Songs of the Dead
Page 1
Songs of the Dead
Derrick Jensen
Flashpoint Press
An imprint of PM Press
© 2009 Derrick Jensen
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, by any means, including mechanical, electric, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher.
Cover design by Beth Orduna and John Yates
Text design by Michael Link
Edited by Theresa Noll
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
ISBN: 978-1-60486-044-3
LCCN: 2008934204
Jensen, Derrick, 1960–
Songs of the Dead / by Derrick Jensen.
p. cm.
Fiction
Flashpoint Press
Published by PM Press
Flashpoint Press Box 903 Crescent City, CA 95531
www.flashpointpress.com
PM Press Box 23912 Oakland, CA 94623
http://www.pmpress.org
Printed in the USA on recycled paper.
Also by Derrick Jensen
Lives Less Valuable
What We Leave Behind
How Shall I Live My Life?:
On Liberating the Earth from Civilization
Now This War Has Two Sides (double CD)
As the World Burns:
50 Simple Things You Can Do to Stay In Denial
Thought to Exist in the Wild:
Awakening from the Nightmare of Zoos
Endgame Volume I:
The Problem of Civilization
Endgame Volume II:
Resistance
Welcome to the Machine
The Other Side of Darkness (triple CD)
Walking on Water
Strangely Like War
The Culture of Make Believe
Standup Tragedy (double CD)
A Language Older Than Words
Listening to the Land
Railroads and Clearcuts
Songs of the Dead
Derrick Jensen
Table of Contents
The Cannibal Sickness
Possession
Places We Do Not See
Power
The Muse
Wétikos
Beauty
Enemy Territory
Falling Through Time
The Problem is God
Who’s in Charge?
Necrophilia
Confusion
Thunder
Miracles
Colleen
More Miracles
The Land
To Be a Forest
Hell
Dr. Kline
Demons
On the Run
Deathwatch
Power, Again
The Voice of God
Stauffenberg’s Ring
That we come to this earth to live is untrue:
we come but to sleep, to dream.
Aztec Poem
one
the cannibal sickness
Each night, I walk the line that wends between unconsciousness and terror, between forgetting and remembering, between present and past. Each night I do not fall asleep but instead stumble through time, falling into deep impressions—like five-pointed hand-prints on soft clay—of past on present, living in house after house after house of imagination, each one an edifice of events uncompleted. Does the land dream so, too, carrying with it the weight of thousands of years of nights on nights, remembering salmon that were and are not, caressing them in the infancy of their evolution and caring for them in their absence? Does the land mourn these losses as I mourn my own, and does she—it, he, pieces of moist soil between my fingertips, the orange bellies of ponderosa pine four arm lengths around—dream as well of times unwounded, and of woundings? Does time wind and unwind for her—for I know now it is her—each night as she sleeps beneath snow, stars, cold wind, trees sighing sadly or giving up their own ghosts before meeting what we have become, beneath a moon that night after night sees all, yet keeps remembering?
I know now that there is and always has been a heart that beats beyond the grasping of our mechanical fingers, unfound in the claws of our braced backhoes, slipping away in the face of our too-coarse bulldozers. The past resides in the soil, and though we believe it blows away and is lost, that is not true. It is there all the time, though we do not see it.
Our dreams carry with them the perfume of this soil, and will not without a fight let go of that which beneath it all makes each of us who we are. So each night I walk that fine line, and sometimes awaken to freeze before all that has happened to me, to her, to each of us, and to wish that things could be different than they are.
He touches the still-warm skin of her belly with the first three fingers of his left hand. Almost on their own, his fingers trace tiny circles toward the tented skin over her pelvis. Her skin is soft, pale. Her scent fills the room.
He stands between her legs, leans over slightly, then more. He touches the scalpel in his right hand to the skin just below her navel, and draws a line to her pubic hair, pink of skin, thin white layer of subcutaneous fat, light brown layer—so thin—of muscle, then the yellow wall of the abdominal cavity itself. The geology of skin. Which layer came first?
He remembers how she was a short time ago, still breathing, gasping, clinging tight to whatever she could grasp. Her clawed fingers opening and closing, wrists twisting beneath metal holding her to the table, skin tearing, and beneath the skin muscles tightening, rising up, trying to leave her body.
Dying, she’d terrorized him more than ever before. Again and again he’d asked her the one simple question he always asked, and again and again she’d pretended not to know. She’d kept up that feigned ignorance to the end, when with her last words—more a sigh, really, a gurgle, a retch, than any sort of sentence—she’d been able to convince him her ignorance might be real. “Nothing, nothing. Not at all.” That’s what she had said.
The scalpel. So small. Sharp. Bright. He breaks into the peritoneum. The first time he had done that he’d been surprised there was no stench. Some animals stink when you open them up. Most people don’t. He sees the intestines, long tubes sheathed in fat, lifts them up and sees the bladder. It’s also white. So much white. The size of a fist. Beneath that, what he’s looking for. Pale pink, white, another fist. He slices at the ligaments, then pulls at the uterus. It doesn’t come out easily. It never does. He reaches behind and beneath to sever the attachments, and finally the organ is liberated. He brings with it the ovaries.
His fingers are red. Cherry. Burgundy. Darker. Almost black. He looks at his watch. It’s late. He puts down the scalpel.
This time he burns the body. He puts it in the back of his pickup and takes it south of town. It rides wrapped in blue plastic beneath the shell. The ride is smooth until near the end, when he drives across railroad tracks, up a slope, around a corner, and into a small quarry. Fractured rock on three sides, and trees on the other.
Good cover. Here he can watch, just a little. He wants to see the fire. He’s never done that before.
He stops the truck, hears the click of his door opening and the soft catch as he slowly shuts it. Walking to the back of the truck, he hears the gravel grind beneath his feet. He opens the shell and rear gate, then reaches for the tail of the blue tarp and pulls it toward him. The tarp is heavy, but not so heavy that he isn’t able to carry it.
Then the unwrapping. He rolls the body free of the tarp, but doesn’t look at it until he returns from the truck with the gasoline. Now he looks at her. Dark blonde hair, soft, tangled. Pockmarks on her face. Missing a tooth. That wasn’t his doing. It was already gone.
She w
as not a pretty woman, he thinks, not very pretty at all. But at one time she had been. She’d had a picture in her wallet of a younger woman, standing next to a man. The woman was beautiful: slender, long blonde hair, smooth skin. He had asked her who that was, and she’d said it was her. “What happened?” he’d asked.
She hadn’t answered, but she hadn’t needed to. He’d known the answer. He’d seen the tracks on her arms when he first picked her up. Scabby, scarred, bruised. Abuse, drugs, alcohol, and sunlight had all worked together to harden the muscles of her face until she could no longer remove the mask of impassivity that protected her from customers, and from everyone. Or almost everyone.
He pours the gasoline, sets the near-empty gas can a safe distance away, lights a match, then uses it to ignite a twisted piece of newspaper. The flame describes a soft arc toward the body, then flashes outward in a concussive wave he feels in his belly. For a short time the flames seem to hold themselves above the body, but as he watches the skin begins to darken, then split away from the muscles tightening and becoming dark themselves, braiding to look like nothing so much as jerked meat. He follows the smoke up and realizes he needs to leave. Too much smoke, more than he anticipated. Someone could see. Still not too worried, though, he watches a few more moments before retreating to the truck, and afterwards driving back to the highway, back to the town.
two
possession
For the past few years, I’ve been working on a book called Possession. It is, like all of my other books, an attempt to provide at least preliminary answers to what I perceive are some pressing questions. A Language Older Than Words, for example, is, among other things, an attempt to explore the relationships between silencing and atrocity, and between remembering and healing. In The Culture of Make Believe I wanted to ask and attempt to answer questions like, What is hate? What are the relationships between hatred, perceived entitlement, objectification, and atrocity? What are the logical endpoints of this culture’s way of perceiving and being in the world? And Endgame was centered around the questions, Do you believe this culture will undergo a voluntary transformation to a sane and sustainable way of living? If not (and almost no one I ever talk to believes it will) what does that mean for your strategy and tactics to defend the places you love?
It’s always easier to articulate the questions that drive a book long after that book is done. During the writing itself, it often seems as though I’m slowly feeling my way forward in the dark, arms outstretched in front of me to warn of obstacles, as I attempt to follow some almost entirely unseen path toward some entirely unseen goal. Often this goal is not only unseen, but literally unimagined—that is, after all, one of the points of writing a book: to imagine and articulate that which before, you could not put words to or sometimes even conceptualize—but it feels like Possession is yet another attempt to understand the incomprehensible destructiveness of this culture. We can talk all we want about silencing, perceived entitlement, and all that, but none of it could ever be sufficient to explain how any group of people, no matter how stupid or arrogant, could kill the planet they live on so that they can make money. Possession is about more than that, though. It’s also about our relationships to various parts of the world about us. And this is where Possession veers slightly away from the other books; in this book, far more than in the others, I ask about our relationships—sometimes beneficial, sometimes harmful, sometimes neither, sometimes both—not only with those others we can see and feel and hear, like trees and dogs and cats and rivers, stars, mountains, and so on, but even moreso with those we can’t: muses, fates, the dead, and so many others. Asking these questions is then leading me, shuffling as always and sometimes stumbling, toward questions concerning free will, or put more straight, toward questions about how I make decisions, or put straighter still, toward the question: when I do make a decision, who is making that decision? Who’s in charge? And further, who—chance, physics, fates, God, the gods, or any (and maybe all) of a myriad of others— determines the results of that decision?
On November 8, 1939, Georg Elser tried to kill Hitler. Elser knew that each year on that date, the Nazis commemorated their failed putsch of 1923 with speeches and a dinner. For several months prior to the 1939 gathering, Elser was able to spend the night unnoticed in the Löwenbräu restaurant in Munich, where the meeting would be held.
Elser’s plans were meticulous. He had longsince taken a job in a quarry for the express purpose of stealing explosives. Task accomplished, for thirty-five nights he carved a hidden chamber into a concrete post next to which Hitler was to give his speech. A pair of timers would trigger the explosion not long before Hitler reached his crescendo.
I’ve often wondered how many times over the next six years—the last of his life, all spent in a concentration camp, perhaps noticing day-by-day his bones jut more from his skin, perhaps watching the white marks of malnutrition march down his fingernails—Elser must have asked himself why he chose to set the timers late and not early in Hitler’s speech. Was he worried that Hitler would not be prompt, or that preliminary festivities— the playing of the Badenweiler march and the saluting of the Blood Banner—might take longer than anticipated? Or was there no good reason for the timing? Do you think that in the long years afterward he ever considered how many lives were lost because of that one simple and virtually meaningless—by itself—decision? Perhaps more to the point, do you think there was ever an hour in which he did not consider the unfortunate effects of his choice?
I don’t ask this to blame Elser for his timing. At least he made the effort. And there was no way for him to know that fog—nothing more substantial than fine droplets of water hanging suspended in air, so unpredictable, an act of God—would save Hitler’s life.
The assassination attempt nearly did not come off. Because Hitler had already brought the country to war, that year’s service was to be abbreviated, with Rudolph Hess delivering the speech instead of Hitler. But on November 7, Hitler changed his mind and decided to fly down from Berlin to participate in the ceremonies.
Each year the speech began at 8:30, and lasted until 10:00. But this year was different. Because November in Munich frequently brings with it fog, Hitler faced a decision: should he spend the night in Munich, should he chance flying back and risk being delayed in the fog, or should he return by train? Hitler would have to finish early so he could catch his train at 9:31. Georg Elser did not know this.
By six o’clock that night, the hall was packed with the cream—such as it was—of Nazi society: Himmler, Rosenberg, Frank, Goebbels, Ribbentrop. A band played the Badenweiler march while the Blood Banner was brought in. Hitler arrived to massive applause, and began his speech at precisely 8:00.
His speech ended at 9:07, and he was out of the building by ten after. The bomb exploded at 9:20, causing the roof to collapse and killing nine people. Elser was later arrested trying to escape into Switzerland. He was sent to a concentration camp, and was murdered by the SS on April 5, 1945.
three
places we do not see
A couple of years ago I had a dream that wasn’t so much a dream as it was a visitation, a conjuration of the sort I’d somehow thought only happened in books and movies, in which you speak some demon’s name and the demon appears. I’ve since come to understand that these visitations—of demons and many others—are a part of life no more unusual, and normally no better perceived, than the stones on the ground, and the speaking of these stones.
In this dream that was and continues to be even more than a dream, I was fighting with rebels against corporations, against the forces I fight in waking reality, only this time I was using guns instead of words. In this dream we were losing horribly, just as we are in waking reality. We were, and the parallels continue, drastically outnumbered by the military and the police. Many on our side were being shot. I lay flat on my belly behind a lip of concrete. It was small cover, but with bullets ricocheting around me, it was far better than nothing. The firing of guns—
mainly theirs, but a few of ours—merged into a constant roar. Then the roar lost its continuity, first to tiny gaps not yet filled with silence but still carrying echoes of the explosions, and then with silence in which I could hear my own gasping breaths. The firing became more and more sporadic, then stopped altogether.
I glanced to my right, to one of my fellow rebels, and I saw that the reason he no longer fired back was that he was dying. In this dream that is even more than a dream, that is a visitation or a conjuration, I saw a vampire fastened to the man’s neck sucking out his blood and his guts. The vampire dropped the husk, looked, found someone else, attached himself. Then I looked at the enemy and I saw that there was not one vampire, or even a hundred, but thousands, and more than thousands. I saw, in this dream that is more than a dream, that these vampires were killing every human they could find. They were sucking out their blood and their guts. They were having a feed. The vampires—or demons, or whatever other name we may wish to put on these others whose real name I don’t know—were neither angry nor evil nor in any way malevolent. They were famished, and they were eating. They began to chase me, as they were chasing everyone else. I evaded them, at least temporarily. I stopped. I looked through a glass window in a steel door. Thin metal mesh reinforced the window. Beyond the mesh, beyond the glass, beyond the steel, I saw a vampire who was not chasing, not feeding. He was standing. He was watching. He had pale skin, smooth scalp, grotesquely long fingers and a just as grotesquely long, curved nose. In this dream I knew he was the director. I did not and do not know what this means.
I woke up. I tried to convince myself that this dream was and is “no more” than a dream, and that these vampires represent those forces we are fighting against, that they represent those who are killing the planet, that they represent this culture as a whole, this culture of napalm, toxic wastes, deforestation, rape. No. I tried to convince myself that they represent something much more specific: the biotechnology industry, for example, and its creation of monsters. No. The dream, which really was and is even more than a dream, would not allow those interpretations. The vampires are vampires. And they’re hungry. And they’re waiting to be released, waiting to feed on humans.