Whale Music (10 page)

Read Whale Music Online

Authors: Paul Quarrington

BOOK: Whale Music
12.75Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

I am voyaging down the gold and platinum record hallway. In this hallway are also many Grammy Award plaques, which Danny and I often used as coke mirrors. Many things in the popular music industry can be utilized as coke mirrors, no mere coincidence. At any rate, there used to be more of these gold and platinum records and such, but one night Danny was in an extremely drunken bad mood because he’d caught his wife Lee in bed with another woman. Lee was by far the most beautiful of Dan’s wives. Danny called Lee many filthy names and then, following a logic that eludes me still, he started pitching our gold and platinum records to the fishes. I was worried more about depleting our supply of potential coke mirrors. Those were the days when I did quite a bit of that stuff, although I’ve cut down recently, mostly because no one will
sell me any. Let’s face it, I can’t purchase No-Doze. I don’t really see what the problem is, it’s not like I’m going to go out in public and shame myself. I’ll stay home and shame myself.

I must be on my way somewhere, although I seem to have stalled in this hallway. From another room I can hear music, Claire is listening to a Van Morrison record. If she really wants to file an accurate report on our planet she should listen to Perry Como. My best guess is that I was headed for the kitchen. It seems like I haven’t eaten in days, I’ve actually lost a bit of weight. But I’m bogged down in the hallway, which means something unpleasant is about to happen.

Knock-knock
.

Front door.

I should hire a butler to drive these people away, but then who would protect me from the butler? I press myself against the wall, hoping to bury myself in a shadow.

“Desmond?” comes a voice. “I know you’re there.”

It’s one of the Dr. Tockette impersonators.

“Desmond! Let me in.”

“If you’re really Dr. Tockette, use the secret password!”

“Desmond. For your treatment to be successful, it’s imperative that you allow me to enter without this password nonsense.”

“Do you think the president of the United States just allows anyone to come in? No, sir. I’ll bet he has a highly complex system of passwords. And yet no one calls it nonsense or accuses him of mental imbalance.”

“Certainly they do!”

“A bad example.”

“If I say the password, will you let me in?”

“I most certainly won’t if you don’t.”

“This once then, and never again.
Garuda.”

“Garuda?”

“Open the door.”

“No. You’ve alarmed me. You conjure in my mind this
terrifying image of some mythical beast, half-bird, half-human, and then you ask that I open the door?”

“Play fair, Desmond. I’ll tell your mother on you.”

“By the way, Columbia University will not admit to ever hearing of you, let alone awarding the Doctorate of Psychiatry that you lay claim to.”

“Not that Columbia. Colombia the country. ”

“You studied psychiatry in the country of Colombia?”

“A very reputable school.”

“Dr. Bolivar’s School of Advanced Torture Techniques?”

“Your mother says you have a girl in there.”

“There is a visitor here.”

“Don’t you wish to discuss your sexual hang-ups?”

“Don’t
sexual hang-up
me, you mountebank.”

“Garuda! Garuda!”

Claire is beside me in the hallway. She says, “Fuck off!”

“Who’s that?”

“It’s the person telling you to fuck off,” answers Claire.

“Young woman, I am Mr. Howl’s personal doctor. I insist that you open the door.”

“Well, I don’t believe you’re his personal doctor, because you know dick on a stick about him.”

“I know everything about him! I have one entire filing cabinet devoted to him.”

“So then,” says Claire, winking at me, “what’s with this sexual hang-ups business?”

“Sexually speaking, Mr. Howl is retarded at about the level of a three-year-old.”

“Yeah, well, that don’t sound like the Desmond I know.”

“Oh,” snorts Dr. Tockette, “I suppose you and he have had intimate relations?”

“Absolutely. He’s great.”

“What, you manually stimulated his little apparati?”

Claire shoots me a look, rolls her eyes towards the door. “Nope. We do it all.”

“All?”

“We fuck, we suck, usual stuff.”

“Desmond? Is this true?”

“Well …” We fuck? We suck?

“He’s modest. Take my word for it. He gave me head for about eight hours straight yesterday.”

“Are we talking about Desmond Howl?”

“Yeppers.”

“Desmond? Is this true?”

“Eight hours seems like an awfully long time,” I say.

“Sure is,” agrees Claire. “Dr. Fockette out there would have creamed his jeans in about three minutes.”

“Young lady, I demand that you open the door. You could be doing severe damage to my patient’s psyche.”

“You
could be doing the fucking damage, buster. It’s his house, and he doesn’t want you in it, so fuck off.”

“Desmond, I’m telling your mother.”

“And tell that douche-bag to stay away, too.”

Ooh, what nasty language they have up on Toronto.

“He’s insane, young lady.”

“So the fuck what?” shouts Claire. Suddenly she is crying. She reaches out, touches my fat arm, and then runs away.

I follow the alien, alarmed by her weeping. She should not be crying on my behalf. I am the Whale-man, I live in an ivy-encrusted manse with my tiny bag of shadowy memories. I am not worthy of so many vicious tears.

And here, in the living room, the alien is destroying things. Vases are pitched against walls, the shrivelled husks of flowers rendered to dust. Empty glasses and crumby plates are dashed to the ground. An automatic card shuffler is mangled. Record albums sail through the air. This gives me an idea.

“Wait!” I shout.

The alien does wait, her breathing heavy, her face twisted.

“Watch!”

I disappear into the gold and platinum hallway, select one at random. “
Catch a Ride.”
A biggy, crates to Crete. The back of the
mounting is cheap cardboard (the popular music industry is all gloss), I poke my fingers through and tear out the argental disc. I waddle into the backyard with the thing. This must be satisfying when your innards are on the boil, because Danny did it. I cock my wrist and let fly. Look at it go! The sixties weren’t a waste of time after all, everyone learned how to toss a Frisbee. The thing climbs regally into the sky. The platinum catches the sun and sends it splashing. The record lilts to the right, it loses its loft and slices through the air, there is a very satisfying noise as it is dashed upon the rocks below.

“Say,” I comment, “that
is
fun.”

The alien is right behind me, a golden platter in her hands. She elects to use the two-handed delivery, which adds distance but takes away from the graceful flight. Each to its own. The record clears the rocks at the bottom of the cliff. It bounces among the foamy waves and disappears.

Claire and I run back into the house, we gather up gold and platinum records.

The alien’s tears turn to laughter. I, on the other hand, am reminded of my brother Daniel, and my eyes begin to sting.

When Danny was fifteen years old, he fell in love with a girl named Brenda Mackey. This was a bit odd, because Brenda was no beauty. She was a big girl, a bit pot-bellied, large-breasted in a doleful fashion. She had a tattoo on her left forearm, one of those faint blue institutional jobs. It was merely a crudely drawn cross—it might have been of a religious nature, it may have been a dagger. Both arms were covered with scars. Fine, straight scars. Orderly, arithmetical rows of scars. Brenda’s face was pleasant enough, except she had a repertoire of about twenty-two frowns and sneers, from which she made her selection of facial expression.

The thing about Brenda Mackey was, she was the owner of a reputation. Her reputation was like a huge slobbering St. Bernard that followed along behind her, occasionally woofing its cookies. I have no desire to be cruel, especially to someone
who owns a reputation (I mean, just look at the monster I have), but the truth of the matter is, Brenda was a slut. She certainly educated Danny in these matters sexual. He would relate this education to me at night as we lay in bed. I was baffled, I was confounded. At the same time, there was something chivalrous about Danny’s behaviour. This became apparent when Brenda’s reputation, that hairy behemoth, was sullied.

The sullying was done by Phil O’Kell, who periodically got released from some institution or another, usually for the day. He never committed a crime that was particularly dastardly—uttering false documents, fraud, petty theft, acts more of muddle than malice. And I will say this, that when Phil O’Kell sullied Brenda Mackey’s reputation—he accused Brenda of the one or two sexual acts that even she might find distasteful—it was because his heart was mangled. Phil was an aggrieved suitor. Squalor doesn’t negate everything. So, Phil O’Kell got released from prison one day, thought he might spend time with Brenda, discovered instead that she was cavorting with my young brother. O’Kell stood on street corners and ragged her.

You’d have thought Danny would be petrified, instead he seemed exhilarated. “O’Kell is horse meat,” he screamed. His energy knew no bounds, he grabbed me by the shoulders and shook hard. “O’Kell is a dead man!” Did I mention that O’Kell was a massive specimen, that he spent his time in prison lifting weights? Danny needed some advantage, any edge, and with that in mind he created Stud E. Baker.

Stud E. Baker was a rancid and mealy greaseball. He wore bluejeans coated with crankshaft oil, a torn T-shirt. Stud wore cowboy boots that might have been stolen from the Dalton gang as their dead bodies were lined up to be photographed. Stud E. Baker’s hair was worried into an elaborate do, duck-tailed, a surf running down the middle, but then this intricate creation was destroyed by a rumpled Confederate Army cap. Stud E. Baker smoked continuously, his body was fuelled by high-test Mexican beer. He swallowed amphetamines.
Stud had a gimpy leg and a sexual disease he’d caught in a tropical clime. This disease made his crotch endlessly itchy, and Stud E. Baker usually had one hand in his pants, scratching with vigour.

Stud E. Baker hit the streets in an old ragtop, the engine souped up till it howled, it bombinated, it shook public buildings.

The call went forth. Stud wanted to play chicken with Philly O’Kell.

Palomountain had a perfect place for the playing of chicken, just to the south of town, in a small forest, the government had once thought to build an airforce base. They mowed a wide swath, five hundred yards long and a hundred feet across, and then abandoned the idea, I assume because someone realized it was stupid to be taking off and landing airplanes in a forest. At any rate, they’d burned that strip to the nubble, there was little subsequent vegetation.

Danny set the time: midnight. I was recruited as his second. Phil O’Kell was waiting when we arrived. He had three or four thugees with him. They threw beer bottles and belched. Maybe fifty or sixty town kids (Brenda Mackey among them) showed up to watch. Danny—Stud E. Baker—roared up, slammed on the brakes, the two cars sat facing each other at either end of the aborted landing strip.

The thing could not be done without preliminaries. Stud E. Baker opened the car door, grabbed ahold of the roof and pulled himself up. His eyes were red, his ears were steaming, he gave off tequila effluvia. “Take it back!” he screamed.

Phil O’Kell reared himself likewise. “Er, nope.”

Danny reseated himself, started building up the revs. The animals in the forest fled.

I was the starter, which is to say I stood in the middle of the aborted landing strip waving a handkerchief over my head. When I judged the howls to be sufficiently loud, I let the thing fall. Then I hustled my fat ass off to the sidelines as fast as I could.

The cars headed for each other, Danny quickly getting up to about sixty, O’Kell contenting himself with about thirty, as if obeying a posted speed limit. At the last possible moment—really, several moments before the last possible moment—O’Kell veered to the right.

Stud E. Baker never let up on the gas. Danny claimed that the accelerator stuck, that the brakes failed, but I’m inclined not to believe him. He flew the length of that aborted landing strip and hit the trees spectacularly. The hood crumpled, exploded into flame. From the wreckage emerged Stud E. Baker, and local legend has it that he lit a smoke from the flames before limping away.

Stud E. Baker, having defended his woman’s honour, walked by Brenda Mackey and gave her a disdainful glance. He spit in the direction of Phil O’Kell and muttered, “If you’d suck him, you’d suck ripe shit.” He kept going, waving a hand at me. “Come on, Desmo. Let’s get drunk.” I trotted to keep up, panting like an overheated dog.

The strangest part may be this: two or three days later, Danny handed me a sheet of paper. Written on it, in a cramped and arduous script, was:

Brenda, you give me peace of mind
.
Brenda, like a jewel I find
In a dark place where nobody goes
In a strange place where the wind blows
In a cruel place where nobody knows
Brenda
.

Danny grinned. “Fucking poetry.”

Brenda, you give me reason to
Brenda, live my life for you
In this dark place, where the rains fall
In this strange place, where the night calls

(Already I was singing in my head, lush harmonies, dense chords, sevenths, ninths—my god, a Neopolitan sixth!)

In this cruel place, I will give my all
To Brenda
.

Danny gave me a little jab to the belly. “Hey, brother,” he whispered, “we are on our way.”

Other books

TemptressofTime by Dee Brice
Echoes of the White Giraffe by Sook Nyul Choi
El jardín olvidado by Kate Morton
The Truth of Me by Patricia MacLachlan
Motor City Blue by Loren D. Estleman
Nightmare City by Nick Oldham
Entranced by Jessica Sorensen