Rock Bottom

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Rock Bottom Page 1

by Michael Shilling




  Copyright © 2009 by Michael Shilling

  All rights reserved. Except as permitted under the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the publisher.

  Back Bay Books / Little, Brown and Company

  Hachette Book Group

  237 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10017

  Visit our Web site at www.HachetteBookGroup.com

  First eBook edition: January 2009

  Back Bay Books is an imprint of Little, Brown and Company. The Back Bay Books name and logo are trademarks of Hachette Book Group, Inc.

  The characters and events in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.

  “To Be Someone” by Paul Weller © 1978 by Stylist Music Ltd. (PRS), all rights in U.S. and Canada administered by Universal Music — Careers (BMI), used by permission, all rights reserved.

  ISBN: 978-0-316-04042-6

  Contents

  Part I

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Part II

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Part III

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Acknowledgments

  Advance acclaim for Michael Shilling’s

  Rock Bottom

  “A rock-and-roll novel at once rocking and rollicking. Rock Bottom knowingly skewers the pretensions of the music business, while never taking them seriously, and the result is a simultaneously scabrous yet affectionate portrait of a band and its entourage in the final throes of a tour de farce. Michael Shilling writes with wit, fury, and an infectious gusto; it’s the kind of high-energy prose that makes readers want to get up and strut their stuff.”

  —Peter Ho Davies, author of The Welsh Girl

  “Rock Bottom is a raunchy, knowing, brilliant novel—a diamond-sharp, lightning-witted, sex-packed, hilarious account of the last days of a fallen-from-grace hard rock band, marooned in Amsterdam under the crashing ruins of a lost greatness. Shilling, himself a former musician, is our insider guide to the ravages and seductions of the rock-and-roll world, and he describes the sights with a tender, pitch-perfect savagery. But more than this, the novel is a remarkably accomplished piece of art—a complicated survivor’s tale full of hilarious sadness, virtuous cruelty, beautiful destruction— the sort of book you pick up with high expectations and that, to your surprise and delight, surpasses them all. A book funnier, smarter, sadder, and more inventively composed than you could possibly have hoped. It’s a hit—I mean, I was laughing all the way through, and singing along.”

  —Michael Byers, author of Long for This World

  “Michael Shilling’s debut is everything one wants in a novel: tragic and thrilling, farcical and realistic. The prose is exuberant in its range and wildness, but also in its little treasures, its unfoldings and depths. Here is a writer who brings characters to life, circumstances to light, and imbues them with resonance, traveling the whole map of human obsession and longing with breathless energy. This is a sexy, funny novel, but with the kind of profundity we need from our best novelists at this time. Michael Shilling is an important new writer, and this is a novel you won’t forget having read.”

  —Laura Kasischke, author of The Life Before Her Eyes and Suspicious River

  “Finally, at last, an ass-kicking, authentic rock-and-roll novel, one that peels back the veneer and gloss and—with an insider’s eye—exposes the lovely, wondrous dirt.”

  —David Means, author of Assorted Fire Events

  For Anna

  There’s no more swimming in a guitar-shaped pool.

  No more reporters at my beck and call.

  No more cocaine, it’s only ground chalk.

  No more taxis, now we’ll have to walk.

  But didn’t we have a nice time?

  Didn’t we have a nice time?

  Oh wasn’t it such a fine time?

  — The Jam, “To Be Someone”

  It’s about my gardener, actually.

  — Keith Richards, on “Jumping Jack Flash”

  PART I

  1

  BOBBY HAD BEEN AWAKE for about ten seconds when his hands started to itch. His poor fucking hands, cracked and raw with eczema, stuck out of the blanket like rotting snails.

  “Nice,” he said. “Real nice.”

  He lay on a cot in Morten’s living room. Morten, a friend of Helen, their European booking agent, was one of those starfuckers-in-spirit who put bands up so he could be part of the rock-and-roll underground railroad. No one in Blood Orphans had met Morten — he was a banker always away on business — and this time around he had apparently neglected to pay his heating bill.

  “Fucking Euro icebox,” Bobby hissed. “Unbelievable.”

  In the late-autumn half-light of the gloomy Amsterdam morning, Bobby stared at his hands with sadness and wonder. The eczema, a lifelong nuisance that in the past year had become a scourge, started off as little bubbles of lymph that, upon being opened by his stubby nails, caked into a yellow curd, burned like they had salt rubbed in them, and made playing the bass guitar a painful chore. Made him have to keep his semirancid left palm away from the pick guard and pluck gingerly. Forced him to play nothing but root notes, because every time his fingers moved, the fretboard bit them like a fucking cobra.

  He gutted his left palm for a minute. It felt like he was getting to the bottom of something.

  The blankets Morten had provided were for children, puny swatches of acrylic adorned with the actions of different cartoon characters. On Bobby’s blanket, Underdog soared to the rescue in a long cape, his ears floppy, his grin light.

  Bobby sat up and flexed his feet. Around him, in little Euro cots — always too short, always too narrow — slept Darlo and Adam, the drummer and guitar player. Shane, the singer, was missing, and that was fine with Bobby. He hated Shane, that faux-spiritual prick. And without Shane around, he didn’t have to divide his attention. He could fully focus on his recurring fantasy of killing Darlo. Wiggling his freezing toes, Bobby imagined going into the kitchen, finding a big fucking knife, and slashing the drummer’s smug, sex-addicted, square-jawed face until it looked like a Levolor blind.
For fucking all the girls Bobby wanted to fuck. For constantly mocking his lack of musical ability. For exuding a smooth idiot confidence Bobby envied in a way that bordered on obsession.

  Darlo slept with his hands behind his head, his mouth slackened into a smile, at perfect ease. Glyphs of Wonder Woman covered his blanket.

  Blood Orphans had played in Amsterdam last night, and they were playing there tonight as well. The record company, determined to bury them alive, had conspired with the booking agency to get them a two-night stand at the new and improved Star Club. The original Star Club, in Hamburg, was where a band called the Beatles had spent four months in leather jackets and pompadours, honing their skills before they ate the world. Recently, some rich Dutchie had opened his own Star Club on the bank of the Amstel. Helen, who, like most booking agents, thought she was a strategic genius, had decided that Blood Orphans could really profit from bathing in the quasi-historical wave pool of an ill-conceived tourist trap.

  “What a way to end a tour, huh?” she’d said. “Go out with a bang, right?”

  More like a whimper, a peep, the distant screech of a rodent under the wheels of a truck. Bobby couldn’t quite believe it, but here it was, the last day of their last tour. Tomorrow he’d be on a plane to Los Angeles, this grand failure over, and he’d be back in the world, where Blood Orphans was just some band that had blown its chance, and he was an unemployed loser.

  He couldn’t wait.

  In ripped black T-shirt and banana-print boxers, Bobby shuffled into the kitchen and located the coffeemaker, an old, nasty Braun shellacked with the dirt of a thousand grubby rock musicians’ paws. He poured ground coffee and grimaced. Dirt; there was a time when he wouldn’t even have noticed. There was a time, on the first or second or even third tour, when everything had seemed part of some higher pattern of beauty. Back before they’d been branded racists. Back when all the teeth in his mouth were real. Back before the riot in Sweden, the jail time in Omaha, and a thousand utterly predictable days in that shitty van.

  He paused in these ruminations to scratch furiously at his hands, rubbing and digging like a psychopath plotting with invisible allies. The dermal demolition proceeded so well, so much better than anything else ever did, that he kept at it until he felt a robust rip in his right palm.

  “Oh fuck,” he muttered, the rapture broken. “Oh well.”

  “Mommy!” Adam yelled from his bed. The guitar player often cried out for his mother in his sleep. His small blankets of shit acrylic were festooned with images of Mickey Mouse in top hat and tails.

  “Shut up, please,” Bobby grumbled. “Poncy little girl.”

  “Mommmaaa!” Adam howled in response, his voice echoing through the place, distant yet piercing, like something off a Pink Floyd record.

  While the coffee brewed, Bobby went into the bathroom and looked for provisions to soothe his hands. In two years of touring he’d raided many a medicine cabinet for salves and ointments. He had tried Nivea and Aveeno. Doused his hands in shea butter and Cetaphil. Done a dance of olive oil and calendula and minerals from the Dead Sea, prayed to the gods of aloe vera, camphor, and almond blossom, worshipped at the dark altar of cortisone. For all this he had been forsaken.

  He stepped into the shower, the soap-spattered curtain of which showed the Justice League doing its thing, wrinkled up and warped from countless hours of rank musician scrubbing. Dried rivulets of mold ran down the plastic.

  If there was one thing Bobby missed about America, it was bathroom life — how hot water was hot, cold water was cold, and both were right on time. Here in Europe the ham was meatier, the beer was hoppier, the sex was another thing completely, but the plumbing was ancient, the pressure in the pipes was anemic, and the toilets had the hole at the back of the bowl, allowing one to examine one’s waste for approval before signing off. This variance in toilet architecture had spooked Bobby into a long month of constipation. Now he only played when his body went into the red. He only played to a sold-out crowd.

  When the soap touched his raw right hand, the lather turned into a mass of bees.

  “I am so cosmically fucked,” he said, and stared into the sputtering showerhead.

  He dried off with one of those tiny Euro towels — thin and nonabsorbent — applied Eucerin to his hands, shook them like they were on fire, and retrieved ten Band-Aids from his stash. Soon his hands were covered. The Mummy, back in black.

  Navigating the uselessness of hands covered in latex, he put on the same clothes he’d worn for a week, including jeans so ripe they could walk away. Then he poured some coffee, procured sugar and milk, and lit a cigarette.

  Euro cigarettes were not fucking around. Instantly the day improved. But then his phone rang. His bell tolled.

  It was Joey. The manager. The fucking day tripper. That bitch.

  “Yeah?” Bobby said. “What?”

  “Hey, babe,” she said, in a cocaine hum. “Good morning.”

  “What the fuck do you want?”

  “Don’t be like that, Bobby. Play nice.”

  “Play nice?” He growled. “Come on tour and see how much you want to play nice.”

  “How are your hands?”

  “I said, what the fuck do you want? Why are you calling me?”

  “I’m calling you,” the manager said, “because I just got to Amsterdam, and I’m sitting here at a café outside my hotel.”

  “And?”

  “And I knew you’d be the only one up.”

  “And?”

  “And I thought you’d want to come over here and imbibe, partake, and otherwise dilate.”

  He put the coffee cup down. “Is that so?”

  “Yeah,” she replied. “It is so.”

  “You and that bindle of coke getting a wittle wone-wey?”

  She waited for a second. “I’m trying to reach out to you, Bobby. Don’t be a dick.”

  He hung up on her.

  Fucking Joey. Her talents, which had seemed so formidable at first, had a wicked fucking half-life now. The conniving witch hadn’t delivered shit for them since the day the ink went dry on their Warners contract.

  Had she stopped the absolutely career-crippling racism charge? No.

  Had she kept Aerosmith from dropping Blood Orphans from their tour of America’s finest sports arenas? No.

  Had she stopped their slow slide into booking agent hell, from favorites at William Morris to the laughingstock of the interns’ desk at Who Gives a Shit Booking? She had not.

  At least she hadn’t slept with Darlo. At least, if only for reasons involving power and control, she had denied the drummer a place between her slamming little legs, kept him hurting, kept him frustrated. That made Joey a little bit of a saint to Bobby, carved out a special place for her in his weary, bitter heart.

  Big deal, he thought. She was still an incompetent cokehead shill, and they were still the worst fucking band in existence.

  A wasp flew by his head and started banging itself against the cold windowpane. This wasp had missed the last flight out of summer and would soon die a cold, exoskeletal death in a bland Amsterdam apartment.

  Bobby always appreciated others with whom he could find kinship, and this wasp fit the bill nicely. Like the wasp, he too had been led astray by his instincts and was now at the whim of vast forces, forces beyond comprehension in the complexity with which they had ruined his life. Every day was a cold window to bang one’s head against.

  “Oh, little wasp,” he said, “ye I shall free.”

  And with that he smashed the insect against the pane, exploding its rust-orange exo-body but also creating a solid fracture in the glass, a flat skein that resembled the interstate in North Dakota, upon which they had often trod.

  The wasp, splattered in the center, was reborn as Bismarck.

  “Bad omen,” Bobby said. “I’m outta here.”

  He donned his bomber jacket and went down the Dutch stairs, into this last miserable morning of tour. On the banister, he left behind a goo of rot.


  Morten’s apartment lay on a fashionable street. Lanterns decorated the sidewalk. Scanning the storefronts, Bobby saw three posh clothing stores, a pharmacy with a hand-carved dove for a sign, and several restaurants with thousand-euro signage. Next door to Morten’s, an Internet café was opening.

  “Oh, sweet,” he said, and flicked his cigarette to the pavement.

  The café had that chic modern primitive vibe that plagued European hipster establishments, and smelled of sandalwood, cloves, and espresso. Behind the counter, a skinny aging hippie in overalls read a copy of De Telegraaf. Brown dreadlocks accentuated his receding hairline. He was smoking a fat spliff, and smiled as Bobby approached.

  “Do you mind speaking English?” Bobby asked. “I no sprecken ze Dutch.”

  Natty Dread nodded. “Sure, man. Sure.”

  “A double espresso, please.” He looked in the glass case. “And that pastry.”

  “The mazette?”

  “Yeah, I guess. What’s a mazette?”

  The hippie’s sallow stoned eyes gazed at him. “French for fool.”

  “Perfect, then.”

  A short, foxy girl with shoulder-length henna-red hair came in. She looked like that chick from Run Lola Run, wearing black eye shadow and something in the vein of a Catholic schoolgirl’s uniform. Bobby’s hands tingled. She smiled at him and sat down at a computer.

  If Darlo were here, he thought reflexively, that girl wouldn’t stand a chance.

  Chewing on his mazette, which was just a safe house for powdered sugar, Bobby stared at the front page of yesterday’s International Herald Tribune, which someone had left on a stool. He read the headlines, America this and America that, but nothing registered. After five futile weeks combing Europe for an audience, America was just a dream now. Until he emerged from the gate at Long Beach, America would feel no closer to him than Atlantis.

  “What is that you are humming, man?” asked Natty Dread.

  “Jethro Tull,” he said. “ ‘Aqualung.’ ”

  The man smiled, then pointed to the ceiling.

  “You are staying with Morten, no doubt?”

  “Roger that.”

  “Over and out.” He made a thumbs-up. “Sweet, dude.”

 

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