Category: Fiction

  • More than words

    Focus

    I woke in a dark room, sore down to a place deeper than any I’d known, for soreness is much more than a word; soreness is, at its heart, an intimate physical breach, an invasion of what we take for granted, a fire and resonating pain where before there was nothing, or what felt like nothing. Mute neutrality pervades as the body does its job, and only after sudden pain do we awaken to a place contrary to that quiet, neutral state. 

    I thought I was dead but those are also just words. Words hardly convey the existential paradox of such moments, of being there and not being there simultaneously. Surely I was dead, I thought, and this is what comes after death. My adoptive parents were both wrong and right. A woman approached from the shadows with a sponge and dabbed my chest and then I knew I was alive, the pain was no longer pain as a word or in the theoretical sense but something alive and howling in protest, my reflexes seismic. The pain seemed more a part of me than me, as if it were the true self and I an imposter.

  • Departure

    Ancient seabed

    The elders warned us to remain in the village, to never wander beyond the invisible village boundaries unescorted because we were young and innocent, we hadn’t yet been exposed to danger, the world was full of suffering and violence and the temptation to wander into the woods would tug at our hearts. Children are curious, they said. God’s enemies prey on curiosity. Don’t walk into the forest alone, they said. There are people in the woods and people hurt other people, that’s what they do, that’s what they’ve done since god created them and that’s what they’ll always do. We don’t understand this world any more than god wants us to, they said. We keep close to each other, we protect each other. We love and provide for each other and put our trust in god and that’s how we know everything will be okay. 

    Even as a child I knew their life would not be my life. Their god wasn’t my god, their rules didn’t apply to me. I held no enmity. With few exceptions, the village granted me a sense of community and inclusion. I loved those people who’d taught me the values of hard work and self-reliance. But even invisible boundaries are eventually breached. The elders spoke of salted deserts and wide plateaus upon which incredible creatures roamed, they mentioned clear waters and giant cities of stone and glass for the eye to behold. It was a vast and wild world that even the most wondrous dreams couldn’t simulate. 

    It took years to gather courage enough to leave. I feared the outside world and I feared the loneliness. I feared the danger of the unpredictable and tried to consolidate my limited knowledge and lifetime of legends into an immediate framework. I was afraid to leave my adoptive parents, who had done nothing but love and provide, nurture and behold. I endured countless meditations and hundreds of starlit discussions with Jennifer, fostered with love yet lost and alone in a remote world. It was inevitable. As difficult as it would be, I had to depart the only community I’d ever known to venture into a supposed dream and its unspeakable counterpart.

  • Deconstructionist pt. I

    crack_up

    I was always certain that one day I would become a great builder. I never questioned or discarded the idea as unreasonable or romantic, but rather thought of it as the natural progression of my experience. I began constructing objects out of clay and mud at such an early age that I didn’t recognize the shapes wrought of my hands as anything but extensions of my physical self, as ordinary as other children kicking a ball. My grade school art teachers began to take note of this advanced understanding of architecture, and my parents attended closed-door meetings with school administrators to discuss my potential.

    By the time I finished the fourth grade I had fashioned a replica of the city’s most infamous bridge on sight and memory, adding curative modifications to mend impractical flaws in the original composition. My model was constructed of clay and sticks and stood four feet tall. Word of the feat soon reached the bridge’s original architect and found him forced to defend his aesthetic approach. It was with that particular project that I gained my first enemy. By the end of that year I began sketching plans, also with ability beyond my years, and received my first commission — a horse stable and adjoining three-story shed for grain storage.

    My parents thrust me into accelerated courses in order to maximize my creative potential. I graduated high school at fourteen and enrolled in the local university’s architecture program. Forced to decline commissions throughout my adolescence due to academic policy, I made promises to those daring enough to employ the skills of a boy, a child whose work was unproven but notable for its rigid and cost-efficient use of material and time. News outlets and marginal media representatives began to call. I was young but already the focus of nationally syndicated news interviews. My parents became de facto representatives, and ultimately exploited my talents and alchemized them to their own schemes.

    I honored my promises and flourished professionally but was reputedly difficult to work with. I became solitary, abrasive, evasive, and though the work was always world-class and completed on deadline, I retreated into myself, building secrets and cities of my own. By the time I reached my late-twenties, I’d alienated myself from my parents and the world, only speaking through an agent, myself now a recluse, frightened of the world and angry at it. I was alive in my work and nowhere else.

    A group of financiers commissioned me to build the renowned Trankworth Center, a sprawling subset of office buildings and condominiums spread beneath their centerpiece, a twenty-eight-story tower made of glass and steel in downtown Los Angeles. The project took three years and over two thousand men to complete. It was considered a masterpiece at the unveiling, a ceremony I did not attend. Magazines, books, television shows, my contemporaries and critics all lauded the Trankworth as an achievement in North American architecture. My name soared to inconceivable heights; I was undoubtedly respected in my field. Heralded as the new face of American architecture, I received commissions from each continent.

    After the Trankworth, I turned them all down.

    Suddenly and inexplicably I no longer found value or identity in building. For the first time in my life, I stopped working. It was as if the Trankworth had drained my resources, wrung them out, pulverized them. I retreated further into seclusion, searching in vain for symbols of life where it actually existed, not where I fashioned it. I wanted to feel alive but I also knew life would be something of a revelation to me, something not previously experienced. My parents died in an auto accident, and though I maligned them for taking advantage of my younger self, I couldn’t help but feel pain and loneliness when they passed away.

    While meditating on a small tussock on the afternoon of my thirty-second birthday I had a revelation whereupon my ideas abandoned me, I fell weightless in the void. Soundless light rather than darkness. My ideas returned to me broken into elements, the elements into molecules, into smaller fragments yet. I entered back into waking consciousness compounded, condensed, my body shrinking incrementally, collapsing upon itself, as though in a centrifuge.

    I emerged from the experience more aware than ever. Climbing from the depths of self into which I’d retreated, the world had either grown embittered at my estrangement or forgotten about me entirely. I was offered not a single commission. Again I disappeared into worker’s solitude, armed with sketches and plans and perhaps salvation.

  • fireworks

    IMG_0864

     

    —the explosion occurred downstairs. Breaking glass and bursting wood, heavy thud. I thought about Siobhan in those frantic moments while I dressed and descended the stairs. I thought she might have done it, the old woman may have accidentally blown up part of the house, or maybe it wasn’t an accident at all but a spiteful outburst. She stood in the far sitting room on the main floor, wide-eyed and watching the flames dance about the room, an orgy of heat and snapping light. She looked at me and we extinguished the fire, her grabbing blankets and me fetching water from the kitchen tap. Someone had thrown a homemade grenade through the window and fire scattered in the room, blackening the carpet and much of the furniture. Siobhan wasn’t hurt. She must not have been in the room when the bottle came through the window. The smell of gasoline, acrid and nauseating. Siobhan called the security police but they never arrived, far too busy elsewhere in the city. I climbed upstairs to my notepad and attempted work on the project but was unable to focus. I heard small rockets detonate beyond the city and I thought, it’s hopeless, the end is nigh. An invisible circle closed tightly about me.

    I focused my mind elsewhere, writing about the voice inside, writing about my mother and how I woke this morning thinking of her despite not having dreamed of her. I woke this morning (thinking of my mother) assessing the scab on my hand, acknowledging that one day I’d die violently, alone. I’ve always known it and my mother knew it too, she knew and refused to understand. If only I could have saved her, if only I could have said to her, Mother, do not worry. I woke thinking of my mother, yearning to read something, and then it was dusk with sirens swirling in the city. The shelling or the sounds of shelling then drowned out the sirens (along with all sense of time) and I was startled when the old woman opened my door and quietly walked to the bed behind me. She smiled but did not look at me, a small hand up at the side of her head to wrap strands of hair around her ear. Again I thought of Annalise despite my irritation at having just been startled, and it was bright outside despite the smoke. Siobhan had never come into my room during daylight. I could smell her perfume from the bed behind me and I closed my eyes, thinking of Annalise, my Ophelia, engulfed at once with longing and sadness. I needed to be close to her. I stood with my eyes at the window and walked to the bed, my arms out to her as she pulled me in. I stood there for a while, cradling her head in my arms. The world was fireworks and she sat weeping on the edge of the bed and I stroked her head, my eyes closed.

  • Muted

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    The voice speaks to me, it is a deep voice. I understand some words and phrases that my brain fashions into patterns, as this is the essence of mankind’s relationship to its languages. Air emanates from the lungs, shaped by the throat and mouth. The human ear receives the sounds for the brain to form into recognizable patterns. The mouth, however, is the most offensive of communicatory vehicles. It transforms language into vulgarity, coarseness. Spit and odor often sour the experience for the listener. I prefer words written rather than spoken. Words on paper written by hands assembling symbols, again, in recognizable patterns, a process much more refined than speaking, much cleaner and more worthy of attention, the written word. For anyone can speak. A newborn begins speaking immediately, incomprehensibly. Unevolved man spoke in grunts and howls. The human being must learn to write legibly and coherently, a person must be taught to build cogent thought. Man can speak of an idea almost as fast as he can think it; writing (and reading, for that matter) take time, an effort required of the communicant.

    Is it not the duty of man and woman to think and apply the mind toward some purpose? Is it not our duty to wish to improve the life (and thereby, the ideas) of others? Is there no morality in keeping silent?

  • neo-enlightenment, text redacted

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    [redacted] incarceration by emancipation. There are two initial steps in the process, the first being extraction of the bourgeois individual from common life and placement into isolation, sampling the good life at intervals for a year, providing the subject with controlled transgressions into common life to witness firsthand the fundamental incompletion of the subject’s former life in comparison to the good life.

    Subjects in this initial phase are isolated with study materials in multiple mediums to exercise and cultivate the intellectual spirit, prioritizing topics the individual has interest in engaging. [redacted] The instructors then diversify content so that soon the subject absorbs information faster and at greater depth, and the assimilation of refined themes begins.

    [redacted]

    The subject witnesses an imperative of the will to wish to strengthen and sharpen the mind, and he/she acknowledges that humans are inherently eager to seek information and structure it to the mind’s will. [redacted] The enlightenment project reinforces that eagerness, revives it from an entropic state and demonstrates its potential [redacted]

    […] is our primary goal, so that the subjects, once the initial phase of enlightenment is underway, will return to former life in an enlightened state of consciousness, one that engages the political, moral, and intellectual processes, without modifying the sovereign person’s nature of character. We strive to combine the intellect with a culturally relevant awareness that each human being coexist and freely give, take, and borrow knowledge from one another.

    [redacted]

  • Neurosis, gentleness, contempt

    IMG_1277

    They said that with an intellect advanced far beyond one’s years there will accompany it a cognitive malady or other neurosis equally advanced, because the universe must always balance its extremes. And the boy’s gifts were extreme. This is how he suffered adult phenomena at an early stage of maturity, due to this balance, or imbalance, if you will. He was so sick that he couldn’t translate his fears and feelings into language in order to articulate them to others. They said that because of this, the boy suffered through a debilitating anxiety throughout his childhood and adolescence while the few people who bore witness to his gifts had no idea of the struggle inside him, the strain and terror gnawing at his spirit.

    And it was due to this complicated element in his life that the boy, or the prodigy child, as they called him, grew into the world and into himself with a gentle disposition but also a deep contempt of the world that would accompany him unto death.

  • Old man, gun

    You put the pin in afterward, he said, twisting the pistol around so I had a better view of the barrel’s clean gash. Like this. The barrel snapped closed and he handed the pistol to me. The old man’s eyes were the color of bullets. Now you try, he said.

    The gun had the energy of an animal in my hand. I stared at it and moved it around and watched the light reflect in its chrome sheen and then I looked back at the old man and he was grinning at me.

    When I was your age we didn’t have fancy guns like that, he said, nodding at it. The first pistol I ever shot was a beat-up police-issue .38.

    His eyes darkened and focused on something distant for an instant before lighting back up. My old man stole it from some cop, he said.

    What did you shoot at? I asked. The old man shrugged and said, empty coffee cans in the backyard, targets we’d made from wood.

    I nodded and stared out from his garage to the street. It was quiet and bright.

    How old were you when you shot your first person? I asked him. He dropped his eyes to me and pulled a small cigar from his pocket. He lit it and blew streams of smoke out his nostrils.

    What makes you think I ever shot anyone?

    My dad says you used to shoot people, I said, staring down at the gun in my hands. He says you used to hit men. He says you killed a lot.

    Your old man said that? he asked, coughing out smoke. He looked out to the street and sighed deep in his barrel chest. I like your daddy, he said. He’s a good father to you kids. But he got no business telling you stories like that. Specially when they ain’t true.

    The old man’s eyes darkened again and he took the gun from me delicately, a softness in his bones.

    Let’s go inside and make you a sandwich, he said.

    I watched him lock the gun away in a black toolbox. A faded tattoo of a bulldog painted one of his forearms. I had the strange feeling that I’d hurt him, that I had sliced him with a knife and memories spilled out.

    I stared out to the street again and a strange wave of sadness slid over me just as a cloud passed across the sun.

    Come on, son, the old man said, and we went inside.