I Am Not Myself These Days (14 page)

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Authors: Josh Kilmer-Purcell

BOOK: I Am Not Myself These Days
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I
t's a week of cactuses and hearts.

Jack sends me to work every day with a note or little drawing in my pants pocket. The partners at the agency decide they aren't mad at me anymore when one of the suits at ABC decides my spoof was hilarious. Someone at ABC who knows someone at CBS says there's even a possibility Letterman might run it as a parody of the campaign.

Jack spends his days working out and buying things for the apartment, and then meets me after work to have dinner with Ryan and Grey or Laura. Thursday he spends the entire day shopping at Mexican markets and putting together a three-course Mexican dinner for me. I know he's just trying to stay busy to keep his mind off of getting high.

I'm scraping leftover bits of enchilada off a plate into the trash when he comes into the kitchen and puts his arm around me.

“You know, if we wanted we could move to Baja Peninsula tomorrow and get a place on the ocean,” he says.

“Not enough work for drag queens. Or whores,” I say.

I instantly regret using that word. It used to be a funny running joke, but this week it sounds dirty. Mean. Jack had gone the entire week without taking a single call simply because I asked him to. When we first started dating, he grilled me to make sure I had no problem with his career, and I assured him I thought it was cool.

“I'm sorry. Stupid dig,” I say.

“Don't worry.”

“I was just joking.”

“Don't worry. I know. I've decided, when I get back to work next week, not to go on any party calls anymore. Just normal ones,” he says.

“You don't have to do that. You faked it before, you can do it again,” I say, trying to be overly generous.

“Maybe later. Not now.”

I'm relieved. I know that he couldn't be around crack any more than I could be around an open bottle without indulging.

I'm also not naive. I'm not sure he can do this. Sex for money, dressing in drag, and too much booze…fine. All things we can handle. But the crack throws me. The whole time we've been together I knew that we were forging a different path for ourselves, pretty far outside the typical romantic comedy genre. But genres are genres for a reason, and I saw enough “very special” sitcom episodes about the dangers of drugs to know there aren't a lot of happy endings. No one made it through puberty in the 1980s without Nancy Reagan's harpy message permanently tattooed on his brain. Every time I saw Jack high I couldn't help but picture his brain as a sizzling egg in a frying pan.

But if anyone can break the cliché, I suppose it might as well be us. Whatever fucked-up lifestyle we've been living, it's had its positive effects. I've been getting fewer and fewer doubtful snide remarks about our relationship from people around me. They knew what I was like before Jack and they see what I've been like since. I might still be having a bit too much fun for some of them, but they know that since Jack, I've been showing up to work when I need to and have been nowhere near as bitchy. Something about Jack is good for me. Something's working. Maybe not all of it. But something.

 

“Something wrong? You look a little sober,” Laura says Friday morning. She's been teasing me relentlessly all week.

“Don't you get a pin or something after your first week sober?” she goes on.

“I think I get a drink ticket,” I say.

“When can you start drinking again? You're beginning to bore me.”

“You've been boring me forever. Why do you think I drink?” I reply.

We're sitting in her office avoiding any sort of productive thinking that might possibly lead up to an advertising concept for Kudos granola bars, our new assignment. So far, we've come up with one brilliant tagline that was summarily dismissed by the rest of the agency:

Healthy granola. Sinfully delicious chocolate. Kudos…it's bi-snack-ual.

“I want you to come out Saturday night and meet this guy I've been seeing,” Laura says.

“As much as I want to witness a miracle, I can't drink till next week.”

“Bring Jack. He'll stop you.”

“We're going upstate for the weekend, anyway.”

One of my surprises from Jack this week was a reservation for a weekend getaway to a spa two hours north of the city. He decided we both needed a little professional help in finishing up our little self-imposed detox. A couple of seaweed wraps, salt scrubs, hot stones. Total cleansing.

“If you make it through the weekend without drinking, I'll take you out to get trashed at lunch on Monday,” Laura says.

“Deal,” I say. “And if you can make it through the weekend without ditching this new guy, I promise not to tell him about your herpes.”

“I don't have herpes.”

“He doesn't know that.”

“Don't cross me, motherfucker,” Laura says, turning back to her computer. “I'll crush you.”

 

Again, the salsa music when I step off the elevator. For weeks after coming home from Japan I braced myself for whatever possibly could be behind my apartment door. But tonight the only thing crossing my mind is whether to pack my Gucci or J. Crew bathing suit for our spa trip tomorrow.

“Hey!” I shout over the music.

A cupboard slams in the kitchen. I walk around the corner. Jack and Trey lean against opposite counters staring at me bug-eyed. Jack's head is completely shaved.

“Hey, you!” Jack says. “How's work?”

They're high. The kitchen smells like someone peed on a pile of aspirin then lit it on fire.

“Fucker,” I spit.

“What's wrong?” Jack starts, before he realizes he's not going to get away with any lie. “We just had some left over. No big deal.”

I don't say anything. Jack's chapped lips had just begun to heal this week and now they're blistered and swollen from the burning pipe. I notice a burn that goes from his right temple over the top of his ear. He must have flared a chunk of his hair off, then shaved the rest of it off. The angry red splotch has Vaseline smeared on it.

“Nice haircut, asshole.”

“Come on. I'm sorry. This is it. It was the end of it. I wanted to get it out of the house.”

I stand there and glare at him. He looks like a seven-year-old. He starts to open his mouth and say something, then stops. Then does it again. Like a fish.

I've never seen Jack this soon after he's taken a hit. He's wild with energy. Even though he's standing perfectly still, his body is in constant motion. His forearms twitch. His hamstrings are contracting. There's no part of his body that's not completely taut.

“You told me last week that there wasn't any more in the house,” I say.

“I forgot I had some in my backpack.”

“That's bullshit. You cleaned out your backpack on Tuesday.” Jack spent most of the evening on Tuesday taking inventory and rearranging his work toys.

I nod at Trey. “
He
brought it over.”

Trey looks at me and smirks, shrugging his shoulders. Then he turns toward the counter and picks up the pipe and the lighter we use to light the grill on the balcony. Trey lights up again, and I see Jack's attention waver between the pipe and me. And it looks like I'm losing.

“Fucking weak-ass lying crack whore,” I spit at Jack and storm into the bedroom.

 

By Sunday night I've only been home a total of three hours. Just long enough to shave, change into a different Aqua outfit, glare at Jack as he lies in bed watching TV, and head out again.

It's good to be back to normal. My own peculiar normal. Working, drinking, working. I'm in great form at the clubs, and everyone seems especially glad to see me. Unlike most of my binges, I don't even bother to count how many drinks I'm having.

It's not easy to stay out twenty-four seven. You have to choreograph your club schedule carefully to always be in one that's not only open, but crowded and fun as well. It's best to find a pack and move together. The hardest time is between noon and about five p.m. Then I'm reduced to heading to my favorite illegal afterhours club on Avenue D. It used to be called BodyHeat, but after a string of overdoses it's now referred to as BodyBag.

BodyBag is located in an apartment on the first floor of a tenement building. It's an old railroad-style layout. To get in, Baron, the guy who sits on the stoop, has to have seen you before. But even if you're there every night, there's no guarantee that he's in a mood to let you in. It's nothing personal. Baron keeps a close watch on everything that happens on Avenue D. If too many people are coming and going from the place, it looks suspicious and he'll just wave you on when you approach. There's no point in stopping and pleading; it will only guarantee that you won't get in the next time.

Apparently the coast is clear when I arrive sometime Sunday afternoon from wherever I was last. I try to remember where I just came from. I can't. Doesn't matter. The only thing that matters is that I'm away from Jack and on to the next party.

Inside, there's a smattering of tired partyers scattered on the frayed couches and armchairs. The windows are all painted black. I have to pee, but there's no use trying the bathroom. It's always filled with either people preparing to shoot up, or people shooting up, or people passed out and blocking the door after shooting up.

The kitchen area of the apartment has been turned into a bar. I walk up and pay twenty dollars for a double bottom-shelf vodka.

As soon as I sink into one of the chairs that reeks of the sweat of the last hundred clubgoers that collapsed in it, I start to pass out.

Keep it together. Just finish this drink. Then I can go home and pass out without having to talk to Jack. One more drink. That's all.

I lean back and shut my eyes and listen to other conversations around me. I can't follow any one for any length of time. People's voices come in at different volumes and at different intervals.

“…I don't have any. Bob did it all before we left…”

“…fucked me till I bled…”

“…right out the goddamned window…”

“…she's a fucking whore…”

“…beat the crap out of her…”

“…nice fish…”

“…I said,
nice fish.

Someone's poking my shoulder. I open my eyes. A huge muscular bald guy is sitting on the arm of my chair.

“Nice fish.” He's pointing at my tits. “Want another drink?” Now he's pointing at my glass.

“Sure. Vodka.”

“Be right back.”

I'm spinning again when he returns.

“Guzzle and let's go fuck,” he says.

I close my eyes and swallow my drink.

I can't stand up.

“Here.” He's holding out his hand. He pulls me up and I lean into him. We pause for a second. I swallow hard. I try to even myself out somehow. I try to take a deep breath. Fucking corset. He puts his arm around my waist. It's thick and weighty. I barely have to move my feet as he lifts and pulls me toward the door.

“It's not free,” I say when we're out in the hallway, “I'm not free.” My eyes won't open the whole way.

“What do you want?”

“Three hundred dollars.”

“I'll give you forty dollars and a rock,” he says, waving for a cab.

 

“Hola, senorita.”

Pedro. I don't answer him. I just need to get this over with. I try to keep my focus on the elevators at the far end of the lobby.

“Nice place,” the bald guy says, gripping my arm tightly. Too tightly. But it's keeping me upright.

In the elevator he pushes me against the wall and shoves his hands down the back of my skirt. They're huge hands, and rough. I bury my face in his chest. His shirt smells acrid, like our kitchen. One of his hands comes out of my skirt and pushes into my forehead, slamming my head into the side of the elevator. His tongue is in my mouth. It's sour. I can't breathe.

Inside the apartment I put my bag on the kitchen counter. Just want to rest a second. Jack's cleaned it off. No crack shit anywhere. I lean my forehead against the cupboard next to the stove.

“I need the money first,” I say.

“Come on, baby. It's no big deal. We're here now, let's just go.”

“I need the money.”

“Look at this place, bitch, you don't need my fucking money,” he says, laughing, though I can tell he's losing patience.

“Just the rock then. Just gimme the rock,” I say.

“Here,” he says, pulling a vial out of his pocket. “You want to hit it now?”

It's hard to think. I could do it. See what it's all about. Maybe if I tried it I would know what Jack was up against. Nah. I'm fucked up enough. I just want to get this over with.

“Let's just fuck,” I say. I tumble forward and fumble for his belt. He spins me around and shoves me. Hard. I fall into the hallway closet door and see a flash of black around the edges of my eyes. For a second I think I can recover and stay upright, but the wall's not where I judged it to be. I land on the ground face first.

He's on top of me pressing his huge forearm down on my cheek, smashing my head down hard against the parquet.

I throw up.

The vomit in the back of my throat and nose makes it impossible to breathe. I gag again. His arm presses harder into the side of my face while he pulls at my clothes.

His knees are on the back of my knees, crushing my kneecaps underneath them. He's saying something, but my ears are ringing so loud from the pressure of his arm that I can't hear him. I can't breathe. I can't breathe. There's a blue light flickering at the end of the hall. The bedroom TV. Jack is home. I'm gagging harder, trying to get air. The hard cold parquet feels like it's pushing up against my Adam's apple. He spits in my face. It's drips in my eyes and I can't see.

“Jack,” I try to call out; it comes out as a hoarse whisper.

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