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Authors: Amelia Gray

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BOOK: Museum of the Weird
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“The Virgin Mary?” she says. “That’s strange.”

 

“No, it’s not.”

 

She stands up. Her zippered pouch drips water down her leg. She is unusually tall.

 

I have to shut my eyes. “I’m sorry,” I say. “I’m disoriented.” “Story of my life,” she says. When I open my eyes, she’s vaulting over a line of bushes on the other side of the park. I think, good. The world needs tougher religious artifacts. Everything you find on Sunday morning is too delicate. Candles burning over white linen. Transferring the wine from vessel to vessel, chasuble sleeves hanging perilously close. You can buy all this stuff from a catalog, but it’s expensive. Sometimes, it comes blessed.

 

The fountain is very close to my home and at my home’s heart is my medicine cabinet. Something feels very strange about the container of my body. As I was getting up, the corn disk hardened into a circular saw blade and went to work on the flesh of my organs. It consumes and spins faster and threatens my spinal cord. My brain howls in protest. I want darkness and my bed and the calming mechanism of a great deal of medication.

 

My brain says,
careful what you wish for!

 

The next day, Jeannie serves me King Ranch chicken at the café. She has her hair pulled back.

 

“Your hair looks nice like that,” I say.

 

“I wear it like this every day,” she says. This sounds a little accusatory and I feel like apologizing for not noticing and then I resent the desire to apologize for not noticing because it’s not as if noticing her is my responsibility. I have lately been thinking about responsibility. The chicken is congealed to my plate under a solid grease-mound of cheese.

 

“What are your responsibilities?” I ask Jeannie.

 

She glances at her other table, two women who are also having the King Ranch chicken. It is the special. “I take orders,” she says, looking back. “And I bring out water and I serve plates and sometimes I say ‘that plate is hot.’ I roll silverware, I cut lemons and limes, I clean the women’s restroom and I wash the windows and I change the specials board and write receipts and make change.”

 

“That sounds like a great deal of responsibility,” I say, thinking of lists—1. bring out water 2. serve plates 2a. that plate is hot 2b. I hope you enjoy the food 3. roll silverware 3a. this silverware is heavy and right 3b. what am I going to do about my problems 4. cut 4a. lemons 4b. limes 5. clean 5a. windows 5b. restroom 5c. specials board—“but I meant in your whole life.”

 

“That’s a lot more,” she says, smiling.

 

“I imagine so.”

 

She picks up my menu. “What are your responsibilities?”

 

“To keep my body alive, and my mind well.”

 

“That’s it?” she says. “Well, you’re lucky.”

 

I cut through cold cheese with the side of my fork. “I am the luckiest man alive,” I say. “I am the luckiest man in the history of the free world.”

 

“Don’t you have a job, though? Don’t you have any goals?” These questions make me uncomfortable. There is a poster behind her of peppers from around the world and I wonder which pepper would be the worst on the tongue. Then, if you swallowed them, which pepper would be the worst in the gut, and how would the burn differ. Jeannie would not be interested in me if I told her that I got checks from my mother and from the government and, though I respect the necessary existence of each, that I dislike both as sources of revenue, and that my goal is her, or someone like her. These are normal ways to think but no way to talk to a religious woman.

 

“My goals are to be alive and well,” I say, “and to be closer to God.” “Those are good goals.”

 

“I want to get so close to God that God has to file a restraining order.”

 

QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR

 

Q: Why does Jeannie like you?

A: Jeannie appreciates my honesty and understands that there is not nearly enough of it in men in the world these days. She has not given it much thought.

Q: Is it possible that she will break your heart?

A: She would need a much larger magnet.

Q: Do you expect us to believe you?

A: You have absolutely no choice.

Q: We resent this, Arnold. Please give us a reason to trust you.

A: The reason is that you have absolutely no choice.

Q: Don’t you feel that God is
so beyond
caring what is going on down here?

A:

The fountain is broken. The water in the concrete basin is still, and the pumps are shut off. A man in work clothes is bent over an electrical box I never noticed, twisting wires. I think of the electrical box in my chest and feel a little sorry for myself.

“The water is powered by electricity,” I say to the man. “Doesn’t that seem like a cop-out?”

 

The man pulls a crimping tool out of his box. “I’d be out of a job if it wasn’t,” he says.

 

“What are your responsibilities?”

 

“To keep food on the table,” he says, turning his attention to the electrical box.

 

“You’re lucky you don’t live on a boat.”

 

“What’s that?”

 

“You’re lucky you don’t live on a boat on the ocean. It would make things difficult.”

 

“Fishermen make a lot of money these days,” the man says. “I was watching a show about it. It’s profitable but dangerous.”

 

We live in a world where fishing is sexy. “My responsibilities are to keep my body alive, and my mind well,” I call out to the man working in the electrical box.

 

“That’s hard to do on your own,” the man says. He’s hiding in his work clothes. All I see is blue denim and brown belt. This man is a novice practitioner of the electrical box and is growing smaller by the second. This is terrifying to me and I call out, “I’m doing the best I can!”

 

I’m very worried that the man will become the electrical box and that the fountain will never be repaired. “Please be careful!” I yell desperately towards the smooth denim, a hanging curtain now, over the electrical box. My hand comes up, my wrist, and I start the generator in my chest. The battery is tiny and creates a small alien warmth as I am brought back hard to the world.

 

From my brain, an urgent message:

 

Why did you do that? We were all about to have a good time. If it weren’t for you and your precious medical science, we’d be orbiting Saturn right now and watching the stars fall. You call this keeping your mind well? We’re all well on our way to crushing boredom, that’s all. But don’t worry about us. It’s not as if we power your dirty shell through this world. It’s not as if we spend all day waiting for a nap in the sun, only to find you jogging us back to your own pointless day-to-day. We have nothing better to do. Please, continue.

 

My brain is diseased with logic.

 

Jeannie tells me that the daily specials in the café are always the food they didn’t sell enough of from the day before. She points at my sloppy joe.

 

“Taco meat from Thursday and marinara sauce. Some ketchup.” “What about the King Ranch?”

 

“Chicken quesadillas. The tortillas went stale.”

 

“How late do you work tonight?”

 

She looks at me and doesn’t say anything. Under the table, I rip my napkin in half, and then in half again, and again and it’s snowing white paper over my shoes.

 

“You might want to come to my home for dinner,” I say. When Jeannie and I walk to my home, the following does not happen.

 

1. We turn miniscule but not unimportant, and find that blades of grass have their own weapons, though they are weapons against small insects, who look like demons at close proximity;

 

2. The sidewalk turns liquid and claims us, drawing us deep through hot sharp earth, where we meet those from generations past as well as some people working in a coal mine;

 

3. A wise man confronts us and suggests that the
Pieta
is the most beautiful piece of art ever made by a human in the history of the world and while I don’t disagree I think it might be even better as a fountain.

 

I do, however, realize that Jeannie is essential to not one but both of my responsibilities and is therefore very precious to me. She nourishes my body with her daily leftover specials and she is strong and essential to the health and safety of my mind. It is when I look dreamily at the pendular motion of her golden cross that I realize I feel entirely well. Inside my heart, the generator rides the thumping aortic valve in blissful, silent contentment. Jeannie’s hair flows behind her like a river. I am in ecstasy.

 

In my home, Jeannie looks around. “It’s cleaner than I thought,” she says.

 

I offer her a mint because I’m not sure what else to do with her. We are both very shy, and we are not used to interpersonal communication outside the arena of the café. I do feel very shy. My generator feels that I feel very shy.

 

She pinches a mint with clean fingers. We both smell like ground beef.

 

“Where did you get this box?” she says.

 

“From a catalog.”

 

“It’s adorable,” she says, taking it and turning it over in her hands. “Isn’t this what priests keep communion wafers in?”

 

“A pyx,” I say. “It came blessed.”

 

She looks around the room. Her eyes see: table, books, parament, pyx collection, stove, palm fronds, window, stained glass. In the stained glass, she sees tiny bubbles which contain worlds.

 

“Did all this come from a catalog?” she says.

 

“The oven came with the apartment.”

 

She laughs, and then she stops laughing. She looks at the oven and I want to tell her that it actually did come with the apartment and that’s not a joke and she’s really quite kind to come over for dinner and I’m sorry that I didn’t make anything and moreover that I don’t have anything in the house to eat because I usually take my meals out because it’s good for the spirit and as usual what’s good for the spirit is bad for the wallet.

 

Jeannie sits down at the table and begins to cry. I touch her hair with my lips and her head is warm and smells like a glass of milk. She sobs and holds her fists closed on her knees.

 

“I’m sorry,” she says. “I’m frightened.”

 

My fingertips brush against the place where her hair is drawn up in a ponytail and I say, “you certainly shouldn’t be frightened of me, if that is what you are frightened of.”

 

“No,” she says. “I am having a fight with my husband and I have nobody to talk about it with. I am frightened he will leave me,” she says.

 

(Then, a terrible thing happens: My brain leaves the picture entirely. The room goes completely black, and the spotlight comes up on the two of us—Jeannie at the table, with my brainless body propped up behind her. Someone coughs. The curtain man lights his cigarette and digs into the fuse box.)

 

JEANNIE

(in tears)

I am frightened he will leave me.

ARNOLD

Don’t be frightened. Please, let’s talk about it, between the two of us. Let’s work out a solution for you.

JEANNIE

I can’t do that. I feel awful about doing this to you, burdening you with this.

ARNOLD

(putting his hands on her shoulders)

It’s no trouble at all, my dear. Can’t you see? I care very much for you. How long have you been married?

JEANNIE

Six months. He’s a good man, he has a good job. He’s great in bed—

ARNOLD

And why don’t you wear a ring?

JEANNIE

We’re getting rings tattooed on our fingers as soon as we can find the perfect artist. I figure it’s more lasting that way.

ARNOLD

So what’s the problem?

JEANNIE

If you’d let me get to it—

ARNOLD

(laughs suddenly)

I just don’t see the problem then, pretty girl like you, a newlywed, striking out in the world with a sensitive and handsome man—

JEANNIE

Whoever said he was handsome?

ARNOLD

Your responsibility overall is to care for your own life and your own handsome husband because he is a lucky man and to see you sad should be one of the great sadnesses in his life and I’ll tell you that honestly, it should be one of his greatest sadnesses.

JEANNIE

Whoever said he was handsome?

BLACKOUT.

“What gives?”

“Sorry.” I reach for the wall, feeling for the switch. When I find it, she’s looking at me with fish eyes.

 

“I think I’d better go,” she says. She stands up and I shrink back in my chair. “But thank you for the advice.”

 

She is a tower of a woman! In the center of my seat, I am acutely aware of the false-feeling velvet under my hands.

 

“Would you like a glass of water?” I ask the tower of Jeannie. “No, thank you.” She reaches across the room and puts her hand on the doorknob. She fills my apartment and I cower in the low cover of the chair cushion. And then the
whump whump
of my brain as it comes down the stairs two at a time, looking for breakfast. As she leaves, she sees a man alone at his kitchen table, blessing himself before the invisible feast.

 

After that, as after all great tragedies, the days go by: Jeannie serves me meatloaf at the café.

 

Jeannie serves me spaghetti and meatballs at the café. Jeannie serves me pork barbecue and french fries at the café. Jeannie serves me breakfast tacos at the café.

BOOK: Museum of the Weird
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