He didn’t look at me. “You know who you are?”
After a second I said: “About two thirds of it; so I guess at least I’m on my way. Maybe I’m pretty lucky.” I finished my beer. “You come down to the nest. Whenever you want. Just don’t bring your gun.”
“I wish,” Jack said after a few seconds, “I could just get me some kind of job. A job where I could make some good money. Then I could get me a girlfriend; then I could buy my own drinks. I don’t like to sit in a bar and hustle nice guys for drinks.”
“When I first got to town,” I told him, “I had a job, moving furniture. Five bucks an hour. You’d’ve dug it. It was made for you.”
But he was looking at the dollar bill.
Since the frustration was making me mean, I decided it was time to go. I stepped from the bar.
“Hey, Kid?”
“What?”
“Ain’t you gonna take your change?” He put his middle finger on the wrinkled dollar and slid it over the wet wood.
I thought a second. “Why don’t you keep it?”
“Aw, no, man—Naw, I don’t like to take no hand-outs. I need a job; make some good money; pay my own way.”
“You take this hand-out,” I said. “You need it.”
“Well, thanks, man…?” His finger, holding the paper to the counter, slid it back. “Thanks a lot! I’m good for it, too. You’ll get it back, once I get some money. You’re a pretty nice guy.”
Comments anyway: I want to help. And feel help would be impossible. Almost. Which is simply almost forgetting how much help I’ve had.
I hope he comes to the nest.
Off his head about everything else, he’s right on about the pussy. Despite George, and a city consecrated by twin moons, I know there must be some greater, female deity (for whom George is only consort), a sin yet to name her (as that sun is never named); we have all glimpsed her, sulking in the forest of her knowledge—every tree a tree of that knowledge—and there is nothing but to praise
This afternoon Lady of Spain and Filament staggered through the front door in volcanic laughter, lurched up the hall supporting each other—
“Hey,” I said. “What happened with you?”
Filament faced me, pursed her lips, inflated her cheeks, widened her eyes, and rattled her chains before her breasts, miming something I did not understand. Her cheeks exploded with more laughter. Lady of Spain, dragging Filament’s arm, hauled her away.
Dollar pushed around me, grinning. “Hey!” he called. “What happened? Did you do it?”
Filament turned and repeated the mime.
Dollar—I’m not sure it meant more to him than it did to me—crashed back against the wall, holding his stomach and howling: “Oh, wow…! You mean…? Really…? Wow…!” and followed them up the hall, his laugh shriller than either of theirs.
Then Tarzan stepped in from the service porch and said: “Look, ladies, people are sleeping in the back room, huh?” There are twelve tones of voice in which you can say that: three of them would have gotten him an apology with muffled giggles. He chose, at random, from the other nine.
Sex between nest members is rare enough—I can think of six, no seven exceptions, including me and Denny—to make me wonder if basically I don’t have here an exandrous and/or exogynous totem group. Most sex comes walking in, invited or not—and eventually walks out. The seventh exception was Filament’s surprising (to me, anyway. Lanya says, “Why were you surprised?” I don’t know why I was surprised. I was surprised, that’s all) affair with a tall, Italian looking girl named Anne Harrimon, who, her first night here, took lights and chains and the name Black Widow. Always standing hand in hand, always sitting knee to knee whispering, running through the house giggling or asleep at any time in any room, one’s head against the other’s breast, one’s breast beneath the other’s hand, intense, innocently exhibitionistic, and almost wordless, they developed, within hours, a protective/voyeuristic (?) male circle that ran with them everywhere and that, incidentally, dissolved the apes for the duration (the two were not Tarzan’s favorite people). After a couple of weeks, the Widow came to me and returned her chains. Those few minutes of conversation in the yard were the only time I really got to know her, decided I liked her; decided I would offer them back to her if I ever saw her again (recalling Nightmare and Lanya): she left. Filament was sad but did not talk about her; then returned to older ways. Seems to be the place to mention it: I once asked Denny why he had no nickname.
“Nightmare used to call me B.J.,” he explained. “Until I told him to cut it the fuck out. So I’m just Denny.”
“B.J.? What did that stand for?”
“I’ll give you one guess.”
“Oh,” I said. “Hey, what is your last name, by the way?”
“For a while it was Martin. Once it was Cupp. Depended on the foster family I was staying with.”
Does the onomal malleability here make my own loss more bearable?
“Fuck off, man!” Dollar said, straightening. “It’s their nest too!” His had actually been the only laugh with edge to wake.
“Now look!” Tarzan said. “These bitches come running in here yelling and shouting! Somebody’s got to tell ’em to keep—”
“Now you look,” Filament said. She had about as much use for Tarzan as he had for the other Caucasians in the nest. “You may be Tarzan. But I am not Jane!”
“I’d fuck him,” Lady of Spain said. Black, and an occasional partaker in long, intense conversations with Jack the Ripper, for Tarzan she had acquired something of the apes’ aura. (Because of this was she more tolerant of him?) “I really would. But Tarzan don’t fuck nothin’.” Only one of the twelve could make that come out right. She chose it with such ease, I hope he took a lesson.
“Aw, hey, now: I was just asking you to keep it a little—”
D-t, naked and half asleep, loomed in the back doorway, forearms high on the jambs, bony hips cocked askew, big hands (with their funny thumbs) and head hanging. The head came up and he blinked. “Tarzan, when I went to sleep, you was complaining about something. Here it is with the sky all light, and you still at it?”
“I was just telling them to be quiet so they wouldn’t wake you up!”
“Time for me to get up anyway, boy. And they did not wake me.”
“You see!” Dollar said. “You see, all your yellin’ and carryin’ on makes more noise than—”
Filament put her hand on Dollar’s chest and lowered her head. “Now you just wait too.” She looked up again. “Tarzan, you like living here, right?”
“What you mean?” Tarzan’s chin jerked belligerently.
“She asked you,” Lady of Spain said, “if you like living here. Or not.”
“Yeah,” Tarzan said. “Yeah. I like living here. What are you gonna do about it?”
“I’m not gonna do anything,” Filament said. “But you better. You better do the same thing Dollar is doing.”
“Huh?” Dollar said. “What am I—?”
“And that is: Since you like livin’ here, you better make a real effort to stay.”
D-t broke the silence with laughter. He shook in the doorway like a windy scarecrow.
“Man,” Tarzan said, “now what are you laughin’ at?”
D-t threw one arm around Tarzan’s neck—
“…Hey, man!…”
—and, still laughing, dragged him down the hall, occasionally rubbing his knuckles on Tarzan’s head, hard.
“…Hey, cut it out…hey, stop it; that hurts…damn it, nigger! Cut it out…hey, what are you…stop…!”
In the living room, D-t let Tarzan up.
“…what the fuck you doin’?” Tarzan rubbed both hands in his yellow hair.
“I’m just trying to see if your head is as hard as you keep makin’ out like it is, motherfucker! We got any coffee?”
Tarzan dropped one hand, rubbed harder with the other. “Yeah, I…I think so. Somebody made up a pail about an hour ago.” He was still confused.
In the hall, Filament and Lady of Spain walked on. Behind them Dollar said: “He don’t got no right to talk to you like that.”