. I know. I know. Thank
you, Shane. I say,
"You shouldn't even be in PFLAG. Your gay son is dead,
so he doesn't count anymore." This sounds pretty hurtful, but I'm bleeding
here. I say, "Sorry." The
bandages are tight and the alcohol stings in the dark, and my father says,
"The Wilsons put a PFLAG sign in their yard. Two nights later, someone drove
right through their lawn, ruined everything." My
folks don't have any PFLAG signs. "We took ours down,"
my father says. "Your mother has a PFLAG bumper sticker, so we keep her
car in the garage. Us taking pride in your
brother has put us right on the front
lines." Out of
the dark, my mother says, "Don't forget the Bradfords. They got a burning bag of dog feces
on their front porch. It could've burned their whole house down with them
sleeping in bed, all because they hung a rainbow PFLAG wind sock in their
backyard." Mom says, "Not even their front yard, in their backyard." "Hate,"
my father says, "is all around us, Bump. Do you know that?" My mom
says, "Come on, troops. It's chow time." Dinner
is some casserole from the PFLAG cookbook. It's good, but God only knows what
it looks like. Twice, I knock over my glass in the dark. I sprinkle salt in my
lap. Any time I say a word, my folks shush me. My mom says, "Did
you hear something? Did that come from outside?” In a whisper, I ask if they remember what tomorrow is. Just to see if they remember, what with
all the tension. It's not
as if I'm expecting a cake with candles and a present. "Tomorrow,"
my dad says. "Of course, we know. That's why we're nervous as
cats." "We
wanted to talk to you about tomorrow," my mom says.
"We know how upset you are about your brother still,
and we think it would be good for you if you'd march with
our group in the parade." Jump
to another weird sick disappointment just coming over the horizon. Jump to
me getting swept up in their big compensation, their big penance for all those years
ago, my father yelling, "We don't know what kind of filthy diseases you're
bringing into this house, mister, but you can just find another place to sleep,
tonight." They
called this tough love. This
is the same dinner table where Mom told Shane, "Doctor Peterson's
office called today." To me she said, "You can go to your room and
read, young lady." I
could've gone to the moon and still heard all the yelling. Shane
and my folks were in the dining room, me, I was behind my bedroom door. My
clothes, most of my school clothes were outside on the clothesline.
Inside, my father said, "It's not strep throat you've got,
mister, and we'd like to know where you've been and what you've been
up to.” "Drugs,"
my mom said, "we could deal with." Shane
never said a word. His face still shiny and creased with scars. "Teenage
pregnancy," my mom said, "we could deal with." Not
one word. "Doctor
Peterson," she said. "He said there's just about only
one way you could get the disease the way you have it, but I told him, no, not
our child, not you, Shane." My
father said, "We called Coach Ludlow, and he said you
dropped basketball two months ago." "You'll need to go
down to the county health department,
tomorrow," my mom said. "Tonight,"
my father said. "We want you out of here." Our
father. These
same people being so good and kind and caring and involved, these same people
finding identity and personal fulfillment in the fight on the front lines for equality and personal dignity and equal rights for
their dead son, these are the same people I hear yelling through
my bedroom door. "We
don't know what kind of filthy diseases you're bringing into this house, mister, but you can
just find another place to sleep tonight." I
remember I wanted to go out and get my clothes, iron then, fold them, and put
them away. Give
me any sense of control. Flash. I
remember how the front door just opened and shut, it didn't
slam. With the light on in my room, all I could see was myself reflected in my
bedroom window. When I turned out the light, there was Shane, standing just outside the window, looking in at me, his face all
monster movie hacked and distorted,
dark and hard from the hair-spray
blow-up. Give
rne terror. Flash. He didn't ever smoke that I
knew about, but he lit a match and put it to a cigarette in his mouth. He
knocked on the window. He
said, "Hey, let me in." Give
me denial. He
said, "Hey, it's cold." Give
me ignorance. I
turned on the bedroom light so I could only see myself in the window.
Then I shut the curtains. I never saw Shane again. Tonight,
with the lights off, with the curtains shut and the front door locked,
with Shane gone except for the ghost of him, I ask, "What parade?" My
mom says, "It's the Gay Pride Parade." My dad
says, "We're marching with PFLAG." And
they'd like me to march with them. They'd like me to sit here in the
dark and pretend it's the outside world we're hiding from. It's some hateful
stranger that's going to come get us in the night. It's some alien fatal
sex disease.
They'd like to think it's some bigoted homophobe they're terrified of.
It's not any of it their fault. They'd like me to think I have something to make up
for. I did
not throw away that can of hairspray. All I did was turn
out the bedroom lights. Then there were the fire engines coming in the
distance. There was orange flashing across the outside of my curtains, and
when I got out of bed to look, there were my school clothes on fire. Hanging
dry on the clothesline and layered with air. Dresses and jumpers and
pants and blouses, all of them blazing and coming apart in the breeze. In a
few seconds, everything I loved, gone. Flash. Jump
ahead a few years to me being grown up and moving out. Give me a new start. Jump
to one night, somebody calling from a pay phone to ask my folks, were
they the parents of Shane McFarland? My parents saying, maybe. The
caller won't say where, but he says Shane is dead. A voice
behind the caller saying, tell them the rest. Another
voice behind the caller saying, tell them Miss Shane hated their hateful
guts and her last words -were: this isn't over yet, not by a long shot. Then
somebody laughing. Jump to
us alone here in the dark with a casserole. My
father says, "So, honey, will you march with your mother
and me?" My
mom says, "It would mean so much for gay rights.” CHAPTER FIFTEENJump
to the moment around one o'clock in the morning in Evie's big silent house when
Manus stops screaming and I can finally think. Evie
is in Cancun, probably waiting for the police to call her and say: Your
house-sitter, the monster without a jaw, well, she's shot your secret boyfriend
to death when he broke in with a butcher knife is our best guess. You
know that Evie's wide awake right now. In some Mexican hotel room,
Evie's trying to figure out if there's a three-hour or a four-hour time
difference between her big house where I'm stabbed to death, dead,
and Cancun, where Evie's supposed to be on a catalogue shoot. It's
not like Evie is entered in the biggest brain category. Nobody shoots
a catalogue in Cancun in the peak season, especially not
with big-boned cowgirls like Evie Cottrell. But me
being dead, that opens up a whole world of possibility. I'm an
invisible nobody sitting on a white damask sofa facing another white sofa
across a coffee table that looks like a big block of malachite from Geology
101. Evie
slept with my fiance, so now I can do anything to her. In the
movie, where somebody is invisible all the sudden—you know, a nuclear
radiation fluke or a mad scientist recipe—and you think, what would I do
if I was invisible . . . ? Like go into the guy's locker room at
Gold's gym or, better yet, the Oakland Raiders' locker room. Stuff
like that. Scope things out. Go to Tiffany's and shoplift diamond tiaras and
stuff. Just by
his being so dumb, Manus could've stabbed me, tonight, thinking I was
Evie, thinking Evie shot me, while I was asleep in the dark in her bed. My dad,
he'd go to my funeral and talk to everybody about how I was always
about to go back to college and finish my personal fitness training degree and
then no doubt go on to medical school. Dad, Dad, Dad, Dad, Daddy,
I couldn't get past the fetal pig in Biology 101. Now
I'm the cadaver. Sorry, Mom. Sorry, God. Evie
would be right next to my Mom, next to the open casket. Evie would stagger
up leaning on Manus. You know, Evie would've found something totally
grotesque for the undertaker to dress me in. So Evie throws an arm around
my mom, and Manus can't get away from the open casket fast enough, and I'm laying there
in this blue velveteen casket like the interior of a Lincoln Town Car.
Of course, thank you, Evie, I'm wearing this concubine evening
wear Chinese yellow silk kimono slit up the side to my waist with black fishnet
stockings and red Chinese dragons embroidered across the pelvic region
and my breasts. And red
high heels. And no jawbone. Of course, Evie says to my
mom: "She always loved this dress. This
kimono was her favorite." Sensitive Evie would say, "Guess this makes you oh for two." I
could kill Evie. I
would pay snakes to bite her. Evie
would be wearing this little black cocktail number with an
asymmetrical hemline satin skirt and a strapless bodice by Rei Kawakubo.
The shoulders and sleeves would be sheer black chiffon. Evie, you know
she has jewelry, big emeralds for her too green eyes and a change of
accessories in her black clutch bag so she can wear this dress
later, dancing. I hate
Evie. Me, I'm
rotting with my blood pumped out in this slut-ty Suzie Wong Tokyo Rose
concubine drag dress where it didn't fit so they had to pin all the extra
together behind my back. I look
like shit, dead. I look
like dead shit. I
would stab Evie right now over the telephone. No,
really, I'd tell Mrs. Cottrell as we placed Evie's urn in a
family vault somewhere in Godawful, Texas. Really, Evie
wanted to be cremated. Me, at
Evie's funeral, I'd be wearing this tourniquet-tight black leather mini
dress by Gianni Versace with yards and yards of black silk gloves bunched
up on my arms. I'd sit next to Manus in the back of the mortuary's
big black Caddy, and I'd have on this wagon wheel of a black
Christian Lacroix hat with a black veil you could take
off later and go to a swell auction preview or estate sale or
something and then, lunch. Evie,
Evie would be dirt. Okay, ashes. Alone
in her living room, I pick up a crystal cigarette box off the table that looks
like a block of malachite, and I overhand fast-pitch this little treasure
against the fireplace bricks. There's a smash with cigarettes
and matches everywhere. Bourgeoise
dead girl that I am, I wish all of the sudden I hadn't done this, and I
kneel down and start to pick up the mess. The glass and cigarettes. Only Evie
... a cigarette box. It's just so last-generational. And
matches. A
little tug hits my finger, and I'm cut on a shard so thin
and clear it's invisible. Oh,
this is dazzling. Only
when the blood comes out to outline the shard in red, only then can I see
what cut me. It's my blood on the broken glass I pull out. My blood on a book
of matches. No,
Mrs. Cottrell. No, really, Evie wanted to be cremated. I get
up out of my mess, and run around leaving blood on every light switch and
lamp, turning them all off. I run past the coat closet, and Manus calls, "Please," but
what I have in mind is too exciting. I
turn out all the first-floor lights, and Manus calls. He has to go to the bathroom,
he calls. "Please." Evie's
big plantation house with its big pillars in front is all
the way dark as I feel my way back to the dining room. I can feel the
door frame and count ten slow, blind footsteps across the Oriental carpet to the dining room table with its lace tablecloth. I
light a match. I light one of the candles in the big silver
candelabra. Okay,
it's so Gothic Novel, but I light all five candles in the
silver candelabra so heavy it takes both hands for me to
lift. Still
wearing my satin peignoir set and ostrich feather bathrobe, what I am is the
ghost of a beautiful dead girl carrying this
candle thing up Evie's long circular staircase. Up past all the oil paintings, then down the second floor
hallway. In the master bedroom, the beautiful ghost girl in her candlelit satin opens the armoires and
the closets full of her own clothes, stretched to death by the giant evil Evie Cottrell. The tortured bodies of dresses
and sweaters and dresses and slacks
and dresses and jeans and gowns
and shoes and dresses, almost everything mutilated and misshapen and begging
to be put out of its misery. The
photographer in my head says: Give me anger. Flash. Give
me vengeance. Flash. Give me total and complete
justified retribution. Flash. The
already dead ghost I am, the not-occurring, the completely empowered invisible nothing I've
become, I wave the candelabra past all that fabric and: Flash. What
we have is Evie's enormous fashion inferno. Which
is dazzling. Which
is just too much fun! I try the bedspread, it's this antique Belgian lace duvet,
and it burns. The
drapes, Miss Evie's green velvet portieres, they burn. Lampshades burn. Big
shit. The chiffon I'm wearing, it's burning, too. I slap
out my smoldering feathers and step backwards from Evie's
master bedroom fashion furnace and into the second-floor hallway. There
are ten other bedrooms and some bathrooms, and I go room to room.
Towels burn. Bathroom inferno! Chanel Number Five, it burns. Oil paintings of
race horses and dead pheasants burn. The reproduction Oriental carpets
burn. Evie's bad dried flower arrangements, they're these little
tabletop infernos. Too cute! Evie's Katty Kathy doll, it melts, then it burns.
Evie's collection of big carnival stuffed animals—Cootie, Poochie, Pam-Pam,
Mr. Bunnits, Choochie, Poo Poo, and Ringer—it's a fun-fur
holocaust. Too sweet. Too precious. Back
in the bathroom, I snatch one of the few things not on fire: A
bottle of Valiums. I
start down the big circular staircase. Manus, when he broke
in to kill me, he left the front door open, and the second-floor inferno sucks
a cool breeze of night air up the stairs
around me. Blowing my candles out. Now, the only light is the inferno, a giant space heater smiling down on me, me deep fried in my eleven herbs and
spices of singed chiffon. The feeling is that I've
just won some major distinguished award for a major lifetime achievement. Like,
here she is, Miss America. Come
on down. And
this kind of attention, I still love it. At the
closet door, Manus is whining about how he can smell smoke, and please, please,
please don't let him die. As if I could even care right now. No,
really, Manus wanted to be cremated. On the telephone message
pad, I write in a
minute ill open the door, but i still have the gun. before
that, i'm shoving valiums under the door, eat them, do
this or I'll kill you. And I put the note under
the door. We're
going out to his car in the driveway. I'm taking him away. He'll do everything
I want, or wherever we end up, I'll tell the police that he broke into
the house. He set the fire and used the rifle to kidnap me.
I'll blab everything about Manus and Evie and their sick love affair. The
word love tastes like earwax when I think it about Manus and Evie. I
slam the butt of the rifle against the closet door, and the
rifle goes off. Another inch, and I'd be dead. With me dead outside the locked
door, Manus would burn. "Yes,"
Manus screams. "I'll do anything. Just, please, don't
let me burn to death or shoot me. Anything, just open the door!" With
my shoe, I shove the poured-out Valiums through the crack under the
closet door. With the rifle out in front of me, I unlock the door and stand
back. In the light from the upstairs fire, you can see how the house is filling up with smoke. Manus stumbles out, power blue
bug-eyed with his hands in the air,
and I march him out to his car with
the rifle pressed against his back. Even at the end of a rifle, Manus's skin
feels tight and sexy. Beyond this, I have
no plan. All I know is I don't want anything resolved for a while. Wherever we end up, I just won't go
back to normal. I
lock Manus in the trunk of his Fiat Spider. A nice car, it's
a nice car, red, with the convertible top down. I slam the
butt of the rifle against the trunk lid. Nothing
comes back from my love cargo. Then I wonder if he still has to pee. I
toss the rifle into the passenger seat and I go back into Evie's plantation inferno.
In the foyer, only now it's a chimney, it's
a wind tunnel with the cold air rushing in the front door and up into the heat
and light above me. The foyer still
has that desk with the gold saxophone telephone. Smoke is everywhere, and a chorus of every smoke detector siren sirening is so loud it hurts. It's
just plain mean, making Evie in Cancun lay awake so long for her good
news. So I
call the number she left. You know Evie picks up on the first ring. And
Evie says, "Hello?" There's
nothing but the sound of everything I've done, the smoke detectors and
the flames, the tinkle of the chandelier as the breeze chimes through it,
that's all there is to hear from her end of the conversation. Evie
says, "Manus?" Somewhere,
the dining room maybe, the ceiling crashes down and sparks and embers rush out the
dining room doorway and over the foyer floor. Evie says, "Manus,
don't play games. If this is you, I said I
didn't want to see you anymore." And
right then: Crash. A
half ton of sparkling, flashing, white-light, hand-cut Austrian
crystal, the big chandelier drops from the center of
the foyer ceiling and explodes too close. Another inch, and I'd be
dead. How can I not laugh. I'm
already dead. "Listen,
Manus," Evie says. "I told you not to call me or I'll tell the police
about how you put my best friend in the hospital without a face. You got
that?" Evie
says, "You just went too far. I'll get a restraining order if I have
too." Manus
or Evie, I don't know who to believe, all I know is my feathers are on fire. CHAPTER SIXTEENJump
way back to a fashion shoot at this junkyard full of dirty
wrecked cars where Evie and me have to climb around on the wrecks wearing
Hermaun Mancing thong swimwear so narrow you have to wear a
"pussy strip" of surgical tape underneath, and Evie starts in
with, "About your mutilated brother . . . ?" It's
not my favorite photographer or art director, either. And
I'm going back to Evie, "Yeah?" Busy sticking out my
butt. And the
photographer goes, "Evie? That's not pouting! The
uglier the fashions, the worse places we'd have to pose to make them look
good. Junkyards. Slaughterhouses. Sewage
treatment plants. It's the ugly bridesmaid tactic where
you only look good by comparison. One shoot for Industry Jeans Wear, I
was sure we'd have to pose kissing dead bodies. These
junked cars all have rusted holes through them, serrated edges, and I'm this close to
naked and trying to remember when was my
last tetanus shot. The photographer
lowers his camera and says, "I'm only wasting film until you girls decide to pull in your
stomachs." More and more, being
beautiful took so much effort. Just the razor bumps would make you want to cry.
The bikini waxes. Evie came out of her
collagen lip injection saying she no
longer had any fear of hell. The next worse thing is Manus yanking off
your pussy strip if you're not close-shaved. About
hell, I told Evie, "We're shooting there tomorrow." So,
now the art director says, "Evie, could you climb up a
couple cars higher on the pile?" And this is wearing high
heels, but Evie goes up. Little diamonds of safety glass
are scattered on everywhere you might fall. Through
her big cheesy smile, Evie says, "How exactly did
your brother get mutilated?" You can only hold a real smile for so long, after
that it's just teeth. The
art director steps up with his little foam applicator and retouches where the
bronzer is streaked on my butt cheeks. "It
was a hairspray can somebody threw away in our family's burning
barrel," I say. "He was burning the trash and it exploded." And
Evie says, "Somebody?" And I say, "You'd
think it was my mom, the way she screamed and tried to stop him bleeding." And the photographer says,
"Girls, can you go up on your toes
just a little?" Evie
goes, "A big thirty-two-ounce can of HairShell hairspray? I bet it peeled
half his face off." We
both go up on our toes. I go, "It wasn't so
bad." "Wait
a sec," the art director says, "I need your feet to be not
so close together." Then he says, "Wider." Then, "A little wider, please."
Then he hands up big chrome tools for us to
hold. Mine must weigh fifteen
pounds. "It's
a ball-peen hammer," Evie says, "and you're holding
it wrong." "Honey,"
the photographer says to Evie, "could you hold the chainsaw a bit closer to your mouth,
please?" The
sun is warm on the metal of the cars, their tops crushed under the weight
of being piled on top each other. These are cars with buckled front ends you know nobody walked away from. Cars with T-boned sides
where whole familes died together.
Rear-ended cars with the back seats
pushed up tight against the dashboard. Cars from before seatbelts. Cars from before air bags. Before the Jaws of Life. Before paramedics. These are
cars peeled open around their exploded
gas tanks. "This
is so rich," Evie says, "how this is the place I've worked my
whole life to get." The art
director says to go ahead and push our breasts against the cars. "The
whole time, growing up," Evie says, "I just thought
being a woman would be ... not such a disappointment." All I
ever wanted was to be an only child. The
photographer says, "Perfecto.” CHAPTER SEVENTEENWhat
you get with the Rhea sisters is three skin-and-bone white men who sit around a suite at the
Congress Hotel all day in nylon slips with
the shoulder straps fallen off one shoulder or the other, wearing high heels
and smoking cigarettes. Kitty Litter, Sofonda Peters, and the Vivacious Vivienne VaVane, their faces shining
with moisturizer and egg-white facials, they listen to that step-to-three cha-cha music you only hear on elevators
anymore. The Rhea sister hair, their
hair is short and flat with grease
and matted down bristling with bobby pins, flat on their heads. Maybe they have a wig cap stretched
on over the pins if it's not summer outside. Most of the time, they don't know
what season it is. The blinds aren't ever open, and there are maybe a
dozen of those cha-cha records stacked on
the automatic record changer. All
the furniture is blonde and the big four-legged RCA Philco
console stereo. The stereo, you could plow a field with that
old needle, and the metal tone arm weighs about two pounds. May I present them: Kitty Litter. Sofonda
Peters. The
Vivacious Vivienne VaVane. AKA the Rhea sisters when
they're onstage, these are her family,
Brandy Alexander told me in the speech therapist office. Not the first time we met, this wasn't the time I cried and told Brandy how I lost my face. This
wasn't the second time, either, the
time Brandy brought her sewing basket
full of ways to hide my being a monster. This was one of the other tons of
times we snuck off while I was still in the hospital. The speech therapist
office was just where we'd meet. "Usually," Brandy
tells me, "Kitty Litter is bleaching and tweezing away unwanted facial
hair. This unsightly hair thing can tie up a
bathroom for hours, but Kitty would
wear her Ray-Bans inside out, she loves looking at her reflection so much." The
Rheas, they made Brandy what she is. Brandy, she owes them everything. Brandy
would lock the speech therapist door, and if somebody would knock, Brandy and
me, we'd fake loud orgasm noises. We'd scream and yip and slap
the floor. I'd clap my hands to make that special spanking sound that everybody
knows. Whoever knocks, they'd go away fast. Then
we'd go back to just us using up make-up and talking. "Sofonda,"
Brandy would tell me, "Sofonda Peters, she's the brains, Sofonda
is. Miss Peters is all day with her porcelain nails stuck in the rotary-dial
princess phone to an agent or a merchandiser, selling, selling,
selling." Somebody
would knock on the speech therapist door, so I'd give out with a cat
scream and slap my thigh. The
Rhea sisters, Brandy would tell me, she'd be dead without
them. When they'd found her, the princess queen supreme, she'd been a size twenty-six, lip-synching
at amateur-night, open-mike shows. Lip-synching "Thumbelina." Her
hair, her figure, her hippy, hippy forward Brandy Alexander walk, the Rhea
sisters invented all that. Jump to
two fire engines passing me in the opposite direction as
I drive the freeway toward downtown, away from Evie's house on fire. In
the rearview mirror of Manus's Fiat Spider, Evie's house is a smaller and
smaller bonfire. The peachy-pink hem of Evie's bathrobe is shut in the car door,
and the ostrich feathers whip me in the cool night air pouring around the
convertible's windshield. Smoke
is all I smell like. The rifle on the passenger seat is
pointing at the floor. There's
not one word from my love cargo in the trunk. And
there's only one place left to go. No way
could I call and just ask the operator to ring Brandy. No way would the
operator understand me, so we're on our way downtown to the Congress
Hotel. Jump
to how all the Rhea sister money comes from a doll named
Katty Kathy. This is what else Brandy told me between faking orgasms
in the speech therapist office. She's a doll, Katty Kathy is one of those foot-high
flesh-tone dolls with the impossible measurements. What she would be as a real woman is 46-16-26. As a real woman, Katty
Kathy could buy a total of nothing off the rack. You know you've seen this doll. Comes naked in a plastic bubble
pack for a dollar, but her clothes
cost a fortune, that's how realistic she is. You can buy about four hundred tiny fashion separates that mix and match to create three tasteful
outfits. In that way, the doll is
incredibly lifelike. Chilling, even. Sofonda
Peters came up with the idea. Invented Katty Kathy, made the prototype, sold
the doll, and cut all the deals. Still, Sofonda is about married to Kitty
and Vivian and there's enough money to support them all. What
sold Katty Kathy is that she's a talking doll, but instead
of a string, she's got this little gold chain coming out of her back. You pull
her chain, and she says: "That
dress is fine, I mean, if that's really how you want
to look.” "Your
heart is my pinata." "Is that what you're
going to wear?" "I
think it would be good for our relationship if we dated
other people." "Kiss
kiss." And,
"Don't touch my hair!" The
Rhea sisters, they made a bundle. Katty Kathy's little bolero jacket
alone, they have that jacket sewn in Cambodia for a dime and sell it here in
America for sixteen dollars. People pay that. Jump
to me parking the Fiat with its trunk full of my love cargo
on a side street, and me walking up Broadway toward the doorman at the
Congress Hotel. I'm a woman with half a face arriving at a luxury hotel,
one of those big glazed terra cotta palace hotels built a hundred
years ago, where the doormen wear tailcoats with gold braid on the shoulders. I'm wearing
a peignoir set and a bathrobe. No veils.
Half the bathrobe has been shut in a car door, dragging on the freeway for the past twenty miles. My ostrich
feathers smell like smoke, and I'm trying to keep it a big secret that I have a rifle tucked up crutch-like under my arm. Yeah,
and I lost a shoe, one of those high-heeled mules, too. The
doorman in his tailcoat doesn't even look at me. Yeah, and my hair, I see
it reflected in the big brass plaque that says The Congress Hotel. The cool night
air has pulled my butter creme frosting hairdo out into a ratted stringy
mess. Jump
to me at the front desk of the Congress Hotel where I try and make my eyes alluring.
They say what people notice first about you
is your eyes. I have the attention
of what must be the night auditor, the bellman, the manager, and a clerk. First impressions are so
important. It must be the way I'm
dressed or the rifle. Using the hole that's
the top of my throat, my tongue sticking out of it and all the scar tissue
around it, I say, "Gerl terk nahdz gah sssid." Everybody
is just flash frozen by my alluring eyes. I
don't know how, but then the rifle's up on the desk, pointing at nobody in
particular. The manager steps up in his
navy blue blazer with its little brass Mr.
Baxter name tag, and he says, "We can give you all the money in the drawer, but no one here can open the safe in the office." The
gun on the desk points right at the brass Mr. Baxter nametag, a fact that hasn't
gone unnoticed. I snap my fingers and point at a piece of paper for him to give
me. With the guest pen on a chain, I write: which
suite are the rhea sisters in? don't make me knock on every door on
the fifteenth floor, it's the middle of the night. "That
would be Suite 15-G," says Mr. Baxter, both his hands
full of cash I don't want and reached out across the desk
toward me. "The elevators," he says, "are to your right." Jump to
me being Daisy St. Patience the first day Brandy and I sat together. The
day of the frozen turkey after the whole summer I waited for somebody to ask me
what happened to my face, and I told Brandy everything. Brandy,
when she sat me in the chair still hot from her ass and she locked the
speech therapist door that first time, she named me out of my future. She named
me Daisy St. Patience and never wanted to know what name I
walked in the door with. I was the rightful heir to the international
fashion house, the House of St. Patience. Brandy
she just talked and talked. We were running out of air, she talked so
much, and I don't mean just we, Brandy and me. I mean the world. The world was
running out of air, Brandy talked that much. The Amazon Basin
just could not keep up. "Who
you are moment to moment," Brandy said, "is just a
story." What I
needed was a new story. "Let
me do for you," Brandy said, "what the Rhea sisters did for
me." Give me
courage. Flash. Give
me heart. Flash. So
jump to me being Daisy St. Patience going up in that elevator,
and Daisy St. Patience walking down that wide carpeted hallway to
Suite 15-G. Daisy knocks and nobody answers. Through the door, you can hear that cha-cha music. The
door opens six inches, but the chain is on so it stops. Three white faces appear in
the six-inch gap, one on top of the other,
Kitty Litter, Sofonda Peters, and the vivacious
Vivienne VaVane, their faces shining with moisturizer. Their short dark hair is matted down flat with bobby pins and wig caps. The
Rhea sisters. Who's
who, I don't know. The drag queen totem pole in the door crack says: "Don't take the queen
supreme from us." "She's
all we have to do with our lives." "She
isn't finished yet. We're not half done, and there's just
so much more we have to do on her." I give
them a peekaboo pink chiffon flash of the rifle, and the door slams. Through the door, you can
hear the chain come off. Then the door opens
all the way. Jump
to one time, late one night, driving between Nowhere,
Wyoming, and WhoKnowsWhere, Montana, when Seth says how your being born makes your
parents God. You owe them your life, and they can control you. "Then
puberty makes you Satan," he says, "just because
you want something better." Jump to
inside suite 15-G with its blonde furniture and the bossa-nova cha-cha music and cigarette smoke, and the Rhea sisters are flying around the room in
their nylon slips with the shoulder
straps off one shoulder or the other.
I don't have to do anything but point the rifle. "We
know who you are, Daisy St. Patience," one of them
says, lighting a cigarette, "With a face like that, you're
all Brandy talks about anymore." All
over the room are these big, big 1959 spatter glaze ashtrays
so big you only have to empty them every couple years. The
one with the cigarette gives me her long hand with its porcelain nails
and says, "I'm Pie Rhea." "I'm
Die Rhea," says another one, near the stereo. The
one with the cigarette, Pie Rhea, says, "Those are our
stagenames." She points at the third Rhea, over on the sofa, eating
Chinese out of a takeaway carton. "That," she says
and points, "This Miss Eating Herself To Fat, you can
call her Gon Rhea." With
her mouth full of nothing you'd want to see, Gon Rhea says,
"Charmed, I'm sure." Putting her cigarette
everywhere but in her mouth, Pie Rhea says,
"The queen just does not need your problems, not tonight." She
says, "We're all the family the top girl needs." On the stereo is a picture
in a silver frame of a girl, beautiful in
front of seamless paper, smiling into an unseen camera, an invisible
photographer telling her: Give
me passion. Flash. Give
me joy. Flash. Give me youth and energy
and innocence and beauty. Flash. "Brandy's
first family, her birth family, didn't want her, so we adopted her,"
says Die Rhea. Pointing her long finger at the picture smiling on the blonde stereo, Die Rhea says,
"Her birth family thinks she's dead." Jump to
one time back when I had a face and I did this magazine cover shoot for
BabeWear magazine. Jump
back to Suite 15-G and the picture on the blonde stereo is me, my cover,
the BabeWear magazine cover, framed with Die Rhea pointing her finger at
me. Jump
back to us in the speech therapist office with the door locked and Brandy
saying how lucky she was the Rhea sisters found her. It's not everybody
who gets a second chance to be born again and raised a second time, but this
time by a family that loves her. "Kitty
Litter, Sofonda, and Vivienne," Brandy says, "I owe them
everything." Jump
to Suite 15-G and Gon Rhea waving her chopsticks at me and saying,
"Don't you try and take her from us. We're not finished with her yet." "If
Brandy goes with you," says Pie Rhea, "she can pay for her own
conjugated estrogens. And her vaginoplasty. And her labiaplasty. Not
to mention her scrotal electrolysis." To
the picture on the stereo, to the smiling stupid face in the
silver frame, Die Rhea says, "None of that is cheap."
Die Rhea lifts the picture and holds it up to me, my
past looking me eye to eye, and Die Rhea says, "This, this is how Brandy wanted
to look, like her bitch sister. That was
two years ago, before she had laser surgery to thin her vocal cords and
then her trachea shave. She had her scalp
advanced three centimeters to give her the right hairline. We paid for her brow shave to get rid of the bone ridge above her eyes that the Miss Male used to
have. We paid for her jaw contouring and her forehead feminiza-tion." "And,"
Gon Rhea says with her mouth full of chewed-up Chinese, "and
every time she came home from the hospital with her forehead broken and
realigned or her Adam's apple shaved down to a ladylike
nothing, who do you think took care of her for those two years?" Jump
to nay folks asleep in their bed across mountains and deserts
away from here. Jump to them and their telephone and years ago some
crazy man, some screeching awful pervert, calling them and screaming
that their son was dead. Their son they didn't want, Shane, he was dead of AIDS
and this man wouldn't say where or when and then he laughed and hung
up. Jump
back to inside Suite 15-G and Die Rhea waving an old picture of me in my
face and saying, "This is how she wanted to look, and tens of thousands of Katty
Kathy dollars later, this is how she looks." Gon
Rhea says, "Hell. Brandy looks better than that." "We're
the ones who love Brandy Alexander," says Pie Rhea. "But
you're the one Brandy loves because you need her,"
says Die Rhea. Gon
Rhea says, "The one you love and the one who loves
you are never, ever the same person." She says, "Brandy will leave us
if she thinks you need her, but we need her, too.” The
one I love is locked in the trunk of a car outside with a stomach full of
Valiums, and I wonder if he still has to
pee. My brother I hate is come back from the dead. Shane's being dead was just too good to be true. First
the exploding hairspray can didn't kill him. Then our family couldn't
just forget him. Now
even the deadly AIDS virus has failed me. My
brother is nothing but one bitter fucking disappointment after another. You
can hear a door opening and shutting somewheres, then another door, then
another door opens and Brandy's there saying, "Daisy, honey," and
steps into the smoke and cha-cha music wearing this amazing sort of
Bill Blass First Lady type of traveling suit made out of solid
kelly green trimmed with white piping and green high heels and a really smart green
purse. On her head is an eco-incorrect tasty sort of spray of rainforest green
parrot feathers made into a hat, and Brandy
says, "Daisy, honey, don't point a gun at the people who I
love." In
each of Brandy's big ring-beaded hands is a sassy off-white American Tourister
luggage. "Give us a hand, somebody. These are just the royal
hormones." She says, "My clothes I need are in the other room." To
Sofonda, Brandy says, "Miss Pie Rhea, I have just got to get." To
Kitty, Brandy says, "Miss Die Rhea, I've done everything
we can do for now. We've done the scalp advance-merit, the brow lift, the brow
bone shave. We've done the trachea shave, the nose contouring, the jawline contouring, the forehead realignment ..." Like
it's any wonder I didn't recognize my old mutilated
brother. To
Vivienne, Brandy says, "Miss Gon Rhea, I've got months
left on my Real Life Training and I'm not spending them holed up here in
this hotel." Jump to us driving away
with the Fiat Spider just piled with luggage. Imagine desperate refugees from
Beverly Hills with seventeen pieces of matched luggage migrating cross-country to start a new life in the Okie
Midwest. Everything very elegant and
tasteful, one of those epic Joad
family vacations, only backwards. Leaving a trail of cast-off accessories, shoes and gloves and chokers
and hats to lighten their load so's
they can cross the Rocky Mountains, that would be us. This
is after the police showed up, no doubt after the hotel manager called and
said a mutilated psycho with a gun was menacing everybody up on the fifteenth
floor. This is after the Rhea sisters ran
all Brandy's luggage down the fire stairs. This is after Brandy says she
has to go, she needs to think about things,
you know, before her big surgery. You
know. The transformation. This is after I keep
looking at Brandy and wondering, Shane? "It's just such a big commitment," Brandy says, "being a girl, you know. Forever." Taking
the hormones. For the rest of her life. The pills, the patches, the
injections, for the rest of her life. And what
if there was someone, just one person who would love her, who could make her life happy, just the way she was, without the hormones and make-up and the
clothes and shoes and surgery? She
has to at least look around the world
a little. Brandy explains all this, and the Rhea sisters start to cry and wave and pile the American Touristers into the car. And
the whole scene would be just heartbreaking, and I would be boo-hooing too, if
I didn't know Brandy was my dead brother and the person he wants to
love him is me,
his hateful sister, already plotting to kill him. Yes. Plotting me, plotting to kill Brandy Alexander. Me with nothing
left to lose, plotting my big revenge in the spotlight. Give
me violent revenge fantasies as a coping mechanism. Flash. Just
give me my first opportunity. Flash. Brandy
behind the wheel, she turns to me, her eyes all spidery with tears and
mascara, and says, "Do you know what the Benjamin Standard Guidelines are?" Brandy
starts the car and puts it in gear. She drops the parking brake and cranes
her neck to see for traffic. She says,
"I have to live one whole year on hormones in my new gender role before my vaginoplasty. They call
it Real Life Training." Brandy
pulls out into the street and we're almost escaped. Police SWAT
teams in chic basic black accessorized with tear gas and semiautomatic
weapons are charging in past the doorman holding the door in his gold
braid. The Rheas run after us, waving and throwing kisses and doing
pretty much ugly bridesmaid behavior until they stumble, panting, in the street, their
high heels shot to hell. There's
a moon in the sky. Office buildings are canyoned along either side of the street.
There's still Manus
in the trunk, and we're already putting gross distance between me and my getting caught. Brandy
puts her big hand open on my leg and squeezes. Arson,
kidnapping, I think I'm up to murder. Maybe all this will get me just a
glimmer of attention, not the good, glorious kind, but still the national media kind. Monster
Girl Slays Secret Brother Gal Pal "I've
got eight months left to my R.L.T. year," Brandy says. "Think you can
keep me busy for the next eight months?” CHAPTER EIGHTEENHalf
my life I spend hiding in the bathrooms of the rich. Jump
back to Seattle, to the time Brandy and Seth and I are on the road hunting
drugs. Jump to the day after the night we went to the Space Needle, where
right now Brandy is laid out flat on a master bathroom floor. First
I helped her off with her suit jacket and unbuttoned the back
of her blouse, and now I'm sitting on a toilet overdosing
Valiums as steady as Chinese water torture into her Plumbago
mouth. The thing about Valiums, the Brandy girl says, is they don't kill the
pain but at least you're not pissed off about being hurt. "Hit
me," Brandy says and makes a fish lips. The
thing about Brandy is she's got such a tolerance for drugs
it takes forever to kill her. That, and she's so big, most of her being muscle,
it would take bottles and bottles of anything. I drop
a Valium. A little baby-blue Valium, another powder blue Valium,
Tiffany's light blue, like a gift from Tiffany's, the Valium falls end over end into
Brandy's interior. This
suit I help Brandy out of, it's a Pierre Cardin Space Age style of just
bold white, the straight tube skirt being fresh and sterile to just above her
knees, the jacket being timeless and clinical in its simple cut
and three-quarter sleeves. Her blouse underneath is sleeveless. Her
shoes are box-toe white vinyl boots. It's an outfit you'd accessorize
with a Geiger counter instead of a purse. At the
Bon Marche, when she catwalks out of the fitting room, all I can do
is applaud. There's going to be postpartum depression next week when she goes
to take this one back. Jump to
breakfast, this morning when Brandy and Seth were flush with drug
money, we were eating room service and Seth says Brandy could time travel to Las
Vegas on another planet in the 1950s and fit right in. The planet Krylon,
he says, where synthetic bendable glam-bots would lipo-suck your fat
and makeover you. And Brandy says, "What fat?” And
Seth says, "I love how you could just be visiting from the distant future via
the 1960s." And I
put more Premarin in Seth's next coffee refill. More Darvon in Brandy's
Champagne. Jump
back to us in the bathroom, Brandy and me. "Hit
me," Brandy says. Her
lips look all loose and stretched-out, and I drop another
gift from Tiffany's. This
bathroom we're hiding in, it goes way the other side of decorative
touches. The whole deal is an undersea grotto. Even the princess phone is aqua, but when you look out the big brass porthole windows, you see
Seattle from the top of Capitol
Hill. The
toilet I'm sitting on, just sitting, the lid's closed under
my ass thank you, but the toilet's a big ceramic snail shell
bolted to the wall. The sink is a big ceramic half a clam
bolted to the wall. Brandy-land,
sexual playground to the stars, she says, "Hit me." Jump
to when we got here and the realtor was just a big tooth. One of those football
scholarships where the eyebrows grow together in the middle and they
forget to get a degree in anything. As if I can talk, me with
sixteen hundred credits. Here's
this million-dollar-club realtor who got thrown his job by a grateful alumnus
who just wanted a son-in-law who could stay awake through six or seven holiday bowl
games. But maybe I'm being a touch judgmental. Brandy
was beside herself for feminine wetness. Here's this extra-Y chromosome
guy in a double-breasted blue serge suit, a guy whose paws make even
Brandy's big hands look little. "Mr.
Parker," Brandy says, her hand hidden inside his big
paw. You can see the Hank Mancini soundtrack of love in her eyes. "We
spoke this morning." We're
in the drawing room of a house on Capitol Hill. This is another rich
house where everything is exactly what it looks like. The elaborate Tudor roses carved in the ceilings are plaster, not pressed tin, not
fiberglass. The torsos of battered
Greek nudes are marble, not marbleized plaster.
The boxes in the breakfront are not enameled in the manner of Faberge. The boxes are Faberge pillboxes, and there are eleven of them. The lace under the
boxes was not tatted by a machine. Not
just the spines, but the entire front and back covers of all
the books on all the shelves in the library are bound in leather, and the pages
are cut. You don't have to pull a single book to know this. The
realtor, Mr. Parker, his legs are still flat on the sides of his
ass. In the front, there's just enough more in one pant
leg to spell boxers instead of briefs. Brandy nods my way.
"This is Miss Arden Scotia, of the Denver
River Logging and Paper Scotias." Another victim of the Brandy Alexander Witness Reincarnation Project. Parker's
big hand swallows my little hand, big fish and little fish, whole. Parker's
starched white shirt makes you think of eating off a clean tablecloth,
so flat and stuck out you could serve drinks off the shelf of his barrel chest. "This,"
Brandy nods toward Seth, "is Miss Scotia's half-brother, Ellis
Island." Parker's
big fish eats Ellis's little fish. Brandy
says, "Miss Scotia and I would like to tour the house ourselves. Ellis is
mentally and emotionally disturbed." Ellis
smiles. "We
had hoped you would watch him," Brandy says. "It's
a go," Parker says. He says, "Sure thing." Ellis smiles and tugs with
two fingers at the sleeve of Brandy's suit
jacket. Ellis says, "Don't leave me too long, miss. If I don't get enough
of my pills, I'll have one of my fits." "Fits?"
says Parker. Ellis
says, "Sometimes, Miss Alexander, she forgets I'm waiting,
and she doesn't get me any medication." "You
have fits?" Parker says. "This
is news to me," Brandy says and smiles. "You will not
have a fit," Brandy tell my new half-brother. "Ellis, I forbid
you to have a fit.” Jump to
us camped out in the undersea grotto. "Hit
me." The
floor under Brandy's back, it's cold tile shaped like fish and laid out so they
fit together, one fish tail between the heads of two fish, the way some sardines
are canned, all the way across the bathroom floor. I drop
a Valium between Plumbago lips. "Did
I ever tell you how my family threw me out?" says
Brandy after her little blue swallow. "My original family,
I mean. My birth family. Did I ever tell you that messy
little story?" I put
my head between my knees and look straight down at the queen supreme
with her head between my feet. "My
throat was hurting for a couple of days, so I got out of
school and everything," Brandy says. She says, "Miss
Arden? Hello?" I look
down at her. It's so easy to imagine her dead. "Miss
Arden, please," she says. "Hit me?" I drop
another Valium. Brandy
swallows. "It was like I couldn't swallow for days," she says.
"My throat 'was that sore. I could barely talk. My folks, they
thought, of course, it was strep throat." Brandy's
head is almost straight under mine as I look down. Only Brandy's face
is upside down. My eyes look right into the dark interior of her Plumbago mouth, dark wet going inside to her works and organs and
everything behind the scenes. Brandy
Alexander Backstage. Upside down she
could be a complete stranger. And
Ellis was right, you only ask people about themselves so you can tell
them about yourself. "The
culture," Brandy says. "The swab they did for Strep
Throat came back positive for the clap. You know, the
third Rhea sister. Gonorrhea," she says. "That little tiny
gonococcus bug. I was sixteen years old and had the clap. My folks did not deal
with it well." No.
No, they didn't. "They
freaked," Brandy says. They
threw him out of the house. "They
yelled about how diseased I was being," Brandy says. Then
they threw him out. "By
'diseased' I think they meant 'gay'," she says. Then
they threw him out. "Miss
Scotia?" she says. "Hit me." So I
hit her. "Then
they threw me out of the damn house." Jump
to Mr. Parker outside the bathroom door saying, "Miss Alexander?
It's me, Miss Alexander. Miss Scotia, are you in there?" Brandy
starts to sit up and props herself on one elbow. "It's
Ellis," Mr. Parker says through the door. "I think you
should come downstairs. Miss Scotia, your brother's having a seizure or
something." Drugs
and cosmetics are spread out all over the aquamarine countertops, and
Brandy's sprawled half-naked on the floor in a sprinkling of pills and capsules
and tablets. "He's
her half-brother," Brandy calls back. The
doorknob rattles. "You have to help me," Parker says. "Stop
right there, Mr. Parker!" Brandy shouts and the doorknob
stops turning. "Calm yourself. Do not come in here,"
Brandy says. "What you need to do," Brandy looks at me
while she says this, "what you need to do is pin Ellis to the
floor so he doesn't hurt himself. I'll be down in a moment." Brandy
looks at me and smiles her Plumbago lips into a big bow. "Parker?"
she says, "Are you listening?" "Please,
hurry," comes through the door. "After
you have Ellis pinned to the floor," Brandy says, "wedge
his mouth open with something. Do you have a wallet?" There's
a moment. "It's
eel skin, Miss Alexander." "Then
you must be very proud of it," says Brandy. "You're going to
have to jam it between his teeth to keep his mouth open. Sit on him if you have
to," Brandy, she's just smiling evil incarnate at my feet. The
shatter of some real lead crystal comes through the door from downstairs. "Hurry!" Parker
shouts. "He's breaking things!" Brandy
licks her lips. "After you have his mouth pried open,
Parker, reach in and grab his tongue. If you don't, he'll choke, and then
you'll be sitting on a dead body." Silence. "Do
you hear me?" Brandy says. "Grab
his tongue?" Something
else real and expensive and far away shatters. "Mr.
Parker, honey, I hope you're bonded," the Princess Alexander says, her
face all bloated red with choking back laughter. "Yes," she says,
"grab Ellis's tongue. Pin him to the floor, keep his mouth open, and pull
his tongue out as far as you can until I come down to help
you." The
doorknob turns. My
veils are all on the vanity counter out of my reach. The door opens far enough
to hit the high-heeled foot of Brandy,
sprawled giggling and half full of Valiums, there half-naked in drugs on the
floor. This is far enough for me to see Parker's face with its one
grown-together eyebrow, and far enough for
the face to see me sitting on the toilet. Brandy
screams, "I am attending to Miss Arden Scotia!" Given the choice between
grabbing a strange tongue and watching a
monster poop into a giant snail shell, the face retreats and slams the door
behind it. Football
scholarship footsteps charge off down the hallway. Then
pound down the stairs. The
big tooth that Parker is, his footsteps pound across the
foyer to the living room. Ellis's
scream, real and sudden and far away, comes through the floor from
downstairs. And, suddenly, stops. "Now,"
says Brandy, "where were we?" She
lies back down with her head between my feet. "Have
you thought any more about plastic surgery?" Brandy says. Then she says,
"Hit me.” CHAPTER NINETEEN When you go out with a drunk, you'll notice how a drunk fills your glass so he can empty
his own. As long as you're
drinking, drinking is okay. Two's company. Drinking is fun. If there's a bottle, even if your glass
isn't empty, a drunk, he'll pour a little in
your glass before he fills his own. This
only looks like generosity. That
Brandy Alexander, she's always on me about plastic surgery. Why don't
I, you know, just look at what's out there. With her chest siliconed, her hips lipo-sucked, the 46-16-26 Katty Kathy hourglass thing she is, the
fairy godmother makeover, my fair
lady, Pygmalion thing she is, my
brother back from the dead, Brandy Alexander is very invested in plastic surgery. And
visa versa. Bathroom
talk. Brandy's
still laid out on the cold tile floor, high atop Capitol Hill in Seattle.
Mr. Parker has come and gone. Just Brandy and me all afternoon. I'm still
sitting on the open end of a huge ceramic snail shell bolted to the wall.
Trying to kill her in my half-assed way. Brandy's auburn head
of hair is between my feet. Lipsticks and Demerols, blushes
and Percocet-5, Aubergine Dreams and Nembutal Sodium capsules are
spread out all over the aquamarine countertops around the vanity sink. My
hand, I've been holding a handful of Valiums so long my palm has gone Tiffany's
light blue. Just Brandy and me all afternoon with the sun coming in at
lower and lowers angles through the big brass porthole windows. "My
waist," Brandy says. The Plumbago mouth looks a little
too blue, Tiffany's light blue if you ask me. Overdose baby blue.
"Sofonda said I had to have a sixteen -inch waist," Brandy
says. "I said, 'Miss Sofonda, I am big-boned. I am six feet
tall. No way am I getting down to a sixteen-inch waistline." Sitting
on the snail shell, I'm only half listening. "Sofonda,"
Brandy says, "Sofonda says, there's a way, but I have to trust her.
When I wake up in the recovery room, I'll have a sixteen-inch waist." It's
not like I haven't heard this story in a dozen other bathrooms.
Another bottle off the countertop, Bilax capsules, I look it up in
the Phyicians'Desk Reference book. Bilax
capsules. A bowel evacuant. Maybe
I should drop a few of these into that nonstop mouth between my feet. Jump to
Manus watching me do that infomercial. We were so beautiful. Me with a face. Him not
so full of conjugated estrogens. I
thought we were a real love relationship. I did. I was very invested in love, but
it was just this long, long sex thing that
could end at any moment because, after all, it's just about getting off.
Manus would close his power blue eyes and twist his head just so, side to side,
and swallow. And,
Yes, I'd tell Manus. I came right when he did. Pillow
talk. Almost all the time, you
tell yourself you're loving somebody when
you're just using them. This
only looks like love. Jump
to Brandy on the bathroom floor, saying, "Sofonda and
Vivienne and Kitty were all with me at the hospital." Her hands curl up off the
tile, and she runs them up and down the sides of her blouse. "All three of
them wore those baggy green scrub suits,
wearing hairnets over their
wigs and with those Duchess of
Windsor costume jewelry
brooches pinned on their scrub suits," Brandy says. "They were flying around behind
the surgeon and the lights,
and Sofonda was telling me to count backwards from one hundred. You know ... 99 ... 98 ...
97 ..." The
Aubergine Dreams eyes close. Brandy, pulling long, even breaths, says,
"The doctors, they took out the bottom rib on each side of my chest." Her
hands rub where, and she says, "I couldn't sit up in bed for
two months, but I had a sixteen-inch waist. I still have a six-teen-inch
waist." One of
Brandy's hands opens to full flower and slides over the flat land where
her blouse tucks into the belt of her skirt. "They cut out two of my ribs,
and I never saw them again," Brandy says. "There's something in
the Bible about taking out your ribs." The
creation of Eve. Brandy
says, "I don't know why I let them do that to me." And
Brandy, she's asleep. Jump
back to the night Brandy and I started this road trip, the night we left
the Congress Hotel with Brandy driving the way you can only drive at
two-thirty AM in an open sports car with a loaded rifle and an
overdosed hostage. Brandy hides her eyes behind Ray-Bans so she can
drive in a little privacy. Instant glamour from another
planet in the 1950s, Brandy pulls an Hermes scarf over her
auburn hair and ties it under her chin. All I
can see is myself reflected in Brandy's Ray-Bans, tiny
and horrible. Still strung out and pulled apart by the cold
night air around the windshield. Bathrobe still dragging
shut in the car door. My face, you touch my blasted, scar-tissue
face and you'd swear you were touching chunks of orange peel and
leather. Driving
east, I'm not sure what we're running from. Evie or the police or Mr. Baxter or the Rhea
sisters. Or nobody. Or the future. Fate.
Growing up, getting old. Picking up
the pieces. As if by running we won't have to get on with our lives. I'm with
Brandy right now because I can't
imagine getting away with this without Brandy's help. Because, right now, I need her. Not
that I really love her. Him. Shane. Already
the word love is sounding pretty thin. Hermes scarf on her head,
Ray-Bans on her head, make-up on her face,
I look at the queen supreme in the pulse-pulse,
then pulse-pulse, then pulse-pulse of oncoming headlights. What I see when I look at Brandy, this is what Manus saw when he took me sailing. Right
now, looking at flashes of Brandy beside me in Manus's car, I know what it is I loved about
her. What I love is myself. Brandy Alexander
just looks exactly the way I looked
before the accident. Why wouldn't she? She's my brother, Shane. Shane and I were almost the same height, born one year apart. The same coloring.
The same features. The same hair,
only Brandy's hair is in better shape. Add to
this her lipo, her silicone, her trachea shave, her brow
shave, her scalp advance, her forehead realignment, her
rhino contouring to smooth her nose, her maxomil-liary operations to shape
her jaw. Add to all that years of electrolysis and a handful of hormones and
antiandrogens every day, and it's no wonder I didn't recognize her. Plus
the idea my brother's been dead for years. You just don't
expect to meet dead people. What I
love is myself. I was so beautiful. My
love cargo, Manus LockedInTheTrunk, Manus TryingToKillMe, how can I keep thinking I
love Manus? Manus is just the last man who thought I was beautiful. Who
kissed me on the lips. Who touched me. Manus is just the last man who ever told
me he loved me. You
count down the facts and it's so depressing. I can
only eat baby food. My best
friend screwed my fiance. My
fiance almost stabbed me to death. I've
set fire to a house and been pointing a rifle at innocent
people all night. My
brother I hate has come back from the dead to upstage me. I'm an
invisible monster, and I'm incapable of loving anybody. You don't know
which is worse. Jump to me wetting a washcloth in the
vanity sink. In the undersea
bathroom grotto even the towels and washcloths are aqua and blue, with a scalloped shell motif along
the hems. I put the cold,
wet washcloth on Brandy's forehead and wake
her up, so's she can take more pills. Die in the car instead of this bathroom. I haul
Brandy to her feet and stuff the princess back into her suit jacket. We
have to walk her around before anybody sees her this way. I strap
her high heels back on her feet. Brandy, she leans on me. She leans
on the edge of the countertop. She picks up a handful of Bilax capsules and
squints down at them. "My
back is killing me," Brandy says. " Why'd I ever let them
give me such big tits?" The
queen supreme looks ready to swallow a handful of anything. I
shake my head, No. Brandy squints at me,
"But I need these." In
the Physicians' Desk Reference, I show her Bilax, bowel
evacuant. "Oh,"
Brandy turns her hand over to spill the Bilax into her purse, and some capsules fall but
some stick to the sweat on her palm.
"After they give you the tits, your nipples are cockeyed and way too
high," she says, "they use a razor to shave the nipples off,
and they relocate them.” That's
her word. Relocate. The
Brandy Alexander Nipple Relocation Program. My dead
brother, the late Shane, shakes the last bowel evacuant off her damp
palm. Rrandy says, "I have no sensation in my nipples." Off
the counter, I get my veils and put layer after layer over my head. Thank
you for not sharing. We walk
up and down the second floor hallways until Rrandy says she's ready
for the stairs. Step at a time, quiet, we go down to the foyer. Across the foyer,
through the double doors closed on the drawing room, you can hear Mr.
Parker's deep voice saying something soft, over and over. Brandy
leaning on me, we tiptoe a slow three-legged race across the foyer,
from the foot of the stairs to the drawing room doors. We crack the doors open
some inches and poke our faces through the crack. Ellis
is laid out on the drawing room carpet. Mr.
Parker is sitting on Ellis's chest with a size seventeen
wingtip planted on each side of Ellis's head. Ellis's
hands slap Parker's big ass, claw at the back of the double-breasted
jacket. The single vent in Mr. Parker's jacket is torn open along the seam up
the middle of his back to his collar. Mr.
Parker's hands, the heel of one hand crams a soggy, gnawed
eel-skin wallet between Ellis's capped teeth. Ellis's
face is dark red and shining the way you'd look if you got the cherry pie
in the pie eating contest. A runny finger painting mess of nosebleed and tears,
snot and drool. Mr.
Parker, his hair is fallen over his eyes. His other hand is
a fist around five inches of Ellis's pulled out-tongue. Ellis's
slapping and gagging between Mr. Parker's thick legs. Broken
Ming vases and other collectibles are all around them on the floor. Mr.
Parker says, "That's right. Just do that. That's nice. Just relax." Brandy
and me, watching. Me
wanting Ellis destroyed, this is all just too perfect to spoil. I tug
on Brandy. Brandy, honey. We better walk you back upstairs. Rest you
some more. Give you a nice fresh handful of Benzedrine spansules. and
want to make them happy, but you still want to make up
your own rules. The
surgeons said, you can't just cut off a lump of skin one
place and bandage it on another. You're not grafting a tree. The blood supply,
the veins and capillaries just wouldn't be hooked up to keep the graft alive.
The lump would just die and fall off. It's
scary, but now when I see somebody blush, my reaction
isn't: oh, how cute. A blush only reminds me how blood is just under the
surface of everything. Doing dermabrasion, this
one plastic surgeon told me, is about the
same as pressing a ripe tomato against a belt sander. What you're paying
for most is the mess. To
relocate a piece of skin, to rebuild a jaw, you have to flay a long strip of skin
from your neck. Cut up from the base of your
neck, but don't sever the skin at the top. Picture a sort of banner or
strip of skin hanging down loose along your neck but still attached to the
bottom of your face. The skin is still attached to you, so it still gets blood. This strip of skin is still alive. Take the
strip of skin and roll it into a tube
or column. Leave it rolled until it heals
into a long, dangling lump of flesh, hanging from the bottom of your face. Living tissue. Full of
fresh, healthy blood, flapping and
dangling warm against your neck.
This is a pedicle. Just
the healing part, that can take months. Clatter
and tintinnabulation of ringing metal against metal chimes and gongs in the car
around us. "Sorry,
I guess," Brandy says. "There's shit on the floor, got
under the brake pedal when I tried to stop." Music
bright as silver rolls out from under our car seats. Napkin
rings and silver teaspoons rush forward against our feet. Brandy's got
candlesticks between her feet. A silver platter bright with starlight is slid half
out from under the front of Brandy's seat, looking up between her
long legs. Brandy looks at me. Her
chin tucked down, Brandy lowers her
Ray-Bans to the end of her nose and arches her penciled eyebrows. I shrug. I get out to
liberate my love cargo. Even
with the trunk open, Manus doesn't move. His knees are against his
elbows, his hands clasped in his face, his feet tucked back under his butt; Manus
could be a fetus in army fatigues. All around him, I hadn't noticed.
I've been under a lot of stress tonight, so forgive me if I didn't notice back at
Evie's house, but all around Manus flash pieces of silverware. Pirate treasure
in the trunk of his Fiat, and other things. Relics. A long white candle,
there's a candle. Brandy
slams out of her seat and comes to look, too. "Oh
my shit," Brandy says and rolls her eyes. "Oh my shit." There's
an ashtray, no, it's a plaster cast of a little hand, "It's okay." There's
a little rushing sound, the sound of rain on the roof of a tent or a closed
convertible. "Oh,
God," Brandy steps back. "Oh, sweet Christ!" Manus
blinks and peers at Brandy, then at his lap. One leg of his army fatigues
goes darker, darker, darker to the knee. "Cute,"
Brandy says, "but he's just peed his pants." Jump
back to plastic surgery. Jump to the happy day you're healed. You've had
this long strip of skin hanging off your neck for a couple months, only it's
not just one strip. There are probably more like a half-dozen pedicles because
you might as well do a lot at once so the plastic surgeon has more tissue to
work with. For
reconstruction, you'll have these long dangling strips of skin hanging off
the bottom of your face for about two months. They
say that what people notice first about you is your eyes.
You'll give up that hope. You look like some meat byproduct
ground up and pooped out by the Num Num Snack Factory. A
mummy coming apart in the rain. A
broken pinata. These
strips of warm skin flapping around your neck are good, blood-fed
living tissue. The surgeon lifts each strip and attaches the healed end to your
face. This way, Now
Manus peers at me, sits up and scrapes his head on the
open trunk lid. Man, oh, man, you know this hurts, still
it isn't anything tragic until Brandy Alexander chimes in with her
overreaction. "Oh, you poor thing," she says. Then
Manus boo-hoos. Manus Kelley, the last person who has any right to, is crying. I hate
this. Jump to
the day the skin grafts take, and even then the tissue will need some support. Even if the
grafts heal to where they look like a crude, lumpy jaw, you'll still need a jawbone. Without a mandible, the soft mass of
tissue, living and viable as it is, might just reabsorb. That's the word the plastic
surgeons used. Reabsorb. Into
my face, as if I'm just a sponge made of skin. Jump
to Manus crying and Brandy bent over him, cooing and petting his sexy hair. In the trunk, there's a
pair of bronze baby shoes, a silver chafing
dish, a turkey picture made of macaroni glued to construction paper. "You
know," Manus sniffs and wipes the back of his hand
under his nose. "I'm high right now so it's okay if I tell you this." Manus
looks at Brandy bent over him and me crouched in the dirt. "First,"
Manus says, "your parents, they give
you your life, but then they try to give you their life." To
make you a jawbone, the surgeons will break off parts of your
shinbones, complete with the attached artery. First they expose the
bone and sculpt it right there on your leg. Another
way is the surgeons will break several other bones, probably long
bones in your legs and arms. Inside these bones is the soft cancellous bone
pulp. That was the surgeons' word
and the word from the books. Cancellous. "My
mom," Manus says, "and her new husband—my mom
gets married a lot—they just bought this resort condo in Bowling River in
Florida. People younger than sixty can't buy property there. That's a law they have." I'm
looking at Brandy, who's still the overreactive mother,
kneeling down, brushing the hair off Manus's forehead. I'm
looking over the cliff edge next to us. Those little blue lights
in all the houses, that's people watching television. Tiffany's
light blue. Valium blue. People in captivity. First
my best friend and now my brother is trying to steal my fiance. Jump
to Manus sitting in his piss and silver in the trunk of his
red sports car. Potty training flashback. It happens. Me,
I'm crouched in front of him, looking for the bulge of
his wallet. Manus
just stares at Brandy. Probably thinking Brandy's me, the old me with a face. Brandy's
lost interest. "He doesn't remember. He thinks I'm his mother," Brandy says.
"Sister, maybe, but mother?" So
deja vu. Try brother. We
need a place to stay, and Manus must have a new place. Not thp ??? "I
went to visit them at Christmas, last year," Manus says.
"My mom, their condo is right on the eighth green, and
they love it. It's like the whole age standard in Bowling
River is fucked. My mom and stepdad are just turned sixty, so they're
just youngsters. Me, all these oldsters are scoping me out like an odds-on car
burglary." Brandy
licks her lips. "According
to the Bowling River age standard," Manus says, "I haven't been
born yet." You
have to break out large enough slivers of this soft, bloody bone pulp. The
cancellous stuff. Then you have to insert these shards and slivers of bone into
the soft mass of tissue you've grafted onto your face. Really,
you don't do this, the surgeons do it all while you're asleep. If the
slivers are close enough together, they'll form fibroblast cells to bond with
each other. Again, a word from the books. Fibroblast. Again,
this takes months. "My
mom and her husband," Manus says, sitting in the open
trunk of his Fiat Spider on top of Rocky Butte, "for Christmas,
their biggest present to me is this box all wrapped up. It's the size
of a high-end stereo system or a wide-screen television. This is what I'm hoping. I mean, it could've been anything else, and I would've
liked it more." Manus slides one foot down
to the ground, then the other. On his feet,
Manus turns back to the Fiat full of silver. "No,"
Manus says, "they give me this shit." Manus
in his commando boots and army fatigues takes a big fat-belly silver
teapot out of the trunk and looks at himself reflected fat in the convex side.
"The whole box," Manus says, "is full of all this shit and heirlooms that nobody else wants." Just
like me pitching Evie's crystal cigarette box against the fireplace,
Manus hauls off and fast pitches the teapot out into the darkness. Over the cliff, out over the darkness and the lights of suburbia, the teapot
flies so far that you can't hear it
land. Not turning around, Manus
reaches back and grabs another something. A
silver candlestick. "This is my legacy," Manus says. Pitched overhand into the darkness, the
candlestick turns end over end, silent the way you imagine satellites fly. "You know," Manus
pitches a glittering handful of napkin
rings, "how your parents are sort of like God. Sure, you love them and want to know they're still
around, but you never really see them unless they want something." The
silver chafing dish flies up, up, up, to the stars and then
falls down to land somewhere among the blue TV lights. And
after the shards of bone have grown together to give you a new jawbone inside
the lump of grafted skin, then the surgeon can try to shape this into something you can talk with and eat with and keep slathered in
make-up. This is years of pain
later. Years
of living in the hope that what you'll get will be better
than what you have. Years of looking and feeling worse in the hope that you might look better. Manus
grabs the candle, the white candle from the trunk. "My mom," Manus
says, "her number two Christmas present to me was a box full of all the
stuff from when I was a kid that she
saved." Manus says, "Check it out," and holds up the
candle, "my baptism candle." Off into the darkness,
Manus pitches the candle. The
bronze baby shoes go next. Wrapped in a christening
gown. Then a
scattering handful of baby teeth. "Fuck," Manus
says, "the damn tooth fairy." A lock
of blond hair inside a locket on a chain, the chain swinging and let
go bola-style from Manus's hand, disappears into the dark. "She
said she was giving me this stuff because she just didn't
have any room for it," Manus says. "It's not that she didn't
want it." The
plaster print of the second-grade hand goes end over end, off into the
darkness. "Well,
Mom, if it isn't good enough for you," Manus says, "I don't want to
carry this shit around, either." Jump
to all the times when Brandy Alexander gets on me about
plastic surgery, then I think of pedicles. Reabsorb-tion.
Fibroblast cells. Cancellous bone. Years of pain and hope, and how can I not
laugh. Laughter is the only sound
left I can make that people will understand. Brandy,
the well-meaning queen supreme with her tits siliconed to the point
she can't stand straight, she says: Just look to see what's out there. How
can I stop laughing. I mean
it, Shane, I don't need the attention that bad. I'll
just keep wearing my veils. If I
can't be beautiful, I want to be invisible. Jump to the silver punch
ladle flying off to nowhere. Jump
to each teaspoon, gone. Jump
to all the grade school report cards and class pictures
sailed off. Manus
crumbles a thick piece of paper. His
birth certificate. And chucks it out of existence. Then
Manus stands rocking heel-toe, heel-toe, hugging himself. Brandy
is looking at me to say something. In the dirt, with my finger I write: manus
where do you live these days? Little
cold touches land on my hair and peachy-pink shoulders. It's raining. Brandy
says, "Listen, I don't want to know who you are, but if
you could be anybody, who would you be?" "I'm
not getting old, that's for sure" Manus says, shaking his head. "No
way." Arms crossed, he rocks heel-toe, heel-toe. Manus tucks his
chin to his chest and rocks, looking down at all the broken bottles. It's
raining harder. You can't smell my smoky ostrich feathers or Brandy's L'Air
du Temps. "Then
you're Mr. Denver Omelet," Brandy says. "Denver Omelet, meet
Daisy St. Patience." Brandy's ring-beaded hand opens to full flower and
lays itself across her forty-six inches of siliconed glory.
"These," she says, "this is Brandy Alexander.” Jump to this one time, nowhere special, just Brandy and me in
the speech therapist office when Brandy catches me with my
hands up under my veil, touching the seashells and ivory of my exposed
molars, stroking the embossed leather of my scar tissue, dry and polished
from my breath going back and forth across it. I'm touching the saliva
where it dries sticky and raw down the sides of my neck,
and Brandy says not to watch myself too close. "Honey,"
she says, "times like this, it helps to think of yourself
as a sofa or a newspaper, something made by a lot of
other people but not made to last forever." The
open edge of my throat feels starched and plastic, ribbed-knitted
and stiff with sizing and interfacing. It's the same feel as the top
edge of a strapless dress or maillot, held up with wire or plastic stays sewn inside. Hard but warm the way pink looks. Bony but covered in
soft, touchable skin. This
kind of acute traumatic mandibulectomy without reconstruction, before
decannulation of the tracheostomy tube can lead to sleep apnea, the doctors said. This was them talking to each other during morning rounds. And
people find me hard to understand. What
the doctors told me was unless they rebuilt me some kind of jaw, at
least some kind of flap, they said, I could die any time I fell asleep. I could
just stop breathing and not wake up. A quick, painless death. On my pad with my pen, I
wrote: don't
tease. Us in
the speech therapist office, Brandy says, "It helps to know
you're not any more responsible for how you look than a car is,"
Brandy says. "You're a product just as much. A product of a
product of a product. The people who design cars, they're products. Your
parents are products. Their parents were products. Your
teachers, products. The minister in your church, another
product," Brandy says. Sometimes
your best way to deal with shit, she says, is to not hold yourself as such a precious little
prize. "My
point being," Brandy says, "is you can't escape the world,
and you're not responsible for how you look, if you look
beauticious or butt ugly. You're not responsible for how you
feel or what you say or how you act or anything you do. It's all out of your
hands," Brandy says. The
same way a compact disk isn't responsible for what's recorded on it,
that's how we are. You're about as free to act as a programmed computer. You're
about as one-of-a-kind as a dollar bill. "There
isn't any Teal you in you," she says. "Even your physical
body, all your cells will be replaced within eight years." Skin,
bones, blood, and organs transplant from person to person. Even what's
inside you already, the colonies of microbes and bugs that eat your food for you,
without them you'd die. Nothing of you is all-the-way yours. All of you
is inherited. "Relax,"
Brandy says, "Whatever you're thinking, a million other folks are
thinking. Whatever you do, they're doing, and none of you is responsible. All of you is a cooperative effort." Up
under my veil, I finger the wet poking stub of a tongue from some
vandalized product. The doctors suggested using part of my small intestine to
make my throat longer. They suggested carving the shinbones, the fibulas of this
human product I am, shaping the bones and grafting them to build me,
build the product, a new jawbone. On my
pad, I wrote: the
leg-bone connected to the head-bone? The
doctors didn't get it. Now
hear the word of the Lord. "You're
a product of our language," Brandy says, "arid how our
laws are and how we believe our God wants us. Every bitty molecule about you
has already been thought out by some million people before you,"
she says. "Anything
you can do is boring and old and perfectly okay. You're safe because you're so trapped inside your culture. Anything
you can conceive of is fine because you can conceive of it. You can't
imagine any way to escape. There's no way you can get out," Brandy says. "The
world," Brandy says, "is your cradle and your trap." This
is after I backslid. I wrote to my hooker at the agency and
asked about my chances of getting hand or foot work. Modeling
watches and shoes. My hooker had sent me some flowers in the hospital early on. Maybe
I could pick up assignments as a leg model. How much Evie had blabbed
to them, I didn't know. To be
a hand model, he wrote back, you have to wear a size seven glove and a size
five ring. A foot model must have perfect toenails and wear a size six
shoe. A leg model can't play any sports. She can't have any visible veins. Unless your fingers and toes still look good
printed in a magazine at three times their normal size, or billboarded
at two hundred times their size, he wrote, don't count on body part work. My
hand's an eight. My foot, a seven. Brandy
says, "And if you can find any way out of our culture,
then that's a trap, too. Just wanting to get out of the trap reinforces the
trap." The
books on plastic surgery, the pamphlets and brochures all promised to help me live a more
normal, happy life; but less and less, this
looked like what I'd want. What I
wanted looked more and more like what I'd always been trained to want. What everybody wants. Give me attention. Flash. Give
me beauty. Flash. Give
me peace and happiness, a loving relationship, and a perfect home. Flash. Brandy
says, "The best way is not to fight it, just go. Don't
be trying all the time to fix things. What you run from
only stays with you longer. When you fight something, you only make it
stronger.” She
says, "Don't do what you want." She says, "Do what
you don't want. Do what you're trained not to want." It's
the opposite of following your bliss. Brandy
tells me, "Do the things that scare you the most.” In
Seattle, I've been watching Brandy nap in our undersea
grotto for more than one hundred and sixty years. Me, I'm sitting here with a
glossy pile of brochures from surgeons showing sexual reassignment surgeries.
Transitional transgender operations. Sex
changes. The
color pictures show pretty much the same shot of different-quality vaginas. Camera shots
focused straight into the dark vaginal introitus. Fingers with red nail polish cupped against each thigh to spread the labia.
The urethral meatus soft and pink.
The pubic hair clipped down to
stubble on some. The vaginal depth given as six inches, eight inches, two
inches. Unresected corpus spon-giosum
mounding around the urethral opening on some. The
clitoris hooded, the frenulum of the clitoris, the tiny folds
of skin under the hood that join the clitoris to the labia. Bad,
cheap vaginas with hair-growing scrotal skin used inside,
still growing hair, choked with hair. Picture
perfect, state-of-the-art vaginas lengthened using sections of colon,
self-cleaning and lubricated with its own mucosa. Sensate clitorises made by
cropping and rerouting bits of the glans penis. The Cadillac of vagino-plasty.
Some of these Cadillacs turn out so successful the flood
of colon mucosa means wearing a maxi-pad every day. Some
are old-style vaginas where you had to stretch and dilate them every day
with a plastic mold. All these brochures are souvenirs of Brandy's near future. After
we saw Mr. Parker sitting on Ellis, I helped the drug-induced dead body
Brandy might as well be back upstairs and took her out of her clothes
again. She coughed them back up when I tried to slip any more Darvons
down her throat, so I settled her back on the bathroom floor, and when
I folded her suit jacket over my arm there was something cardboard tucked in
the inside pocket. The Miss Rona book. Tucked in the book is a souvenir
of my own future. Kicked
back on the big ceramic snail shell, I read: Hove Seth Thomas so much
I have to destroy him. I over-compensate by worshiping the queen supreme.
Seth will never love me. No one will ever love me ever again. How
embarrassing. Give me needy emotional
whining bullshit. Flash. Give
me self-absorbed egocentric twaddle. Christ. Fuck me. I'm so tired of
being me. Me beautiful. Me ugly. Blonde.
Brunette. A million fucking fashion makeovers
that only leave me trapped being me. Who I
was before the accident is just a story now. Everything before now, before
now, before now, is just a story I carry around. I guess that would
apply to anybody in the world. What I need is a new story
about who I am. What
I need to do is fuck up so bad I can't save myself. CHAPTER TWENTY-THREESo
this is life in the Brandy Alexander Witness Reincarnation
Project. In Santa Barbara, Manus who
was Denver taught us how to get drugs. The
three of us were squeezed into that Fiat
Spider from Portland to Santa Barbara, and Brandy just wanted to die. All the time, holding both
hands pressed on her lower back,
Brandy kept saying, "Stop the car. I got to stretch. I am spaz-am-ing. We
have to stop." It
took us two days to drive from Oregon to California, and the
two states are right next door to each other. Manus being all the time
looking at Brandy, listening to her, in love with her so obvious I only
wanted to kill them in worse and more painful ways. In
Santa Barbara, we're just into town when Brandy wants to get out arid
walk a little. Trouble is, this is a really good neighborhood in California. Right up
in the hills over Santa Barbara. You walk around up here, the police or
some private security patrol cruises you and wants to know who you are and see
some I.D., please. Still,
Brandy, she's spasming again, and the hysterical princess has one leg over
the door, half climbed out of the Spider before Denver Omelet will even stop.
What Brandy wants are the Tylox capsules she left in Suite 15-G
at the Congress Hotel. "You
can't be beautiful," Brandy says about a thousand times,
"until you feel beautiful." Up here
in the hills, we pull up curbside to an OPEN HOUSE sign. The house
looking down on us is a big hacienda, Spanish enough to make you want to dance
the flamenco on a table, swing on a wrought-iron chandelier, wear a
sombrero and a bandoleer. "Here,"
Denver says to her. "Get yourselves pretty, and I'll
show you how we can scam some prescription painkillers." Jump
back to the three days we hid out in Denver's apartment
until we could get some cash together. Brandy, she's cooked
up some new plan. Before she goes under the knife she's
decided to find her sister. The me
who wants to dance on her grave. "A vaginoplasty is
pretty much forever," she says. "It can wait while I figure some
things out." She's
decided to find her sister and tell her everything, about the gonorrhea, about
why Shane's not dead, what happened,
everything. Make a clean break of it. Probably she'd be surprised how much her sister already knows. I just
want to be out of town in case a felony arson arrest warrant is in the
pipeline, so I threaten Denver, if he won't come with us, I'll run to the police
and accuse him. Of arson, of kidnapping, of attempted murder. To Evie, I mail a letter. To
Brandy, I write: let's
drive around some, see what happens, chill. This seems a little labor
intensive, but we've all got something to
run from. And when I say we, I mean everybody in the world. So Brandy thinks we're on tour to find her sister, and Denver's come along by blackmail.
My letter to Evie's sitting in her
mailbox at the end of her driveway
leading up to her burned-up ruins of a house. Evie's in Cancun, maybe. The letter
to Evie says: To
Miss Evelyn Cottrell, Manus
says he shot me and you helped him 'cuz of your filthy relationship.
In order for you to stay out of PRISON, please seek an insurance settlement for
the damage to your home and personal property as soon as possible.
Convert this entire settlement into United States
funds, tens and twenties, and mail them to me care
of General Delivery in Seattle, Washington. I am the person you are
responsible for being without a fiance, your
former best friend, no matter what lies you tell yourself. Send the money and I will consider
the matter dealt with and will not go
to the police and have you arrested
and sent to PRISON, where you will have to fight day and night for your
dignity and life but no doubt lose them
both. Yes, and I've had major reconstructive
surgery, so I look even better than myself,
and I have Manus Kelley with me and he still loves me and says he hates you and
will testify against you in court
that you're a bitch. Signed, Me Jump
to above the edge of the Pacific Ocean, parked curb-side at the Spanish
hacienda OPEN HOUSE. Denver tells Brandy and me how to go upstairs while he
keeps the realtor
busy. The master bedroom will have the best view, that's how to find it. The master bathroom will have the best drugs. Sure,
Manus used to be a police vice detective, if you consider wagging your butt
around the bushes in Washington Park wearing a Speedo bikini a
size too small and
hoping some lonely sex hound will whip his dick out, if that's detective work, then, sure, Manus was a detective. Because
beauty is power the way money is power the way a
loaded gun is power. And Manus with his square-jawed, cheekboned good
looks could be a Nazi recruiting poster. While
Manus was still fighting crime, I found him cutting the crust off a slice of bread one
morning. Bread without crust made me
remember being little. This was so
sweet, but I thought he was making me toast. Then Manus goes to in front of a
mirror in the apartment we used to
share, wearing his white Speedo, and he asks, if I were a gay guy would I want to bang him up the
butt? Then he changed to a red Speedo
and asked again. You know, he says,
really stuff his poop chute? Plow the cowboy? It's not a morning I would want on video. "What
I need," Manus said, "is for my basket to look big, but my ass to
look adolescent." He takes the slice of bread and stuffs it inside between
himself and the crotch of the Speedo. "Don't worry, this is
how underwear models get a better look," he says.
"You get a smooth unoffen-sive bulge this way." He stands sideways to
the mirror and says, "You think I need another slice?" His
being a detective meant he crunched around in good weather, in his sandals and his lucky red
Speedo, while two plainclothes men nearby
in a parked car waited for somebody
to take the bait. This happened more than
you'd imagine. Manus was a one-man campaign to clean up Washington Park. He'd never been this successful as a regular policeman and this way nobody ever
shot at him. It all
felt very Bond, James Bond. Very cloak and dagger. Very spy versus spy.
Plus he was getting a great tan. Plus he got to tax deduct his gym membership
and his buying new Speedos. Jump to
the realtor in Santa Barbara shaking my hand and saying my name, Daisy
St. Patience, over and over the way you do when you want to make a good
impression but not looking at me in my veils. He's looking at Brandy and
Denver. Charmed,
I'm sure. The
house is just what you'd expect from the outside. There's
a big scarred mission-style trestle table in the dining
room, under a wrought-iron chandelier you could swing on. Laid across the
table is a silver-embroidered, fringed Spanish shawl. We
represent a television personality who wishes to remain nameless, Denver
tells the realtor. We're an advance team scouting for a weekend home for
this nameless celebrity. Miss Alexander, she's an expert in
product toxicity, you know, the lethal fumes and secretions given off by
homes. "New
carpet," Denver says, "will exude poisonous formaldehyde
for up to two years after it's been laid." Brandy
says, "I know that feeling.” It
got so that when Manus's crotch wasn't leading men to their doom, Manus was three-piece-suited
in court on the witness stand, saying how the defendant approached him in
some lurid exposed public masturbating way and asked for a
cigarette. "Like
anybody could look at me and think I smoke," Manus
would say. You
didn't know what vice he objected to more. After
Santa Barbara, we drove to San Francisco and sold the Fiat Spider. Me, I'm
writing on cocktail napkins all the time: maybe your sister's in the next city, she
could be anywhere. In the Santa Barbara hacienda,
Brandy and me found Benzedrine and Dexedrine
and old Quaaludes and Soma and some Dialose capsules that turned out to
be a fecal softener. And some Solaquin
Forte cream that turned out to be a skin bleach. In
San Francisco, we sold the Fiat and some drugs and bought
a big red Physicians' Desk Reference book so we wouldn't be stealing
worthless fecal softeners and skin bleaches.
In San Francisco, old people are all over selling their big rich houses full of drugs and hormones.
We had Demerol and Darvocet-Ns. Not the puny little Darvocet-N 50s. Brandy was feeling beautiful with me trying
to O.D. her on big Darvocet
100-milligram jobbers. After
the Fiat, we rented a big Seville convertible. Just between
us, we were the Zine kids: Me, I
was Comp Zine. Denver
was Thor Zine. Brandy,
Stella Zine. It was
in San Francisco I started Denver on his own secret hormone therapy to destroy
him. Manus's
detective career had started to peter out when his arrest
rate dropped to one per day, then one per week, then zero, then still zero. The
problem was the sun, the tanning, and the fact he was getting older and he was a
known bait, none of the older men he had already arrested went near him.
The younger men just thought he was too old. So
Manus got bold. More and more his Speedos got smaller, which wasn't a
good look, either. The pressure was on to replace him with a new model. So
now he'd have to start conversations. Talk. Be funny. Really work
at meeting guys. Develop a personality, and still the younger men,
the only ones who didn't run when they saw him, a younger
man would still decline when Manus suggested they take a walk back into the
trees, into the bushes. Even
the most horny young men with their eyes scamming everybody else would say,
"Uh, no thanks." Or,
"I just want to be alone right now." Or
worse, "Back off, you old troll, or I'll call a cop.” After San Francisco and San
Jose and Sacramento, we went to Reno and
Brandy turned Denver Omelet into Chase Manhattan. We zigzagged
everywhere I thought we'd find enough
drugs. Evie's money could wait. Jump
to Las Vegas and Brandy turns Chase Manhattan into Eberhard Faber. We drive the
Seville down the gut of Las Vegas. All that spasming neon, the red chase lights going one direction, white chase lights going the
other direction. Las Vegas looks the
way you'd imagine heaven must look at
night. We never put the top up on the Seville, had it two weeks, never
put the top up. Cruising
the gut of Las Vegas, Brandy sat on the boot with her ass up on the
trunk lid and her feet on the back seat, wearing this strapless metallic brocade
sheath as pink as the burning center of a road flare with a bejeweled bodice and a
detachable long silk taffeta cape with balloon
sleeves. With
her looking that good, Las Vegas with all its flash and
dazzle was just another Brandy Alexander brand fashion accessory. Brandy
puts her arms up, wearing these long, pink opera gloves, and just
howls. She just looks and feels so good at that moment. And the detachable long
silk taffeta cape with balloon sleeves, it detaches. And
sails off into Las Vegas traffic. "Go
around the block," Brandy screams. "That cape has to
go back to Bullock's in the morning." After
Manus's detective career started downhill, we'd have to work out in the
gym every day, twice on some days. Aerobics, tanning, nutrition, every station
of the cross. He was a bodybuilder, if what that means is you drink
your meal replacement shakes right out of the blender six times a day
over the kitchen sink. Then Manus would get swimwear through the mail you
couldn't buy in this country, little pouches on strings and microfilament
technology he'd put on the moment we got home from the gym, then follow me around
asking, did I think his butt looked too flat? If I
was a gay guy, did I think he needed to trim back his
pubic hair? Me being a gay guy, would I think he looked too desperate? Too
aloof? Was his chest big enough? Too big, maybe? "I'd
hate for guys to think I'm just a big dumb cow is all,"
Manus would say. Did he
look, you know, too gay? Gay guys only wanted guys who acted straight. "I
don't want guys to see me as a big passive bottom," Manus
would say. "It's not like I'd just flop there and let just
any guy bone me." Manus
would leave a ring of shaved hairs and bronzer scum around the bathtub and
expect me to scrub. Always
in the background was the idea of going back to an assignment where
people shot at you, criminals with nothing to lose if you got killed. And
maybe Manus could bust some old tourist who found the cruisy part of
Washington Park by accident, but most days the precinct commander was on him to start training a
younger replacement. Most
days, Manus would untangle a silver metallic tiger stripe string bikini
out of the knotted mess in his underwear drawer. He'd strain his ass into
this little A-cup nothing and look at himself in the mirror
sideways, frontways, backwards, then tear it off and leave the
stretched, dead little animal print on the bed for me to find. This would
go on through zebra stripes, tiger stripes, leopard spots,
then cheetah, panther, puma, ocelot, until he ran out of time. "These
are my lucky lifeguard 'kinis," he'd tell me. "Be honest." And
this is what I kept telling myself was love. Be
honest? I wouldn't know where to start. I was so out of
practice. After
Las Vegas, we rented one of those family vans. Eberhard Faber became
Hewlett Packard. Brandy wore a long, white cotton pique dress with open
strappy sides and a high slit up the skirt that was totally inappropriate for the
entire state of Utah. We stopped and tasted the Great Salt Lake. This just seemed like the
thing to do. I was
always writing in the sand, writing in the dust on the
car: maybe
your sister is in the next town. Writing:
here, take a few more Vicodins. It
was after Manus couldn't get guys to approach him for sex
that he started into buying man-on-man sex magazines and going out to
gay clubs. "Research,"
he'd say. "You
can come with," he'd tell me, "but don't stand too close,
I don't want to send out the wrong signal." After
Utah, Brandy turned Hewlett Packard into Harper Collins in Butte. There
in Montana, we rented a Ford Probe and Harper drove with me squashed in the
back seat, and every once in a while Harper would say,
"We're going one hundred and ten miles an hour." Brandy
and me, we'd shrug. Speeding
didn't seem like anything in a place as big as Montana. maybe
your sister's not even in the united states, I wrote in lipstick on a
bathroom mirror in a motel in Great Palls, So to
keep Manus's job, we went out to gay bars, and I sat alone
and told myself that it was different for men, the good
looks thing was. Manus flirted and danced and sent drinks
down the bar to whoever looked like a challenge. Manus would slip onto the
bar stool next to mine and whisper out the side of his mouth. "I
can't believe he's with that guy," he'd say. Manus
would nod just enough for me to figure out which guy. "Last
week, he wouldn't give me the time of day," Manus would rant under his
breath. "I wasn't good enough, and that trashy, bottle-blonde piece
of garbage is supposed to be better?" Manus
would hunch over his drink and say, "Guys are so
fucked up." And
I'd be, like, no duh. And I
told myself it was okay. Any relationship I could be in
would have these rough times. Jump
to Calgary, Alberta, where Brandy ate Nebalino suppositories wrapped in
gold foil because she thought they were Almond Roca. She got so ripped, she
turned Harper Collins into Addison Wesley.
Most of Calgary, Brandy wore a white, quilted
ski jacket with a faux fur collar and a
white bikini bottom by Donna Karan. The look was fun and spirited and we
felt light and popular. Evenings
called for a black and white striped floor-length coat dress that
Brandy could never keep buttoned up, with black wool hot pants on underneath.
Addison Wesley turned into Nash Rambler, and we rented another
Cadillac. Jump
to Edmonton, Alberta, Nash Rambler turned into Alfa Romeo. Brandy wore
these crinoline shorty-short square dance petticoats over black tights
tucked into cowboy boots. Brandy wore this push-up bustier made of leather with local cattle
brands burned all over it. In a
nice hotel bar in Edmonton, Brandy says, "I hate it when
you can see the seam in your martini glass. I mean, I can feel the
mold line. It's so cheap." Guys
all over her. Like spotlights, I remember that kind of attention. That
whole country, Brandy never had to buy her own drinks, not once. Jump
to Manus losing his assignment as an independent special contract vice
operative to the detective division of the Metropolitan police department. My
point is, he never really got over it. He
was running out of money. It's not like there was a lot in the bank to begin
with. Then the birds ate my face. What I
didn't know is, there was Evie Cottrell living alone in her big
lonesome house with all her Texas land and oil money, saying, hey, she had some work
that needed
doing. And Manus with his driving need to prove he can still pee on every tree.
That mirror-mirror kind of power. The rest
you already know. Jump to us on the road,
after the hospital, after the Rhea sisters,
and I keep slipping the hormones, the Provera and Climara and Premarin, into what he ate and drank. Whiskey and estradiol. Vodka and ethinyl
estradiol. It was so easy it was
scary. He was all the time making big cow eyes at Brandy. We
were all running from something. Vaginoplasty. Aging. The future. Jump
to Los Angeles. Jump
to Spokane. Jump
to Boise and San Diego and Phoenix. Jump
to Vancouver, British Columbia, where we were Italian expatriates
speaking English as a second language until there wasn't a native tongue among us. "You
have two of the breasts of a young woman," Alfa Romeo told a realtor I
can't remember in which house. From
Vancouver, we reentered the United States as Brandy, Seth, and
Bubba-Joan via the Princess Princess's very professional mouth. All the way to Seattle,
Brandy read to us how a little Jewish girl with a mysterious muscle
disease turned herself into Rona Barrett. All of
us looking at big rich houses, picking up drugs, renting cars, buying
clothes, and taking clothes back. "Tell
us a gross personal story," Brandy says en route to Seattle.
Brandy all the time being the boss of me. Being this
close to death herself. Rip
yourself open. Tell me
my life story before I die. Sew yourself shut. CHAPTER TWENTY-FOURJump
way back to a fashion shoot at this slaughterhouse where
whole pigs without their insides hang as thick as fringe
from a moving chain. Evie and me wear Bibo Kelley stainless steel
party dresses while the chain zips by behind us at about a hundred pigs an hour,
and Evie says, "After your brother was mutilated, then what?" The
photographer looks at his light meter and says, "Nope. No
way." The art
director says, "Girls, we're getting too much glare
off the carcasses." Each
pig goes by big as a hollow tree, all red and shining
inside and covered in this really nice pigskin on the outside
just after someone's singed the hair off with a blowtorch.
This makes me feel all stubbly by comparison, and I have to count back to my last waxing. And
Evie goes, "Your brother?" And
I'm, like, counting Friday, Thursday, Wednesday, Tuesday . . . "How
did he go from being mutilated to being dead?" Evie
says. These
pigs keep going by too fast for the art director to powder down their shine.
You have to wonder how pigs keep their skin so nice. If now farmers use sunblock or what.
Probably, I figure it's been a month since I was as smooth as they are. The way
some salons use their new lasers, even with
the cooling gel, they might as well use a blowtorch. "Space
girl," Evie says to me. "Phone home." The
whole pig place is refrigerated too much to wear a stainless steel dress
around. Guys in white A-line coats and boots
with low heels get to spray super-heated steam in where the pigs insides were, and I'm ready to trade them jobs. I'm ready to trade jobs with the pigs,
even. To Evie, I say, "The
police wouldn't buy the hairspray story. They were sure my father had raged on
Shane's face. Or my mom had put the
hairspray can in the trash. They called it 'neglect.'" The
photographer says, "What if we regroup and backlight
the carcasses?" "Too
much strobe effect as they go past," the art director
says. Evie says,
"Why'd the police think that?" "Beats
me," I say. "Somebody just kept making anonymous
calls to them." The
photographer says, "Can we stop the chain?" The
art director says, "Not unless we can stop people from eating meat." We're still hours away from
taking a real break, and Evie says,
"Somebody lied to the police?" The pig guys are checking
us out, and some are pretty cute. They
laugh and slide their hands up and down fast on their shiny black steamhoses.
Curling their tongues at us.
Flirting. "Then
Shane ran away," I tell Evie. "Simple as that. A couple
years ago, my folks got a call he was dead." We
step back as close as we can to the pigs going by, still
warm. The floor seems to be really greasy, and Evie starts telling me about an
idea she has for a remake of Cinderella, only instead of the little
birds and animals making her a dress, they
do cosmetic surgery. Bluebirds give her a facelift. Squirrels give her
implants. Snakes, liposuction. Plus, Cinderella starts out as a lonely little boy. "As much attention as
he got," I tell Evie, "I'd bet my brother
put that hairspray can in the fire himself.” CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVEJump
to one time, nowhere special, just Brandy and me shopping along a main
street of stores in some Idaho town with a Sears outlet, a diner, a day-old
bakery store, and a realtor's office with our own Mr. White Westing-house
gone inside to hustle some realtor. We go into a secondhand
dress shop. This is next door to the day-old bargain bakery, and Brandy
says how her father used to pull this stunt with pigs just before he took them
to market. She
says how he used to feed them expired desserts he bought by the truckload from
this kind of bakery outlet. Sunlight comes
down on us through clean air. Bears and mountains are within walking
distance. Brandy
looks at me over a rack of secondhand dresses. "You
know about that kind of scam? The one with the pigs, sweetness?" she says. He
used to stovepipe potatoes, her father. You hold the burlap
bag open and stand a length of stovepipe inside. All around the pipe, you
put big potatoes from this year's crop. Inside the pipe you put last year's
soft, bruised, cut, and rotting potatoes so folks can't see them
from through the burlap. You pull the stovepipe out, and you stitch
the bag shut tight so nothing inside can shift. You sell them roadside
with your kids helping, and even at a cheap price, you're
making money. We had
a Ford that day in Idaho. It was brown inside and out. Brandy
pushes the hangers apart, checking out every dress on the rack and
says, "You ever hear of anything in your whole life so underhanded?" Jump to Brandy and me in a secondhand store on that same main street, behind a curtain,
crowded together in a fitting room the size of a phone booth. Most of the crowding is a ball gown Brandy needs me to
help get her into, a real Grace Kelly of a dress with Charles James written all
over it. Baffles and
plenums and all that high-stressed skeletoning engineered inside a skin of shot pink organza or ice blue velveteen. These
most incredible dresses, Brandy tells me, the constructed ball gowns,
the engineered evening dresses with their hoops and strapless bodices, their stand-up horseshoe
collars and flaring shoulders, nipped waists, their
stand-away peplums and bones, they never last very long. The tension, the push
and pull of satin and crepe de Chine
trying to control the wire and boning inside, the battle of fabric against metal, this tension will
shred them. As the outsides age, the
fabric, the part you can see, as it gets weak, the insides start to poke and
tear their way out. Princess Princess, she
says, "It will take at least three Darvons to get me into this
dress." She opens her hand, and I
shake out the prescription. Her father, Brandy says, he
used to grind his beef with crushed ice to
force it full of water before he sold it. He'd grind beef with what's
called bull meal to force it full of cereal. "He
wasn't a bad person," she says. "Not outside of following the rules a little
too much." Not
the rules about being fair and honest, she says, so much as
the rules about protecting your family from poverty. And disease. Some
nights, Brandy says, her father used to creep into her
room while she was asleep. I don't want to hear this.
Brandy's diet of Provera and Darvon has
side-effected her with this kind of emotional bulimia where she can't keep down any nasty secret. I smooth my veils over my ears. Thank you for
not sharing. "My
father used to sit on my bed some nights," she says,
"and wake me up." Our
father. The
ball gown is resurrected glorious on Brandy's shoulders,
brought back to life, larger than life and fairy tale impossible
to wear any place in the past fifty years. A zipper thick as my spine
goes up the side to just under Brandy's arm. The panels of the bodice pinch
Brandy off at
her waist and explode her out the top, her breasts, her bare arms and long neck. The skirt is layered pale yellow silk faille and tulle. It's so much gold
embroidery and seed pearls would
make any bit of jewelry too much. "It's
a palace of a dress," Brandy says, "but even with the
drugs, it hurts." The broke ends of the wire
stays poke out around the neck, poke in at the waist. Panels of plastic
whalebone, their corners and sharp edges
jab and cut. The silk is hot, the
tulle, rough. Just her breathing in and out makes the clashing steel and celluloid tucked inside,
hidden, just Brandy being alive makes it bite and chew at the fabric and her skin. Jump to
at night, Brandy's father, he used to say, hurry. Get
dressed. Wake your sister. Me. Get
your coats on and get in the back of the truck, he'd say. And we
would, late after the TV stations had done the national anthem and gone
off the air. Concluded their broadcast day. Nothing was on the road except us,
our folks in the cab of the pickup and us two in the back, Brandy
and his sister, curled on our sides against the corrugated
floor of the truck bed, the squeak of the leaf springs, the hum of the
driveline coming right into us. The potholes bounce our pumpkin heads hard on
the floor of the bed. Our hands clamp tight over our faces to keep
from breathing the sawdust and dried manure blowing around
leftover. Our eyes shut tight to keep out the same. We were going we didn't
know where, but tried to figure out. A right
turn, then a left turn, then a long straight stretch going we didn't
know how fast, then another right turn
would roll us over on our left sides. We didn't know how long. You couldn't sleep. Wearing
the dress to shreds and holding very still, Brandy says,
"You know, I've been on my own pretty much since I was sixteen." With
every breath, even her taking shallow Darvon overdosed little gulps
of air, Brandy winces. She says, "There was an accident when I was
fifteen, and at the hospital, the police accused my father of
abusing me. It just went on and on. I couldn't tell them anything
because there was nothing to tell." She
inhales and winces, "The interviews, the counseling, the intervention
therapy, it just went on and on." The
pickup truck slowed and bounced off the edge of the blacktop,
onto gravel or washboard dirt, and the whole truck bounced and rattled
a while farther, then stopped. This
is how poor we were. Still
in the truck bed, you took your hands off your face, and we'd be
stopped. The dust and manure would settle. Brandy's father would drop the
tailgate of the truck, and you'd be on a dirt road alongside a looming broken
wall of boxcars laying this way and that off their tracks.
Boxcars would be broken open. Flatcars would be rolled over with their
loads of logs or two-by-fours scattered. Tanker cars buckled and leaking.
Hoppers full of coal or wood chips would be heaved over and dumped out in
black or gold piles. The fierce smell of ammonia. The good
smell of cedar. The sun would be just under the horizon with light coming
around to us from underneath the world. There'd
be lumber to load on the truck. Cases of instant butterscotch pudding. Cases of typing
paper, toilet paper, double-A batteries, toothpaste, canned peaches, books.
Crushed diamonds of safety glass'd be everywhere around car carriers
tipped sideways with the brand-new cars inside wrecked, with their clean, black
tires in the air. Brandy
lifts the gown's neckline and peeks inside at her Estraderm
patch on one breast. She peels the backing off another patch and pastes it on
her other breast, then takes another stabbing breath and winces. "The
whole mess died down after about three months, the whole child abuse
investigation," Brandy says. "Then one basketball practice,
I'm getting out of the gym and a man comes up. He's with the police, he says,
and this is a confidential follow-up interview." Brandy
inhales, winces. She lifts the neckline again and takes out a Methadone
disket from between her breasts, bites off half of it and drops the
rest back inside. The
fitting room is hot and small with the two of us and that huge civil
engineering project of a dress packed together. Brandy
says, "Darvon." She says, "Quick, please." And she
snaps her fingers. I fish
out another red and pink capsule, and she gulps it dry. "This
guy," Brandy says, "he asks me to get in his car, to talk, just to
talk, and he asks if I have anything I'd like to say that maybe I was
too afraid to tell any of the child service people.” The
dress is coming apart, the silk opening at every seam, the tulle busting out, and Brandy says,
"This guy, this detective, I tell him,
'No,' and he says, 'Good.' He says he
likes a kid who can keep a secret." At a
train wreck you could pick up pencils two thousand at a time. Light bulbs still
perfect and not rattling inside. Key blanks by the hundreds. The pickup truck
could only hold so much, and by then other trucks would be arrived with people
shoveling grain into car backseats and people watching us with our
piles of too much as we decided what we needed more, the ten thousand shoelaces
or one thousand jars of celery salt. The five hundred fan belts all
one size we didn't need but could re-sell, or the double-A batteries.
The case of shortening we couldn't use up before it went
rancid or the three hundred cans of hairspray "The police guy,"
Brandy says, and every wire is rising out of
her tight yellow silk, "he puts his hand on me, right up the leg of my shorts, and he says we
don't have to re-open the case. We
don't have to cause my family any more problems." Brandy says,
"This detective says the police want to
arrest my father for suspicion. He can stop them, he says. He says, it's all up to me." Brandy inhales and the
dress shreds, she breathes and every breath
makes her naked in more places. "What
did I know," she says. "I was fifteen. I didn't know
anything." In a
hundred torn holes, bare skin shows through. At
the train wreck, my father said security would be here any minute. How I
heard this was: we'd be rich. We'd be secure. But what
he really meant was we'd have to hurry or we'd get caught and lose it all. Of course I remember. "The
police guy," Brandy says, "he was young, twenty-one or
twenty-two. He wasn't some dirty old man. It wasn't horrible," she says, "but it
wasn't love." With
more of the dress torn, the skeleton springs apart in different places. "Mostly,"
Brandy says, "it made me confused for a long time." That's
my growing up, those kind of train wrecks. Our only dessert from the
time I was six to the time I was nine was butterscotch pudding. It turns out I
loathe butterscotch. Even the color. Especially the color. And the
taste. And smell. How I
met Manus was when I was eighteen a great- looking
guy came to the door of my parents' house and asked, did we ever hear
back from my brother after he ran away? The guy was a little older,
but not out of the ballpark. Twenty-five,
tops. He gave me a card that said Manus Kelley. Independent Special Contract Vice Operative. The only
thing else I noticed was he didn't wear a wedding ring. He said, "You know, you look a lot like your brother." He had a glorious smile and said,
"What's your name?" "Before
we go back to the car," Brandy says, "I have to tell you something about your
friend. Mr. White Westing-house." Formerly
Mr. Chase Manhattan, formerly Nash Rambler, formerly Denver Omelet,
formerly independent special contract vice operative Manus
Kelley. I do the homework: Manus is thirty years old. Brandy's twenty-four. When Brandy was sixteen I was fifteen. When Brandy was sixteen, maybe Manus was already part
of our lives. I
don't want to hear this. The
most beautiful ancient perfect dress is gone. The silk and
tulle have slipped, dropped, slumped to the fitting room
floor, and the wire and boning is broken and sprung away,
leaving just some red marks already fading on Brandy's skin with Brandy
left standing way too close to me in just her underwear. "It's funny,"
Brandy says, "but this isn't the first time I've destroyed somebody's beautiful dress," and a big Aubergine
Dreams eye winks at me. Her breath and skin feel warm, she's that close. "The
night I ran away from home," Brandy says, "I burned almost every stitch
of clothing my family had hanging on the clothesline." Brandy
knows about me, or she doesn't know. She's confessing her heart, or she's teasing me. If she
knows, she could be lying to me about
Manus. If she doesn't know, then the man I love is a freaky creepy sexual
predator. Either
Manus or Brandy is being a sleazy liar to me, me, the paragon of virtue
and truth here. Manus or Brandy, I don't know who to hate. Me
and Manus or Me and Brandy. It wasn't horrible, but it wasn't love. CHAPTER TWENTY-SIXI
here had to be some better way to kill Brandy. To set me free.
Some quick permanent closure. Some kind of crossfire I could walk away
from. Evie hates me by now. Brandy looks just like I used to. Manus is
still so in love with Brandy he'd follow her anywhere, even if he's not sure why. All I'd have to do is get Brandy
cross-haired in front of Evie's rifle. Bathroom
talk. Brandy's
suit jacket with its sanitary little waist and mod three-quarter sleeves is still folded on
the aquamarine countertop beside the big
clamshell sink. I pick up the jacket, and my souvenir from the future
falls out. It's a postcard of clean,
sun-bleached 1962 skies and an opening
day Space Needle. You could look out the bathroom's porthole windows and see what's become of the
future. Overrun with Goths wearing
sandals and soaking lentils at home,
the future I wanted is gone. The future I was promised. Everything I expected.
The way everything was supposed to
turn out. Happiness and peace and love and
comfort. When
did the future, Ellis once wrote on the back of a postcard, switch from
being a promise to a threat? I tuck
the postcard between the vaginoplasty brochures and the labiaplasty
handouts stuck between the pages of the Miss Rona book. On the cover is a
satellite photo of Hurricane Blonde just off the West Coast of
her face. The blonde is crowded with pearls and what could be diamonds
sparkle here and there. She
looks very happy. I put the book back in the inside pocket
of Brandy's jacket. I pick up the cosmetics and drugs scattered across the
countertops and I put them away. Sun comes through the porthole windows
at a low, low angle, and the post office will be closing soon.
There's still Evie's insurance money to pick up. At least a half million
dollars, I figure. What you can do with all that money, I don't know, but
I'm sure I'll find out. Brandy's
lapsed into major hair emergency status so I shake her. Brandy's
Aubergine Dreams eyes flicker, blink, flicker, squint. Her hair, it's gotten all
flat in the back. Brandy
comes up on one elbow. "You know," she says, "I'm
on drugs so it's all right if I tell you this." Brandy looks
at me bent over her, offering a hand up. "I have to tell you," Brandy
says, "but I do love you." She says, "I can't
tell how this is for you, but I want us to be a family." My brother wants to marry
me. I
give Brandy a hand up. Brandy leans on me, Brandy, she
leans on the edge of the countertop. She says, "This wouldn't
be a sister thing." Brandy says, "I still have some days
left in my Real Life Training." Stealing drugs, selling
drugs, buying clothes, renting luxury cars,
taking clothes back, ordering blender drinks, this isn't what I'd call Real Life, not by a long shot. Brandy's
ring-beaded hands open to full flower and spread the fabric of her skirt across her
front. "I still have all my original equipment," she says. The
big hands are still patting and smoothing Brandy's crotch
as she turns sideways to the mirror and looks at her profile. "It was
supposed to come off after a year, but then I met you," she says.
"I had my bags packed in the Congress Hotel for weeks just hoping you'd
come to rescue me." Brandy turns her other side to the mirror
and searches. "I just loved you so much, I thought maybe it's not
too late?" Brandy
spreads pot gloss across her top lip and then her bottom
lip, blots her lips on a tissue, and drops the big lumbago
kiss into the snail shell toilet. Brandy says with her
new lips. "Any idea how to flush this thing?" Hours
I sat on that toilet, and no, I never saw how to flush it. I step out into the hallway so if
Brandy wants to blab at me she'll have to
follow. Brandy
stumbles in the bathroom doorway where the tile meets the hallway
carpet. Her one shoe, the heel is broken. Her stocking is run where it rubbed the doorframe. She's grabbed at a towel rack for balance
and chipped her nail polish. Shining
anal queen of perfection, she says, "Fuck." Princess
Princess, she yells after me, "It's not that I really
want to be a woman." She yells, "Wait up!" Brandy yells,
"I'm only doing this because it's just the biggest mistake
I can think to make. It's stupid and destructive, and
anybody you ask will tell you I'm wrong. That's why I have
to go through with it." Brandy
says, "Don't you see? Because we're so trained to do life the right way. To
not make mistakes" Brandy says,
"I figure, the bigger the mistake looks, the better chance I'll
have to break out and live a real life." Like
Christopher Columbus sailing toward disaster at the edge of the world. Like Fleming and his bread
mold. "Our
real discoveries come from chaos," Brandy yells, "from
going to the place that looks wrong and stupid and foolish." Her
imperial voice everywhere in the house, she yells, "You do not walk away from me when I take a minute to explain myself!" Her
example is a woman who climbs a mountain, there's no rational reason for climbing that
hard, and to some people it's a stupid folly, a misadventure, a
mistake. A mountain climber, maybe she starves and freezes, exhausted
and in pain for days, and climbs all the way to the top. And maybe she's
changed by that, but all she has to show for it is her story. "But
me," Brandy says, still in the bathroom doorway, still looking at her
chipped nail polish, "I'm making the same
mistake only so much worse, the pain, the money, the time, and being dumped by
my old friends, and in the end my
whole body is my story." A sexual reassignment
surgery is a miracle for some people, but
if you don't want one, it's the ultimate form of self-mutilation. She
says, "Not that it's bad being a woman. This might be wonderful, if I
wanted to be a woman. The point is," Brandy
says, "being a woman is the last thing I want. It's just the
biggest mistake I could think to make." So
it's the path to the greatest discovery. It's
because we're so trapped in our culture, in the being of
being human on this planet with the brains we have, and
the same two arms and two legs everybody has. We're so trapped that any way we
could imagine to escape would be just another part of the trap. Anything
we want, we're trained
to want. "My
first idea was to have one arm and one leg amputated, the left ones, or the
right ones," she looks at me and shrugs, "but no surgeon would agree to
help me." She
says, "I considered AIDS, for the experience, but then
everybody had AIDS and it looked so mainstream and trendy." She says, "That's what
the Rhea sisters told my birth family, I'm pretty sure. Those bitches can be so
possessive." Brandy
pulls a pair of white gloves out of her handbag, the kind of gloves with a
white pearl button on the inside of each wrist. She works each hand into a
glove and does the button. White is not a good color choice. In white,
her hands look transplanted from a giant cartoon mouse. "Then
I thought, a sex change," she says, "a sexual reassignment
surgery. The Rheas," she says, "they think they're
using me, but really I'm using them for their money, for their thinking they were in control
of me and this was all their idea." Brandy
lifts her foot to look at the broken heel, and she sighs. Then she reaches
down to take off the other shoe. "None
of this was the Rhea sisters' pushing. It wasn't. It
was just the biggest mistake I could make. The biggest challenge I could give
myself." Brandy
snaps the heel off her one good shoe, leaving her feet in two ugly
flats. She
says, "You have to jump into disaster with both feet." She
throws the broken heels into the bathroom trash. "I'm
not straight, and I'm not gay," she says. "I'm not bisexual.
I want out of the labels. I don't want my whole life crammed into a single word. A story. I
want to find something else, unknowable,
some place to be that's not on the map. A real adventure." A
sphinx. A mystery. A blank. Unknown. Undefined. Unknowable. Indefinable.
Those were all the words Brandy used to describe me in my veils. Not
just a story that goes and then, and then, and then, and then until
you die. "When
I met you," she says, "I envied you. I coveted your face. I thought
that face of yours will take more guts than any sex change operation. It will give
you bigger discoveries. It will make you stronger than I could ever
be." I start down the stairs.
Brandy in her new flats, me in my total confusion, we get to the foyer, and
through the drawing room doors you can hear
Mr. Parker's long, deep voice
belching over and over, "That's right. Just do that." Brandy
and me, we stand outside the doors a moment. We pick the lint and
toilet paper off each other, and I fluff up the flat back of Brandy's hair. Brandy
pulls her pantyhose up her legs a little and tugs down the front of her jacket. The
postcard and the book tucked inside her jacket, the dick tucked in her
pantyhose, you can't tell either one's there. We
throw open the drawing room double doors and there's Mr. Parker and
Ellis. Mr. Parker's pants are around
his knees, his bare hairy ass
is stuck up in the air. The rest of his bareness is stuck in Ellis's face. Ellis Island, formerly Independent Special Contract
Vice Operative Manus
Kelley. "Oh,
yes. Just do that. That's so good." Ellis's
getting an A in job performance, his hands are cupped around Parker's football scholarship power-clean bare
buns, pulling everything he can swallow into his square-jawed Nazi poster boy face. Ellis grunting and gagging, making his comeback from forced retirement. CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVENThe man
at General Delivery who asked to see my ID pretty much had to take
my word for it. The picture on my driver's license might as well be
Brandy's. This means a lot of writing on scraps of paper for me to
explain how I look now. This whole time I'm in the post office, I'm looking
sideways to see if I'm a cover girl up on the FBI's most
wanted poster board. Almost
half a million dollars is about twenty-five pounds of ten- and
twenty-dollar bills in a box. Plus, inside with the money is a pink stationery
note from Evie saying blah, blah, blah, I will kill you if I ever see
you again. And I couldn't be happier. Before
Brandy can see who it's addressed to, I claw off the label. One
part of being a model is my phone number was unlisted so I wasn't in
any city for Brandy to find. I was nowhere. And now we're driving back to Evie.
To Brandy's fate. The whole way back, me and Ellis, we're writing
postcards from the future and slipping them out the car windows as we go
south on Interstate 5 at a mile and a half every minute. Three miles closer to
Evie and her rifle every two minutes. Ninety miles closer to fate every
hour. Ellis
writes: Your birth is a mistake you'll spend your whole life trying to
correct. The
electric window of the Lincoln Town Car hums down a half inch, and Ellis drops
the card out into the I-5 slipstream. I
write: You spend your entire life becoming God and then you die. Ellis
writes: When you don't share your problems, you resent
hearing the problems of other people. I write: All God does is
watch us and kill us when we get boring. We
must never, ever be boring. Jump
to us reading the real estate section of the newspaper,
looking for big open houses. We always do this in a new
town. We sit at a nice sidewalk cafe and drink cappuccino
with chocolate sprinkles and read the paper, then Brandy
calls all the realtors to find which open houses have people still living
in them. Ellis makes a list of houses to hit tomorrow. We
check into a nice hotel, and we take a cat nap. After midnight
Brandy wakes me up with a kiss. She and Ellis are going out to sell
the stock we picked up in Seattle. Probably they're screwing. I don't care. "And
no," Brandy says. "Miss Alexander will not be calling
the Rhea sisters while she's in town. Anymore, she's determined the only
vagina worth having is the kind you buy yourself." Ellis is standing in the
open doorway to the hotel hallway, looking
like a superhero that I want to crawl in to bed and save me. Still, since Seattle, he's been my brother. And you
can't be in love with your brother. Brandy
says, "You want the TV remote control?" Brandy
turns on the television, and there's Evie scared and desperate with her
big pumped-up rainbow hair in every shade of blonde. Evelyn Cottrell, Inc.,
everybody's favorite writeoff, is stumbling through the studio audience
in her sequined dress begging folks to eat her meat by-products. Brandy
changes channels. Brandy
changes channels. Brandy
changes channels. Evie is everywhere after
midnight, offering what she's got on a silver
tray. The studio audience ignores her, watching
themselves on the monitor, trapped in the reality loop of watching
themselves watch themselves, trying the way we do every time we look in a mirror
to figure out exactly who that person is. That
loop that never ends. Evie and me, we did this infomercial. How could I
be so dumb? We're so totally trapped in ourselves. The
camera stays on Evie, and what I can almost hear Evie
saying is, Love me. Love
me, love me, love me, love me, love me, love me, love me, I'll be anybody
you want me to be. Use me. Change me. I can be thin with big breasts and big
hair. Take me apart. Make me into anything, but just love me. Jump
way back to one time, Evie and me did this fashion shoot
in a junk yard, in a slaughterhouse, in a mortuary. We'd
go anywhere to look good by comparison, and what I realize is mostly what
I hate about Evie is the fact that she's so vain and stupid and needy. But what
I hate most is how she's just like me. What I really hate is me so I
hate pretty much everybody. Jump
to the next day we hit a few houses, a mansion, a couple
palaces, and a chateau full of drugs. Around three o'clock
we meet a realtor in the baronial dining room of a West Hills manor house. All
around us are caterers and florists. The dining room table is spread and
heaping with silver and crystal, tea sets,
samovars, candelabras, stemware. A woman in dowdy scarecrow social secretary tweeds is unwrapping these gifts of silver and
crystal and making notes
in a tiny red book. A
constant stream of arriving flowers eddies around us, buckets of irises and
roses and stock. The manor house is sweet with the smell of flowers and rich
with the smell of little puff pastries and stuffed mushrooms. Not
our style. Brandy looks at me. Way too many folks around. But the
realtor's already there, smiling, fn a drawl as flat and drawn-out as
the Texas horizon, the realtor introduces herself as Mrs. Leonard Cottrell. And
she is so happy to meet us. This Cottrell woman takes
Brandy by the elbow and steers her around
the baronial first floor while I decide to fight or flight. Give
me terror. Flash. Give
me panic. Flash. This has to be Evie's
mother, oh, you know it is. And this must be
Evie's new house. And I'm wondering how it is we came here. Why today? What are the chances? The
realty Cottrell steers us past the tweedy social secretary
and all the wedding gifts. "This is my daughter's house.
But she spends almost all her days in the furniture department
at Brumbach's, downtown. So far we've gone
along with her little obsessions,
but enough's enough, so now
we're gonna marry her off to some jackass." She
leans in close, "It was more difficult than you'd ever
imagine, trying to settle her down. You know, she burned
down the last house we bought her." Beside
the social secretary, there's a stack of gold-engraved wedding
invitations. These are the regrets. Sorry, but we can't make it. There
seem to be a lot of regrets. Nice invitations, though, gold engraved,
hand-torn edges, a three-fold card with a dried violet inside. I steal one of the
regrets, and I catch up with the realty Cottrell woman and Brandy and Ellis. "No,"
Brandy's saying, "there are too many people around. We couldn't view
the house under these conditions." "Between
you and me," says the realty Cottrell, "The biggest wedding in the
world is worth the cost if we can shove Evie off onto some poor man." Brandy
says, "We don't want to keep you." "But,
then," the Cottrell woman says, "there's this subgroup
of 'men' who like their 'women' the way Evie is now." Brandy
says, "We really must be going." And
Ellis says, "Men who like insane women?" "Why,
it plum broke our hearts the day Evan came to us. Sixteen years old,
and he says 'Mommy, Daddy, I want to be a girl'," says Mrs. Cottrell. "But
we paid for it," she says. "A tax deduction is a tax deduction.
Evan wanted to be a world-famous fashion model, he told us. He started calling himself Evie, and I canceled my subscription to Vogue the next
day. I felt it had done enough damage to my family." Brandy says, "Well,
congratulations," and starts tugging
me toward the front door. And
Ellis says, "Evie was a man? " Evie
was a man. And I just have to sit down. Evie was a man. And I saw her
implant scars. Evie was a man. And I saw her naked in fitting rooms. Give
me a complete late-stage revision of my adult life. Flash. Give me anything in this
whole fucking world that is exactly what it
looks like! Flash! Evie's mother looks hard at
Brandy, "Have you ever done any
modeling?" she says. "You look so much like a friend of my son's." "Your
daughter," Brandy growls. And I
finger the invitation I stole. The wedding, the union of Miss Evelyn
Cottrell and Mr. Allen Skinner, is tomorrow. At eleven ante meridiem, according
to the gold engraving. To be followed by a reception at the bride's home. To be
followed by a house fire. To be
followed by a murder. Dress
formal. CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT My dress
I carry my ass around Evie's wedding in is tighter than skin tight.
It's what you'd call bone tight. It's that
knock-off print of the Shroud of Turin, most of it brown and white, draped and cut so the shiny red
buttons all button through the stigmata. Then I'm wearing yards and
yards of black silk gloves bunched up on my arms. My heels are nosebleed high. I wrap Brandy's half mile of black tulle studded with sparkle up around my
scar tissue, over the shining cherry
pie where my face used to be, wrapped
tight, until only my eyes are out. It's a look that's bleak and morbid.
The feeling is we've got a little out of control. It
takes more effort to hate Evie than it used to. My whole
life is moving farther away from any reason to hate her.
It's moving far away from reason itself. It takes a cup of coffee and a
Dexedrine capsule to feel even vaguely pissed about anything. Brandy,
she wears the knock-off Bob Mackie suit with the little peplum skirt
and the big, I don't know, and the thin, narrow I couldn't care less. She wears
a hat, since it's a wedding, after all. Got some shoes on her
feet made from the skin of some animal. Accessorized including
jewelry, you know, stones dug out of the earth, polished and cut to reflect
light, set in alloys of gold and copper, atomic weight, melted and beat with hammers,
all of it so labor intensive. Meaning, all of Brandy Alexander. Ellis,
he wears a double-breasted, whatever, a suit, a single vent in the back, black.
He looks the way you'd imagine yourself dead in a casket if you're a guy, not a problem for me, since Ellis has outlived his role
in my life. Ellis's
strutting around now that he's proved he can seduce something in every
category. Not that knobbing Mr. Parker makes him King of Fag Town, but now he's got Evie under his belt, and maybe enough time's
gone by Ellis can go back on duty, get
his old beat back in Washington
Park. So we
take the gold-engraved wedding invitation that I stole, Brandy and Ellis
each take a Percodan, and we go to Evie's wedding reception moment. Jump to
eleven o'clock ante meridiem at the baronial West Hills manor house of
crazy Evie Cottrell, gun-happy Evie, newly united Mrs. Evelyn Cottrell
Skinner, as if I could care at this point. And. This is oh so
dazzling. Evie, she could be the wedding cake, in tier on tier of sashes and
flowers rising around her big hoop skirt, up and up to her
cinched waist, then her big Texas breasts popped out the
top of a strapless bodice. There's so much of her to decorate,
the same as Christmas at a shopping mall. Silk flowers are bunched at
one side of her waist. Silk flowers over both ears anchor a veil thrown back
over her blonde on blonde sprayed-up hair. In that hoop skirt and those pushed-up
Texas grapefruit, the girl walks around riding her own parade float. Full of
Champagne and Percodan interactions, Brandy is looking at me. And
I'm amazed I never saw it before, how Evie was a man. A
big blonde, the same as she is here, but with one of
those ugly wrinkled, you know, scrotums. Ellis
is hiding from Evie, trying to scope out if her new husband
as yet another notch in his special contract vice operative
resume. Ellis, how this story looks from his point of view is he's
still major sport bait winning proof he can bust any man after the long fight.
Everybody here thinks the whole story is about them. Definitely that
goes for everybody in the world. Oh, and
this is gone way beyond sorry, Mom. Sorry, God. At this point, I'm not sorry for anything. Or anybody. No,
really, everybody here's just itching to be cremated. Jump to
upstairs. In the master bedroom, Evie's trousseau is laid out ready to be packed. I
brought my own matches this time, and I light the hand-torn edge of the gold-engraved
invitation, and I carry the invitation from the bedspread to the
trousseau to the curtains. It's the sweetest of moments when the fire takes control, and you're no longer responsible for anything. I
take a big bottle of Chanel Number Five from Evie's bathroom
and a big bottle of Joy and a big bottle of White Shoulders,
and I slosh the smell of a million parade float flowers all over the
bedroom. The
fire, Evie's wedding inferno finds the trail of flowers
in alcohol and chases me out into the hallway. That's what I love about fire, how
it would kill me as quick as anybody else. How it can't know I'm its mother.
It's so beautiful and powerful and beyond
feeling anything for anybody, that's
what I love about fire. You
can't stop any of this. You can't control. The fire in Evie's
clothes is just more and more every second, and now the plot moves along
without you pushing. And I
descend. Step-pause-step. The invisible showgirl. For once, what's happening
is what I want. Even better than I expected.
Nobody's noticed. Our
world is speeding straight ahead into the future. Flowers
and stuffed mushrooms, wedding guests and string quartet, we're all going there
together on the Planet Brandy Alexander. In the front hall, there's the Princess
Princess thinking she's still in control. The
feeling is of supreme and ultimate control over all. Jump
to the day we'll all be dead and none of this will matter.
Jump to the day another house will stand here and the
people living there won't know we ever happened. "Where
did you go?" Brandy says. The immediate future, I
would tell her. CHAPTER TWENTY-NINEJump
to Brandy and me, we can't find Ellis anywhere. Evie and all the Texas
Cottrells can't find their groom, either, everybody laughing that nervous
laughter. What bridesmaid has run off with him, everybody wants to know.
Ha, ha. I tug
Brandy toward the door, but she shushes me. Ellis and the groom both missing ... a
hundred Texans drinking hard . . . that ridiculous bride in her
big drag wedding dress . . . this is just too much fun for
Brandy to walk out now. Jump
to Evie riding her big parade float out of the butler's
pantry, her hands all fisted up, her veil and hair flying
straight out behind her. Evie's shouting about how she done found her butt-sucking fag-assed new husband face-downed enjoying butt sex with
everybody's old boyfriend in the butler's
pantry. Oh,
Ellis. I
remember all his porno magazines, and all the details of anal, oral, rimming,
fisting, felching. You could put yourself in the hospital trying to self-suck. Oh,
this is dazzling. Of course, Evie's answer to
everything is to heft her hoop skirt and run
upstairs after a rifle except by now most
of her bedroom is a Chanel Number Five perfumed wall of flames Evie has to ride her parade float right into. Everybody cell phones 9-1-1 for help. Nobody's
bothered enough to go into the
butler's pantry and check out the action.
Folks don't want to know what might be going on in there. Go
figure, but Texans seem to be a lot more comfortable around disastrous house fires than they
are around anal sex. I
remember my folks. Scat and water sports. Sado and masochism. Waiting
for Evie to burn to death, everybody gets a fresh drink and goes to
stand in the foyer at the foot of the stairs. You hear loud spanking from the butler's pantry. The
painful kind where you spit on your hand first. Brandy,
the socially inappropriate thing she is, Brandy starts laughing.
"This is going to be messy good fun," Brandy tells me out the side of
her Plumbago mouth. "I put a handful of Bilax bowel evacuant in
Ellis's last drink." Oh,
Ellis. With
all that's going on, Brandy could've gotten away if she hadn't started
laughing. You
see, since right then, Evie steps out of that wall of flame
at the top of the stairs. A rifle in her hands, her wedding dress burned down
to the steel hoops, the silk flowers in her hair burned down to their wire
skeletons, all her blonde hair burned off,
Evie does her slow step-pause-step down the stairs with a rifle pointed right
at Brandy Alexander. With
everybody looking up the stairs at Evie wearing nothing but wire and ashes,
sweat and soot smeared all over her lucious hourglass transgender bod,
we all watch Evelyn Cottrell in her big incorporated moment, and Evie
screams, "You!" She screams at Brandy
Alexander down the barrel of the rifle,
"You did it to me again. Another fire!" Step-pause-step. "I
thought we were best friends," she says. "Sure, yes, I slept
with your boyfriend, but who hasn't?" Evie says, with the gun and everything. Step-pause-step. "It's just not enough
for you to be the best and most beautiful,"
Evie says. "Most people, if they looked as good as you, they'd tread water for the rest of their
lives." Step-pause-step. "But
no," Evie says, "Here you have to destroy everyone else." The
second floor fire inches down the foyer wallpaper, and
wedding guests are scrambling for their wraps and bags,
all of them headed outdoors with the wedding gifts, the
silver and the crystal. You
hear that butt slapping sound from the butler's pantry. "Shut
up in there!" Evie yells. Back to Brandy, Evie says,
"So maybe I'll spend some years in prison, but you'll have a
big head start on me in hell!" You
hear the rifle cock. The
fire inches down the walls. "Oh,
God, yes, Jesus Christ," Ellis yells. "Oh, God, I'm coming!" Brandy
stops laughing. Bigger and prettier than ever, looking regal and annoyed
and put-upon as if this is all a big joke, Brandy Alexander lifts a giant hand
and looks at her watch. And
I'm about to become an only child. And I
could stop everything at this moment. I could throw off my veil, tell
the truth, save lives. I'm me. Brandy's innocent. Here's my second chance. I
could've opened my bedroom window years ago and let Shane inside.
I could've not called the police all those times to suggest
Shane's accident wasn't. What stands in my way is the
story how Shane burned my clothes. How being mutilated
made Shane the center of attention. And if I throw off my
veil now, I'll just be a monster, a less than perfect, mutilated victim. I'll be
only how I look. Just the truth, the whole
truth, and nothing but the truth. Honesty being the most boring thing in the
planet Brandy Alexander. And.
Evie aims. "Yes!"
Ellis yells from the pantry. "Yes, do it, big guy! Give
it to me! Shoot it!" Evie
squints down the barrel. "Now!"
Ellis is yelling. "Shoot it right in my mouth!" Brandy
smiles. And I
do nothing. And
Evie shoots Brandy Alexander right in the heart. CHAPTER THIRTYMy
life," Brandy says. "I'm dying, and I'm supposed to see my
whole life." Nobody's
dying here. Give me denial. Evie's
shot her wad, dropped the rifle, and gone outside. The
police and paramedics are on their way, and the rest of the wedding guests
are outside fighting over the wedding gifts, who gave what and who now has
the right to take it back. All of it good messy fun. Blood
is pretty much all over Brandy Alexander, and she says, "I want to
see my life." From
some back room, Ellis says, "You have the right to
remain silent.” Jump
to me, I let go from holding Brandy's hand, my hand warm red with
blood-born pathogens, I write on the burning wallpaper. Your
Name Is Shane McFarland. You
Were Born Twenty-Four Years Ago. You
Have A Sister, One Year Younger. The
fire's already eating my top line. You
Got Gonorrhea From A Special Contract Vice Operative
And Your Family Threw You Out. You
Met Three Drag Queens Who Paid You To Start A Sex
Change Because You Couldn't Think Of Anything You Wanted
Less. The
fire's already eating my second line. You
Met Me. I Am
Your Sister, Shannon McFarland. Me
writing the truth in blood just minutes ahead of the fire eating it. You
Loved Me Because Even If You Didn't Recognize Me,
You Knew I Was Your Sister. On Some Level, You Knew Right
Away So You Loved Me. We
traveled all over the West and grew up together again. I've
hated you for as long as I can remember. And
You Are Not Going To Die. I
could've saved you. And
you are not going to die. The
fire and my writing are now neck and neck. Jump
to Brandy half-bled on the floor, most of her blood wiped up by me to
write with, Brandy squints to read as the fire eats our whole family
history, line by line. The line And You Are Not Going To Die is
almost at the floor, right in Brandy's face. "Honey,"
Brandy says, "Shannon, sweetness, I knew all that.
It was Miss Evie's doing. She told me about you being in the hospital.
About your accident." Such a
hand model I am already. And such a rube. "Now,"
Brandy says. "Tell me everything." I
write: I've Been Feeding Ellis Island Female Hormones
For The Past Eight Months. And
Brandy laughs blood. "Me too!" she says. How
can I not laugh? "Now,"
Brandy says, "quick, before I die, what else?" I
write: Everybody Just Loved You More After The Hairspray
Accident. And: And I
Did Not Make That Hairspray Can Explode. Brandy
says, "I know. I did it. I was so miserable being a
normal average child. I wanted something to save me. I wanted
the opposite of a miracle." From
some other room, Ellis says, "Anything you say can and
may be used against you in a court of law." And on the baseboard, I write: The
Truth Is I Shot Myself In The Face. There's
no more room to write, no more blood to write with, and nothing left to say,
and Brandy says, "You shot your own face off?" I nod. "That,"
says Brandy, "that, I didn't know.” CHAPTER THIRTY-ONEJump
to this one time, nowhere special, just Brandy almost dead on the floor
and me kneeling over her -with my hands covered in her Princess Alexander
partytime blood. Brandy
yells, "Evie!" And
Evie's burned-up head sticks back in through the front doorway.
"Brandy, sugar," Evie says, "This all's been the
best disaster you've ever pulled off!" To me,
Evie runs up and kisses me with her nasty melted lipstick and says,
"Shannon, I just can't thank you enough for spicing up my boring old home life." "Miss
Evie," Brandy says, "you can act like anything, but,
girl, you just totally missed shooting the bulletproof part of my
vest." Jump
to the truth. I'm the stupid one. Jump
to the truth. I shot myself. I let Evie think it was Manus
and Manus think it was Evie. Probably it was their suspicion
of each other that drove them apart. It drove Evie to keep a loaded rifle
around in case Manus came after her. The same fear made Manus carry a
butcher knife the night he came over to confront her. The
truth is nobody here is as stupid or evil as I let on. Except
me. The truth is I drove out away from the city on the
day of the accident. With my driver's side window rolled
halfway up, I got out and I shot through the glass. On the way back into town,
on the freeway, I got in the exit lane for Growden Avenue, the exit for La Paloma Memorial Hospital. The
truth is I was addicted to being beautiful, and that's not something you
just walk away from. Being addicted to all that attention, I had to quit cold turkey. I could shave my head, but hair grows back. Even
bald, I might still look too good.
Bald, I might get even more attention. There was the option of getting fat or
drinking out of control to ruin my looks, but I wanted to be ugly, and I wanted
my health. Wrinkles and aging looked too far off. There had to be some way to get ugly in a flash. I had to deal with my looks in a fast, permanent way or I'd always be tempted to go back. You
know how you look at ugly hunchback girls, and they are so lucky. Nobody
drags them out at night so they can't finish their doctorate thesis papers.
They don't get yelled at by fashion photographers if they get infected
ingrown bikini hairs. You look at burn victims and think how
much time they save not looking in mirrors to check their skin for sun damage. I
wanted the everyday reassurance of being mutilated. The
way a crippled deformed birth-defected disfigured girl
can drive her car with the windows open and not care how
the wind makes her hair look, that's the kind of freedom I
was after. I was
tired of staying a lower life form just because of my
looks. Trading on them. Cheating. Never getting anything
real accomplished, but getting the attention and recognition anyway.
Trapped in a beauty ghetto is how I felt. Stereotyped. Robbed of my motivation. In this way, Shane, we are
very much brother and sister. This is the biggest mistake I could think would
save me. I wanted to give up the idea I had
any control. Shake things up. To be
saved by chaos. To see if I could cope, I wanted to force myself to grow again. To explode my comfort zone. I slowed
down for the exit and pulled over onto the shoulder, what they call the
breakdown lane. I remember thinking, how apropos. I remember thinking, this is
going to be so exciting. My makeover. Here was my life about to start
all over again. I could be a great brain surgeon this time
around. Or I could be an artist. Nobody would care how I'd look. People would
just see my art, what I made instead of just how I looked, and people would
love me. What I
thought last was, at last I'll be growing again, mutating, adapting, evolving.
I'll be physically challenged. I couldn't wait. I got the
gun from the glove compartment. I wore a
glove against powder burns, and held the gun at arm's length out my broken window. It wasn't even like aiming with the gun only about two feet away.
I might've killed myself that way, but by now that idea didn't seem very tragic. This
makeover would make piercings and tattoos and brandings look so lame,
all those little fashion revolts so safe that they themselves only become
fashionable. Those little paper tiger attempts to reject looking
good that only end up reinforcing it. The
shot, it was like getting hit hard is what I remember. The bullet. It took a
minute before I could focus my eyes, but there was my blood and snot, my
drool and teeth all over the passenger seat. I had to open the car door
and get the gun from where I'd dropped it outside the window. Being
in shock helped. The gun and the glove's in a storm drain
in the hospital parking lot where I dropped them, in case
you want proof. Then
the intravenous morphine, the tiny operating room manicure scissors
cut my dress off, the little patch panties, the police photos. Birds ate my
face. Nobody ever suspected the truth. The
truth is I panicked a little after that. I let everybody think the wrong
things. The future is not a good place to start lying and cheating all over
again. None of this is anybody's fault except mine. I ran because just
getting my jaw rebuilt was too much temptation to revert, to play that
game, the looking good game. Now my whole new future is still out there waiting for me. The truth is, being ugly
isn't the thrill you'd think, but it can be an opportunity for something better
than I ever imagined. The
truth is I'm sorry. CHAPTER THIRTY-TWOJump back to
the La Paloma emergency room. The intravenous morphine. The tiny operating room
manicure scissors cut Brandy's suit off. My brother's unhappy
penis there blue and cold for the whole world to see. The police
photos, and Sister Katherine screaming, "Take your pictures! Take your
pictures now! He's still losing blood!" Jump to surgery. Jump to
post-op. Jump to me taking Sister Katherine
aside, little Sister Katherine hugging me so hard around the knees I almost buckle to the floor. She looks at me, both of us stained with the blood,
and I ask her in writing: please. do this
one special thing for me. please, if you really want to make me happy. Jump to
Evie installed talk-show—style under the hot track lights, downtown
at Brumbach's, chatting with her mother and Manus and her new husband about how
she met Brandy years before all of us, in some transgender support
group. About how everybody needs a big disaster every now and then. Jump to
some day down the road soon when Manus will get his breasts. Jump
to me kneeling beside my brother's hospital bed. Shane's skin, you don't
know where the faded blue hospital gown ends and Shane begins, he's so
pale. This is my brother, thin and pale with Shane's thin arms and pigeon chest. The flat auburn hair across his forehead,
this is who I remember growing up
with. Put together out of sticks and
bird bones. The Shane I'd forgotten. The Shane from before the hairspray accident. I don't know why I
forgot, but Shane had always looked
so miserable. Jump to
our folks at home at night, showing home movies against the side of their white house.
The windows
from twenty years ago lined up perfect with the windows now. The grass lined up with the grass. The ghosts of Shane and me as toddlers running around, happy with each other. Jump
to the Rhea sisters crowded around the hospital bed. Hairnets pulled on
over their wigs. Surgical masks on their faces. They're wearing those faded
green scrub suits, the Rheas have those Duchess of Windsor
costume jewelry brooches pinned on their scrubs: leopards shimmering
with diamond and topaz spots. Hummingbirds with pave emerald
bodies. Me, I
just want Shane to be happy. I'm tired of being me, hateful me. Give
me release. I'm
tired of this world of appearances. Pigs that only look
fat. Families that look happy. Give
me deliverance. From
what only looks like generosity. What only looks like love. Flash. I
don't want to be me anymore. I want to be happy, and I
want Brandy Alexander back. Here's my first real dead end
in my life. There's nowhere to go, not the way I am right
now, the person I am. Here's my first real beginning. As
Shane sleeps, the Rhea sisters all crowd around, decorating him with little
gifts. They're misting Shane with L'Air du
Temps as if he were a Boston fern. New
earrings. A new Hermes scarf around his head. Cosmetics
are spread in perfect rows on a surgical tray that hovers next to the
bed, and Sofonda says, "Moisturizer!" and holds her hand out, palm up. "Moisturizer,"
Kitty Litter says, and slaps the tube into Sofonda's palm. Sofonda
puts her hand out and says, "Concealer!" And
Vivienne slaps another tube into her palm and says, "Concealer." Shane,
I know you can't hear, but that's okay, since I can't talk. With
short, light strokes, Sofonda uses a little sponge to spread
concealer on the dark bags under Shane's eyes. Vivienne pins a diamond
stick pin on Shane's hospital gown. Miss
Rona saved your life, Shane. The book in your jacket
pocket, it slowed the bullet enough that only your boobs
exploded. It's just a flesh wound, flesh and sili-cone. Florists
come in with sprays of irises and roses and stock. Your
silicone broke, Shane. The bullet popped your sil-icone
so they had to take it out. Now you can have any sized breasts you want.
The Rheas have said so. "Foundation!"
Sofonda says, blending the foundation into Shane's hairline. She
says, "Eyebrow pencil!" with sweat beading on her forehead. Kitty
hands over the pencil, saying, "Eyebrow pencil." "Blot
me!" Sofonda says. And
Vivienne blots her forehead with a sponge. Sofonda says,
"Eyeliner! STAT!" And I have to go, Shane,
while you're still asleep. But I want to
give you something. I want to give you life. This is my third chance, and I
don't want to blow it. I could've opened
my bedroom window. I could've stopped Evie shooting you. The truth is I didn't so I'm giving you my life
because I don't want it anymore. I tuck
my clutch bag under Shane's big ring-beaded hand. You see, the size
of a man's hands are the one thing a plastic surgeon can't change. The one thing
that will always give away a girl like Brandy Alexander. There's
just no way to hide those hands. This
is all my identification, my birth certificate, my everything.
You can be Shannon McFarland from now on. My career. The ninety-degree attention. It's yours. All of it.
Everyone. I hope it's enough for you. It's everything I have left. "Base
color!" Sofonda says, and Vivienne hands her the lightest
shade of Aubergine Dreams eye shadow. "Lid
color!" Sofonda says, and Kitty hands her the next eye
shadow. "Contour
color!" Sofonda says, and Kitty hands her the darkest
shade. Shane,
you go back to my career. You make Sofonda get you a top contract, no local charity benefit
runway shit. You're Shannon fucking
McFarland now. You go right to the
top. A year from now, I want to turn on the TV and see you drinking a diet cola naked in slow motion.
Make Sofonda get you big national contracts. Be
famous. Be a big social experiment in getting what you don't want. Find value
in what we've been taught is worthless. Find good in what the world says is
evil. I'm giving you my life because I want
the whole world to know you. I wish
the whole world would embrace what it hates. Find
what you're afraid of most and go live there. "Lash
Curler!" says Sofonda, and she curls Shane's sleeping
eyelashes. "Mascara!"
she says, combing mascara into the lashes. "Exquisite,"
says Kitty. And
Sofonda says, "We're not out of the woods yet." Shane,
I'm giving you my life, my driver's license, my old report
cards, because you look more like me than I can ever
remember looking. Because I'm tired of hating and preening and telling myself old stories that were never
true in the first place. I'm tired of always being me, me, me first. Mirror,
mirror on the wall. And
please don't come after me. Be the new center of attention. Be a big
success, be beautiful and loved and everything else I wanted to be. I'm over that now. I just want to be invisible. Maybe I'll become a belly
dancer in my veils. Become a nun and
work in a leper colony where nobody
is complete. I'll be an ice hockey goalie and wear a mask. Those big amusement parks will only hire women to wear the cartoon character costumes, since
folks don't want to chance a strange
molester guy hugging their kid. Maybe
I'll be a big cartoon mouse. Or a dog. Or a duck. I don't know, but I'm sure
I'll find out. There's no escaping
fate, it just keeps going. Day and night, the future just keeps coming at you. I
stroke Shane's pale hand. I'm
giving you my life to prove to myself I can, I really can
love somebody. Even when I'm not getting paid, I can give love and happiness
and charm. You see, I can handle the baby food and the not talking and
being homeless and invisible, but I have to know that I can love somebody.
Completely and totally, permanently and without hope of reward, just as an act
of will, I will love somebody. I
lean in, as if I could kiss my brother's face. I leave my purse and any idea of who I am tucked under Shane's hand. And I leave behind the story that I was ever this beautiful, that I could walk into a
room deep fried in a tight dress and
everybody would turn and look at me. A million reporters would take my picture.
And I leave behind the idea that this
attention was worth what I did to get it. What I
need is a new story. What
the Rhea sisters did for Brandy Alexander. What
Brandy's been doing for me. What
I need to learn to do for myself. To write my own story. Let my brother be Shannon
McFarland. I
don't need that kind of attention. Not anymore. "Lip
liner!" Sofonda says. "Lip
gloss!" she says. She
says, "We've got a bleeder!" And
Vivienne leans in with a tissue to blot the extra Plumbago off Shane's chin. Sister
Katherine brings me what I asked for, please, and it's
the pictures, the eight-by-ten glossies of me in my white sheet. They aren't
good or bad, ugly or beautiful. They're just
the way I look. The truth. My future. Just regular reality. And I take off my veils, the cut-work and muslin and lace, and leave them for Shane to find
at his feet. I don't
need them at this moment, or the next, or the next, forever. Sofonda
sets the make-up with powder and then Shane's gone. My brother, thin
and pale, sticks and bird bones and miserable, is gone. The
Rhea sisters slowly peel off their surgical masks. "Brandy
Alexander," says Kitty, "queen supreme." "Total
quality girl," Vivienne says. "Forever
and ever," says Sofonda, "and that's enough." Completely
and totally, permanently and without hope, forever and ever I love
Brandy Alexander. And that's enough. |
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