Matt Vadnais
REAL-TIME VIDEO OF DEAD PEOPLE YOU WANT TO HAVE COFFEE
WITH: A NOVELLA
(SERIALIZED AND BROKEN UP INTO SECTIONS FOR YOUR
READING PLEASURE, AS DENOTED BELOW)
THIS IS PART TWO.
PART ONE APPEARED IN DIAGRAM
4.6; PART THREE WILL APPEAR IN DIAGRAM 5.2.
__
The Living: [1]
[2] [3]
A New Manifesto: [4]
[5] [6] [7]
|
Tito, Wellbutrin,
and I have to walk single file. Other groups — louder and more confident
than we are — don't move for us. The sun still isn't out. It will
storm tonight, but for now it's just this heavy air, thick like static
or a magnetic field. The street is broad and long, probably not as crowded
as it gets at night, but everyone is so loud, their footsteps, their breathing.
I find myself walking too cautiously, jerking away from anyone who gets
close.
I wonder if phobias accrue over time.
My short hair is wet with sweat, my scalp
tight with itching.
My finger-less hands are awkwardly clasped
behind me.
Sometimes, when Wellbutrin is not caught
up in his own anxiety, he reaches forward, and we walk like a two-car
train. Tito is in front, trying to get us where we are going as quickly
as possible.
For a couple of years — longer than
I have been with Tito and Wellbutrin — the crowds have been like
this, a sour wad in my throat. I wonder if this is how Los Angeles felt
for my parents, before the dog park and food bank. I wonder if they felt
invisible, or too visible. I wonder if they were just lonely, something
less jumpy, less crazy-feeling than what I feel; this street, by all measure,
is a nice place with friendly strangers.
I wonder if they had good reason not to
like the city.
I wonder what they gave up to move there.
I know that, before they left for California,
my parents thought of themselves as locals. When I finally saw their bodies,
both of them were wearing Kansas University sweatshirts.
I am wondering why they agreed to move
to Los Angeles in the first place — why my chances at celebrity
were enough for them to give up Kansas — when Tito takes my arm
and pulls us into a restaurant.
In a corner booth, with an arc seat, we
sit three in a row, touching at hip and shoulder. We are sweaty, out of
breath. I feel stupid. I see the shape of Tito's mouth, how quickly Wellbutrin's
eyes are adjusting to the dark, empty sandwich shop.
If what I have is a phobia, perhaps it
is viral.
The air conditioning is on too high, and the place
is as cold as a grocery store. I feel my skin tighten. My knee begins
to shake almost immediately. But the air is easier to breathe than outside.
The dim light is much easier to see through.
"What's it like to be recognized?"
Tito asks. He is between Wellbutrin and I, leaning his body on his elbows.
"Ask Wellbutrin."
"You were more famous,"
"Yeah she was."
"But I wasn't spotted. Not unless
I was in costume. Wearing black, and the hair, and you know. When it happened,
I was playing a character."
"Same here," says Wellbutrin.
"I was on stage. I saw the adoration and stuff, but it was part of
a show. Every once and a while, someone stopped me and asked if I was
who I was. But only the fanatics, and even they would have believed me
if I said I had no idea who they were talking about."
As he talks about it he chuckles. He has
talked of how tired he was in those days, touring and recording. But to
see him remember it, after the name change and two degrees, is not to
believe him.
"Say the name again."
"No," he says.
"Plato's dead, Baby," says Tito.
His hands are touching Wellbutrin's. "Archetype is marketing scheme.
My coffee maker is closer to Coffee Maker. My dog is more Dog."
"The hell does that mean?"
"Say the name again."
"Is," says Wellbutin. "Are,
Was, Were, Be, Am, Been, Has, Have, Had, Do, Did, Does, May, Can, Might,
Must, Shall, Will, Should, Could, Would," he says. Not fast, not
in the memorized list that I'm sure he first learned it. I have tried
to say it back to him. I always get hung up at been. We know the rest
of the story, but he continues with it, and we laugh in the usual places.
"But no one wanted to know all that so we were just The Helping Verbs.
Even that was too much for radio stations. The Verbs they said. Suddenly,
our connotation included running, jumping, exploding."
"That's a sad, sad metronome,"
Tito says.
"What he said," I say.
Over Tito, Wellbutrin smiles at me.
It's true that I was more famous. I had
to work crowds. Once, legal let me do a commercial in full makeup, selling
mufflers — with Speedo your car can be dying and no one will know.
I did voice-overs all the time, for commercials, for documentaries, an
IMAX show about the Sahara and the cruelty of the natural world.
And while it's true that several people
in this place would recognize Tito's story, or Wellbutrin's bass riffs,
everyone here could describe my death.
Finished with lunch, we remain in the booth with emptied
plates, scattered utensils. Wellbutrin is whistling, his softness restored.
No one has mentioned the broadcast since we left the house. I have not
heard any of his final verdicts about our act of appropriation, whether
or not I violated his literary boundaries. I'd like to know.
Still, I don't want to say anything.
I decide to sit for awhile, our table cluttered
but separated from the rest of the restaurant, but Tito grows anxious,
getting his color back. For a while he just fidgets, rubbing his chin
with a fist. I can hear his hand scraping against his beard.
Eventually, he begins to drum the table
with a knife and spoon.
"We found our hook," he says.
"It went fine," says Wellbutrin.
I am unsure how to read his tone of voice.
"More than fine," says Tito.
"Better. Firecracker Bill, like a bulldozer."
"Sure," says Wellbutrin. He is
growing heavier again, the same grace, but defeat in his voice. "This
is dangerous."
"It played out."
"It did," he says. "But
that's no guarantee it will again."
"Yeah it is," Tito says. "That
she said anything is red-letter proof that she said it right."
"No it's not."
"Boys," I say. "Who's next?"
Whether or not we do the chat again, there
is no question that there will be another house. Though money isn't an
issue, we will put the estate up for sale, probably by the end of the
week. We attempted to give our first, the Capote house, to charity. But
it created a stir. If it happens in real space, exposure is not what we
are looking for.
"Good question," Wellbutrin says.
"Browder," says Tito.
Wellbutrin laughs, and I have to smile
as well.
Earl Browder was the head of the American
Communist Party during World War II. Tito wanted to do him before Stafford.
Wellbutrin had to stoop to saying things like "ideleonomics"
to get Tito to hold off this long.
I know that he is crucial to Tito's ideology,
but nothing we do, no amount of house footage, will make Earl Browder
a personality. We might as well be shooting from the grave of a random
uncle.
"He's not famous," I say.
"And he's not a writer," Wellbutrin
says.
"Both troubles are really the pistons
that will make us go, go, go," says Tito. He sits fully upright again,
still shorter than both of us. He takes his hands from the table. He thumbs
at his nose and rocks as he speaks. "People don't know him, true.
We want a reformation of ocracy," he says. "And that can't happen
only with writers. Browder needs us to make his bones sing. Burroughs,
if you want to speak from a technical mouth, already sings from the page.
Browder is as deserving as anyone."
He quiets. When we don't say anything,
he begins to tap his knife against his water glass.
"Look," he says, still tapping.
"We're ready for this, for him. After Ghostboy, we have the base
audience, several hundred hits since last night. We're ready for the next
step, ready to bring fame to a figure instead of the other way around.
And we can start to bring out the heavy boxes, pry open the crates marked
politics."
"But politics is all he is,"
says Wellbutrin. "Nothing needs to be clarified. People want to know
Browder, they can take a class on the cold war."
"People can take a class on anyone,"
Tito says. "If that brochure is accurate, then we're selling obsolete
swampland. Browder's as much of an enigma as anybody. Plus, he's close.
Who else we got left in Kansas?"
"We can leave Kansas."
"I bought the estate," says Tito.
"Was it even for sale?"
"I bought it."
"You bullied whoever lived there into
leaving."
"I increased our offer. They decided
it was worth it. I'm just playing their game, revolution as a slow poison.
I signed electronically. We pack up and go. We can be there by sundown
tomorrow."
He's right. With money, the world is smaller.
As I watch the waitress ring up our ticket, I am ashamed of how small
ours has become.
[ Previous ] [ Next
]
|
|