Bright light.
My mother is leaning towards me, smiling, running
her fingers down the side of my face, twirling the stray pieces of my
hair...whispering...
Anthony...Anthony....
Except my name is not Anthony.
Waking
up there is a pure and perfect point of pain. An intense searing
violence that seems to be right in the middle of my brain. I feel for a
moment, like I could just sit up and vomit all over the bed.
But, the feeling passes.
Looking
out of the twenty-second story condo window, still very dark, a January
4:30 a.m. Toronto appears sterile and empty, as it does every morning,
and reaching for the Camels I bought on the last junket I light the
cigarette in a successful attempt to stave off the desire of my stomach
to empty last night's contents.
Out of bed, naked, my chest hair
itchy, my arms and legs sore and my vision dizzy, stumbling to the
shower. Ice cold water for a moment, then hot. The water feels like
shit. It is like the shower is fucking attacking me. Why the fuck am I
awake at all?
Somehow, seemingly seconds later, though that can't
be right, right (?), I am in the condo gym, alone, happy it is open the
full twenty-four. I am on that machine, the running one, running. And
running. The gym windows are fogged by the cold and you could think that
the city was a Impressionist painting looking through them. Almost
beautiful instead of the dump that the daybreak will reaffirm it as.
An empty financial center full of empty financial people.
My watch says it is six. Six a.m. Too fucking early to go in. Too late to go back to bed.
Kicking
open the main suite bar sized second fridge freezer there is a little
of the vodka left. I figure I have an hour to finish it.
Office
open, 7:30 a.m. I am there a few minutes later, obligatory black coffee
in hand. Receptionist barely registers me as I pass. I have come in
before everyone almost everyday I have been in town lately.
Computer
on, and I am at it. Activity slowly begins around me, volume level
gradually increasing, hellos said, people filing past.
I don't
care about any of it. At all. Of course, I say hello, you have to. But I
can't wait again until they send me to Paris, Milan or fucking Topeka
for that matter. If I never saw any of these people before the day I
die, it would be too soon.
Except Alice. But she hasn't been by yet.
Alice,
looking at me, eyes wide, "You know this can't go on..." Holding the
back of my head as the cell phone bleats out a melody...her husband
calling yet again. What was that book that you gave me Alice? That one
by Graham Greene?
I walk out into the fierce January cold.
Negative twenty today. Just sucks the air right out of your lungs. Going
to eat shit knock off Indian food from some Yonge St. take out dump.
Won't be there in a few weeks. They all come and go with interchangeably
bland fare. People shuffling in line in front and behind me, all dreary
looking. The young man behind the counter, handsome. But defeated, I
think. He takes my order and he looks just so perfectly bored. Like he
must count the seconds of every long and pointless day of relaying these
orders to cooks who equally are doing time.
So many people, so
many lives, spent doing this totally superfluous shit. When the vast
improbability that is the universe decided to grant you the gift of this
tiny instance of life, you ended up spending it doing this. Or that. Or
what I am doing, also irrelevant.
Ask not if anyone will
remember us 100 years from now. No one will care to remember us fifteen
minutes after we are gone. Our pictures may be on the mantlepiece for a
few years, but nothing we did will linger on. Because, we did nothing.
Up
the elevator. The negativeness of this space. I hate the fucking
elevator. Caged with people you don't know. All looking ahead. Or forced
to listen to tiny fragments of conversations that you are not a part
of.
At the desk again, more painkiller.
In the taxi,
everything blurring by, down from Bloor to the condo. He is shaking me.
Stay awake, buddy. We've been into the whiskeys. The good ones...every
drink a bit of liquid gold. Two hundred twenty seven dollars later. Give
me one of your obscure words....ok...we have had a jeroboam of whisky
my fine asshole of a friend. How is that for obscure. He laughs.
It is noon now. Cell phone buzzes. My lawyer in Montreal. I ignore it.
Anxiety compels me to the bathroom. Lock the door and a few minutes
later it feels numb again. My pills can do that to you. Numb but alert.
The anxiety gone for now. There is no point in worrying about things
that you cannot change or undo.
Jonathon comes down the hall. Ass kisser that one. But Jonathon has a
soft spot for me. He wants to see me at two. Jonathon, tell him I left
at one.
He smiles.
It is a Thursday. I might have had somewhere to go.
The bottom of the Scotia Plaza. Small underground bar. Not underground
in some revolutionary sense, but literally. No one drinking here at two
in the afternoon is making less than $75K. But it is dark all day long.
You can pretend it is always nighttime. My kind of place.
Bar is mostly empty. I get a Glenfiddich. Then another. Two tables over
are two suits. Assholes you can tell. But that is easy. They are all
assholes around here. The biliousness with which the one spouts his
puerile reactionary nonsense is nauseating. One of these business
know-it-all types. But he doesn't know a fucking thing. I contemplate
walking over to his table and punching him right in the face when
fortune intervenes on his, (or my?) behalf and I feel a slight touch to
my shoulder.
I don't need to look. Its Alice.
She sits down. He's looking for you you know. I know. Why did you leave? What difference? He can find me tomorrow.
She smiles. I don't get you. But you don't need to get me do you? No, I
guess not. Detente then. I won't try to understand your motives, and you
won't try to understand mine.
A terrible feeling. Like something is bursting out of my chest.
I am trying to slow down, but inevitably I will get there, no matter
how slow I walk. Long institutional hallways. I am finally at the door.
Opening it and the first thing I see is the bed.
A few more drinks. I already have a headache. It will get worse, but then better. This is what always happens.
Let's go for dinner. Where? John and Mohammed are at Rodney's. Why not?
We walk down the stairs, Rodney's is packed. After work crowd now.
I order two dozen oysters and a very expensive Chablis.
Mohammed looks great in his blue double breasted. John is a picture of
junior executive perfection. Fancy watch, lovely shirt and tie.
Expensive cufflinks. I want to kiss them both.
Mohammed is circumspect. We missed you at the meeting today. Had to see a
client. Silence. They know I am lying, of course. How did it go? It
went as it always goes.
What do you think of Sandra's proposal? I laugh. Guys, do we really care right now?
What did you study? Was it hematology after all? Why did I see you
there...that distance I traveled to be away from you? Looking out from
the Via car window, you there on the platform awaiting another train to a
separate place, and despite wanting to get off and to run back to you,
all I could do was to look down at your overshoe.
Then it is just Alice and I again. Walking so slowly almost to spite the bitter 10 p.m. air.
Why do you do it? What do you mean? Why don't you just quit? Everyone
knows you don't want to be here anymore. They only keep you because you
produce. But, Alice, where would I go? And why? Wouldn't anywhere else
be just the same? If you have to chose between two identical places to
wither, why not chose the one that you are already at?
She kisses me and hails the taxi approaching us. I must leave you my dear. He has become something of a martinet, my husband.
With Cassandra at the bar. She has seen many of my night's ends. The
usual crowd is around. A few unknown faces. Cass serves me the draft and
the double bourbon. She shouldn't really but she does anyway.
Trying to push through the crowd at the accident site. Coming back to
see it. The rope has cordoned off the area around the parking lot and
the curious strain to see the remains of what what once a young man. As I
turn around, knowing now that what I feared was true, rushing to the
stairs of the station, she pushes the Jesus Saves handbill into my
chest.
Jesus Saves what?
It is near 2 a.m. Cassandra hands me my last drink. There is no one
here now, save her and I. Cassandra, I love you. Now...now...you know I
don't sleep with the customers. I know. But even if you did, I would
never try. I don't sleep with people I like. What about Alice? Well, I
tell you too much Cassandra, I suppose I do like Alice. Well, then maybe
you are not so bad after all, I like her too. You only met her once. It
was enough. She is married. We are all married to something. I'll call
you a taxi.
I wanted normalcy. I wanted to dream the same dream you did. I wanted
to be where you were. But we can't always help ourselves. I failed you.
I failed you the moment we met. I could never be the person I told you I
could be. You understood this long before I could.
Bright light.
My mother is leaning towards me, smiling, running
her fingers down the side of my face, twirling the stray pieces of my
hair...whispering...
Alexander...Alexander....
Except my name is not Alexander.
Friday, July 13, 2012
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