Read The Book of Goodbyes Online
Authors: Jillian Weise
When the call came for me to join Bitto
behind the damn Falls, did I not challenge
the appointment, did I not appeal to
the High Courts and wait in the dark offices
of tree holes and check the box to describe
myself as too birdbrained? Did I not
beg to stay in the Arbolis with you?
Yet you have not returned to me.
I know, I know I got beaked and fifed
Hesiod into your ear when all you
wanted to do was sleep and sometimes
all you wanted to do was pluck me
and that was, will always be, fine by me.
If I quote the Greats too much, know it's
because I'm afraid of you, yep, yep,
how you puff up your feathers, you know
how you do. I'm talking out loud again
to the can of Brahma, Sage of Seven
Ages, Father of Creation: No, I won't
shut up. I'm talking to Kate.
Also when you entreated me
to buy a machine, a machine to show us
what we look like when we're looking at
a machine, I suffered the wages,
the setup and download to find you,
wearing all your feathers, cheeping
with 36 other finches, none of whom
concern what I have to say here:
I am the original plagiarist.
Yet you have not returned to me.
Daily I withhold from one million
strangers, though they be willing.
I withhold the ability of my
cyber gender and this is a stupid
point I agree. No one wins for withholding.
What else can I say? I'm winging this.
At least when we were speaking in our
deplorable way that was something,
that was some smutcaw we had,
and seduced me you did in manners
unprecedented. If I sleep with
other finches, let us here reference
the words of the Apostle Paul: “I hate
what I do.” I don't hate you.
I don't even not like you. I've gone
over the branches and can't find you.
Today the gauchos arrived and they want
me to ride on the brim of their sombreros
to the ranch and maybe I will find me there
a finch who reminds me of you and you
will have returned to me.
Skype is on your Mac on the table
next to the Malbec and ashtray,
next to the book that cost 120 pesos,
b/c you had to have
Ulysses
in English. You're in some town
where your name doesn't exist
and they rename you, so you're
never sure who they're talking to.
The screen rings. It's Big Logos.
He downloaded the thing. First
a garbled voice comes from
the keys then, “Can you hear me?”
By the power of gods in Estonia,
makers of software, haters of fees,
the voice says your name and he's
not anyone, though anyone from
Terre Haute to Rome can Skype you,
he's someone you know or knew.
Which tense to use? Then his face
appears by the folders, the clock,
the Firefox, his face on his body
in his bed 8,000 miles away
and he says, “Give me a hug.”
You both grab hold of your machines.
You show your eyeballs to each other,
all impressed with yourselves,
as if your eyeballs have not always
been on your head. “Good to see you,”
he says. “Can you look in my eyes?”
You try but you're always looking off.
It's sad but it feels good like you love
reading
Ulysses
and you love being
alone near the Martial Mountains.
He plays a cover of Bruce Springsteen
by Lucero, and what a rad band.
This is the life. This is your friend,
your friend from way back, though
let's be honest, he was more
than that, and not to trouble you
with facts, he's still more than that.
You're so hot for technology.
This is better than IM. You can't
get enough of his pixels and it must,
please tell me, it
must
add up,
all those hours spent listening
to Lucero, who is okay but,
let's face it, not Springsteen,
and all those hours spent watching
Hulu together and now look at you,
staring at your screen, which is
not ringing, which will not ring.
It has always been just a screen.
You can't blame it for that.
If you're there, I will look at the door
to the motel room and I will be in
my violet dress because violet is one
n
away from violent like come in,
how was your trip, and if you're there,
I will spend the first ten minutes
ignoring you. I will play Philip Glass
and I will play Busta Rhymes.
It depends on what type of there
you are and what you're there for.
I will read Berryman poems to you,
only Berryman and “I'm hungry,”
you will say and you will keep
being hungry and there is no need
for you to be there to know that.
If you're there, you will have stopped
being you, because being there
in a motel room with me is something
you no longer do, not the you
I know and not the you
you know either and that's
the violence of the whole thing.
Joshua Tree, CAâA young professional, Jane Doe,
was raped and murdered at the Cactus Motel
off Twentynine Palms Highway Sunday morning.
Officers responded to the call, made from Room H,
Jane had tried the phone, found
the landline dead, flipped her cell, dialed 9-1-1
again and again, tried the front desk,
wanted to call Big Logos, to whom
she was a mistress, and knowing this was not
her weekend in Verona, and knowing it was
her duty to provide mischief not trouble,
liveliness not near-death, and knowing exactly
who would pick up the phone if she called him,
and knowing the voice on the other end
would say, “Yes? Who is it?” a question
Jane decided was not hers to answer, decidedly
none of her business, he would have to do it,
and so far he was doing it daily, making
arrangements in bars to take his dick out,
for his and her enjoyment, under the table,
until his dick became habit, and he said,
you make my dick happen
, which made her
feel like a creator of dick, and she loved it,
and she feared losing it, and made no demands
that he leave his girlfriend, and was unmoved
to tell her, he would have to do that,
it ails me
, he said, the ailment Jane attributed
to a mid-life crisis, it was easier to think this
than to ask what was really wrong with him,
or what was really wrong with her,
and so resigning him to his ailment in Verona,
she called instead a friend, a distant,
a friend who knew nothing, not the affair,
not the trip to Joshua Tree, a man by the name
of Clint who worked for Express Trucking,
data entry, third shift, Jane knew he would be
awake playing Guitar Hero, or masturbating
to the Girls Gone Wild DVD she'd encouraged
him to purchase, since when they last spoke,
the girls char-charred in the background,
on TV, and Clint loved them, which is when
she made her recommendation to purchase,
because what else did Clint have to live for?
Clint could do nothing for her.
What did she expect Clint to do for her
in Room H, an auspicious letter, the voiceless
glottal fricative,
had has him his her hers
,
letter of breath, of bare sound, of
hate humanity
and
hell
. She began making bets with God:
she would not encourage Clint to pornography,
she would stop romancing Big Logos,
she would go to church in the morning,
she would find a saint after service,
she would wear long dresses and call mom.
She couldn't call mom in a moment like this,
to tell her a man, possibly dangerous,
certainly deranged, was standing outside,
breathing heavily, banging hard with his fist,
and had no answer when she spoke to him.
“Yes? Who is it?” she asked, expecting
the owner,
the proprietor, the landlord, the hotel manager,
there's been a fire, an earthquake, a problem
with your credit card.
Then remembering
the man with dirty hands who all day walked
back and forth beside her window, from his room
beside hers to desert, from desert to his room
beside hers, she remembered thinking him
attractive, disheveled, t-shirt, khaki shorts,
she could pin him in a lineup, six two,
she remembered thinking of fucking him,
of what that would be, for he was a businessman
at a Fortune 500 company, drove an Audi,
wore sunglasses with a haircut, he had accounts
manageable, he was en route to Los Angeles,
on the red-eye, the kind of man who fucked
stewardesses in supply closets before selling
a pie chart to Tokyo, how far she got thinking,
earlier in the eve, and now hoping desperately,
scanning the room for defense, that it was not
this man, but that it was the owner of the motel,
and she expected some reply from the door,
since otherwise Jane knew no one in Joshua Tree,
had not been to any of the bars, clubs,
nor karaoke joints that the 911 operator
suggested she may have frequented,
are you sure
you didn't go out anywhere meet anyone?
and though she told the 911 operator:
“I am positive I met no one tonight I am
going to die please he is banging on the door”
the operator didn't believe her, kept insisting
are you sure are you absolutely sure
while she
screamed “WHO THE HELL ARE YOU?”
and thought of him passing her window,
thought of him casing the desert, thought
of how before, when before he was not
a threat
, she was going to say to his hands
how dirty
, he had been walking the desert,
she could see him, digging out the desert,
as he hassled the door knob, hurried past
the window, he was at the back door now,
she had people to tell she loved them,
she had things left to say, and the operator,
Miss
what are you doing staying out there alone?
The last time I saw Big Logos he was walking
to the Quantum Physics Store to buy magnets.
He told me his intentions. He was wearing
a jumpsuit with frayed cuffs. I thought the cuffs
got that way from him rubbing them against
his lips but he said they got that way
with age. We had two more blocks to walk.
“Once I do this, what are you going to do?”
he asked. “I wish you wouldn't do it,” I said.
Big Logos bought the magnets and a crane
delivered them to his house. After he built
the 900-megahertz superconductor, I couldn't go
to his house anymore because I have all kinds
of metal in my body. I think if you love someone,
you shouldn't do that, build something like that,
on purpose, right in front of them.
So what's up? Where are you these days?
Last I heard you worked at a bakery.
Last I read your poems were lower case
with capital content. I used to like
to read them in the dark. It's weird
you're not his girl anymore.
You were the picture in a snow globe
on his desk that I'd go to, shaking,
when he left the room. That room.
Do you remember it? The Dr. Seuss
sheets read: “This is not good.
This is not right. My feet stick out
of bed all night.” We tried not to talk
about you. When we had to do it,
I made him go to a dyke bar
so everyone would be on my side.
In my mind you were so good
at everything, like walking.
I asked him if you had two legs.
What was I thinking? Of course
you have two legs. I asked him,
I guess, so that the possibility
of me would exist. He said yes
as if he was ashamed to admit it.
Does it make you feel better
to know he cheated with a handicapped
girl? I wonder if you have
any handicapped friends.
I don't know why I'm using that word.
It demoralizes me. Or if you don't.
Or if you've seen somewhere,
maybe in the bakery, a woman
with a limp and felt sorry.
Once in the dyke bar he said
he was waiting for you to
stand on your own two feet
and it was hilarious to me,
though it was a serious conversation,
so I could not laugh.
We never talk about you now.
It's not allowed. We have to act all
that-never-happened.
I always liked you and thought
you were cool
and sometimes I pretend
you're in the room
and you forgive me and say
you always knew.