the clouds hurry away
but before they could I
found your face in each one
and you were laughing
more brightly than the sun
here in my...
so come and sit with me
here in my garden of stones
sit and sip my devil tea
we'll watch the clouds go by
till all the seeds are sown
here in my garden of stones
I have so many stories
I want the ghosts to hear
if you lay here next to me forever
we'll make them up together
dear lover: you know it not
but you will die for me
here, in my...
so come and sit with me
here in my garden of stones
sit and sip my devil tea
we'll love the nights away
no we'll never be alone
here in my garden of stones
each stone I plucked
from nature's breast
and I laid them perfectly
to fit your perfect form
my blood I shed
so here forever you could rest
with me, my love
here, my love, in my...
so come and sit with me
here in my garden of stones
sit and sip my devil tea
oh, I will wait for you, alone
from among the greying coals
here in my garden of stones
my garden
here in my
in my
in my...
garden of souls
Mitch the
Cat loosened the scarf from his head as he told me:
"You are pink yet. My child,
when the world claws at your boots find not your solace in the dregs of the
whiskey ration—nor in the sweet nothings of fine herbs.
"But I admit: these spirits distilled—ah...—they still my weary spirit."
"But I admit: these spirits distilled—ah...—they still my weary spirit."
He was full of this shit. He set
down the glass.
His scarf was green today, which
complemented the coming of fall. It hung limp about his neck.
He rescued his long pipe from
within the folds of grey—black silk.
"And the herbs, well, they
do soothe my weary soul."
"So... why not then?" I asked.
He considered. I could tell he was just warming up. Mitch the Cat said:
"I need 'em because I need 'em. 'Cause I've needed them for years since I began thinking they helped. When you convince yourself you need something you'll do it until you really do need it. Until you have no choice."
"I need 'em because I need 'em. 'Cause I've needed them for years since I began thinking they helped. When you convince yourself you need something you'll do it until you really do need it. Until you have no choice."
He smiled.
"It's a cruel world,"
he said.
"Never think you need help.
You don't—at least, I mean—you're the only one who can help you. Everybody
needs help, and lots of it, most often; but we all look in the wrong damn places.
Start helping yourself before you get conned—by the lazy, for the lazy—into
thinking some outside shit is the answer. It's a cruel world, no doubt.
"Everybody's too proud and
too self-conscious to encourage others to learn from the mistakes they've made."
"And you?"
"Same but for this here
lapse in disciplined cowardice. I drank the cool aid and I fucking served it
too. Oh, I was a Zhar and life was presented to me as the most beautiful
princess you could imagine (the most tainted of temptresses). And you know what
I did?
"I fucked that bitch.
"My Life as a Maiden by Mitch the Fornicating Feline: how's that,
eh? That'd sell a print or two."
He laughed raucously as I was
silent. He loved fucking with people, and I loved him for it.
"We preach all kinds of
goodness but when it comes down to it," he continued, "we encourage
most all the wrong practices."
"Most?"
"Well, we are doing some
things right, I guess."
"And you?" I asked
again.
The sky was a milky blue-grey,
like the soft underbelly down of some gargantuan bird of paradise.
He looked put off.
"Eh?"
"What are you doing
right?" I clarified.
Mitch the Cat smiled.
"Why, I'm dying. A
revolutionary experience, I promise."
The whiskey made a soft purring
sound as it fell upon the rocks. He grunted as he replaced the bottle on the
floor. His pipe added its hazy nonchalance to the morning air.
This was the first time Mitch the
Cat had admitted to me that he was sick; and perhaps the first time in our long
history that I viewed him as human, even though I had discovered his illness
months before and had known his weaknesses for much longer.
So now Mitch the Cat was dying.
The longer he smoked and drank and talked of poetic, prophetic nothing, the
more I could see it in him.
I saw it in the light grey
stubble; the sloping shoulder-line; the deep purpling under his eyes—the eyes
themselves, once so brilliantly green they seemed to shine even in the dark.
They looked like pale ponds in the evening, now.
His voice: cracked from talking.
There seemed to be too much dry wisdom for his thin frame to keep holding in
(or perhaps he was desperate to fulfill it before it was lost: was it in fact
drying, shriveling, evaporating upon itself as we spoke?). I watched his pink-blue
lips move and I remembered him when he was silent.
"I take it back—I am committed to truth, not consistency,
a nice man once told me—"
I laughed. You've never met Ghandi, you ass.
"—'cause, sister, this shit here is heaven on earth.
"Fuck all those other
hallucinogens: they make you feel like death incarnate. Which, admittedly, is enjoyable."
He look a long draught from his
pipe. The bowl turned from green to red to black to ash. The match dropped in a
slow arcing trajectory as his fingers went limp and suddenly our atmosphere was
awash with his swirling smoke.
"But this allows you to
live. Because living's so much simpler than dying, but so much fucking harder,
too."
I have so many stories I want the ghosts to hear, I thought absently.
"We forget how simple it all
is. Being. The great tragedy of
maturity, that.
"The great tragedy of life.
"Innocence Lost. Discontent and misunderstood dissatisfaction is the
code of our existence.
"And what do I say?"
He himself considered this
carefully, the smoke upon his brow and the soft light absorbed by the scarf
about his neck.
"I say fuck existence. Fuck
life. My own existence, at least.
"I had my go and the whole
shit—show killed me gently. Laid me down in the hay and silk and whispered in
my ear all of the nothing I could ever possibly bear and then? it set me adrift
and aflame to float from the shore like the half—rotted carcass of some worn
out ship. I'm real sorry, Jimmy boy, God
tells me. But we've moved on.
Suddenly he went off in some character’s
voice which I didn’t recognize.
“On behalf of world-wide incorporated, I’m sorry to inform you
that we will not longer be needing your modeling services, darling. That’s the
way the cookie crumbles. Stiff up the upper lip. Hmm?”
I disagreed. The world could
never move on from a man such as him. But a man such as Mitch the Cat... well,
maybe he had earned the right to cast himself off, having seen the decay in his
wrinkling skin and felt it in his bones.
"Now I'm an old dog on the
table of alcohol and death in some decrepit shelter and my loving buddy God's
got sadness in His eyes and cheap scotch on His breath and a fucking needle in
His palm and He's weary of it all too and wants to get this long sad story over
and done with.
"See, I was vitality itself—I
was life!—and He knows it. He was
there—was he with me? I don't know. But he was there and he knows how it all
went down. Hell! wouldn't that just be the cruelest joke of all? Maybe God's
just some poor ageless wretch who's cursed with the misfortunate to witness all
the world in all its glory in all it's ages. Poor shit, He would be then. Have
to suffer all the misplaced sadness—
"You know, that's what gets
to me mostly: the misplacement. Nobody knows what the hell is going on, do
they? We're sad and angry and frustrated but we don't know why! It's all a
blame game and it's all so easy and so complicated."
We both sighed deeply and he
smirked.
"Tell me about your life,
Mitch." This is one of the only things I remember saying. That palaver had
belonged to him all along.
He glared at me.
"That's what I'm fucking
doing."
I could tell that he didn't know
if I was being sardonic or not. I was used to that, although he usually knew.
"You're talking about your dying.
It's all very interesting," I assured him (sarcastic yet truthful).
"But..."
"Yes. I know. You have life
yet, pumpkin. And life attracts life, as does death prefer a similarly soothing
companion.
"Oh yes, I remember when I
was young."
I thought:
As do I, Mitch the Cat. I
remember your existence; I remember your life.
I still do, perhaps better so
now, as everything else fades, it seems I can remember everything I have ever
heard him say, ever seen him do; every time I ever thought of how much I loved
him and the handful of times I told him so.
His smile was that of a crook;
and crooked, at that.
"We all have dreams, Junior.
We're all dreamers at soul. True story: ninety—nine percent of our waking lives
are spent asleep. And we dream every now and again when we're lucky enough.
"It's not about whose dreams
are the grandest—believe, mine were the grandest and the cruelest and so I was
the greatest and I was the most terrible to behold. But it didn't help. It
might not even have been worth it, come the end....
"No, no. Dreams are smoke,
even if, by their completion the smoke recedes and you're surrounded by
everything you've ever thought you wanted—the fame, the love, the respect and
all the damn stuff!
"Life? Life is the small moments when you see a lover's eyes through that
thick haze and you no longer have your thought or your perceived 'purpose'.
When you realize but for the faintest moments that there is something that is
so much more real than the dimensions to which our proud and skittish brains our
privy.
"That brief moment when you
know—even if you don't understand,
necessarily—that you're the culmination of a billion years of boundless
creativity. Something more beast than human, and more god—like as well.
"Open your eyes, I never
did."
His smile reminded me of a
vampire's, and I thought how interesting it was to talk to a dead man.
Although, with Mitch the Cat, it had always felt like that.
"So, let us speak of that
beautiful and terrible maiden, my darling
my darling my wife and my bride, Life."
I gazed out at the sounding sea
from my lover's sepulcher, and to him I listened.
Interesting and very descriptive, thought-provoking.
ReplyDeleteAlittle hard at first to follow who is speaking, but then the reader realizes it is the old man. A great beginning because we know it will be a story about an interesting life.
Thanks, working on the following part now, it's one of the things I was concerned about, glad you mentioned it.
ReplyDelete