"I want you to hurt me."
That's what the blind man tells you--*orders* you, really, feeling his
incautious drunken way
along the wall. The hotel is full of dust and light and surprising
silence, for a Sunday in
Mexico; no churchbells ring, no fireworks off in the distance, not
even the occasional gunshot.
Maybe that's because it's by a graveyard, but you wouldn't want to
bet on it.
And: "I don't want to," you reply, strumming lightly. Knowing that you
could have just as easily
said "care" instead of "want", because it's as much a matter of convenience
(or in-) as anything
else; morality's such a damn slippery thing even at the best of times,
which these--aren't. Not to
mention how the blind man himself could confirm that for you, if he
let himself think about it for
more than the half-second it takes between tequila-slugs...
"*Hurt* me, fuckmook!"
"No."
Not likely. Not interested. Not...
...just yet.
Out there in the graveyard, barely visible from the window you slump
in (your guitar at the ready,
guitar-case also close to hand), a half-eaten sugar skull lies smashed
between two tombstones,
engulfed by ants. What might have once been MIGUEL reduced to its last
two letters, like some
cheap joke from Hell. Thank god the blind man can't see it, because
you know *exactly* what he'd
say--
"I can pay, you know."
"What with? Fideo and Lorenzo already took off with all your dirty money, remember?"
The blind man pauses, lodged in the doorframe. Strikes a pose.
"People *have* been known to swap me stuff for--favors," he says, deadpan. "In the past."
"Back when you had eyes?"
"Yeah, that'd be it: Fuck YOU, Mexi-can't. Last I heard, your wife'd
been dead for quite the
while, and I'm willing to bet your dick slaps up at justabout the same
angle everybody else's
does..."
"Maybe I have taste." Sharp turn from one tune into another, snapping:
"And don't talk about her,
either. You don't have the right."
"No rights?" He smirks. "Now I *know* I'm still in Mexico."
And so it goes. Sundown at last, blazing red ball sinking headfirst
into a stream of gold-shot
pinky-blue, like pinata colors: Tomorrow the sky will crack open again,
and who knows what'll pop
out? Could be anything, like finding a peso in the crack of your boot-heel
or a votive candle to
La Flaca, the Skinny One--la Muerta Gloriosa, glorious death--burnt
nearly down to wick and wax in
a nook just behind the motel room's ricketty toilet. Like finding an
eyeless enemy dressed up to
the nines in gunfighter black on some dusty street and deciding watching
him drink himself to
death would be somehow more amusing, more fitting, than simply letting
him bleed to death where he
sits.
You don't know why you did it, even now, though you're pretty sure it
wasn't to be kind. Because
it's not like you've ever gotten any thanks for *that*, thus far, aside
from the occasional offer
of "favors"; ridiculous and grotesque, most so whenever you factor
in the spasms of genuine
interest this maimed freak continues to be able to raise.
Because you're used to dead people, after all--dead, or half-, or soon-to-be.
A skeleton choir in
your head, singing and dancing and clicking their bones like castanets
in some horrid tango: Dead
wife, dead daughter, dead brother, dead friend. Dead lover jacknifed
in the white dust at your
feet by the side of a never-ending road. Dead spot in the middle of
your palm, where the tendons
which worked your guitar once nested...
Oh, they work all right, after all your long practice--but not like
they used to, never again. And
all that hand wants to touch now is dead things, like the blind man's
white, sweat-slick skin
whenever he crawls over you in the middle of the night, breathing tequila-fumes
into your mouth.
When his lank hair hangs down around you both, hiding the blurry, red-tinged
holes where his
wicked black eyes used to be; eyes that once promised everything and
nothing at the very same
time, a double negative cancelling itself out on contact.
Everything for the asking. Nothing at all for free.
Death crying out to death, a hole in the very center of your world.
Like that dry, dead place the
blind man has instead of a soul, empty since long before Barillo and
his daughter made sure that
his outside and inside finally matched.
"Well, catch you later," the blind man says at last, appropos of nothing
much. And raises the last
of today's bottle in a sort of haphazard toast, while he does--spills
half of it down his
shirt-front, too, streaking the second "I" in CLEAVAGE INSPECTION AGENCY
yellow in much the same
way he always leaves a trail against the bathroom wall, 'cause he's
got no *eyes*,
shit-for-brains. Or maybe just because he wants to: He's that petty,
sometimes. More often than
not.
One tune blending into another, into another, into another--familiar
feel of wood beneath your
fingers, the rhythm instinctual, impossible to chart or stem. Like
a night tide's current dragging
you back, dragging you down.
Later. Tonight, in the dark you both share. When you'll press the blind
man's face into the pillow
and hear him pant and swear; tear at each other with your mouths, each
probably thinking of other
times, other people. When you'll come to with his tongue tracing your
scars and a dirty-palmed
hand cupping your balls, or your lap suddenly full of renegade cultural
imperialist, his inner
thighs sticky and straining against your own; former agent Sheldon
Sands pumping liquid
ticker-tape across your chest and clamping down 'till the explosion
he triggers makes you just as
blind as him, if only temporarily.
Hissing: "So you tell me, 'the'--you really think this doesn't *hurt*?"
And oh, at that moment, you know you'll hope it does.
All these days, all these nights. All these dead minutes passing by
in an empire of dirt you've
somehow agreed to jointly rule, you and Sands, while a painted papier-mache
sun lights the
tombstones outside up like teeth in a false white smile: America the
beautiful, Mexico the brave.
America astride Mexico like a three-dollar whore, laughing all the
way. And any of the above might
make pretty good lyrics for this song you seem to have been working
on, together, if the blind man
could only see to write them down somewhere before you forget them
again...
Or you could only stand to sing it, if he did.
THE END