Part 8 (1/2)
Now the room is just beginning to grow light. Outside the sun is rising, and I roll out of bed. I go to the bathroom and douse my face with water. What happens next is totally out of character for me, but I get down on my knees in front of the sink. I place my hands together. I close my eyes.
Part of me feels silly.
Part of me wants to believe. In what, in whom, I have no idea. And the funny thing is, for me, it doesn't really matter. It is after all the act, not the message, that ultimately gives form to prayer.
Frank Delia
JERRY STAHL JERRY STAHL is the author of the narcotic memoir is the author of the narcotic memoir Permanent Midnight, Permanent Midnight, made into a movie starring Ben Stiller and Owen Wilson, as well as the novels made into a movie starring Ben Stiller and Owen Wilson, as well as the novels Perv-A Love Story, Plainclothes Naked, Perv-A Love Story, Plainclothes Naked, and and I, Fatty. I, Fatty.
twilight of the stooges
by jerry stahl
so it's 1980-something. I'm nowhere.
Suzy, this older white lady I buy cocaine from, tells me she'll give me a free gram if I help her do some.
I say, ”Sure, why not?”
She says, ”Exactly.” Then, before my eyes, she gets on her hands and knees on the cat peemarinated s.h.a.g carpet. She raises the salmon nightie she lives in, exposing a pair of sixty-three-year-old, weirdly hot, baby-smooth a.s.s cheeks, which she introduces as Heckel and Jeckel's albino cousins. Jiggling her cheeks the way body builders will jiggle their pecs, left-right-left, she makes them talk to each other.
”Heckel likes to get spanked. Bad little crow!”
”Jeckel, you're such a freak.”
After fifteen minutes, or maybe a day, Suzy pretends to get annoyed with her chatty b.u.t.tocks. She tells them to shut up. As I zone in and out, grinning like I haven't seen Miss Chatty Cheeks 5,000 times already, I am simultaneously wondering how long I can go without asking/begging/stealing another hit, and obsessing on the name of the guy who did Topo Gigio on Ed Sullivan Ed Sullivan.
By the time I write this, I am acutely aware of how old remembering The Ed Sullivan Show The Ed Sullivan Show makes me. Tennessee Williams routinely shaved a year off his age. When people caught him he'd explain that he didn't count the year he worked in a shoe store. I sometimes think the same could be done with drug years. They don't count. Though probably they count more. Like dog years. My liver, in point of fact, is well over a hundred. It sometimes forgets its own name and will doubtless be placed in a rest home by the time you read this. makes me. Tennessee Williams routinely shaved a year off his age. When people caught him he'd explain that he didn't count the year he worked in a shoe store. I sometimes think the same could be done with drug years. They don't count. Though probably they count more. Like dog years. My liver, in point of fact, is well over a hundred. It sometimes forgets its own name and will doubtless be placed in a rest home by the time you read this.
Suzy's TV is always on with the sound off. After a while you begin to think the rays soak into your head and over the blood brain barrier with the rest of the s.h.i.+t you're putting in there. Suzy resembles Miss Hathaway, Mr. Drysdale's horsy secretary on The Beverly Hillbillies The Beverly Hillbillies-if Miss Hathaway had been locked in a dark room and force-fed Kents, cocaine, and gin for twenty-seven years, while bathed in color Sony light.
She reaches back and hands me a straw, a regular sweetheart. ”Okay, soldier, pack some in there.”
”In the straw?”
”In my a.s.s a.s.s. Jesus! How dumb are you? Put some powder in the straw, put the straw in my a.s.s, and blow.”
”I've done worse for less,” I say with a shrug, trying to convey an emotion I do not even remotely feel. In fact, there is actual screaming in my head, a voice that sounds alarmingly like Jimmy Swaggart. (More TV-adjacent damage; I might as well be in the box, getting transmissions directly into my pineal gland.) I am never not awake Sunday morning at 4, when Jimmy comes on in my neck of the world.
Am I nervous or am I happy?
Why are you staring?
f.u.c.k, HELICOPTERS!
Right before I angle toward the target, I start to feel chiggers under my skin, and I fight the urge to scratch myself b.l.o.o.d.y digging them out. This is when I hear Jimmy Swaggart start speaking directly to me: ”Hey, loser! You're about to blow drugs into the a.n.u.s of a woman old enough to be your mother. You know what Jesus says about that?”
Happily, I am so cocaine-depleted I instantly forget that I'm aurally hallucinating, and that I itch. You don't know you're having a white-out until you come out of it. I just kind of blink to blink to. I remember that I'm trying to keep my thumb pressed on one end of the straw while I slip the other end in Suzy's pink O without spilling any c.o.ke. (Her sphincter, for reasons I can't fathom, makes me think of a dog toy.) I hold my breath, mouth poised by the business end of the tube, the length of a TV Guide TV Guide away from the bull's eye. I have a weird pain in my spleen. Though I'm not sure where my spleen is. I just know it's unhealthy. And I should go to a dentist, too. I can only chew with the left rear corner of my mouth. away from the bull's eye. I have a weird pain in my spleen. Though I'm not sure where my spleen is. I just know it's unhealthy. And I should go to a dentist, too. I can only chew with the left rear corner of my mouth.
”When I say do it, do do it!” Suzy says, and launches into some kind of Kundalini fire-breathing that expands and puckers her chosen c.o.ke portal. For one bad moment I am eyeball to eyeball with a jowly, Ray Harryhausen Cyclops, who won't stop leering at me. Then I avert my gaze and take in the pictures of Suzy's dead B-celebrity husband on the wall. The Teddy Shrine . . . it!” Suzy says, and launches into some kind of Kundalini fire-breathing that expands and puckers her chosen c.o.ke portal. For one bad moment I am eyeball to eyeball with a jowly, Ray Harryhausen Cyclops, who won't stop leering at me. Then I avert my gaze and take in the pictures of Suzy's dead B-celebrity husband on the wall. The Teddy Shrine . . . That's better That's better. Suzy met her late husband when she was a call girl. (Many of her clients were half-washed-up New York stage actors.) In a career lull, Teddy appeared in a number of Three Stooges Three Stooges vehicles. But not, as Suzy would interject when she repeated the story- which she did vehicles. But not, as Suzy would interject when she repeated the story- which she did no more than ten times a night-” no more than ten times a night-”the good Three Stooges Three Stooges . . .” Teddy made his Stooge ascendance in the heyday of Joe DeRita, the Curly-replacement n.o.body liked. ”Twilight of the Stooges,” Suzy would sigh. ”People even liked Shemp better than they liked DeRita.” . . .” Teddy made his Stooge ascendance in the heyday of Joe DeRita, the Curly-replacement n.o.body liked. ”Twilight of the Stooges,” Suzy would sigh. ”People even liked Shemp better than they liked DeRita.”
Suzy worked a finite loop of peripheral celebrity anecdotes ... Bennett Cerf liked to be dressed like a baby and have his diaper changed ... Broderick Crawford liked to give girls pony rides. Goober from Andy Griffith Andy Griffith was hung like a roll of silver dollars but had a dime-size hole burned in his septum. She also claimed that her apartment on Ivar, a cottage cheeseceilinged studio a short stagger up from Franklin, used to belong to Nathanael West. I can still see her tearing up, missing a dear friend: ”The midget from was hung like a roll of silver dollars but had a dime-size hole burned in his septum. She also claimed that her apartment on Ivar, a cottage cheeseceilinged studio a short stagger up from Franklin, used to belong to Nathanael West. I can still see her tearing up, missing a dear friend: ”The midget from Day of the Locust Day of the Locust died the same day John Lennon was shot.” died the same day John Lennon was shot.”
I spent more time with Suzy than my own wife, which is a whole other story. After a certain point, junkies are rarely missed when they're not home. (If they happen to have a home-as opposed to a place they still have keys to, from which they can steal small appliances.) A half-second before I think she is ready to blast off, Suzy abruptly turns around and chuckles. ”I ever tell you how much Larry Fine loved his blow? The man was a hedonist ... How do you think his hair got that way? He wanted to be the white Cab Calloway but it never worked out.”
Luckily I don't spill anything. Did I mention the white-outs? I did, didn't I? Why am I telling this story? It's not even a story. It's just, like, a snippet from a loop. Like Suzy's bottom-feeding monologues. I don't have memories. I just have nerves that still hurt in my brain. Shooting c.o.ke does that. Even more than smoking it, when you fixed you could just wipe the inside of your skull clean as porcelain. c.o.ke was about toilets and toilets were s.h.i.+ny white. Especially at 4 a.m. with the lights on and the bathroom door locked. Sometimes the blood in your head would crash over your eyeb.a.l.l.s and you'd just go blind for a while, but you wouldn't notice till you could see again-when you came back and realized you were standing there, knuckles buckling, one hand propped on the wall, the other compulsively flus.h.i.+ng and re-flus.h.i.+ng the toilet, for the whoosh that could make you come.
I've done okay since getting off all of it-the dope and the cocaine- but I still think, much as the smack destroyed my liver, the c.o.ke shorted my synapses. All systems will be firing and then, next thing I know, I'll blink into vision again and realize I've gone blank. It's not so much as if the power's been diminished, it's as if the power just suddenly ... goes out. Can we feel anything as sharply as the absence of a specific feeling?
What the f.u.c.k does that mean?
What was I just talking about?
Never mind. It's not coming back.
When I think about getting high, what I remember, viscerally, is not the dope rush-those faded years before I stopped the dope-I remember the c.o.ke hitting, that fork-in-the-heart jolt, like you dipped your toe in a puddle and tongue-kissed a toaster.
Before the needle was halfway down, you could see G.o.d's eyes roll back in His head.
So I twitch back and there's this gaping Eberhard Faber eraser-colored hole, two hummocky cheeks yanked open, scarlet chipped fingernails against baby skin.
”Hey, Whitey Ford, throw the dart through the hula hoop, dammit! What's the puzzle!?”
So (first time's always the hardest) with no further ado, I stick the straw into Suzy's a.s.s, careful not to inhale, and blow the Pixy Stix's worth of flake into her alimentary ca.n.a.l, or whatever it is, and watch the teeny mouth shut tight around its deposit.
Suzy squirms. ”Unggghh-uhhhh ... Oh G.o.d ... NNNNNNGGGGGG! NNNNNNGGGGGG!
Then she twists her head around, gla.s.sy-eyed. ”I'm a regular Venus flytrap!”
That's when I realize I left the straw in her. I look everywhere but it's gone. Sucked right up with the blow. Should I tell her? Would she get mad when she found out? What if she cut me off? Or was there some kind of a.s.s-acid that could eat a straw to pulp-so she'd never know?
Suzy mistakes my panic and paralysis for awe. ”Impressive, right?” Smacking herself on the flank, she adds, ”I used to smuggle guns for the Panthers in there. There's a man named Jackson who could tell you some stories, if he was in a position to tell anybody anything.”
Then she giggles, doing a little wiggly thing with her bottom. ”A lot of guys paid a lot of money to be where you are right now! Now blow some more, Daddy. Blow! Blow! Blow!”
I reload from a Musso & Franks ashtray full of powder and go in for Round Two. Her capacious a.n.u.s quivers like some blind baby bird. And this time (with a fresh straw) I close my eyes, unload the blow, then quickly get up and weave into the bathroom to shake up a shot. I should put some dope in but can't find it-and can't wait-and before I have the needle out I'm on the floor, doing the floppy-fish. It takes everything I have to slap a chunk of tar on tin foil and take a puff to stop the convulsion. I make it back out to the living room. (Blinds always pulled, no day or night, like a one-woman keno lounge.) I never saw Suzy get off her couch to pee. I never saw her eat. I never saw her do anything but cocaine, generally up her nose-or, on special occasions, the odd a.s.s-blow.
Suzy didn't geeze, she thought it was low cla.s.s. She left the freebasing to her roommate, Sidney, a shut-in who could generally be found in his room, sniffing a pillow between hits. Sidney hadn't left his room, Suzy liked to say, since The Rockford Files The Rockford Files was new. His claim to fame was playing drums behind Lenny Bruce at a Detroit strip club. was new. His claim to fame was playing drums behind Lenny Bruce at a Detroit strip club.