Oh! Those Victorians!

a wrought-iron spiral staircase painted red and white, in a lush tropical greenhouse

I write dirty books.  On the literary side, because I’m a hopeless show-off, but they’re books full of naked people and cuss words and often very little plot.  Why do I do this?  Of all the things I could write, why smut?

Insert obvious noises about it being fun, titillating, and at times very lucrative (if one writes the right kind of smut.) There is of course a great big long theoretical answer as well, because hey, I like trying to live from the heart of my philosophy.

And the evidence suggests I am one of those humans that doesn’t make enough dopamine unless vigorously stimulated.  It often feels like my choices are to write scorching sex scenes almost daily or succumb to an ennui so intense that I must develop another addiction to distract me. Maybe writing smut is my drug of choice.

But then dirty books about those repressed, prudish Victorians?

I follow the framing of landmark French philosopher Michel Foucault, whose work on the social construction of sexuality neatly upends this idea that the Victorians never spoke of sex.  Far from it, as sex became no longer a private activity but a matter of public concern.  Certain classes of people—homosexuals, working class families whose faith and poverty lead to an “excess” of children, wives who were disinterested in providing sexual services to their husbands, and so on—were doing sex wrong, and needed identifying, and where possible correction.  Deviance became not a matter for the church but for the doctor’s office, the psychiatrist’s couch.  Less a sin than a dysfunction to be remedied.  

Set against this is the growing agitation by these same groups, demanding less patronizing treatment from the ruling classes.  Homosexuality was criminalized, but by defining a criminal class who didn’t perceive their own behaviour as a criminal choice, the ruling class forced disparate individuals into a social unit, which then discovered it had significant power by dint of size alone.  The legal enclosure of homosexuality is the dawn of the modern, collectivized, queer rights movement.  State power labelled homosexual people and lumped them together in order to control them.  But as is the way with humans, the subjects of control, once forced into proximity, were able to define commonalities which allowed them to organize against the continued operation of Power.

That this discursive road is rocky as fuck is not really surprising. Winning any kind of space is hard, and those who win often then protect it against all others, even if it was those others (i.e. the trans women who drove the Stonewall uprising) who won them that space. Capitalism and the dogmas it serves want us to hate each other, so that we’ll keep fighting each other and not our masters.  Power right now wants to enclose trans people, but do that and it obliges them to align.  They count heads, and its suddenly not a handful of isolated cases but a sizeable percentage of the population.  One percent of the US population is over three million people. That’s… statistical.  That’s a voting bloc.  That’s how we change the world.

Bach Door Shenanigans

A metal door in an alley decorated with uplifting graffiti including a rainbow, MLKJr and an avocado

In March of 2020 I started reading this book.

a paperback edition of the book Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid  by Douglas R. Hofstadter
Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid by Douglas R. Hofstadter.
(Heck, try and say that five times fast.)

At 777 sizeable pages, it took what felt like all pandemic (ha hahahhhahha, but anyway) to finish.  A good eight or nine months at least, in which time I became absolutely convinced that what we call cognition is merely sophistication.

Stack enough layers of iterative analysis on top of one another and the system behaves as if it were intelligent.  That’s what our brains are.  The cerebral cortex is literally the icing on a cake whose foundation is cellular away/towards membrane awareness.  Maybe it’s my own of confirmation bias, but it made some damn sense. 

While reading this tome (if ever a book deserved the word) I also wrote some 350,000 words of fiction, most of which I’ve published. My own afflictions and ideas like the preceding have made it very easy to feel the characters are real people who exist independent of my imagination. This is obviously false. However…

Even though there isn’t a thinking mind, stack enough data in a single system, connect the points, allow for feedback, and one begins to observe something like intelligence.  Fictional characters do not have minds, but as they say, if it quacks like a duck…

Many writers find a strong character will “come alive” and present them with ideas they might not have come up with before the character was given form.  One “gets to know” the characters, even though it is the author who adds the information layer by layer, getting closer to the point where that concretion of one’s own thoughts begins to resemble something that thinks.

This is when characters can “take over” and tell the writer how to change their stories to suit. Who the fuck is doing this?  You, but also The-You-That-Is-Not-You.  It’s the old witnessing-the-witness epiphenomenon.  Which part of you is aware of your awareness?  This has yet to be satisfactorily determined by science, and may be, like the sight of the back of one’s own head, not possible for us to fully know.

A fictional character certainly does not have consciousness as we know it.  It is, in a sense, an AI script being run by the computer of your brain.  However this makes it able to manifest behaviour which seems so much like consciousness that we pragmatically can treat it as such.

Let your characters tell you what to do.  It’s just you telling yourself, but these backdoor shenanigans are where the interesting things happen.

Blue Streak

“I fell in love with Jack when I heard him swearing at my kids.” I waited for the nervous giggle from the guests, though a few seats down the head table from us Patti was already laughing hysterically. “I mean, Ryder’s terrific, don’t get me wrong,” I went on with an obvious wink at my younger son, who smiled even as he hid behind his hair again. “But I can’t tell you all the things I was tempted to say to him back then, because this is a family event.” More laughter now, and Jack blushing too, all that really mattered because he was so sexy when he blushed. I don’t know if I should have I picked that story to tell at our wedding, and there was so much I’d be leaving unsaid, but what I had loved most from the beginning was his strength. I had so little of my own at the time…

***

“Explaining it again isn’t going to make a difference, Chris. I just…have to go. You know it, I know it–”

“I don’t know it. I don’t know why, after everything we’ve done to make it work that this is what ends it.”

“Chris, you know this isn’t the only thing. We’re running out of time. If I’m going to start over–”

“Start over? How long have you been planning this? Holy shit, Patricia.”

“It’s not like that…” she said again, through tears, through her hands clapped over her face, which only made me think I was right, that she’d fallen for someone else. This had happened before, so long ago it had started to seem like another person’s life. That had ended in a drunken showdown between me and the son of a bitch at her work Christmas party, but it had started with her crying into her hands just like this.

What had started the crying this time was me telling her about Chicago. I’d been a penniless intern at the firm when I met Patti, pulling sixty-five hour weeks and courting her in ninety minute blasts–two drinks, an improper suggestion, and the first horizontal surface in sight. Fourteen years, two kids and two career shifts later I was on half-flex time, and hadn’t been out of town in months. The kids were both old enough to not be too much work for Patti without me, and the four days in Chicago almost sounded fun.

If I hadn’t said those three words, the fight might not have started, but then again she wasn’t wrong when she said it wasn’t the only thing. I loved her–I had since the start, and in a way always will–and never doubted she loved me, but she had never really trusted me, never trusted that I meant it when I said I loved her. She was never pretty enough, never thin enough, never a good enough mom, and a man can only reassure his gorgeous, compassionate, accomplished wife so many times before he starts thinking he’s losing his mind. When my love couldn’t keep up with her paranoia, she had to augment it, with the kids, with her job, and now with a guy named Josh from her spin class.

I’ve thought a lot about what might have happened if we’d known about her depression sooner. Within twenty-four hours of leaving me she had hit the depths of a blue funk the likes of which none of us had ever seen. For a few days I debated sending her friends to rescue her from her parents’ house and her mother’s steady diet of passive-aggressive belittlement. Then I found her meds. She’d had the prescription for months, but there were too many in the bottle, which meant she hadn’t been taking them, which explained almost everything.

Clinical depression is an illness; if you disagree, you haven’t really seen it hit, seen it turn a person inside out, tear their family to shreds, no matter how hard they fight. I was granted custody, largely on the strength of a letter Patti wrote refuting her own mother’s conjecture about the kind of father I would be. While I dealt with the doctors and psychiatrists and lawyers and other garbage collectors of life, my mom moved into the house to keep things running day to day, but after the dust settled she went home and our new life began.

Nelson was twelve, Ryder nine. He was angriest. He’d always been quick-tempered but was sensitive around his mother, and without her he lost any ability to keep his cool. Fights at recess; fights in the hall; spitting on the school ground and pushing girls, and the crown jewel, throwing an eraser at his math teacher and mouthing back about it. His room became a prison, stripped of toys. The game consoles moved into my bedroom, his handheld onto the high shelf in my closet. Nothing mattered, nothing changed, and the house went into a blue funk of its own.

I can clean–I mean, I hate it, but I assume women hate it too, and it’s a wonder that society tricked them into doing most of it. For the first month people were working and going to school. Food kept getting eaten and not all of it by me, and I became very good at grabbing the five most necessary grocery items and getting out of the store in under five minutes. But it wasn’t long before homework was being forgotten, gym clothes were going unwashed, and the bathroom floor had achieved a state that warranted wearing shoes.

Patti had done so much for us, minded so many stupid little things, like which kind of paper towels fell apart in your hand and shouldn’t have been bought in the first place, or what brand of marble cheese Ryder would refuse to eat as if there was a genuine difference. I was spending money like crazy, leaving two ten dollar bills on the kitchen table every morning because I had no time to make lunches and no time to badger the kids into doing it themselves.

At work they’d given me authority over a new hire, a sparkly-eyed graduate who seemed to have got the job more on the vitality of his handshake than on his knowledge of jurisprudence. At least I had Jack. He’d been working for me only a few weeks when Patti left. When I saw him the day after, I’d found myself telling him everything. He had nodded and been kind but said little else, but he’d also kept it to himself, and he was twice as smart as the half-assed hire I was coddling. Jack was keeping me alive, in body and soul, putting up with my muttering, clarifying my ideas; bringing lunches and dinners, coffees and a couple times a beer when I was still there after sunset, my mind torn between the tasks I couldn’t hope to complete that day and the kids I was ignoring as I pointlessly tried. My assistant.

***

I don’t know what Jack was doing when I called, but he had never not answered the phone. My optimistic morning had devolved into an impossible afternoon, and I couldn’t trust the new kid Brayson with these easily offended clients. Time and space weren’t about to bend in my favour, so I would have to lean on Jack.

“Jack Kateri here, hi Chris.”

“Yeah, hi. Look, I know this is way off your job description, but I don’t know who else I can ask.”

“Do I even have a job description besides doing what you tell me?”

“Sure you do, ask HR. But look, I need a huge favour from you.”

“I’m listening.”

“I need you to pick Ryder up from school. I’m sorry, it’s bullshit I gotta ask you, I mean I wish I could hand this file over instead and get him myself–”

“Is that seriously it? Am I taking him to your house?”

“Just till Nelson gets home.”

“And you called the school to tell them I’m coming?”

“I’ll do that right now.”

“Gee, Chris, I thought it was going to be a big deal.”

“Yeah, but it’s not your job to run my life.”

“Um, actually it is. You should let me do it sometime, you might like it. My billable hours don’t come off your take, you know. I make company money, baby.”

“What are you talking about.”

“I’m your PA, dumbass. Let me personally assist you for once. Why don’t you go read my job description. Text me the address of the school. I’ll let you know when the prisoner transfer is complete.”

“Oh…kay. Thanks.”

“No problem, boss.”

Nelson would come home on his own after track, but Ryder couldn’t be trusted to walk the five blocks. Instead he’d hang around the front of the school, picking paint off the front steps and envying the passing high-schoolers for their vape pens, their phones, juicy bait to a kid just old enough to get into serious trouble and still young enough not to see it coming. Jack was however even cooler, with a fast car and brand new phone and a great haircut that would have made me look like a try-hard. Ryder had warmed to him quickly the few times they’d met. Surely they could get along for a couple hours.

In the end it was nearly seven by the time I got home. I hadn’t bothered to call, at first too desperate to finish and then too embarrassed. Patti would have already called me twice and been texting every eight minutes, and I had to admit my after-hours productivity had doubled since we’d split. A year ago this would have been eight thirty, with another forty-five minutes to go of her yelling at me for doing my job.

Someone at my house was yelling already, and not either of my boys. Yelling at such a volume that no one noticed the front door open and close.

“…literally the worst day you could have picked for this stunt. You know what your dad’s going through. You know you’ve got to make the best of this shitty situation. He can’t start bailing your ass out too. Not with the sort of shit this one apparently likes to cause.” Hidden by the chunk of wall between the doorway and the living room, I stood where I was, stunned to realize Nelson was in trouble too. Jack was right, I couldn’t take it if both my kids started acting out, but I’d given up on yelling long ago as it only made Ryder clam up.

“And then there’s you,” Jack continued, and though the volume was lower, the intent was even clearer. I could picture Ryder’s sulky look, his head down so all you saw was the top of his head and his poked out lower lip. “I can’t even…you know how fucked up that was, right? I don’t want to say you deserve to have your ass beat, but if you do that kind of crap when you’re older, it’s going to come back on you and you’re going to get fucked up by someone with way less tolerance than me.”

“But–”

“I’m not done. I know you’re not happy, Ryder. Divorce fucking sucks. Everything changes. And to the rest of the world it’s like nothing changed and they can’t get why you’re so upset. That’s life, and sometimes life is fucked up. I’m not going to lie to you. Things aren’t always going to work out. One day you’re going to want something and you’re going to try everything you can to make it happen and it’s not going to be enough. But being an asshole isn’t a solution. That’s what you were today. And I want it to be the last time. Don’t fuck your dad around.”

“I’m so-so-sorry.” Ryder was crying now, big gulping sobs that reminded me how young he was.

“I know. So here’s the deal. I’m going to let you decide if you want to tell your dad what you did. You aren’t in trouble with school because it wasn’t on school grounds, so this one time I’m giving you a choice. You can tell your dad, or not, but know that if you do anything like this ever again, I will not be giving you another pass.”

“I n-n-know.”

“Okay then. Come on, let’s hug it out…” There was the creak and shush of people getting off the sofa, then Ryder’s voice muffled by the others’ arms and chests. No one had ever spoken to the kid like that. It was too soon to hope that it stuck, when the most I had come to expect was rolled eyes and a slammed bedroom door and absolutely no change in behaviour.

Ryder would never forgive me if he found out I’d been listening, so I opened the front door and closed it again to sound like I’d just stepped in. When I came around the corner Ryder leapt across the room, threw his arms around me and began to cry into my shirtfront. He hadn’t let me hug him in a month.

With nothing in the pantry but peanut butter and dried beans, I dialled up an extra-large pizza for supper, then sat back to watch as Jack put the boys to work. The dishwasher had been full of clean dishes all weekend, yet we’d smothered the countertops in our dirty cups and bowls rather than do anything about it. So much for equality. No wonder Patti had flipped. Jack lived alone and had to do it all himself, and from his clothes, his whole demeanor, I guessed his house would be immaculate. He wasn’t uptight, he was just put together, and he always smelled fantastic. If he was my personal assistant, maybe I could make him take me shopping. I was older than him, but I didn’t have to look this much older.

About the boys’ crimes Jack told me nothing. Not exactly nothing, because if I hadn’t overheard them I would have demanded to know what was making the boys act like guests from a more functional family. With the dishwasher humming in the kitchen we even dared to eat at the dining table, Jack having the good sense to throw a placemat under the hot pizza so we didn’t melt the varnish. Normal family dinner-ish, and Jack knew all about the boys’ day at school, Nelson’s A+ history test I hadn’t known was coming up, Ryder’s presentation on robots that was due at the end of the week. With another woman sitting at Patti’s end of the table it wouldn’t have felt so right. She would have been an obvious usurper. I couldn’t have invited a female assistant to stay for dinner without it being a scandal, but I hadn’t even asked Jack. He had simply not left. Maybe too personal an assistant, but maybe I didn’t care.

The pizza was gone, and I knew if there was more Nelson would still be eating. He only a little shorter than me with years yet to grow and seemed to have doubled in mass as puberty caught up with his athleticism. Ryder was still a loose-limbed boy, speedy but undisciplined, too cynical for someone so young, doomed to be an artist or writer, some open category that didn’t box him in. He would travel. Nelson would study. Jack would…be going home soon, the thought jarring as I watched him play with the pizza box, making it growl and bite Ryder’s hand. Giggling and rubbing his wrist, Ryder turned to me.

“So, when Jack picks me up tomorrow–”

“Wait, when did we decide this?” I said.

“He said he could. Jack, didn’t you say like the timing was perfect, it was a good time of day for you, like not a big deal? And he’s like your assistant, right, so you can make him do whatever you want.”

“It doesn’t work like that, okay? He’s not our servant.”

“I could, though,” Jack said. “Just for the week. Until you get this shitty case laid out. Sorry, I gotta watch the language.”

“It’s okay, shitty’s okay around our house when you mean it,” Ryder said. “Like just there, I had to say it, right, Dad? So he’d get the point about–”

“That presentation’s on Friday, isn’t it?” I said. Ryder clammed right up, then and he and Nelson left the table, taking their own plates and ours to the kitchen, much to my ongoing surprise. Maybe it wasn’t such a bad idea having Jack keep an eye on Ryder, if it was in the name of helping my work run smoothly. That had to count as assisting me personally.

Leaving behind the rarely heard sound of my boys unloading a dishwasher, we went out on the back porch through the dining room doors, installed at a huge cost on Patti’s insistence and used at most three times in the year that followed. At least the patio furniture was dry, and we sat without talking for a few minutes. Jack was comfortable around me, not always the case with younger men, who often mistake my calm for arrogance. He himself was calming without being a pushover, and he had obviously struck a chord in Ryder. Why was he single? It was really none of my business.

I was single. I was a single father. A single father with a suicidally depressed almost-ex-wife and still no idea what was going to happen to my kids, whether the job that kept them cared for was worth the time I gave it, why I was still acting like this was a minor event, a blip on the radar, like Patti had twisted her ankle instead of bailing on her family. At least it was dark and Jack couldn’t see me crying, but he wasn’t stupid.

“You ought to go on vacation after this case wraps,” he said. “Not to run away from your shit, just…you’re working too hard.”

“It’s a reason to get up every morning.”

“That’s not a good reason. Your kids are a reason. Yourself. What would you do tomorrow if you didn’t have to go into the firm? Like, twenty-four hours to spend however you want.”

“Just a day?”

“A week, then. What’s your fantasy destination?”

We hadn’t travelled in years, so long ago that Ryder probably didn’t even remember the outlandish trip to Alaska, taken at the demands of a then five-year-old Nelson and his insatiable obsession with whales. Patti couldn’t say no, not to her budding marine biologist, though by the end of the fortnight she looked twice as tired as when we’d left. Not a vacation like I should have taken her on, where she could have relaxed into her old self, the girl I had married. Where could I go that I wouldn’t wish I had brought her five years ago?

Crying again, but I hadn’t in weeks, months if you added them up, because I hadn’t had time. Hadn’t had the space, the lack of other people’s need, in order to feel my own. I was kidding if I thought a vacation would have stopped what happened. As if there was somewhere to run I stood up, but two steps brought me to the edge of the deck, the yard a black chasm of shadow, blurred by tears.

“Should I leave?” Jack said.

“No. I’m sorry–”

“Don’t say that. You’re supposed to feel fucked up. I remember when my parents split. She hung him out pretty bad. I had the room over the garage, and I could hear my dad go in there at night and cry. No one was on his side. Poor bastard didn’t have a clue what was going on. He was so sad he just signed everything over to my mom and disappeared from our lives for a while. But I couldn’t forget him, all alone in the fucking garage. Stupid macho shit.”

“What the fuck is wrong with people?”

“Hey, we’re people too. Everyone gets stupid when things are falling apart.” He got up to stand beside me, and we watched an early firefly blundering around at the back of the yard, the green dot bobbing like a tiny boat on the ocean at night. All alone on the sea of love, and the thought was stupid enough that it didn’t matter anymore. Everyone was alone, even when they were together, all of us stuck inside our own heads.

“I should go away,” I said,  and scared by the monotone of my own voice I went on. “Just find a beach and lay on it for a week getting hammered and sunburnt. But who’d watch the kids?”

“Take ‘em with. Let ‘em go parasailing with the youth instructors while you hit the pool bar. They’ll be too high on life to notice if you keep nodding off at dinner.”

“Patti could never rest while they were around. And when they weren’t, she worried about them.”

“You’d have to tell her you were going. You probably have to get a letter to take her kids out of the country.”

“Seriously?”

“That’s how kidnapping happens. It’s usually one of the parents.”

“We’re going to Club Med, not Uzbekistan.”

“So you are going?”

“Why, you trying to tag along? Are you offering to babysit my kids?”

“I’ve had worse jobs. Babysitting your dumb ass, for example.”

“Maybe you should leave.”

“Yeah, I gotta start packing, wax my bikini line…”

“Shut up.”

“Yes sir, Mr Delange. Will there be anything else?”

“Are you really going to pick up the kids tomorrow?”

“Sure. Do they eat tacos?”

“On Tuesday?”

“Sorry, stupid question.”

***

Five nights of this. Four nights, because of Friday. Friday would be different. To start with, it was Friday, and despite every servile instinct in my workaholic soul I walked out of the office at four on the dot. As I stepped out into the sunshine I felt something in me take flight, leap up into the golden air and soar. The week had been a kind of test, and I didn’t care if I passed. I only had to try.

The kids had been impeccable all week, as if I would uninvite Jack if they misbehaved again, and so the threat never needed to be made. I was feeling vindicated against the therapists who had either implied or rudely stated that given his mother’s neurochemistry it was my moral obligation as Ryder’s parent to drug the bad behaviour out of him. He was simply too young to suppress his feelings the way adults got used to doing. Jack made him happy, in a way I’d never seen: attentive, polite, eager to earn praise, more respectful than I thought he knew how to be. Nelson too, in his quieter way, ever ready with a question that would lead us all to think and talk. I had always expressed my views cautiously around my kids, wanting them to form their own opinions. Now that they had, and with Jack to counter my authority, we could begin to talk like friends.

Friday, and so I’d brought home beer. Jack would leave his car at our house, get home by Uber or taxi whenever he felt like leaving, which meant we’d see him tomorrow when he came back for it. While the kids cleaned up from dinner he and I sat in the dark on the back deck, waiting for the fireflies to start their show. Cold beer, warm nights, friendship. Pain and recovery. Life went on, and sometimes it improved.

By now I knew as much about Jack as I did about any of my friends, more in some cases.  Being with him was like fresh air, like a clear sky first thing in the morning, and every night as I watched him drive away it had felt like a bank of clouds had rolled back in. To see him the next day at work was a relief, a return to clarity. 

He was shameless about his parents’ divorce and the years of fall-out, about first realizing how much each of them had contributed, and then having to forgive them both. I didn’t feel half of the hatred towards Patti as had seemed to flow between Jack’s parents. I didn’t hate her at all in fact, though I came to see that I was blaming her as if she had done it out of spite, broken our hearts on purpose, when it was really just a symptom of her depression. It wasn’t that she didn’t want to be married to me as much as that she didn’t think herself able to be married. That’s why it had never been my fault, why it had always been hers, why she had always said that I should have known we would fall apart, because she hadn’t believed she was capable of staying together. All these things I had learned in the dark these last four nights.

At a tapping at the patio door I turned. Nelson was beckoning me in. Ryder had broken a glass and got cut cleaning it up, and I spent a few squeamish minutes with him in the bathroom, suppressing my very strong aversion to the sight of blood. Thankfully neither boy had inherited this , and they insisted on finishing the chores, though Ryder kept his cut hand up on his other shoulder as though he wore a sling. After a minute of feeling superfluous I went back outside.

Jack wasn’t on the deck, and I went down to the lawn, the only place he could be. The shrubs around the base of the deck were swarming with fireflies, more than we’d seen so far, and I almost tripped over him, crouched down with his face inches from the stumbling lights.

“I didn’t see you,” I said as he straightened.

“It’s okay. I didn’t realize how dark it was down here.”

“Could you see the bugs, up close like that?”

“Sort of. The light makes it hard, right? They’re supposed to taste terrible.”

“According to who?”

“I mean to birds.”

He was drunk. I was too, a bit, though dealing with the kids always made me sober up in a hurry. But we were here now in the dark, chasing fireflies, and I could see the shape of his nose outlined by the light on the house next door, and his forehead and the hair that fell over it, and beneath it all his mouth. And I wondered what the world was like when love was a danger to your health. He had never said I’m gay but I knew his whole life now, his crushes, his shame, different and yet the same as my own immature agonies, the pain of creating your grown-up self by cutting away the excess. He finally felt me staring at him and turned, his face dappled bright and dark by the movement of leaves in the streetlights. “What, do you think I ought to test my theory?”

“Please don’t eat a bug.”

“I don’t think I could even catch one.”

“Jack…”

“I probably ought to get going. Why are the kids still up?”

“Don’t go.”

“What?”

“Are you single?”

“Why?”

“Don’t go home.”

“Chris…don’t fuck with me.”

“I’m not. I mean it.”

“You’re drunk.”

“Not really.”

“You’re fucking with me.”

“I’m not.”

“Prove it.”

***

“And I did, and I hope to prove it every day from now on, in every way I can.” The raunchy overtones struck me as another giggle rose from the crowd. I hadn’t given a speech at my first wedding, a hasty civil ceremony when Patti had imagined she was pregnant. But this was Jack’s first and hopefully only wedding, and he deserved every minute of it. He was on his feet now, coming to put his arms around me again, a feeling I had never thought of wanting, until I didn’t want to live without it.

“It sounds like a real story when you tell it,” he said only to me.

“It is a story.”

“It was never like that. We just hung out.”

“Until I knew I loved you.”

“Five nights was enough?”

“You’re easy to love.” Even easier to kiss, and I did, and everyone cheered. Next year we’d take the boys with us to Europe, but for our honeymoon, Jack and I were headed for the beach.

No Homeland

the crescent moon and sunset above the clouds

That’s the story I repeatedly tell through my fiction.  All my work really, as my essential nihilism has required me to repeatedly question whether there is such a thing as Home. There is Safety, yes, and Love, but we conflate these into a singular experience and then symbolize it in a physical location and then pretend that we didn’t construct any aspect of that.

I don’t mean to say there’s no value in the idea of Home, only that we must be prepared to never, ever find it.  The essentiality of Home is the end of the rainbow, present yet untouchable.  What makes a home? Not the people in it, for those raised in chaos might find their comfort in solitude. Not the structure, for it seems the stronger you build your walls, the less resilient you make your spirit. A frightened man needs bricks and fences. The brave walk free.

How little we need to be happy.

So I spend a lot of narrative time pursuing stories about characters who lack a sense of Home. Not homeless in the economic sense. More that the geolocator of their heart points to everywhere and nowhere.  Because that’s my story. Wherever I go, I make myself at home. I am a cuckoo, a sampler, a constant mirror.  Show the locals that you are enough like them and they will accept you. This rules my personality, to the extent my whole conversation style is predicated on affirming the other party’s statements.  I act out their words, their stories.  I sometimes cringe as I watch myself doing it, but it works, because they laugh.  People remember me because I make them laugh.  This gets you far, when you have no Home-land.  When you are constantly looking for a new Home.

I am not however a dupe. I am not recruitable to any cause of diminishment. I would rather die alone than don a brown shirt and deny others’ basic humanity.

How little we need to be happy.

A Mantra for the Terrified

"I must not fear.
Fear is the mind-killer.
Fear is the little-death that brings total obliteration.
I will face my fear.
I will permit it to pass over me and through me.
And when it has gone past, I will turn the inner eye to see its path.
Where the fear has gone there will be nothing. Only I will remain."
-Frank Herbert

The Bene Gesserit litany against fear is one of the strongest examples of a clever, spiritual-sounding concept from a piece of fiction being turned into a near-religious text.  It sounds magnificent, and it echoes many sentiments of Western thought. Perhaps it’s less meaningful to people whose religious cultures make death part of an infinitely iterating cycle and not the end point of a linear process (see: apocalypse, Christian obsession with.)

But the litany, along with the existence of the Bene Gesserit and the rest of the Dune universe, is a fictional proposition. Frank Herbert wrote fiction. He made it all up. That it sounds like a real religion is simply because he did a good job of it.  By way of comparison, consider The Force, which is essential Qi in a British accent. Good old Ether if you like, if it was real and semi-sentient. Lucas didn’t invent that out of thin air (*laughs in alchemist*) but patched it together from established texts. He got away with it because his audience of pre-adolescent North Americans had by and large never heard of Taoism.

We’re meant to overcome our fears, but I have a very different attitude these days. I don’t need to ‘conquer’ my fears before doing The Big Things. I’ve tried and tried to make myself fearless before doing something, and it’s a waste of time.  Go ahead and have the fear, but do the thing anyway. Doing The Thing is maybe the only way to get rid of the fear.

As Space Mom said, “stay afraid, but do it anyway.” If anyone was ever Strong with the Force, it was Carrie Fisher.

So grab your maker hooks and let’s ride this sandbitch into tomorrow. Enjoy this you-failed-witch-school-but-yay-now-you-don’t-have-to-fuck-a-Harkonnen litany against giving a shit about being afraid.

And if anyone mentions that these are two different sci-fi franchises, I will literally scream.

I can’t do shit about the fear
It can kill me if I let it, but I don’t think it will
Besides, there is no such thing as total obliteration
I will face my fear
I will let it walk along with me
It will not keep me from taking another step
The fear will probably never go away. Regardless, I remain

Short Story: “Free Verse”

[I am haunted by my characters. Nathan is the most persistent. I have been writing him for 8 years, at various stages of his life. For the first several years, I never wrote from his POV. I wanted an enigma. A black box of a character. A man who acted solely under his own internal logic, to which we could never be privy. More recently I began to let him speak. There are still many ‘episodes’ where his silence says far more.] please note: story contains brief use of homophobic slurs


Free Verse

The final raspberries are tart and demanding

You will go through the bracken and the apple trees

Wilded from forgotten orchards

The hill a hard climb

To reach them

When you stand knee deep in trillium and the canes arch overhead

The frost-sharpened fruit like blood on their thorns

She will be not there

Not there too in the next room

The scent of her perfume

Blown away by your arrival

Forever elsewhere

Turning the corner before you

Leaving the room as you wake with your hand hollow for want

Looking always away and the back of the head is not hers

Though the laugh and the wave was

You are there

Where you go

She is not there

Where you are

You are not anywhere

You are not

One day you will let go

At the top of the arch of the swing

In spite of the lake and the cliffs and the sky and the steel

You will let go and she will be there

To catch you

The second last line was the clincher, the typed page clearly showing where the word ‘not’ had been included, then redacted, then penciled back in by hand, then erased, more than once. Ray couldn’t expect the kid to read this aloud in front of the class.

He knew–everyone knew–that Nate Tallent’s mother had taken off when he was in grade seven. Between that and his father’s friendship with Hillebrand’s principal Jasper Urkell, you tended to give Nate a pass most of the time, though he never took advantage of it like other kids might have. He was smart for starters, not a screw-up but an intelligent kid dragged down by his peers. Smart but indifferent, and between Ray and a few of the younger teachers, it was agreed that if you cracked down on him he’d probably stop trying.

It showed in his grades. Nate was more than smart enough to average better than a C in English, but he hated doing the work, often spending more effort to get out of it than it would take to just sit there and do it. The results were usually below his best, but with no interest in post-secondary and a family business waiting to pick him up, he could get away with not caring.

Ray Fletcher cared, always a sucker for students with untapped potential, whose meager expectations he could raise, or so he liked to tell himself. Nate was a different breed, not selling himself short so much as wholly disinterested in school, so deep in his own head that Ray didn’t have the time to draw him out.

And then Nate had handed in his free verse assignment. Asking for ‘free verse’ was optimistic, as few kids had ventured beyond ABABCC, as if all the best poems rhymed, as if Whitman and ee cummings and everything since sonnets hadn’t happened. Nate got it, not just the form of real poetry but the feeling, the couching of impossible emotions in a few spare lines describing a walk in autumn, a trace of memory, a hint of one’s mortality. He was fifteen.

Usually Ray asked other people’s advice. Jake Urkell was a legendary principal, genuinely devoted to his pupils, unlike others Ray had known, to whom the kids had seemed an obstacle to the work instead of the work itself.  You could ask him anything, questions about protocol, discipline, keeping the attention of the smart kids and bailing out the rest, and when he was wrong, it was only when he didn’t know enough about the situation.

Ray didn’t need to know any more.  Everyone too much about Nate Tallent already. He was the sort of kid who set off every teacher’s curiosity: a careless genius who was a waste of a brilliant mind, a sterling individual athlete who lacked the temperament for team sports, a habitual shit-disturber playing them for fools, and a bastard in the biblical sense, his parents unmarried, though they were rich enough no one talked about it. To ask anyone about Nate’s poem was to publicly dissect the kid yet again.

Making Nate read the poem in class would lead to the same result. Ray could barely make it through without choking up, struck fresh every time by that second last line, and the first of the stanza: one day you will let go. If Nate cried in front of his classmates, Ray would have ruined every minute of rest of the kid’s high school career, if not his life.

That day as Ray passed along the rows of students silently gnawing on a passage of Macbeth, he touched Nate’s shoulder so the boy looked up. “Come see me at the end of class.”

Sitting behind Nate, Peter Conroy snickered, glad someone else was under the gun for a change. Peter thought he was sneaky for sourcing Iron Butterfly lyrics instead of Zeppelin, as if Ray was an old man and not twenty-six. He still drove a damn Camaro, which at times had made him the coolest teacher in school and at other times made him feel like a try-hard.

“And Peter,” Ray went on, letting his exhaustion harden his voice. “Next time you pinch song lyrics for your poetry assignment, you might try to reach back farther than five years ago. I don’t want to see you after class. I just want you to hand in something tomorrow that’s worth grading.”

Nate barely reacted: a widening of the eyes and the hint of a smile. When the bell rang he stayed in his seat. Ray closed the classroom door then slipped into the desk beside.

“What’s going on?” Nate asked after a prickly minute. “You’re not dying or anything, are you, Mr Fletcher?”

“No. It’s nothing to do with me.”

“Then what did I do wrong?”

“Nothing. It’s your poem, Nate. It’s outstanding. Really well written. Clearly it’s about something very personal, though. So I wanted to give you the chance not to read it tomorrow.”

The boy looked hard at him. “Why wouldn’t I read it? Isn’t that part of the assignment?”

“It is, and yours is one of the best poems I’ve ever seen from a student. And I don’t mean technically, though that’s there too. It’s just…it’s rare for someone your age to show so much feeling.”

“What about Marcy’s poem? That had plenty of feeling.”

“Melodrama, we call that. It looked less…expressive on paper.”

“They say delivery’s everything.”

“Nate, your poem made me cry. I can’t imagine what it was like to write. And I want you to know that if you don’t want to read it in front of the class, I’m okay with that.”

 “Are you worried I’m going to lose my shit up there?”

“I wouldn’t use those words, but kind of.”

Nate took a deep breath then sat back. “Look, Mr Fletcher, you shouldn’t read too much into it. Into the poem, I mean.”

“But isn’t it about your…” The chill in Nate’s eyes told Ray he was overstepping. This was the very interrogation he had been trying to spare the kid. “I’m sorry. It’s none of my business.”

“I’ll see you tomorrow, Mr Fletcher.”

***

If he hadn’t been able to see the parking lot from his second story classroom, Ray might have sold the Camaro by now. It was what the kids called a heat-score, a beautiful machine that made people stop in their tracks to look, and every time Ray gave out an F or a detention, he felt the need to keep half an eye on the car for the next few days.

It also made him early, as he needed to get the right parking spot, in his line of sight but not under the pine trees and their drips of paint-corroding sap. As a bonus, it had put him in good standing with Mr Leonard and the other veteran teachers, who thought of him as the punctual one.

Ray had grown to love the serenity of the school before the bells rang, as he nursed the morning’s first coffee and took in the view. In June the sun would have risen hours ago, but on this November morning the pines’ shadows still lay long across the frost-rimed grass when he heard the fighting.

Yelling you heard plenty of, but he knew that edge, when it was more than two kids trying to shout each other down. Whatever was happening, others were gathering to watch. During his practicum he’d had to break up a near-riot at a football game, when two factions of children had turned on each other with shocking speed. He’d been herding his charges onto their school bus when the name-calling started, suspension-worthy insults flying back and forth. He’d looked back in time to see a canvas backpack flung by one of his kids sail across the gap and slam into the other crowd. He’d had no time to notice whose backpack, as their side had immediately returned fire. Like iron filings to a grade nine science magnet, every kid in sight had been sucked into the maelstrom of undirected anger.

The voices this morning had that same anxiety, the same urgency of craving yet fearing the sight of blood. Ray grabbed his coat and ran. By the time he got downstairs, other students were running across the grass towards the parking lot, drawn by the sound. He couldn’t see the source until he got around the corner, where a couple dozen kids stood in a loose crescent around a pair in the centre. Ray’s heart dropped as he recognized one of the pair as Nate.

At least it was only a standoff, nobody bleeding, the boys a few yards apart though both bristling with rage. “You ought to shut up about things you don’t know, Conroy,” Nate was saying as Ray approached.

Pete didn’t answer, the taunts coming from his cronies behind him. “Oooh, little orphan Annie’s gonna cry.” “How was that ‘special meeting’ with that faggot Fletcher? Your ass sore?” “No wonder your mom took off, fucking queer.”

“What the hell is going on?” Ray shouted. “This stops immediately or every one of you is suspended.” Other teachers were running this way, and in Ray’s moment of inattention, Pete Conroy made his move.

 Not much of a move, as by the time Ray turned around Pete was on the ground, clutching his face and howling, blood seeping through his fingers. Nate lowered his fists from his boxer’s stance as the crowd scattered.

“Sorry, Mr.  Fletcher.”

“It was self defense.”

Nate frowned, at Ray, at his own hands. “I hit him first.”

“He antagonized you.”

“You weren’t even here. Are you saying you’re gonna lie?”

“Are you?”

***

Ray never found out how the fight started. It was however the excuse Urkell had been waiting for to expel Conroy, already on probation for what staff referred to as the Volleyball Incident. Nate got the mandatory minimum of three days suspension. By the time he returned to English class, they had started The Merchant of Venice.

Cleaning out his desk at the end of the semester, Ray found Nate’s poem, ungraded. He’d given Nate a hundred percent on the unit, enough to raise his overall grade to a B minus. The typed poem he had hidden, not wanting it to become evidence. Nate had never asked for it back.

Ray read it now in the pale light of a waning January afternoon, then again out loud, because poetry is meant to be heard, then once more because he liked it so much, because he could feel the want in the hollow of his own hand. Nate had never needed his help.

WHAT RUINED ME Episode 1: ‘Orlando’ by Virginia Woolf

I was perhaps nine when I read Orlando. My mother was a literature major, and our house was chockers with Penguin Classics with their orange and black and pale green spines. I’m confident that in letting me read whatever books I liked, she did not intend to implant in me the idea that one could just…become another gender.

Becoming ‘other’ was already a given in my mythology. Animals become heroes.  Ordinary children become mighty kings and queens. Wardrobes become portals, and the very best parties turn into treasure hunts.  As long as you know where your towel is, the rest will work itself out, more or less. I was thus very comfortable with the idea of waking up one day as someone else and it all being perfectly manageable and not at all like hell (Kafka aside).

The matter-of-factness in Orlando is one of its strengths. Though the book is about gender, it is not really about trans identity, which at the time of its writing was certainly extant but not under such terms as we know it today. Orlando doesn’t consciously surrender their gender. It is instead taken away by unspecified means, which are beside the point as Orlando goes on to navigate their new gender while retaining the perceptual filters of their first.

Can I confess to remembering very little otherwise? Adult attempts at reading Woolf have been troublesome. Her style of writing is an effort to read, and I am generally disinterested in domestic dramas, so there go most of her plots. This book is however iconoclastic, and is up there with Voltaire’s Candide and Orwell’s Animal Farm as a literary classic worth trying to get people to read when they’re far too young.

Can’t be arsed reading? There’s a film… https://www.indiewire.com/2012/09/heroines-of-cinema-tilda-swinton-and-sally-potters-orlando-44615/

Verdict: Did Not Finish

photo by Patrick Tomasso on Unsplash

Carrying on from the last post, here’s a short list of reasons I haven’t finished books recently.

An aristocrat so incompetent she can’t cut a piece of fruit (this seemed false, as she’d have had knife skills for eating complicated state dinners) and a master thief who habitually targets mansions of the rich, but didn’t know about the servants’ passages behind the walls. And was told about it by the same girl who can’t cut fruit.

The FMC “humorously” tricking the MMC into humiliating himself in public, knowing that’s his worst nightmare.  Relationship red flag, yo.

The Dead Hooker trope, in which the MMC’s heroic motivation is seeing his mother and other sex workers get violently assaulted. I’m not saying this isn’t motivating, but did you need to make me imagine a dozen women getting raped just so I’ll believe this guy’s do-good motivation?  Growing up in a London brothel in the 1860s would have been motivation enough, thanks.

Same book: anachronistic use of the word ‘pussy.’  Kids, the Internet is RIGHT THERE.  Google that shit.  I know I do.

When the characters keep noticing how hot the other person is, even while in mortal peril or the midst of the worst argument ever. This is everywhere and I hate it.

Christ, I’m a snob.

“I want you to throw me against the wall and make me regret all my life choices. Now would be fine.”

What makes me finish a book? In the main, intelligent characters with genuine agency, and if there’s sex, consent is explicitly stated in the text. Even the enemies-to-lovers, ass-slapping, fight-while-we-fuck stories need to have consent baked into the plot.

Actively agreeing to ridiculous sex is damn sexy. “I want you to throw me against the wall and make me regret all my life choices. Now would be fine.” Having had sex I regret, that I didn’t entirely plan on having, I know what I prefer.

The Commuters

Paris, 1903

When is the next train due?

Seven  minutes.

Will we have enough time?

Yes, only hurry. This way, behind here.

Is this safe?

Of course not. Do you care?

Have I ever cared?

I’ve missed you so.

A kiss first, quickly.

Mmm…you changed tobacco.

Actually I did. Your brand.

You’re even more delicious. Come, further from the light. Over here.

Kiss me more. I never get enough kisses from you.

We never have time. If I could only have you for a night. An hour even, alone.

To get undressed.

Yes. To kiss you everywhere. To touch you properly, feel your skin against mine.

Time for you to do everything to me you’ve ever wanted. 

This is madness.

It’s enough.

Hush, footsteps…alright, they’ve gone. Andre, we can’t keep doing this.

But how else can I see you?

I’ll rent a room. Somewhere that people won’t care who comes and goes. You know I have money. It’s not impossible.

It’s not safe.

This is worse. This is scandals and inquiries and your whole life and mine gone to ruin. For seven minutes of scrabbling in the dark, like a pair of blind—

Hush…they’ve gone.

Andre, please, let me find us somewhere. One night. Somewhere in the north end. Or right out of town. Rent a cottage, arrive separately. Take guns and dogs and say we’re hunting.

We’ll talk about it later.

There is no later. There’s this, and this again, and never anything else.

Don’t leave. Michel, I’m sorry. I’m frightened and I’m sorry that I’ve got nothing more to give you. I’m sorry that it will never be enough.

Stop. If that’s all you’ve got to say, let’s stop talking.

Kiss me again.

Mmm…come farther now. Hurry.

I can barely see you.

You don’t need to see. Just touch me.

Oh my…is that…all you?

Don’t you know how I ache for you every moment we’re not together?

I want you in my mouth.

We can’t. Not here.

I must. Just this once. 

Agree you’ll see me elsewhere. Tell me you’ll be with me, if only for a night. Or I don’t know that I can ever do this again.

Don’t lie.

I mean it. Promise me one night together. Or I’ll walk away right now—

Don’t. Don’t ever say that again.

Well then?

I promise. We will be together. Not just like this but truly together. Whatever you desire. Only say you’ll never refuse me.

How could I refuse my heart?

One more kiss. Then let me have you.

Yes. Only hurry…             

I’ve wanted to do this for so long. Every time we meet.

You’d better start or you’ll be waiting again…oh…Andre…oh, love…what is that you’re …how can it feel so…oh yes, touch me there. I’ll spread my legs for you to reach…yes…yes…yes, take me right down…oh, I’m going to…oh yes, suck it down. Yes, take it.

Well…I never knew you had such talk in you.

You wait. Wait till we’re alone. When there’s no one to hear us, judge us. I’ll tell you all the things I’ve ever wanted to do to you, love. And then we’ll do them.

Yes. Find us a room. I promise, I’ll be there.

Do you still love me?

More than ever. I’ll be tasting you all night.

I hear the train.

What about tomorrow?

What about it? You know I’ll be here. Quick, kiss me one last time…now go. Carry on with the crowd. I’ll leave after.

I miss you already, darling.

Tomorrow, love. I promise.