The New Elvis

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Authors: Wyborn Senna

BOOK: The New Elvis
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The New Elvis

By Wyborn Senna

This book is dedicated to my agent, Liz Trupin-Pulli, who always pushes me to go farther, better, faster, and to Adam Lambert, who inspired this tale
.

“Now, the finding of the father has to do with finding your own character and destiny. There’s a notion that the character is inherited from the father, and the body and very often the mind from the mother. But it’s your character that is the mystery, and your character is your destiny. So it is the discovery of your destiny that is symbolized by the father quest.”
— Joseph Campbell,
The Power of Myth

Chapter 1

For some, Paradise is a resting place for meritable souls. For others, the heart of Sin City is a place to reinvent the future through pivotal deals, impulsive exploits, serendipitous encounters, and premeditated plans.

On the night of August 19, 1974, on the thirtieth floor of the Las Vegas Hilton, Elvis was feeling slightly tired but a little bit wired. He had just finished his second show, and it was two in the morning. In lavish suite 3000, he draped his scarf on a lamp, stripped off his concert whites, dropped his heavy belt, kicked off his shoes, and headed to the bathroom to take a shower. Twenty minutes later, he dressed in blue jeans and an embroidered patchwork jacket he wore as a shirt, unbuttoned from his neck to his chest. He came out to join Glen, James, Jerry, and Ronnie, grabbed a hot dog from a tray that had been set out, and left the room to make a phone call.

“Come back,” Ronnie called.

Elvis ignored him. He dialed the front desk and explained what he wanted.

The clerk was stunned by his request but thought she could make it happen.

As though nothing out of the ordinary was about to transpire, Elvis returned to the gathering, grabbed a Pepsi, and cleared his throat. Glen began to play “Down In The Alley” on the piano, and Elvis sang, even though his voice was tired. The phone rang at three, and Elvis left the room to take the call.

“Do you need a car?”

“Sure. And make sure the driver knows where we’re going.”

Manny knew Vegas as well as his own reflection in the rearview mirror. He drove Elvis southbound down Paradise Road and took a right onto Harmon Avenue. Shortly before they reached the corner of Las Vegas Boulevard, he pulled over and stopped at the curb.

“See that building back there?”

Elvis lowered his window and peered into the darkness. Inset between a warehouse and a cluster of condominiums, the single-story medical office bore a discreet sign that read Las Vegas Fertility Associates.

“Yep,” Elvis told the driver.

They sat in companionable silence until a man in a white lab coat turned a light on and came to unlock the front door. Elvis jumped out of the limo and went to meet the doctor, whose name was Wendall Johns. They studied each other as they shook hands. To Elvis, Dr. Johns looked like a serious-minded professional, whom he hoped regarded confidentiality as highly as the Pope revered the sacraments. That the doctor would don his white coat in the middle of the night to meet him seemed to be a good sign.

Dr. Johns had heard many stories about Elvis over the years and wondered how many of them were true. Tonight, the star’s blue eyes were mere slits behind his gold-framed, aviator-style glasses, and his dark hair, swept back from his forehead, hung past his ears, nearly hiding his mutton-chop sideburns. He didn’t appear as heavy as he looked on film, and his tan seemed faded. A diamond-studded, gold Maltese cross hung from a chain around his neck, and his face looked wan in the moonlight.

The doctor ushered him inside and gave him a seat by his desk. “You sure you want to do this?”

Elvis stared at his vintage crystal opal and diamond pinkie ring like he was trying to recall where he’d bought it. He looked up suddenly. “Just give me a cup and a magazine,” he said, straight-faced. “And I expect you to keep my identity a secret. You can provide prospective mothers with genetic information, but—”

Dr. Johns had heard about the various paternity cases filed against Elvis, and he wondered how many of the King’s affairs had resulted in offspring. He also wondered about Elvis’s drug use, erratic behavior, and lack of sexual interest in Priscilla after she became pregnant on their honeymoon in Palm Springs. Though he was not trained in psychiatry, Dr. Johns read plenty of psychoanalytic material, and it seemed that the virgin-whore dichotomy or Madonna-whore complex—wherein a virginal, young wife would begin to be seen as a mother and therefore not sexually attractive—fell in line with Elvis’s intense devotion to Gladys. This also correlated to why Elvis seemed obsessed with virgins and why the star dated girls as young as age fourteen, even as he entered his twenties and thirties. They were girls, not mothers, so he could sexually desire them. If Elvis faced the obvious contradiction inherent in wanting children but desiring only virginal women, this was a bizarre way to fulfill his fantasy. He could have a child without compromising a woman’s chastity.

“Little Lisa Marie isn’t enough?”

The King leaned back in the chair and gave a halfhearted smile, his upper lip raised slightly but the sides of his mouth tense and tired. “Oh, sure, she’s all that and a fleet of new Cadillacs. But now that I’m divorced from Priscilla, I’m not likely to father any more children, and if I did, they’d be unintentional. But this here has been well thought out. It’s anonymous. It’s clean. It’s uncomplicated. And if you know anything about me, that’s hard to come by. I can do it, and when it’s time to say howdy to the Good Lord and go catch up with Mama, I can leave knowing I’ve left a little more of me behind.”

“Another way of leaving your mark,” the doctor acknowledged. He had heard this before from other sperm donors who had contemplated their mortality.

Elvis was as serious as a sober Sunday. “Make sure the woman are beautiful, if you can. It’d be nice to have some gorgeous kids. And, preferably, unmarried, just wanting to have a child in their life.”

“Should they have good singing voices?”

Elvis shrugged. “Doesn’t matter.”

“Why don’t we add virgin to the list while we’re at it?” Dr. Johns suggested, trying to sound jovial, but deadly serious.

Elvis sat up straighter in the chair and couldn’t hide his genuine grin. It was clear to Dr. Johns that he loved the idea. “Why not? That sounds absolutely perfect. Add virgin to the list.”

Dr. Johns wrote down “virgin” and thought,
Freud, you were one smart cookie
.

Chapter 2

On the tenth anniversary of Elvis Presley’s death, a plane crash at Michigan’s Detroit Metropolitan Airport killed one hundred and fifty-six people, one of them being Zella Stuart’s childhood sweetheart, Glenn Enright.

In the summer of 1987, no one wore chastity rings vowing to remain pure until marriage, but Zella had a silver promise ring Glenn had given her their senior year at Grosse Pointe High. They had never made love, and Zella remained true to him even though she’d moved to Las Vegas to pursue her dream of becoming a magician with her own show on the strip, working in the interim as a cocktail waitress at the Flamingo until she got a permanent job as a magician’s assistant and could begin her ascent up the show biz ladder.

Glenn planned to get an apartment near Zella’s place in Vegas prior to their wedding. The night before their reunion, they couldn’t stay off the phone. The last time they spoke was moments before Glenn’s fatal flight, when they’d said they’d see each other soon.

Four months after his untimely death, Zella felt blue and well beyond her years. She walked down the strip and gazed at the Christmas lights and decorations that paled amidst the blaze of neon signs. She strolled down Las Vegas Boulevard past the Aladdin and Little Caesar’s Casino and turned onto Harmon, searching for the address listed on the business card she’d been given by her friend. The clinic sat between a warehouse and a cluster of condominiums, and there was nothing showy about it. The building sat far back from the street in a dimly lit lot, where a small sign identified it as Las Vegas Fertility Associates. Because it was the holiday season, a string of micro-lights framed the rectangular placard and cast tiny blue, red, green, and gold shadows across the shiny plastic letters.

Wearing a clean white lab coat, Dr. Wendall Johns turned on the light in the lobby and came to open the door for Zella. The linoleum entryway was crowded with potted poinsettias and a rosemary shrub decorated with lights and handmade, clay ornaments.

Zella stopped at the tree and examined one of the pink ornaments, which bore a tiny handprint, the name “Melinda”, and the year, “1985”. Another pink one also bore a handprint no larger than a small plum, the name “Pearl”, and the year “1984”. A pale blue one with a handprint read, “Abraham, 1981”.

“Are these—?” she began.

“Our children,” Dr. Johns said. He led her from the tree into the main office, where a desk and chairs were situated. A nativity scene, complete with animals, was arranged on a narrow table across the room, in front of a mirror with an ornate frame.

Zella could see her reflection and part of the desk, including Dr. Johns’s forearm, which moved as he scribbled notes on paper laid atop a fresh folder. She smoothed back her straight, dark hair and repositioned a clip that kept her bangs from falling into her eyes.

“Reason for wanting to conceive?”

Zella told him about Glenn’s accident, how he had been the love of her life, how she would never meet anyone to match him, and how she wanted someone to love. “I tried a cat and then a dog. Then I took a roommate, Deb, who used to work with me, but now she teaches pre-kindergarten at The Meadows. She loves kids, too.”

“And you’re how old?”

She pursed her lips and twisted the promise ring she still wore. “Twenty-two.”

Dr. Johns studied her. Instead of shrinking under his scrutiny, she unclasped her pocketbook and removed a savings account passbook. She slid it across the desk so he could see its six-figure tally, thanks to the family life insurance Glenn’s father shared, having considered his future daughter-in-law one of the clan.

Dr. Johns smiled. “I didn’t know serving casino drinks paid that well.”

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