American Purgatorio (16 page)

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Authors: John Haskell

Tags: #Adult, #Contemporary

BOOK: American Purgatorio
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The two worlds resist coming together, and yet at the same time, there's only one world.

Feather spoke first. She said, “I feel like there's a wall around me.”

“A wall of what?” I said.

Our thighs and shoulders were touching, but we weren't looking at each other. “It's glass,” she said. “I can see what's out there and hear things, but I can't touch anything, or if I do I'll shatter the glass.”

“What would happen if you did?”

“If I shattered the glass? The glass would break.”

And that was all we said.

We sat like that a while longer, not speaking. Then we heard some birds outside. And I'm not saying that sitting there we shattered any glass because that would be too dramatic a description of what happened. What happened was that somehow what we wanted and what we needed, for a moment, were the same thing.

7.

But then the moment was over and I was back to wanting something else. I'd already gone to another moment, thinking about the possibility of that upcoming moment. However much I tried to accept the moment as it was happening, to twist my mind into the fact of acceptance, I still wanted something else.

By the time I leaned over and kissed Feather on her forehead she was almost asleep. I got dressed, left her in the room, and drove my car into town. I parked on a neighborhood street near a health food store, bought a carrot juice, and spent the rest of the morning sitting in my car, watching the street.

With Anne, I thought, there was love. Not a passing desire, but something solid and true, and thinking this, I realized I hadn't been looking for Anne, not very diligently, and I thought that I should. I thought I ought to make a systematic search of every street in Boulder. But when the morning light brought the people out and onto the street I got out of my car and joined them. I walked along the pedestrian mall, noticing the drains laid in the concrete, and the plants planted in good mulchy soil. I saw the sprinkler heads at the edge of the soil, and I sat on one of the benches, still holding my carrot juice. People were walking by, and I could see that they were noticing me, but mostly they didn't make contact. They kept walking.

I was sitting on this bench in the middle of this pedestrian mall, literally in the center of what would have been a street, but I barely felt that I was there. I was watching the people, who were either watching other people or looking at shoes in the shoe store windows. Right about then a girl sat on the other side of the bench. She had a garbage bag stuffed with laundry and she sat on the bench and we started talking. She had brown hair, tied back, and we talked about New York and deforestation and about hair. I asked her if “brunette” meant the same as brown. We talked about waitressing and copy editing, and at a certain point in the conversation she mentioned that her cat had died. To me it wasn't a monumental problem, but I was thinking that it probably meant something to her, and when she said she needed someone to help bury her cat, I volunteered.

We walked together, up the hill to a lagoon near an official-looking building, a museum or a library, and we stood in front of this lagoon. We were standing there, and I was holding the green plastic garbage bag containing, not her laundry, but her cat. I was about to throw it in the water and I said, “Do you have anything you want to say?” She was wearing a black silk dress from the 1940s, with lace, and a very sensual hat, and she said, “You're the writer, you say something.” I didn't even know the cat, and I said, “Well, what was the cat like?” And she said, “That cat had a mind of its own.” A mind of its own, I thought, and I said, “Here's to its own mind,” and I swung the bag and threw it out into the lagoon. And we watched it. We watched it float. For about fifteen minutes we watched it float out there on the surface of the water and we wanted it to sink, we wanted it to go under the water, but it didn't want that. It wanted to float right where it was. So we didn't know. I found a stick or branch that was lying in the mud and with it, I reached out and pulled the bag back to shore. I untied the knot, folded down the sides, reached in and felt a paw down there. I took hold of the paw, pulled it up, and sure enough, it was a dead cat. I knew it was dead, not because it was stiff, but because it was so still. It was absolutely motionless. It was swaying slightly, but no air was passing in or out, so I kicked the garbage bag out of the way, swung the cat until it got enough momentum, and then threw it back into the lagoon. And we watched it. Again. We watched it keel over to one side and float there on the water. We wanted the cat to sink, but the cat had a mind of its own.

V

(
Gula
)

1.

I'm driving south, through the Colorado mountains, and although I'm looking for clues, I'm no longer certain that the clues I'm seeing are clues for me. For instance, I'm not sure if the turn signal of the car in front of me is sending me a message to turn or not. Snow-capped mountains are on my right and dry piñon hills are on my left, and when I stop for a barbecue sandwich in a motel town called Buena Vista, the lady in the imitation covered wagon tells me about a hot springs nearby that is supposed to “heal your bones,” and I interpret “bones” to mean something unseen inside a person's skin.

That sounds good, so I drive up the alluvial hill, along a winding stream, and find the wind chimes marking the entrance to the hot springs. I drive into the gravel parking lot and it looks like every other two-story motel but this one has water, a series of grotto-like bathing pools set in the hill. People are floating in them, and scattered around the grounds—above the gates and doorways—are hand-painted signs and Indian symbols, reminding visitors of the sanctity of the waters.
PEACE IS INFECTIOUS
, they say, and
LISTEN TO THE EARTH
.

A pregnant white-haired girl at the check-in desk tells me that all the rooms in the lodge are taken, but a teepee, she says, is available. So I take my sleeping bag into this teepee, which has a dirt floor, a bunk bed, and a fire pit in the middle. I wash up in the bathroom in the lodge and for about a day my life consists of soaking in the pools of different degrees of heat, floating on foam pads, and at night, more floating, looking up at the stars.

The employees are friendly and healthy, and they all have tattoos or piercings. I talk to a few of them, including the girl from the front desk, who lives in the lodge. She wears loose colorful clothing, and one morning, when the pools are quiet, she offers me a tarot reading. I'm not interested, I say, or ready yet, but after a morning soak I feel comfortable enough to sit with her on the thick red carpeting in the dimly lit recreation room.

Her skin is like slightly tinted milk, her eyes soft, her voice sincere, and sitting on her heels she seems the perfect person to give me some direction, not any direction, but the one direction that will lead me to the reunion with my wife. That she believes she's psychic seems reasonable because everybody seems to be psychic, and maybe everybody is. I tell her a little about myself, tell her my experience so far has been fine but now I want to move on. I say I want to act, and that I'm willing to do it, to see the world with a new view, and because of that new view, be different. I want to fill up the minutes I have with a broader, more inclusive perspective, and that's what I'm doing now. I've never had an aura reading before, never sat cross-legged in a recreation room with a pregnant girl dressed like an Indian who is about to tell me my future.

“Okay,” I say.

“Good,” she says. She decides we have to move to more private quarters, so we walk out to my teepee. She brings along a candle and some rugs, and she sits at the edge of the fire pit, lighting the candle and placing it in the ashes of the pit. At first I stay perched on the bottom bunk of the bed, watching her preparations, but since she's brought along a rug for me, in the end we both sit, cross-legged, the candle burning between us.

At first she's accurate, talking about loss, and tribulation. She tells me I haven't found what I'm looking for, and that to do that, I need a new direction, a direction. So what she's saying, so far, is accurate. When I ask her a more specific question, a question related to Anne, she advises me to move on and forget the past. “The person you're thinking about,” she says, “is gone.”

Well at first I refuse to accept that. I ask her what person she's talking about, but I know what person. And it's not that I can't get enough of Anne. She's just there. My thoughts just naturally keep coming back to her, and the girl is suggesting I change my thoughts.

I think about what that might be like. To change my thoughts. And why not? I can exercise a little self-control. When thoughts of Anne start coming to me, I can think of something else. I can notice my thoughts and then change them. I can think about the wind outside the teepee, or the goats I saw that afternoon climbing diagonally up the hillside.

So that's what I do. And it takes some concentration but it works. And because it works I let myself relax. And when I do, every thought that comes to me is a thought of Anne. The happiness I've had with her is a real thing, and every time I think of her, what I feel is the absence in my body. It's painful, but I can't stop it. In the absence of Anne, I manufacture her, and it isn't even an urge, it just happens. My determination to change my mind is overpowered by an urge to maintain the sadness, because that sadness is connected to Anne.

The pregnant girl is telling me about the person she's sensing (Anne), mentioning things I both admire and dislike, telling me that none of it matters because this person is part of the past. As she says this, thoughts, in the form of images, are coming to me. For instance, the time Anne tried to take my photograph. She wanted it to be perfect. She was having trouble with the focus and the light meter, and I saw her desire to succeed. I saw who she was—who she was and what she needed—and I loved who she was. I saw her ambition and her eagerness and her optimism, and I say optimism because optimism was the foundation of our love.

She may or may not have been beautiful, but to me she was beautiful, and what was beautiful was her being. When we love people, what we see are the flaws that make them human. Anne's flaws made our love seem superlative, and I counted myself lucky being in the light of that love. The light was missing now, but as I remembered her, it came back to me. Her uncompromising need for perfection, a trait that at best I put up with, now I longed for. I sat in the teepee, finding Anne in my mind, and liking her there, wondering if maybe I was liking her memory a little too much, but then thinking no, it would probably help. It would probably make it easier to find her if I had her in my mind.

As I did in Cooperstown, New York.

We had taken a trip to the Baseball Hall of Fame, not that you were a baseball fan, but some friends of yours had given us a night at a bed-and-breakfast. There was a snowstorm outside and it was all amazing and wonderful and we never left the room. All that day was spent having sex, until we were numb from it, staying pretty much in or around the bed, eating and making love until, at a certain point, you were complete and I was also complete. We were both empty. And in that long breath of emptiness I felt, not the longing of wanting more, but the peace of wanting nothing.

Of course it wasn't always pleasant. There was that time on Great Jones Street or Bond Street, off Lafayette. We'd gone to a bar after work, with friends, and you were more than a friend at that point but nervous enough about the relationship that you started drinking, we all started drinking, but you kept drinking so that when it was time to leave and we stood on the street, waiting for a cab, you'd left your coat inside. I went back to get it, found it on the floor, and when I brought it out, you were sitting on the curb, bent over, holding your head in your hands and throwing up all over the gutter. I went to you and tried to comfort you, but I didn't know how to do it. I told someone to get some water. I put my hand on your forehead and then you threw up some more. Just an hour earlier you'd been feeling good and you wanted to feel a little more good, but that was too much, that
more
was too much. And now the more was gone. We took a cab home and riding in the cab, looking at your closed eyes, sympathetic or empathetic, I kissed your forehead which was hot, and your cheeks which were soft and round, and then your lips. I didn't care about anything. I was kissing your mouth because it belonged to you.

*   *   *

All the time I was thinking this, the snowy-haired girl with the loose dress was talking, telling me where I was and what I had to do. She was speaking to me, but I was having a little trouble hearing her. A car was turning out of the parking lot and I was having trouble hearing her because I was paying attention to the shadows of the headlights playing across the canvas skin of the tent. I could see her, a partial silhouette, and I wanted to understand, and because what she was saying was still incomprehensible, I asked her to repeat.

But it wasn't that I didn't hear her words. I did. And it wasn't that I didn't understand their meaning. She was telling me to let go, and I couldn't let go. I couldn't stop what I was doing because it was what I had to do.

And of course I had reasons, in my mind, to discount what she was telling me. She was just a twenty-some-year-old imitation Indian shaman who didn't know enough of life to tell me that my life, with my wife, was over.

And yet I suspected that she was probably right.

On the one hand I had a mind of my own, and on the other hand I had another mind, and I seemed to be somewhere between the two.

2.

I could soak only so long, and once I'd left the thermal springs motel all I really remembered about the white-haired psychic girl was that she wore an Indian outfit and Indian jewelry. That became the clue, and as I drove out of the green valleys of Colorado and into the red canyons of the West, I was glad, first of all, to be moving, and second to be moving toward something vaguely Indian, and through that vague something Indian, to Anne.

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