walk with the city all glowing wet, all sparkling, for me, as if
it’s for me, the light’s for me and the rain’s for me and it’s
stoned out o f its fucking mind for me; and the buildings are
just pure glitter and the light’s coming down from heaven
luscious and wet; for me. The boy at the door can’t keep me
out because I stride in and I am aglow; he’s a mandarin
standing there with his little list and his leather jacket and his
pretensions and his snobbish good looks and I mumble words
I know he can’t hear and I never yet met a man who wasn’t
stupider than me and he’s trying to decide am I someone or not
and I am not fucking anyone but I am striding in my
motorcycle boots and I am wet and I am bound for glory at the
bar and I push m y w ay through the crowd and fuck him and
he’s watching me, he sees that I ain’t headed for a table which
would transgress the laws o f the universe, and it ain’t a girl’s
trick to sit somewhere she ain’t entitled because a man didn’t
pick her out already; he sees I want the bar and I suppose it’s
faintly plausible that a girl might want a drink on her own or it
confuses him enough that he hesitates and he who hesitates is
lost. I take out all the bills I have and he’s watching me do it
and I put it down in front o f me, a nice pile, substantial, and I
am firm ly sitting on a stool and I have spread m y elbows out
on the bar to take up enough space to declare I am alone and
here to drink and he don’t know I don’t have more money and
I order m y Stoli on the rocks and I ain’t making no move to
take m y change or m ove m y money so he relaxes as if letting
me there will not do monumental harm to the system that is in
place and that it is his jo b to protect and the bodies close in
around me to protect me from his scrutiny and the noise closes
in around me and I am swallowed up and I disappear and I am
completely cosseted and private and safe and I feel like some
new thing, just new ly alive, and there’s the placenta hugging
me and I’m wet with fucking life and I stare into m y fucking
drink, m y triumphal drink, I stare into it as if it’s tea leaves and
I’m the w orld ’s oldest, wisest gypsy, I got gold earrings down
to m y knees and I got foresight and hindsight and I am a reader
o f history, there’s layers o f history, vulgar and occult, in the
stu ff and if you lit a fire to it yo u ’d burn history up. And shit I
love it; a solitary human being covered all over by noise, a
dense noise that bubbles and burns and cracks all over you like
fire, small fire, a million tiny, exploding fires; or a superhuman embrace by some green, slim y, scaly monster, it’s big and all over you and messy, it’s turbulent and dramatic and
ever so much bigger than a man and its embrace is overwhelming, a descent, an invasion that covers the terrain, a
crush o f locusts but you aren’t repelled, only exhilarated at
how awesome it is, how biblical, how spectacular; like as i f it
took you back to ancient E gypt and you saw something
sublime in the desert and you had to walk across it but you
could; it wraps itself around you like some spectacular excess
o f nature not man, yo u ’re crawling with it but it ain’t bad and
it ain’t loathsome and there’s no fear, it’s just exactly extreme
enough and wild enough and it says it’s nighttime in human
history now in Am erika and Moses has his story and you have
yours and each o f you gets the whole universe to roll around in
because everything was made to converge at the point where
you are amidst all the rest o f life o f whatever kind, com position, or characteristics, it’s a great mass all around you, the blob, a loud blob, Jell-O , loud Jell-O , and yo u ’re some frail,
simple thing at the center and what you are to them doesn’t
matter because the noise protects you from knowing what you
are to them; noise has a beauty and noise has a function and a
quiet girl sometimes needs it because the night is long and life
is hard and pain is real and you stare into the glass and you
drink, darling, you drink, and you contemplate and you
drink; you go slow and you speed up and you drink; and you
are a deep thinker and you drink; and you have some hazy,
romantic thoughts and some vague philosophical leanings and
you drink; and you remember some pictures that flash by in
your mind and you drink; and there’s sad feelings for a fleeting
minute and you drink; and you choreograph an uprising, the
lumpen rise up, and you drink; and there’s Camden reaching
right out for you, it’s taking you back, and you drink; a man
nudges you from the right and you drink; he puts his face right
up close to yours and you drink; he’s talking about something
or other and you drink; you don’t look left or right, you just
drink, it’s worship, it’s celebration, you’d kneel down except
for that you might not be able to synchronize your movements, in your heart you kneel; and you drink; you taste it and
you roll it around your tongue and down on into your throat
and down on into your chest and you get fiery and warm and
you drink it down hard and fast and you sit stone still in
solemn concentration and you drink; the noise holds you
there, it’s almost physical, the noise, it’s a superhuman
embrace, bigger than a man’s, it’s swamp but not swam py, it’s
dry and dark and hot and popping, it’s dense and down and
dirty and you drink; the noise keeps you propped up, your
back upright and your legs bent and your feet firm ly balanced
on the stool, except the stool’s higher now, and you drink; and
yo u ’re like Alice, you’re getting smaller and it’s getting
bigger, and then you remember Humpty Dum pty was a
fucking eggshell and you could fall and break and D orothy got
lost in Oz and Cinderella was made into a pumpkin or nearly
such and there’s a terrible decline and fall awaiting you, fear
and travail, because the m oney’s gone, you been handing it
over to the big man behind the bar and you been drinking and
you been contemplating and the pile’s gone and there’s terrible
challenges ahead, like physically getting o ff the stool and
physically getting out o f the room and physically getting
home; it hardly seems possible that you could actually have so
many legs and none o f them have any bones that stand up
straight and you break it down into smaller parts; pay up so the
bartender don’t break your fingers; get o ff the stool; stand up;
walk, try not to lean on anyone, you can’t use the men as
leaning posts, you can’t volley yourself to the front sort o f
springing o ff one after the other, because one or another will
consider it affection; get to the door; don’t fall on the mandarin
with the list, don’t trip in front o f him, don’t throw up; open
the door on your own steam; get out the door fully clothed,
jacket, T-shirt, keys; once outside, you make another plan.
These are hard things; some o f them may actually be
impossible. It may be impossible to pay the bartender because
you may have drunk too much and it may be impossible to get
o ff the stool and it may be impossible to walk and it may be
impossible to stand up and it may be impossible to find the
door. It’s sad, yo u ’re an orphan and it’s hard to concentrate,
what with poor nutrition and a bad education; but sociology
w ill not save your ass if you drank more money than you got
because a citizen has to pay their bar bills. There’s tw o dollars
sitting on the bar in front o f you, the remains o f your pile like
old bones, fragments o f an archaic skeleton, little remnants o f
a big civilization dug up and yo u ’re eyeing it like it’s the grail