The Woman Is Tired
Two months have passed since I first met my
Atlanta man, my American online steady. The thing is I’m in love with myself
even though I once read when self-love walks you down the block, despair lurks around
the corner. Meanwhile I’m just a worn-out circus trainer throwing out emails
like raw fish to keep my men in line.
Mark sends me an email from work. He wants to
swoop in on the twenty-eighth to deliver fresh protein, “is it a good time to cum?” he writes. I wince. Anyhow, there
is no fresh protein shortage—Lenny, Robbie, Mark, the kinky little one James,
Garth—miserly with his cash and generous with his semen. They’re babies with
their cocks, these men. When I kneel before a man’s cock, he plants his prick
at the back of my mouth, his bare ass pumping. And then he says you love it,
don’t you and I say yes, I do, but the truth is it’s about being expedient. Kneeling
facilitates the art of deep throat and siphoning off semen. I like showing off,
but mostly I want him to get trigger happy and shoot his load. Because I work
with invasive chatterers and I’m tired. And because I know I’m not going to
come and I don’t really give a damn except I’ve got this persona, so I toss an exotic
image to the part of his brain wired to his cock, which is his entire chunk of
grey matter. I’m thinking females allocate specific brain cells, and after all
these decades I am beginning to understand myself. I’m like a guy in this mad
life, working the room with standard socializing and how-do’s, all the while
inching toward the exit door connecting directly to my crotch.
“Not my
JCT!” Mark says when I tell him there is no moaning in me, no ooh baby and all
that phone shit, I say, and as for my words that used stay up all night, always
wet and eager, well, they’re tired, cannot not remain awake, have grown pale,
possibly anemic. He says I mustn’t work so hard, I should rest.
I miss Lenny. Online men gorge on my passion and
exuberance, but it’s Lenny that I like. After he kissed my cunt and flew back
to Chapel Hill, he left me a phone message playing “A Kiss is Just a Kiss” on
his electric kazoo. I dashed out in hunt
of an adjective for beyond cool. “You’re
the one, you’re velvet” I wrote, even though the sex in me was all used up,
like my fridge when I’m low on cash.
Hardly any weed left. I tell Lenny my birthday
is coming soon and a party might revive me. He develops a plan: I should rent a
studio, display my erotic art, a band should play two types of music. While all
I’m wanting is to lie in bed on a Sunday morning with the weight of a man’s
arms around me. This emptiness is an unwelcome visitor, one that stays on and
on, refuses to exit, consumes. Maybe I’m
depressed. I write maudlin blues lyrics and send them to Mark. I can’t think of
a tune.
We were consumed with each other. In our peak
season, emails and phone calls taking off every hour, every seat was taken and
charter flights were fully booked. The weather was warm and balmy. It was one
of the best seasons I could remember. But I slacked off and Mark placed himself
back in the online hunt. I’d set the man up at the Drake and fucked him in
every way. Twice a year on New Year’s and also on my birthday for the seven
years following, he’s still pitching
a remake.
James wants me to accompany him to a swinger’s
party. I’ll go, I say, if I can stay dressed and write about it, the way an
artist sketches court proceedings. He says I can stay dressed, but he doesn’t
think my scribbling would go over too well, we could go out for coffee
afterward and share mental notes. We’re on the phone “after midnight” like that
Monk tune on the tape from the wacky Bostonian, I having repaired to the
sunroom since Caroline is sleeping sprawled out in my bed. “You’re telling me
swinging exhibitionists wouldn’t flock to me? All I need to say is I’m doing a
piece on swinging, my big break possibly and I would so appreciate. . . ” James says there’s a
certain etiquette, this being a franchise. I sit up. “You mean like MacDonald’s
and Kentucky Fried Chicken?” Then I email Mark, who zips back an immediate
response even though it’s Monday and he’s a working engineer. I leave a message
on Sabina’s machine: “Remember Anais Nin had this client she wrote erotic
stories for, like the ones in “Little Birds” and those books. Anyhow, she and
Sartre and Genet would sit in the café at Monmartre, well, maybe not Monmartre,
I just put that in because it enhances the picture—the truth is I’ve never been
to Paris and you know about my intellectual gaps—so they’d drink and fashion up
scenarios for her dollar-a-page gig. Now here’s this engineer emailing me in
the morning with his ‘hon, sucking me off would be a good thing right about now,’
so I tap out a page or two, but he’s still hungry, could I give him an
old-fashioned missionary on the side, like at a restaurant, you know, ‘and I’ll
have some fries to go with that.’ And what I want to know is when the fuck does
the man work?”
In the morning I send Mark his missionary and
throw in an extra sixty-nine. He’s fired in the afternoon. But Mark believes in
God and he’s a Southern stoic so I know he’ll manage. Before phoning him, I slip
into the ensuite for a few tokes. I was a fine actress and could fake consolatory
tones and dialog, I’m a passionate and creative liar and excel at delivery
although I have never forged a come, being more of a process than a
product-oriented type. The man is given the boot for his fixation and I’m
thrilled.
“More for the book,” I tell Sabina.
It’s a small fucking world. Garth goes out with
some work-related types to a steak-house in Scarborough, the client Garth is
courting turns out to be a musician, a pianist with a steady gig and cash to
invest, and as he’s opening his silver attaché case, the orange and black
postcard for TUZA, which just happens to be Swahili for “to pay tribute to”—and
isn’t that what Relay of the Arts for the Next Generation is all about?—falls out or comes into view.
Garth comments and the musician says yeah, he’d heard about the festival from
his Chicago drummer friend who’s coming into Toronto to spend the weekend with
the broad who’s running the whole thing. “Question for you,” Garth says when he
calls. I decide to do a partial-accept, full deny and tell Mark not to come in
for my birthday; I am sick, depressed, crashed and weirded out from smoking up.
Garth phones the morning of my birthday.
“By the way,” he says, “it’s your birthday isn’t it? “Yes,” I say and wait. I figure he’s decided
to cast me out of his life again. On my birthday. He is determined to make me
sad on mine and to feel guilty on his. Come to think of it, all the holidays we
share are like that. And most days. I don’t know why I let him fuck me up the
ass. Still, it’s my birthday and I’m crying because I love him and hate him, and
then love him all over again even though I’m fifty-six and should know better. Loving
Garth is like the wild come I never had, although once I grabbed Abie’s
shoulders on the Austin Terrace Street bed which had a built-in grey bookshelf
headboard for night and early-morning readers. It freaks me out to think of
Abie’s cock on account of his doing such injustice to the appendage.
Garth says he wants to be more involved in my
writing life. But what he really wants is to check out his performance record. He’s
matured over the past nine and a half years, I tell him. He is almost an
accomplished lover.
“Why almost?” he says.
“First, tell me five things you like about me.”
“I feel
attached” is all he’s willing to say. Oh, and he’s reconciled to having
me in his life in one form or another. When he fucks me, his eyes never soften
or deepen. He kisses really well and he has soft lips. He has taught me what
rimming feels like and I think he’s good at it, he ass fucks with gentleness
when required and knows when to ram hard. But he can’t project love. If he
could add love and affection, then he’d be accomplished. On my
birthday, a dozen online men send me birthday greetings. I lie in bed on my
side with my back to my bedroom door and refuse to answer the phone.
I trim my
pubic hair to add flair to my emails. Online love makes me feel like Paris
where couples kiss on street corners and I like that. It’s my peaceful place
and my refuge from the storm. But
now Mark says I haven’t lived up to his expectations,
haven’t paid my part of his long distance bill or sent him a Canadian beret. I
slide into monotones and dream in black and white. Only my fingers move as I
type. My salmon and grey Mexican blanket wrapped around my shoulders, I strike these
keys and remember my old Hermes typewriter.
I talk to myself. You’re just lonely sweetheart. You’re
sliding, honey. Hope leers and flaps off, and I am Madame Lafarge typing,
typing, worrying all the while about money, adding up what I have, what I need,
what small amount I earn these days. My head is full of numbers. I sit at this
heavy black wood desk facing north while Caroline, gorging on TV, runs her
zigzag commentary. My writing is a steaming kettle spewing cunt, cock, fuck,
ass and come, with words strewn in between.
What do you think I need? Who do you
think I am? Why am I still alive?
Doubts peck at me. Cantankerous geese. I stay alive to take
care of the girls—filling in spaces with art, writing, assorted inspirations,
and men. I type because if I stop, the world will freeze in its tracks and I
might fall off.
Garth is a killer. I have never met a man like
him nor will I again. He tears my heart apart, but I can’t let him go. I phone
him since he is well-versed in the art of lethal weapons and assorted homemade death-inducing
methods and a clinical effect’s list. I tell him I am full of loathing and he
likes that.
I send Mark acquiescing emails while I question my life, the
men, the wish and
need for,
the hunt, the letters. Sometimes I skip words and my voice drops to a whisper.
I take adavan, smoke up, and then it comes to me. Robbie! The understudy strutting
out of the wings.
Life is
soft and hard—a summer’s sun in an Arctic
winter. The ex is floundering again, his body flabby, flesh washed green. Skin
like rising dough hangs from his chin and flakes off his eyelids. I will not
stand around his grave. He’s afraid, he says while I worry for myself even with
my cloak of muscles. All that has passed between us, all the losses and pain—I
try to think grief as an old war wound from another life time. It never works.
Memories are like a pop-up clown-in-a-box. Wind and wind and the clown pops up.
Slam the red metal cover down, wind, and the damn clown pops up again. I stare
in the ensuite mirror. Opening my eyes in nineteen-twenty’s mock horror, tears fill
and spill as the old piano player performs his tired score. The air is porous
and dense. There are terrains on this earth where land lies rolling and smooth
and air is perfume and gardenias, but this land of mine threatens treacherous
and steep with air like thin ice. I’m cold. Wearing a faded red-hooded
sweatshirt and my father’s old wool cardigan, and I’m still cold, typing,
typing for all the homeless and the despairing. When you’ve been a member of that
group, you can never walk away or revoke your membership. You’re a member for
life. I want to write about loneliness and fear, the struggle of grasping
dreams as the only worthy living remnants, like hanging onto the ledge of an
unseaworthy cargo ship—what such an effort does to a mind and body that could
once move with grace and adapt effortlessly to any angle. Now all I can write
about is love and cunt fucking, love and ass fucking, love and sucking off—love.
I save what is left, managing to get
out with some of the old dreams intact. My raft is a daughter whose mind has tunnels
with tests of fire and monsters. She carries around the unshakable belief that
I can fix whatever is broken or at least maintain it, and she is dismayed,
scared when I cannot. But if you’re in a crunch and you need a woman who sits
and types in a man’s size large leather jacket in the hope its toughness will
rub off on her, then you’ve got the right broad. Then I discover Abie is in
quicksand again, flailing about and sinking deeper and will that ever change?
There is no one else to care for Caroline who sits watching TV and knows all
the shows and related times. There is no one else for her.
Mark requires three thinking days to make up his
mind. On the fourth day, I can contact him, he says. I send him an email on the
first day. “Mark, I am a good woman. My
grandmother was a strong Russian peasant with long blond braids in her youth
and a powerful singing voice. My grandfather was an earnest man with an
amputated trigger finger, this grandfather who taught himself letters so he could
read Tom Paine, Bertrand Russell, Tolstoy, Gandhi, Nehru, and Einstein and gave
Wanda Landowska’s recordings of the Brandenburg Concertos and Beethoven’s Piano
Concertos, especially the Emperor, Number 5, my favorite, air and
sunlight. Moyne, my skinny wired cousin who smoked three packs a day said there
was not a kinder man than my Zadi. He didn’t have a mean bone in his body,
except that he teased his wife something fierce, every day of their marriage. A
man, Mark, who gave away half his fortune so ink might stain a writer’s
fingers, whose grace gave Shiva oils a canvas and a voice to the sweetest arco. This is the man who grew my
embracing heart. My Zadi. And you will shortly leave.”
Maybe I’m spinning too fast. Maybe I never learned how to
spin at all. Never lay on my back warmed by the noonday sun and watched the
passing of clouds, images spreading and shifting, slipping away. No chance for
me—silly spinning with arms sparkling like dew on the points of grass, shaping
myself into an “S” with you whoever you are. Not for me, twirling until the
world becomes dizzy. Maybe once, dressed in a white poplin sundress and
scallop-edged ankle socks in Cape Cod, I felt the part where after delighted,
after twirling, you stretch out on stalks of grass, their tops prickling the
skin on arms and legs. And I am so full to brimming that I’m empty and all
around searching for love more and more.
I write to Lenny. I tell him he’s the best of
who does what and who says what. He says he’d like to be a fly on the wall. I
create scenes for him and he believes he has access to my naked soul. He has sucked
my cunt, his mouth vacuuming an orgasm right out of me. When I came and
trembled afterward, he spread his body over mine. “I like to watch,” he said, would
I masturbate for him and would I mind if he jerked off? I laughed and climbed
on top of him. “Oh
now she’s climbing on top of me,” he recited and “oh, now she’s using her
tongue. Baby!”
Love has ravaged him, he says, so I ask whether he would
prefer to be in love or to have some loving in his life. I write to Lenny
because, in some way, we are sharing this book I’m writing. “Hey baby,” I say,
“I had this new online fling, set him up with my letters—remember the one about
ass fucking and my bathroom come? Oh, and I threw in an old deep throat for
good measure. And left messages, erasing and repeating five times maybe more
because, you know, intonation is everything.”
“You’re a crazy woman,” Lenny says in his light Mose Allison
voice.
I sit down in front of my keys, playing the
letters—keys tapping, dancing side to side, up and down, the rhythm sometimes
halting, searching, slowing down, gathering up speed, commas, commas gathering
up speed, linking letters sending messages about love, heartache, yearning to a
New York man with a cock like
a divining rod. “Come take me, I’m on
that tour” I’ll scream running naked
with my valise in hand and hair flying.
I’m stoned when I read his emails. His
words appear broader, thicker. I set out my word traps. I want to teach him
about hardcore kink, about bonds that never claim wrists or ankles, when a mind
spreads its legs. “You can see it in the eyes,” I tell him, “they’re haunted, you
know, and the lids are like mourning veils. My eyes.” I’m a junkie checking out
hotmail: has he written, what has he written, and if he hasn’t, why not? He
should be sliding in my come by now. When he writes, I’m high. “Oh,” I say.
“Oh,” my fingers suspended above the keys, headphones filling my head with an
old sax tune. I dress in layers; as soon as you think you’ve hit my undermost
layer, there is another one beneath and then another. Even I don’t know what’s
at the bottom or when I’ve reached it.
Four times a week, I train a
three-hundred pound middle-aged woman, a suburban mouth who claims that she comes
twelve times in a row. Her pale skin is veined and hangs in sacs. She has clear
blue eyes, but the skin above and below is purple. At fifty-three, she’s hooked
up with married Norwegian she met on the fourth pay-what-what-you-can day of my
music and arts festival. Toronto Lennox used to fuck fat women. There was no
work involved, they were just so grateful, he said. Harriet parades her bedroom
details to Women’s Workout members—how the Norwegian taught her to take piss
and rub herself, how it made her come and who would have believed it. He’s a
hunk, she says, but I’ve seen him in person and he’s just a tall man with a
small nose. We Jews still worry about our noses. Garth says that white noses
are a mutation and I think he’s right. Harriet’s an obese woman with a belly
rolling out like an old carpet that’s been spooled for decades and then
unraveled. I never liked her although she has a good heart. Also, eleven years
ago, groggy from a night’s sleep and mid-night binge and needing to take a
piss, she bumped into her husband hanging from a bathroom fixture. So I felt sorry for her in spite of her being
a three-times-a-week-guaranteed on account of her longstanding affair with
food. Harriet has a talent for quality multiple orgasms. But then she’s got thighs
like Garth and her massive comes could cause earthquakes. No way would I trade places. Even with my
quest to reach my orgasmic potential. Besides,
she has owl eyes like John Diefenbaker.

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