--I
AM BOUND TO LEAVE YOU
…I woke up grumpy today, same as
yesterday, without really knowing why.
Does that ever happen to you? If
it does, what do you do to rectify the situation?
It’s been sunny and beautiful. I’ve had little pressure on me. By all accounts, I live a charmed life. There’s no reason for me to be grumpy or
unkind or anything but grateful.
It’s sad to say, but what took me out of
my grumpy phase was a very thoughtful note I got this morning. (It’s sad, because if all of us are waiting
for someone to appreciate us, or compliment us in order to feel good, well it
might not ever happen.)
Anyway, this is the note:
“I just want to say that you are an
amazing writer. I read the piece you
posted yesterday, and I can’t remember the last time that so many lines jumped
out at me as brilliant. Not that my opinion
matters, but well done!”
And this is the story, a quirky thing of
which I have no idea what compelled me to write it:
Metazen,
2010
“Friends
and Relatives of Rubber”
by Len Kuntz
To
make it easier on everyone involved, he became a rubber band. A paper airplane
might have worked just as well but give him credit because his idea bespoke
inventiveness, understanding, and a certain languid level of maturity.
First
he burrowed into the bark of a nearby rubber tree, waiting for the drilling
press. Inside he was strip-searched and boiled, re-engineered and born again. He
exited in a gluey river of sap that was slow to sundry but became shapely
nevertheless.
Afterward
he demonstrated superior elasticity.
People
shot him.
He
went here, he went there. Friends and relatives used him for their own
purposes, much the same as before except that now there was a crisp expediency,
a complicit collusion.
Not
everyone had acuity, however. “What’s happened to you?” his sister asked, and
when he failed to answer, she said, “Aw fuck it,” and launched him into the
shallow end of their swimming pool where he sank no different than a finless
fish.
Seen
from below the water’s surface she resembled a David Hockney painting. “Who the
hell are you?” her warbled voice chanted.
Speechless,
he thought: I am a vessel a utensil a measly weapon an unused binding unit.
No
one was especially impressed.
The
kings and queens of the neighborhood no longer acknowledged him. The grocery
store clerks—former vandal friends of his—now looked askance when he stood in
line hoping to purchase cigarettes. Once he was tied and knotted to a homeless
man’s dreadlocks for a fortnight, but other than that his new existence
remained useless, leafless and lame all the same.
Also,
he smelled disgusting, like a car tire or hippo breath, talc-y like a bad batch
of heroin. He never bathed and never ate or drank. He became slender then
skinny-sharp, fluid and flexible, his own acrobatic show.
Nonetheless,
he was under no illusions. He knew what he was: a child, a sire, an heir maybe,
someone’s hard burden. He was a son, a stepson too, a rental until
eighteen. Prostitutes and backhoes, places to live for a short periods of
time—all of these things could be leased as well.
On
his birthday a final, fraudulent fuss was made. For appearances sake, one set
of parents had a nature-themed party featuring exotic yet endangered species
from the pruned plains of Africa and Australia, Mexico or North Dakota. On hand
were rhinos and emus, macaws and giraffes, foreign nationals with Nehru
collared shirts and felt cowboy hands. The event was a fair to middling success
until the boa trainer got sidetracked telling a story and the snake swallowed a
neighbor girl whom everyone—teachers, house wives, babysitters—adored. He
didn’t know the girl that well, but he understood he was supposed to feel
genuine gloom over her loss, and when he couldn’t generate even a pinch of
sympathy, he snapped himself off a water faucet and sweated pungent regret the
entire flight across town.
He
arrived late to the second party because the Seattle PD had difficulty
fingerprinting him.
Many
of the featured guests were gone by then. Gangbanging bums looted the
overflowing garbage bags and cans, adjusting their blousy pants as they did,
shuffling their pistols and penises to make room for half-eaten corn dogs made from
imported Chicken Cordon Bleu.
He
hoped no would recognize him.
He
tumbled over to the tented table where wilted balloons hung from the aluminum
posts like drunken grandmothers or their slackened breasts, and found what was
left of the sheet cake.
Untouched
but for a finger stab in the northeast corner, cursive frosting gave this
enthusiastic yet vague salutation: HAPPY BIRTHDAY YOU!
He
took a cigarette from his pocket and lit it. The cig tasted like a bad movie,
or a celluloid strip smoldering black and gritty under an unforgiving flame. He
stuck the cigarette butt through the gluey icing and flinched when it hissed
back, a pissed off Satan woken from his nap.
The
lawn gleamed stoner green, yet brittle tawny weeds clung along the outskirts
where the neighbors lived. He lit matches, one after the other, and tossed the
flaming javelins as far as his rubbery arms could stretch.
The
fire crackled and burped up blackened bilge as it digested a field within
seconds. It slid dance floor smooth and liquid orange.
The
remaining crowd stampeded, ladies screaming, men scooping up their deluded
toddlers and oxy cotton teens. Sweaters snagged and ankles sprained.
His
own father and stepmother, Jamie, plowed right over him. He hit his
stepmother’s breast plate and fell backwards, somersaulting in slow motion
while wondering if any child had ever suckled one of those steel bullet
nipples. When he landed, his father crushed his cheek, leaving a topsider
imprint: the Gucci letter G.
He
wished the fire would make its way to him, but the grass where he laid was
soggy and soaked from Diet-Coke spills.
He
inhaled the burnt odor and pictured the bottom of an urn containing cremation
remains. He considered the word “remains”, rolled it around his tongue like a
hairy jaw breaker, and listened to the squad of fire trucks, their sirens
bleating and piercing the sky, a murdered flock of magpies.
He
tucked his hands behind his head. His favorite part of a story was the end.
He
opened his eyes and challenged the sun to a staring contest and never blinked,
not even once his corneas were boiled.
He
smiled. Even as a rubber band, he felt whole. Especially as a rubber band.
His
birthday was a success, his wish granted. Rubber or real, it made no
difference; he was invisible and would remain that way till the end.
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