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Authors: Sarah Schulman

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Chapter Twenty-seven
(In which David remembers Don)
 
 
I watched David walk unsteadily down Fourteenth Street and followed him for a bit, leaving Rita to go off to the bookstore. His head hung down below his shoulders like he just couldn't take it anymore. It was one of those most miserable walks of your life. I had no idea of what was the right thing to do and so ran after him, but slowly. He saw me and stopped to greet hello but was unable to wipe off the terror and misery. Absolutely incapable of hiding it.
We ended up at his house sitting on the bed and in the artificial light I could see how much damage the last few months had done. His skin was all dry and scaly, his face was ruddy from peeling. He had KS on one of his eyelids and he kept sweating profusely throughout the entire visit. Worse was how skinny he'd gotten. To that point where all their clothes are falling off but have to be loose to avoid swelling. It just hangs on their bodies kind of shapeless and you could tell he'd had hours and hours of diarrhea. Hours of crying on the toilet seat, alone in the middle of the night. Rectum raw and chafed, his guts sore from shitting without any sleep.
“Last month was my birthday,” he said. “I turned thirty-five.”
“Happy birthday,” I said.
“I've been doing a lot of writing,” David said. “About my earlier life. I've been jotting down little things worth remembering and trying to put them in some kind of order. Some of the most important things that ever happened to me. Some of the things that I want to have represent me when I'm gone.”
“Do you want to read one to me?” I asked.
“This one is about my dead boyfriend Don,” he said, going slowly through piles of disheveled papers, sweat cascading from his face, literally pouring all over himself and the paper. I watched it dripping and was utterly repulsed. I didn't want to be, but honestly, I was. I felt like I was going to throw up—the way you want to vomit at the smell of homeless people even while having nothing against them and a great deal of pity.
“One day Don and I went to the country and made love on the grass. I lay there looking up at the sun, and when I glanced over, Don was standing, nude and silent. I looked admiringly and saw a tree in Donny's ass. That is to say, I saw Don as a tree and then I looked at a real tree for comparison and saw it, suddenly, as a curvy, softy thing, like my beloved's joyful buttocks. Then I saw that thought in an objective way and saw the tree literally in Don's ass—protruding brightly from his rectum while he stood like a tree himself and then the sun got caught in my line of vision and it was over. One of those loving flashes of moment that become memories and that disappear from the collective unconscious when its rememberer dies too young because fate has frowned on all us young trees and God has taken our playmates away from us.”
And all I kept thinking was that I wanted Troy to love me enough that I would never have to speak to my family again.
Chapter Twenty-eight
(In which Killer introduces Troy Ruby who then describes how she became an American artist)
 
 
“The dynamics of gravity,” was all Troy said when I told her what had happened. Only I withheld the part about her and my family in case it didn't work out that way. I didn't want to have to be embarrassed. That was about six months ago when I still wasn't sure.
Troy was born in Cincinnati, Pennsylvania, in 1958 when Dwight David Eisenhower was president, and remains unresolved, just like the fifties. America jumped from World War II right into Vietnam and never made peace with those twenty years of betrayal. Our own Cultural Revolution. You look at the names of those who squealed on their friends—they became America's favorite heroes. The squealed-upon rode off into nowhere and died in oblivion, never having been publicly redeemed. No punishment for the evil. No honor for the defiled. A model for the new age.
Her father, Joe-Jack Ruby, was night manager of the Queen of the Nile Café in downtown Cincinnati, PA. Her mother was the resident songstress, Princessa De Barge. They picked her up at the age of two, grabbed all the cash in the till, and came up to New York City on December 12, 1960—five weeks before the inauguration of President John Fitzgerald Kennedy.
The whole family watched his coronation from a tavern in Queens before settling into a small apartment in Greenwich Village sometime soon after.
Can't you see why I'm so taken by her?
Her story is so full of what was once considered romantic. And she told it to me the first time we fell in love.
“Robert Frost, crusty old codger,” she said, leaning up naked against the dusty brick wall. “He stood hatless in front of friendly television cameras that freezing afternoon and read his poetry, outside, to the nation. Then, in public schools from coast to coast, boys and girls like you and me, Killer, we had to memorize his words. For Frost, though an artist, was a classy one. A classy American. Not some homo like Allen Ginsberg chanting
Sunflower Sutra
with little faggie pinkie cymbals.”
At this point she assumed an imitative pose, stared off into the eye of an imaginary television camera, and began recreating the gestures of Robert Frost fumbling with his scarf and notes at the 1960 presidential inauguration.
 
My little horse must think it queer,
To stop without a farmhouse near …
 
“Now, this couplet,” she said, “must have made a fierce impression, toddler that I was. Because years later I would suddenly, as though channeling the spirit of the Creator, leap from my chair in a packed meeting hall and yell out, ‘We're queer. We're near.' To which someone, I believe it was Maxine, responded, ‘We're here, we're queer. Get used to it.'”
She lit a cigarette, held it posed up in the air, like a proper lady used to dirty work. Ashtray balancing precariously on the bed.
“See Killer, see how American culture is born. From Bob Frost to my lips. One long wagon train full of cottonmouth. Two hundred and eighteen years of collective unconsciousness. Next thing
you can guess, some little fairy from Aimes, Iowa, will be jumping up and down rhyming
Seven years ago
and
homo
without any idea of how that free association was made. But the rhyme will sit comfortable, soothingly, in the psyche of its proprietors. Four score, I mean, for sure.”
When comparing lovers there are subtle differences. One caresses me with more confidence, but what does that really mean? Could it just be because her hands are bigger? Or is she really less fearful? Women have so many reasons to hesitate. One presses her lips to mine longer. She holds my thighs. Won't let me sleep. Lovemaking isn't my responsibility with one of them. It will come to me without worry.
“So, that was my role in the growth of Queer Nation,” Troy Ruby told me, chomping on her cigarette. “One minor character in a minor moment.
Queer
did get old very fast, nowadays only academics take it seriously. But
Nation
managed to live on in many fond conversions. Transgender Nation, Alien Nation, Reincar Nation. And all along the line no one noticed how much that word echoed with the secret store of nostalgic desire for normalcy, normalcy, normalcy. Those apple pie, warm kitchens, and American flags that are trapped somewhere back there between the hypothalamus and the frontal lobe. Someplace in the Central Drawer where
One
Nation
Under God, Indivisible, With Liberty and Justice For All
resonates eternally. And that is why
Nation
is ultimately such a comforting word. And that is how I became an American poet.”
Chapter Twenty-nine
(In which Troy Ruby writes and recites a love poem to Killer)
 
 
It is a very strange thing, but the lesbian community is a community of liars. Liars and believers, tops and bottoms, butches and femmes, doers and wannabes, yuppies and deadbeats, mommies and daddies, enemies and friends. It is all so dynamic.
The more you hide, the safer you are, especially if you're out. When you're out, you're huge because this just can't be. I'm so big, I'm enormous. How can I ever be happy with little things? Sitting in someone else's backyard or on a rooftop or fire escape, watching my lover, tanned, stretched out on the chaise longue from Lamston's, gin and tonic, cigarette. Her arms are my greatest pleasure. Her legs are so shapely. I love them.
“Killer,” she said on the sixth night. “You know I have a girlfriend named Anita. You know that we have been together for seven years. I've told you that, right?”
“Yes,” I said.
“She's a loving person. I admire her. She accepts me. She's fun. I like sharing things with her. She's easy to get along with.”
“Sounds doomed,” I said.
“Why? ”
“She'll never be able to break down your isolation.”
She leaned back in the bed and opened her legs a little. “Troy?” I whimpered.
“Yeah? ”
“Honey, could you hurt me? Rough me up a little?”
“What do you want? ”
“I don't know, choke me, slap me, tell me off, make me cry. I really need to cry.”
That night both of us were ashamed. Not only showing our masochism but even worse, not being able to really do it well. We made love again in the bathtub and her half hearted thrashing became a faded memory.
“Hey,” she said, disengaging from my orgasm. “Let me get a cigarette, a cup of coffee, and then I'll return to worship at the altar.”
An hour later she recited a poem.
For Killer
by Troy Ruby
 
Your head is a silk factory. Your forehead is a plum. Your eyes are ladles. Your mouth is a lamp. Your throat is a tortoise. Your theater is a snapping one. Your shoulders are a bowl of rum. Your chest is a radio. Your belly is mellow. Your pubic hair is tender. Your vagina is familiar. Your legs are red. Your feet are a mind.
 
Your ears are posies. Your nose is Kamchatka. Your cheeks are bonanzas. Your neck is a steam table. Your breasts are amusing. Your navel is paprika. Your timing is three-quarters. Your spaciness is ninety. Your ass is a cream stone. Your back lives in Manhattan. Your thighs can sing opera. Your knees are blue kanten. Your ankles are imported. Your toes are like string.
Your follicles are tremendous. Your scalp grows six feet. Your cerebrum came from Macy's. Your molars took a shine. Your gum bleeds like my salary. Your tongue stings of K-Y. Your chin sat on a platter. Your armpit is a springboard. Your waist told a secret. Your soft lips give me pleasure. Your clitoris winked in Technicolor. Your calves ate only vegetables.
“That's great,” I said.
“You probably think it's a little long.”
“Well,” I said. “You could cut it down to just two stanzas.”
“True.”
“Troy? ” I asked. “Do you think you can make it as a poet?”
“Never,” she said. “I have other plans.”
“Like what?”
“I've been doing research,” Troy said. “I just started reading this new popular novel,
Good and Bad
, by Muriel Kay Starr.”
“Not you too,” I answered, bored. “Everywhere I go I see that fucking book.”
“Well, excuse me.”
“It's just that, we all know Muriel Starr,” I tried to explain calmly. “She used to know Rita about ten years ago. Then she went out with this girl Lila Futuransky—who ended up involved in a scandal, but Muriel, of course, escaped unscathed. She moved to another neighborhood and got closer to power. Now she's got this novel out everyone is reading, but I hear it is really closeted.”
“I read the first four chapters,” Troy said. “And it made a lot of things very clear.”
“About?”
“About the key to success.”
“What are you going to do, Troy? ” I asked.
“Well,” she said, in her pinstriped and fedora tone of voice. “I'm writing a self-help book.”
“I need self-help,” I said.
“Well, then,” she answered softly. “You'll be the first recipient.”
Chapter Thirty
(In which Troy Ruby attempts to write a bestseller, after reading four chapters of
Good and Bad
, by Muriel Kay Starr)
The Millennial Moment:
Facing the Coming Millennia with Joy
by Troy Ruby
 
Americans are spiritually exhausted. We have undergone a stressful millennia. Stresses of all kinds have plagued the people of the earth. Too many to list here.
There have been famines, plagues, wars and strife of all kinds. Unfettered strife, dominating the planet. In order to avoid more strife of this nature, we must seize the Millennial Moment.
It is time for Americans to rest. The Millennial Moment is one in which you can both seize and rest. Why have these two activities been separated in the public imagination for so long?
Many of you face turning to your most productive midlife years at the Millennial Moment. What does it mean? Regular anxiety is bad enough, do we need to have Millennial Angst now too? The answer lies in the Eight Leaps of Faith. Just memorize them and you will have accomplished at least one thing. A mere glance of the Eight Leaps of Faith might even do a little something.
The Eight Leaps of Faith
 
The First Leap: The Past is Prologue
Everything that is behind you should be equally behind.
 
The Second Leap: Reaching Your Goals
All previous goals must be dispensed with. Those who were first will now be last. The old order is rapidly changing. Set new goals. Only ones that you are sure you can reach without much luck.
 
The Third Leap: Every Generation Has to Try Heroin
Who are these people with whom we have lived on this planet for twenty-five years or less? Baby-Boomers. The key to the millennium lies in figuring out what they are going to be afraid of. The answer? The future.
 
The Fourth Leap: What About the Future?
We are all terrified that we are going to be punished.
 
The Fifth Leap: Finances
Buy stock in Prozac. Invest in the depression market and then get out. Then put all your money in the joy market. There are so many antidepressants competing for consumer dollars, but no one is selling depressants. Be an innovator. (See
Eighth Leap
.)
 
The Sixth Leap: The Decade of Exposure
Parity at the millennium. More exposure then for those with less now.
And vice versa.
 
The Seventh Leap: Pharmaceutical Publishing
There will be more books to promote pharmaceutical products.
 
The Eighth Leap: Is Prozac a Mood Alterer? AA Wants to Know
If AA is going to outlaw Prozac, AA won't be long for this world. (See
Sixth Leap
.)
 
Now for an important question.
Prince said he's gonna party like it's 1999. Do you think that you will be partying in 1999? Or will you be meditating?
To make your choice, order Troy Ruby's cassette tape and guide to how to meditate at a party. Just send $99.95 and keep your fingers crossed.

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