Rust and Bone

Home > Other > Rust and Bone > Page 14
Rust and Bone Page 14

by Craig Davidson

The fluff girl kneels beside him. “Call an ambulance!”

  I snatch Kitten’s cellphone—she’s actually talking to someone as all this goes on—and dial 911. “God, man—are you okay?”

  The way Wayne’s glaring at me—yeesh, if looks could kill. Of course, I’ve now found myself on hand at both his penile catastrophes. Could he think I’m somehow responsible—a voodoo doll? A miniature wax penis stuck full of pins?

  When the ambulance arrives the attendants look puzzled, then, after a quick examination of the set and its players, get the idea. They

  heap cold packs onto Wayne’s groin, strap him to a stretcher. “Look on the bright side,” the cameraman says. “Makes for a dilly of a lawsuit.” The fluff girl insists on accompanying Wayne to Emerge. I offer to tag along but the attendants won’t allow it. As the ambulance pulls away she’s staring wistfully out the rear window—who’s she looking at, if not me?

  My name is Sam. I’m a sex addict.

  Welcome, Sam.

  Thanks, everyone. So, what have I lost—that’s tonight’s question? Everything, I guess you could say. Job, family, security. The normal life. Not that you’d find it surprising. The support of such systems requires some sort of a … veneer. A veneer of normalcy, right? Repeat the mantra: Happy family, happy family, happy family. But the secret was doing more damage than the truth. Told my friends, my boss, my co-workers. Full disclosure; the unobstructed facts. Four hundred sexual partners over the past five years, nameless and unremembered. What else can you do? Beg forgiveness. Grovel. I was demoted but kept my job. My wife and I entered counseling. Inside I realized it couldn’t last. The person I was desperately trying to be—the husband, the family man—was a fraud. I’m incapable of that change. It’s not that I’m weak or spineless: the process of transformation demands you become a whole new person. I’m not saying change is impossible or that you or you or you won’t make a clean break; I sincerely wish it for everyone. But it’s simply not in me and I won’t apologize. Right now it’s about learning how to cope, make my way as best I can without hurting anyone. That’s why I do dirty movies: no commitment, no lies, no guilt, nobody gets harmed. Love and responsibility do not factor into the equation. Like those signs you see in national parks: Take only pictures, Leave only footprints.

  EARLY EVENING by the time we wrap. A crease of sunset lines the horizon, interrupted by the high rises of downtown: buildings I’d once travailed in, wheeled and dealed, buildings I’m now effectively banned from. Bright pinprick spires burn in foothills beyond the city, derricks venting sour gas, flames frayed by a south-blowing wind. A pale crescent moon sits like a toy boat in the gap between two dark mountains. Across the road an empty lot hosts abandoned shopping carts, old tires and castoff watertanks rusting in the nettles, a junked car with garbage bags taped over its shattered windows. A huge scavenger bird with a raw boiledlooking head perches on the car’s spavined roof: a buzzard, though to the best of my knowledge such creatures are not native to this part of the planet.

  Take a Phillips screwdriver from my glovebox, remove the license plates from Wayne’s Buick Century, screw them to my Chevy Cavalier. A dastardly deed but Wayne won’t catch any heat: got to figure he’ll be laid up for a week. Ironclad alibi. Settle behind the driver’s seat, doff my trousers, arrange a layer of Kleenex between my spread legs. Rev the engine, pull out of the lot.

  This old Western movie crystalized it for me. Black-and-white, which generally I cannot abide. There was this cowboy and his horse, a Palomino. The cowboy doted on his mount—fed it apples and sugar cubes, brushed cockleburrs out of its mane with a wire comb. Towards the end they’re on a wagontrain trekking through the Sierra Madres when the horse is slowed by a split hoof. The cowboy jams his pistol to the horse’s eye and pulls the trigger. Why’d you do that? the wagon-master says. Thought you loved that horse. The cowboy spits and says, Nossir, but I do love horses. That is to say, I cherish the nature of horses— hardworking, reliable, docile. But alla them is that way. Can always find y’self another horse.

  Now, it’s conceivable to cherish the nature of women, right? They’re beauteous and supple, willing to accommodate the man who knows how best to stroke them. But that’s on a whole: you might feel nothing on a case-by-case basis. A sex addict’s relationship is with sex, not people. For addicts it’s crucial to break any object of desire down to its base elements: tits, asses, lips, hips, cocks, cunts. The process of dehumanization is like a moral imperative.

  I dearly cherish the nature of woman.

  Cruise streets in the gray twilight, past decrepit rowhouses and shops with gated windows, homeless persons and lean winter dogs hunched at the mouths of go-nowhere alleys, a boarded church cloaked in the shadowy overhang of tall maples, through cones of lamplight casting their blue nocturnal glow, on over a swing bridge spanning the blighted waterway. Mammoth construction cranes stand still as obelisks against the quilted sky. Difficult to shift gears with my pants rucked around my ankles.

  Scan the sidewalks but fail to spot a suitable candidate: here a bagwoman, less human being than agglomeration of filthy ponchos trundling a shopping cart with a frozen wheel; there a chick resembling an ambulatory fire hydrant, bull-dyke by the looks of it, hieing a chowdog on a length of heavy-gauge chain. Real slim pickens. Call my pal Danny Dewson; we co-sponsor one another through Sexaholics Anonymous.

  “Hey. It’s me.”

  “It’s you,” says Danny. “How goes the battle?”

  “Gotta be honest with you …”

  “Honesty’s the best policy, Samuel.”

  “So here it is: I’m cruising. Right now, cruising.”

  Silence on his end. “Are you, like, past the point of no return? Stripped and ready to rip?”

  “Cocked, locked, ready to rock,” I tell him.

  “Oh, man.” Danny clicks his tongue. “Oh, man-oh-man. Where are you?”

  “Corner of Bonita and Empress. Between the peepshow theater and that rub-n-tug joint.”

  “Sure, near that bar with the room in the back.” Danny’s fingers drum the wall beside his phone. “Listen, you probably ought to just let yourself go on this one, okay? You can fall off the wagon every once in a while, so long as you hop right back on.”

  This is exactly what I need to hear. “Everyone cheats a little now and then, isn’t that so? I mean, it’s not the end of the world, is it?”

  “Of course it isn’t,” says Danny. “Of course not.”

  “And hey, not like I’m committing a mortal sin or anything.”

  “Well I’m really not up on all that, Samuel.”

  “But you think it’s okay? This one time?”

  “I’m gonna greenlight you, here.”

  “Bless you, Danny. Bless your heart.”

  “Stay strong, brother.”

  The moment I hang up she’s walking down the sidewalk—we’re talking on cue. Materializing out of thinned mist like an apparition, some vaporous half-glimpsed angel, not entirely real. Wearing tight blue jeans ripped at the knee and some sort of fur-trimmed coat. Too far to make out exact features but that’s not critical.

  Pull alongside her, roll down the window. “Excuse me? Excuse me, miss?”

  She checks up and hunkers down on the sidewalk. At this unforgiving range her face does not hold up: teeth shot to hell and this oddshaped growth, a carbuncle I guess you’d say, growing out the side of her nose.

  “Lookin’ for somethin’?”

  “Well, you see, I’m sort of lost.” It’s a struggle to keep my body still, I’m masturbating so furiously. “Do you know the way … to the highway?”

  She leans forward, resting her wrists on the windowframe. “That what you’re really after, cowboy?” Her eyelashes are clotted with pebbles of mascara and the furred collar of her coat smells like a drowned rodent—Christ, she’s not making this easy. “Let’s not pussyfoot around.”

  “Well, maybe we can work something out. If you could just … lean a bit closer …”

  Sh
e thrusts her head through the window, face inches from mine as though this forced intimacy might somehow seal the deal and I surrender control with a moan, splashing the steering column as a feeling of absolute peace floods through me, ecstatic well-being of a sort experienced only by Buddhist monks and perhaps tiny infants—enlightening peace. I’m beset by these heartwarming thoughts towards this woman, dreams of a good life and healthy future, happiness and love but this mini-satori is fleeting and I’m overtaken by a sense of futility known to few on earth, brought about by the inconceivability of these dreams for this woman or myself or anyone really, staring through the windshield at a night sky spread with stars, the conceivable worlds couched in those dark sprawling spaces between the light host to alien lifeforms possessed of such nobility and decency as I will never even fathom, and this sense of incalculable desolation draws about me, I who remain so trivial, insignificant, tenuous, and specklike.

  Among addicts, the act of release frequently triggers feelings of ecstatic euphoria followed by periods of profound remorse, paranoia, and depression.

  “Well,” the woman assumes in a pragmatic tone, “you’re not a cop.” Her eyes narrow to feline slits. “Really should charge you for that.”

  “Thanks.” Slip the gearshift into first, work a crumpled twenty out of my pants pocket, toss it on the street and pull away. “Sorry about that.”

  “Hey, anytime …”

  There are over three trillion nerve receptors in the human body. Fully seventy percent are located in erogenous zones. This is what you’re fighting. Every minute of every day. It’s an uphill battle.

  My name is Sam. I’m a sex addict.

  Welcome, Sam.

  Lisa, my wife—ex-wife—and a six-year-old daughter. Met Lisa out East; went to the same college. She had this air like she’d swallow you up and blow you out in bubbles if you strayed too near. I mistook the effect she had on me for love. She could’ve had anyone. She chose me. I don’t love her, but I do care. If she were penniless, I’d support her. If she were dying I’d give her blood, a kidney, whatever. Her mistake was believing it was within her power to change me. My daughter, Ellie … I love her deeply. Looking at her I realize I’m still capable of that. When I think of her in idle moments, it’s always some mundane task—brushing her teeth, tying her shoelaces. Silly, day-to-day stuff. I never allow a week to pass without seeing her, calling her, letting it be known how much I care for her. I used to wish the love I felt for Ellie were somehow able to … stretch, encompass more people. But it can’t, and that’s okay. I once believed my heart was somehow impoverished, but now I recognize it’s no larger or smaller than the next man’s—my heart is simply different.

  THE HOUSE IS AN AWKWARD DUPLEX with swayback roof, mullioned windows, a single-car drive. We used to live in a big house on the ritzy side of town back in the Days of Yore, epoch of the Steady Job and Frequent Promotions and Healthy Bank Balance, also the Weekly Business Junkets and Late Nights at the Office and Dirty Dark Secret.

  Lisa answers my knock in a housecoat, hair wet from a bath. In the darkened family room the TV casts flickering luminescence on the walls.

  “Hi there. Hoping maybe I could see Ellie for a bit.”

  “What are you doing here?” My ex-wife crosses her arms over her breasts. “You get Ellie every other weekend, you know that.”

  “Well, yeah, of course, but I was hoping maybe a few minutes …”

  “You stink, Sam.”

  “Do I?” It’s genuinely upsetting I failed to recognize this. “Oh, jeez. Could I wash up?”

  Lisa purses her lips. I consider the single worst act I’d committed during our marriage. Probably the time I returned from a whorefilled weekender, gave her the clap, then halfheartedly argued she’d given it to me. Yeah, that’s the one.

  “I wouldn’t ask but I’d really like to see her. Half an hour and I’m out of your hair.”

  She steps aside. “Okay, for a little while. But clean yourself up.”

  In the bathroom scrub at a stiff patch on my jeans then dry off with Lisa’s Conair. Unzip my fly and push the blowdryer into my pants until the heat becomes unbearable and switch it off. In the medicine cabinet find a bottle of perfume and give myself a liberal spritzing.

  My daughter sits on the sofa watching a kids’ show. In the room’s muted light she appears somehow insubstantial, a flickering hologram of herself.

  “Hey, kiddo.”

  When she smiles I see she’s lost a baby tooth, upper left canine. “What’re you doing here, Daddy?”

  “Seemed like the thing to do at the time.” Sitting beside her, the cushions compress in such a way that Ellie’s body tilts into the soft crook beneath my arm. “What ya watching?”

  “The animals talk.” Her body shrugs against mine. “They live on a river. The guinea pig’s funny.”

  On the TV screen a mob of industrious creatures—hamster and mouse, turtle, a duck—cavort in a drift of popcorn. The guinea pig’s voice reminds me of Jimmy Cagney: Youuu doity raaat! Youuu kilt my bruddah!

  “You smell like a girl,” Ellie says and for a moment I’m filled with a dark and predatory dread until I realize she’s talking about the perfume.

  “Spilled some of your mom’s smelly stuff on me. You don’t like it?”

  Another shrug. “Okay, I guess.”

  I settle my arm around her shoulders and squeeze. Feel the movement of her chest and try to match my breathing to hers, our lungs expanding and contracting in perfect synchronism until I fear hyperventilation. We watch in silence; I’m content to simply be near her, drinking in her warmth and calm as a camel does water for a long desert trek.

  Lisa comes in with a tray of milk and Fig Newtons. When she hands me a glass our fingers brush and she pulls away as though burned. Ellie finishes one cookie and reaches for another.

  “No more,” Lisa says. “Too much sugar before bed gives you nightmares.”

  “I like nightmares,” my daughter reasons.

  The program reaches a heartwarming conclusion, riverbank denizens throwing a party. The hamster’s zipping around in a miniature motorboat, shiny black eyes bugged out in abject terror. Sitting with my daughter’s head rested in the crook of my arm watching the rodents frolic all I can think about is female genitalia, a sheer wall of vaginas like some sort of cliff, furred pussies, shaved pussies, blond and black and ginger-haired pussies, and I’m standing at the base of this forbidding structure stark naked wearing a pair of blue-tinted skigoggles and then I’m climbing, grabbing onto labias for purchase, searching for sure handholds in the loosest ones, jamming toes and fingers into moist slits wishing for crampons or a bag of talc. Ellie shifts against me and I’m trying desperately to think of anything else, marigolds–seahorses–merry-go-rounds but nothing works, I’m stuck with the pussy-cliff, scaling its slick alien veneer like an intrepid mountaineer tackling the perilous northface ascent on K2.

  What kind of person harbors such thoughts? I mean, really, what kind?

  Addicts are frequently beset by bitter self-loathing in response to erotic fantasies over which they exercise no control.

  “Well,” I say, “about time I hit the dusty trail.”

  “Stay,” Ellie says. “VeggieTales is on next.”

  Giant talking cucumbers. Yes, just what the doctor ordered.

  “I’d better not, honey. Got to get to my meeting. See you this weekend, ’kay?”

  Give her a big hug. Crumbs on her top lip, breath smelling of milk. Lisa follows me to the door.

  “You’re good with her, Sam. I’ll give you that.”

  “What can I say. I love her, I guess.”

  She smiles in a way that makes me sad. Perhaps intuiting something, she asks, “What are you thinking about?”

  Scaling a cliff of vaginas.

  “Oh, nothing.”

  “C’mon.”

  “Well, okay … I was reading this book the other day. There was a character who … well, he screwed watermelons. At night he’d cros
s into his neighbor’s melon patch, cut a hole in a watermelon with a penknife. The Moonlight Melonhumper. And I guess I got to thinking it wouldn’t be so bad, would it—balling melons? Grow some in your backyard or just, y’know, keep a few on hand. Whenever the urge struck you could slip away and take care of business. What I’m saying is, it’d be possible to lead a normal life.” A brittle laugh. “Humping watermelons. Jesus Christ, Lisa, wish that did it for me.”

  “Is this something they advocate in your group?” she says. “This kind of … frankness?”

  “Sort of. I’m not certain.”

  “Well,” she says stiffly, “goodnight. I’ll drop Ellie off Saturday morning.”

  It’s 8:45, giving me fifteen minutes to make group. Crossing the front lawn the cellphone buzzes in my pocket. It’s set to vibrate on account of the pleasant shiver it sends up my balls; I’ve been known to slip it into my underwear and ring myself from payphones.

  “It’s me,” says Danny Dewson.

  “It’s you. How goes the battle?”

  “Well, Samuel, I’m gonna level with you—”

  “Always pays to keep things on the level.”

  “Right. So here it is: I’d really like to stick my … rod … through this … hole.”

  “Where are you?”

  “That peepjoint off Sanford. Between the second-run porno house and the strip club.”

  “Right, a ways up from that place with the secret knock.” Unlock the car, settle into the driver’s seat. “I think it’s okay this time. As setbacks go, it’s minor.”

  “That’s true, isn’t it? Not like I’m some kind of devil for wanting to do this, right?”

  “Of course you aren’t, Danny. Of course not.”

  “And hey, there might not even be a girl on the other side, right?”

  “Sure,” I tell him. “Who knows what’s on the other side.”

  “So you think it’s okay? This one time?”

  “Gonna give you a free pass.”

  “Hey, that’s super, Samuel. Just super.”

  “Stay strong, brother.”

  My name is Sam. I’m a sex addict.

  Welcome, Sam.

 

‹ Prev