In the City of Shy Hunters (73 page)

BOOK: In the City of Shy Hunters
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How will you know, I said, This exact right most perfect person?

All I know is it will be dramatic. It will be just so fucking dramatic that I will know, Fiona said.

Fiona, I said, Why don't we go to my apartment and take a shower? I said. I'll fix us some pasta.

Fiona bit her lip. Her breath in. Her breath out.

I can't go in showers, Fiona said. And toasters terrify me, and refigerators. I'm even afraid of my vibrator, for chrissakes, Fiona said.

Only silence.

I'm afraid of my '53 DeSoto, I said, And I'm afraid of the shower too, and elevators, and subways, and cabs, anyplace confining, and people can't get too close to me.

Really? Fiona said. The only place I feel safe is in my shower curtain. I'm going to get over it, Fiona said, In time.

Just come home with me, I said, Lie down on the futon. Or we could go to Fish Bar, I said. There's a great new song on the jukebox. Mercedes Sosa, “Gracias a la Vida.”

Will, Fiona said, I can't go inside.

How do you feel about irons and ironing boards? I said.

Not yet, Fiona said. It's just not right, Fiona said. I know it's unbelievable.

The war, Fiona said. Any day now. The Dog Shit Park War.

FIONA
'
S INNER VOICE
wouldn't let her leave the green bench. I bought her a knish and some scalloped-looking potatoes from Odessa and took the knish and potatoes back to the green bench. Fiona was still sitting there. She ate like a farmhand.

She ate like she was eating for two.

We sat there on my green bench holding hands, watching the light
entre chien et loup
. On the corner of Eighth Street and Avenue B, the streetlamp came on, the color from another incarnation. Ruby Prestigiacomo's arborvitae was right behind us.

Then Fiona's inner voice called her back to Walk/Don't Walk.

I went home without her. Took my clothes off, washed my face in the kitchen sink, sponged off my pits, my crack, my balls. I was standing among my naked Art Family.

I hadn't checked my mail for about a week, so I got my keys, walked out into the narrow blue hallway, and under the unrelenting light of the fluorescent halo, I opened up my mailbox. Inside was my Con Ed bill, the rent bill, and a big manila envelope from Peter Morales.

I turned on my reading lamp, set my reading lamp on my
Father Knows Best
table, Rose's poem on the red wall in black Magic Marker just above me. Swiped the dry rose petals off the table. Put down True Shot's manila envelope. Threw the Con Ed and the rent bill in the garbage can.

I pulled up the ladder, sat on the second rung.

Across the courtyard, the E.T.-phone-home guy was phoning home again. Newspapers spread around him on the floor, the phone receiver cradled in his neck, his other hand pumping on his cock.

I rolled another cigarette, lit it, and opened the envelope from True Shot. A photograph fell out of the folded paper.

True Shot was standing in front of a tipi. He was smiling extra lovely with his arm around an old man, an old Indian man, smiling with his arm around Grandfather Alessandro. In front of them—Alessandro's
old hand and True Shot's extra-lovely hand—in their hands, the ocelot medicine bundle, Charlie 2Moons's pipe.

True Shot's handwriting was shaky like his eyes had been, and all the sentences sloped down.

I read True Shot's letter out loud to my Art Family.

Dear William of Heaven:

So much has happened since I arrived here in Fort Hall. So much it would take a novel to tell you all of it. First off, there ain't no Blackfeet in Blackfoot, Idaho. The Blackfeet are all up in Browning, Montana. Alessandro says we'll take medicine pipe up there next spring on Mother's Day. Then there's Charlie's pipe, which as you can see is safe here with Alessandro. Alessandro says to tell you to come get it anytime you want. And something else, Will. You
were
Charlie's brother, Will. Your father had an affair with Viv. Charlie's father is your father, Will
.

All my love,
Peter Morales

P.S. Doublewide Viv wants me to tell you a story. It's a Shoshone story and it goes like this: When a woman gives birth, first she births a rabbit. The rabbit runs from the womb, runs here and there, to the river, to the mountain, to the forest. Then when the child is bom, the child must follow the path of the rabbit
.

Wherever the rabbit goes, we have to go too
.

So on your journey, Will, Viv says to watch out for rabbit turds!

Only silence. My apartment, all of the whole Known Universe, silent. I turned off the light, rolled a cigarette, stood with my Art Family, smoked. Rolled another cigarette, smoked. The mercury-vapor light was dust-storm light from another incarnation and the unrelenting light from Fifth Street Videoland was coming in my windows onto the floor. The cigarette an orange jewel.

The photos:

Mother in her red housedress and Bobbie in pedal pushers and white short-sleeve blouse and me in jeans and a striped T-shirt with suspenders, standing in front of the Residency squinting into the sun.

Father standing in front of his swimming-pool-blue pickup, Levi's leg up, his cowboy boot on the running board, his Stetson cocked back.

Father in his clown suit in front of his swimming-pool-blue horse trailer with his German shepherd Heap Big Chief and Ricky the monkey and Sea Bass the mean goose.

Photos of cowboys steer-wrestling, bulldogging, bronc-riding, bullriding.

A photo of Father with his buddy Lou Racing in front of the old Tribal Council building.

A photo of Bobbie standing in front of the sexually haunted barn, wearing the black dress.

A photo of Mother—the one of her from her magenta album with the gold edges on the pages—where she was lifting up her skirt and dancing in Saskatchewan when she visited her cousins. She was smiling so much her gums showed.

A photo of Father as a young man. In front of Saint Veronica's Church in Blackfoot, wearing a suit with pleated pants and shined shoes, white shirt and a tie with the pattern of butterflies and dice.

His black hair, his smile.

THAT NIGHT AT
Café Cauchemar there was some big to-do with
Les Misérables
, and we were all in the weeds. I had Section Five, which is right in the middle of the restaurant, right under the Sistine Chapel God. It was about eleven o'clock and Andrew, the new maître d'hôtel seated three people at table 33: a heavyset tall man, an American, with wild graying blond hair in a white turtleneck and double-breasted blue blazer with gold buttons; a dark-haired, dark-eyed small-boned woman who looked Italian; and a thin beautifully skinned silver-haired man, maybe Swedish.

The big American man ordered a bottle of Chablis Grand Cru and appetizers for the table—escargots and a dozen bluepoint oysters.

The silver-haired Swedish man was wearing a cornflower-blue suit and a blue silk shirt, the same blue as his eyes. His wife—I guessed—was wearing a sleeveless scoop-neck long black gown. Her voice was deep; she smoked one Marlboro after the other.

I poured the '84 Mugo.

All three of them were laughing laughing as I served the American man his steak frites rare with ketchup and a steak knife, the Italian woman her cassoulet, the Swedish man his steak tartare.

Dessert was fresh fruit compote for the woman,
tarte tartin
for the silver-haired man, deep-fried ice cream for the American. Espresso all around, decaf for the American.

The American guy was talking.

Paris is so clean and beautiful, he said. And Barcelona, so clean and
beautiful And Madrid. But here in New York, garbage strewn across our streets—rats, vermin. We live in fear and filth. Homeless people, beggars are everywhere. You'd think they'd have the courtesy to stay in their own parts of the city.

The moment that after, you're different.

My fist hit the table. The water, the wine in the glasses rippled.

Quiet as only New York can get that fast.

Abracadabra! My fist was a John Wayne punch, a big bang, a big fucking bang, right into the American guy's big mouth.

I don't remember much about this next part.

Big crashes, people yelling. The American guy—chair and all—went flying onto the black and white tiles of Café Cauchemar. Someone, some people, pulled me off the American, ripped my shirt. In no time at all, I was through the swinging red doors and in the kitchen.

I made my way to Chef Som Chai. The chef was sautéeing sole
meunière
. I kissed Chef Som Chai on the cheek, then the other cheek. The chef looked down at the sauce pan. He didn't say anything. He just knew. Kung Fu salad guy gave me the high five. I changed my clothes in the locker room. Put my ball cap on, my Levi's jacket on. Walked out through the dining room, through the front door, the same way I came in.

So long ago.

AT PARADISE GARAGE
, the beautiful man behind the red velvet rope winked at me when he lifted the rope and let me in. I winked back, walked up the cement incline you could drive a truck up—blue emergency lights on each side of the ramp, blue light back and forth around and around—I turned right, and walked up some more.

In the crowd, my eyes went right to a woman in a yellow dress. She looked like the cover of a Marvin Gaye album. She was at the bar, dancing with the brass bar pole, pulling against the pole, stretching, pushing her butt out, dancing with herself.

Just her in her body in a moment in her life, such a brave and lovely act it is to let the body celebrate.

Then I was not just kind of dancing off to the side by the speaker like usual. Just like that, my skinny arms, my big butt, nipples poking out my T-shirt too much, my big bare frog-belly-white Idaho legs, my wish my dick was bigger, my mother's nerves—I was walking out alone into the middle of dancing humanity.

Who cares what a bunch of assholes think. I was invited to this party.

Dancing. Not locals kicking up closing time. No ranchburger home sweet home.

In all the world. America's dark basement. Charcoal. Wolf Swamp. Down here in the jungle. In drag as me. Where the heart is. Where you fuck hope. Where you never touch me. Where you be one and get one.

Where the hunter is the prey and paradise is out in the garage.

Horizontal, I am vertical, hula-hula walking like an Egyptian, shoulder bone connected to arm bone, folding in on myself, crossed over, polemical fool, lucid, slow-water circles down the corner drain, dervish, whirling labyrinth, William of Heaven in heaven, another New Yorker gone to hell, broken open, a puddle of blood, cum in the palm of my hand, vasty deep, spilled open, head bone connected to butt bone, round and round, up and down, side to side, back and forth, strong yellow piss, spit. Finally totally too too too out of my fucking mind.

CHAPTER
TWENTY-NINE

T
he people of Dog Shit Park had built a barricade around the park.

Those who lived in Dog Shit Park were inside; everybody else, the rest of New York, especially the police—the Riders—were outside.

Anything you could imagine was set in front of the gates and against the old wrought-iron fences: cardboard, car parts, wood scraps—two-by-fours, two-by-sixes, four-by-fours—plastic tarps, canvas, blankets, shopping carts, old couches, armoires, dressing tables, chests of drawers, kitchen tables, chairs, old wood doors, destruction rubble, an old Dodge Dart, pieces of plywood, sheets of corrugated metal, Sheetrock, pressboard, a huge cornice from a building, bicycle frames, tree limbs.

A barricade seven to ten feet tall all the way around Dog Shit Park. A banner across the front gate facing Avenue A,
HOMES FOR THE HOMELESS
:
FUCK PIGS
.
FUCK THE RIDERS
.
FUCK SERGEANT WHITE SUPREMACY
.

The first night there was one hell of a party going on inside the barricade. A big bonfire and people yelling and waving banners and chanting,
We want a home! We want a home!

And there was music—guitars and flutes and saxophones and tambourines and drums—and people singing and dancing. Inside the barricade, Dog Shit Park bacchanalia. Outside, the puritan undertow.

Divide and conquer.

When the horse shit hits the fan
,
you'll know where to find me
.

Fiona Yet was inside the barricade, dancing and singing, twirling. The flames of the bonfire on her red shower curtain made of her a reflected fire, a dancing twirling dervish of fire.

Me outside the church.

All around Dog Shit Park was crawling with cops. Hundreds of cops, maybe a thousand. As many cops outside as homeless people inside.

The first night of the Dog Shit Park War, Fish Bar got held up. Two guys wearing ski masks walked in, held everyone at gunpoint, took
the money from the cash register, took money and valuables from all the customers. Precinct Nine half a block away, but not a cop in sight.

The next day, Mayor Ed Koch gave the order.

I was sitting in Life Café, dipping french fries into my coffee, when the Riders came around the comer, four abreast, line after line of big horses galloping galloping—horse sweat, horse hooves on the pavement—from the east on Tenth Street, from the west on Tenth Street, on the sidewalks of Tenth Street, cops on horses, clubs in their hands, clubs raised in the air. Charging ahead of the legions of four, a white stallion. On the white stallion, Sergeant White Supremacy.

Just then a man crossing the avenue dropped his grocery bag and ran across Tenth Street in front of the horses. Sergeant White Supremacy caught up, leaned into the blow, and hit the man in the back of the head. The man screamed and fell, horse hooves all around him, graceful English elms inside the pool of blood on the pavement.

From the south on Avenue C, more horses, more cops.

Riders swinging clubs from the north on Avenue C.

You could hear the horses' hot breath in and out, in and out. People running everywhere. At the sidewalk table next to me, a young black woman with long braids, copper bracelets, copper necklace, and long green jeweled earrings catching light, had been sitting, reading a book, drinking her cappuccino. When she saw the Riders, the woman let her book drop. She stood up and raised her fist.

BOOK: In the City of Shy Hunters
5.42Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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