I said: “Get up. I want to show you something,” at which Denny laughed and Lanya grunted.
Denny told her: “That’s all right. We’ll just get our clothes off right away, next time.”
I said: “Aw, come on!”
We put on some clothes (Denny: socks, vest, chains. Lanya: shirt; her harmonica fell out; was returned to breast pocket; tennis sneakers. Me: pants) climbed down from the loft, put on more clothes (Denny: pants, boots. Lanya: took off sneakers to put on jeans, put on sneakers again. Me: vest, chains, boot), and went into the hall.
Baby Adam, Priest, Devastation, Filament, the Executioner (who everybody usually calls: X-X) and Cathedral were pell-melling in and X-X told me they were really beat, had been running since sometime yesterday. I said three or four of them could go up and fall out in the loft bed because we weren’t using it. Filament, the knuckles of one hand on her hip, the other hand waving (she chooses to wear only thin chains, some outside her breasts [nipples like puddles of Peptobismol on the upper slopes of soapstone breasts] some inside) told about what they done in the park: scared some children, unintentionally, and had some sort of loose, blurry confrontation with two men who might have been Tom and Mak. Three went to find mattresses in the back room.
(To try for accuracy is to risk awkwardness.) To find out who I am I’ve had to give up my name and who knows what part of my life. It wasn’t a choice. But treating it like one seems the only way to keep my mind…“seems”? I am frightened because, in this City, I don’t know where I am, I don’t know where I can go. (To try for form is to risk pomposity.)
The trapdoor on the porch ceiling was open. Denny climbed up the ladder nailed against the wall; Lanya and me (wondering who’d opened the door and why) followed. Poked my head after her heels into the lead-colored sky. Stepped up on the pebbly roofing paper and couldn’t figure out how transition had occurred between the slab of runny metal three feet beyond the trap, and the football-Stadium-wide, muzzy balloon around us-and-the-nearest-buildings. Thought of climbing down and up again to watch this time.
Asked Lanya if she’d reconsidered being a scorpion instead of just a scorpion’s old lady. “Not,” she said sweetly, “on your fucking life!” And then: “No, seriously. I’ve thought about it again, and it’s just something I don’t want to do. I like staying here for extended visits. But I like living with Madame Brown.” Well, she’s been here three days straight. And yesterday Denny, for a joke, put one of his chains around her neck and she kept it on till she went to bed. But she didn’t put it on again this morning when she went to school.
Across the roof, Fireball—buck naked except his optic girdle—turned around and smiled, a little confused.
“Did you open the roof trap?” Lanya asked.
Filament has a blue scorpion tattooed on her shoulder she said she got before she came to Bellona. She has probably volunteered more information about her previous life than anyone around the nest (most of her life sounds very dull); but, high on tact, she also manages to remain one of the most invisible. If one were writing about the place, she’d probably be among the half dozen people most likely left out, or whose one or two outstanding traits you’d fix for decoration on another character. A girl, and white, she still has the most typical scorpion personality, almost unbelievably so. In fact, I wonder if I believe that; so this note.
“Yeah. I just wanted to get out and walk around.” He told us he liked to go around naked. To his unnecessary explanation, Denny explained (unnecessarily) that you could go around in the street stark naked if you wanted in Bellona “…and it wouldn’t bother nobody.” Lanya, by now, was taking off her clothes. So I took off mine. Denny said, “What the fuck,” and took off his. (He left the dog’s choke collar looped and re-looped on his ankle.) Lanya took her harmonica out of her shirt and began to play those discordant clutches. We all walked around and stared out at the edges of what we could see or each other when each other wasn’t staring back; leaned on the roof rim; sat on the mansard things along the side. A long time.
Then Fireball got on his pants and chains—
“So long,” Lanya said.
Fireball grinned. “So long.”
—and went down.
We came closer together at the far corner and talked about him awhile, me and Lanya mostly, mostly Denny listening. Then I told them for the first time about mugging that guy last week.
Sort of awed, Denny said: “Wow!”
Lanya said: “You are kidding, aren’t you…? Jesus, you’re not!” She was sitting cross-legged with her back on the low wall. When she lifted her harmonica, there were two parallel dashes on her thigh.
“No, I’m not kidding. It was interesting.”
“The awful thing is, I’m sure you did it to find out what it felt like, or for some other half-assedly commendable reason.”
“The main thing,” I explained, “isn’t that I was so scared, but if you get off this very thin line, you get angrier than a motherfucker—”
“Look,” she said, “you wouldn’t kill somebody just to find out what it felt like.”
“It would be easier here than any place else.”
“Christ!” She looked up at the sky.
“Okay,” I said. “So you don’t approve. Why are you angry?”
“Because,” and her eyes came down to mine, “in some funny way I think it’s my fault. And don’t ask me to explain that; or you’ll get angry.”
While I tried to figure out some way to get her to explain, practical Denny asked: “What’d you get?”
“Three bucks. For the work, it pays better than the Richards’s.” I reached over for my pants, took the bills out of my pocket, and gave them to him. “Here.” I glanced at Lanya with a little smile. “I’d split it between you, but she won’t take one.”
She got a tightish expression that let me know she certainly would.
Denny looked at the bills and repeated: “Wow!” Thinking: He would use the same inflection if he discovered something had been stolen from him. “Here.” Denny handed one bill to Lanya and—“Here, you keep one. That way we can split it up right”—one back to me. “I gotta take a piss.” He stood and walked away, palms facing back, the bill wrapped on the middle finger of his left hand.
Lanya watched me. “I suppose I’d find you dull if you didn’t keep dropping stuff like that into my head. No, don’t say anything. I’m still thinking.” She pushed herself to her knees. “I’ve got to take a piss too.” Her buttocks and one thigh were printed from the roofing paper.
At the corner drain, Denny looked back over his shoulder. “You going downstairs to the bathroom?”
“No,” she said in a considered tone that, when the rest of their exchange was finished, should have made me realize she knew what it was going to be.
“Oh, yeah. I guess you can squat here.” Denny finished and shook himself.
“What makes you think I have to squat to piss?”
“You’re a girl. You can’t do it st…I mean I thought girls had to sit down or something.”
“Jesus God!” Lanya said.
“Well, how do you guide it then?” Denny asked.
“Same way you do.”
“But you don’t have a—?”
She held up two fingers in a peace sign, turned them down against her cunt and sort of pulled. “Like that, if you must know. Now would you please stop staring and let me pee?”
“Oh…yeah.” Denny frowned. “Sometimes I can’t piss in a john if somebody’s staring right at my dick.” He turned away, glanced back, away again. “Wow.”
Like something had been given back to him.
He went to the wall. “Now I never knew that,” he said.
When she came up, he was looking at the harmonica; turned and handed it to her across my shoulder.
“You know how to play it?” she asked.
“Naw.”
“The scale starts here,” she said. “See, at the fourth hole.”
We went down (putting on clothes half here, half there), and in the living room got into the discussion with some of the people mentioned (Fireball, Filament, et al) that I wanted to write down some of the things Lanya said in it in the first place. (When I started this, I’d thought that the business about Lanya being turned on by all those funny things about me, and what had happened on the roof would make a good prologue, because in the discussion she referred to them) but again I’m tired of writing it down, now that I’ve gotten to the substance.