you are, what’s inside o f you, like you planned it all along, like
yo u ’re General Westmoreland or something instead o f messed
up, bleeding trash, and i f yo u ’re running aw ay they send you
back for more, and they don’t give you money to help you,
and they tell you that you like it; fucking middle-class
hypocrite farts. I have a list. I remember you ones. Y o u try to
pull the w ool over someone else’s eyes about how smart you
are and what humanitarians you all are on the side o f
w hoever’s hurting. Nelson Mandela provoked it. What do
you think about that, assholes? We all o f us got the consolation
that nobody remembers the worst things. T h ey’re gone; brain
just burns them away. And there’s no words for the worst
things so ain’t no one going to tell you the worst things; they
can’t. Y ou can pick up any book and know for sure the worst
things ain’t in it. It’s almost funny reading Holocaust literature. The person’s trying so hard to be calm and rational, controlled, clear, not to exaggerate, never to exaggerate, to
remember ordinary details so that the story will have a
narrative line that will make sense to you; you— whoever the
fuck you are. The person’s trying so hard to create a twenty-
four-hour day. The person picks words carefully, sculpts
them into paragraphs, selects details, the victim ’s selection,
selects details and tries to make them credible— selects from
what can be remembered, because no one remembers the
worst. They don’t dare scream at you. They are so polite, so
quiet, so civil, to make it a story you can read. I am telling you,
you have never read the worst. It has never been uttered by
anyone ever. Not the Russians, not the Jew s; never, not ever.
Y ou get numb, you forget, you don’t believe it even when it’s
happening to you, your mind caves in, just collapses, for a
minute or a day or a week or a year until the worst is over, the
center caves in, whoever you were leaves, just leaves; if you
try to force your mind to remember it leaves, just fucking
empties out o f you, it might as well be a puddle on the ground.
Anything I can say isn’t the worst; I don’t remember the
worst. It’s the only thing God did right in everything I seen on
earth: made the mind like scorched earth. The mind shows
you mercy. Freud didn’t understand mercy. The mind gets
blank and bare. There’s nothing there. Y ou got what you
remember and what you don’t and the very great thing is that
you can’t remember almost anything compared to what
happened day in and day out. Y ou can count how many days
there were but it is a long stretch o f nothing in your mind;
there is nothing; there are blazing episodes o f horror in a great
stretch o f nothing. Y ou thank God for the nothing. Y ou get
on your fucking knees. We are doing some construction in our
apartment and we had a pile o f wood beams piled up and he
got so mad at me— for what? — something about a locked
door; I didn’t lock the door or he didn’t lock the door and I
asked him w hy not— and he picked up one o f the w ood beams
and he beat me with it across m y legs like he was a trained
torturer and knew how to do it, between the knees and the
ankle, not busting the knees, not smashing the ankles, he ju st
hammered it down on m y legs, and I don’t remember
anything before or after, I don’t know what month it was or
what year; but I know it was worse, the before and the after
were worse; the weeks I can’t remember were worse; I
remember where it happened, every detail, we had the bed in
the hall near the w ood beams and we were sleeping there
temporarily and it was early on because it w asn’t the brass bed
yet, it was ju st a dum py old bed, an old mattress, and
everything was dull and brown, there was a hall closet, and
there was a toilet at one end o f the hall and a foyer leading to
the entrance to the apartment at the other end o f the hall, and
there wasn’t much room, and it was brow n and small and had
a feeling o f being enclosed and I know I was sitting on the bed
when he began to hit me with the beam, when he hit me with it
the first time, it was so fast or I didn’t expect it because I didn’t
believe it was possible, I didn’t understand what happened, or
how it could; but I remember it and the only thing that means
is that it isn’t the worst. I know how to calibrate torture— how
to measure what’s worse, what’s better, w hat’s more, w hat’s
less. Y o u take the great morbid dark blank days and you have
located the worst. Y ou pray it ain’t buried like Freud says; you
pray God burned it out like I say. Some weeks later he wanted
to have dinner with his sister and brother-in-law. I could limp
with a great deal o f pain. I was wearing dark glasses because
m y eyes had cuts all around them and were discolored from
bruises and swollen out o f shape; I don’t know when m y eyes
got that way; the time o f the wood beam or in the weeks I can’t
remember after; but I had to wear the glasses so no one would
see m y eyes. Them kinds o f bruises don’t heal fast like in the
movies. They all played cards and we had cheese fondue
which I never saw before. I walked with a bad limp, I
concealed the pain as best I could, I wore the dark glasses, I had
a smile pasted on my face from ear-to-ear, an indelible smile,
and brother-in-law brought up the limp and I said smiling
with utter charm that I had tripped over the beams and hurt
myself. D on’t w orry, I whispered urgently to m y husband, I
would never tell. I would never tell. What you did (hoping he
doesn’t hear the accusation in saying he did it, but he does o f
course and he bristles). I’m on your side. I wouldn’t tell.
Brother-in-law, a man o f the world, smiles. He knows that a
lot o f stupid women keep falling down mountains. H e’s a
major in the military; we say a fascist. He knew. He seemed to
like it; he flushed, a warm, sexy flush; he liked it that I lied and
smiled. There’s no what happened next. Nightmares don’t
have a linear logic with narrative development, each detail
expanding the expressive dimensions o f the text. Terror ain’t
esthetic. It don’t work itself out in perfect details picked by an
elegant intelligence and organized so a voyeur can follow it. It
smothers and you don’t get no air. It’s oceanic and you drown,
you are trapped underneath and you ain’t going to surface and
you ain’t going to swim and you ain’t dead yet. It destroys and
you cease to exist while your body endures anyway to be hurt
more and your mind, the ineffable, bleeds inside your head
and still your brain don’t blow. It’s an anguish that implodes
leaving pieces o f you on the wall. It’s remorse for living; it’s
pulling-your-heart-apart grief for every second you spent
alive. It is all them cruel things you can’t remember that went
to make up your days, ordinary days. I was in the bedroom. It
was dark blue, the ceiling too. I’d be doing what he wanted, or