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Authors: Mykle Hansen,Ed Stastny,Kevin Kirkbride,Kevin Sampsell

Eyeheart Everything (13 page)

BOOK: Eyeheart Everything
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But now the indescribable thing has gone, and left me with its seed of perfect knowledge, and I know I’ve somehow been chosen, somehow been impregnated with the awareness of how it all works, and that the indescribable thing was God, and that I came to this desert on this day and stood right here and God Itself ran over me and broke both my legs and a fair amount, I am realizing, of the other parts of my body, and it feels wonderful ... The pain, it’s not pain, it’s just sensation, action, it’s the feeling of life, it’s the energy bound up in me somewhere, I feel the shape of my legs and I think “who needs legs, I’ve got God in my brain!” and as several people gather around me and start to try to bear me away someplace, the rest of the crowd starts shouting “Don’t move him!” and a huge fat pale woman, who is also completely naked except for a cowboy hat and a backpack-carried advanced hydration system and a diving watch, screams as she shoves through the crowd, I’m an EMT! Stand back! I’m an EMT! And someone else tells her in the calmest and most gentle and clear voice, It’s okay, everything’s fine, just close your eyes, back away from the scene, sit down, find your center, relax, and the EMT will wear off in about five hours. But she stiff-arms him right into the dust and marches more or less right over two other people, and screams at the man who’s behind me, holding the undersides of my arms with his hands, which seem to have a lot of blood and bits of wood and hemp twine on them and are a little bit uncomfortable — but I’m certainly not complaining — and he lets me go, gently, and everybody backs away into a respectful but dense little circle.

And she asks me if I can talk, and only then do I realize, no, actually, I cannot talk. So I shake my head no, but what I want to tell her is hey, hey please, don’t scream at the nice naked people, they’re just watching me do my thing. Yes, that’s it. My thing. I’m a being-run-down-by-God artist, and this is the performance I brought with me to the desert here, to share with everybody. I’m trying to demonstrate to you all how important it is to go run out in front of huge indescribable things as they rush toward you, instead of running away. I am hear to teach you people. Please, relax.

She’s taking my pulse, she’s telling the crowd she needs some rags, some clothing to tear into strips. And all the naked people look sheepishly around them, and someone has a tiny nylon sash which she says is no help at all, and someone else has a red feather boa, and that’s about it for the clothing options in the immediate vicinity. So she rips off my t-shirt — my orange hunting t-shirt with the reflective strips on it, that you can see from ten blocks away, which I actually did see once from ten blocks away, in a store window, and was able to reduce my speed and pull into the parking lot of the hunters’ supply store and purchase it for twenty bucks, which was a lot of money at the time, years ago when I was unemployed, and then I realize that I’m actually kind of pissed off now. Who is this EMT-smoking weirdo who wants to destroy my favorite shirt, the one you can see from far away, that one I bought because I wanted to be struck by lightning, not that I felt like it really would improve my chances, but I just had this feeling that in my quest to be struck by lightning, I should get that shirt, and sure enough, wearing that very t-shirt, which is the only item of clothing I have that I actually bother to get dry-cleaned, that I was actually struck not by lightning, but by God, which is the same basic thing, and that this T-shirt was a valuable tool for human enlightenment, and how short-sighted and ignorant it was of her to want to rip it up and use it just to stem my bleeding.

I tried to say, I’m okay, let me bleed, but she kept going and I couldn’t speak. She said Wiggle your toes, and I wiggled my toes, and she said, Can you hear me, wiggle your toes if you can hear me, so I wiggled them some more, and she said, Are you wiggling, and God she was irritating, I mean, I’m playing along here, but don’t expect me to show much enthusiasm for this interruption of my trip. And then I realized: that it was over, and the feeling I had a moment ago wouldn’t last, and now I was worrying about my shirt, and my bleeding and my toes, and Tony, who I still hadn’t seen, and my bag, and my water bottle and everything was going to be a big drag from here on out. And I heard a helicopter, in the distance, then coming closer, and then a huge strong wind rose up and blew dust into my eyes, as the lady who was on EMT explained that they were going to take me to a hospital in Reno, and that I would be fine, when in fact I had been fine and now I was going to be in Reno instead ... but oh well. Say goodbye to God, I thought, and I began to cry a little as I noticed the feeling in my body was becoming a little too strong for my liking. And then some men came and put me on a thing, and the thing was carried over to the helicopter, and one more time I looked into the faces of a huge assembled throng of naked, silent, confused people whose eyes you couldn’t ever see and who stuck metal bits into themselves, and I knew they were worried too.

And just before they shut the helicopter door and air-lifted me away from my dream, I saw on the corner of the clearing a huge mass of twisted rods, uncoiled ropes, fire retardant sprayed over smoking retarded fires, sashes, wires, engine oil, latex, steam, grass, sticks, wood, cloth, and on one knee beside it was the man I has seen who rode it on towards me, back when it was whole, and I tried to wave to him, I wanted him to come closer so I could thank him, but instead he stayed there, bent and weeping over the wreck of the indescribable thing.

DANGER!

In order to save you from yourself, we have labeled this large red button. It reads: DO NOT PUSH. Please, do not push the large red button. Every time you push the button, someone you don’t know who lives far away will die, or maybe you will get some candy. BUTTON WARNING! Don’t push it. There will be a bright flash and a loud noise, and the boredom you are so goddamn sick of will vanish, replaced by something graphic and life-altering and loud. EXPLOSIVE DECOMPRESSION DANGER. If you twist the red handle, everybody will be killed — and in a fascinating way, too. They will all be extruded through this tiny airplane window like so much human pasta. There’s no alarm on this red handle, and no fail-safe. Is the handle hard to twist? Is it oiled regularly, or does it stick? Don’t find out. DANGER! DO NOT LICK THE EXPOSED WIRES! We have exposed them for you to look at. They’re really very pretty, don’t you think? Look very closely. Bring your tongue just a few inches shy of the blistering mark, but DO NOT lick the exposed wires. Look at the shiny wires, then at the bold, courageous sign. Which one will you choose? It’s a big decision.

SCHOOL CROSSING. You weren’t even thinking about it. Nope, you weren’t even considering straightening that knee and bearing down hard on the accelerator. Thump. Thump. Oh no, not you. DO NOT THINK WHAT WE KNOW YOU MUST BE THINKING. Don’t blame us for putting the thought in your head. UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES THROW THINGS FROM THE TOP OF THE EMPIRE STATE BUILDING. They will only get lodged in someone’s bloody brain. Isn’t that interesting? You don’t want to do such interesting, hideous, easy-to-do things. Do you?

You don’t want to suffer SEVERE TIRE DAMAGE, do you? You wouldn’t want to brave a RADIATION DANGER. You are FRAGILE. You have MOVING PARTS. Smoking will kill you, but SMOKING NEAR THE PUMPS might kill you. Care to test your luck? Please don’t, even though you will probably live and it will show them just how brave you are.

HANGING FROM, PLAYING WITH OR USING THIS TOWEL DISPENSER IN A MANNER OTHER THAN AS ILLUSTRATED MAY CAUSE SEVERE INJURY OR DEATH. Got that? DEATH. Study the diagram carefully. One false move and you’re snuffed! But what if you don’t dry your hands? ELECTROCUTION HAZARD, that’s what.

The world is a minefield. Mine is the voice that will guide you through. But you must obey. NO PARKING NORTH OF HERE. Everything is a trap. Everything is very dangerous, people don’t realize that. CURB WHEELS. The tigers are gone, but there are toasters everywhere, with metal forks lying beside them. Christmas tree lights. Cars. NARROW BRIDGE. We have technology and power and raw materials. DO NOT INHALE. We can make you all the rope you ever wanted. Miles and miles of supple, brightly striated hemp rope, exceptionally strong. DANGER: ROPE HAZARD. Enough rope to hang yourself, your family, Mom, Dad, the dog, your boss, all your ex-girlfriends, the President and the Vice-President and everybody who ever did anything to hurt you, and all your friends, and a million starving Africans who never got the chance to do anything to anybody you’ve ever even heard of. Please, don’t do it. YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED.

Pang

Hey! I am Pang. I planted those tulips. No, those there, yes. This is my favorite month of the spring. So far! Ha! Look at that color! Someday I think they will create a perfectly blue tulip, and then my palette will be complete. See that row, the breech of white there in front, four or five young ones bowing. That’s a wave breaking on a gravel beach. Can you see it? Stand here. Now? Ha! There’s a red boat over there, a sailboat. There’s no tulip that looks like a sail, I know, but see the red hull? See the yellow nest on the green mast? It’s calm out there, but deadly. All over here — come, look — see these? Wreckage. This is Crete. I sailed there myself. I was blown out to sea off the Taiwan shore when I was nine or ten. The Greeks found me, took me aboard. I’m a Greek sailor. Chinese, I can’t even say it anymore. “Sang,” that’s mother. I never saw her again. She had a garden, though, I’ll never forget it. See these circles, they draw a ring around this point. Over here — here is where you stand. Anywhere is okay, but here is best. Here the tulips salute you. Good morning, gentlemen ... Look! Over there! That sonovabitch has to go. That’s not mine, how did that get in? Too small to save ... here, have a flower. I have a pin, where ... ah. Hold still. Please, it’s for you. You see, I have too many! Ha! Now you are a young bachelor — the Greek girls won’t leave you alone if you go to Crete.

The Oranges of Mr. Shark

My friend the great white shark is poorly socialized. He was born with the instincts of his ancestors, and his motivations are to hunt, kill, and eat other creatures. He is honest about this, and eloquent, but underneath it all, he is a shark’s shark. Other creatures don’t trust him. Even his family keeps him at a fin’s length.

He might better be described as my acquaintance. We drink coffee at the same café down by the shore, the one where the waiters all wear striped pantaloons and the drinks come in little cups shaped like dogs and cats. We sip out coffee, and talk about this and that. He is funny, well-spoken and always immaculately dressed. Sometimes he is a bit forward.

“I’m very lonely,” he confided one day. “I’ve tried to find a companion. I’ve gone out to the nicest restaurants with the nicest people, but it seems that whenever things start to go well, and I begin to relax, the whole killing and eating thing gets in the way. I can’t help it, it’s just my nature.” My friend the shark frowned a huge, toothy frown. “I don’t know what to do,” he said, and he sipped at a cat’s head full of mocha.

“Hmm,” I said. “Gee. Well.”

“I’m not a bad creature,” he said, running his tongue around the edge of the mug, “I’m just constantly hungry.” A modicum of saliva gathered on his lip.

“Gee,” I said, as he looked at me with a hungry eye, “that’s too bad.”

“Anyway,” he said, “one ought to look on the bright side of things. Today the weather is beautiful, and I’m going for a swim. Why don’t you hop on in and join me?”

“No no,” I said, “I don’t really, umm, feel up to it.”

“Oh well ... then I’ll see you later,” said the shark, as he dove into the water and swam away.

I told the story of the shark’s troubles to my friend Phil. Phil considers himself something of a matchmaker, and claims that he is personally responsible for no less than ten marriages in this city, some lasting years.

BOOK: Eyeheart Everything
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