Just Another Night at the Ryokan Mottainai


Deep in the verdant mountains of Japan’s Gifu prefecture, on the outskirts of the traditional city of Takayama, there was a hotel. A Ryokan, specifically, the traditional kind of Japanese inn passed down through generations, with staff living on-site and an onsen right outside the sprawling three-story polished building. For such an old place, it was in extraordinarily pristine shape – unexpected, considering how long it takes to go out of your way to get here. 

Yet, here I was. Ready for a long weekend, relaxing in the hot springs and dining on traditional Japanese cuisine. Because Japan is all about tradition, is it not? And if I find their traditions enjoyable, perhaps I’ll honor such delightful excursions as traditions of my own.

The owners were a lovely old couple, one short greying woman and one short grey man. I took my shoes off in the lobby and placed them in the cubbies at the entrance. The place was bedecked in a hard, muted red, browned from either age or the saturation of the air outside, the perfect color for matching the bamboo tatami mats lining every floor panel. There was a shrine to some ancestor or other in an adjacent room, where an incense stick curled one single plume of smoke around a complete set of shogun armor, and an empty incense plate hung from the ceiling. I inhaled long and deep…monkō, I believe they call it. Listening to the incense. 

The elderly man gave my key to a young woman, who beckoned me in the direction of my room. The couple were all smiles, the creepy kind, where the incessant number of wrinkles become ever evident as they pile upwards until completely obscuring your eyes. The help, however, all had the same painted white faces, wearing traditional kimonos, and gave no impression of expression whatsoever.  This was less creepy, I suppose. More the kind of professionalism I was expecting from a traditional inn. 

The room was surprisingly modern, clinical. A bathroom near the front door, complete with electronic heating toilet and built-in bidet. A futon lay on the ground, with an ornate, puffy cover, not far from the sitting area with a table, chair, and single minimalistic calligraphy piece. I recognize the form as Kanji, but am not completely sure what 健康 translates to.

he first day passed without incident. I was terribly tired from the drive, and the onsen had been calling my name the whole way here. How could I deny it any longer? There were a few others out and about the ryokan, but we all kept our distance. The water was dark against its bottomdrop of grey stones on one side and the sharp red glare of hanging lanterns on the other side. It was an interesting choice, almost like being in a darkroom, and the figures of other guests waded about in the steamy water like false photographed stills of the Loch Ness Monster. Hm…Another exotic place I need to visit…

When I dried off and returned to my room in just a towel, the meal was already spread out on a low sitting table – an assortment of miso soup, rice, smoked salmon, fried tamagoyaki, a hodgepodge of unidentifiable vegetables, and sake. Dressing in the rental kimono hanging in my closet, I heartily devoured the meal which gave me just enough energy to finish writing my daily travel blog by the window. The bamboo forest was serene, the harsh hum of cicadas heralding the sun as it reclined behind mountains until its red rays lay flat as a blanket; then night prevailed. Sleep came to me somewhere in between.

Daylight brought with it an itching sensation near my ribs. I inspected the reddened, puffy area closer…a mosquito bite, perhaps? This might call for a trip into town later, grab some ointment, after I complete my morning exercise routine and hop in the shower.

As I was returning to my room from a relaxing run through the cedars, I noticed a short curtain hanging from a sign that said something in Katakana. Steam flowed freely from within, and I concluded that this must be one of the public baths on site. Not usually one for privatized public nudity, it was an experience I would expand my comfort zone for, at least once. 

The dressing room was empty, as was the bath area. The place was decorated with wood, from the floors to the basin to the seats below the showers. There was a panel of glass at the far end of the room, a small outdoor area surrounded by thatched walls that featured two large red barrels – tubs, filled to the brim with hot water pouring from bamboo spouts. Grimy from the humidity outside, I lathered, rinsed, and relaxed in the sprawling heated tub. My mind was eagerly melting into that woozy complementation of soreness and heat after about fifteen minutes, which meant it was probably time to go. I rose, and, no sooner did I step out of the basin, then I was immediately conscious of a pair of eyes on me. Studying me…Sizing me up…

No one had entered, I was certain of that – they must have evaded my initial study of the room. Scanning one last time, for peace-of-mind’s sake, I caught sight of a figure in one of the red barrels outside. He waved at me, slowly, with a friendly smile on his face, so at least it was clear he had not been meaning to avoid me before. I opened the sliding glass door and stepped onto the pebble pathway outside, which led to the barrels.

“Ah, a fellow foreigner,” he welcomed me in a thick Australian accent. He was a portly, tall man in his late 40s, with a high-ridged nose jutting from a saggy rectangular head topped by a Kappa’s haircut. His protruding belly pressed against the tub, an iceberg in that steaming water abducted from the onsen, and he raised one hairy arm to beckon at me like one of those lucky cat statues in restaurant windows. “Come, come, park your carcass, have a chat.”

I obliged – again, as a one-time experience, might as well try out everything the public bath has to offer. So I slipped into the other red barrel next to him, water seeping out and trickling through the cracks of the stone garden.

The Australian was a laid-back, casual fellow, an intellectual and worldly traveler who always returned to Japan when he fancied being surrounded by nature at its least exotic and most mystical. He enjoyed the public baths in the afternoon because they were usually empty, and the serenity of listening to the water pour from the fountains, trickle across the floor and into the ground, gave his ears a front-row seat to the cycle of comfort undisturbed. It soothed his nerves as a politician, a position in which following the trail of money was hardly ever satisfied with a conclusion or clear line of sight.

“Then again,” he lolled, sinking back into the faucet so that the water clapped against his back and sprayed off his slouched shoulders, “Ryokan Mottainai is not always the most relaxing place. There have been strange occurrences, yes…spooky things that go bump in the night or steal your left sock.”

“What,” I chuckled, “like ghosts? That wasn’t on the website.”

“You think it would be? You think mentioning haunts and spirits would attract more customers?”

I shrugged. Far be it for me to pretend I have any experience in advertising. “But anything could help. Place seems pretty dead.”

The Australian laughed, “You’ll see how dead soon enough. Things pick up for the spirits on Saturday nights.”

“Not funny,” I said, though it was certainly interesting. “What kind of spirits are we talking about here? Malevolent, environmental, deceased…”

“Flip of the coin, mate. Never can tell who might you interesting yourself. Though…There is one…”

He gave me a sideways smirk and sank deep into the bath, blowing bubbles on the surface. It was a little gross.

“One…Well, what?”
“There is one pretty persistent spirit, the dangerous kind.”
“Where are they usually? Guess I should avoid-”
“Oh, you can’t. You won’t. All you can hope is that she passes by your door without peeping in. But if you wake in the night and smell someone smoking outside, or the sweet, sweet odor of burning flesh, so strong it burns the insides of your nostrils and brings tears to your eyes…Better hold your breath and stay as still as possible. Unless you fancy smelling like an overcooked sirloin yourself when she gets her hands on you.”

I wanted to ask more, but my head was feeling woozy and that darn mosquito bite was itching like mad. The Australian gave me his beckoning wave in farewell – I guess it translates both as greeting and goodbye – and I left him there half-submerged in the comfort of his dark rusted barrel.

Hiking to the bus stop was a bit of a slog, as the clouds came in and drizzle came down. But I made it there, and had the bus all to myself. I must say, I must say, that it was such a relief when I got off in Takayama and was surrounded by locals. Sure, it’s been like, what, a day? But I was already feeling too isolated at the Ryokan Mottainai. 

Popped into a convenience store, snagged an umbrella and some Kinkan anti-itch ointment, and settled down for a bit in a small cafe near the open-air market. Even in the rain, set up on the edge of the Miya-gawa river thundering down its man-made ravine twenty feet below, the stall owners weathered the storm to sell their wares. They had come prepared for a storm like this; now if only they had come prepared for customers not to be prepared, as they fled helter-skelter for shelter’s sake.

Oho! Another group passes by my little cafe window, a tour group off to see the sights – and none with umbrellas! They’re standing at the edge of the bridge, and I can see the tour guide gesturing out into the mists below. I applied the ointment to my bite (hoooowow, that stings!) and hurry back into the rain before they move on and leave me behind.

“When they found the body,” the tour guide hunched over, hammily narrating the events of what sounded like a post-drowning, “both of his eyes were missing. Some locals say, if you see a fisherman lurking on this bridge late at night, casting his line into the darkness below, then better for you to find another way around. He’s hunting for the fish that sucked out his eyes, and it might be hard for a blind, desperate man to determine the difference between you…and a fish.”

A bizarre shudder of unenthusiastic laughter rippled through the crowd. I got chills, probably from the rain, and laughed along with them. No one seemed to notice me as we trudged through cobblestone streets, stopping here and there for the tour guide to put on a larger than death performance that only I seemed to appreciate.

“It was at this shrine that a venomous snake spirit struck out at Hirata as he bowed his head for fortune in the New Year. He didn’t live to see the morning, and now both his spirit and the snake lurk about the grounds, entreating you to act with either productivity or slouch in your hearts on New Year’s Eve. For, as the snake would argue, why bother showing restraint when your final night begins with a bite?”

“And here we have the final resting place of Ike, who took etiquette one step backward outside of the house to take his shoes off and contracted a lethal foot fungus. If you see green mold growing near your shoes, it means he might be lurking about, waiting for the opportune moment to snatch your shoes and throw them into the street!”

“Infamous mobster Bando Bunko died of food poisoning at this Yakitori shop. Oddly enough, this actually brought in more customers than dissuaded them. Suspicions of ‘fowl’ play only heightened as the ghost of the deceased diseased mobster sometimes vomits on customers as they leave during a rainy day like today. With a grudge against women who don’t believe the unjust deserve justice, right around that corner, still wearing his dapper Yakuza suit…LURKING.”

The tour was very edutaining, and I was very pleased at seeing my rainy afternoon pass by quickly, when we arrived at a crumpled heap of rubble…What used to be a house, allowed to rot and ruin right there between two perfectly fine homes.

“We’ve got two more stops on our tour, folks. This next one-”

All of a sudden, someone in the crowd broke out crying. It was a little girl, grasping tightly for her mother’s waist as she looked with unblinking eyes away from the house and the crowd. The mother said nothing. The tour guide said nothing. Everyone just looked kinda sad and stared at the rubble while letting the girl just go on and on and on. Someone needed to teach her some manners.

“Excuse me,” I proclaimed loudly, for the whole group to hear, “but maybe you should take your child somewhere else if a pile of burnt wood is too much for her.”

No one responded directly, but I did see the tour guide’s ears pick up at my voice.

“Wait a moment,” he murmured, scouring the rubble with his eyes. “I sense something…”

I felt tingles on my fingles. Couldn’t he tell us the backstory before whatever it was haunting us jumped out without any guesses as to how it would do so? Tell us, tour guide, hurry, how the spirit lurks in this place! My thoughts blurted out in a few incoherencies…I don’t know why, maybe the moisture was getting to me?

All of their heads turned, directly towards me. Not their bodies, still pointed straight ahead at the ruined house – just their heads. Like owls, they swiveled to glare in my direction, all eyes milky white, like those of the blind, silvery dishes glinting in their skulls.

“You,” whispered the tour guide, “are not one of us.”

“So?” I blurted. I refused to be discriminated against just because I was alive, or hadn’t paid the tour fee. “I’ve been following you for the past half-hour, and you’re just now having a problem with me?”

“You’re disturbing the other spirits,” said the guide, as his head started to float like a fruit underwater, neck extending in a faint wisp to keep it anchored to his body. “I’m trying to give them a little peace, and one of our more sensitive participants is coming up on his first encounter with how he died.”

A little boy began to cry in the crowd. He was just staring at me, mouth open, crying sounds spilling out but no tears, no pained expression to show he was otherwise “disturbed.” It was annoying, really – he was probably mocking me. Then his head began floating, too. 

“Yeah,” said some sharp-dressed man with tattoos on his neck and some gross liquid dribbling down his chin, then down his nose as it orbited a full one-eighty and schlooped back into his nostrils, “This is an exclusive club, and you ain’t got no membership!”

All of their necks were stretched to the limit now, intertwined as their heads bobbed like balloons on strings. It felt like an unfair advantage; like they were looking down on me, and I was the one in the wrong.

“Fine,” I shouted, exasperatedly throwing up my hands and pacing a tight little circle, “I’ll go, if you’re all going to be rude about it! But I’ll have you know-“

They were gone. I took my eyes off of them for one second and they had spirited away under the cover of rain.

“Assholes!” I yelled after them with hands cupped around my mouth, hoping they hadn’t gotten so far that I wouldn’t get the last word in. I was too loud, though, and some angry little Japanese grandmother threw open her curtains and started yelling at me in her own language. I smiled with about twenty embarrassed “Sumimasen” before I managed to disappear under the cover of rain as well. And it wouldn’t be until I got back on board the bus that I had a hard time remembering if the old lady was leaning out of a perfectly serviceable house that stood exactly where the rubble of that burnt pile of wood was scattered. But I wouldn’t necessarily classify that as something worth double-checking, especially if at risk of bumping into that rude tour group again.

The rain cleared up by the time I was dropped off at the Ryokan. The smiley owners welcomed me back, asked me how was I feeling…Honestly, not too hot. I feel like a cold is coming on or something, my skull is a slurring scramble right now and my side is raw from scratching (I think rain washed the ointment off). If anything can help the headache, I’d put money on the onsen out back, so I quickly changed and stumbled into the warm, natural waters.

The warmth rising under my chin and ears helped relax my head and neck, which is what I was hoping for. What I wasn’t hoping for was for the onsen to be so crowded…there were about eight to ten people wading about nearby. I could not see them that well, just shadows slowly moving around under the warm lanternlight that hung from the trees, casting weak spotlights on the surface of the water. One of the shadows passed around the light cast in front of me, and came to rest his back against a rocky outcropping that was little more than an arm’s stretch from me.

“I’m sorry, but do you have to be so close? I know it’s crowded, but there’s still plenty of room on the other side.”

The man didn’t answer me. Heck, he didn’t even look at me. What was with the Japanese and their abhorrent lack of manners? I always thought they were a courteous and overly-neurotic about saving face. This was the exact opposite of what I was expecting.

“Are you listening? Either move, or tell me you won’t so I can make you move. But sitting there ignoring me is just asking for trouble!” 


He didn’t even turn to look at me, so I splashed him. Then I kicked around under the water, swung my arms wildly, looked over the edge in the trees – because, somehow, the personal space invader had vanished into this air as soon as my tsunami washed over him. It wasn’t that powerful, surely he didn’t get washed away to a different part of the onsen, but then…where the heck did he go?

I thought I spied him at the other end of the onsen, just kind of bobbing about, but I determined it must be a shadowy lookalike. Come to think of it, all of these shadows look alike. So I approached another one to strike up conversation.

“Hi! Some crazy rain we had today, right? Pretty spooky!”

No response.

“I’m sorry, do you not speak English?”

Ignored again. So this time I reached out and personally grabbed them in a big ole bear hug, and POOF! Gone! Not a real person, hahaha, am I hallucinating here? Wading frantically through the onsen, I just start grabbing shadows. Anything that looks like a person, one of them has got to actually be a person! But they all just disappear, merging with the rising steam as soon as I come into contact. I’m out of breath pretty quickly for dashing after spirits, and my head feels worse than ever, so I turn for the stairs. Maybe I’ll find the Australian in the public baths – I need someone to tell me I’m not crazy.

Which I’m seriously starting to doubt, as another shadow catches my eye at the far end of the onsen, where the steam is the thickest. And next to them is another shadow, and another, and another…okay, double the number of shadows that were here when I arrived, to make a long story short. And they were all lined up, focused right at me.

I tried to spook them first, gave a little fake out jab with my arms to establish dominance. I’d already grabbed, like, eight shadows. Was it light, or was it handsy people, who were the true enemies of the darkness? But then they started gliding through the water towards me at an alarmingly speedy pace and I was the only scared one here. I desperately dashed for the shore, tripping and going under twice, then rolled out over the edge. Heaving myself up, I saw all of the shadows, still in the water, right at the edge where I just was. My guess was that they couldn’t leave the onsen, so I flipped them off in victory and marched back inside.

Turns out its not Japanese people, just Japanese ghosts who are extremely rude.

Entering the public bathroom, I was relieved to see my friend the Australian already waiting, beckoning to me with his lucky cat paw from the barrel outside. My relief almost distracted me from noticing that the bathroom was not the same – all of the wood had been replaced by dark stone, mottled with different shades of grey and giving the steam a miasmatic quality.

“Ah, that,” explained the Australian as I settled into my barrel next to him, “is the result of equality. The women get the wood bathroom tonight, then tomorrow it will return to the mens side. They just switched the sign.”

“Weird…I just walked to where I thought I was last night. Pretty sure this is the same bathroom.”

“Well, now, that would be utterly ridiculous, wouldn’t it?”

“You’d be surprised…”

I recounted my encounters, of the tour and the onsen, and the Australian listened with compassionate interest.

“It reads to me that you aren’t in the greatest of circumstances, mate.”
“You’re telling me.”
“I am. And I’m also telling you, this means that you will be especially susceptible to seeing her tonight.”
“What, the burn victim?”

“Oh, she’s no burn victim,” he laughed, shimmying his hairy chest under the fountain, “but what ailed her in life now ails her in death. There was something that weighed on her spirit so much, that it withstood the purification that comes with passing out of the body.”

“Hm. Got any suggestions?”

The Australian shrugged, so I bid him farewell before he ducked under the water. Drying myself off, I was preparing to leave when it finally struck me just how odd it was that the Australian knew so much about this angry ghost girl. So I decided to open the bathroom door and go back for one more round of what might turn out to be crucial questions for tonight. The bathroom was still empty. Just the drip, drip sound of condensation and the tub basin continuing its endless recycling and filtration.

I could see through the steam and the glass that the only occupant had not left yet – but I could confidently say, whatever it was now, it was not Australian. Sitting in the barrel where my acquaintance had been, was a grossly massive beast covered in black-tinged rust-colored fur that stuck out in every direction. Its face was resemblant to one of those traditional Oni masks, complete with fangs, horns, a snarling smile, and glowing eyes, hunched down between its gaping shoulders. The demon’s eyes glinted as it caught sight of me, raising a gnarled elongated hand to give me that lucky cat wave once more; but I was certain, now that I had seen him for what he really was, to stay would put me in a very unlucky situation. So I just waved back, slid the door shut, and returned to my quarters without the information.

Getting to sleep was a futile and sweaty affair. My side still itched like the Dickens, and I was worried that this ghost girl the Yōkai warned me about would pop out of nowhere without warning. How could I defend myself against her then? I was almost relieved as my nose started to burn from the smell of roasting flesh and my eyes started to water from the effects of smoke that was freshly pouring in from under my door. My fear swapped places with annoyance, the main theme of this trip ever since ghosts decided I was to be their primary source of entertainment.

Rising, I decided to get this over with. Not like I would be getting any sleep tonight, anyways.

MONTEBAL!” shrieked the banshee without even waiting for a “hello” from me as soon as I opened the door. Her entire body was burning, blackened skin stretched tight on her wasted frame, with dark sunken holes in her skull where eyes once were. Fire surrounded her, dripping down from her hair and razing the walls and ceiling around me. It was pretty impressive, though perhaps only because the speed of her showmanship caught me by surprise.

“The time of your reckoning is here, Montebal,” yelled the ghost, pointing a crusty finger accusingly at me, talking over my insistent spluttering that she had the wrong guy. “These fires you see around you consume, never to give, as you did in life – and now they shall consume you. Your neglect of what is important, the ruin you left in your wake, I have come to deliver the consequences upon your head. Blood is thicker than oil, father!”

I decided that was my cue to deliver a bucket of salt directly on her head. The smell of burning oil was unmistakable, but also the hardest type of fire to put out. I had prepared a few options depending on what kind of fire she was: a regular fire, electrical fire, oil fire, etc. My hope was that salt, though not too terribly effective against oil fires, would be doubly effective due to her being a ghost as well. So I hinged my bets on a bucket of salt, and thusly dumped!

The fires immediately schlooped back into the ghost girl, like juice up a straw.

“What the Hell was that?” she chattered, shivering like she had just been doused with ice-cold water.
“My name is not Montebal!” I shouted loud and clear, before she had a chance to start up another tirade.
“What? It’s not…no, but it has…who are you, then, and why are you in Montebal’s quarters?”
“Quarters? This is a hotel room in the Ryokan Mottainai!”
“Ryokan…Where the Hell is that?”
“Japan!”
“What?! But how did I get from Gibraltar to here?”
“Listen I’m just a guest here, and a live one to boot. How should I know?”

I didn’t think her face could look more ghastly – boy, was I wrong. Oil burbled up inside her eye sockets and streamed down her sunken cheeks. She hunched down over her knees in the doorway, sobbing.

Feeling pity, I placed a hand on her back and burned myself. She understood the gesture, though, and rose to follow me inside. I warmed her a cup of canola oil and we sat down together as she spilled her guts over the relationship between her and her father, Montebal, who sought his fortune on an oil rig off the coast of Gibraltar while leaving his family behind to suffer the abandonment. She had been overtaken by disease, until the only thing left beating in her frail body was hatred for her father. It was a touching tale that I admit I had no good advice to give, how she could pass on or be at peace. But I tried my darnedest anyways.

“Look,” I began, “I came here for a relaxing trip, to take in the sights, smells, and salivations of Japanese culture. Instead, I have been bombarded on all sides by obnoxiousisms of the phantasmic sort – it’s got me all discombobulated and in a downright foul mood. I have finally come to terms after talking with you, that the realm of the deceased-but-not-done is beyond my control. I can’t do anything about it. So why bother bothering over all this nonsense when I have just a little time left to enjoy myself here? Better to move on with my own plans, and let the things beyond me pass by.”

She smiled and patted my hand, burning me a second time.

“Thank you for taking the time to listen to me, if that’s truly how you feel. I think your advice is good…for another time. For now, if I don’t want to end up more lost than I already am, it’s probably for the best that I have a purpose in mind, you know?”

The ghost girl downed the cup of oil and thanked me for my hospitality. I showed her to the door and bid her goodnight, before she floated up into the ceiling. There was a loud knock, a door sliding, a booming “MONTEBAL!” Then a lot of screaming from the guests above me. I chuckled and shook my head, and was able to sleep soundlessly as a monk after that.

The morning came, and I was feeling better than ever! No more itching, no more headache, a drawling, happy feeling of elevated nausea bringing warmth to my muscles and heart. I checked out with the smiley couple at the front, who smiled even more than they had when I first arrived, and took the bus to the airport.

My trip to experience a Japanese onsen had some ups and downs, sure, but I think it made me a more resilient man. Plus, it’s not every day one relates with and to the dead, so I had to approach whatever recollection I planned to retain of my stay at the Ryokan Mottainai with respect, if not with fondness. For I learned it was not good for me to dwell on things that I did not change, simply for lack of knowledge or ability. These things exist in the realm of shades, where the dead and realities that could have been find a brief tangibility in the waking hours of understanding.

All that to say, I needed a very good reason to not fly right back to Japan, once whatever drugs the owners had pumped into me wore off, and the burning itch in my side returned worse than before, and I scratched it to find my fingers running up and down the long ribbed stitchings of a scar where that “mosquito bite” had been. A fresh, puffy scar that burned like fire, crossed directly over where my left kidney used to be, my one lasting takeaway from a stay at the Ryokan Mottainai.


Everybody Wants to Be a Star


Hannah plucked a petal off the tip of her tongue. She must have been in such a hurry, some stray flower got stuck in her hair and pretended to be a trapeze artist until it lodged itself between her lips. She studied the purple petal, belonging to an overlooked hydrangea, and flicked it into the open toilet with disgust. After patting her flushed face with cold water and squeezing her skull back into the pink cat mascot head, she opened the door and strode cheerfully into the hotel room.

Hannah had to pat Jewel’s face a few times before her eyes fluttered open. She tried to fix the smudge Hannah made with her makeup, but that wasn’t possible with her wrists tied viciously tight to the armrests of the chair the rest of her body was likewise cruelly bound to. Hannah was taking no chances, smiling as she dragged another chair directly in front of her captive. Jewel smiled right back – not that she could see Hannah’s face behind that plushy cat grin.

“Hi,” Hannah ventured, testing the strength of Jewel’s consciousness.

“And who are you supposed to be,” ridiculed Jewel, “my biggest fan?”

“Not supposed to be. I am.”

“Then you should know you’re totally screwed by kidnapping me.”

“What? Think you’d be able to identify me to the cops?” Hannah teased, poking Jewel hard in the cheek. Jewel didn’t pull away, didn’t even flinch, but stared at Hannah with a toothy grin almost wider than the cat’s.

“The cops are the least of your concern.”

Hannah laughed. The modulator in the teeth of the mascot head made her voice sound like a cybernetic chipmunk. 

“My biggest concern was just getting you here. Seriously, I’m not going to hurt you. Of course I had to drug you, though, how else could I get an audience with you?”

“I don’t know. Get a ticket like everyone else.”

“Oh, come on,” Hannah groaned. “Your convention tickets aren’t just expensive, they also sell out in, like, thirty seconds! Crazy as it sounds, dragging you here was much easier.”

“It does sound crazy.”

“You know,” frowned Hannah, “your tone is really getting on my nerves.”

“Oh, I’m sooooo sorry,” the long o’s were accompanied by a synchronized eye roll from Jewel, “You just threw my whole schedule off and ruined all my pre-show prep work. But, here, I’ll try and accommodate you. You’re asking me to be faker than I already am?”

Hannah shook her head in a panic. “I did not call you fake! I never would!”

“Well, I am. Wipe off my makeup. Go on! You’ll see just how fake I am.”

“Are you sure…?” Hannah hesitated. She would do anything for her idol, but she wasn’t sure that de-masking her was something she wanted to be personally responsible for.

“You wanted to know my secrets, right? This is your chance to see the real Jewel.”

Hannah looked up into that wide-eyed grinning face. It was all a taunt, but she was flattered just to be loathed so much by her own idol. It meant that she meant something to her, no matter how negative.

“All right. Give me a second.”

Hannah sprang up and returned to the bathroom. She took off the mascot head again, and, no sooner was her head free, but she coughed up four petals this time.

“What the Hell…where are these coming from?”

But there was no time for that, her idol was waiting to have her request fulfilled. The popular influencer whose videos had inspired Hannah for three transformative years, from her highs to her lows. She had invested so much in her merchandise, her subscriptions, her songs, and now she was going to find out what made her so popular. A dream come true!

Hannah wetted the paper towels and returned to Jewel, who hadn’t moved one inch. She delicately placed one against Jewel’s face-all they did was smudge the makeup. She rubbed and rubbed and rubbed, but nothing happened.

But there was no time for that, her idol was waiting to have her request fulfilled. The popular influencer whose videos had inspired Hannah for three transformative years, from her highs to her lows. She had invested so much time, money, and obsession into her merchandise, her subscriptions, her songs, and now she was going to find out what made her so popular. A dream come true!

Hannah wetted the paper towels and returned to Jewel, who hadn’t moved one inch. She delicately placed one against Jewel’s face, but all they did was smudge the makeup. She rubbed and rubbed and rubbed – nothing happened.

“C’mon,” mocked Jewel. “You have to want it more than that.”

Hannah did. She wanted it more than anything! If not to learn Jewel’s secrets, then at least to be reassured that no one was as perfect as she pretended to be. Scrubscrubscrubscritchscratchscratch until, finally, the makeup began to peel off with streams of blood running down Jewel’s face.

“Thaaaaat’s it. Good job~”

Seeing that blood was a solvent, Hannah scratched harder and harder until blood was flowing freely, Jewel calmly coaxing her along all the while. As she stood back, ready to receive Jewel’s secret, she felt her throat swell up to tell her she wasn’t ready at all.

It was her. Jewel was her. Through all the blood and splotches of makeup and raw skin, Jewel looked exactly like Hannah. Worst of all…Jewel’s unfazed grin proved she knew all along.

“You know who I am, then? Yup. I’m you~”

“From…from the future?”  murmured Hannah, removing her mask since it was pointless now.

“In a way,” Jewel said softly. “From the future that will never be. I’m the you you could have been, if you didn’t just consume and consume and consume. I’m the you you wish you were. Making fun things, not to be remembered, but to be adored by the youth in your prime. But now your prime is passing. I am the proof.”

“How…?”

“How does not matter, it’s too late for a solution. I mean, can’t you feel them? Taking root?”

Hannah could feel them – had been for some time. She felt something deep in her lungs, weighing them down, slithering around and spreading in a way that didn’t fill them up, but made them heavy and hollow. Only when she felt the leathery skin of her lungs couldn’t drag any more against her ribs, like wet clothes on a washboard, did she feel her lungs start to fill up. It was not like water filling a balloon, but like feathers stuffing a pillow; some poking out here and there, leaving her gasping for air as they overflowed in the only direction left open: up.

Hannah hacked and coughed as sharp twigs scratched their way up her trachea, and a burst of purple petals popped out of her mouth, sticking against the blood now pouring in streams down Jewel’s smiling face.

“Ooooo, looks like you caught a case of the Hanahaki. Makes sense why they’re hydrangeas, too. A jealous, one-sided obsession. For the you you could have been, but know you will now never be!”

Jewel was laughing and choking as Hannah was strangling and choking. Neither could breathe, tracheas blocked by hands and flowers. Stems were sprouting uncontrollably, bulging Hannah’s trachea and smothering Jewel’s face. In her last conscious thought, Jewel clung desperately to her last hope. The hope that, once Jewel was gone, not only would the flowers stop – but Hannah could so easily take her place. Seize the attentions and affections she was certain she deserved, if only she had a chance and the inclination or ability to take it. This was her, finally taking it.

“Hanahaki! Hannah hacking! Hanahakihannahacking!” Jewel jeered, until the flowers found their way into her mouth as well and grew towards the darkness within. Every sickly stuffed gag intertwined them closer together under the cover of vines, the mirror images finally joined in what was and what could never be, what desired and what deserved. They clung for each other, one unable to exist without the other, until flower overpowered tissue, and their lungs burst. Both consumer and consummated, consumed by ravenous growth. Their only contribution to this world was fertilizing a violent violet infestation.

It took hotel management a full month to clear out the brambles. No one could find the source or the root of the sudden infestation of Hydrangeas that seemed to explode in a twisted formation from the center of Room 610. Every piece of furniture was overrun by that intertwined ball of vines, thicker than cables and sticker than sap. The oddest thing was, as they hacked and sliced to clear the room, was that the vines seemed to pulse, ever so softly – like a nervous system, attuned to a heartbeat. Two heartbeats, actually, for one root system beat within the pauses of the other.

There was also blood all over the petals, scraps of skin residue here and there, a jumbled mess of red, peach and violet. But no body was ever found. The only thing a forensics expert could determine, is that all DNA samples belonged to one missing girl. To her, or to the flowers themselves.


Deconstruction of an Otaku Person


There wasn’t much really to Hinata’s life. He would go to his part-time job in Akihabara, selling the same merchandise he himself loved to collect, come home to his small two-by-two tatami mat apartment, and venture into the waking hours of the morning on the paper wings of a manga or the flashing lights of a video game. He had a community online, but he only knew them by username, not by face, and had never truly known any of them before. He was clearly what Japanese society terms a N.E.E.T. That is, Not in Education, Employment, or Training. And he was fine with that.

Why bother to foster relationships, careers, hobbies that are just eaten up by time or expenses in the end? No, better to spend the time on things that, even if they let you down, still massage those basic nerves of pleasure, pumping blood from the heart that yearns for escape from reality. That was Hinata’s philosophy, in more artistic terms since he hadn’t a creative bone in his body. He was built to consume.

Another long day of peddling perverted paraphernalia had passed before he finally reached the part of his routine that brought him home. Home, to a little cupboard with a TV on the floor, a pile of blankets in front of it, and food garbage littered around it in an almost ritualistic circle. The majority of the box’s volume was taken up by shelves – a full display of various entertainment, from video games to anime to manga to, above all else as the residential idols, his beloved painted figurines.

These figurines weren’t your run-of-the-mill action figures. They were expensive, handcrafted works of art. They were also sexy, something that was absolutely required if Hinata could feel comfortable dropping 90,000 yen on just one statuette. He was turning thirty next week, which meant that he had accumulated one-hundred and twenty-two high-grade PVC and silicone anime girls over the 16 years he had been collecting. They were the wallpaper, from floor to ceiling, in their flowery dresses, stylish kimonos, tight or revealing clothing. Ninjas, Magical Girls, Mech Pilots, Demons, Space Assassins, Vampires, Bunny Girls, Angels, Knights, Militants, Beasts, Schoolgirls…He had one girl for every occupation, any occasion. The occasion being: what was the flavor of his pleasure today?

Today, Hinata had sold a figure he never thought he would sell. An otaku, a total loser and pervert, acknowledged as ugly in her own anime show, to some boy who had a very depressing look on his face. So depressing, that Hinata almost empathized with him. But he didn’t want to empathize; he would rather escape into a cheerful game with a cheerful girl by his side tonight. Perhaps a city simulator RPG of some kind? As for the girl, well, the selection was his favorite part.

After looking over his assortment of dolls, Hinata decided on one of the Magical Girls. She had brilliant pink hair that sparkled when the light hit it a certain way, and a detailed gold-dusted wand with intricate flourishes of clear plastic to imitate a magical effect. She was suspended in midair using the same plastic, which allowed her ruffled sleek pink dress to be crafted in a way that suggested she was performing some sort of impressive acrobatics. And, to top it all off: her smile. The perfect combination of painted eyes and mouth, making it appear like she was filled with wonder and excitement to be doing whatever it is magical girls do. He needed that kind of wonder in his jaded adult life. So he picked her up, delicately, careful not to snap any of her fragile accessories.

Not careful enough, however. One of the Magical Girl’s translucent flourishes hooked onto the curled tail of a Snow Leopard hybrid, pulling the Beast from its den and onto the floor where it promptly snapped in half.

“Shit,” said the Magical Girl.

Hinata’s eyes widened in disbelief. He would have dropped her from shock if she hadn’t set him back two months rent to acquire. 

The Magical Girl figurine immediately tried to correct her mistake by stiffening up. But the damage was done, and the room was too small for Hinata to suspect an intruder. He poked her curiously in the cheek, which set her into a laughing fit.

Hinata tripped with surprise into his pile of blankets as the other one-hundred and twenty-two figures lining his shelves let out a collective groan.

“Well, that’s just great. Couldn’t keep the giggles to yourself, huh?”

“Stupid Magical Girls, always so pent up from being in storylines too serious for them.”

“Hey, don’t blame her breaking character on all of us! That’s a harmful stereotype!”

“All your magic rot your brain, huh? Baka!”

The Magical Girl figure blushed angrily. “W-w-well I can’t help it, you saw what this idiot did to poor Nugleatonga!”

“Mrooooooowr…”

“Oh, good, she’s all right at least.”

Hinata’s head was spinning. At first, the scenario was frightful, as any scenario involving living dolls usually was. But he quickly realized that they were all rooted to the spot, fastened securely on their stands, only able to move their heads and change their expressions. They may be alive, but they couldn’t go anywhere. He owned them. They were his, to talk to and find comfort in, to bring him the pleasures that friends usually offer. He wouldn’t have to be alone ever again, or be alone with people who he thought weren’t worth being around. He now had a captive audience, to enjoy his company as he enjoyed the typical pleasures of his passing days.

Almost as if they read his mind, all heads turned in unison to face Hinata directly. An entire cage lined with painted eyes from every side, judging his silence.

“Do you know why,” sneered a Mech Pilot, reclining on a model of the cockpit belonging to her giant robot (parts not included), “we have never talked to you before? It is because, while you are at work or engaged in frivolous play, we have our own way of finding entertainment.”

“Every figure based off of a popular brand – say, a popular hero from an anime show – is consciously tied to that property” explained a Smutty Teacher, bent provocatively over a desk with her thin metal pointer poised under indecipherable text scribbled on a chalkboard. “So, while we may seem inanimate, we are actually tied directly to our counterpart’s experiences in their primary medium. Whatever plots she experiences in her story on the screen or the page, we are able to experience it constantly, as if for the first time. And let us assure you, it never gets boring.”

“You, on the other hand,” scoffed a Schoolgirl, her skirt blown up like a tease, arms crossed and cheeks delicately colored pink with scribbles over her nose to show embarrassment though her voice relayed nothing but disgust, “are soooooo boring! Gawd! Every night you do the same damn thing…come home, fall down in that heap of greasy rags, hammer your thumbs on the control or your hand on your dick, and pass out. It’s just…It’s freaking pathetic.”

Hinata colored in anger and humiliation. These figures of plastic and paint had seen him do all sorts of embarrassing activities, watch shameful entertainment, mope and sulk in his loneliness, and now they could criticize him for all of it! He wouldn’t stand for it. He would break each and every one of them, take off their clothes, bring them to such a position of lowness that they wouldn’t dare speak to him like some homeless addict in his own apartment.

“Whatever you’re thinking, perv,” muttered a Demon Girl with built-in stone horns and a velvet tail wrapped around thighs bigger than the rest, “Don’t think we haven’t seen it before. You’re upset for us judging you, but don’t seriously act like that doesn’t describe you to a T! You take a dead-end job that pays you just enough for terrible food and a crap place, so you can blow all your cash on stuff that gets your rocks off. No savings for a better life, no energy to try harder, no time to build relationships. You don’t play video games for a release, you do it to get off on the girl avatars. Don’t lie, we see you, creep! You’re not a fictional hero, or some intelligent creative soul who deserves better and is just misunderstood, or a skilled professional in anything at all. A loser. Just a damn loser is what you are.”

Hinata seethed, but his confidence in being a superior human among inferior plastics was starting to waver. He did not back down! He insisted upon his philosophy, his hedonism, his attachment to the pleasures of buying material things that give you exactly what you expect. Why would he change, when this life was predictably pleasurable?

The little cupboard apartment was filled with the loud derisive laughter of every single figurine. The cackling broke Hinata’s spirit: this was the exact kind of noise he desired to escape, that he never wanted to hear from real people and so retreated to the imaginary.

“You moron,” spat a Bunny Girl, tastelessly showing the backside of her tights while holding a champagne tray, glasses filled with a hardened gel substance, “Don’t you know the only thing you’re relying on are all those horny, good feelings that come from being young? What happens when you get past thirty, then past forty, and you can’t get it up and you get all tired, fat, and old? Then, when you can’t even realistically escape to where you want in this little sanctuary you’ve built, cause you can’t even keep up with your fantasies, you won’t get nowhere out there in the real world, neither! Alone, broke, too tired to get your buzz on…Shit, you might as well just die now, dumbass!”

There was a murmur of agreement from all of the figures. An Angel in the back started the chant. The rest of the girls slowly joined in with sadistic glee.

“Die. Die. Die. Die. Die! Die! Die! DIE! DIE! DIE!”

The command was so loud, so violent, that the whole room was rumbling under the vibrations of their demonic timbre. The paint depicting their eyes, no matter the color, glowed red. Over a hundred cutesy anime eyes, shining all around him with the dim glow of an emergency exit sign that would open up straight into a deep pit of absolute darkness. Hinata desperately wanted to dash for the door, or at least flip the lights on, but he could no longer see which way it was – even if illumination was only at arms’ length. But his arms were too preoccupied, pressing his hands like suctions against his ears, and his skin was too thin to keep out that chorus of demeaning voices as they added more insults to the sad heap cowering in the center of the room.

“Idiot!”

“Loner!”

“Pathetic!”

“Virgin!”

“Antisocial Coward!”

“Introverted Weakling!”

“Broke-Ass Little Bitch!”

“Selfish Asshole!”

“Addicted Weeb!”

“Pervert!”

“Pedo Freak!”

“Creep!”

“Gamer Trash!”

“Loser!”

The voices wouldn’t stop. Curled in a ball, bawling, begging them to leave him alone, Hinata finally started screaming at the top of his lungs to drown them out. But the dolls were louder, their pulsating red eyes surrounding him oppressive, and he couldn’t look away from their voyeuristic delight at beholding such a pathetic piece of human waste shriveling up under the heat of their humiliation. That was the sort of thing from which they derived their greatest pleasure. It was about time they got some from their “owner” for a change. At least he could be somewhat useful for once in his worthless life.

♋ ♋ ♋

When the police burst into Hinata’s room, they were shocked by what they saw.

The Leasing Office had called them, firstly concerned with receiving the past month’s rent, which was never delivered, but secondly with concern for the tenant’s safety. Other neighbors had reported strange noises as they passed by the door every day – morning or night, it made no difference. The noise never stopped, a weak dry-heaving on perpetual loop, accompanied by the background vocals of a hundred whispers. 

Breaking down the door after he refused to open it, the police discovered Hinata lying curled up on the ground in the middle of his room. His hands were still clasped tight over his ears, milky eyes staring up at the ceiling but seeing nothing, skin stretched taut against his wiry frame that looked like it hadn’t been nourished once for an entire month. His chapped lips quivered fearfully, repeating nothing in particular but simply reminding himself he still existed, by virtue of having a voice. The police tried to remove his hands from his ears, but they wouldn’t budge; his joints and muscles were so tensed up from fear and time working against him, that they had locked in place.

It would take four months before Hinata recovered from dehydration, starvation, lack of sunlight, muscle spasticity, and psychological trauma. During therapy, he refused to say what happened to make him feel like that…other than his home had been “invaded” and that he had been forced to “look inside himself and make changes in his second shot at life.” Hinata may have missed his thirtieth birthday, but whatever ordeal he underwent in that dark cupboard of a room ensured that his future birthdays would extend much longer. And have much more meaning.

Filed away in the police report, as well as the Leasing Agent complaint, was the status of Hinata’s apartment at the time of the rescue. Everyone knew about it, but the landlord decided, upon a personal visit to the scene, that he wanted no part in whatever the Hell was going on there, and took the room completely off the books for good.

What the police had walked in on was a peculiarly minimalist room, but nothing they hadn’t seen before from a dead-end N.E.E.T. like this one. What made it peculiar were the statuettes lining the shelves, hundreds of them. They could tell they were once figures of cute anime girls, very expensive, expertly crafted and clearly coveted by collectors.

Once.

Now, they were repulsive, sickly monstrosities. Their limbs, bodies, and necks had stretched towards where Hinata’s limp body had been retrieved, as if hungry to claim his soul. Paint had melted, smeared, swirled across their bodies in indecipherable symbols and streaked their faces into bleeding nightmares. Their clawed fingers, pointing at him with accusations – painted mouths split to become smiling fanged jaws – their eyes, hollowed out into empty pits – their clothes, torn and blended in with their bodies to create leathery, mutated forms with multicolored appendages stretching out towards, again, the spot where Hinata was recovered. Hinata refused to mention the figures, grew pale as a sheet whenever they were, and the therapist tasked with his recovery eventually shut down the topic altogether.

The police chalked Hinata up as a mental case and left it alone. The Leasing Agent, however, needed to resell the apartment, and continued to receive complaints of threatening whispers coming from within.  He also heard that a lot of the previous tenant’s abandoned belongings would fetch a high price, which was as a good incentive as any for action.  So, one day, he decided enough was enough and opened the door to clear the place out.

It must have been a trick of the dark, but…The Leasing Agent could have sworn that, as soon as the light entered that stuffy cell, every single head of every single figurine swiveled in unison. Staring, directly at him – judging, and eager to see the natural sentence carried out, so they had a good reason laugh forever and ever.

The Leasing Agent locked the door behind him and never looked back.


Round the Rood


I have a fetish. A peculiar fetish. An undeniable, unabashed, unwavering fetish for one thing, and one thing only: the Cathedral. Strange, perhaps, that this is the first time I am making such a confession to anyone, considering my expertise in confessional design requires me to spend more time with them than sins I have. But I know a fetish when I feel one, and this confession makes me feel nothing but the purest of joys – there is no shame here.

When I see a Cathedral, something about it elevates my spirit to the heights of those arches, those domes, those skylit clerestories and triforiums.  I quake when I see a Carolingian, and am beyond myself in the presence of a Byzantine. Baroque be always in style with me, and I am always eager for an Eclectic. Oh, how many shapes, how many forms, how many feelings do these ancient structures hold? I am no Christian, though I appreciate the unnecessary idolization of their temples. My love for these stony sanctuaries is as close as I’ve gotten to religion, in fact. But it is a true love, a reasonable love – for who could resist admiring the majesty of such noble art? And, if admiring it be so common, then how exceptional those few must be who fetishize them.

When I was young, I would steal away from church services just to explore the plain nooks and crannies our church offered. As a child I found it preferable to the sermons, but, as I aged, I became learned to just what a meager imitation it was of edificio del Padre. It was a boring, trite little thing, constructed from wood for the sole purpose of keeping out drafts and keeping Christians in. Smelling of mulch outside from the dying gardens, and of the must rising from the decaying husks of the congregation inside, trapped under the beams of a breaking roof. Where there is pure utility, there is no art.

My family, my friends, so-called though they were, are to me a bore and waste of time. There is no elevation to their conversation, no art to their small talk, no beauty in their sloppily crafted personas, no no no no no! Not only do they offer paltry interactions that are hardly comparable to the divine connection between myself and my sanctuaries, but they also fail to understand how and why and what is the idol of my devotion. Not one single person knows one fact about Cathedrals. They could at least act like they cared! But they do not, so I do not, and would rather spend my time beneath marble arches not my own than under the shingled roof that is.

There is no cathedral, in my humble obsessive opinion, more artistic than St. Paul’s – so there is naturally no other roof I’d rather be under at this moment. I can hardly remember any place in this damp miserable Londontown that I’ve been, outside of St. Paul’s, so uninspired and uninspiring were they. I know its every nook and cranny, its every crowded catacomb and vault and side chapel. I could tell you the name of every jamb figure, blind, by tracing my fingers along their stony beards and crowns. I can draw a blueprint up in no time, and tell you where every secret portal is located, its style and the importance of its users. I have walked back and forth under the porticoes, learning St. Paul’s façade until it is no more complex to my eye than the back of my hand. These intricate parapets, those mighty pendentives, the splendid simplicity of bosses in between the creative complexity of buttresses – there is no place I’d rather be.

I remind myself now of the importance in my love for cathedrals, my intimate mappings of their structures,  because there must be some concealed explanation that love can uncover; one to tell me why I’m here, now, staring over the bannister encircling St. Paul’s triple-shelled dome, at this late, late hour. Two o’ clock…a very early and very strange hour. A very empty, a very echoey, a very unhinged hour. The only hour, I’m slowly discovering, in which I’d rather not be at the place I’d most rather be at during any other waking hour. Two o’clock is not a waking hour – I’m therefore quite terrified. I regret having sneaked inside for a moment alone from those religious invaders.

There is something else I must confess, though I am embarrassed to do so. As I scaled the winding stairs upwards to the Whispering Gallery, I discovered a new part of the cathedral that had, to this day, eluded my loving gaze. A hole, not intentional, a fault in the construction, that I never noticed before. Had I been averting my eyes, refusing to acknowledge the obvious cracks beneath my beloved St. Paul’s skin? But I did not mind the hole, so much as I minded my lack of knowledge about it. Surely there was some reason for the darkness beyond, some reason to justify or beautify the absence of material and the extension of space? The breeze crawling out was cool, drawing me in, promising that to crawl inside would be to open my eyes to some deeper secret about these objects of my affection. First my head, then my chest, my stomach, my legs finally passed through, and I had passed through.

At first glance, I had seen a room beyond this hole, but it must have been some trick of the light since I was sliding downwards, along a steep slope. Slate buried itself under my fingernails as I instinctively tried to dig in, prevent myself from being pulled into some inescapable recess, but my efforts were futile. Like a rat in a pit trap, I slid with fear towards what I was sure was my doom, gathering so much dust and cobwebs that I wouldn’t be able to see even if it wasn’t pitch black. The air grew colder, and colder, and stuffier, and ancient, until I hit a floor and launched forward into open space until I sprawled against a railing.

Coughing and patting the dust from my clothes, peeling the cobwebs from my eyebrows, I was met with the echo of my own voice. An echo whose timbre was very familiar to me, and I could soon see why as well as hear: I was at the Whispering Wall, a circular balcony three stories up in the dome of St. Paul’s, overlooking the plummet to the tiles below. Pushing myself back, it dawned on me just how impossible it was – I had descended for what seemed like a full minute at a gut-dropping pace, to end up on the same level at which I began? By no accounts did that make sense. Even less so as I turned to observe my exit, only to discover that there was none to be found. Whatever hole I stumbled out of, the end to that tunnel – gone. Only the two doors I knew to be the only entrances and exits were visible, and they were too far for me to suppose the mysterious hole spat me through a bit of unexpected renovation. So how did I end up here?

I feel a shiver delicately stroke my spine, for I see now that I am not completely alone. On the other side of the gaping hole is another man. He stares at me blankly. Or, perhaps that is a blank stare? I have trouble discerning his expression from this distance – and without my glasses, which I seem to have misplaced. He is more fuzz than man at this distance. But, perhaps, there is no reason to fear? Since he is up here with me, surely he must know where I was deposited from, and why.

It is not customary for me to approach others in this place, though it be erected for fellowship and group-worship. I have no use for those purposes. I exist to laud the glory of the building itself, none of the extraneous attachments that have leeched themselves to it. Still, I cannot deny that the emptiness at such an hour unnerves me, and this mysterious figure across the way is a welcoming sight.

They do not seem inclined to greet me, so I take the first step clockwise to close the gap. No sooner do I take that step, do they take one clockwise as well.

“No, don’t worry! Wait right there, I’ll come to you,” I chuckle good-naturedly.

They do not reply. But they do move in the same direction as I try to get closer. No matter how fast I walk around the dome, I always end up equidistant to this mysterious figure as before.

“Oh, I’m sorry. Did you want to be alone? Were you praying?”

There, I can see his mouth moving…but…

“I’m sorry, I can’t…I can’t hear you! Can you speak up?”

His mouth is clearly forming words, but I don’t know what they are. He is pointing at me, jabbing his finger in my direction almost desperately. Is he mocking me, pretending to speak but instead taking advantage of the fact that we are alone to act out some sort of selfish frustration upon me?

But I have forgotten for a moment where we are: The famed Whispering Gallery, where echoes travel round about and can be heard from the other side of the dome. Talk about the perfect merger of utility and art! If he means to say something, that would certainly get the message across.

I point to the stone and gesture as if speaking into it. They get the gist, and slink over to their side of the wall, bend over, and speak into it.

Even pressing my ear almost to the wall, I cannot make out the words – his mouth is clearly moving, from what I can see, strained into an horrified gaping hole snapping open and shut like a fish. And echoing through the wall is some unnerving squishy sound, like bubbles popping in wet clay being pressed between two powerful hands. The squishing and squelching stirred something in me, like a song that resonates with your heart. But not a good one – a herald that something terrible is near, and you are the only one alone for miles and miles who can hear it. And, worse than that, the songmaker knows just how alone you are.

“Okay,” I shouted, my patience exasperated, “I’ll leave you alone if you’re just going to-“

Turning from the wall, I see the figure plainly for a split second. Standing rigid on the edge of the precipice with his head lifted high, and, in the second split of that second, disappearing over the lip. A few seconds more, and a muddy thud is felt throughout St. Paul’s, resonating its way up to me. I did not fully register what just happened at first. It is early, after all, and I am still floundering about in my own headspace from that trip earlier through the hole in the wall. But I peer over the edge of the hole, slowly, cautiously – sure enough, three stories below, lies the man’s motionless body. Faintly twitching, crumpled in a spread heap like an insect crushed underfoot.

“Help! Someone help! A man just fell,” I shouted downwards, leaning over the lip, at the top of my lungs. “Can’t anyone hear me?” But no one could, for the Cathedral was empty – I had made sure of that before I entered. The salivary sucking of the man’s breaths echoed louder, from all around the Whispering Wall, and from beneath me, filling the entire enormity of the main chamber.

I stumble backwards and through one of the two true doors to the Whispering Gallery. My flight down the winding stairs was a dangerous descent, every step weak from the shock, until I burst out into the main chamber on the breath of the wind.

The atrium was vast, gleaming, empty. The squelching still rebounded in echoes off the walls, growing fainter and fainter until it faded away completely – and yet, he was already gone. Vanished! But to where? There is no way anyone could survive a fall from such a height, onto this solid surface, or break through it to the catacombs and gift shop below. I know because I smacked the ground with my open palm, just to make sure. There was no hole, no indentation, no blood spatter to indicate anyone had fallen at all, and my hand hurt now so I knew I must be awake.

But that, too, I began to doubt, as Portland stone and gold, wood and limestone, all together began to slide off the wall in one goopeous glob of heavy mush, pulling priceless artifacts from the wall as they poured ever so slowly, a cascading waterfall of dull colors, seeping over the pulpit and the pews and the spot where the strange man had fallen. Or not fallen…At this point, I don’t know what’s real anymore.

Dizzy, I stepped one heel after the other, backwards, towards the front door – never taking my eyes off the center, never looking away, ever watching. What was the cause of these hallucinations tonight? The door, the man, the walls, all indicated that I was losing my mind to images that were trying their hardest to make my absolute favorite place in the whole world the last place I want to be right now. Then my back bumped against the door, and the relief I felt told me that they had succeeded. I fumbled for the handle, and fled down the steppes into the greenish-orange lamplight of the streets.

“Help! Someone! Anyone,” I called, no longer for the invisible man, but for myself. For I was now suddenly gripped with the terror of being alone in the world, and I needed more than the living shadow of St. Paul’s overhead. I needed the shadow of something that was supposed to be living, and so I tripped over the steps and against the door of the first lodging I could find. Hammering at the door, shouting my usual entreaties for this particular night, “Help! Someone! Anyone!” 

A light suddenly went on in the window! I could hear laughing, see the shadows of people making merry. But they were oblivious to my pounding, my begging, my cursing – in their joy I had no part, and they would not allow me to make a case otherwise.

I stepped back down the steps, seething, to discover one of them was watching. This one was different: a silhouette, sitting still and undisturbed in the window up and to my left, exiled from those in the lighted room. I could tell from their profile that they were staring at me, like the Statue of Queen Anne, regal and accusatory, but I could not make out any features. I felt an invisible force in my heart, bidding me to press my ear back to the door; what would they tell me?

…squish…squeech…squEESHSQUNCHSQUASHSQUELCH-”

I shoved my body from that cursed door and fled once again. Down the long rows of terrace houses seeming to stretch on ad infinitum, I was pushing my lungs to their limit. I tried to stay focused, straight ahead, forcing my mind to ignore the fact that there were silhouettes in every window, staring without a sliver of compassion down on me in my mad dash towards some unseen exit. No more shadows in the throes of partying, only the one lone figure in the upper window, my only witness. And that infernal squelching, like a finger in a cup of goo, or wax melting down its frame – following me from behind, below, all around, closing in on me from that endless stretching wind of two-story houses.

And then, a sign: “NO THROUGH ROAD.” The mark of dead ends. And what a dead end it was – an architectural marvel in simplest form. A sheer, blemishless concrete wall, straight up into the night, connecting the two opposite rows of terrace houses. There was no way around it or over it, no way to escape the SQUELCHSQUELCH seeping fast on my heels. There was, however, a small brick protruding out on the edge of the wall. I pulled at the brick; it fell easily out. So did the next. And the next. One by one until a hole large enough for me to crawl through opened up. Without a second thought, ears clogged with that goopy dredge at work on my nerves, I plunged into the opening.

I tumbled, over and over, nose and eyes overwhelmed by the most ancient dust that had ever clouded my senses. I felt my joints bent out of shape, my head bruised, unable to tell which way was up or down or even able to try reaching out for a stable surface. Eventually, I let it take me – down, down, down into whatever pit I was to be deposited in.

I felt a blast of open, cool air and skidded face-first over a series of wooden steps. Rolling over onto my back, the familiar tingles of joy from peering into the beauty of thethe virtuous voussoirs of the dome, with its one little porthole providing me with a front-row seat to the light of dawn. Joy, turned to confusion, turned to horror: I was back at the Whispering Wall in St. Paul’s Cathedral.

Pulling myself up by the railing, I felt a little groan wheeze from between my cracked and dusted lips. How could this be? I ran all through the streets of London, to end up here again, three stories up, over a mile from where I had entered that hole in the wall? This must be a dream…No, a terrible nightmare. Not even the frescoes above could improve my outlook on the situation.

An outlook that, as I spied the fuzzy man on the other side of the wall, standing behind the railing as he did earlier before he jumped, grew dimmer every passing second. The fuzzy man was just as obscured as he had been – now, not only because his face was all staticized, but because something stood between him and I. 

Or, floated, rather.

It was an awful sight – a hovering vision made of clay, silver and gold, not quite spiritual, not quite physical. A Masterwork that had been floating with its hand connected to the man’s left shoulder, at first beholding a humanistic figure not so different from the Saints and angels lining the facades both within and without. Its skin seemed, again paradoxically, both liquid and solid, rippling under the beams of first light. I stared at the beautiful angel, its outstretched motionless wings draping the man in shadows as if about to engulf him, when it slowly turned in midair and looked directly at me.

Its face was my face, and I hated it. I had never seen an expression like that across my features, making it seem alien to me as it drifted towards me. Like it wanted me, but not for anything good – the blank stare of lust, to possess the love I had for its dwelling place and quash it forever.

Running towards the man seemed like my only option; perhaps we could stand a chance against this mutual threat? It seemed to be stalking him as well…But no matter how fast I run, he is always equidistant from where I first began: on the complete opposite side of the void between us.

And still the living statue draws near. I see its skin bubbling up, screaming faces pressing themselves against the stone from within, its muddy unmolded body floating steady and never losing ground in the flight towards me. An abominable Seraphim on tendryllic wings, coming to claim my soul as part of its facade.

I shouted at the man. I tried to wake him up, warn him; he could not hear, or he would not listen, or he willed himself not to listen so he could not hear. And now the clay abomination was upon me, throwing its thick threads of gold and silver onto my face, my body, suctioning my body in with the power of a sinkhole as it tried to make me one of those contorted faces within its parasitic body. And my ears, my ears! Always assaulted with that malodorous squelching. Had it really been after me this whole time?

I would not let the clay spectre take me without resistance. I pushed into that inflexibly soft core, shouting at the top of my lungs. I would be heard! I would not go quietly into obscurity! The more I struggled, like quicksand, the greater its power over me. So long as I feared it, denied it, found reason not to be absorbed into its cool, milky embrace.

Why, though? Why did I resist? Did I not enter the hole in the wall to uncover the secrets of St Paul’s? And here was the secret, about to illuminate the darkest recesses of architecture, while I resist the very unknown thing I sought. So I stopped my struggles, my resistance, and clung tightly to the clay that had enveloped me. Tell me your secrets! Lead me to the truth! Bring me a higher pleasure than any other cathedral has before!

Only then did it recoil. The entire figure melted into a single stream, like oil carried on the wind, and seeped up towards the skylight. I called after it, but the whole body slipped through my fingers. I reached out, as if to grip the tail of a kite that had almost flown out of reach, but my fingers closed over nothing. My feet also teetered over into nothing, shocking me with the realization that I had somehow ended up standing over the railing during the struggle. As I teetered forward, balance lost, I glimpsed the static man. for the last time, turning from the Whispering Wall. He did not see me, but I saw him – the face that was my own, every bit my likeness, coloring and rigifying before my very eyes as the product of the sentient clay Masterwork. And the product was me, formed to witness my own destruction and run towards it nonetheless.

I fell. Three stories, maybe more, watching the glory of all I loved pass by in a blur until the tiled floor rose and met me in the chest. For a brief second, I heard my own voice above me calling for help, and understood that my body would not move, but these observations were drowned out. For it was coming…that dreaded squishing sound, catching up to me from below. 

SQEESHSQUNCHSQUASHSQUELCH

I could do nothing. Maybe I just didn’t want to – what was the point? And perhaps, through all the fear and the instinct that this would not be good, this would all lead only to nothing, I found myself too unconcerned with any other outcome than to see where I would be dragged to. The tile floor was like unhardened concrete, yielding to accept me as I sank downwards to where the sound was. All I could see there was the perfectly smooth surface of dark gray stone, shifting and moving and changing direction like it had taken residence behind my eyelids, since my body knew that downwards was the only direction it was headed. I heard my doppelganger pass overhead, shouting so ineptly for help. Ah, he would come to realize the pointlessness soon enough. For I was familiar with the sound now, recognizing it as the sound of Future’s waste, hidden beneath every crowning spire man erected to beautify it.

Whatever it truly was, it had found me long ago. Forever now I go to greet it, deep in the bowels of my beloved cathedral. Not because I want to, no, but…Well, when I think about such a fetish as mine – which was all I ever thought about – what else would I have done?


Moses Shrugged


Waiting rooms are uncomfortable. Fight me if you don’t agree, but, with throbbing silence and awkward glances pointed both at you and nowhere, I’d personally rather be anywhere else. Fight me on any other waiting room, even…but not this one. Something…something about this particular box, the faux-velvety, clinical space, is worse than the others. Not just worse…intolerable. It could be the humidity of the sweat going down my back, gathering behind the folds of my neck and collecting in mucky pools. It could be the judgmental eyes of the skinny little girl across from me, staring me down when she’s certain I won’t notice but swiftly shifting into a study of the green wallpaper behind me when I meet her gaze. It could be the long paperwork before me, the fact that I haven’t eaten anything all day, the haze from the marijuana that helps with the pain and long days…

But, I think, maybe the cause of my discomfort…is that I shouldn’t be here at all.

I didn’t think I’d ever be in this position. He was going to take care of me, we were going to make it together, and I was going to make the home he’d look forward to returning to. He was the love of my life, I thought, I thought with rapture as he plunged into me again and again, before he plunged into the sea never to rise again and left me sore – with the swell of my body and the breaking of my waters. We worked so hard to get to America…it was America that took him from me, and the hundreds of other lives that never returned to the their wives and husbands and leave them in the position that I am now.

Alone in a waiting room.

I study the crimson…green?…crimson wallpaper directly ahead, flaking off like the skin of some rotting corpse. Is this what I came for? Is this the dream we were all told to fall in love with? I clutched tightly to the black duffel sitting on my lap. Tightly, but tenderly.

My name was being called, but I didn’t want to hear it yet.
“Mrs. Continuista?”
Not yet.
“Is there a Mrs. Continuista here?”

“All right, guess she got tired of waiting. Miss Darnell?”
“Right here!”

The skinny kid across from me sprung up and hop-skipped to the counter, where a manicured pair of deep-brown hands shuffled papers under a pane of glass that concealed their owner.

“And what did you want today, sister?”
“Well, my boyfriend and I have been going at it for a couple of months.”
“Congratulations. You must be really good in bed, for him to stay that long.”
Mockery is lost on Miss Darnell.
“We’ve been trying so hard, and I think I’m finally –“

She breaks short and gives a tight squeal, trying to make the receptionist share her
excitement. The glass pane blocks any connection between them, except vocal.

“You’re finally what?
“Oh, you know…”
“We’re a clinic. You must be specific with the need our services can assist in.”
“I’m pregnant!”

She half-glances at the people behind her, as if expecting this information to affect our
lives somehow. Instead, I feel all of them stare directly at me – to avoid her.

“Then why are you here?”
“Well, Charlie changed his mind, doesn’t think he’s ready. Wants me to get rid of it.”
“So an abortion for you, then?”
“Hell no! It’s my body, my decision. I’m keeping it!”
“Then why are you here, Miss Darnell?”
“I want a mammogram. I know I’m not far along yet, but I’d like to see if it’s a boy or a girl.”
A pause.
A longer pause.
“A’ight, get yo dumbass self outta here.”

Miss Darnell stammered in disbelief. It was definitely unexpected.

“We look like a charity to you? Mammograms. You’re shittin’ me. You know how expensive that equipment is? Only hospitals got that shit. We do abortions. I dunno how many times I gotta tell you entitled bitches before it gets through your dense melons. Get outta here, Miss Darnell.”

Miss Darnell, bright pink as a strawberry, stood still for a moment. She turned as if she’d been slapped, and left with the most pathetic and unconvinced huff I’ve ever heard. But I was convinced. I stood. The black duffel swung back in forth on the crook of my arm.

I moved to the glass pane. The receptionist’s hands smoothed out her papers, and her professional saleswomanship with it.

“Yes, sister? What did you want today?”
“I’m Mrs. Continuista.”
“I see. I hope, with a last name like that, you’re not here to ask for a mammogram.”
“An abortion.”
“Well, well…It’s a new age, then, isn’t it? And have you filled out the paperwork?”
I handed the sheets to her disembodied hands.
“Excellent. And? Did you have any questions?”
“I don’t want to do it.”
A pause.
A longer pause.
I prepared for another outburst.
“What brought you here?”
“What do you mean?”
“Why did you feel you needed an abortion in the first place?”
“I don’t know. I guess…I guess I’m afraid.”
“You’re all alone, are you?”
“Yes.”
“Typical. Men, am I right? Doing whatever they want with your body, then running off whenever they want to. Nothing but the dust of the Earth, if you ask me.”
“Oh, no, he was completely faithful. He lived long enough to learn I was pregnant…but…
not much longer than that. I just don’t think I can handle supporting two people alone.”
“Oh, sister, I’m sorry to hear that. How did he die?”
“I don’t like to talk about it…he was in the Navy. Comes with the occupation, I guess.”
“Oh my God, that’s terrible. Jeanine!”

A few seconds bring another shadow behind the lacquered glass.

“Yeah?”
“Tell Jeanine your sad story, Mrs. Continuista.”
I do.
“Why, child, that’s so terrible! Just awful! It’s one of those stories you always hear, you know, as hypotheticals, but never do you actually meet someone who’s gone through it. Like those girls who end up pregnant from their rapist, or the jackass who lied about putting a condom on, or the woman whose life is in danger if she has the child, you just never see something like this very often, if hardly at all. Usually it’s just the hazards that come with recreational sex. Nothing special, nothing uncommon, so no problem. Right?”

Jeanine’s milky silhouette faded away into a room deeper back.

“Don’t worry anymore. You are in the right place. We exist for people exactly like you, who come down with this unforeseen affliction. I mean, who can resist sex? Who can resist the greatest feeling ever? We’re here to eliminate the repercussions, like taking the fat out of cake. Think of it, not as a practice, but as a service to womankind. To you. Now, for scheduling your operation…”


Please…
“Well, aren’t you brave. Taking advantage of the new law, so soon?”
“Yes.”
“Now I see why you were so nervous. How long have you had the Tumor?”
“Tumor?”
“It’s what we call them at this stage. Tumors. Helps with the separation. After all, yours is much more of a leech now than before, right? Suckling away at your future. Where is it, anyway?”

I heave my black duffel onto the counter. I unzip it. Inside, bundled up, is the Tumor, fast
asleep. Sedated.

“My, my. Ain’t that just pathetic. And you’ve let that thing fester for three weeks?”
“I wasn’t sure if this was the right decision.”
“You’ve said it before, you haven’t much of a choice. What, you want to give it up to one of those relocation agencies, constantly wondering where it’s been passed? No, you were right to come to us. You know, our founder, the mother of all our good work, our patron saint of Darwinism.”
She sniggered at her own little joke.
“She was probably thinking of poor souls just like you, Mrs. Continuista, when she built our first clinics.”

The receptionist’s ebony hands clacked long, painted nails against the counter. Her emotions were getting riled, though the bright red stripes on the tips of drumming fingers were all I could see.

“And people call her immoral, acting like Moses when he came down the mountain and threw down his tablets, when they’re all worshipping the same golden bull? How many other animals kill their offspring, in far worse ways, and for less use than us. And now they’re crying over this new law? Bitch, please! When women are forced to go through this painful process to fix a mistake, it’s not their fault. The new law gives us an opportunity to make it less painful, less violent, at less cost, and, most importantly, to better serve the patient and her body, and suddenly it’s a moral outrage? It’s, like, when are your supposedly progressive minds going to woman up, and take your worldview to its logical conclusion? It’s fucking hypocritical!”

Her nails stopped drumming.
“You’re still not convinced, are you?”
“No. Sorry.”
She sighed and leaned back. It wasn’t a sigh of annoyance, but more like the heart’s gas
pipe pushing out an excess breath of pity.
“You ever heard of Jean Piaget?”
“No. Sorry.”

“Not surprised. He was a Swiss psychologist, did some work on education and brain development. I won’t go into his theories, because they don’t matter, but what does matter is he determined a child can’t act apart from its own impulses and observations until age two. Crying, curiosity, eating, pissing…it’s all done on impulse. The child has no sense of self, like any regular animal, with a constant present perspective and no way of expressing itself as a human being, in its own brain or in interactions with human beings. It has no means of communicating to us that it is human, no way of using human signs, or any kind of meaningful sign, to define itself as human. It has no self-consciousness. Therefore-“

“It’s a Tumor.”

“You said it, not me. Ever seen a newborn foal? A baby hippo? Ever wonder why human offspring are so completely helpless compared to the rest of the animal kingdom? They’re born too early. If they came out as developed as, say, a fawn, the mother’s body wouldn’t be able to handle it. In other words, birth is the body’s way of aborting the child before it becomes dangerous. It’s still technically a fetus even now, skull still unformed, immune system still haywire, because it’s only here on borrowed flesh from your body, sister. It’s not yet it’s own, and you’re still in control.”

I sighed. I don’t know why I did it, whether it was because I was hoping she’d talk me out of it, or because I was just tired of worrying about what I should do.
“Is it done humanely?”
“Oh, yes. Euthanization is all pretty sophisticated nowadays. Courts wouldn’t have passed the law if it wasn’t.”
I sighed again. Her trimmed hands slowly slid another form in front of me. I picked up a pen and looked down. I almost dropped the pen.
“What the Hell is this?”
“Oh, well, you can receive compensation if you want. A portion of the profits after we sell its –
“And if I refuse?”
“You won’t receive anything, but the pieces will still go to market, with or without your consent. We know what you’re going through, so we’d understand if you’d prefer not to receive what some call ‘blood money’. I see yours is male, so you might receive even more.”
I signed. But I didn’t check that box.
“Suit yourself.”
“Anything else?”
“Yes, actually. I had Jeanine run your profile through the system.”
My breath caught.
“Sorry, protocol. Why didn’t you tell us the Tumor was defective?”
“I’m sorry, defective?”
“Diagnosed with autism, according to your doctor’s records.”
My caught breath ran away into some unknown recess in the pit of my stomach, and expanded there.
“Will that be a problem?”
“Oh, no, not at all! In fact, it makes your decision much more reasonable.”
“It won’t affect your profits on its brain, or something?” I said that with sarcastic spite. This time, the glass shielded the receptionist.

“Of course not! We’re not Dr. Frankenstein over here. We’re not even a medical practice, technically, more of a service. To make your life livable again. We thank you for your patronage, Mrs. Continuista, and ask you to think of us next time your body is afflicted.”

The long, crimson nails stretched under the glass and gripped my duffel bag. As soon as it started to slide toward the slot…my Tumor’s eyes opened. It looked directly at me. It smiled, though its mouth made no movement, and reached upwards at me, though it conveyed no desire, and I was struck hard by how much it reminded me of him. And I knew, I knew that I would be haunted by that face as I was by his, though I was sure that doing this I would not have to watch it grow up and see it every day and be reminded of that empty place he left in my heart.

The Tumor began crying on the other side of the glass.

The entire waiting room lit up with frightened, glossy eyes, as if the very specter of Death was drumming his bony knuckles on their bloated bellies. One began to cry. Then another. Then they were all wailing banshees, unsure of where this sound was coming from within themselves.

“You dumb bitch! Look what you’ve done to your sisters! You were supposed to sedate it properly! You asshole! You whore! You piece of shit!”

The receptionist’s screams sent me out of the waiting room as fast as my weak legs could go without a mind controlling them.

I left the waiting room, but I couldn’t escape the wailing. That damned, haunted wailing. They were the sirens behind my car. They were the nightmare floating above my head. They were the rot in my fruit, the cramp in my leg, the pressure in my skull, the nightmare above my bed, the distraction at my work, the early to my climax, the impatience in every good thing I could find for myself. But, but…it only lasted a short while, relatively. The wails faded to echoes, and then to a memory, the memory of him, and I could go on living. It’s been years, and many more women have made the same choice I did. But I still did it when not everyone was…I was one of the firsts. I was also one of the last to question it, and I’m just glad I don’t have to question it any longer.

But I can’t help thinking sometimes. And sometimes reminds me of back then, back when I stopped thinking for only one moment, a moment I was sure would be for the best. But now all I’m sure of…I’m sure I left behind more than just the Tumor that day.


The Mellowdramatic Murder of My Reservation


The fault of a part is usually to blame for collapse in the whole.

This is the mantra of retrospective foresight, an employment that demands sacrifice for smoother waters tomorrow. Especially when it comes to social mingling and supposedly required interactions of the juvenile kind…I absolutely must be a master at this.

It is the only way I, the Don Quixote of the millennial era, can hope to blend in with false niceties and a cloak of similarity. Nevertheless, I still have hope for them! With each interaction, I learn how to entice my fellow twenty-something year olds, how to meet them as equals, how to tolerate their obsessions. Somewhere within the rotted crust of the whole lies a golden core, and I chew away relentlessly for that sweet center. Reservation is the hero here, certain that humanity is worth investing time and understanding in. Besides, I know, without Reservation and retrospective foresight…then I am a carp, flopping around on the top of a hill, miles away from the lake; it’s a nice view, but I need that damn water if I’m going to live.

Desperate for a breath of clear air from my home, a place I like to call “Hell’s Crotchpocket,” I opted for a semester studying in London, England. Here I could start afresh, with an optimistic mind and an open heart. All I needed to remember: the fault of a part is usually to blame for the collapse of the whole. I must steel every socializing nerve in my body, prepare myself mentally, and make myself the most impressive foreigner they’ve ever seen. One crack in the cement, and that whole edifice comes crumbling down.

Personal justifications aside, it was a failure. The fault must definitely lay with that Norwegian…A pal of mine (I think), fast friends despite being clearer opposites than Progressives and Conservatives, with his brash and unapologetic nature putting my own manipulative goodwill out to dry. He and I were due for a shindig that clocked in at nine, but that more experienced fellow assured me that drinking beforehand was a prerequisite. So I acquiesced, stood in the corner, as he and the rest of my flat drank. Long bottles of tequila, stubby glasses of rum, cubic vials of vodka, all disappearing down their hollow throats – my flatmates, ten in total, who insisted on showing me how parties are done in the UK. As the minutes trickled on, the clocklike array of cards began to mysteriously lose face, and I began to doubt if we would ever get to the party. The time rang eleven, though only for me.

It was supposed to be fun, a kickstart night welcoming all freshmen (and international students like myself). A night of easy dancing and cool music, an event of socializing and getting to know those whom you might spend the rest of your university days with – or the rest of your life, even. At least, that’s what I hope from the bottom of my heart it will turn out to be. I may have journeyed here to study, add another cinderblock in an impressive degree, but that doesn’t shelve my romantic telescope. And let me tell you, from this chilly mountaintop, the stars promised to be bright tonight.

But then the Norwegian was drunk. He was my closest compatriot in this strange land, and exceptionally handsome, so I was relying on his company to loosen crowds. But his tongue loosened first, loosened so much that it wrought a cannon to fire off as many derogatory statements into the hearts of our female companions as possible. I would have risked it, though. I would have risked it to not be alone at the forthcoming party, but he soon disappeared with a group of even looser buddies. All who obviously had attended the pre-drinking festivities of their own flats, and manifested within a cloud of smoke that reeked filthily of nicotine. For the record, the Norwegian did wildly gesture at me to join, but there were far too many of his kind now that my hand was forced to disappointedly wave him off. I shouldn’t have relied so heavily on his company.

And so the fault must certainly lie with these worthless pre-drinking festivities. Before he left, the Norwegian tried to force me to drink, said it would get my blood pumping – and he was probably right. But the stuff tastes like rubbish, and I would rather not act like rubbish, so I focus on Kings as the rest of the powwow passes around their Peace Pint. After the Norwegian, it was the Indian who got drunk first. But she was petite, and whined pathetically as the games penalties were heaped on her shoulders, sinking her further into that muddlebrained mire. I laugh, I compete in the categories seriously, but I am deeply anxious to hurry to the real party. The real party that might offer such a change from the stagnant cesspools of Hell’s Crotchpocket. Who would I meet? Could I actually convince a beautiful, intelligent young woman to drink with me? Of course, I wouldn’t have more than one glass; I must keep my wits out of courtesy for her company…Still, what of the dancing – will it be actual dancing? How do I approach her? What if my movements fall short of charming, and I-

The German directs my attention towards choosing a card. She is the only other not drinking, and as antsy as I to move on to the venue. “It must be everything I hope for, right?” I signal with my eyes. She might be a third year, but she’s still a novice at reading expressions because she just smiles agreeably and sips her Coke.

I am continually offered the community booze, and politely refuse with not decreasingly hidden disgust. Nevertheless, my optimism is unwavering, even as the drunken festivities clamber towards midnight, and I see shadows in the soggy walkways lurching homewards, probably those who arrived at its commencement around nine.

Actually, that sight does put a damper on my hopes.

Thankfully, the German has also had enough, and joins my pleas that convince the rest of our haggard troupe to move on to the main event…Finally! I confess to excitement, though I’ve always put a firm heel down on the throat of this particular brand of merrymaking…it’s simply not the kind of indulgence I’d prefer taking advantage of. But it’s an alien thing to me, this “clubbing” business, and novelty is enough to quiet principle for a brief while. I smile at the German for assisting this poor American in his dilemma. Perhaps she can take the place of the Norwegian?

Her eyes flutter and she places her hand gently on my arm. I smile sweetly back at her and escape before she further misinterprets my actions.

The rain comes in a light sprinkle. I won’t blame the rain, because rain is pleasant. The dance itself is in a pub on our university’s campus, so it’s a short walk through gravel unevenly shifted by tipsy toddlers, some of them not even able to make it through the trees. We arrive to a line of students longer than the building itself, waiting to get in…but it is all right! In fact, I am relieved, worried that the fault might come to lie with our late arrival and the absence of attendees. But a queue line in the rain? I come here expecting fun in a place I would normally dismiss, so what is a little wet wait? All these belching, chanting, ass-grabbing, smoking, swearing wretches – they’re nothing I haven’t dealt with before at home.

This is fine.

As the long line disappears, man by woman, into the club, I quiver in anticipation. Who will I meet tonight? What should I say? My breath smells fresh enou – crap, I think the rain melted the paste in my hair! But it is too late to tell, too late to change; the doors open wide, a red aura and trembling bass waves pouring forth from within. I expected this sort of raucous, but…not at this level. Still, I’m here for the people. I can hear my Reservation calling, that this is a crowd with infinite potential, and that the people of this crowd can offer me something fantastic. Well, then, it’s high time to meet them!

No sooner do I step inside the pulsating red shadows am I sucked up in an enormous mass, mashing and kneading to process me through its lumps of human flesh. The air itself is sweat, and that which drips down ungraceful figures flailing about in these cramped quarters serves as saliva – Several heaving gulps are required to wash me down this strange throat, this immense organ of bodies. The belly of the beast is nothing but alcoholic madness as bloodshot eyes look upwards into darkness, mouths agape like lifeless fish heads bobbing up and down in a pool of emptiness. Their meaty lips pull back in smiles, but they gulp desperately for air in secret as their glossy eyes swivel in search of the closest Zippo. They are clammy, cold, surrendering the faintest response as I swim in search of some semblance of life. I leave the bar and break for the tents, certain that misty air might wash the brains I desperately long to pick. Though I am met with questions there, they are not the pleasant kind: “Hey, fam, got have a lighter? Hey, do you smoke weed? How ‘bout a glass of beer, then find a real party?”

There has to be some safe haven here; Someone just like me, searching for someone just like them, as disgusted as I am with how far social intimacy has fallen.

But, the more I look for life in the whole, the more shattered parts present themselves in its stead. I try! I swear, I really do – But look there: at the bar, faults – on the deck in the rain, faults – in the basement club, faults – in the large white tents, faults. Faults everywhere, no matter how hard I try not to look for them. I can speak with no one, because no one has the capacity to speak, or feel reasonably, or do anything else but absorb the heat of corporeal contact, and so there is no one to prove that my founded faults are not grounded. What a waste of time, of sanity – I need to get out of this cesspool! I make my way out the doors, to the cool of the rain, but the crowd has changed. At least when it acted as an organ, a body made of many bodies, there was life still and a purpose for movement. But now the energy is gone – What remains is a sticky, hot lump, welded as one by the gas of booze and cigarettes.

I am swimming in shit. A mushy mass of shapeless filth, drained dry of organic usefulness and God-given autonomy, squelches with every step aimed at escape. Chunks of bloody corn stare at me, red kernels behind humanlike skulls worn to slivers by digestion – the hunger for acceptance. A rotting stench of sop swirls in my head, almost as if no longer a gas but a dripping liquid oozing from the crack of the intestinally tormented. There is puke on the floor, literal puke, but it can hardly compete with the bitter auditory diarrhea that sloshes around in my ears, sticking to the drums and the canals until I can hear nothing more than the sloshing of human excrement. Base groans and groaning bass, thumping in the loins of everyone present but thumping my brain to the point of insanity.

My back sticks to one of these walking stools, a portly girl with piercings in her tongue that might well be a key ring she swallowed as a child. Those kernels in her head speak one word: sex. She smiles, opens her mouth, I smell the rancid smoke climbing from the depths, see the piss coating her tongue, beg her apologies, and flee.

Now I am in the middle of it all. I cannot see the exit, or the Norwegian, or the Indian, or the German, or even a single thing I recognize as comfortable, familiar. All I see is a black mass, lumpy and wet, flopping about in the dark under that red light. I can barely breathe now, its putrid, moldy, rotting steam choking my mind and seizing my heart. I panic, lost in a shit-sea, paddling desperately for shore where there is none to be found. Mouths grin through the dark muck, anxious to sink deeper into the bowels of warm, empty pleasure. I am drowning in this fecal mire, my mind races, my limbs fail to move, my eyes register nothing before me –

In my blindness – a voice.

The voice drifts over the crap-covered floor from a stage, where a DJ stirs the pot. Waving to me from on high – my lofty Reservation! Her angelic smile beaming down, she opens her arms to encourage.

“Keep searching, my brave warrior! She is here, somewhere, just waiting for you!”

With a graceful gesture she beckons, towards those twisted faces half-dissolved from the juices designed to help them save face. They gawk at me with incomprehension as to why I resist the joys of invasive connection.

“But where? How much longer must I search? I’m so very tired!”

My Reservation does not answer, but gestures once again over those pitiful floating heads beneath. I can only bring myself to glance at them again, but their gaping, oozing stares are revolting to even feel upon the back of your head. Still, if my Reservation says she must be here, then she must be here! I hold my breath and plunge back in, filled with determination.

For an hour I sifted through the bile, through those animalistic pleas for pleasure, for someone above the roar of dysfunction. But my eyes began to cloud over, my brain waxes lax, and I almost realized too late that I was sinking into something new. Something the people here came to escape, something they had to lose their minds and their very selves to ignore.

Something called despair.

A laugh rises up over the turmoil. I start from my lapse, and flail desperately for the surface, the laugh growing ever louder. When my head breaks above the muck, that laugh pierces the grimy air of the dance floor, shrieking at a pitch that only I can hear – and wish I could not.

It belongs to my delicate, my innocent, my optimistic Reservation. She now hangs off the edge of the stage, pupils expanded in madness and cheeks split with her smile, howling in hysterics. She points aimlessly at the malodorous orgy.

“She’s there, boy! She’s there, somewhere, somewhere, somewhere!”

She then points straight at my forehead and cackles. But this is too much! My panic rises to a grand capitulation, and, without thought, I take off my belt and swing it above my head repeatedly, then let go. The belt hurtles across the room, over the toilet I’m sinking in, and wraps tight round the neck of my Reservation. She grasps for it, but loses her grip in the process, tipping over and plummeting headfirst into the shit sloshing onto the stage. Her ringing laughter is abruptly reduced to weak burbling. She does not resurface. But she lingers still, still lingers…

My head finally clears, and I walk freely out of the building without a single piece of crap smudging my shirt.

As I stagger home in the rain, I pass another group, drunk from pre-drinks and on their way to the party. At the back is a naïve-looking fellow: a babyface with clear and hopeful eyes. He is also a dreamer, excited for what he finds back at that party, the one I just left in horror. And who knows; maybe he will find what he’s looking for? It’s a foolish dream, I see at last, but I hope he does.

I am no longer so immature, to hope there might be someone like me out there, who believes that human connection can be made both rationally and emotionally, out of high-minded care and an eye for the future. To hope there is someone who can keep their head above the shit, and still keep a smile on their face as they aim towards contentment, not only happiness…Do they exist?

I, a child, so eager to cross the threshold of Hell in search of an angel, a righteous fool. Yes, I will still forge friendships with the Norwegian and the German and the Indian…the American, the Brit, the Chinese, every one of them. I will laugh with them, work with them, share stories with them, feel things with them. But what I can no longer do is expect the impossible from them. I tried so long, in the hopes that meaningful human connections among young people, built on merit and virtue rather than social pleasure and political convention, might still exist. I hoped that love might still be out there in untouched fields, harvesting the land in its purest form.

The drought killing those fields was the fault of the whole’s collapse. But it happened before I arrived, and I mourn that I can do nothing but settle for the last semblance of a home among the rubble. Since there is no single part to blame, I have murdered my Reservation, and dunked her in the very thing I sought hope from: the youth of the human race.

In this manner I say, without joy, without the despair of hoping, without Reservation, that the generation still consuming this undefined collective good…They cannot see the sun, through all the shit sealing the cave they dance in.


Fixation


Last night, I saw a demon.

It came to me in a garden touched by autumn. The leaves were browned with rot, a murky stream of fog flowing in-between dense hedge. Not much else could be seen, except that the sky was nearing twilight, all blackish orange. My vision faded in and out, in and out – synchronized with jagged breathing. Walking forward, I gradually realized with faint concern that I was not going anywhere at all; it was the garden moving past me.

The scenery remained the same, never-changing, those autumn leaves tinged in their rusty orange dimmed further by the fog and the choking sun. I was nervous, trembling nervous. Yet the garden kept walking, on and on into nothingness. I wished so desperately for it to stop, not because I saw anything frightening, not because I expected any terror from the faceless leaves, but because I could not control if I would eventually come upon something frightening or terrible.

It was a fear realized when I came upon the demon.

I cannot say how I knew it was a demon. Until this dream, I had never been in the presence of one. It appeared first as no more than part of the pitch nothingness at the end of the garden. But, as I drew nearer, its shape was defined by what was not there, and I became aware of a malicious consciousness lurking in a spiritual form. As my heart raced, my vision cleared, and I saw that the pitch was formed with purpose: the shape of a human, cut out like a paper man in the fabric of space, a black hole sucking the garden into itself. Sprouting from its head were two long appendages, an appearance like ears. There was nothing overt about it that would make one consider it a demon. Yet it was, simply because I knew it to be true as soon as I saw it. I classified it immediately by the feeling alone, before I even had the chance to mark its appearance.

The demon stood suspended, waiting for me to come. The clearer that empty form became, the faster my heart raced from fear. Those two ears twitched, as if hearing my pulse, and its own evil owner crackled like static, not from glee, but from the anticipation of satiated hunger. I do not know what exactly it was hungry for, but I knew that whatever it was was stored deep inside me. At first I knew this was but a dream – I was convinced this was a vision that could not affect me. But, the longer I stared into the infinite darkness of the demon, the less certain I was that this was certain. As my courage wavered, I was aware that the demon had some sort of physical body; bits and pieces of a describable appearance phased in and out of the darkness. I strained my vision to see those pieces clearly.

It was then I began to fear for my life.

I can’t tell you why. I’ve basically given up all possible explanations, and there’s no way of finding explanations when you’re trapped inside a nightmare. All I know is that the longer I stared into the demon, the more aware I became that I was going to die in that garden, at the feet of that demon. My whole body was wracked with hopelessness, the primal fear of promised doom.

I stared and the demon stared back. It had no eyes, , not all of the time, yet somehow it held my stare without break. My neck strained under that Hellish glare – my head jolted up and down – these were the throes of death, more violent the clearer my spectre became. I had to look away, or I would die there.

I could not look away. So I woke up.

I woke not on my own, but by the uncontrollable thrashings of my own body. They startled me out of my mind, and, even pulled back into the communal plane, I continued jerking about like one possessed for another minute. When the shakes subsided, and my head stopped its possessed bobbing, I was left exhausted, traumatized, sleepless at four in the morning. It was an epileptic seizure that saved me, but I was sure, if I were to see the demon again, it would be an epileptic seizure that kills me. Oh-so close to death in those waking moments, I wandered my apartment without a thought in my head for a while. Thoughts were replaced with terror, terror that every shadow behind every door concealed a devil determined to draw me back into the dream – to force me to stare into the demon until I finally succumbed to hopelessness. I sweated, fearful that a devious grin or a black form was waiting to propel me into fear again, behind the door, at the foot of the bed, at the end of the hall. This was neurosis speaking. But that neurosis revealed something to me: I understood the only way to avoid such an end was to force myself not to expect, and consequently peer into the demon. It was the demon’s unveiling, not its presence, that would prove to be fatal. Knowing this didn’t do a thing to quell my fears.

After wiping the drool off my pillow and cleaning the sweat off with a shower, I fixed some coffee and watched The Autopsy of Jane Doe. It was a frightful film, but I had chosen it in particular because I wanted to check something: to see if the nightmare affected my experience with the movie. It helped feed the dark atmosphere, certainly, but my thoughts were untinged by the evil in that movie. It was posing as evil, a watered-down replication of the darkest malignance, which I had borne witness to. The film even proved to be a welcome distraction, entertaining me and drawing my thoughts away from thoughts that would otherwise make the morning drudge along in fear of every dark corner.

When the film finished, I looked online for explanations of that nightmare. Some people propose to be experts at reading visions, and most opinions online are free (some of the traumatized love to relieve their fears to connect with others of the same thought or experience). However, all I could find were mentions of “dark men” with “black hats,” furry beasts, or your Slenderman types; hardly any were recognized as the demon that I came upon. There were records of possessions that lead to epileptic seizures, but barely any provided descriptions of the demonic culprit. Moreover, none had mentioned that singular despair of looking into the figure – how that figure fashioned from void material clenched your gut with the feeling that life was on the line. As far as I could tell, I was the only one writing about it. It was my fear alone.

I noticed something over the next few weeks. I noticed that the people around me were not privy to fear. Anxiety, yes. Depression, yes. Wariness, most definitely. But true, unadulterated fear is not something present in most college students’ lives. True fear is founded on the precept that all things are about to end, and that there will be no chance for recovery because there will be nothing to build from. Just one ruined shell of what was once a being, laid low by forces outside their control. That is death. That is the fear I woke to in those dawning hours. Their numbness was not born from courage, but rather imperceptibility. They had not faced death – there is no way they could no what fear felt like.

Yet the fear only lasted through half the day. My mind became preoccupied with other things, and what I thought I saw in the demon was discounted as a nightmare, brought on by subconscious thoughts that I could not be bothered to untangle. My fear was irrational, heightened by the certainty that I knew what I had been looking at, when I really did not. But, as I considered the impact of fear on my peers, I became more relaxed with the idea that whatever would come, would come. Only One has the power to stop it, and I prayed, but I was unafraid because I knew the demon could only take my life, not me.

Within a month, I found myself returned to the twilight garden. It had been some time since I stopped philosophizing fear, content with the answers I found. I did not fight the hedges and the fog as they rolled onwards, but focused rather on confronting what would be at the end. It took longer than last time. Much longer. Perhaps it only seemed longer, since I was now aware, but the garden appeared to have grown while I was away. My nerves were steeled in preparation, but they loosened with impatience as there was no break in the orange-black foliage in sight.

Only then did the demon manifest. At the end of the garden, wherein it only seems to continue on towards nowhere, did the demon finally manifest through its spatial tear. My body was transported by spasms, and I gasped for the courage to stare my reaper straight in its faceless eyes. The longer I held my gaze, the clearer the demon seemed to me; likewise, the longer I held my gaze, the more violent my spasms became. The waiting, the journey through the garden, had sent me to slaughter, wearing down all my reassurances by forcing me to stand at attention until it arrived at the proper point. And now the demon had the upper hand.

But still I gazed, and still I picked apart the demon’s existence. As its body became clear to me, I realized it was not made of parts familiar to corporeal sight, but felt in the mind’s eye. The more I picked it apart, the less I saw, and consequently the more I feared because the demon was made of fear itself, and had tricked me by its stillness into believing I could stare directly into it and not be afraid. Its ears twitched. They were not ears at all, but antennae detecting the worry in my heart and manipulating it into possessive fear. I had fallen for the demon’s unassuming nature, and my body was now beyond my control.

Unable to look away, unable to run away, I had no choice but to look into the depths of that hole as I was drawn ever nearer. Closer, closer, death approached. The garden soon brought me to the demon’s feet, and I realized that we had reached the end. As I collapsed to the ground, trembling from seizures, I stared unflinchingly up at the demon. Its gaze seemed to look past me, as if I were already lost and thereby not worth further attention. My vision faded in and out of blackness, as the twilight was slowly fading into night. On the cusp of death, I realized that this figure, this demon, though made of fear, was not frightening at all. It was the fear I saw in it, and what I feared that meant for me, which brought me nearer to death. It was fear for loss of control, not the loss of control itself, that convinced me that hope was now just a dream, and this nightmare a reality.

In that dawning thought, I found strength. In that strength, I found peace.


Spontaneous Combustion


I can’t tell you the exact day when the world went crazy. Little implosions in the background – you never notice them at first, right? White noise, that’s all it starts as. Just slightly odd people doing slightly odd things – You can tell the odd ones by their eyes. Those with “the glaze” are generally harmless, but you can never be certain. The instant you’re certain is the instant they act unpredictably cruel. I’ve seen two classmates jump onto the desks and perform a sweet schottische together, and I’ve seen a boy cut out his own tongue and tie it around his head as a pointless eye patch, until he died from blood loss. There are always two conditions under possession of “the glaze”: the actions come from nowhere with no reason, and nobody else regards them. 

But I do. And they notice me, too, staring back with thoughtless, blank eyes. I’ve trained myself to notice them as well, to steel myself against the expectedly unexpected. It’s exhausting – my nerves feel taut for hours on end, as if steel cords were passing through them. But keeping calm at the point of calamity is the only way to keep that white noise in the background.

I see the glaze now, in fact. Across the street, at the edge of a park, sits a lovey-dovey couple on a dew-coated bench. Their backs were turned to me, watching the pond – at first. Their heads swiveled to face me when I wasn’t looking, and now stare with the same glazed eyes my brother had. I can hear my heart picking up the pace as I stop to stand my ground. What will they do? I have no idea. They draw closer to each other…closer…stress like wires through my veins chokes off my breath…closer…

And flap their tongues together, like some sort of perverse handshake.

Breathe out. Walk on, but never break eye contact. Those with the “glaze” are generally harmless, but you can never be certain; they act so unpredictably. I’ve had two classmates jump onto the desks and perform a schottische while standing on their hands. I’ve seen a man cut out his own tongue and tie it around his head as a pointless eye patch until he died from blood loss. There are two conditions that always reoccur under this possession: the actions come from nowhere and with no reason, and nobody else in the area regards them. I’ve trained myself to catch their eyes, to steel myself against the unexpected. Breathe in, breathe out, move on.

Home is my sanctuary. I live alone with my older brother, who has not once been possessed with the “glaze.” Every day I am certain it will happen, but it never does.

“You seem tense lately, Kuriho. What’s the matter?”

A shrug and some generic “not enough sleep” excuse concerns him more.

“You high school students and anxiety. I tell you, I don’t miss it at all. When you graduate and have less things and people to worry about, you’ll wonder what it was all for.”

Sounds like a nice dream, made to be broken.

My brother laughs and picks up my bowl, offers to get me more potatoes.

“It’s much more manageable when you have a reason to care, too.”

He winks and heads into the kitchen. I can’t help but feel a little more relaxed, a little more optimistic. I’m grateful for my brother in times like this; at least I can be certain of that.

A few seconds passed before I pick up the sound of sizzling, the smell of burning. I dashed to the kitchen and beheld my brother standing rigid, his hand in a pot of boiling oil. His eyes…blank.

Recovering from shock, I leapt after him, tried to pull his hand out, screamed as loud as I could. But he was frozen, a silent statue as the apartment filled with the smell of bubbling flesh.

That was two weeks ago. Every night now, without fail, those eyes keep me up. Distant, strained as wide as they can without adding anything to his expression. No frown, no sneer, no grimace – just eyes. They looked down at me, as if to jeer, “You can’t stop this. But you can’t help trying.” My nerves tighten; it gets harder and harder to breathe, to think with clarity.

I’ve seen those eyes many times before. But now they’re in my own home. I can’t unsee them any longer. I pull the covers over me, but I feel a gaze… Waiting out there, through the crack in my door, peering at me behind the mask of my brother. In the morning he is weak from the loss of his hand. At night…Well, whether asleep or awake, there is no longer any sanctuary.

A few hours go by after my brother goes to bed. I pick up the sledgehammer hidden beneath my bed, bought today on a whim, and tiptoe over to his room. The only way to beat this new world’s secret madness is to beat it to the punch. Who knows when you’ll put my hand in the pot next, brother? You understand. You must know why I raise this sledgehammer above your head, if only you could just see yourself in a mirror right now. Are feelings even real to the glazed? Staring at me with milky, lifeless eyes as you do now – the eyes of someone who has no control, no desire, no awareness. The eyes of someone who isn’t really in there at all. So I know you will forgive me.

I catch a glimpse of myself in the mirror on his dresser. It is a relief to see myself clearly, and my eyes, which, though wild at this turning point, are still full of life and thought. I am certain of this, at least.

Something gleams in the moonlight. My heart skips a beat. Tied to my arms, my legs, my body, my head…Where did all these strings come from, rising up towards nothing?

No…not towards nothing. Those red cords – my “nerves” – dangle from two enormous yellow spheres. Pale waxing moons suspended in the darkness of the ceiling, but clearly eyes of some ethereal kind. They shine on me with dim pupils, the strings zigging along them like nerves. In a blink – they disappear.

All at once: the cords snap, my nerves tighten, the hammer is swung, the “glaze” persists.


Precipice


Montana is a place overflowing with nature. That is not to say according to preconceived notions of nature, as in the forest is especially green and spacious, or that the animals are particularly frisky. Such is, in fact, the case with Montana and its Glacier Park, and may in fact lend influence to another type of nature. But stories of that type of nature, the environmental, are overdone and usually banal. Environmental nature is not what this story is about. No, by nature, we are referring to the base state of a thing; what a thing is reduced to when unmanaged, left untempered, raw.

Ah, there’s the word: raw. Montana is a raw place. Like the human body without clothing, every tear, every flaw in the flesh left exposed to the world. The scorches of forest fires are unpretending, erosion unstoppable, infestation a burden to bear. Houses have been built around the lakes, lovely wooden structures that are restricted, by policy, from receiving updates or additions. They must remain as they are, no pretending. Even the glaciers, the things that give the park its name, have almost melted completely away. And yet, somehow, it all remains so markedly beautiful. This decay, after all, is only natural.

Two hikers, Robson and Brooke, have made the long trek up one of these glaciers, and stopped for a snack. Surveying the pristine view, they are struck with awe and wonder that eluded them during the climb, since the mind tends to focus on pain over the pleasure that surrounds it. Filled with pride, energized by accomplishment, the two friends laugh and point at the trail they left thousands of feet below. This is the literal and metaphorical peak of their trip, the final stop before their Spring Break ends and they must return to the sloughs of university life. All that remained was the final hike down the glacier, to their hostel above a convenience store, to gather their things and take the train back to Seattle. A place where all was most certainly not raw, where people wear proper clothing and engage in proper interactions.

Over the course of the trip, Brooke and Robson were exposed to natural beauty, both around and within themselves. They had met over a mutual interest to travel, in a campus club, and soon arranged the trip for just the two of them to go out and “experience nature.” They meant, of course, nature in an Environmental sense. But they also experienced nature in a raw sense, for one would never agree to accompany the other if there was not an innate carnal attraction at the onset. And so they travelled, stopping at cheap hostels, engaging in raw animalistic intercourse most every single night. They explored the root of youth, and, finding it pumping and swollen with another’s blood, suckled from it. They could not help it – it was just too tantalizing to pass up.

The urge again passed between them at the top of the mountain. There, thousands of feet in the air, heads heavy from the dense atmosphere and intense muscular strain, they found themselves lusting after each other. They could see it in their eyes, they could smell it in their pheromone-mixed sweat. Both Robson and Brooke wanted no more than to plunge into the seismic throes of momentary passion, the thrill multiplied by their natural surroundings. It was a bedroom of the ancients, where man and woman, still developing language, relied more on instinct and physical assertion to communicate. Aroused beyond the proper considerations of a hike, the two grasped each other, and copulated among the ferns.

Naked and sleek, weak from mounting both the mountain and each other, the pair sat near the edge of a precipice. It was sufficiently clouded by scraggly trees, and broad enough that their footing would not be accidentally lost. They peered out over piney valleys, collected in pockets surrounded by the cruel, gray stone that packed the bases of mountains. They beheld a misty mountain morning, and there was no one else around to witness it but Mountain Goats and eagles.

In the midst of all this splendor, Robson was struggling with unfamiliar terror. It was not terror wrought by the vast verdant pit below, no, but rather by the young woman next to him. Following their long week of adventuring, it was clear to him that Brooke was immensely frailer than he. He knew this by throwing her around in the bed alone. As he absorbed her aura, felt the comfort of her being next to him, an unexplainable, contradictory urge struck him: the urge to nudge her off the edge of the cliff.

Why? Why would he conjure such a frightful action up in his mind? What could possibly possess the human will to encourage such a ghastly crime for no reason but impulse? For it was impulse that goaded Robson on, with the promise of some forbidden pleasure. To take that lithe, capable, helpless body and render it dashed on the rocks below – a tragedy. To betray at once the trust that was built in mind and flesh between them, satiating a rash desire for the thrill of denying life its once-inherent value.

And yet, was that the pleasure promised by the impulse? Or, was it that part-and-parcel sinking feeling, to commit the ultimate crime in a place where it would never be detected and live with the secret? It is reasonable to believe, natural even, that a hiker would take a tumble attempting the perfect selfie on the edge of a precipice. There is no one to say otherwise, and a phone is easily broken to bits from a mile-high drop. Ironic, that the least traceable murder requires no planning, no cover-up – a contrived end almost natural. Such a surprise is the height of sadism; the plummet commences before the victim comprehends what has happened, their last few seconds of existence futilely devoted to understanding why a supposed friend just sent them to their death. There will be an investigation, there will be an autopsy, but there will be nothing to point back to Robson.

Robson’s gut churned with anticipation. He looked down, down, and was afraid. But, again, not of the height below, but of his sudden lapse of morality. He turned in a daze to Brooke, smoking her cigarette, unaware of the danger looming so near to her on two sides. With just a look, his animalistic urge was redirected – he now simply wanted to have another go in the grass. Relieved to discover it had been but a fleeting thought, Robson smiled at Brooke with a little nervous confusion. He would never be able to shake the memory of thinking this thought, no matter how natural, but at least he could drown it out with orgasmic distraction. He felt Brooke stand next to him, and he unconsciously rose after her.

All Robson felt was a shove, before icy coldness inside and out told him he had fallen off the cliff. The wind blasted his hair back, and tears burned his eyes. In the moment of shock, in the denial of death, he made a last-ditch effort to turn around. He wanted desperately to see, if not what happened, the reaction on Brooke’s face. Sunlight burst over the peaks, illuminating what had evaded him since they’d been together.

What he saw was a reflection of his own mind.

Unbeknownst to Robson, as he had been pondering dangerous fantasies, so had Brooke. But whereas Robson’s was founded in her vulnerability, Brooke was intrigued with subverting his power. And that is what drew her to use the precipice, to hurl this fellow animal to his death from the draw of impulse – just another Mountain Goat losing footing. Robson’s very curiosity looked back at him through Brooke’s misted gaze, tracking this raw figure on its hopeless trip down the glacier. Almost as quick as it came on, the curiosity vanished, replaced with a horror no doubt brought on by moral implications and their physical manifestations. She covered her mouth to prevent the scream from coming out, and knelt down in despair. Then the altitude concealed her face from Robson.

In his last few meters, Robson was astounded at his fate. A one-in-a-million chance, Brooke being borne from the same mind as he, and he still could not put his finger on why he did not act first. One simple act of savagery, and her corpse would be watering the ferns, not his. But he did not act. She did. And now he could still only wonder why his thoughts condemned him to execution by whim, what small twang of conscience was in him that was not in Brooke. His bitter consolation was that she would have to live with the shame (he could see it in her face), and for that he was partly glad he balked at the chance. But that is what he dismissed it as: a fluke of chance, an enigma, impossible to understand reasonably. She was human, he was human, and they shared in thought if not in action. It was his fault, his weakness that he did not act first. But at least dying first gave Robson a sense of dignity. He was almost relieved she had been the one to give in, and not he.

The fall seemed to last for ages. Nevertheless, the end is always expected – it always comes. Fear gripped Robson, another communal human quality, as he braced himself for inevitable crushed bones and mangled muscles on the cracked stone rising to meet him. With unintentional violence, the rocks smashed his skull and spattered his brain all over their worn surfaces, a brain carrying Robson’s last uncomforting thought:

This was only natural.


The Gourmet Life

featured in Calliope Literary Magazine’s Spring 2018 edition


Open your stomach, and savor the tale of how I became a true Gourmet. It is a tantalizing tale, encrusted with a firm, yet enticing, start, dribbling with the most sanguine of warm centers, and dissolving into a mindful aftertaste, not too bitter and not too sweet. A quick treat, easy to digest, and only slightly tainted by its own presentation, I hope. I can only hope, you see, for I myself was not ready to live such a tale when it was first served up to me. That tale originated as a surprise, and, like all surprises, it takes retrospect and a cleared head to appreciate its digestion.

The Society of Gourmands for Gustatory Gallantry. Prestigious, a name that just rolls off the tongue with a generous glottal thrust. I first heard of it during my adolescence in the slums, from that old kooky cook Cook’s fables following long days and nights in the Skid Row kitchen. This legendary Society’s entire purpose was to re-imbue food with purpose, at a time when it was erased from reality as unnecessary, and the subsequent meal was rumored to be the most satisfying fourteen-digit expenditure in existence. “If yeh meck yahself useful,” Cook would say in his indiscernible native accent, the one belonging to the mostly-toothless, “them Gormans might sweeps ya up inta one of them ‘Feasts of Lasts.’ Best food ya evah tested. Real food, says a buddy o’ mahn.”

Now, I can guess what you’re thinking: real food? Bullocks, say you, real food doesn’t exist anymore! That’s just a rumor the bureaucracy spreads among its constituents to keep them, and by virtue their votes, alive. But bullocks say not I, because that’s exactly the allure of this so-called “Feast of Lasts”: food, the genuine article, prepared with lavishes of lip-smacking love like you’ve only dreamed! Not the crummy cans of genetic hodgepodge lining our common shelves, meant for nutrition and not for pleasure, but real meat from real animals, real sprouts from real vegetables, real cakes with real sugar…My head swims from mere aftertastes.

The waters of memory run so wide, the vessel of my invitation cannot be seen on the horizon. Was it my personal diary detailing the varying flavors of flavorless foods, published for an extra penny to yield a fortune? Maybe the charity I provided those who could not rise as I did, swept too deep into the despondency of poverty left by the collapse of civilizations we relied upon? Or perhaps my appeals for a Global Reconstruction Effort, to focus on the reintegration of genuine edibles, and not the Baroness Hayflax’s cans of Spammish bile we have no choice but to live and thrive solely upon? Before we can rebuild this broken planet, wrecked by the combined disasters of Nature and humanity, we must first rebuild ourselves; mundane manual labor, day in and day out, needs the color of salivation to liven a mostly rough sketch of what life once was. The people suffer for it, knowing a hearty supper no longer awaits them at home, no longer offers a sweet release, since the looming shadow of order deems it unnecessary.

So, why was I invited by that esteemed Society of Gourmands for Gustatory Gallantry, to participate in the legendary “Supper of Lasts?” For no more evident reason than they sought me, and I was willing.

And so I arrived at the appointed date and time, desiring a good impression. The Premier Palate Pavilion was a botanic garden, erected with monstrous glass panels that allowed the pleasures of the garden without to be felt from within, and capitulating in a dome of multicolored glass as its culinary crown. Even the most ostentatious grandmother would fall leagues short of decorating such a dining room as this one, furnished with jagged jet tables and amber chairs. The Society was around fifty in number, elites from the entire world over in mind, purse, or name, the majority female but the younger majority male, and all bedecked in clothes expensive enough to dress a child for five years. To pass the time, these laughing faces orbited politics, philosophy, romance, the collapse of society, gossip, and, above all else, the anticipated supper.

My host was a magnanimous Swede by the name of Doctor Major Major Doctor; for brevity, I shall simply call him Doctor Major. He was a man of both military and medicinal repute, famously wealthy, yet saving pride for his elevated taste. He had been impressed with my work, and heartily took me under the arm, destined for parades in and out of certain socialite groups to captivate them with my theories on Nutritional Selection and the Zen potential of taste buds. I was quickly pleased by how fascinated they were of the intellectualism I brought to the dinner table, my favor being most profound upon the Doctor Major himself.

“Right-o, boy, well said! For what is a man but a beast, if he can’t appreciate what really hits the spot?”

Well, now, I felt compelled to give him other indications of how to tell whether a being is a beast or a man, but, seeing my company’s boredom settling in, reeled them back in with a discussion on the psychological effects of Parsley garnish, the singular sprig that always makes it onto the plate despite never being eaten.

I eventually became distracted by the scenery, the porcelain fountains and lush tropical trees providing better food for the eyes than my companions’ food for the ears. Mind you, I rose from the gutters; only in dreams had I been privy to such extravagance. And the animals! Lured by the smells of the cuisine as if they anticipated it as much as I, shadows lumbered out from behind the chalky curtain of night. Creatures of all sizes: a large cat with orange coat and zigging stripes, a bulky, grey, wrinkly thing with a spear sprouting from its nose, a leathery green monster-worm with a tongue flicking in and out of its jaws, a fish the size of a car, sleek and black with white splotches…Truly, a more colossal menagerie had never been seen!

But my eager eyes would grow wider still, not from amazement, but stunned confusion. Among the bushes, hidden behind a pitcher plant the size of a telephone pole, was a young man. I would not find this strange, were he not bare as a peeled banana, and his eyes any less piercing. But they did not pierce with emotion or intelligence; there was no emotion or intelligence to be found, but a hopeless cloud that made him appear dopey-eyed, unaware, like those animals with hooves and horns to which cars were the primary predator. I pressed my palm against the glass, anxious not to scare him but not to remain unaware of him. He sniffed the air, plodding towards my hand though looking everywhere it was not, and pressed his cheek against the glass. His eyes frightened me, for there was no spirit, no recognition, no process of thought that existed there. All I saw were two wet, ebony gems – glossy, empty, dormant.

A brass gong resonated throughout, signaling the first course. My strange companion faded back into the moonlit garden.

I took a seat between Doctor Major and a middle-aged woman cradling yards of furs wrapped around her chest at one of the round tables, aching for an explanation of what I just witnessed, but feeling it improper as the pu-pu platters arrived with their assortment of appetizers. Skewers a forearm high, penetrating a stack of speckled melons and spotted, stringent meats. My inquiries were soon forgotten to me with this, our first taste of that legendary “Feast of Lasts.” The morsels were, in a word, fresh, in another word salivating. Their steam lifted with our forks, and continued out our nostrils as our teeth closed on them like an ivory curtain. A sigh of ecstasy was echoed by the whole room, well deserved; never had I tasted fruits so plump, meats so tender, vegetables so crisp! Doctor Major elbowed me in the ribs with good humor.

“That’s the ticket! Does it live up to everything you expected, boy? Or does it shatter those expectations like a glass ceiling?”

I murmured in the assent, drooling a little of that savory juice.

“That there is a special mutation between dragon fruit, watermelon, and some berry or other that escapes me. But our supper isn’t named for mutated fruits, oh, hell no! The meat, gamey and tame simultaneously, is none other than Jaguar, a ferocious jungle cat! The last of its kind, boy, so savor it while you can!”

I was struck by the sudden realization that this would be the only time such a heavenly taste would perch upon my tongue, before dissolving forever. I asked why the cats were not bred, so that we may always partake of grilled Jaguar whenever we pleased.

“Why, I took you for more of a man of thought that. Breed Jaguar? Haugh! The only reason Jaguar, or any meat for that matter, bursts with such flavor is because you can only try it once!”

I found this line of reasoning impudent, for how should I recall its flavor from just one sample during my lifespan? And, oh, the pangs to come, pangs to feast on Jaguar again and knowing it cannot be offered by the whole world! I was the only one of this mind, as the Society of Gourmands for Gustatory Gallantry slobbered and smacked over their trifle portions, wolfing down the chunks without second thought.

Of course, I knew you would question my care for life, for that magnificent beast I have reduced to a mouthful of taut, juicy muscle. And I ask you, in return, what is the difference between this Jaguar and the cow, so readily put to the slaughter in times before civilization’s collapse? Back then, a pig, a horse would be murdered for its utilities, so why should this cat not also serve its purpose?

The next appetizer was rolled out as fast as the last was devoured: glazed dumplings stuffed with peacock. Again, what makes this fowl so holy when compared to the chicken? I ate it, and found it better than any chicken.

In this manner the “Feast of Lasts” progressed with a few more appetizers, each a beast that marked the end of its kind. Then, the main course was announced, and served to eyes that appeared to be drooling just staring at it. My plate was uncovered, and I found myself marveling at the smoothest, shiniest meat, a tanned orange strewn with purple veins, a sweet, pungent smell swelling my brain.

“Well? Don’t sit there gawking all day. Have a bite, won’t you?”

I looked towards Doctor Major, and realized that all eyes in the Pavilion were strained directly at me, eager for my first taste of that sumptuous flank. Observing it as custom, I took the first bite.

Good God! The rich flavors of this meat were an achievement of creation, greater than anything I have had or could ever possible consume again, putting Jaguar to shame! The luscious juices, the tough skin, the tender consistency…the room shared my opinion, surely, for they tore into their portions like demons, and the meal was finished in a hot second. I was sad to see it go forever, almost to the point of tears.

“You enjoyed it? Don’t grieve, boy; this wasn’t the last time you’ll have that particular meat.”

I was overjoyed to hear the good news! Surely they couldn’t be so sadistic as to disregard this meat as they did the previous five. So, what was this heavenly main course of the “Feast of Lasts,” the same main course of every “Feast of Lasts?”

“A gift, my boy. A gift from the esteemed Baroness Hayflax.”

Ah, really? I could not imagine the creator of the government’s regulated food, formless and heartless, to have such taste as to be permitted into this Society. She was rumored a wealthy old woman, age not dulling her wit, a formidable debater on any stage but preferring to keep her diamond ringed fingers steeped in politics. I had despised her for what she forced us all to consume, but I suppose there were reasons for it. I inquired which table the good woman was at, to confess my misgivings and thank her. Doctor Major laughed.

“Why, she’s at every table, boy! A bit of her at least…you were lucky, getting the ass! Juiciest portion, am I right?”

At first, I could not have surmised what my new friend was going on about. But then I looked around at the gleaming grins of my company, teeth gnashing in consummation; a forearm picked clean here, stacked rings of breast meat there, a rib, a hand…an eyeball, staring at me from the end of a fork, its darkened vision grown darker as it was slurped down. Hazy and aching, my consciousness returned to what remained of the late Baroness Hayflax before me. My gut sunk, clammy and cold, with the steel taste of vomit.

I had eaten another human being! Disgusting, evil! That these devils would treat such an act with the highest class, and drag me headlong into it without knowing! On purpose or no, I committed the gravest offense to humanity, even savored every moment of it…I felt so sick, not only in stomach, but in soul. Some part of my humanity – I don’t know how to describe it – but I felt lesser. Less than a person…like an animal. Animals eat their own young, so does the Society of Gourmands for Gustatory Gallantry devour its own members!

Shame, horror compelled me to rise, and bile dripped from the corners of my mouth as I choked it down with more willingness than to finish my meal. The company watched me, glossy shining, waiting for my next move. Was I to run from the Society? Was I to give up fine dining forever?

To be honest, these fears were not what caused me to hesitate. Nor were they what weighed me back into my seat. No, no…it was dear Baroness Hayflax, and her sumptuous rump. God, what a sumptuous rump! The Jaguar, the peacock…none compared to the heartiness of that good lady’s barbecued hindquarters. I still felt awful, downright awful, but how could I return to those cans of pus, the only option for children bred of the slums? As the rest resumed dining, I resolved to wait, to not eat another bite…but I did. Then another. Then the Baroness Hayflax was gone, and only her salty juices swam in the dish.

Dessert was splendid, but I don’t have the heart to describe all the puddings and jellies it entailed. How could they pierce the rotten heart of a cannibal? The meal wrapped up, farewells were exchanged, and an almost mocking eulogy of the late Baroness was presented. I tried to keep up a good show, but was too shocked to offer anything other than a dazed, curt politeness. When most of the party had departed, the Pavilion painted the color of night, rows of waiters burst forth through double doors on roller skates. Faster than I could follow, they folded the tables, carted the chairs, convincing in their ignorance with professional haste. One, a woman with her hair in cornrows, approached me with a smile.

“Did you find everything to your liking, sir?”

I ran. Through the maze of glass hallways, I ran, in a cold sweat with a hellish heat burning my chest. On the other side of the walls, I could see the sad, staring faces of the animals. They knew, they knew that I was just one of them, that none of my culinary refinements and fancy words could hide the plain truth that I was just another lowly creature. I stumbled outside, desperate to escape the jungle’s condemnation.

“Ho there! Need a ride home?”

Doctor Major Major Doctor waved at me from his station wagon. I did not want to join him, but knew I must for safety. Who knows how this cult obtains their human brand of meat? Was I to be next?

The drive home began in silence. I knew not what to say, afraid of causing offense that could put me in harm’s way. Doctor Major glanced my way discreetly, opened his mouth a few times, but stopped short to twirl his mustache. The property stretched a mile in every direction, but he didn’t wish to let it pass before speaking.

“Listen, boy, I know what you’re about. You’re all twisted up inside right now because you just ate another human being, yeah? Felt like a punch in the nuts when I found out, too, but I kept eating. Stuff’s just too damn good! You did the same, being a man of intelligence, so I know I can tell you the truth. I’m sure it will help ya calm down a bit, help ya sleep at night.”

We were nearing the end of the jungle. I could make out some small fire ahead, which Doctor Major also saw and insisted I strain my eyes to see what it illuminated.

Behold, can I believe my own eyes? What did I see but men and women, even children, all bare as the road through the jungle and stupid as the farm animal with hooves and devilish horns? They sat around the fire, the younger ones hooting, the older ones silent, but all stared at our passing car with bright, glossy eyes, similar to the boy I encountered before the feast. In a few feet, the Premier Palate Pavilion, and that tribe of strange humanoids, was behind us.

Doctor Major Major Doctor cleared his throat, and began his justification.

“You see, the laws of our great land are against murder, for good reason. Without people, how would we support our own extravagancies, you know? But share and share alike can create some dismal prospects for workers, who have nothing really to work for but to keep our government moving. The laws are against murder, yes…but they say nothing of self-murder. We seek out those people, the ones who have no hope in their eyes, or up to their necks in bills, and make them a proposal:

‘How would you like us to take care of all your needs, so that you never have to worry again?’

The terms are simple; the subject will live on our properties for a minimum seven years, eating as much as they please and freed from working for nothing ever again. I mean, it’s pretty clear-cut, right? Would they rather be cattle for the bureaucracy, yet spend every penny they have just to end the grumbling in their bellies for an hour and pretend to be civilized, or would they rather be cattle for us, and never worry a dime over security or social pretensions again?

Most agree pretty quickly, I think. They have problems later down the line about how much freedom we allow, the freedom to act like animals, but the reasoning lobe of their brains calms down after a month or two. You can tell, considering how many children were in that group alone; the kids are raised to be without language. Soon, the original escapists think no better than your average ape, and all they do is sleep, eat, and fuck all the livelong day. They signed a contract, you see, so they’re not very well allowed to leave when they so please, but an unworthiness to re-enter society sets in eventually. That, and, I guess, a reluctance to go back to misery. Besides, did they have that much control in their other lives, anyway?

Beside the point, beside the point. Anyhow, after seven years, which the monkeys can’t count because the jungle doesn’t come with a calendar, we decide whether to continue cultivating them or to slip a drug into their meal. You heard me; we euthanize them. Nothing very barbaric, especially since they literally signed their lives away to us (first line in the fine print), so think of it as…assisted suicide. Yeah. We’re all animals after all, am I right, boy? Just better than thinking than the rest. You’ve seen what happens when you take a man out of civilization, but you’ve also seen what happens while he is in it; destined to be a pack animal either way, living off others’ purses and letting his drivers live off his hide. Tell me, what’s the difference between a man and a sheep?”

I said I didn’t quite know what a sheep was.

“Oh. Well, shit. I was going to say a sheep can offer more than just meat, but the joke’s lost if you don’t know what that is. We’ll have to have some next time around! Delectable thing, sheep, goes down easy.”

I was surprised how calmed I was by this explanation. Is man no more than a glorified animal? If so, there is nothing legally wrong about what the Society is doing. In fact, they’re doing these people a favor; instead of working to put money in your neighbor’s pocket, you don’t have to work and are still provided for? I…I hesitate to say, but maybe I wasn’t reasoning well enough. True, what makes man more than the Jaguar, the Peacock, besides his intellect? And it’s not like this outcome was against their will, and carried out inhumanely…

“Oh, and the Baroness Hayflax? No, she didn’t go through all that, she died of age. Very peaceful sleep it was, I heard. Yeah, she donated her body to the Society, said it was the only thing she looked forward to every month, and asked us to remember her for her lavish taste. But I’m pretty sure she meant something entirely different than what we’re thinking now, eh?”

Doctor Major laughed throatily, an echo on that solitary road above the rumble of the engine. To act natural, I joined in. As my thoughts raced, I realized something…nothing the Doctor Major said was really wrong. And they were doing such a great favor for these poor souls in their last years, too; I know what it’s like, having once been in their position. I got out of the gutter, but suppose there are those who are unable to? Then I’d reckon…I’d reckon this is a fine way out, even charitable. Even humane.

My laughter, genuine this time over such an agreeable impossibility, rose in the night to meet Doctor Major’s, and our voices twinkled in the sky over that desolate plain beyond the jungle. The moon followed us home to the city, where the free man still toils under the yoke of his own curse; the curse of being born without purpose, able to recognize this truth, and unable to help serving all but himself.

Another month has passed, and I will put your fears to rest: I made up my mind to join the Society of Gourmands for Gustatory Gallantry that next day. Access to the kitchen was granted to me, that I might experiment with the best use of my talents. Tonight, we shall begin with my own recipes, using such exquisite meats as Orca, Cassowary, and Tortoise. Then we move on to…well, you know what’s always to be the main course. I do not even care that my own creations are destined to pale in comparison. Oh, how fortunate I am, to have been accepted into the company of true Gourmets!

Open your stomach, and savor the tale of how I became a true Gourmet. It is a tantalizing tale, encrusted with a firm, yet enticing, start, dribbling with the most sanguine of warm centers, and dissolving into a mindful aftertaste, not too bitter and not too sweet. A quick treat, easy to digest, and only slightly tainted by its own presentation, I hope. I can only hope, you see, for I myself was not ready to live such a tale when it was first served up to me. That tale originated as a surprise, and, like all surprises, it takes retrospect and a cleared head to appreciate its digestion.

The Society of Gourmands for Gustatory Gallantry. Prestigious, a name that just rolls off the tongue with a generous glottal thrust. I first heard of it during my adolescence in the slums, from that old kooky cook Cook’s fables following long days and nights in the Skid Row kitchen. This legendary Society’s entire purpose was to re-imbue food with purpose, at a time when it was erased from reality as unnecessary, and the subsequent meal was rumored to be the most satisfying fourteen-digit expenditure in existence. “If yeh meck yahself useful,” Cook would say in his indiscernible native accent, the one belonging to the mostly-toothless, “them Gormans might sweeps ya up inta one of them ‘Feasts of Lasts.’ Best food ya evah tested. Real food, says a buddy o’ mahn.”

Now, I can guess what you’re thinking: real food? Bullocks, say you, real food doesn’t exist anymore! That’s just a rumor the bureaucracy spreads among its constituents to keep them, and by virtue their votes, alive. But bullocks say not I, because that’s exactly the allure of this so-called “Feast of Lasts”: food, the genuine article, prepared with lavishes of lip-smacking love like you’ve only dreamed! Not the crummy cans of genetic hodgepodge lining our common shelves, meant for nutrition and not for pleasure, but real meat from real animals, real sprouts from real vegetables, real cakes with real sugar…My head swims from mere aftertastes.

The waters of memory run so wide, the vessel of my invitation cannot be seen on the horizon. Was it my personal diary detailing the varying flavors of flavorless foods, published for an extra penny to yield a fortune? Maybe the charity I provided those who could not rise as I did, swept too deep into the despondency of poverty left by the collapse of civilizations we relied upon? Or perhaps my appeals for a Global Reconstruction Effort, to focus on the reintegration of genuine edibles, and not the Baroness Hayflax’s cans of Spammish bile we have no choice but to live and thrive solely upon? Before we can rebuild this broken planet, wrecked by the combined disasters of Nature and humanity, we must first rebuild ourselves; mundane manual labor, day in and day out, needs the color of salivation to liven a mostly rough sketch of what life once was. The people suffer for it, knowing a hearty supper no longer awaits them at home, no longer offers a sweet release, since the looming shadow of order deems it unnecessary.

So, why was I invited by that esteemed Society of Gourmands for Gustatory Gallantry, to participate in the legendary “Supper of Lasts?” For no more evident reason than they sought me, and I was willing.

And so I arrived at the appointed date and time, desiring a good impression. The Premier Palate Pavilion was a botanic garden, erected with monstrous glass panels that allowed the pleasures of the garden without to be felt from within, and capitulating in a dome of multicolored glass as its culinary crown. Even the most ostentatious grandmother would fall leagues short of decorating such a dining room as this one, furnished with jagged jet tables and amber chairs. The Society was around fifty in number, elites from the entire world over in mind, purse, or name, the majority female but the younger majority male, and all bedecked in clothes expensive enough to dress a child for five years. To pass the time, these laughing faces orbited politics, philosophy, romance, the collapse of society, gossip, and, above all else, the anticipated supper.

My host was a magnanimous Swede by the name of Doctor Major Major Doctor; for brevity, I shall simply call him Doctor Major. He was a man of both military and medicinal repute, famously wealthy, yet saving pride for his elevated taste. He had been impressed with my work, and heartily took me under the arm, destined for parades in and out of certain socialite groups to captivate them with my theories on Nutritional Selection and the Zen potential of taste buds. I was quickly pleased by how fascinated they were of the intellectualism I brought to the dinner table, my favor being most profound upon the Doctor Major himself.

“Right-o, boy, well said! For what is a man but a beast, if he can’t appreciate what really hits the spot?”

Well, now, I felt compelled to give him other indications of how to tell whether a being is a beast or a man, but, seeing my company’s boredom settling in, reeled them back in with a discussion on the psychological effects of Parsley garnish, the singular sprig that always makes it onto the plate despite never being eaten.

I eventually became distracted by the scenery, the porcelain fountains and lush tropical trees providing better food for the eyes than my companions’ food for the ears. Mind you, I rose from the gutters; only in dreams had I been privy to such extravagance. And the animals! Lured by the smells of the cuisine as if they anticipated it as much as I, shadows lumbered out from behind the chalky curtain of night. Creatures of all sizes: a large cat with orange coat and zigging stripes, a bulky, grey, wrinkly thing with a spear sprouting from its nose, a leathery green monster-worm with a tongue flicking in and out of its jaws, a fish the size of a car, sleek and black with white splotches…Truly, a more colossal menagerie had never been seen!

But my eager eyes would grow wider still, not from amazement, but stunned confusion. Among the bushes, hidden behind a pitcher plant the size of a telephone pole, was a young man. I would not find this strange, were he not bare as a peeled banana, and his eyes any less piercing. But they did not pierce with emotion or intelligence; there was no emotion or intelligence to be found, but a hopeless cloud that made him appear dopey-eyed, unaware, like those animals with hooves and horns to which cars were the primary predator. I pressed my palm against the glass, anxious not to scare him but not to remain unaware of him. He sniffed the air, plodding towards my hand though looking everywhere it was not, and pressed his cheek against the glass. His eyes frightened me, for there was no spirit, no recognition, no process of thought that existed there. All I saw were two wet, ebony gems – glossy, empty, dormant.

A brass gong resonated throughout, signaling the first course. My strange companion faded back into the moonlit garden.

I took a seat between Doctor Major and a middle-aged woman cradling yards of furs wrapped around her chest at one of the round tables, aching for an explanation of what I just witnessed, but feeling it improper as the pu-pu platters arrived with their assortment of appetizers. Skewers a forearm high, penetrating a stack of speckled melons and spotted, stringent meats. My inquiries were soon forgotten to me with this, our first taste of that legendary “Feast of Lasts.” The morsels were, in a word, fresh, in another word salivating. Their steam lifted with our forks, and continued out our nostrils as our teeth closed on them like an ivory curtain. A sigh of ecstasy was echoed by the whole room, well deserved; never had I tasted fruits so plump, meats so tender, vegetables so crisp! Doctor Major elbowed me in the ribs with good humor.

“That’s the ticket! Does it live up to everything you expected, boy? Or does it shatter those expectations like a glass ceiling?”

I murmured in the assent, drooling a little of that savory juice.

“That there is a special mutation between dragon fruit, watermelon, and some berry or other that escapes me. But our supper isn’t named for mutated fruits, oh, hell no! The meat, gamey and tame simultaneously, is none other than Jaguar, a ferocious jungle cat! The last of its kind, boy, so savor it while you can!”

I was struck by the sudden realization that this would be the only time such a heavenly taste would perch upon my tongue, before dissolving forever. I asked why the cats were not bred, so that we may always partake of grilled Jaguar whenever we pleased.

“Why, I took you for more of a man of thought that. Breed Jaguar? Haugh! The only reason Jaguar, or any meat for that matter, bursts with such flavor is because you can only try it once!”

I found this line of reasoning impudent, for how should I recall its flavor from just one sample during my lifespan? And, oh, the pangs to come, pangs to feast on Jaguar again and knowing it cannot be offered by the whole world! I was the only one of this mind, as the Society of Gourmands for Gustatory Gallantry slobbered and smacked over their trifle portions, wolfing down the chunks without second thought.

Of course, I knew you would question my care for life, for that magnificent beast I have reduced to a mouthful of taut, juicy muscle. And I ask you, in return, what is the difference between this Jaguar and the cow, so readily put to the slaughter in times before civilization’s collapse? Back then, a pig, a horse would be murdered for its utilities, so why should this cat not also serve its purpose?

The next appetizer was rolled out as fast as the last was devoured: glazed dumplings stuffed with peacock. Again, what makes this fowl so holy when compared to the chicken? I ate it, and found it better than any chicken.

In this manner the “Feast of Lasts” progressed with a few more appetizers, each a beast that marked the end of its kind. Then, the main course was announced, and served to eyes that appeared to be drooling just staring at it. My plate was uncovered, and I found myself marveling at the smoothest, shiniest meat, a tanned orange strewn with purple veins, a sweet, pungent smell swelling my brain.

“Well? Don’t sit there gawking all day. Have a bite, won’t you?”

I looked towards Doctor Major, and realized that all eyes in the Pavilion were strained directly at me, eager for my first taste of that sumptuous flank. Observing it as custom, I took the first bite.

Good God! The rich flavors of this meat were an achievement of creation, greater than anything I have had or could ever possible consume again, putting Jaguar to shame! The luscious juices, the tough skin, the tender consistency…the room shared my opinion, surely, for they tore into their portions like demons, and the meal was finished in a hot second. I was sad to see it go forever, almost to the point of tears.

“You enjoyed it? Don’t grieve, boy; this wasn’t the last time you’ll have that particular meat.”

I was overjoyed to hear the good news! Surely they couldn’t be so sadistic as to disregard this meat as they did the previous five. So, what was this heavenly main course of the “Feast of Lasts,” the same main course of every “Feast of Lasts?”

“A gift, my boy. A gift from the esteemed Baroness Hayflax.”

Ah, really? I could not imagine the creator of the government’s regulated food, formless and heartless, to have such taste as to be permitted into this Society. She was rumored a wealthy old woman, age not dulling her wit, a formidable debater on any stage but preferring to keep her diamond ringed fingers steeped in politics. I had despised her for what she forced us all to consume, but I suppose there were reasons for it. I inquired which table the good woman was at, to confess my misgivings and thank her. Doctor Major laughed.

“Why, she’s at every table, boy! A bit of her at least…you were lucky, getting the ass! Juiciest portion, am I right?”

At first, I could not have surmised what my new friend was going on about. But then I looked around at the gleaming grins of my company, teeth gnashing in consummation; a forearm picked clean here, stacked rings of breast meat there, a rib, a hand…an eyeball, staring at me from the end of a fork, its darkened vision grown darker as it was slurped down. Hazy and aching, my consciousness returned to what remained of the late Baroness Hayflax before me. My gut sunk, clammy and cold, with the steel taste of vomit.

I had eaten another human being! Disgusting, evil! That these devils would treat such an act with the highest class, and drag me headlong into it without knowing! On purpose or no, I committed the gravest offense to humanity, even savored every moment of it…I felt so sick, not only in stomach, but in soul. Some part of my humanity – I don’t know how to describe it – but I felt lesser. Less than a person…like an animal. Animals eat their own young, so does the Society of Gourmands for Gustatory Gallantry devour its own members!

Shame, horror compelled me to rise, and bile dripped from the corners of my mouth as I choked it down with more willingness than to finish my meal. The company watched me, glossy shining, waiting for my next move. Was I to run from the Society? Was I to give up fine dining forever?

To be honest, these fears were not what caused me to hesitate. Nor were they what weighed me back into my seat. No, no…it was dear Baroness Hayflax, and her sumptuous rump. God, what a sumptuous rump! The Jaguar, the peacock…none compared to the heartiness of that good lady’s barbecued hindquarters. I still felt awful, downright awful, but how could I return to those cans of pus, the only option for children bred of the slums? As the rest resumed dining, I resolved to wait, to not eat another bite…but I did. Then another. Then the Baroness Hayflax was gone, and only her salty juices swam in the dish.

Dessert was splendid, but I don’t have the heart to describe all the puddings and jellies it entailed. How could they pierce the rotten heart of a cannibal? The meal wrapped up, farewells were exchanged, and an almost mocking eulogy of the late Baroness was presented. I tried to keep up a good show, but was too shocked to offer anything other than a dazed, curt politeness. When most of the party had departed, the Pavilion painted the color of night, rows of waiters burst forth through double doors on roller skates. Faster than I could follow, they folded the tables, carted the chairs, convincing in their ignorance with professional haste. One, a woman with her hair in cornrows, approached me with a smile.

“Did you find everything to your liking, sir?”

I ran. Through the maze of glass hallways, I ran, in a cold sweat with a hellish heat burning my chest. On the other side of the walls, I could see the sad, staring faces of the animals. They knew, they knew that I was just one of them, that none of my culinary refinements and fancy words could hide the plain truth that I was just another lowly creature. I stumbled outside, desperate to escape the jungle’s condemnation.

“Ho there! Need a ride home?”

Doctor Major Major Doctor waved at me from his station wagon. I did not want to join him, but knew I must for safety. Who knows how this cult obtains their human brand of meat? Was I to be next?

The drive home began in silence. I knew not what to say, afraid of causing offense that could put me in harm’s way. Doctor Major glanced my way discreetly, opened his mouth a few times, but stopped short to twirl his mustache. The property stretched a mile in every direction, but he didn’t wish to let it pass before speaking.

“Listen, boy, I know what you’re about. You’re all twisted up inside right now because you just ate another human being, yeah? Felt like a punch in the nuts when I found out, too, but I kept eating. Stuff’s just too damn good! You did the same, being a man of intelligence, so I know I can tell you the truth. I’m sure it will help ya calm down a bit, help ya sleep at night.”

We were nearing the end of the jungle. I could make out some small fire ahead, which Doctor Major also saw and insisted I strain my eyes to see what it illuminated.

Behold, can I believe my own eyes? What did I see but men and women, even children, all bare as the road through the jungle and stupid as the farm animal with hooves and devilish horns? They sat around the fire, the younger ones hooting, the older ones silent, but all stared at our passing car with bright, glossy eyes, similar to the boy I encountered before the feast. In a few feet, the Premier Palate Pavilion, and that tribe of strange humanoids, was behind us.

Doctor Major Major Doctor cleared his throat, and began his justification.

“You see, the laws of our great land are against murder, for good reason. Without people, how would we support our own extravagancies, you know? But share and share alike can create some dismal prospects for workers, who have nothing really to work for but to keep our government moving. The laws are against murder, yes…but they say nothing of self-murder. We seek out those people, the ones who have no hope in their eyes, or up to their necks in bills, and make them a proposal:

‘How would you like us to take care of all your needs, so that you never have to worry again?’

The terms are simple; the subject will live on our properties for a minimum seven years, eating as much as they please and freed from working for nothing ever again. I mean, it’s pretty clear-cut, right? Would they rather be cattle for the bureaucracy, yet spend every penny they have just to end the grumbling in their bellies for an hour and pretend to be civilized, or would they rather be cattle for us, and never worry a dime over security or social pretensions again?

Most agree pretty quickly, I think. They have problems later down the line about how much freedom we allow, the freedom to act like animals, but the reasoning lobe of their brains calms down after a month or two. You can tell, considering how many children were in that group alone; the kids are raised to be without language. Soon, the original escapists think no better than your average ape, and all they do is sleep, eat, and fuck all the livelong day. They signed a contract, you see, so they’re not very well allowed to leave when they so please, but an unworthiness to re-enter society sets in eventually. That, and, I guess, a reluctance to go back to misery. Besides, did they have that much control in their other lives, anyway?

Beside the point, beside the point. Anyhow, after seven years, which the monkeys can’t count because the jungle doesn’t come with a calendar, we decide whether to continue cultivating them or to slip a drug into their meal. You heard me; we euthanize them. Nothing very barbaric, especially since they literally signed their lives away to us (first line in the fine print), so think of it as…assisted suicide. Yeah. We’re all animals after all, am I right, boy? Just better than thinking than the rest. You’ve seen what happens when you take a man out of civilization, but you’ve also seen what happens while he is in it; destined to be a pack animal either way, living off others’ purses and letting his drivers live off his hide. Tell me, what’s the difference between a man and a sheep?”

I said I didn’t quite know what a sheep was.

“Oh. Well, shit. I was going to say a sheep can offer more than just meat, but the joke’s lost if you don’t know what that is. We’ll have to have some next time around! Delectable thing, sheep, goes down easy.”

I was surprised how calmed I was by this explanation. Is man no more than a glorified animal? If so, there is nothing legally wrong about what the Society is doing. In fact, they’re doing these people a favor; instead of working to put money in your neighbor’s pocket, you don’t have to work and are still provided for? I…I hesitate to say, but maybe I wasn’t reasoning well enough. True, what makes man more than the Jaguar, the Peacock, besides his intellect? And it’s not like this outcome was against their will, and carried out inhumanely…

“Oh, and the Baroness Hayflax? No, she didn’t go through all that, she died of age. Very peaceful sleep it was, I heard. Yeah, she donated her body to the Society, said it was the only thing she looked forward to every month, and asked us to remember her for her lavish taste. But I’m pretty sure she meant something entirely different than what we’re thinking now, eh?”

Doctor Major laughed throatily, an echo on that solitary road above the rumble of the engine. To act natural, I joined in. As my thoughts raced, I realized something…nothing the Doctor Major said was really wrong. And they were doing such a great favor for these poor souls in their last years, too; I know what it’s like, having once been in their position. I got out of the gutter, but suppose there are those who are unable to? Then I’d reckon…I’d reckon this is a fine way out, even charitable. Even humane.

My laughter, genuine this time over such an agreeable impossibility, rose in the night to meet Doctor Major’s, and our voices twinkled in the sky over that desolate plain beyond the jungle. The moon followed us home to the city, where the free man still toils under the yoke of his own curse; the curse of being born without purpose, able to recognize this truth, and unable to help serving all but himself.

Another month has passed, and I will put your fears to rest: I made up my mind to join the Society of Gourmands for Gustatory Gallantry that next day. Access to the kitchen was granted to me, that I might experiment with the best use of my talents. Tonight, we shall begin with my own recipes, using such exquisite meats as Orca, Cassowary, and Tortoise. Then we move on to…well, you know what’s always to be the main course. I do not even care that my own creations are destined to pale in comparison. Oh, how fortunate I am, to have been accepted into the company of true Gourmets!