Story and music by original author unknown.

“Nobody broke your heart;
you broke your own because you can’t finish what you start.” I remember. I
remember the way the wine-dark waves lapped at the balcony, trying to swallow
it, and the way I would often stare down into them and see rubble deep down in
them, statues tossed over and into that realm down there, all suffocating,
dreadful, hopeless, still, pictures without motion. I remember the way that it
all smelled—an air of sulphur? the general malaise? a gunfight—brutal fucking
murder it was, at least in my mind, but Hell, when’s my mind ever been
clear—and yet there was no body here, and there was no blood to speak of, no
gunman nor his weapon of choice, no pigs, no ringing sounds snarling their ways
into my ear canals. But it always smelled like that. Perhaps every night after
my leaving there would be a shooting. I never minded the idea of getting mowed
down, relinquished to the vicissitude of a necessary cleaning operation. Just
mop it up and be done with it. Some days I’d come by and there’d be specks of
crimson staining Stygian hanging about, neglected, just like everyone in that
little shack.

The shack itself was
chaotic—and that was putting it eloquently—as the people in it, the things that
took place, the shack itself… all inevitably pure chaos. Nothing ever really
made sense; everyone within the shack came and went as they pleased, and barely
any returned after their first visit. But there was a set of constants among
us. Well… if we’re being quite honest, I think I’m getting ahead of myself here.

A day in the life: I
remember that I’d stalk in, my feet planted wide and my head tilted back, and
into the central room I would stumble from that short, bending hallway,
everyone screaming and clambering for worth. But I remember I was always louder
and I could always move with much more force, and their heads would always pan
toward me, a look of minute terror etched into some of their faces. Some wore
their respect on their shoulder. But I’d sit down at the table and then we
would play poker, and the saltwater under the floorboards would slosh around,
the constant reminder. A poem would often come to mind, but more specifically
those words that ache true:

“‘My name is Ozymandias,
King of Kings,

Look upon my works ye
Mighty, and despair!’

No thing beside remains,
Round the decay

Of that Colossal Wreck,
boundless and bare,

The lone and level sands
stretch far away.”

And every time I thought
these words, a solemn look came over me.

And nobody ever noticed.

Nobody ever knew who had
built the shack. Even in the public records (which I scoured years later),
there seemed to be no mention of its inhabitants, the architect, the year it
was built. Even the way the shack was shaped both internally and externally was
impossible to pin down, other than how it was clearly of the late modernist
variety. A structural expressionist wonder compacted into a tight 20 * 20 * 6
square feet, left to simply rot after its construction. Its interior design
made as little sense as the hangers-on. A futuristic Art Nouveau. It brought to
mind images of Alex DeLarge singing in the rain. It made me laugh hysterically.
That made others laugh. Lord, I remember. I remember, I remember, I remember, I
remember. The way I’d reach inside my mouth and scrape my teeth to get out the
gunk, as if it could replace brushing and flossing them. And the way that the
more I’d do it, the more I’d see other people do it. One of them had
gingivitis. Terrible breath.

I remember when I first
passed the place. I was strolling by; I had just been in the slums in town and
the next thing I knew, I was standing next to those rows and columns. They were
all different to some degree, had some differing qualities to them, some being
more distinct from others. I remember the way it all seemed to swim with
inaccuracy, imprecision that itself made no sense; it was like floating in
sensory deprivation, above the bed in which I might otherwise sleep.

The waters were elegant,
serene, even contemptuous in size, some mountain impossible to scale in my
mind’s eye. I saw some people enter the building, but I was reluctant to join
the quickly gathering crowd. Every day I would pass and there would be someone
new I’d see going in or out. Clearly, in our scene, it was the talk of the
town. It got so bad I struggled to even go through the harbour on many days,
pushing through that marketplace. Every day the horizon seemed to get lower and
lower, I realised eventually, and I thought of possibilities as for the
explanation as to why. I imagined that the sky was simply becoming cloudier,
thicker, lower, falling, more oppressive, and there was a solemnity implied in
that. Others, I could hear among them, also discussed it. Why were we being
stifled?

It was all suffocating
until one day it was not, and the lands were comparatively barren. Later, I
learned the source of the emptiness was that, inside of there at some God
forsaken hour of the day where the place was empty save for these three, a pair
of people brought their friend in and shot them in the chest with a .950 JDJ,
killing them instantly. They were caught on CCTV outside in balaclavas.

They were never seen
exiting the building; only the remains of the deceased found.

When I first heard, I
remember that I instantly envisioned nuclear annihilation. All of them being
wiped away from the face of the Earth, all traces of them erased in some time
elapsed invisibly. Jesus Christ.

“Fucking depraved
bastards,” the man sitting beside me at the table spoke to me as I read
Foucault’s Madness & Civilization. “They— God, can you believe that?
They didn’t even have the courage to just show their faces! Who are they? Who
were they?”

And for a couple of weeks,
that was all that anyone ever talked about. Wild theories as to why it had
happened, conspiracies of a greater power at play. It was true, there was a bit
of an undercurrent of those here who believed something greater to be at work
that brought us all here. Frankly, I remember that when I first arrived, I fell
in with them a little. It was a few months before the incident that shook us
all, and despite me being a stickler, I had never heard about the matter until
some time after it had occurred, although everyone around me was talking about
it. It was all incoherent, jumbled screaming: what did you expect me to do?
listen to it?

But no matter. I didn’t
humour them until I saw it on the news. After that, that group of… conspiracy
theorists? They were so highly disregarded afterwards that they became kind of
a punchline among some of us. Well, that’s to say I had friends there, but I
didn’t. Not yet. And what would be the use of them?

After that it had gone
mostly quiet, and the place became barren. I scarcely saw anyone there anymore.
I always thought I could hear distant murmurs abound in this place, some quiet
echoes of spectres, hauntological, heavy. Ha! Stratified to make each of them
some sort of special, unforeseeable force. I’d call back to every one I heard
as if trying to overpower them with words could even vaguely protect me. But
toward the distant noises or calls I would walk anyways.

Deeper inside, the place
seemed to be more run-down, less maintained. It looked like my grandparents’
house: objects strewn all about, dust collecting anywhere and everywhere it
could thrive, thick on the air. I felt like if I stood around there for too long
I’d end up choking to death. As the whole place dried up, I remained, some
fragment of the jar that had long been shattered and cleaned up left behind.
And it was quiet. And it was beautiful. It was somewhat reminiscent of the NoEnd
House
, although for what purpose that it did is unbeknownst to me. I
plundered every depth, every crevice of the place, eventually, and yet still
with every new day there would be more things to be found, some metamorphosis
of the present times, moving away from the stills of each frame in our films
we’d play back to ourselves. I imagined reels of film lighting themselves up,
nitrocellulose erasing invisible and intertwined histories.

Eventually, I felt as if it
were a home away from home. I remember that I brought more and more valuables
there just to sit with them, and I was too tired to take them home. I slept on
the cold floor. But every night it would get colder.

This was not the first time
I had been here. There were other places on the harbour, some bigger. Some
smaller. When I first walked in the sky was higher up, more of the horizon to
be seen. But now it seemed like the building had shrunken, or, now that I
realised it, that the world had. There were some more of these places around,
very little distance between them, and they were huge. Mansions. Victorian,
gothic. A population the size of a party and then some, 24/7. When I was
younger I felt much more kinetically drawn to these places, as if they were
made for me, as ridiculous as it sounds. But then again, all of this is
ridiculous. I went outside and looked around and, indeed, they were still
bustling, acting like nothing had happened here. At least, nothing that really
concerned them that much. Which may have been true, but it still hurt to see it
all panning out like this. I wondered to myself: what can I do? what can I do
to make them know how real this is?

But there would be no
answer, no respite.

I stepped back inside of
the building and looked around and found a new door in the wall to the west. I
imagined behind it a huge, sprawling world, something new again, not just the
emptiness of these months I’d spent for so long just wasting away. Becoming as
much of a ghost as everyone else had. But the more I thought about it the more
aversive I became. For what lay behind the door? and what powers that be could
bestow this place with the ability to grow new functions, new objects?

Were they right in that
idea that we were here for a reason, not by our own admission, guided by that
which is unseen? the unseen in us? and who were we to know the answer?

There would be none.

I remember how immaculately
uncomfortable I felt as I opened the door to a vast blackness, but deep down I
feel like I can more distantly recall some sentiment of comfort, solace in it.
It’s absurd, surreal in hindsight. It sounds like a dream. But I stepped in, my
hands outstretched to my sides to ensure the boundaries of this new space. I’d
stumbled into a universe of hidden interiors, and how truly brilliant that was!
or at least so my very loose conceptions of the future held true to me,
themselves these ghosts that hanged over from some excellent time that was
relatively far out of our entire shared realm of conceptions.

It was quiet here; it was
dull, even. But it was right, and it was cold. And I stayed here for a time. I
remember hearing things from not so far off. It made me feel at home. But
eventually, every time, I’d have to come back from that place, and go to sleep.
Because where else was there to go?

Every day I would venture
deeper and deeper yet, the floor more caked with filth down this way, and there
was another door present there. Nonetheless, I was hesitant to enter as I could
feel the weight of the threat looming there, and I turned away from that
feeling even back then. I wonder if I knew at this time just how things were
going to pan out deep down, or if I really did have no idea of what I was
stumbling into. I had never known it, but deep inside of every single one of
these places were hidden these entrances. Every single one, I found as I
stumbled deeper and deeper into it. And that’s not to say it was necessarily
bad. Overall, I’d say that, in coming away from it all, it was not good or bad.
Fuck, it’s hard to pin down, and it always has been. But everything here always
seems to swim until you look close enough, and it brings you to the truth of
some matter, or as close to the truth as you could hope to get… well, again,
getting ahead of myself.

I don’t know how long it
took to open that second door. It was rusted, felt even to be superglued shut.
I had to grasp a crowbar and stick it in what very little opening there was and
pry the thing open. It took what felt like an hour, I would like to say,
although in hindsight that seems rather unrealistic. But eventually before me
there stood a new compartment of the building. It was only then that I realised
how this place was physically impossible, and that this entire harbour was not
right in some esoteric way. I remember that I fell back on the floor screaming
against a gate fallen onto the floor, and afterwards I clambered back and off
of it, my arms raised to my face in defence. I remember thinking I saw wisps of
light forging themselves into humanoid forms, only for them to disappear as I
put my arms down to my sides and they hung there like weights. I almost slumped
over onto the floor, and it was only at this point that I knew I had only just
scratched the surface. My ideas were to go and find more of these, catalogue
them, document how they all worked, their dimensions, some sort of science to
explain it. But it is beyond explaining, I realise now, and I should have then.
To put this magick into words would be to undermine its capacity to thrill us.
When I stepped in there was someone standing there, and although it did not
dawn on me immediately, I was becoming aware of the overwhelming beautiful
truth: for in community, alone in the universe, you are never truly alone. They
looked up at me and had a cold smile I fell into. The white light continued to
pour in through the open windows, relinquished of their blinds to be drawn or
their curtains. It was everywhere, overabundant, exhausting, freeing, loveless,
so as to speak “close my eyes and feel me now”. My mouth was agape, I found,
and I had to shut my jaw and clench it against the top teeth with my hand, and
even then it was a struggle to keep it in the right place.

I looked around to see what
little I could in all of this blinding light. There were many doors here, a
small scooter propped up against the wall, a motorbike. My eyes were wide, my
pupils shrunken, I’m certain. I must’ve looked mad.

I asked the man who stood
there the most simple question, because I really, really did struggle to think
of anything else to ask: “What is this place?”

He took a moment to reply.
“It’s a place for you,” he said, chuckling a little. This was warm, engaging.
This exterior of steel, as I suspected, was not firm and resolute throughout
his body. Wondrous and wandrous I approached, in the light of the perplexed
answer to the nothing of the eternity spent before, and I embraced him, and he
embraced me like a father would. And it felt right against my skin, that
pressure.

When I came to, I was in
the original room, my possessions still present, the dimensions of the house
unfaltering. I stepped out and into the wider world and there were all of the
same buildings. “I’m dreaming,” I whispered to myself, but the ethereality was
with both of us.

And when I woke from that
dream, I remember I was back in the original room, the door back and present,
open, inviting. I pinched myself and blood came, and I was engorged with the
pain, smothered in it like a cigarette between a lady’s lips. My tongue pressed
up against the wound in my arm, licking the pain, drinking it, holding it
tightly within me. There was no end in sight the next time I came down the way:
there was simply another door present, but in this iteration it elucidated
nothing more than normality. The term “natural aversion” entered my mind,
although I could not say for what purpose and what it meant exactly, how it
applied. But everything had been disjointed, every single thing. Even the
presence of the shack itself among all the rest confounding at first when I
first saw it years ago.

And I remember I was always
pensive, restrained. I didn’t go through the doors in that hidden room when I
came to this realisation of how it had become normalised. I looked at old
photographs of it from the sea, fell down a paper trail, sets of interviews
come to pass with older men, no exact mention of any name attached to the
architect of the place, no fate, no beginning, no end.

It was not long before I
discovered that the place had grown. Metal pipes and sharp aluminium
compounding on top of itself infinitely, interlocking and twisting and tangling
like strands of hair into a place of filth and rot. The first image of it, in
its rawest form, was from roughly three decades prior, I found. Some Polaroid I
unearthed lying around in a drawer with no specific date attached, but the
context clues of everything surrounding it alerted me. I tried to remember what
it looked like when I first saw it. Had it changed? In this image, the roof was
flat. But now it looked like the top of a circus tent. And I remember, and I
remembered that when I first walked this path, the roof was a truncated square
pyramid. What was the first year that I saw it?

I looked out the window,
and it was dusk. Uncontrollably, even, I pressed my hand up against the window
and I could feel my shape and my size. “If you could do it all again… a little
fairy dust. A thousand tiny birds singing. If you must, you must.”

I looked down at my hands.
There was blood caked under the nails. I brought my nails to my eyes and stared
down the path between the skin, the convergence of the matrix and the keratin.
I saw into it. The visions were disorienting, I recall. But in this moment I
looked to them for guidance, despite already knowing the path ahead.

A bust of Heraclitus.

Dreamlike grasps of wars
bathed in red smoke and white phosphorus, centuries old, stills, no distinct
faces, gunpowder without muskets. Malice without means.

The Abrahamic divine.

Unread books on local
hauntings.

The makings of distant
sittings and dancings.

A maze in blue and black.

Falling from a rooftop.

False awakenings.

Father.

Reclusion.

Chernobyl.

A smug, sovereign grin that
bred terror within me in a time before.

Things of metal clashing,
enmeshing.

Their war cry.

YTMND.

Something Awful.

Yet more distant grips of
something lurking.

Osmosis.

Filthy animations.

Unreal Tournament, pissed off.

Microsoft fantasies.

Violence for violence’s
sake.

Violence for laughter’s
sake.

Skateboarding, despite
physical incapabilities.

Hours spent translating
every night.

Diving into heaps of
garbage.

Green, lush fields with
length.

The beautiful,
non-Euclidean castle, lonely and inviting, surreal and homely.

Cats moving about
awkwardly, led by strings.

Solipsism.

Text-to-speech voices.

Vicious cycles.

Notebooks upon notebooks
upon notebooks, and where do they all slink away to.

Fleeing the sinking ship
that night.

The man with the stutter,
cryptic and alien.

The layout of my primary
school.

The land through the
wardrobe and the doors that opened.

Children saving the world
from an unknowable evil.

Late nights desensitising
myself to the evil.

Memetics.

Remix culture.

Aristocracy.

Fascism.

Reverse engineering.

Theoretical physics in
passing.

Drowning in the pool.

Cheap thrills.

The rise and fall of a drug
empire.

In a club in the wee hours,
standing alone on a hollow dance floor. Christoph de Babalon.

Scepticism of that divine’s
popular conception.

Ungodly, brutal
psychological warfare. Brainwashing.

Where does honour
metamorphosise into glorification.

Kids whining at their
stupid fucking video games.

Beams of light swirling and
spiralling through and down into the sky, witches scattered through it.

Vague faces against dark
backdrops, compressed in blocky colours.

Roentgens and sieverts.

Conservatism.

Alchemy.

“Mephistopheles is just
beneath, and he’s reaching up to grab me.”

The esoteric dark spins.

Illness every three months.

Pseudointellectualism.

Elitism.

You’re gonna carry that
weight.

Desiring to be the
beginning and the end, the alpha and the omega.

Coming of age.

Reckoning with the anima.

Friedrich Nietzsche.

Phenomenology.

Bitterness.

Relishing in the gore.

All-encompassing beauty.

Flabbergagger.

Then I stand there.
The convergence of the matrix and the keratin is once more real. I
turn and I know the true path through. I enter the hallway. I make nine paces
forward and then left. There is a laugh that reverberates through the hall
distantly: it permits no understanding of itself, only what it can hand off. I
have no conception of the past or the future. There is only the now.

…Shit, I get caught up.

In that cold crevasse I
stood staring at the doors ahead. The doorknobs were ancient, rustic, shaped
like ovals, the frames for keys caked with something ungodly. Peeking through
the hole of one, I could see it led outside, back to the harbour. I chose the
other door instead.

When I entered, it was
comfortable. The room was encased in leather, large fans quietly working their
way behind many people sitting at the table. None of them looked my way. I
turned my head to face over my shoulder. The man stood there, smiling, like an
encouraging father does to his offspring. As I stepped in and turned to shut
the door he reached up to his chin, and I paused to watch him start peeling the
skin from his face at his chin. It was very quick. I stopped looking when he
had uncovered his more neutral mouth. Everyone prayed, and I joined the table
in prayer. I was family. Unquestioned.

It’s absurd, even difficult
to put into words the amount of power that these little moments have. You never
know how these moments can reign over your life until, bam, you’re in the
middle of having lost it, and you know how important it all was. And you remember
all that you had. And you clasp your fingers into your palms, searching for
something that isn’t there. And the waters continue to flow. And you keep
breathing. But it’s not the same. It’s never the same and you can’t keep
pretending. And there is nothing to gain from this pursuance. And yet you keep
trying to go down this path anyways.

I was sitting there and it
was quiet suddenly, but not because of me, nor in spite of me: it was simply an
occurrence, something that had no coherent explanation. I was incoherent.
Everyone was. We all laughed at dizzying, analogue images spitting themselves
onto the walls and trying to maintain some sort of godlike status. We saw
Patrick Bateman toss a chainsaw down flights of stairs. We saw a man in brown
professing something, thin, tied up in a chair and laughed and gawked at by
some unseen man, his accent alien and oblique.

To put it bluntly, we had
been taking from other places. We took these things and indulged in them. And
it was alright—there was never a problem with that cultural diffusion—but as I
looked around, I saw it on some shirts. Some had emigrated here. They were like
me. I was like them. And finally I had some sort of place in the world, I
thought. All those years spent drifting through and away I’d found a very
general place but with a slight focus. I could live. I could breathe. I know
this. I knew it then.

“Shit,” was the word that
came out of my mouth, and I didn’t even think about it. I looked over at one
guy. He looked really effeminate. Not that that’s a bad thing, I’m just saying
it.

“What?” came the sort of
voice you would expect.

“Nothing. It’s just… I…
hm.” I closed my eyes and the whole table waited expectantly, patiently. They
were willing to extend their graces.

“What?” he eventually
repeated.

“Out there, it was just
people who had only ever been here. They never talked about this.”

“Yeah.”

“What is this place?”

“Well, uh… it’s our special
place. It’s our home.” He smiled, and let out a relenting, awkward laugh. I
wanted to fall into it, like a daydream or a fever. “See, not all of us
celebrate it, but at least it’s accepted. Right, guys?”

“Right,” came a lot of
them.

“Mm,” came from his mouth
after that. “Right. Like the Friends. The Quakers.”

I smiled back at him and
then we laughed, because that sounded absolutely ridiculous and, to be honest,
I had no idea what he was talking about. “Right.”

Then we played poker.

While we were going about
it, my eyes were caught on this couple that was at the far end of the room. I
don’t remember what the guy looked like. Probably pale. Vampiric. But
ultimately upstanding. The lady he was with really drew my eyes, though. She
looked over at me briefly every now and then. Her look was refined,
sophisticated, if still ultimately part of the same style as what a lot of
other people here were pursuing. Scene. Emo. Whatever you want to call it. But
I could tell there was something more to it than that. I knew that everyone in
here had a story, but whenever I looked over at her it seemed like everything
else fell away, I remember. Not because I was in love. But I knew I had to get
to know her. Get to talk to her. Have a friend. Dammit, I was lonely and it
wasn’t going to be an issue.

There were a lot of us
playing, but I ended up winning.

The next day, I went back
after clocking out, and I ended up sitting a little closer to her this time.
She had earphones in. I was too afraid to speak to her, but I did catch more of
what she was talking about. She sat beside her other friend. Some lady named
Sabrina. I felt like I was in Vertigo, eavesdropping on something that I
wasn’t supposed to. But I did try and do a fair share of everyone in here. A bunch
of people coming and going. Names I don’t remember,  because none of them
really struck me the same way, other than that other guy I was talking about
and his two friends. But this isn’t about them, even if they were nice. When we
sat closer to one another we talked a little more frequently and shared in the
deep of what we had in common. Clearly we all did in being here, but there was
something else. Something new and unforeseen. Perhaps those are the right
words.

I won this game too.

The next day I sat a little
closer to her even more, but not quite close enough for me to even say anything
important like you might think.

I won again.

And the next day I won too.

And the day after that. But
that day was special. We all got up to leave, like we always did, and I went
after the lady. I hadn’t caught her name, even in spite of all of the time that
she had shared with the others that I had seen coming in and out around her,
although to be fair it was a somewhat small circle. I paced around a little bit
in the room because of the build-up of so much kinetic energy in me, and yet
still nobody seemed to bother. When the lady was going to walk out the door I
came up behind her. “Hey,” I called out.

She didn’t respond and I
realised she had those earphones in. I pursed my lips and looked down and then
I ran up and tapped her on the shoulder. “Huh?” she went, and her head turned
to face me. God, she was stunning. We looked at one another for some time, a
confusion awash with both of us.

“Hey,” I repeated.

“Uhm. Hey,” she said back.

“I saw on your shirt that
you’re, uh… yeah. You remember the day I came in, right?”

“Yeah. It’s cool to meet
you and all,” she said, smiling warmly. “I love all that stuff. You know, I
honestly… I wonder if it’s real. Those things.”

“Me too,” I said. “I mean,
I-I, uh, I don’t know if they are for sure, but…”

“Oh, yeah, well, that’s
just the nature of it. Nobody can really figure it out for sure.”

“Mhm.”

“Well, I’m gonna have to
get going… need to take care of my grand—”

“Hey, wait. What’s your
name?”

“Na— oh. It’s
embarrassing,” she conceded, her eyes averting from mine.

I looked at her
inquisitively. “Well, it’s not Nevaeh is it?”

She smirked, trying not to
burst into laughter.

“Or, uh… Spingler?” I was
just shooting the shit. Being ridiculous.

She couldn’t help it. “No!
What?”

“It can’t be that bad.”

“Lana. It’s nice to meet
you.”

I smiled back at her.
“Yeah.”

“Nice to meet you,” she
repeated.

“Yeah, you too. Mind if I
walk with you?”

“No, not at all,” she
replied.

And so we walked along the
path, to her house.

“So what makes you take
special interest in me, exactly?” she asked.

“Well, I guess I’m just
lonely. Looking for someone to bond with.”

“Really,” said staunchly.
“To be honest, you strike me as… hm. You strike me as being more interesting
than you let on for people.”

I looked over at her.
“That’s an oddly specific way of wording things.”

“You seemed like you needed
a pick-me-up. I know I need a lot. I get down a lot.”

“Sorry about that,” I said,
nervous.

“Nothing to be sorry
about.”

“Sorry I’m sorry.”

She chuckled. “Nothing to
be sorry about.”

“Sorry I was sorry I was
sorry.”

A laugh. I laughed too.
“You know, you’re a funny guy.”

“I know I am.” I bent my
knees, went into a squat, and did a weird dance that only lasted a second and
she burst into laughter again. “Glad I could entertain you if anything,” I said
in between laughs myself.

“Yeah, you’re silly. But,
uh, not much going on in my life that’s very… laughable…”

“Sorry about that,” I
repeated. It’s not that I wanted to steer the topic of conversation away from
being dark. I just wanted to keep the laughs coming. Keep her feeling better
than she was.

“I’m glad you’re at
least here to keep me occupied,” she said, validating it.

“Again. Glad I can be of
assistance.” In the dark it was harder to make out her features. The street
lamps were glowing green and it cast her in odd lights, but I didn’t mind it
whatsoever. I felt like I was at home here, even if I didn’t really realise it.
And the sky seemed higher up. And the air was cleaner. It was raining lightly.
We kicked puddles at one another. But what was there to realise? I was alive; I
was in the moment; and nothing could deprecate that high exactly. I had to ask
now. “So why were you there at all? Like, what, uh, what brought you there?”

“Well, I guess I was just…
predisposed. I’ve had a lot of scary things happen in my life. So obviously I’m
going to have some inclinations toward the—”

“Yeah. Sorry for
interrupting, I just—”

“Yeah.”

“I didn’t want to lose my
train of thought. But I understand everything you’re saying, go on.”

“Mhm. So I’m… not really in
a great place. Uh, mom’s really harsh on me… you know how it goes.”

I thought back to all of
the other people I had met there having said the same thing. To a certain
degree I doubted all the rest of them, but there was something more believable
here. She didn’t use it as an excuse to get away with certain things that were
wrong. She wasn’t entitled. “Yeah,” I said back, my eyes full of wonder.

Hers were too.

“Yeah. I’m, uh… I guess
I’ve been in a similar position too.” I sniffled. It was a little cold. I
rubbed my chin, feeling the whiskers. “I was never really very connected to my
family. Always been very independent.”

“Huh. Well I’m sorry about
that.”

“No, it’s alright, it’s
fine. We just never had anything in common. It wasn’t that there was anything,
uh… bad. No. It wasn’t like that. I’m sorry for you, of course. But it’s more a
problem of me than a problem of them.”

She looked at me
understandingly. “Yeah, I get it. Then again a lot of people in there have…
issues.”

“They do?” I asked. I was
sure that everyone I was surrounded with had some sort of problem. Not that I
judged any of them, but… well, actually, looking back, I know it’s hindsight
bias, but can you really blame me as I was in this moment?

“Yeah.”

“I guess I kinda got that
impression. To be honest before I got to where we met, I was starting to feel
like people just use it as an excuse to… say whatever they want and be whoever
they want to be. But I know that’s not the case now. Because of people like
you.”

“Aww. Thanks.” She was
warm. “You know, uh, I like your hair.”

“Thanks?”

She reached out and put her
hand in my hair and pulled her hand away from it. It was a little knotted, but
not too bad. I didn’t complain about the pain. Too little.

I looked at her for a
second before I burst into laughter again, as did she.

“Why did you do that?” I
asked in tears. “That was… weird!”

“Because I wanted to,” she
said, a smug smirk on her knowing face. Then we continued to laugh.

Eventually we took a
detour. At this point it was about 23:00. Fortunately I didn’t have work the
next day, and as far as I could tell she was unemployed but effectively ready
for independence. We sat on a teeter-tot and went back and forth on it and I
told a story about how in fourth grade I won a statewide writing competition by
accidental plagiarism, but then while we discussed it she told me that it
wasn’t plagiarism because I was forced to submit it and I didn’t really have a
choice in the matter, and it really made me think, and I remember that as we
were walking back to her old, decrepit house and I watched her walk through the
doorway that she was right.

When I came in the next
day, I sat down directly next to her and we both smiled. The other guy she was
with when I first saw her never came back and I never asked about him. I won
the game again. That night we walked again. When we got to the playground it
was almost equally as desolate as it was the night before, but when we were
leaving I saw this old, tall guy standing there on the street corner, smoking.
He didn’t look at us.

“How long has that guy been
standing there?” I asked her as we walked away, back to her house. I kept
looking over my shoulder. But I looked back at her.

“Mmn-mm,” she vocalised
with her mouth closed, shrugging.

I looked over at her and
paused and looked down, and we slowly came to a halt in the middle of the
street.

“What?”

I felt oddly unnerved, like
I had seen something I was not meant to see. “Nothing. It’s nothing,” I said.

“Oooookaaaaay…”

“What? It’s— it was weird.”

“Yeah, I suppose you’re
right,” she replied. I think it was only then when I realised how close we were
to one another and there was an awkward silence for a few minutes, but we
quickly filled the air with more chatter as we got closer to her house, our
feet slowing down to another halt so we could keep talking. But eventually she
had to go in. I walked her up to the door and asked her if I could stay the
night. It was a bit late. I didn’t feel like walking home.

“Sorry,” she exclaimed. “My
mom.”

“Oh.”

“Yeah, sorry, I, uh—”

“No, it’s alright. You
already said, about her, uh—”

“Yeah.”

I tilted my head back and
breathed in the air. “I’m glad I met you.”

I won the game every single
day, and every day that I was available we would go for a walk. Even during the
games sometimes I’d keep walking with her, more interested in her life than in
whatever was happening with them. I cared, which was an odd feeling. I
belonged. This, it was, it—it—it was right. It was right. But eventually I
preoccupied her so much that she completely stopped showing up to our little
club and, unfortunately, I had never taken note of what her address was.

So one day when I walked in
and the place remained vacant for the entire day, I spent the day in silence.

The next day it was the
same. Someone I didn’t recognise came by and I tried to strike up casual
conversation to no avail. Not that it was very important anyways. I spent the
week like this. I remember walking out that night and my brow was furrowed. The
sky pressing down again. Oh, Lana. I couldn’t bear it. I kept coming back every
day, my hopes high only to be repeatedly let down. I was alone. I could only
see her face. Feel her sit next to me. Clenching my jaw. Full of absurd high
hopes.

I saw Sabrina there, too. I
saw them talk. I played the scene back in my head. I was a spectre then. But in
her light I was real, physical. I could feel myself slipping again as I sat
here, unknown and without the courtesy bestowed upon me. I was unseen. I clung
to the memory, even if it was not even a month ago. I can see it. I can be
there, standing over them, sitting beside them, smiling and laughing along with
them.

“Lana, who are these
people?” she asked. I’m looking at them, insatiable curiosity coursing through
me, every single vein and capillary.

“Shit. Sorry, Sabrina, I,
uh… this isn’t mine.” In the background played The Blair Witch Project.

“It’s okay. Not sure why
it’d be an issue,” she said. I was perplexed. I was in Inland Empire.
The dance of eternity still looming there. Always quiet and blooming, stepping
forward with the vivace of thousands.

There they were graceful.
Holding their weapons, as if to incite some combat, they interpolated the
language of Sappho into the present. And I was mesmerised. What of any of this
was real? if any of it at all? was I just seeing things? Brian stepped into the
room and they stopped and she looked over and said she was sick and tired of
waiting for him all the time but they got over it instantly and I was standing
there and I wanted to say something but I didn’t know what to say because I
never have the right words, and I wanted to stop time and just be held in her
arms, and I wanted to be back there and alone, and I wondered if it was real,
if I could take her out of time and place her in the hall of fame, where she
needed to be, where I would stand and watch her continue to dance on her
pedestal above the rest of us commoners. They kept dancing anyways. The other
one, Alex also I’d learn his name was, standing there with a quiet look of
knowing on his face. I wanted to walk through the streets with them all. I
wanted to be told their names even if I didn’t know them. I wanted to be there.
I wanted it all. Every piece of pie even with all of the regrettable shit that
it would carry. Eventually I knew this would come to pass. But all I could see
was her face. The way her mouth looked when she would pucker her lips and try
to make us laugh. The glasses. The way her eyes were more often than not bathed
in shadow. Her upturned, short nose. Her brown hair as it would blow in and out
of her face in the grand wind. I wanted to say something. I wanted to do
anything. I feel it. The burning. The embers of that old time. It’s within all
of us. Unspoken. The screeching strings pulling us through time and back into
some unknown comfort. I want to fall back and away. I want it to beckon me.
Spiral. Spiral. Spiral. Dear fucking God. She was so beautiful. When I came to
from my daydream I had tears running down my face. She was my best friend. I
needed to find her. But where could she be found?

I retraced my steps. I fell
down the paths and I could feel the repression of the skies beginning to clear
up somewhat as I walked back. Le sacre du printemps playing for me as if
I was about to view something not meant for human eyes, and, indeed, I felt as
if I were privy to something nocturnal and unwarranted. I had to blow myself
out of the water every day, construct a better identity for this. I stumbled
onto that old house and it looked as young as it had ever looked as I stepped
up to the door and knocked. The door swung open almost instantly, as if she had
been waiting for me. She smiled.

“Hey. It’s been a while,”
she said, and through her teeth and tongue and throat, through the keratin and
the comfort of velvet red, I could sense some yearning.

“Yeah. I, uh… I’m sorry. I
didn’t know where you were.”

“That’s okay!” she put her
hands behind her back, her eyes closed and her mouth following suit, remaining
chipper as ever. “You didn’t take very good notes, did you?”

“No.”

“That’s okay!”

I chuckled. “Yeah, well now
I know better. That place where we met, the whole place, it’s… empty. I was
hoping you would show up. But I guess I should have known better.”

“Yeah, I, uhh… hmm. I don’t
know. I feel like I’ve outgrown all of it. Maybe?” She shrugged. “No. That’s
not the right— yeah, no. It’s more like I didn’t fit in there.”

“What are you talking
about? We all really liked you being there. I know I did, at least.”

“Aw. Well, thanks! No use
looking back on it now though, if it is empty.”

“Ehhh… who knows. It might
come back around.”

“Right. You never know.”

“So what’s been going on
with you?” I asked, leaning on the doorframe. We were both short but she was a
little shorter.

“Well, my mom’s… bedridden.
Have had to take care of her.”

I leaned my head back in
understanding. “Why’s that?”

“She’s sick, she says. I’ve
been trying to… take care.”

I smiled at her. “You know,
for all you say she puts you through, you really do still care.”

She looked a little awkward
after I said this.

“What?”

“Nothing, really. Would you
like to come in? You’re looking really pale.”

“Wh— really? I can come
in?”

“She’s not going to get up
to stop you, at least.”

“What do you mean, I’m
pale?”

“You just are.”

“I’m anaemic.”

“Oh… sorry.”

My lips parted and I looked
down, considering if this was the right course of action, but eventually I just
went fuck it and relented. We walked in and I went to her room and we sat there
and kept talking. Pissing the time away, but I wouldn’t trade it for the world.
We played Majora’s Mask at her own insistence. Listened to Sung Tongs,
Lift Yr. Skinny Fists Like Antennas to Heaven!
, The Black Saint and the
Sinner Lady
at mine and we both relished in the grand moment. Cards
Against Humanity
, or in this context it was Pretend You’re Xyzzy.
Reading badly written creepypasta together. Talking about theology. I slept on
the couch in the living room. When I woke up, I was late for work. Clocked in.
Clocked out. I was a machinist. Hated it. But I’d come back and we’d keep
talking for hours and hours and hours and we’d work our way through alternate reality
game puzzles, theorise about what we were going to do a few years from now. The
first time it snowed that year the sky was pure white. As if it had gone up and
vanished. We went out and blared music from a boombox. Went in and we took
turns playing the piano (she was excellent as a pianist and I was just alright;
I’d often wonder where she picked up her skills from). I never asked where her
mom was or what was even really going on with her mom again. All I could think
about was the moment we were in constantly, every single moment something
granted more beauty and importance than it would get on any normal day. More
information coming to us. Falling into the story of Final Fantasy VIII. Sonic
the Hedgehog 2
. S.T.A.L.K.E.R.: Shadow of Chernobyl (which she
didn’t like very much because it tested our fucking patience, but I was really
into it). Watching Fight Club over and over again and talking about how
the whole relationship between Marla and Jack, if that was even really his
name, was really nice and very relaxing just in general, and I was a little
happier each time we talked about it even though I didn’t really understand why
I felt that way, or why the world was suddenly so much brighter every time I
looked out the window like we were living in a world full of infinite bloom and
even the inside of the house was bathed with absurd brightness, white paint thrown
and dispersed through the air, a fog that has transcended any understanding, at
least on my own part. I didn’t know. Where was her dad? Her grandparents? The
bills to pay? No answers to be had. Nothing much to be held. I was within the
hold. I lived here but we did not kiss. We did not sleep in the same bed. We
were not partners. We were like siblings. Like I had met some estranged member
of my family. But the more I thought about it the less it made sense. I was
never very connected to them. I wasn’t even really now in hindsight. Nothing to
hold.

More games, films, music,
comics. Every day. And then in the middle of those moments we’d sit around in
boredom and just excel at cheering one another up. But more often than not it
was me cheering her up and I didn’t mind it because it made me feel like I had
a place. I don’t remember any specific conversations. Just slight, subtle
arguments that weren’t even that bad. Raunchy jokes out of my mouth that made
her tell me to shut up. But she forgave me. Every time. And I was grateful.

When I went back there to
that place in the harbour it was once again populated, although not nearly to
the same extent it had been previously. I was grateful for it nonetheless.
Everything was right, I thought. I looked at the guy there, or one of them.
Another new face. But there was a look of obstinate determination about him. I
sat down next to him.

“Hey there,” I said.

“Hey,” he replied, looking
like he was going to do something soon.

I pursed my lips, unsure of
what I was supposed to do or say. If ever there was a time for Le sacre du
printemps
now would be it. Because he was mysterious. But so was I. I saw
Lana’s face in my mind again. Flashing like a blade rotating against a light.

“What brings you around
here? This place has been empty for a bit.”

“Probably the same as yourself,
buddy. Just looking for a place to worship.” He lifted his hand up and took a
drag of a cigarette. His head was shaved and he looked fucking exhausted. Had a
black leather jacket on, wrapped really tight around him. I felt like we might
be able to get on, if I didn’t fuck it up.

“Yeahhh… well, personally,
I’m not here for that. I just appreciate the craft.”

He looked over at me. I
could tell he was sizing me up. But then he looked away and shrugged. “So?”

“…Just trying to pass the
time.”

“Just trying to pass the
time. Alright. Look. Let me be.”

I didn’t say anything else
and we just sat there away from one another. Or at least all of this is how he
saw it. I was the one sat there. Obstinate. Bitchy. When I think back on it all
I can see is myself standing apart from my physical corporeal self. And that’s
how it was every single time I walked in there from then on. It was right, but
I have to ask if it was rationally. Because just feeling like something’s right
doesn’t mean that it is, I’ve realised since then. When you’re in your twenties
and you feel like you know it all, you’re often predisposed to this sort of
treatment of life that’s reckless, and you don’t think about what you’re doing
as much and just act like you can do whatever you want. But I realise now as
I’m looking back that I was just the same. I thought I had broken out of the
prison, but truly I was in the prison of my own design. Can you even win?
You’re always fighting for, for some sort of freedom, but no matter what you do
you’re alienated. You can’t win. You can only remember and you can fight
against the tide of the past but it is unchanging. You can scream in its face
until your throat’s raw, until it all goes, until you can’t speak anymore,
until you’re vanishing into eternity, but it’s not going to change. The past
will grow. The future recede. And you are stuck on the journey until you
aren’t. But none of what I’m saying is new. I will remember, I think. I will
continue to remember. I will remember more. But I’m losing myself in the
memory. Can’t win.

Jane Doe by Converge blaring in my
ears until my eardrums could burst. I had told Lana she could come back because
things were starting to heat up again, but we shared a predisposition of
disgust. Eventually we softened up to these fucks coming around. We were an
aristocracy. And this was it. This was the peak of it all. We were respected
amongst one another, no longer a bunch of kids just fucking around. This was
it. This was real. We played poker again, every day, and I wondered if I was
the one who had started the new wave, and I reasoned that it was true without
any question. And there has never been any question. When we left for the day
I’d look up at the sky but I couldn’t tell if there was one or not. I wasn’t
alienated, at least not like I was before. I lived with Lana. She brought on
her boyfriend and we would all hang out, drink some beer, talk about our
pastimes with one another. The new guy was really cheeky, but neither of us
minded, probably because I was the same, and we’d have play fights and continue
to play our games, swapping the controller with each death. A darker fog was
rolling in outside, a cloud on the ground. A tornado. But it passed us. I never
heard her mother up there even if she was there. Not that it makes much
difference, but whatever, you know. We were alive and we were free from all of
those different fucking shackles and it was beautiful and bountiful. We were at
the top. But a dark fog would always be rolling through the streets outside.
And the waters were a bit more red every single day. I would think of that bust
of Heraclitus. I would think about what he had to say even if I had never
actually read his work myself. I could not think of anything when I thought of
his face. I was building myself up but I didn’t know where I was going. I don’t
think any of us knew where we were going. More and more people would come
along, pile onto us, from other sections of the shack. I’d stumble into them
every now and then just to see if I jived with the culture but overall none of
them fit like I did in my first. The more I thought about it the more it was
truly my first. And then one day when I walked in it was the first room that I
saw, it was no longer hidden behind a door. And even in dreams it was true that
I was actually here, physical. But the fog would get thicker. It was so thick
you couldn’t see six feet in front of you. And we all got on fairly well. Lana
stopped coming again after a while, I remember, but I didn’t mind because I
could always go and visit her at her house.

Until it was foreclosed
upon one day after months of our godhood and she had gone without any trace.

It was around that time
that I stopped showing up to the shack and had returned home. It was abrupt. I
didn’t know what to make of it, where she had gone, why she had gone. But I
knew that it was not her choice. That is one thing I was most certain of. We
had it all. Why would she have gone? Was she unsatisfied? had we not given her
enough? we were all kings and queens—I could not imagine that, for any reason,
she could have been without happiness. It was in pondering this that I realised
how truly unhappy my life was. I have skimmed the details because, frankly,
it’s embarrassing. But we chewed up and spit out everyone who came in who we didn’t
like. I always won the game. Every single day. I was their emperor and I
couldn’t reckon with falling from the top of the food chain, even if nothing
had actually happened. I wanted to breathe. I wanted to let go of this feeling
of superiority. Because it simply wasn’t true that I was somehow inherently
better. We weren’t. I realised we weren’t the only ones. Every single one of us
had their own family, even the ones who we disparaged so strongly. Every day
I’d listen to Giles Corey. Sort of a reckoning. I didn’t actually relate
to the lyrics very much because I was comfortable with not being at the top.
The only thing that was wrong was that I didn’t have Lana. Didn’t even know if
she was alive out there. I had to turn and face the strange.

I spent every day home.

I quit my job, couldn’t
even wait out the two weeks. Started smoking. I couldn’t bring myself to go
back. What was there to be recognised for, if anything?

Soundtracks for the Blind complimenting every other
day. I was left alone but shafts of light would still occasionally grace the
corners of my room. It was becoming real. I’d return to Giles Corey
afterwards and I’d look at myself in the mirror and I’d see my head covered in
patchworks of cloth. I could blink, slap myself. It would not go. I was not
going to go. I had to get out. I had to go back and see them.

It was the first time I
ever lost and I was completely laughed out. I bought a bust of Heraclitus. Just
a reproduction, of course. I bought several after a while, my life savings
disappearing out from under me. I hung them on every wall. All of them staring
at me. I Love You This Much by Swans playing every hour of the day and
every night and I’d lay awake at night and be visited by her spectre and I’d
see her face and I’d reach out and grasp it and teeth would begin falling out
of every orifice and I’d wake in a cold sweat and do it all over again. I was a
veteran. I got no letters of congratulation for my work in there. They had
forgotten about me. I wanted to take my car keys and jam them through my eyes.
I was screaming at every hour, in tears. Hot flashes and cold bumps in the
night, hands crawling onto my bed, stretching out of my walls, I was melting.
Until I wasn’t. One day I read it in the paper, coming out of yet another go of
5-MeO-DMT, probing into myself for meaning and coming up from the sea
empty-handed. Her body found in a landfill nearby. I vomited. I went back to
her house. It was gone. I went home. There was no paper. I went to the shack.
It was gone. I can’t say goodbye to yesterday my friend. I’ll keep holding on
to the end. Out of the darkness, there is no other way than light leading to
yesterday. It’s there that I’ll find inner peace not warmth and dreams that I
let slip away, I’ll find the joyfulness I’m looking for way back in yesterday.
I dived into the water run red. Why can’t each of us in the world ever see the
best things in life are free? Little sounds of laughter resounding. At the
moment of submerging I made time to refuse to fly. Face it forever, here I stand
come what may, in the old in the new yesterday. Where was I? And where was
there to go?

I stood outside of the
playground and watched a couple young folks stumble out and back into the wider
world from their solace. They looked over their shoulder at me. I walked away.
Into the park. I hit the ground, entered the dirt. Every time I closed my eyes
I could see her body. I opened them. It was there. I vomited into the paper.
This is wisdom. This is the wisdom that the old fucks couldn’t have and yet I
had it and yet still I was no better than all the rest of them and my head
exploded with dark forebodings too, I saw in another dream. When I wrote it in
my journal it elucidated something unlike before. When the blade hangs over,
suspended by a thread, threatening to fall through and to the earth, god
entropy smiling down, I shout and shouted when nobody seemed to hear, and her
body was in pieces, smaller chunks, molecules, atoms, nuclear explosions,
impossible measurements, rows of houses all bearing down on me.

There was no distraction to
be found in the mass media, low culture; nor in academia, in rationale. And I
knew that she was half crazy but that’s why I wanted to be there. And I was
too. And we all were. And we took turns stabbing each other. And what part of
that card game really benefitted us?

Lana, wherever she was out
there, hung around my neck like a noose. And it was right. And my head
threatened to go through the sky. I was in the clouds. I got in my car, drove,
fasted to lose weight, passed through towns and cities and villages, any
municipality. Blending into one another like all the clouds. I would seize
every time I settled down and entered a motel covered in cum stains, every wall
covered in coats of the paint, every surface. I thought about how clean it was
back at home. I remembered I set my house on fire. I took every picture of her
house that could be taken. I needed to reconstruct it somewhere else. I needed
to see her mother. I needed to live there. I needed to meet the man who built
that shack. I travelled. I dreamed. I thought of Aidan and Dustin traversing
the woods. I could only see us, Sabrina lagging close behind. “Don’t lose your
nerve.” Whispered to me. I looked around. Nobody to speak it. My hands were not
my own. Breathe, keep breathing I can’t do this alone. The songs all
intertwined with my life. I lived in them. I wanted to write so I wrote into
the garbage disposal and I fell into open manholes and I was right there and
I’d climb out and I was right there and I’d stand in the streets tarred and
feathered and I was right there and my wisdom choked me because she is my noose
and I was right there. And I was standing on a pedestal and I was dancing with
her wrapped around my neck and I was going to kick the floor away and hear all of
those fishermen laugh at me as I writhed. And I did it and the rope broke. I
can feel death, can feel its beady eyes.

And I would keep speeding
down the freeway to find her. I knew her name. I could seek her out. I could
find her out there. And one of those pigs stopped me so I pulled over because I
didn’t want to bother with running away. It was late at night. A house on a
hill glowing with yellow light surrounded by trees and grass. Quasi-distant
radio tower. I remembered reading Code Junkie by Jeff Koval and I
thought of the place that Kevin went to at the end and I wondered if I was
about to go there. He stepped up to me, spoke, and I wondered where all the
time had gone, and if I was being rushed down the pipeline and out into the
world at large. I closed my eyes and opened them and I sat at home again and
she was there, squatting over me, looking terribly concerned. She was yelling
for me to wake up, tears in her eyes. I felt myself being shaken. I was at my
house. When did she get here?

“Lana,” I surged with that
life, asphyxiating on my own saliva. My arms were covered in hesitation marks.
I could feel it. When did I sleep? I was close to the frozen borderline. The
fog was in my house. Trapped in my body. I woke up and she was still there and
I held her close in an embrace. I could never let go. She hugged me back. There
we lay crying. I’m not sure how long we spent there just wailing in each
other’s arms. I couldn’t feel her with my fingers. I imagined my skin crumbling
away, turned to porcelain. Touch my beloved’s thought while her world’s
affluence crumbles at my feet. Strange Strings by Sun Ra, Ballistic
Bloodspray
, the Peter Brötzmann Octet, Kaoru Abe, Anthony Braxton’s Saxophone
Improvisations Series F
, covering all the windows in aluminium foil in
order to ensure that the world can be locked out. Sometimes I’d see her in my
house. “There is a typhoon in Japan.” Printing out House of Leaves and
reading it over and over and locking myself into my bed every night, strapping
myself down to keep my body from moving. At least she helped sometimes. Late at
night I’d lie awake and we’d discuss when she’d be coming back permanently. I
left letters laying around on desks and tables, wrote them every day for hours
in the midst of panic attacks and delusory psychedelia and screaming outside
and banging at the door. Some would get answers but altogether it was very
rare. I was enlightened. My hair was falling out in clumps, my teeth chipping.
I tore the cloth away every so often to get back to my real face. It was
dreadful. They were all singing. Infinite Jest, The Metamorphosis,
Catch-22, Beyond Good and Evil, David Lynches primed and at the
ready to go when she would get back. I had scissors to cut myself open. Reality
was fleeting. I could feel it. I had to get out. I tore the door open and off
its hinges and stumbled through the shack and then I was on the harbour. I got
in my car and sped off and into the distance, my tires ripping into the
astroturf. I wanted to be free. I wanted to be there with her in everyday life.
But first I had to find some sort of stability, anything to hold onto and say
it’s for certain. And in a life like this it’s nearly impossible to find. I
would monologue for ages in there. Eat there, sleep there, keep going in
circles but in repetition there’s at least some sort of breakthrough that can
be found if you try hard enough. And only if you do that. It’s maddening, but
it brings insights. Insights into you and the world at large. I may have begun
to form the philosophy here, it might have been earlier, but it was at this
time that I began to actually start reading the words that were written for me
to pick up. Plato, Aristotle, Philipp Mäinlander, Søren Kierkegaard, Max
Stirner, keep digging deeper yet. And what was I going to find?

One day I woke up and found
a collection of firearms in my trunk. I didn’t remember buying them, and I
certainly didn’t remember stealing them. But I thought this would be best to
hold now. I saw Hunter S. Thompson in my mind’s eye. Then I saw her again. I picked
up a pump-action shotgun and took it into my passenger seat and then sat on the
hood of this piece of shit Oldsmobile and just stared off into space. I looked
down at myself. Pudgy. At least here I could see the sky if I wanted to see it.
That’s already leagues ahead of anywhere else. Then I started on one of those
rambling tangents again. I remember I looked down.

“Well, it’s that time
again, isn’t it? Just the greatest thing anyone’s ever wasted their time
doing,” I said. “Another one of these meaningless, trite monologues. At least
nobody’s listening. I’ll probably admonish myself for this in a little while.
But dear God, I miss you. And I can’t help it. Who does it hurt if I talk to
myself about it just for a little while? Really. Can, can you name anyone who
would actually, really mind it? Or is it just going to be— God, I am fucking
crazy. That place drove me out of my own head. You get so caught up in what
you’re doing and you forget about what you’re doing, what you’re servicing. And
now I’ve got to come to terms with it. I’ve spent enough time drowning my
sorrows in drugs and trying to repress it all. And seeing things where they’re
not present. I have to… get real. I’ve got to get to the point. I— Jesus
Christ. I can’t keep myself lucid!” And a pause and then a mumble of “I’m
trying to find my way home and I’m sorry and I miss you” as if some pretentious
quoting of that beautiful thing can ever match up to the raw power of just
hearing someone yell it out loud. Flabbergagger. Stop, this isn’t a joke, this
is really happening. “And, just, shit! Shit, man, I can’t take it! I don’t even
know how long we’ve been doing this! A year? Two years? When the fuck
did I even walk in there? And why did it have to turn out the way it did? And
why is any of this actually happening? And why am I doing this still?”

And there was no answer to
be had, but I kept talking anyways.

“Why?” I kept yelling in
desperation, as overdramatic as it was. “Just why? I had so much. People liked
me, people respected me, and I fucking squandered it! I threw it all away!
Why?! Why?! Why am I… sick?!”

I was spiralling out of
control. I wanted… no, needed to do it. I took the knife in the glove
compartment. I stared at it for what felt like an eternity. I held it up to my
stomach. I felt like I was going to vomit again, and I was tempted to lance
myself. But I couldn’t bring myself to do it. I just ended up… uh, I just ended
up staring at it. And I swallowed thickly. And I heard the clacking of a
million mechanical keyboards and it got to the point where I began screaming,
and I dragged the knife clean across me to deal with all the noise in the world
beckoning me to finish it. I could not take it. I could not. I watched the
shallow wound. I watched myself bleed. I felt like I might bleed out. Not that
I was afraid of a little blood, but I had never done this before. I put the
knife back to my arm. I had to keep going. I had to cut myself open. I had to
see what was at the core. I had to go deep within. The next thing I remember is
just driving with a gaping wound. I was not afraid of it. It didn’t even hurt
anymore—I realise this is the source of my nerve damage, looking back—but the
more I looked at the subcutaneous fat the more I was drawn in, the more I felt
like I would fall into my own body, this vessel which carries my weights, every
recognition of the fact that it will all draw to a close inevitably. I could
not stop driving. I drove everywhere, all across the state, through and down
every street, entering every library. The streets were all barren in the last
stop. It was as if they were waiting for me. I remember walking in and speaking
to the librarian, an older woman with short, white hair. She was trying so
desperately to cling onto her youth.

“Hello,” I said. “I’m
looking for a Lana.”

“Lana who?”

I told her Lana’s last
name.

“Hmm… well, let’s come take
a look, young man,” she said to me. It was abundantly clear that she was at the
very least weirded out by the way I looked, but I refrained from commenting for
a little while. We came back to a set of books in the far reaches of the place.
She directed me to a set of books to start looking through and then pointed it
out to me before I could do anything. “You know, I am curious.”

“About what?”

“Your appearance.”

I scoffed and leaned back
in the chair. “So what if I look a little bohemian?”

“It’s not that,” she
replied. “You’re covered in bandages.”

I furrowed my brow and
looked down. Indeed, I was. I pressed my hands down on my thighs. A vague pain
came over. “…Huh.” We did not speak again after that.

These collections of
records, too, were empty.

She was gone.

I left the building and
kept driving for a bit. I stopped in at the nearest store and took a bottle of
Everclear I found and just left. No need in paying. I knew what was going to
happen to me soon anyways, and there was no need in trying to ward it off. I
remember that as I was driving along the way, my fingers and hands enflamed, I
thought about her face. I thought about the way that her hair waved. I thought
about the impresent, unphysical shared thoughts. I thought about the house. Her
boyfriend. Sabrina. The shack. The waters. My dreams. It all made sense. I was
not to start drinking yet, though. I knew what I was made for after this. I had
to start fulfilling that purpose. I recalled writing into the garbage disposal
day in and day out at one point, my documents shredded, cut-up and placed back
together inevitably. Why was it like this? And why was I suffering from this
unknowable affliction? Unable to even understand the manner in which I was
suffering. I knew the root and what I had to do, but not the why. And I knew I
would never know, because much of the time, there is no why. Things simply are.
And when they are, they are inescapable. And therefore I saw in that time that
I would never escape this. And I knew that the reckoning for my mistreatment of
those from that place were to be my death knoll. And I knew how to atone for my
sins. And I knew that I was to blame. I stopped in at a floral shop. I took
some flowers back to my hometown. Cast them out at the shack, which had been
vacant for months (I went back every now and then just to feel like I wasn’t
dead) and at where her house had been. Repossessed. Some other family living
there. I turned around and stood there. I had no idea what year it was. I
looked around and about endlessly. Everything spinning. I could not see the
sky. Couldn’t see anything. I walked. I could do nothing but walk. Two zero
four eight six three. When I woke up I was back there at the playground. The
old man looked at me and I stood there and my eyes were heavy and I felt like I
could fall over. Then I did. I used the wall as a support.

“I’m sorry,” I said to him.

He took a draft of his
cigarette and blew it back in my face. “What for?”

“I don’t know, Theophanes.”

“I have no God damn clue
who that is.”

“You’re my huckleberry.” I
coughed and sputtered.

“Ah.” He tilted his head
back. “And to what end?”

“She’s gone. You saw me
before. When we were here.”

“I did.”

“Yes.”

“She is gone?”

“Yes. And… shit… and I… I
need to paint it. I need to paint it out of me. To get it out of me.”

“Okay.”

“Is it going to be okay?”

“That’s entirely up to
you,” he said, exasperated. “You’re the only one who controls your life.”

“I don’t feel like I’m in
control.”

“Nobody does.”

“I tried.”

“I know.”

“You don’t know anything
about me.”

“Clearly you came to me for
a reason,” his voice came, steady.

I looked up at him and
sneezed.

He chuckled a little bit
and then went back to smoking.

The next thing I knew I was
in my car again, driving around, typing on a laptop. Ideas. History. Culture.
My story. How everything around me built itself and crumbled and how it would
never rebuild. But the truth was that I didn’t know anything for certain. No
determinism. Even if I say something about myself, does the pure virtue of
saying it make it true necessarily?

I think so. When you say
you’re going to do something, you will go through with it. If you promise
you’ll drink the Kool-Aid and you know what you’re getting into, you do it,
even if you realise you don’t want to. Nothing has actually changed.

I wrote. I wrote and wrote
and wrote myself into a corner just to break the corner, keep working past it,
out of the bounds of the game. There was no part of the excursion that was
alien to me. I knew everything to know. And I kept driving. I kept trying to
find a new place to stay. I kept trying to find her. I had to do it. If she
vanished truly, I would be dead right now. For she rewrote me. For she made me.

I was speeding, once, and a
pig came up and pulled me over. I did not know what to do. I did not know what
would happen to me. I didn’t know him. I didn’t trust him. Nothing to be
trusted under that veneer of human skin. You sound like a fucking idiot, I said
to myself under my breath. He came up and knocked on my window. But I just
stared ahead at the road and pretended like I didn’t hear it. He knocked on the
window again, a bit louder this time. For some reason he couldn’t see it. But I
looked back up at him.

“Roll the window down,” he
said then.

Though I tried in despair
to remain pious in silence, there could be no break in the chains of violence.
I took the gun at that little impasse and shot him in the chest and his blood
squirted from his arteries into my face and then my foot hit the gas pedal like
a cinder block and I was flying and I was free.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

BLACK OIL SMOKE!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

THICK BLUE SKY!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

DEAD RED EYE!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

HEAR ME CRY!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

EAT MY THROAT!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

FEED MY MIND!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

YELLOW EYE!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

FEEL ME CRY!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

PEEL MY SKIN!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SCRAPE MY VEIN!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SEAL ME IN!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


BREAK MY BONES!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

DANCE AND SPIN!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CUT A HOLE!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

FEED

ME

NOW!

Relinquished
from the transit of great times

There
was no more semblance of that triumph

And
in the grandiosity of grime

A
story was forged, there sat defiance

From
conception to nought, ‘twas an homage

In
its cyclicality no escape

Fools
oft’ have no scope of their assemblage

While
artists may observe the core weight

Elitism’s
obstruction brings blossoms

In
death its worth waxed alone negligence

The
bloodshed there obfuscated the sums

Of
that found born in the grand house of sense

Alone
in the world of ideas fold

We
stare at the wall, treasures left untold

 

 

Within
these confines

I
found a new lease on life

Waters
part once more.

 

 

 

 


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