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Authors: Michael J Seidlinger

The Laughter of Strangers (21 page)

BOOK: The Laughter of Strangers
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The audience erupts.

The laughter sends familiar shivers down my spine.

 

AUDIENCE

LAUGHING

 

I feel as cold as I must have felt at the time. Shivering, I don’t realize how angry I am. I saunter over to the celebrity and hit him right in the head.

Decent punch to the face while the celebrity’s fists were down. The memory bleeds into each argument, the verbal quarrel that transpires afterwards. Bleed into one of the later rounds, after the argument ends but isn’t settled, and the fight isn’t just a promotional fight anymore; the celebrity is out for blood. Blood drips from a cut right below the celebrity’s right eyebrow and that is what the camera focuses on.

Something is wrong here:

If the camera isn’t how I saw it, who is holding the camera?

Who stood to my right in the ring, circling around us like a VIP cameraman while I targeted the cut, sending punch after punch right for the same spot, hoping to open the wound enough to leave a scar (and maybe end the celebrity’s career as an actor)?

 

SILENCE

 

The memory continues to bleed with or without any sense.

The celebrity doesn’t know how to control emotion during a fight and I take advantage of that. You can’t let anger fuel the fight; it can be an influence, sure, but if you are throwing volume punches with no other strategy, your opponent will stop your would-be freight-train long before the fight can go the distance.

The cut is looking bad; bad enough that celebrity blood bleeds into the memory and ruins the end of the fight.

I might have won the fight but it bleeds into the aftermath. Ambulance ride for both celebrity and I.

Bleed.

Somewhere later, we sit facing a set of cameras. Bright lights wash out the blood, wash out any words that we might have said.

It looks bad.

I look better than the celebrity, but it is clear that the publicity stunt went wrong. Maybe it went right. I don’t seem to recall.

The memory continues to bleed out the final clause:

And I hear it as a single sentence, a question, directed at me, from a media representative as baffled as anyone else, “What is wrong with you?”

The memory bleeds until black.

And then there is…

 

SILENCE

 

I want to say something but this is not the time or place to say much of anything. I’ve already spoken for myself. For better and for worse, I outstepped any logic, any reasonable understanding based on the identity as it used to be.

Blink.

A frame appears, sans memory:

 

ARTICLE TITLE: THE RISE AND FALL OF WILLEM FLOURES

 

ARTICLE TITLE: THE TRUTH ABOUT ‘SUGAR’ WILLEM FLOURES: INTERVIEW WITH A CIPHER

 

ARTICLE TITLE: THE GOLDEN AGE OF FISTICUFFS: IS IT OVER?

 

ARTICLE TITLE: THE SECRETS AND LIES EXPOSED: A GROUP INTERVIEW WITH THE FIGHTERS OF WILLEM FLOURES

 

A frame breaks into shards before the next memory wipes the mirror clean. The memory has both color and sound.

The memory takes place in a large arena, full of pyrotechnics, fans holding makeshift signs, many of them praising an identity that isn’t mine, and I have full control of the ring.

I hold a microphone and, so unlike me (what does that even mean anymore?), I provoke the audience.

The words “heel” and “sports entertainment” and “celebrity walk-on” flicker in between frames.

The memory aligns to what I imagine are the official broadcast cameras. I see myself for what I really look like. Outside of any self-created visage, that is me…and I look a lot like ‘James.’

It looks like ‘James’ is filling in for me.

“I’m here to save all you idiot wrestling fans from wasting more brain cells watching a
fake
fight!”

 

AUDIENCE

LAUGHTER

 

Provokes me.

Their laughter is what I want to change.

I don’t want to hear it. As the memory begins to reveal itself, I struggle to ignore, to look away, anything, just:

No more of it.

Please.

But it seems the memory is a portrayal of the same self-conscious person that I am. The laughter switches to cheers, chaotic chanting, because it seems that I appeared at the venue for one reason and one reason only:

I am there to beat up ‘Sugar’ Willem Floures.

Not just any part of myself—

I am there to beat up the most vulnerable part of me.

“Is that what you want?!”

The memory skips, already winded, out of breath from twelve rounds of a fight that should have never transpired.

 

IS THAT WHAT YOU WANT?!

 

Then that’s what I give them.

Punch to the stomach.

Punch to the face.

That gets a big enough reaction.

Punch to the face, to the stomach.

Punch to the mouth.

Punch to the stomach, to the stomach, to the stomach.

Punch to the eye.

Eye closes shut.

Punch to the eye.

Punch to the mouth, to the face, to the stomach.

Punch to the forehead.

The memory skips, fading to black.

 

SILENCE

 

I breathe heavily.

The black fades back to our reflection.

And that’s what makes it all click into place.

The voice narrating every single memory…

It’s Spencer’s.

The memories comprise his own sort of mourning for the Willem he once knew. Every single memory is familiar not only because they are mine but also because they were the subject of Spencer’s lectures long after I stopped listening. I wonder:

If I had continued to listen and take notes, would Spencer have continued to discuss boxing?

Would his lectures have continued to analyze my fight performance rather than my performance as myself, as the identity I confuse and abuse?

Have I done something grave?

Willem Floures as enigma, does it fail to be as prominent as Willem Floures the boxer?

 

SILENCE

 

Of course I have no one to consult but myself. They all seem to know what’s right even if we know that it’s wrong.

I look at Sarah.

I look at ‘James.’

I look at myself and it’s a lot like looking at the reflection of a stranger.

A knot of dread in my gut worsens when Spencer walks into frame.

Right there, in the mirror, Sarah’s claims are correct.

I wrote him out of my “story.”

I look at my reflection.

 

THAT’S ME?

THAT DOESN’T LOOK LIKE ME

 

Spencer replies, voice an echo in my mind, “How would you know?”

 

 

 
THE SILENCE I DROVE

 

 

There is rhythm to any mania. Maybe it’s the mania that sets the rhythm and makes it impossible for me to keep up.

Some identities don’t have much else but the voice, no career source, no means of buoying their celebrity stake of the spotlight besides their ability to surprise. And maybe that’s why I drove myself to silence during the early, younger, golden years of my boxing career.

I used to think silence would be enticing; only now, do I realize that silence is worthless unless it precedes or follows a storm.

 

 SILENCE

 

It’s all I’m left with. Bask in silence of a basement where only X and I remain. The rest have escaped. They’ve taken any clear sense of what I can be. Spencer let them out as effortlessly as he led them here, tethered and tied. I pick at the scab of a memory where I confronted Spencer about his actions. I don’t remember what was said but I recall it had something to do with jealousy.

Perhaps it was guilt. Whatever it was, it is no more.

Left behind the silence and the solace I ignore.

I have nowhere else to go. 

With the TV on full-blast, I keep myself entertained.

I drive the silence away.

The TV pays me back for having paid so much attention to it.

The house doesn’t make a move, too afraid it’ll get my attention; I need to be alone. I need to think about this. I need to avoid it for the time being.

Wait until this show is over.

Not now. Maybe after the next one.

It’s only thirty minutes.

There’s plenty of time.

Right X?

 

BREAKING NEWS

 

The show I’m watching, the show that’s watching me, is interrupted by a loud crescendo of over-produced brass instrumentation.

I try turning the volume down but there’s no remote.

“Hey X, you have the remote over there by any chance?”

Executioner sits in the chair next to me, slouching, eyes open and cloudy; he’s quiet even though I set him free myself.

Really, he was the one that should have taken my place.

I can’t believe I’m saying this but…he would have carried the Willem Floures name well.

It’s because I can’t find the remote that I am stuck watching the one channel at the current volume.

The news anchor with a well-rehearsed grin begins, “We interrupt our regularly scheduled program with an update from an already-in-progress press conference between league officials on what will be the follow-up to last month’s fight. We bring you there, live—”

 

RECOGNIZABLE FACES

SPENCER

‘JAMES’

ME

‘SPENCER’

 

I turn and look at where they had all been tied down. No one left.

I count up from two, reassessing how many there had been versus how many were never caught. I give up somewhere around twenty.

I ask X, “What do you make of this? If I am here, who is that?”

X blinks.

The press conference is most definitely breaking news.

Then ‘Spencer’ speaks for ‘me’ making boastful claims about how the new contender, ‘Dynamite,’ but who I’ll always call ‘James,’ is yet another wannabe, just someone who hopes to ride the coat tails of a ‘G.O.A.T.’

 

G.O.A.T.

THE ACRONYM STANDS FOR:

GREATEST

OF

ALL

TIME

 

Whatever it is that’s supposed to be me doesn’t speak.

Just like I had been prior to my fight for the spotlight. I’m not sure which version was better. At the very least, I was entertaining and memorable. The loss of reality and self had to be for something, right?

‘James’ shadowboxes while Spencer expertly dodges and weaves ‘Spencer’s’ claims.

The ‘Spencer’ of the past cannot contend with the Spencer of today.

‘James’ what do you have to say?

I say: You can’t replace me.

I say: You can try but you’ll fail.

What I really say is nothing.

I am a voyeur, watching from behind a dusty plasma TV screen.

“Hey X, if that’s supposed to be me, then who the hell am I? Who the hell are you?”

X blinks.

“I’m starting to sense that you’re trying to use some kind of Morse code using blinks. I don’t know if I’ll follow.”

 

BLINK ONCE FOR “YES”

 

BLINK TWICE FOR “NO”

 

BLINK THREE TIMES FOR “IDIOT”

 

“That’s our code, okay?”

The conference continues with banter from Spencer and ‘Spencer.’ Spencer toys with ‘Spencer,’ successfully summarizing the fight plan because it’s a strategy we used back during my twenty-first fight. Or was it my twenty-second?

“X?”

He blinks.

I don’t catch how many times.

‘Spencer’ answers questions addressed for Spencer.

Both ‘me’ and ‘James’ stand off to the side, arms crossed, the effect a fighter is looking to achieve at one of these press conferences is intimidation.

Intimidate your opponent.

Intimidate yourself.

The conference ends with an official press release:

 

SUGAR VS. DYNAMITE

UNDERCARD:

SCORPION VS. DEADSIE

 SWAGGER VS. THRILL KILL

BAD INTENTIONS VS. STINGER

 

Like any other fight card, it is a great night of boxing where, essentially, people get to watch me beat the shit out of myself for four hours.

“That’s entertainment!”

I look over at X, waiting for a reaction.

Number of blinks: One.

I clap my hands, “Righto!”

You see, if I don’t act enthusiastic I’ll end up as desperately confused as I was when I first started. It will feel like the last couple fights were for nothing.

Absolutely nothing.

I can’t accept such a conclusion. I have to believe that I fought for valid reasons. Even if I don’t know where I stand, and I’m not quite sure if anyone can really see me, I can see myself.

I pinch the skin of my forearm.

I dig my nail into the skin, drawing blood.

I feel it. I can feel something.

No more mirrors. No more hauntings.

Just this.

I need to maintain a balance if I’m going to begin evaluating what is and what isn’t—and with all of them gone and/or against me, the fight is mine to win. Even though I’m the champion, I feel like the underdog.

 

DYNAMITE POISED FOR TITLE WIN

 

The media sweeps other coverage underneath the steady onslaught of ‘James’s’ younger look. He’s not the tattooed, scarred up, busted up and slack body that I command.

Between commercials, I look at the tattoos for some sense of direction.

 

NOISE

 

I bask in the noise of a number of different sources.

X hasn’t moved but he’s still here. Despite our past, I feel like he’s the only friend I have left.

I used to have a close friend, a confidant, someone that kept certain aspects of me in check but he’s betrayed me, left me for someone that didn’t exist until a day or two ago.

“Just because you say that he’s Willem Floures doesn’t make it true!”

I clear my throat, “You idiot, do you think this is how it should end?”

Spencer on TV, “Interview at Ringside,” one of those inside looks at upcoming fight events from the minds of experts.

BOOK: The Laughter of Strangers
13.38Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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