Read Spider on My Tongue Online

Authors: T.M. Wright

Tags: #Horror

Spider on My Tongue (12 page)

BOOK: Spider on My Tongue
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But I want to tell you much,
all,
if that were possible, but it isn't. I want to tell you about Phyllis's sister, whose name was Janice, and who was alive at the time (at the time Phyllis and I were together, always together), and she was hooked on me, though I wasn't hooked on her (though she was as lush and charming as a summer meadow) because I was so hooked on Phyllis, and she, Janice, would take me aside a lot and tell me I was having "crazy notions," because she'd heard me talking to no one she could see (Phyllis) and she was "awfully concerned" about me.

So one day in the middle of her concern, she kissed me full and moist and ripe with herself, her good body, pushed hard against me, and I got an erection the size of a dirigible, and I tried like hell to chase it away (thought about Yogi Berra, thought about Richard Nixon, thought about rabbit stew, no luck getting rid of the dirigible-size, unwanted erection [which is an oxymoron, if you think about it, if you think about it—the body itself never
doesn't want
an erection; the body itself grants them and needs them; it's part of that hunger thing]). Oh, I am being so lucid in my hunger. I've read that's part of the process.

This
process.

This need to tell my stories.

And there she was, Janice, Phyllis's lush-and-charming-as-a-summer-meadow sister (older sister, two years) pressing her ripe body against me, and there's my unwanted erection pushing back, and then Phyllis appears in the doorway, and smiles, and cocks her beautiful head, and comes over and strokes my erection through my jeans, and I cum all over myself and Janice stops kissing me and looks at the cum mess in my pants, and she smiles (very like Phyllis's smile, a little open-mouthed, a horizontal vagina on the face) and she cocks her head, as Phyllis did, and Phyllis leans over and shows me herself beneath her green dress

God, I'm exhausted!

~ * ~

August
 

I am so embarrassed. That paragraph was like an orgasm. Can you forgive me?

~ * ~

August l9thhh
 

I have never wanted to cum in anyone's face. It has been on my mind thatttt paraagraphh for days.

I have eaten.

I have eatnnn eggs.

Cholesterol is a huge componnnentn of eggssg.

The passingmiseryyrn is unconcnrned about cholesterol.

I ned sleikp.

~ * ~

August 20the
 

Awake andrested.

All the tails that ned to be told:

And so tolslepe.

~ * ~

August 20th
 

She was not my entire journey. Phyllis was not my entire. journey.

Mores.elp.

~ * ~

August 20
 

More food.

More eggs. I am not lucid withouttehm.

More slep.

~ * ~

August 19
 

Ten hours sleep while the passing misery watches and Phyllis strokes and Sam looks on merrily.

I remember the streets at night in another place which was not Manhattan. In that small place which was not Manhattan. Afafterr I had gone from Manhattan, afater I had run from Manhattnean.

It was Ithaca and its streets at night were serene. An occasional street lamp. Tall and turn of the century. No garish light. Only a soft light. Incandescent and yellow orange. A good soft yellow orange.

People smoked beneath the streetlamps. I saw fedoras and zoot suits there, and dresses that hung to mid calf, under thoese toall lamps, in the good soft glow of those tall almps.

People slept early in ithacai.

I saw few of them. Ithacans.

I became fixated on the night and the orange-yellow glow, the people in fedoras, zoot suits and long dresses, smoking. They were always there, though only at night, or maybe, like stars, they were there in the mornings and afternoons, but the sunlight washed them away.

I am feeling lucid again. I thank my eggs for it. And my muse. My Phyllis watching.

I'm playing Moby on some small piece of musical equipment.

I became fixated on the night streets in Ithaca, and the Zoot suits and the people smoking in the orange yellow glow of the tall streetlamps.

I feel so lucid again.

I'm very thankful for it.

I must tell you, some of them moved off, on the streets beneath those streetlamps, in the dark, in Ithaca. And I followed.

I lived with one of these people. His name was Galway and he was an Irishman who died under one of the lamps in a recent century.

He was smooth-faced and dark-eyed and spoke in a rich brogue that made me believe in him.

We shared meals.

I told him about Phyllis.

He lived in a tall, latter-century brick townhouse on Gibson Street that was slated for demolition. He had lived in it, he said, for "cup'la decades, I'm guessin'."

And I said, "It's been slated for demolition that long?"

"It was," he said with a grand smile, "and did,
but it lives on, like us."

"And me?" I said.

He said nothing.

We shared many tasty meals.

~ * ~

My eggs are rotting.

The lard is nonexistent.

I tell tales, though I'm an unreliable narrator. The hunger pangs have begun once again.

~ * ~

August 27
 

I met the Beatles. It wasn't easy. It was 1966 and they were very big. They were in New York City, getting ready for the Sullivan Show and I was in the same hotel. I'd gotten to know a small red-head named Irene. She was as tiny as a Yorkshire terrier and she worked at the hotel, in their office, as a file clerk.

She was fun to talk to because she was lively and earnest, a combination I've always enjoyed (those characteristics also described Phyllis, from time to time).

She introduced me to The Beatles as they were leaving the hotel to have lunch at Sardi's. They were leaving one at a time, which, Irene said, was their tactic to avoid cameramen (she did not say "paparazzi").

She introduced me to Paul McCartney, first. She said, as he passed us quickly, on his way to the front doors of the hotel, "Paul, this is my friend, Abner," and Paul nodded at her and looked at me, nodded and said, "Howdy, Mate," and was on his way.

~ * ~

August 30
 

Oh, the stories I could tell, the stories I
need
to tell. It's like a hunger. It's like a need, which is hunger, which is need.

Did I tell you my eggs are rotting?

Yes, I see that I have.

~ * ~

August 30
 

Who can eat rotten eggs? They're lethal!

I believe there are shadows standing at my window.

~ * ~

August 29
 

I'm as sure of that date as I am of my own eyes. August 29. Soon, it will be autumn and I'll be happier.

It is only happiness in this life that I've been after all these years.

I'm so lucid.

~ * ~

August 28
 

I am willing to admit my mistakes.

I do not believe in Sasquatch, but I believe there's a large being standing at my window.

When I speak to it I get no reply, but I feel rebuked, nonetheless. I feel pain. It flows from my head to my limbs to my lower parts.

~ * ~

August 29
 

Phyllis and I and her parents drank tea one night. The tea was Earl Grey, though Phyllis's mother, sweet and attentive in a pleated pink skirt and matching, long-sleeved top, white pumps and gloves, liked
Earl Greyer,
which is slightly more robust.

"I prefer a more sobering tea," she explained from her folding metal chair, then nodded and smiled sweetly at me, first, then at Phyllis, who nodded back, but did not smile (because, I later learned, we were visiting her parents, in their East 89
th
street apartment, only because I had insisted we visit them: "They need to meet me, Phyllis," I said. And she said, "No they don't," which hurt my feelings, and I said so, and that—my hurt feelings—was what persuaded Phyllis about the visit).

There were insects in the apartment where we had our tea. They were like the very insects that inhabit my cupboards now. Very like the insects I used to find on Phyllis's naked body in the morning, or when I got up to pee in the middle of the night and saw her body exposed by lamplight from beyond my window.

I tried not to notice them, the ones in Phyllis's parents' apartment, but it was difficult, because they crawled on the floor around me by sixes and eights and twelves, and they crawled around her mother and father, too, and around her, and they even crawled on Mrs. Pellaprat's beautiful pink pleated skirt and Mr. Pellaprat's nice suit, and Phyllis's low cut, startlingly green dress, so it looked like it was alive, and, at last, I said, "You seem to have something of an insect problem," and Mr. Pellaprat guffawed, and Mrs. Pellaprat (her first name was Grace) guffawed, and Phyllis slapped the back of my head and whispered, "Asshole!"

Mrs. Pellaprat leaned forward so her pretty face was only a foot or so from mine, and explained, "Well, you know, my boy, it's part of the situation," and Mr. Pellaprat said, "Situation," and Phyllis repeated, "Asshole!" then slapped me again.

I turned toward her, gave her a look.

"Good God, Abner," she said, "they know about the fucking bugs!"

And Mrs. Pellaprat said, "Oh we do, my boy. They're only a part of the situation, you know. Only a part of the situation."

"We're thinking of training them," said Mr. Pellaprat. "They're highly intelligent. Especially the silverfish. They have a mind of their own. The silverfish." He was a tall man, exquisite looking, like a model for GQ, and I could see how he and his wife had produced a beauty like Phyllis.

I knew nothing about them, and I knew only a little about Phyllis, then. In that tiny apartment in Manhattan.

~ * ~

August 30
 

I have no eggs. Rotten or otherwise. I have been given some kind of reprieve.

I was told once, this:
When it ends it does not end, you know. Life, that is I mean the life of the body, even. ire stick around for quite a while, searching through the gray matter that remains for bits of memory, something to grab onto, something to keep us here. Think of the gray matter, then think of how people eat Sushi. Think about it. There we are, we've drawn our last breath, but the gray matter remains...what's the word?—viable. There's stuff in it. Memories and ideas and thoughts and philosophies and places So we go in there, into that remaining bit of gray matter, or the gray matter goes into itself—who knows?— and hangs around for a while. A long while, sometimes. Years, sometimes, though who can say? We're caught in that place deep inside the body, which is dead, and we know nothing really beyond what we can get from the viable gray matter—memories of blue sky and quaint farmhouses, maybe, or memories of lakes or oceans or boys with sweet faces. We become a part of all that. It becomes our present. I think it’s no different at all from what we experience before we die. Unless the body is filled with formaldehyde, of course, which kills all the gray matter, all the little cells where memory is stored.

~ * ~

August 30
 

Phyllis is here. Sam is here. The passing misery, too.

Phyllis stands behind me and comforts me as I write. She leans over me now and again and kisses my cheek; I know this because my cheek feels cool for a moment. And she strokes my chest, my face, my cock, and I become aroused. She whispers to me at these times that she's pleased: "All of that just for
me!"
she says. And I tell her, though not in so many words,
Yes, it's all for you! As ever.

BOOK: Spider on My Tongue
9.45Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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