by D. D. Miller
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Filled with burning parade floats, bear attacks and roller derby leagues, D.D. Miller’s short stories present us with a comical collection of slacker heroes who get what they deserve in unexpected ways. These men are survivors who fail to see how fortunate they are, and who watch helplessly as their lives unravel, if only because they fail to act.
Miller’s deft sentences and sharp characterization bring these stories to life, pulling us into the lives of his cast of self-centred underdogs. Readers will find themselves sympathizing with these characters while laughing at the calamities Miller has artfully scattered in their paths?
To three amazing women:
Barbara Sheffield, Judy Miller and Jan Dawson
CONTENTS
DAVID FOSTER WALLACE RUINED MY SUICIDE
THE ILLUSION OF FLIGHT
SEEING YOUR OWN
BE PREPARED
MY SUMMER WITH SETH
FOOL’S PARADISE
THE TUTOR
THE WRONG NUMBERS
DINOSAURPORN.COM
THE KILL-IT-AND-FILL-IT GUY
SON OF SON OF FLYING PIG
THE LADIES’ ROOM AT THE VALLEYVIEW TRUCK STOP
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
1. August 2008
had a problem with endings. I couldn’t finish anything. And I’m convinced that it all started with my name: Gregor Postma. I go by Greg, which is even less complete, but the only people who ever called me Gregor were my Dutch father and grandmother. My grandmother died long ago and, at that point, I hadn’t seen my father in a decade, so sometimes, when I saw “Gregor” printed on a bill or when a telemarketer called and asked for me by that name, I was surprised by how incomplete it sounded.
Subways, I’d discovered, offered false endings. They get to an end only to turn around and continue. Riding the subway was as close to a hobby as I had back then. I liked that feeling of always going somewhere. I’d ride in the front car sometimes all the way to the final station, then get out and walk to the other end of the train so I would still be in the front. I’d sit in the very front seat by the grimy window with the driver hidden away in the cockpit to my right, looking for the end of the line. It’s awkward to stare out the front window of the subway because the seats face the wrong way, and the movements of the train are much more deliberate in that car – the shifts in speed, the bumps and jumps are all exaggerated – but I’d been riding that way for a long time, almost daily since I’d been relieved of my duties from my job with the Chindigo bookstore chain.
Rumours were that there were plenty of jumpers in Toronto. With all my riding of the subway, I thought I would have seen at least a few. But I hadn’t yet. The closest I’d come was seeing a man try to jump.
I saw him as soon as the light of the station appeared during the train’s approach through the tunnel. He was standing very close to the end of the platform, too close to the edge, leaning out over the track and staring into the tunnel. Seeing the approaching train, he turned and walked toward the wall and then quickly paced back to the edge of the platform as the light of the station poured into the train. My heart raced. I couldn’t swallow. I gripped the back of the seat as we approached the end of the tunnel, and I wondered if the jumper would hit the front of the car, exploding the glass of the window, or if he’d just fall to the tracks and be torn apart by the moving train.
And then, at the last possible moment, he turned around, and the train passed him by before coming to a rumbling stop.
I closed my eyes for the duration of the station stop. Had to take deep breaths to calm myself, to slow my beating heart.
I don’t know what led me to look at that particular shelf, but one morning, I noticed a gaping hole in my book collection: a David Foster Wallace book. Immediately, I remembered lending it to Brie, a girl I’d been kind of dating a year before. As with many things that disappeared from my apartment during that time, the book ended up in her blue MEC backpack. Her backpack had a cartoonish capacity, and she took it with her always, to the numerous lessons her stereotypically overbearing Asian immigrant parents made her attend or just to meet up with friends. It was her “home away from the home I hate,” she always said.
The last time I saw Brie was at the lake in Sunnyside Park by the western beaches. She was skating with a pack of roller derby girls, wearing what looked to be brand new roller skates.
I was sitting in the grass near the path when she skated by, and she didn’t notice me. She was holding the hands of another skater and looking straight into her eyes as they skated. I didn’t recognize the look completely, but sort of. I’d almost seen it before, only a few months previous. She’d almost looked at me like that. But not quite.
In early spring of 2008, a new bookstore, Zed’s, opened up a few subway stops away from my apartment. It seemed strange. New bookstores just weren’t appearing, and even franchises like Chindigo didn’t seem too concerned with selling books anymore. Trash still sold: ultra-violent detective books, pseudo-porn for middle-aged women, cartoonishly gory sci-fi or fantasy series for young adults. But more and more sales were of perfumy soap, French presses, throw rugs, kids’ toys.
Next to Zed’s there was a building that had been badly damaged by fire and was boarded up. On the plywood where the front door would have been, someone had hastily spray-painted “dont die” in drippy black lettering.
The bookstore was tiny, just a single room with bins full of paperbacks in the middle. The walls were lined floor to ceiling with shelves of neatly packed hardcovers and trade paperbacks. There were very few sections: fiction, non-fiction and comics/graphic novels. No subdivisions within. The owner was a fifty-something man with thinning, saltnpeppery hair. He was so thin he was almost gaunt and always dressed in fading, tight black denim and T-shirts that were mostly plain and dark. He smiled upon arrival and departure, but in all the visits I’d made to the store, I’d never spoken to him and had never found anything to buy. Not because there wasn’t anything I didn’t like, but because I rarely found anything I didn’t already own.
I entered the store and walked slowly along the fiction wall, lazily scanning the names until I got to W. There were four Wallace works on the shelf: The Broom of the System, Infinite Jest, Brief Interviews with Hideous Men and Oblivion: Stories. The same four sitting on the shelf in my apartment.
I approached the desk. The man’s eyes trailed as he finished reading a line.
“I’m wondering if you have any other David Foster Wallace books tucked away other than what’s on the shelf?” I shrugged back toward fiction.
“It should be there, in fiction. We should have them all.”
I glanced over my shoulder back toward the section. “I was just over there.”
“I’m pretty sure,” he said. “I’d be surprised. Which one?”
“Girl with Curious Hair,” I said.
His eyebrows dipped inward; he shifted off his stool and closed his book. It was an old paperback version of John Barth’s The Floating Opera. I’d never read it.
The man hurried over to the fiction wall and stood in front of the Ws as I had only a few moments before. He returned.
“You’re right,” he said, settling back on his stool behind the counter. “I could have sworn we had a copy of it. Sworn. I’m really sorry.” He shook his head and slouched sadly.
“It’s okay,” I said. “Honestly. It must be hard to keep his books in. Perhaps you sold it,” I said, feeling as if I were comforting him. He just shook his head, staring down at the counter.
I told him “thank you” and exited, heading back across the street an
d into the subway. When I got there, I walked all the way down the platform to where I knew the front of the train would stop.
Mi-young was eighteen years old, lived in Mississauga and was saving money to go to university. That was all I’d ever learned about her life.
I sat down at my computer desk and typed in the URL: http://www.camtogether.com/private-group/mi-young
The screen faded up on Mi-young. She sat in a big comfy chair. The camera didn’t show much else behind her: the top of a bookshelf up against a white wall, the books just far enough away that the titles were illegible. She was sitting with her long legs wrapped under her in the comfortable, contortioned pose of the young. She was in pale blue running shorts and a white tank top.
I had to share Mi-young with others. Anyone who kept their CamTogether account up to date could join in with any of the girls. I tried to ignore them, pretend that they weren’t there, but she often said our usernames when one of us typed something she found amusing. She had regulars, like me, but I tried not to remember their names.
Mi-young was Korean-Canadian. She was tall, thin, but athletic. Her skin was a lovely shade of olive. Her breasts were small but seemed to be the perfect size for her frame and her nipples were long and surprisingly pale.
She’d already started touching herself by the time I’d logged in. The arm of her tank top was tugged aside to expose her left breast. Her fingers slid down her inner thigh and flicked along the edges of her underwear. She spread her knees and she blew me a kiss, winking slowly. I could swear she was looking right at me. I felt as if I could see my reflection in her open eye.
I eventually broke down and bought a new copy of the Wallace book. The independent bookstore in the Annex didn’t have Girl with Curious Hair, so I was forced to go to Chindigo. The location I had worked at was a large, multi-storey location in a fairly upscale mall on Bloor Street at Bay. I shuddered when I entered, literally, and got the tinge of a headache from the overwhelming scent of the soaps and candles that had begun to take up more and more of the store’s retail space.
I recognized a few of the staff members, but there was a constant rotation of “booksellers” and they all had a tendency to look the same: thick-rimmed glasses, slim corduroys, some kind of ironic and/or band T-shirt under the company-issue blue vest. One person I knew I would recognize was my nemesis, Karen Sears, the floor manager, and a dedicated Chindigo lifer. She’d always hated me, hated my obsession with David Foster Wallace and the whole postmodern experiment. She was the person who fired me, and she seemed to take great pleasure in telling me that I didn’t have “the Chindigo attitude.” I didn’t interact well with customers, she told me. I was rude. Sarcastic.
I quickly made my way to the fiction section. The edition of Girl with Curious Hair on the shelf was a reprint edition; an ugly, piss-yellow version with what looked like an image of splattered molasses on it. The copy I’d lost was the 1989 trade version with the black and white image of a woman on it with her head thrown back. I grabbed the book and headed for the cash registers.
Only metres away, I spotted Karen Sears coming up the stairs directly in front of me. I quickly slid to the ground in the Home Repair section. It reminded me of the times Brie would come to visit, and we’d make a game of trying to kill my entire shift without being seen by Karen. We’d hide out in obscure corners of the store (like the poetry corner), and Brie would ask me endless questions about university, though none of her questions seemed particularly important: What did English professors wear? Did we just sit around tables and argue about stuff? Were there bells like in high school to tell you when your class ended?
I turned my head and noticed I was next to a small section of books on knots. I grabbed one called Book of the Knot. I sprung the book open at about the middle to a section on nooses. While the hangman’s knot was central, there was an array of styles displayed that I hadn’t been aware of: the slip knot, the tarbuck, the bowline. I studied the images, enthralled by the slight variations, the extra loops, the tricks. I sat transfixed at the tangled beauty of them. I’m not sure how long I sat there, but when I remembered to stand up and look for Karen, she was nowhere to be seen.
I replaced the Book of the Knot and scurried to the cash registers.
The beginning of the end of Brie and me came on a blazing hot day early in the August of the summer we spent together. Brie and I decided to meet up in the Annex, close to her place. I’d just met up with her, and she was on her roller skates gliding comfortably next to me on the Bloor Street sidewalk. Brie wore a pair of her mother’s old blue roller skates that she’d found buried deep in a closet. They were worn and tattered and had chipped wheels, but she never went anywhere without them and was comfortable enough on them to scoot around people, transition quickly and expertly, and then skate backwards in front of me at times.
We could hear them coming before we saw them. Ahead of us, the crowds parted on the wide sidewalks. There was the sound of many wheels grinding on pavement, and a din of voices as well. Suddenly the sidewalk ahead of us was emptied of walkers, and they were directly in front of us: a pack of five women on roller skates, but as different from Brie’s old-school quads as they could get; theirs were slick-looking and modernized, black leather low-cut boots on gleaming metal trucks. The girls were upon us quickly, shoving fliers into our hands before isolating and circling Brie.
“Holy shit! Those are so cool!” said a skater in jean shorts and a tight tank top with a skull logo on the chest. She even bent down to touch Brie’s old skates. “I can’t believe you can still skate in those things.”
“You’re a total derby girl,” another said definitively. They were a mix of women: black, white, tall, short, skinny, shapely. They all looked very confident on their skates and they seemed very disinterested in me. Brie looked shocked.
Finally one of the girls stepped forward and pointed at the fliers they’d given us. “You need to come check out a bout.” The flier was an advertisement for a game in the Toronto Roller Derby League. “Maybe you could even get some new skates,” she said before skating away with the others and leaving us alone on the sidewalk.
After a few seconds of odd silence, people began to filter around us again. Brie just stood there, so tall on her skates, staring down at the flier and the women pictured on it: two women in full gear, hair flailing from under stickered helmets, fishnets and tights torn and ragged, skating into each other shoulder to shoulder, looks of violent determination etched onto their faces. She held the flier in both hands and just stared.
2. September 2008
I just happened to be walking by Zed’s and decided to head in on the off chance that he had actually acquired something I didn’t already own.
“Excuse me,” the owner said as I entered. “Were you in a few weeks’ back looking for the David Foster Wallace collection?”
I was surprised that he remembered.
“Well, wouldn’t you know that a few days later someone traded in a copy.” He turned quickly and headed toward the Ws and pulled the copy out from the shelf. It was the same ugly yellow edition I’d recently bought at Chindigo. “Here it is,” he said proudly.
“I’m so sorry,” I explained. “I found a copy elsewhere.”
He stared down at the book, his smile waning. “Well, that’s fine. Then I would be without a copy again, wouldn’t I?”
I thanked him and exited the store, finally accepting that I would never, ever find anything at Zed’s that I didn’t already own.
As I passed the burned-out building on the way back to the subway, I noticed that someone had spray-painted over the original “dont die” with red spray paint. In even larger, drippier letters it now read “dont PANIC!!!”
I rode in my usual spot in the front car on the subway home. As we approached the station, and I saw people lingering near the edge of the platform, I couldn’t help but hope that this time, one of them might actually jump.
Brie was much younger than I was and had just gra
duated from high school when I met her. She was with a bunch of other high-schoolers one night in High Park near the massive wooden children’s playground at the south end of the park. I’d stumbled upon them, about ten or so young adults illuminated by cigarette butts and the odd flashlight. I just happened to have a pocketful of weed, which was all I needed to grab their interest.
Brie stood out from the freaks and geeks who made up the group. She was the only Asian; she was tall, muscular and had deep brown eyes that peeked into mine with their glittery interest, impossible to look away from. She was also extremely bright, but a little flaky and talkative because of that. She had her backpack with her that night, of course, and that pair of her mother’s old roller skates slung over her shoulder. Her backpack was overflowing with clothes, books, and various other practical and impractical items, like a flute – I would later learn – and a tiny cooler that held snacks, which usually consisted of some kind of cheese. Even in that summer after her senior year of high school, she was expected to attend music lessons twice a week, on top of soccer practice and summer tutoring.
“I don’t get along with my parents so much,” she said when I asked her about it. We were sitting a little ways away from the main group, sharing a joint. She sucked the joint hard and then let the thick, uninhaled smoke ooze out from between her lips and slip up over her face like a veil. “They are, like, super strict.” She handed it back to me and coughed. The smoke burst out of her mouth. I learned that the roller skates were so that she could move around the city quickly: get to her various lessons and sports practices, but also get home by her curfew. She told me that her parents had forced her into figure skating at a young age.
It was such a different story from my own that I was taken in by it. I hadn’t seen my father in years at that point and, while my mother still physically existed, the woman I knew as a child – as fragile and distant as she’d seemed even then – was completely gone now.