Author: alysse

  • Caving: a comedy

    (SCENE 3: VAYRE appears crawling down the stage into the audience. Shines her light)

    VAYRE
    What was that? Anybody there? Rev? This isn’t funny, whoever you are! I’m warning you, I have a knife!

    (Silence)

    I’m armed and I’m desperate!

    (Satisfied, she crawls to the first row, up and over the audience’s laps. At their reaction she goes rigid)

    Help! It’s alive! Oh, my God!

    (BO appears and works his way toward her. Her eyes are closed and she is planked out and screaming)

    VAYRE
    They’re all around me! Save yourself! Don’t let them touch you!

    BO
Ssh, it’s OK. It’s nothing really. Come on down. This way.

    VAYRE
    Oooo, I can’t look! They’re everywhere! I’m afraid to move!

    BO
    Come with me, I found a safe place we can sit.

    VAYRE
    Is it up high? Because it needs to be up high.

    BO
    It’s higher than here. Careful.

    (Helps her up to sit on stage. She brushes herself off)

    VAYRE
    Did I get any on me? What WERE those? Were they like –

    (shudders)

    BATS?

    (More hysterical)

    DEAD BATS?

    BO
    Nah. Bones, maybe?

    VAYRE
    (Shrieks)

    BONES!

    BO
    OLD bones. Ancient bones. More like fossils, probably. Or dry leaves?

    VAYRE
    (Shrieking)
    YOU CAN’T TELL THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN BONES AND DRY LEAVES?

    BO
    What are you scaring yourself for? We’re all alone here.

    (Gestures at the audience)

    Whatever that was, it was completely inanimate.

    VAYRE
    (Calming her breathing with great effort)

    Well it was totally disgusting, whatever it was. So who are you?

    BO
    You’re welcome.

    VAYRE
    OK, thank you – I guess. I mean for all I know you put that stuff there in some kind of revolting fraternity prank.

    BO
    Yeah, Hedj and I brought down ALL our funhouse equipment.

    VAYRE
    Well, it was mean!

    BO
    I was being sarcastic! We brought nothing but power bars. Want one?

    VAYRE
    Is it gluten free?

    BO
    (Inspecting a bar)

    Chocolate chip. How does gluten free taste?

    VAYRE
    Like sawdust. But, see, that keeps me from eating them.

        BO
    

    Like a food totem. But what happens if you want actual food?

    VAYRE
    I ALWAYS want food!

    BO
    Seriously, we need to keep our strength up. Who knows how long we’re going to be down here?

    VAYRE
    Don’t say that!

    BO
    I mean, look at this; we’re lost already.

    VAYRE
    (Covering her ears and hammering her feet)
    Don’t say it! Don’t say it!

    (He waves a power bar under her nose)

                BO
        Chocolate chip!
    

    (She accepts a bar, unwraps and eats it fanatically, breaking off small pieces and inspecting them carefully)

    BO
    That stuff can’t hurt you.

        VAYRE
    

    How do you know?

        BO
    

    I’m a doctor. Or going to be.

    VAYRE
    Impossible.

    BO
    As long as they don’t kick me out.

        VAYRE
    

    Why would they kick you out?

        BO
    

    The money thing.

    VAYRE
    There’s a money thing?

    BO
    There’s always a money thing. How could you not know this?

    VAYRE
    Well, I’m not here to be your on the job experience.

    BO
    Seriously, I delivered a baby once. In Guatemala. It wasn’t so scary.
    (Thinks)
    Actually, it was pretty scary!

    VAYRE
    Well, you won’t have to do that here! And I definitely don’t want to hear any more about it!

    (Traumatized chewing. Awkward pause.)

    BO
    So… what’s your major?

    VAYRE
    (A practiced complainer)

    It was supposed to be communication. But my advisor – I’m not lying – has such a bad speech impediment I can’t understand him! He’s the HEAD of the department! What does that tell you?

        BO
    

    They’re really poor communicators?

        VAYRE
    

    So obviously I’m having to change majors!

    BO
    (Laughs)

    A speech impediment? How does THAT happen?

    VAYRE
    He has tenure! They can’t get rid of him! His student ratings are in the toilet! Maybe it’s an accent. I can’t even tell.

    BO
    How’d you sign on to communications and miss a thing like that?

    VAYRE
    You can’t think of everything. I paid close attention to four factors: expense, weather, distance, ambiance –

    (Ticks it off on her fingers)

    BO
    Ambiance? You mean like the social life?

    VAYRE
    Ambiance is more subtle than social life. It’s like feng shui.

        BO
    

    You mean like mojo?

        VAYRE
    

    (A little exasperated)
    Whatever that is. Like the mood of a place.

    BO
    Sounds to me like you should be a language major. Or Symbiotics. Something like that.

    VAYRE
    There’s no such thing as “Symbiotics”. Unless you mean semiotics and have you SEEN those people? They don’t want to have a job in the real world EVER. I can’t decide, but English major is definitely out. “Do you want fries with that?” I mean seriously. I want to meet interesting people. What do you think is good? Business?

    BO
    My first roommate was a business major. Business has bad, bad ambiance. You don’t want them. I’m just telling you.

    VAYRE
    You’re probably right. I just don’t want to be broke all my life.

    BO
    If we HAVE a life. I mean, we’ve got to get out of here.

    VAYRE
    Will you stop? Why am I always surrounded by negative thinkers? Of course we’re getting out! We’ll tunnel our way out if we have to!

    BO
    Engineering, there’s your major.

    VAYRE
    Isn’t that full of nerds? I warn you, I hate math.

    BO
    But math is so easy! You can look everything up.

    VAYRE
    Yeah, but you have to know what to look up. Don’t get me started.

    (Silence while she chews and he thinks)

    BO
    Don’t take this the wrong way, but are you the brunette or the redhead? No offense, but down here everything looks different.

    VAYRE
    God, MEN! Better brush up on your bedside manner, buddy!

    BO
    (Taking this entirely the wrong way, he says seductively)

    Wanna help?

    (She gives him a push)

    VAYRE
    Aren’t doctors supposed to make people feel better?

    BO
    You have to be willing to feel worse, in order to feel better. A lot of people can’t get through the “worse” part.

    VAYRE
    Sounds medieval to me.

        BO
    

    Unless you’re a blonde.

    (Holding and studying a lock of her hair)

    It’s OK with me. I just really can’t tell in this light.

        VAYRE
    

    (Snatching her hair away)

    Then let me put this in words on one syllable: There IS no blonde!

    BO
    Good! I hate blondes! I’m anti-blonde! I’m into redheads!

    VAYRE
    No redheads either! God, you guys are such idiots! How can you reject like, two thirds of the human race over hair color?

    BO
    One of you had red hair. I feel like this is false advertising.

    VAYRE
    I MAY have had colored extensions in my hair! For Party Night! You know! For fun. FOR DRESSING UP TO GO OUT AND HAVE A GOOD TIME. So sue me!

    BO
    (Shines his flashlight directly at her like a cop)

    I don’t know. You act like a redhead! There is TOO a redhead, and you’re her!

    VAYRE
    These are henna highlights if THAT’S what you mean. Why are men so pathetic?

    BO
    Well, I like them. They look good on you.

    VAYRE
    (Rapid mood change)

    Really? You think? My roommate says I can’t get away with it because of my skin tone.

    BO
    She’s crazy. What’s the matter with your skin tone?

    VAYRE
    There’s nothing the MATTER with it. She just says I’m a Spring, is all.

    BO
    What’s THAT mean?

    VAYRE
    I’m supposed to wear pastels.

    BO
    That’s just the green meanies. Probably she’s a hosebeast and you’re so obviously not.

    VAYRE
    God, you frat boys are AWFUL!

    (Slaps him)

    BO
    Hey! There’s no call for violence!

    VAYRE
    I’m just setting up the boundaries, is all.

    BO
    I’d complain to the sexual harassment police if we weren’t stuck in a cave miles underground. Hey, I’m the one who rescued you!

    VAYRE
    So you own me? By what law? Neanderthals versus the Sabines?

        BO
    

    You shouldn’t be attacking me, is all I’m saying.

    VAYRE
    You just want me to be putty in your hands.

    BO
    You WERE putty in my hands.

    VAYRE
    I was not!

    BO
    Nice way to treat the guy who rescued you from your panic attack seizure disorder hissy fit or whatever that was that you were having.

    VAYRE
    It wasn’t a panic attack! And it certainly wasn’t a seizure, Dr. Death!

    BO
    Claustrophobia, then, all right? I used to have claustrophobia. When I was little.

    VAYRE
    You have a genius for making people feel worse. You’re going to get an A in that part of the program.

    BO
    (Smiles at her endearingly)

    I got over the claustrophobia. Now I’m just afraid of the dark.

    (She’s still suspicious, but mollified.)

    VAYRE
    Then why dare us to come down here?

    BO
    (Killer grin)
    To give you a chance to rescue me.

        VAYRE
    

    Sounds more like you’re self-destructive.

    BO
    I met a beautiful girl in a bar who said she was going caving.

    VAYRE
    Go on.

    BO
    She was drinking this stuff like liquid ice cream.

    VAYRE
    Was not but continue.

    BO
    These little drops of ice cream kept forming on her upper lip…

    (Stares pointedly at her upper lip.)

    VAYRE
    (Mongoose to his snake)

    So you got an idea.

    BO
    More than an idea. It was like a shock of recognition.

        VAYRE
    

    A shock of recognition?

        BO
    

    Like thinking, This is where I come in!

        VAYRE
    

    What does that mean?

    BO
    Have you ever had that moment where you know exactly what you’re supposed to do?

        VAYRE
    

    Maybe. It doesn’t feel that good.

        BO
    

    Oh, this felt good!

        VAYRE
    

    You don’t think it was a terrible idea?

        BO
    

    Seems more brilliant to me every second. So half of me bullied the other half of me –

    VAYRE
    You bullied yourself? How does that work?

    BO
    I have to strong-arm myself or I would never do anything.

    VAYRE
    (Getting closer to him)

    You have a split personality. Like a private self and a public self? I totally get that. But which one of you is pre-med?

    BO
    The good one.

    VAYRE
    Wow! I see we’re into the “feel good” part of your practice?

    BO
    Feels good to me.

    (They are close together now)

    VAYRE
    I am curious about how you taste.

    (They kiss lightly, he attempts more, she fends him off, laughing)

    VAYRE
    Maybe I’ll go Early Ed.

    BO
    Early Ed?

    VAYRE
    Because wild animal wrangling isn’t an option.

    BO
    Seriously, wasn’t that nice?

    VAYRE

    (Holding him by his collar)

        It was very nice.
    

    BO
    (He likes this. Leaning forward to sniff her hair)

    Plenty more where that came from!

    VAYRE
    We can’t allow ourselves to get sidetracked! We have a job to do.

        BO
    

    (Completely forgetful)

        Which is?
    
                VAYRE
        Find our friends and get out of here!
    
        BO
    

    Right! I know I got what I came for.

        VAYRE
    

    One kiss? One kiss is all you came for?

        BO
    

    Seems like. Now I feel like I could do anything!

        VAYRE
    

    That’s your split personality talking!

    BO
    (Earnestly)

    Split personality means I work twice as hard.
    (They nuzzle)

    VAYRE
    You should have just asked me out for coffee.

        BO
    

    When?

        VAYRE
    

    Instead of all this.

        BO  
    

    I was scared of your friend.

    VAYRE
    (Laughs)
    Rev? She can be intense. I’m the only one who can stand to room with her. She’s pre-law.

    BO
    She is?
    (Laughs)
    That’s so funny. So was my buddy.

    VAYRE
    Don’t say “was”. Stop acting like we’re all gonna die down here.

    BO
    He struggles with grades, that’s all. Dyslexic or something. So… you want to go out for coffee huh?

    VAYRE
    I’m up for anything if we can only get out of here. Oh no!

    (Feels in her pockets)

    Oh God, God!

    (She is really panicked now)

    BO
    What’s wrong?

    (She clutches him – he loves being clutched)

    VAYRE
    (Hissing)

    It’s back there!

    BO
    (Playing with her hair, studying her neck)

    What is?

    VAYRE
    My map, stupid! The fossils must have taken it! I can’t believe it!

        BO
    

    You had a map?

        VAYRE
    

    I was trying to keep track of distances. I love measuring. It soothes me.

        BO
    

    You like measuring? Wow.

    VAYRE
    I LOVE making curtains. And bedspreads!

        BO
    

    But that uses math.

        VAYRE
    

    (She shakes him)
    I…LOST…MY…MAP!

    BO
    No need to panic. I’ll go get it for you.

    (Starts to rise)

    VAYRE
    You will?

    BO
    Sure. No problem.

    VAYRE
    No, no!

    (She grabs him. He loves being grabbed)

    BO
    Why not? It’s just right over there.

    VAYRE
    The monsters are over there!

    BO
    I GUARANTEE you those things aren’t alive.

        VAYRE
    

    But I’m so afraid you won’t come back.

        BO
    

    You are? Wow!

    VAYRE
    I heard something AWFUL over there. Like snorting!

        BO
    

    Snorting?

        VAYRE
    

    And wheezing!

    BO
    (Braggadocio)

    Nah! Come with me, you’ll see it’s no big deal!

    (VAYRE starts to shake)

    VAYRE
    That was the scaredest I’ve ever been in my LIFE. I can’t bear to even THINK about it. I don’t know how you can be so brave.

    BO
    You’re making me brave.

    VAYRE
    Looks like we need each other.

    BO
    Definitely. Teamwork. Foundation of the universe.

    VAYRE
    Here’s an idea. I tie my rope to you.

    BO
    Wow! Bondage huh?

    VAYRE
    No, listen. This is a good idea. Teamwork! If you tug three times I’ll give you more rope and if I tug three times you’ll come back.

    BO
    Why three times?

    VAYRE
    So you can tell it wasn’t an accident. Seriously, I’ve got 240 feet of rope here. Don’t you think that’s enough?

    BO
    How many times do I tug for a monster?

    VAYRE
    Not funny!

    BO
    My name’s Bo, by the way.

    VAYRE
    I know. I investigated you.

                BO
        You did?  Wow!
    

    VAYRE
    I care who I’m down in a deep dark cave with. My name’s Wendy Vayre.

    (They shake; she unties rope from her waist)

    BO
    Bo Darcy at your service. And may I say no map is as important as getting to know YOU.

    VAYRE
    You’ve got a smooth line!

        BO
    

    Haven’t I, though?

        VAYRE
    

    You think this – a mixer? Is everything a hookup with you guys?

    BO
    You give me great ideas, I give you great ideas. The ultimate hookup! How about this one? We merge initiations!

    (She looks skeptical)

    Maybe I’m not expressing myself very well.

    VAYRE
    Express yourself better.

    BO
    Couples connect in this cave just like we did. We could call it “Night Problems!”

    VAYRE
    We are NOT connecting up!

    BO
    We TOTALLY are. And it’s the only way anybody ever accomplished anything. I know you feel it too.

        VAYRE
    

    Why can’t you see merging initiations is insanely dangerous? Coming down here at all is insanely dangerous. Our gnawed, bleached bones are going to star in some “Don’t go clubbing” movie!

    BO
    Never happen. Call me an optimist.

    VAYRE
    You ARE an optimist, aren’t you?

    (She starts tying a rope around him)

        I like that in a man.
    

    BO
    Takes optimism to get the job done.

    VAYRE

    Remember, three tugs –

    BO
    Got it. Three tugs if —

    (He stops himself)

    VAYRE
    What! Say it!

    BO
    Nothing!

    VAYRE
    You better not start in about the monsters again.

    BO
    Three tugs if I need you and you give three tugs if you need me.

    VAYRE
    I can live with that.

    BO
    Tie the other end to yourself. I don’t want us to get separated.

    (They kiss. She gives him a little shove.)

    VAYRE
    Better get going. Be safe.

    (BO begins to crawl towards the audience.)

  • Caving: a comedy

    (SCENE 2: Meanwhile the boys, HEDJ and BO are crawling down the center aisle shining their flashlights up into the audience)

    HEDJ
    (Halts, attentive)
    Omigod, I think I just saw something. I swear I heard somebody breathe.

    BO
    There’s no room in this tunnel for anyone but US. Bacteria and bugs on the other hand – probably PLENTY of THOSE. Getting in my MOUTH. Into all my orifices, I bet.

    HEDJ
    You just have a high opinion of your orifices.

                BO
    

    Dude, didn’t I just tell you about that camel disease that jumped the blood-brain barrier? Theory of hidden variables!

    HEDJ
    A guy has sex with a camel he deserves everything he gets. In my opinion.

                BO
        It’s not just camels.
    
                HEDJ    
    

    Will you stop? Will you stop with the Undiscovered Virus fixation?

    BO
    Bacteria are worse than viruses! Their mutatations –

    HEDJ
    Do you want to turn around right now? I mean, if theoretically we COULD turn around?

    BO
    Hell no. That way the girls get a default win. Can’t let the brothers down like that! No way.

    HEDJ
    So ixnay on the invisible mutants. OK? Not if we want to be conjugate variables anytime soon.

        BO
    

    People who won’t learn from history are destined to repeat it, is all I’m saying.

        HEDJ
    

    You know, there’s always one guy on an expedition who gets thrown overboard because he can’t shut up. That’s the history I’m talking about.

    BO
    It’s just that in pre-med you hear things.

    HEDJ
    Pre-law too. Like the temporary insanity defense gives you the right to kill somebody who’s driving you crazy.

        BO
    

    It does not!

        HEDJ
    

    Well, it’s a defense! It’s worked too!

    BO
    Grow up. We haven’t even started this thing yet.

        HEDJ
    

    We’re still crawling down the entrance tunnel and you’ve already given me brain worms. Lighten up! Now I’m haunted by some guy trying to have sex with a camel.

        BO
    

    Definitely needed a ladder.

        HEDJ
    

    But WHY? Qualifying for Jackass?

    BO
    Or Guinness World Book Sex Edition.

                HEDJ
    

    Bro, there is no Guinness World Book Sex Edition!

    BO
    I’m always surprised by what you don’t know. Lawyers are so busy memorizing cases from the 1930’s they don’t know anything about the real world.

        HEDJ
    

    That is so not true.

        BO
    

    If you Google —

    HEDJ
    Google? Are you serious? I can’t move my elbows. I can barely breathe!

        BO
    

    Don’t act like this whole thing was my idea.

    HEDJ
    It WAS your idea!

        BO
    

    I intuited group consensus.

        HEDJ
    

    Bro, you DARED them.

        BO
    

    They were TAKING the cave! This cave doesn’t belong to a bunch of girls.

        HEDJ
    

    It doesn’t belong to anyone.

        BO
    

    Well, it was YOUR idea we come down through the tunnel.

        HEDJ
    

    I was trying to be gentlemanly! Besides, we flipped for it.

        BO
    

    You LET them win!

        HEDJ
    

    That’s the gentlemanly part!

    (Looking at his phone)

    Can’t Google anything if your phone doesn’t work. Check.

    BO
    How can I check if I can’t use my elbows!

    HEDJ
    How can we find the girls if our apps don’t work?

        BO
    

    You’ve got a girl-finding app? What is it, GirlGrab?

        HEDJ
    

    I’ve got GPS and a mapmaking app, which DOESN’T WORK down here thanks to you!

        BO
    

    Don’t put this on me! You were daring them right along with me!

                HEDJ
        I hope  I know how to back a brother up!
    
                BO
    

    You were drunk as a skunk is what you were.

    HEDJ
    I remember you were flying pretty high yourself.

    BO
    Seems like. What the hell were we drinking?

    HEDJ
    Dude, I’ve got no idea. They ordered these crazy drinks and I was just trying to keep up. The curvy one had these little beads of dew on her upper lip…

        BO
    

    Both of them were curvy.

        HEDJ
    

    I had a blackout! I think they rufied us!

    BO
    Girls don’t rufie guys! They don’t have to!

    HEDJ
    Who do you think is stealing all the kidneys? Call yourself pre-med!

    BO
    That’s an urban legend.

                HEDJ
        Google it! I mean if your phone –
    
                BO
    

    Sorority girls are not into kidney theft! Try to keep up! You can’t handle booze is what you won’t admit and now you’re just using up oxygen. We’ve got to work smarter. How is it smart to crawl down a hole?

                HEDJ
    

    If they had to use the tunnel they wouldn’t even have come. We’d be all by ourselves down here and what’s the point of THAT?

        BO
    

    What’s the point of crawling down a tunnel in total darkness?

        HEDJ
    

    It JOINS the cave, I’m trying to tell you! I Googled it!

        BO
    

    Boy you are helpless without your equipment. Weren’t you an Life Scout? What happened to your sense of adventure?

        HEDJ
    

    I was an Eagle Scout, I’ll have you know.

        BO
    

    I’m giving this five more minutes before I back out. I’d like to see my ass one more time before I die!

    HEDJ
    I’ve seen your ass and it’s no bargain. We have to keep going because we don’t have a choice.

        BO
    

    We could crawl backwards.

    HEDJ
    We ALWAYS have choices. People don’t SEE all the choices that they have.

    BO
    Or we could dig our way out.

    HEDJ
    And risk a cave-in?

    BO
    You know, are the opposite of helpful. Shackleton would have pushed you right off the ice floe.

    HEDJ
    Look! Omigod, it’s the cave!

    (They make their way up the stage steps – someone in the audience makes a noise)

    BO
    Then what the hell was that?

    HEDJ
    I’m guessing water dripping? Believe me, that’s a GOOD sign.

    (No girls – they can stand up. Alone)

    BO
    Now we get drowned? How can water possibly be a good sign?

    HEDJ
    It’s got to flow out somewhere!

    BO
    Sure. China, probably. Just talking about it is making me thirsty.

    (Drinks from waterbottle)

    HEDJ
    Complain, complain. The minute we can breathe, you decide you need water! We’ve been down here exactly five minutes.

    BO
    How come YOUR watch works?

    HEDJ
    It doesn’t. I was just guessing.

    BO
    Doesn’t it bother you that we have no sense of time and no sense of direction?

        HEDJ
    

    We’ll just have to use our Third Eye.

        BO
    

    Our what?

        HEDJ
    

    The thing behind the top of your nose. It’s how animals migrate.

        BO
    

    Sounds like bullshit to me. If doctors don’t know about it, it doesn’t exist.

        HEDJ
    

    Dude, doctors are the last to know about anything! Didn’t it take you guys like six thousand years to wash your hands?

        BO
    

    Well, law never cured anybody of ANYTHING.

        HEDJ
    

    Hey, don’t drink all the Gatorade.

        BO
    

    Can’t drink what we find down here. You’ll grow gills.

    HEDJ
    We’re not building a civilization! We’re finding the girls and getting the hell out!

    BO
    Here’s the cave, so where are the girls?

        HEDJ
    

    Maybe they didn’t come down, not even the easy way! Maybe they’re laughing at us.

        BO
    

    We’ll get the last laugh! DARED and DONE!

    HEDJ
    Or maybe there’s more than one cave. How would we know? It’s unexplored!

    BO
    Some Victorian explored it.

    HEDJ
    You can’t trust the Victorians! They were putting ape jawbones on human skulls and saying they discovered Original Man!

        BO
    

    Yeah, but lying about a cave —

        HEDJ
    

    Yeah, and how about climate change? Everything’s moved around since then. And what about earthquakes?

    BO
    There are no earthquakes in this part of the world!

                HEDJ
        There are so!  They happen down so low you can’t even feel them.
    
                BO
        So you’re a geology major now?
    
        HEDJ
    

    Not to mention boiling lava!

        BO
    

    Now you’re just showing off. My Third Eye smells girls. They’re around here someplace.

        HEDJ
    

    That’s not your Third Eye! That’s your sex gland!

        BO
    

    Same thing for all you know!

    HEDJ
    (Perking up)

    My Third Eye says they’re going to need rescue. Girls are always needing to be rescued.

    BO
    It’s those shoes they wear.

    HEDJ
    Yeah, well they won’t wear stilettos down here. More likely the $4000 sneakers Daddy bought them.

    BO
    There are no $4000 sneakers!

    HEDJ
    Of course there are!

    BO
    Well, you can overpay for anything.

            HEDJ
    Which is my POINT.
    

    (Shines his flashlight around)

    Now this is what I call a CAVE.

    BO
    Let the exploring begin! Dude, we could name this cave after us! I think I have a Sharpie somewhere.

    HEDJ
    What’s to write?

        BO
    

    We’re mapmaking, dude! We’re explorers!

        HEDJ
    

    What’s to map? All we’ve got is a long tunnel and a big room.

    BO
    With an undiscovered underground pool in an undisclosed location. So be careful.

    (Exploring)

        They’re ahead of us, is all.
    

    HEDJ
    Wouldn’t they leave some kind of sign if they’d been through here?

    BO
    Who know WHAT they would do? They were cute girls, though.

    HEDJ
    Plenty of cute girls up top. We could abandon their asses, plant a bandanna, snap a pic and get the hell out.

    BO
    How’s your camera working if your phone doesn’t?

    HEDJ
    Damn! Sharpie the cave and brazen it out? Swagger, man!

                BO
    

    You’re missing a fabulous opportunity here! We could earn the undying gratitude of some really pretty girls!

                HEDJ
    

    Buddy, you fell on your head during rush week.

    BO
    Man, that rope gave way. There was nothing I could do. So which girl do you want?

    HEDJ
    One of them was giving me The Look. The Unmistakable Look.

    BO
    I seriously doubt that!

                HEDJ
    

    (Touching his eye)

    I’m never wrong about The Look.

                BO
    

    Which one was it? Better not be MY one.

    HEDJ
    Oh, you’ve got one all picked out, have you?

        BO
    

    Course I have and so have you!

        HEDJ
    

    The one with the overbite?

    BO
    If you’re referring to the girl I spent all night talking to, then, yes.

    HEDJ
    You know, dude, cave-diving females are almost certainly gay.

    BO
    Let’s HOPE, right?

    HEDJ
    Was it the brunette or the blonde?

    BO
    There isn’t a blonde! She’s more of a redhead!

    HEDJ
    Well, that answers my question, then! Just because you’re going to be a doctor so you feel entitled to the blonde!

    BO
    She ISN’T a blonde – you’re blind as well as crazy. My one is the other one.

    HEDJ
    Oh, the brunette? The dominatrix is the one you want? You’ve bitten off more than you can chew there, buddy.

    BO
    You can’t have both of them!

    HEDJ
    Who says I can’t?

    BO
    The guy you’re about to go swimming with at the end of a deep dark hole says you can’t.

    HEDJ
    Oh, all right. Don’t go all Lord of the Flies on me! Talk about devolution! Take whichever one you want!

    BO
    The one I want is the redhead and there’s nothing wrong with her teeth. The dominatrix is yours. But, we’re going to need more romantic surroundings than this to make a move.

        HEDJ
    

    What’s wrong with these surroundings, bro? Its like the end of the world! Everybody and his grandmother would be getting it on!

        BRO
    

    Or like the beginning of the world. That would be romantic.

    HEDJ
    And how about in the ambulance on the way to Disease Control?

    BO
    Dude, that’s SO not funny. Really poor taste under the circumstances.

    HEDJ
    Life and death down here buddy. It doesn’t get any more “romantic” than that!

    BO
    See! Did I set this up right or what!

    (They high five)

    Call me crazy!

    HEDJ
    Crazy like a fox!

    BO
    You’re welcome!

    HEDJ
    Here’s the plan for maximum coverage. You go that way, I go this way and we meet over there.

    BO
    NOW who’s crazy?

    HEDJ
    Hey! Why march in lockstep? This isn’t summer camp!

    BO
    Man, have you even SEEN any horror movies? The monster gets everyone the MINUTE they split up.

    HEDJ
    No monsters down here, bro. Pinky swear.


    BO
    It’s like a symbolic representation of danger bro. Be prepared is all I’m saying.

    HEDJ
    Eyes on the prize, buddy!

        BO
    

    There you go with that eye thing again!

        HEDJ 
    

    The girls are gonna LOSE and we’re gonna WIN. And you know why?

    BO
    Cause we’re better?

    HEDJ
    Dude, every girl in this school is smarter than either one of us. My parents had to pretend I row crew to get me into this school. Whatever that is.

    BO
    And I had an Asian guy taking my SAT’s. You’re just talking about book smarts. What does THAT have to do with anything?

    HEDJ
    Exactly! It’s all about strategy! We’re gonna win with strategy!

    (A long pause)

    BO
    (At a loss)

    Like…

    HEDJ
    Like we’re not going to duplicate each other’s actions. Have you ever noticed how girls have to do everything together?

    BO
    (Lightning strikes)

    They can’t even go to the bathroom by themselves!

    HEDJ
    That’s what I’m talking about! Baby steps!

    (Mimics mincing walk)

    BO
    Holding each other up!

    HEDJ
    Like they’re gay!

    BO
    (Falsetto)
    Help me. I’m so scared!

    (With his back to audience, HEDJ mimics passionate make out session)

    BO
    Did the earth move?

    HEDJ
    Rolling in the mud, each trying to get on top –

    BO
    Tearing off each other’s clothes –

    HEDJ
    Mouth-to-mouth rescue breathing –

    (Climax. The men sigh together.)

    BO
    Wow! Was that good for you?

    HEDJ
    That’s good for anybody!

    (Mutual struggle to calm their breathing.)

    You go around that way, I go around this way, we meet over there.

    BO
    Ok, Ok, so what am I looking for?

    HEDJ
    Openings. Anyplace they might have gone.

    BO
    If I see something…?

    HEDJ
    Say something. Yell. I’ll come over to you.

    BO
    And you do the same.

    HEDJ
    How can THAT work? If we’re both yelling and we’re both circling this is like dance class.

    BO
    I needed a SINGLE PHYS ED CREDIT. JUST ONE.

        HEDJ
    

    Oh, relax! We’ve all been in Single Credit Hell.

        BO
    

    You have?

        HEDJ
    

    Figure skating!

        BO
    

    That’s not so bad.

        HEDJ
    

    Dude! FIGURE SKATING!

    BO
    OK, OK. I know how to settle this. We go with the quarterback’s play.

    HEDJ
    Could you POSSIBLY be thinking that you’re the quarterback in this scenario?

    BO
    And you’re the figure skater! I’m the one that dared them!

    HEDJ
    You’ve never quarterbacked in your life!

                BO
    

    Flag football! I’m the quarterback if I called the play!

    HEDJ
    Fantasy football more like. You totally, one hundred percent did not call anything! Circling and strategy was ALL my idea!

    BO
    Splitting up and walking backward you mean!

    HEDJ
    If that’s what you’re calling it!

    BO
    So now you admit it!

        HEDJ
    

    I admit it if you admit you drunk-dared them!

        BO
    

    I don’t know why every argument circles back to the dawn of time!

        HEDJ
    

    OK, then, let’s talk about NOW. I’m the one with the plan.

        BO
    

    Which is WHAT?

    HEDJ
    Specialization! We don’t bother to duplicate each other’s actions. Specialization’s like, the foundation of civilization!

    BO
    Germ theory is the foundation of civilization!

    HEDJ
    It so totally is NOT. Look at the Romans! Look at the Egyptians. They were eating rats and drinking sewer water and they were building like crazy!

    BO

    Modern medicine is the only reason anyone can do anything. Otherwise we would all be four feet one, crippled up with rickets and dead at fifteen.

    HEDJ
    That is SO not true. Law is what’s keeping us from killing each other like I’m seriously thinking of —

    BO
    You guys make up your laws, but medicine’s based on biology. That’s REAL law, my man’

        HEDJ
    

    Is not.

        BO
    

    Is too.

        HEDJ
    

    Is NOT.

        BO
    

    Ok, Ok, don’t drop your shorts. How about this? Let’s say if we both start yelling, then I’ll be the one to work my way over to you. Happy now?

    HEDJ
    Right. Sounds good.

    BO
    See? I’m a problem solver!

                HEDJ
        Don’t push it.
    
                BO
    

    I just don’t want to get separated is all.

    HEDJ
    Yeah. Because of the monsters.

    BO
    I heard that!

    (They wander away, exiting different wings.)

  • Caving: a comedy

    In this comedy, the theatre becomes a cave as 2 college frat boys (HEDJ & BO) & 2 Sorority girls (REV & VAYRE) become trapped while spelunking on a dare. Unsettled friendships and a longing for connection have driven them to risk the cell-phone-free dangers of this place. All four long for emotional and sexual union and dependable relationships but are worried about victimization & consequences. How to trust? Both same sex couples become separated: BO “rescues” VAYRE and REV “rescues” HEDJ. Each couple has to forge a reliable physical and emotional connection. The first couple then needs to “find” the second couple deeper in the cave. To escape their emotional and physical prisons, both couples need to work as a team. They will use both physical and metaphysical relationship dynamics; even quantum mechanics to locate a “wormhole” that will “free them” into a previously unimagined universe.

    (SCENE 1: darkened theater. A pair of college age women wearing miner’s lights and using hastily assembled climbing gear lower themselves from the ceiling with rope)

    REV
    We can’t let the boys win!

    VAYRE
    Because they ALWAYS win.

    REV
    Only because they CARE SO MUCH about winning!

    VAYRE
    Like it’s the ONLY thing.

    REV
    They win because they CHEAT.

    VAYRE
    They’re proud of it! They brag about it!

                REV
    

    Like ha ha! We put one over on you!

    (They land with a thump, pull down ropes and lash them around their waists.)

    REV
    (Sniffs)
    God, it stinks down here. What do you think that thing IS?

    VAYRE
    I DON’T think. I’m trying hard NOT to think.

    REV
    (Clutching her friend as if afraid to look around)

    Don’t you dare say the “s” word! I’m warning you. Don’t even THINK the “s” word!

    VAYRE
    What IS the “s” word? Shit?

    REV
    That’s not it! Don’t say it! Don’t think it!

    VAYRE
    Rev, are you afraid of … snakes?

    REV
    (Screams)

    I told you not to say it! Now I see them everywhere! I can SMELL them!

    VAYRE
    Snakes don’t SMELL, silly. There are no snakes down here!

    REV
    Who are you kidding! This is a deep dark hole! There HAVE to be snakes down here!

    VAYRE
    There can’t be. Snakes need to eat SOMETHIING.

    REV
    (Lets go of her)

    There you go. Now you’re starting. I warned you. You mean something like BATS, for example?

    VAYRE
    (Galvanized –Clutches REV fiercely)

    Who said anything about bats? There aren’t any bats down here! This is a bat-free zone!

    REV
    I just said that so you would come with. But you INSIST on torturing me with snakes. It’s a cave, silly! There literally HAVE to be bats! The kind that FLY in your HAIR.

    (They hold each other while uttering blood curdling screams)

    VAYRE
    You are so mean!

                REV 
    

    You started it!

        VAYRE
    

    We’ve got to calm down. What if the boys hear us?

    REV
    Yeah, we’ll never live it down!

                VAYRE
    

    We’ll have to pretend we’re faking. Play screaming. If THAT even exists!

                REV
    

    They’re probably screaming themselves. IF they have the BRAINS to be afraid. Which I highly doubt.

    VAYRE
    You and me both!

    REV
    Why did we get ourselves into this? What the HADES were we thinking?

    VAYRE
    Well, we HAD to take the dare.

    REV
    But WHY do we have to take the dare? What’s wrong with us?

    VAYRE
    Greek honor? Self-sabotage? I can’t remember,

                REV
        Because they’re SO pathetic. 
    

    VAYRE
    Or because they’re so smug and superior.

        REV
    

    Those boys are SO in love with themselves!

                VAYRE
        How is that possible?
    

    REV
    When they’re so much worse than we are in literally every way?

    VAYRE
    SO much worse. But they’re the only game in town.

    REV
    They CAN’T be.

    VAYRE
    I investigated. They ARE. Unless you want to be gay?

        REV
    

    Not me! Where’s the fun in playing with the stuff I’ve already got?

    VAYRE
    I know! Right? Where’s the drama?

        REV
    

    And you just KNOW whoever she is, she’s going to have a better chest than mine!

                VAYRE
        Of course she is! How can she help it?
    

    REV
    (Giving her friend a dirty look)

    Thanks a lot!

        VAYRE
    

    Hey! All I’m saying is we’re always comparing. True?

        REV
    

    (Grudgingly)
    True. Who can relax?

        VAYRE
    

    And when we’re ranking, we rank ourselves worst! Do we or don’t we?

        REV
    

    Well not always.

        VAYRE
    

    But most of the time! It just looks so easy to be someone else!

        REV
    

    It does! It really does! Hey, Vayre?

        VAYRE
    

    What?

        REV
    

    Don’t let those boys know we investigated them!

    VAYRE
    Yeah! Easier to catch them in a LIE.

    REV
    Bundles of lies, probably!

        VAYRE
    

    Yeah! Poseurs! They always get ensnared by their lies!

                REV
        Trip themselves up!
    

    (They pant together; fortifying themselves has been hard work.)

        God, I’m exhausted! Are you?
    

    VAYRE
    I am! And we haven’t even started yet! Who knew this would be so rough?

    (They finally let each other go – a bit embarrassed at the “gay” thing.)

    I won’t say “s” if you won’t say “b”.

    REV
    Deal.
    (Handshake & upslap. They look around, shining flashlights at the audience.)

    VAYRE
    Please remind me HOW we got into this?

        REV
    

    I was drinking Angry Balls. I should NEVER do that. Remind me to NEVER do that AGAIN!

    VAYRE
    Oh, yeah. I was all Sex on the Beach. So I remember…NOTHING. What are those other things?

    REV
    Beer. With a fireball chaser. You’d think THAT would be all right! Right?

    VAYRE
    I’m starting to see the problem with our decision making.

    REV
    Yeah! And the headaches!

    VAYRE
    It’s the boys’ fault!

    REV
    It TOTALLY is! If they weren’t such hard drinkers –

    VAYRE
    Alcoholics, probably. And if didn’t have those gorgeous shoulders —

    REV
    They were all about the shoulders! Shoulders all over the place!

    VAYRE
    Deep, deep brown eyes…

    (They both sigh)

    REV
    Did you happen to catch their names?

    VAYRE
    Hardly.

    REV
    Then how did you investigate them?

                VAYRE
        Friend of a friend.
    

    (Thinks)
    Of a friend.

    REV
    It’s especially hard when they’re buying!

    VAYRE
    It TOTALLY is! I mean, you lose track!

                REV
        They WANT you to lose track!
    
                VAYRE
    

    Technically, the FRAT house was buying.

        REV
    

    That’s even WORSE!

    (They look at each other meaningfully)

    REV & VAYRE
    Uh oh!

    REV
    We’ve been set up!

    VAYRE
    We should leave right now!

    REV
    We COULD leave now. I mean the hole is right up there.

    (They both look up)

    VAYRE
    Funny. I don’t see it. Where did it go?

    REV
    Maybe a cloud passed in front of the sun.

    VAYRE
    I’m already forgetting what sun even LOOKS like.

    REV
    Maybe it moved while we were…screaming.

    VAYRE
    An “s” word! Don’t say it!

    REV
    Yeah. We never win if get excited.

    VAYRE
    Remind me why aren’t we making the pledges do this? Isn’t that the whole point of sisterhood?

    REV
    Lawsuits. We have to figure out if this can even be done. Did you bring food?

    VAYRE
    Of course not. Think how thin we’ll be when we finally get out of here. How about you?

    REV
    Gluten-free power bars.

    VAYRE
    I SO blame the national chapter. Everything’s their fault!

        REV
    

    Yeah! It’s their fault we can’t just spank pledges and roll them in chocolate anymore! Make us think up something hard!

    VAYRE
    Something NEW. God! What a lame bunch of losers! I mean, who doesn’t enjoy a good spanking and a coating of chocolate!

    REV
    I Did! You did! Now we have to invent “pro-social” initiations to dress up somebody else’s resume!

    VAYRE
    It’s SO UNFAIR!

        REV
    

    It SO defeats the point!

    VAYRE
    Which is…

                REV
    

    Knocking respect into those pointy little know nothing heads.

    VAYRE
    Respect!

    REV
    Right! Remind them they’re lucky to be chosen!

    VAYRE
    Sisterhood is a privilege, not a right! They must be worthy!

    REV
    And…

    (Moment’s silence while they try to read each other’s thoughts and speak together)

    REV & VAYRE
    Because…they must be … willing to…

    (Confused halt.)

    VAYRE
    Do anything we tell them?

    REV
    Start at the bottom!

    VAYRE
    Yeah. Like we did!

    REV
    I know, right?

    VAYRE
    So appropriate. I mean if we went through it …

                REV
    

    They should have to.

    VAYRE
    They shouldn’t be able to just get out of it.

    REV
    Why should THEY get a pass? That gives them a completely wrong impression.

    REV
    Yeah! They’ll FAIL!

    VAYRE
    At college!

    REV
    Probably even at LIFE! I mean, it wasn’t even so bad really.

    VAYRE
    Right. Who doesn’t love chocolate?

    REV
    Who doesn’t love a good spanking?

    VAYRE
    I don’t!

    REV
    (Hastily)
    Depends who’s doing it. Who’d you get?

    VAYRE
    Muffy! She’s awful! She really had it in for me!

    REV
    Poor old Muffintop. It’s just jealousy. That’s what THAT is.

    VAYRE
    The Muffintop hates everyone.

    REV
    There’s too much jealousy! Those national women are just angry –check that – FURIOUS about the way their lives turned out. Prom queen divas with three screaming toddlers, a sixty hour job and a husband who sexts.

    VAYRE
    A husband who…what?

    REV
    You know, sends pictures of his junk to TOTAL STRANGERS.

    VAYRE
    Yeah! Poor things! Who wants to ever get old? I never want to leave college!

    REV
    Really? I can’t WAIT to leave college!

    VAYRE
    Why’s that?

    REV
    It’s so freakin’ expensive!

    VAYRE
    Well, apart from that. I mean what’s not to like? It’s like a witness relocation program for teenagers.

                       REV
    

    Yeah but it sucks not having a boyfriend.

        VAYRE
    

    Yeah, being a sex object up for grabs gets old. I HAD a boyfriend.

    REV
    I’m not sure Bucky Buckmaster counts for much.

    VAYRE
    That wasn’t his name.

    REV
    Whatever. I had a stalker that was kind of sexy, but do you hear me bragging? You can’t count high school boyfriends or garage mechanic stalkers. They’re so passé.

    VAYRE
    All because men have that problem with COMMITMENT.

    REV
    They’re shallow is what! They’re not even men! They’re just a bunch of little boys!

    VAYRE
    They need us to show them what’s what.

    REV
    Plan their lives for them.

        VAYRE
    

    Because otherwise they’d just drink beer and watch sports.

        REV
    

    And play video games. Fantasy football twenty-four/seven.

    VAYRE
    Well, we can’t accomplish anything if we spend the rest of our lives in a freakin’ CAVE!

    (Disgusted mutual pause)

    REV
    I would totally leave right now if I knew where that damn hole was.

        VAYRE
    

    I’d be right behind you!

        REV
    

    We’ve got to go back to the plan.

    VAYRE
    Omigod, there’s a plan?

    REV
    I remember talking about a plan

    VAYRE
    (Looking at her phone)

    There’s no signal! I’m not getting a signal!

        REV
    

    Me either!

        VAYRE
    

    Oh, this is bad, bad news. How can we use our GPS? I’m lost without my GPS.

    REV
    It’s those magnetic fields, that’s what it is. I read they all go haywire down here!

        VAYRE
    

    We should have thought of that!

        REV
    

    (In the GPS’s voice)

    Recalculating…

    VAYRE
    So what the hell do we do now?

    REV
    If we back out they’ll say it’s because we’re girls.

    VAYRE
    Yeah, they will! Blast it all over campus!

    REV
    We have to pretend WE set THEM up.

    VAYRE
    Unless they NEVER get out. Then WE’LL be the ones in trouble.

    REV
    We can’t win! But what do you mean “never get out”?? You mean…like, DIE?

    VAYRE
    Face it. Those guys are pretty stupid.

    REV
    What if they never came down in the first place!

    VAYRE
    Yeah! Left us down here by ourselves!

    REV
    They’d think it was funny! Bro Code and Ho Code!

    VAYRE
    Bastards! WE’RE not Hos!

    REV
    They think a “Ho” is any girl who can’t escape.

    VAYRE
    Not the brown-eyed one! He was throwing mad sexy cute vibes at me.

        REV
        That’s all part of their nefarious plan.
    
                VAYRE
    

    I don’t think so. He was seriously sad puppy-eying me!

    REV
    What do you know? You were sexy-beached up out of your mind!

    VAYRE
    I WAS all sexy-beached up our of my mind but sometimes you see most clearly when you’re out of your mind. Don’t forget, I kept adding orange juice. It’s good for you!

    REV
    Yeah! And here we are!

    (Looks around disgustedly.)

    VAYRE
    So let’s say the boys DID come down the tunnel. What’s the plan?

    REV
    We come down the hole and they come down the tunnel. We’re supposed to find each other.

    VAYRE
    Unless we’re in two separate caves!

    REV
    Not according to Blaise Pinwinnie. I googled him. He’ s the guy that originally searched these caves.

    VAYRE
    Wasn’t that like 1863? God! ANYTHING could have happened since then! Tectonic plates have been shifting all over the place! Don’t you ever watch movies?

    REV
    Say we DON’T find them, that’s OK too. If we keep circling we’re bound to end up back where we started. That’s the NATURE of a circle.

    VAYRE
    Unless it’s a spiral.

    REV
    WHAT is your major? Remind me again? “Fashion Ethics”? Let ME do the thinking.

    VAYRE
    My major is not and never has been “Fashion Ethics”. I don’t even think that’s a major. I am currently majorless which is a highly respected condition when you don’t know what you want to do and you don’t want to get stuck doing something you hate.

    REV
    No wonder you want to stay in college forever. Sucks to be your parents is all I can say.

    VAYRE
    Stepfather is another “s” word. Don’t remind me.

    REV
    If there’s a connection we’re going to find it or –

    VAYRE
    Don’t say it! We’ll find it if we DECIDE to find it! Didn’t you read The Secret? If you want something badly enough –

        REV
    

    You believe that garbage? It CAN’T be true or everybody would have everything!

    VAYRE
    No, because people are self-destructive. You wouldn’t argue with that, I hope?

        REV
    

    We’re not self-destructive!

        VAYRE
    

    Right! That’s how I know we’ll find it. You know, I think I see an opening over there.

    (They move slowly downstage, shining flashlights)

                REV
    

    Listen! Did you hear that? You know how boys’ bodies are always making disgusting noises?

    (They listen thoughtfully to audience noises)

    VAYRE
    Nah. It’s the earth groaning or something like that. No big wup.

    REV
    Where ARE they? Up top laughing at us?

    VAYRE
    Maybe they’re dead already.

    REV
    Died from sheer fright, probably! Makes us the last great adventurers!

    VAYRE
    I bet they’re gay. No straight guy could have eyes that beautiful.

    REV
    I HOPE they’re gay! Otherwise – think about it – we’re down here where our cellphones don’t work with a couple of horny frat boys.

    VAYRE
    Maybe they’re not even horny! Seriously! I’ve been reading about it! They’ve all ruined their bodies with masturbation and cheese whiz! If they want to rape anybody they have to get a gang together in a group!

    REV
    That’s disgusting!

    VAYRE
    Yeah, it IS!

    REV
    God, it’s a ruined world left for us to inherit.

        VAYRE
    

    Why do you have to be so negative?

        REV
    

    I’m realistic, is all.

    VAYRE
    Same difference. It would be mad irony if my Mom got the last good generation.

    REV
    I thought you hated your stepfather.

    VAYRE
    I do hate him. He’s good looking though. But talk about negative! Nothing’s ever right for HIM.

    REV
    Well nobody’s helping ME. Even the government wants its money back.

    VAYRE
    Hear that?

    REV
    What?

    (They listen while audience tries to hold its breath.)

    VAYRE
    I’m not sure. Water dripping?

    REV
    Men peeing! Men pee on everything!

    VAYRE
    Like wolves! Or…dogs. It’s the ownership thing!

    REV
    Or a threat! Torturing our sense of smell!

    VAYRE
    Maybe they’re super conniving and Machiavellian and not stupid at all! Talk about snakes!

    REV
    DO NOT SAY SNAKES! If you say the “s” word!” I get to say the “b” word!

    VAYRE
    Don’t you dare!

    REV
    Bats, bats, bats!

    (The girls engage in a vigorous slapfight. Lights out.)

  • I’ll Sleep When You’re Dead

    Chapter 24 – Completing the Maze

    “Jazz, Jazz, Jazz,” Corso shook his head. His voice turned silky. “I am your advisor. It is my job – I think I can say my calling – to step in when you’ve gone astray. And what have you done to your hair? I’m not sure I like it. You look quite a different person. It’s as if you’re attempting a disguise. As Mr. Quinn how that works out. You really require professional intervention at this point, but hasn’t that always been the truth about you?” He turned to Chase.


    “I see you have been hanging around with quite a bad element, Mr. Quinn the housebreaker. Mr. Quinn the burglar. Mr. Quinn who lives – rather tragically I must confess – on the edges of other people’s lives with other people’s things on other people’s money. When will you learn that you are a free agent, Mr. Quinn and not my shadow-doppelganger? Jazz, it grieves me that you are so impressionable.


    “Put down your fists, Mr. Quinn. Did you wish to duke it out? Never let your mouth write checks your body cannot cash. Why don’t you let me explain my proposition before you land yourself in the slammer? I’maware that you can be bought; you’ll see my plan is lucrative. I’ve prepared a spreadsheet for your delectation. If you’ll sit down — and calm down — I’ll show it to you.


    “Do I look dangerous here? Trust me that I’ve come in peace. Now as for you, Jazz, I’m aware that cash can’t sway you or you’d actually have some of it. No, you are motivated by – “ he paused delicately, “I think we’ll call it love. Love, love, love, love, love. Who am I to say it can’t exist? Sit down, Mr. Quinn.”


    To my astonishment Chase sat down. I hesitated, unsure of what to do. I wanted to believe Chase was playing a deeper game – collecting evidence as he had the first time I’d seen him with Corso – but there was a crushed look on his face that hadn’t even showed around his father. Could anyone be that good an actor?


    “This is win, win, children.” To emphasize, Corso leaned forward and Chase flinched as though the other man’s penumbra touched him. Observing his advantage, Corso threw out his arms. “I will lay my life wide open for you, since that’s what you so desire. Tell you all my secrets.” He thumped his chest. “Here’s the first; I am the master key that opens all the doors.” Behind the saturated silk of his voice I heard the scorpion hiss with a sting in its tail.


    “You have no right to be here,” I challenged. “Get out!” Took every ounce of my non-existent courage, I have to say.


    His face assumed a sorrowful mien. “I was so afraid you would start without me,” he sighed. “What can I say to persuade you that I am the multiplier in this equation?”
    “I can take you,” asserted Chase, his voice rough and gravelly as an unpaved road.


    “That would be lovely,” soothed Corso. “By all means let us bench- press each other for the delectation of the fair maiden.” He gestured at my poster. “This is so quaint, Jazz. I’m hoping once you’ve memorized it you’ll loan it to me. If only I had known, every time you said “Oh, Bosch” that you meant Bosch with a “c”. We would have gotten on much faster.”
    “Go to hell,” I returned. Feebly, alas.


    “Jazz, we’re already there,” croaked Chase.
    Oh God, I thought. He’s still set on killing him. Throwing him out the window, like Howk’s body in my vision? I’ve got to do something. But what?


    “Don’t flatter yourself, Mr. Quinn,” snapped Corso, exactly as if we were still in class. “You are just a beginner. Give me a child at the age of seven…then give me another. I’ve plumbed your depths.” He laughed dismissively. “Frankly, Jazz deserves better than you.”
    “We know what you’ve been up to, murdering Miss Howk,” said Chase. “Did she kill your wife for you?”


    A smile broke over Corso’s face. “What fun this game has been,” he sighed. “You advance a pawn, I advance a rook. Rook kills pawn. If I’d had any idea what a pleasure it is having stalkers I’d have tried it long ago. So gratifying to see the pair of you so aroused by my spoor.”
    ““You made all sorts of mistakes,” I said angrily, out of control and aware I shouldn’t be doing this. Should we show him our hand? But the temperature in the room was just too high. I wanted to throw every weapon I could find.


    “I don’t think so,” said Corso. “That doesn’t sound like something I would do. On the other hand, one likes to leave a signature behind. You know Jazz, there’s always more than one suspect. Can you think of anyone who wants to show off for you and thus secure your trust? Is there no one you can think of?” He spoke loudly, as iffor a hidden recording device. “Poor Miss Howk disappeared wearing your scarf, after all. They told me at the Health Center that you seemed angry at her for some reason. Did you take her for a rival?”


    What a master of smoke and mirrors! As if Chase and I didn’t recognize truth when we tripped over it! “You are ridiculous,” I challenged, flinging out the biggest insult I could think of. “What will the dean say about the way you exploit your students? Don’t tell me there isn’t plenty of evidence.”
    “I’m going to tell you something very shocking,” Corso admitted lazily, rising to his feet and peering out my eighth-floor window. He turned his back upon the world to perch upon my ledge. “The internet is full of porn. It’s hard to tell one slave from another. So really, only the slaves can testify they were present at their own comeuppances! Does that sound likely to you? The compensations of continuing just as we are, are enormous. I do wish you’d let me show you.
    Isn’t there anything you desire? Mr. Quinn has a nice shiny car. What do women want? Let me see…hmm…women want men!” He laughed out loud. “I think we’ll guarantee you that! This poor slave, if you require him. Don’t you see yet, you won’t catch flies with threats, adorable little Jazz? Time to try your famous honey instead.” He sighed luxuriously. “Infamous honey, perhaps I should say. Enjoyed by all.”


    I knew the urge to physically attack was just what Corso wanted, so instead of advancing, I retreated, wondering how I could prevent Chase from wrestling with his demon. I walked to the door and turned on the lights. Because right then I saw it all. I had something Corso never had, or if he had, he’d willingly surrendered it. The connection Chase and I had forged to the infinite answered all our questions. With my room’s fluorescent lights lit, the room became a stage. I knew that Bex and his rifle were out there somewhere.


    “You are such a bastard,” spat Chase, staggering to his feet. His face was so drained of blood his freckles stood out like plague spots. Separate, we couldn’t fight him. How could we come together?


    “Oh, come, come,” said Corso, throwing his arms out to embrace the universe, “I gave you what you wanted. I brought her to you, didn’t I? I brought all of them. Turn about is fair play. I’ve upheld my part of the bargain. Now it’s your turn to share.”


    I shouted at Chase, “Transitional objects!” and threw him to the floor in a flying tackle. Chase’s eyes met mine in a suddenly full comprehension. I saw the Corso-induced glaze disappearing from his brain as I mouthed, “Window.”


    Was that crack the window breaking? Crack-crack-crack. Firecrackers. Or bullets. Eight shots, or four shots and four echoes? Who can say? We were face down on the floor in that hug that was our gateway to the universe. We felt, rather than saw, Corso stagger, looked up to see his face express astonishment at his own mortality. He was not immortal, lilies blossomed redly on his naked chest.


    His power sucked out of the room along with his body. Chase leaped to his feet and when I rose to stop him from following the cascade of shattered glass I saw on the library roof what I expected to see; the glittering motorcycle jacket, the gleaming long gun.


    I pulled Chase down and held him as hard as I could.
    “What a monster,” said Chase. “Hold me.”


    I held him. “You’re mine,” I told him. “And I’m yours. You have to stay with me.”
    I felt the tension in his body ebb as we both awakened from our long sleep. We had never been able to fight him separately but together we were invincible.


    The sound of sirens gave us courage to lean out and look out upon the new world. The snow had started falling, and snowflakes gathered on Corso’s naked chest where he lay shattered below us in the parking lot. He was human after all. The flickering lights came closer; a symphony of color and music playing in our honor. A few distant walkers huddled around the dead man, taking cell phone pictures and shouting.


    “It’s great to dream,” said Chase, “And it’s wonderful to be awake.”


    I kissed him hard and he kissed back. “Come on,” said Chase. “It’s time to free the others.” The skin crinkled around his blue eyes as the spirit – my spirit — danced within him.

  • I’ll Sleep When You’re Dead

    Chapter 23 – Together

    We awoke cuddled together at the foot of Chase’s bed, wrapped in his comforter. Chase was moaning.


    “Too late,” he said, “too late.” I kissed him and ran to the kitchen for coffee. Caffeine and aspirin. When I came back he was holding his head.
    “Bad one,” he said.


    “Except we found her!” And I felt fine. I was beginning to see the psychic pain engendered by our flights was different according to what we went in with and how we could process what we learned. See? If there’s always progress, there’s always hope.
    “Maybe Bex will loan me his gun,” moaned Chase.


    I made him drink bitter instant coffee. Our roles were reversed from my “spontaneous combustion” at Hadleigh. As log as there were two of us, we could help each other through anything.
    “W don’t need Bex for anything and we certainly don’t need guns,” I insisted.


    Chase rolled coffee around his mouth as if was a fine wine; then ruined the effect by gargling. “Well then what the hell are we going to do?”


    “Maybe we can’t get Corso for everything,” I asserted, acting brave for Chase’s benefit, “But we can make a start. The sex thing is bad. He’s involved with his students, so even if he tries to blame us, they’ll do something to him. Maybe they’ll lock him up.”
    “You’re willing to have the world…see that?”


    “I think the world may be already seeing it.” Although it would be just like Corso to play gatekeeper so he could make money. Off of us. Besides, we owed the others something; at the very least to make sure “dream lab” never happened again. “We’ll go to the Dean. Remember, he said dream lab was recorded. He has to show them something. ”


    “He’ll just say the equipment malfunctioned,” sighed Chase, rubbing his jaw as if soul flight dislocated it. “How about this, I promise we’ll do whatever you think is right.”


    “First, walk me back to my room so I can get my things.” It would only take moments to pack it up and never return to that “sick building”. I admitted the unmentionable. “I’m scared of Bex.”
    “Let’s go.” He struggled to his feet, rolling a bit as we came together. Steadying each other. “And then I’ll fix that window.”


    Darkness was just settling on an ordinary – to everyone else — Sunday afternoon. Students strolling, linking, hailing one another and hooking up. It looked safe. It looked as if all we had to fear was each other. That’s what the maze-master wants the mice to think.


    “Let’s don’t wait until it gets too dark,” I angsted in full Foreboding Mode.
    “I’m ready. Thanks for the “to go”. He flourished at me his plastic cup.


    We crossed the quad without a problem, though I felt people looked at us strangely. Because we walked so close together, marching hip to thigh in a solitary unit? Inside Hadleigh, I allowed myself to unravel a bit as the hiss of automatic doors closed us in.
    “One down,” I said aloud.


    I might sigh with relief, but my inner bell was gonging, and I’ve learned to ignore that at my peril. Something was wrong but I couldn’t tell what. Still, here at Hadleigh we were surrounded by students; the night security guy had even taken over the desk. Phones in every room, cell phones in every pocket.


    First warning: elevator out of order. That was the first bad thing. And the freight elevator was in service. We waited for it quite awhile.


    “Eight floors is not so bad,” said Chase. “No pain, no gain.” Tossed his coffee cup into the trash.
    He said that so lightly, then saw me wince.


    “Sorry,” he apologized. “It’s just that we’re fighters now. Can’t afford to ditch training just when you’re approaching Final Contest. “ He took my hand. “Come on, I’ll race you.” As we chased up the stairwell he shouted. Facilis descensus averno!”


    “You got that right,“ I puffed. Going up is so darn hard! It’s so much easier to let your muscles go limp and slide. But…better up than down.


    At every floor the fire doors were propped open – illegally, but it lent me confidence. Heartening scraps of music could be heard at every floor; Snow Patrol, Hands Down, Vampire Weekend.

    Speaking of Vampire Weekend, there were so many people around. Nothing can go wrong in a big crowd. Right? Unfortunately most of them were hollow-eyed revenants fleeing Saturday night crime scenes for parietals. With their piss- stained hair and their bile-stained clothing they were not good advertisements for the party-hearty lifestyle. Somehow we never get to see the “after” photos. Corso’s zombies. I imagined the mark of Corso on every forehead.


    I believe they shuddered as much at the sight of us as we shuddered at the sight of them. Because we were going up, like fireman, while they fled the burning building? Maybe we are all just ghosts to each other anyway.


    When I exercise I can’t talk. So I have to think. If shame is felt only by the haunted, that’s damned unfair. Gives the thin edge of the wedge to those like Dr. Corso who applaud a guiltless super-race. Confidence and entitlement – those most envied of attributes — shine out around him like a magical light. At least two corpses in his wake plus a genocidal wave of shame. And what of bodies unrecovered?


    “We’re dead to him already,” I gasped aloud.


    Chase knew exactly what I meant. “If so, he’s wrong,” said Chase, hardly showing the effects of an eight-storey climb, “I was dead but you brought me back to life.”


    “He’s the dead one”, tolled my inner bell. I took off my shoes for the last three flights. I think now I can say I’ve officially had it with stiletto heels. It’s kitten heels from here on out, unless Chase begs. I wished I could say something light, to conceal the fact that I was puffing too hard, but I was puffing too hard.


    “And I don’t even smoke,” I said, unlocking my door.
    Chase proclaimed our new mantra “Facilis descensus–,”


    “Avernum!” Corso finished triumphantly. He lay stretched at full length upon my bed, shirtless and exposing his perfect six-pack. “So glad you’ve been keeping up with your Virgil, Stevie. You’ve got to be careful to get the declensions right. Excuse me, I mean Chase, of course.”


    How was he able to suck every scrap of power out of a room and use it to fuel his own personal generator? Reading glasses perched upon his nose and my laptop perched upon his thighs. He turned his shining face to me and said, “I must apologize for checking your work, Jazz but it did get a bit dull waiting for you. Unfortunately, there’s no work here. There are, however, lots of other interesting things. JazzOne makes a terrible password. How’s the chemistry going?”
    No, no, don’t close the door; don’t lock us in with the monster. But these damned heavy, soundproof, fireproof doors – so unlike poor Miss Howk’s – close by themselves.

    I was still holding my shoes; should Ithrow them at him as if he was a dartboard? I flushed; feeling him effortlessly read my every thought. I could flee down the stairs, but I’d never leave Chase alone to face the dragon. I saw his shoulders set in that familiar wrestling stance; but Corso wouldn’t crumble like Bex; this was real-time, and my room is deficient in vases to throw. And besides, if we marked him it put us further in the wrong. My brain seemed frozen. I was long past having clever things to say. All I managed was, “How did you get in?”

  • I’ll Sleep When You’re Dead

    Chapter 22 – Beyond Paradise

    “Look hard at the picture,” said Chase, waving his phone before my face. I closed my eyes. I don’t work that way. I sheltered in Chase’s arms with a sigh, summoning up the vision shot into my mind when Zane recounted his dream-lab experience. Didn’t he say the tunnel had ribs? Like a tin can? That was distinctive. I felt my restless spirit lifting, pulling away, like a pony urgent to run. Chase’s voice cried, “Take me along,” and I kissed him hard. We lifted off together.


    We were standing outside a gate plastered with weather-spotted Danger, Hazardous Conditions, No Trespassing, Condemned, and Bio- Hazard Warning signs. Not a good place for a living victim, since the factory appeared to be missing a roof. But what a great place to hide a body! A long concrete walkway connected the two collapsed buildings with the parking lot.
    “Police take notice,” read Chase.


    “Don’t you think our spirits could have gotten us inside?” I carped, shaking the padlocked fence.
    “We came to the very place pictured,” said Chase. “I call that a ten point landing.”


    “It’s huge,” I complained. “We’ll be like, overcome with fumes before we find her.”
    “We would…if we still had bodies,” Chase reminded me. “You’ve got to admire the genius of the man.”


    I would never praise heinous Corso’s genius but I did recall that Know Your Enemy slogan. Chase had been dragged into the abyss he studied. Now he was climbing out.


    “These signs would discourage daytrippers, that’s for sure,” Chase told me. “An anonymous 911 call would hardly cut it here. The police can’t search without “probable cause” and the probable cause is inside. See? It’s the perfect crime and the perfect victim. When they finally clean this place up and find her–”


    “Why’s poor Howk the perfect victim?”
    “Because no one reported her missing! A lot of people, their first project on growing up is getting rid of everyone they used to know,” said Chase. “I speak as one who did it. Corso specializes in people like that.”


    I shivered. I was trying to leave my family behind, but not forever. Aspirations weren’t a crime, just an opportunity for you-know-who.


    “How do you think he got through here? I can’t picture him searching for a gap in the fence.”
    Chase stood beside me. “He wouldn’t use his muscles for a problem his brain could solve. That padlock looks awfully new, compared to the chain.”


    “So he cut off the old padlock and installed a new one. Then he could drive in.”
    “The owners are obviously staying away. Who wants to get poisoned? See the grass on the driveway? If they ever try to get in they’ll probably cut it open anyway.”


    “Even he couldn’t make the padlock look old,” I reassured – both Chase and myself. “This is a man we’re talking about, not a god. Mistake number 707.”


    “I sure hope he’s made enough mistakes.” Chase had found a weakness in the chain link and lifted it. We crawled underneath.
    The moment my feet touched that ground I knew.”She’s here,” I said, teeth chattering. “I’m certain. She’s in water.”


    “See?” he patted me. “Better than a cadaver dog.”
    Is this the kind of thing you want your boyfriend to say? Too late to quibble – I’m a package with my oddities the way he is with his terrifying past.


    Water? We looked at the dry factory and the completely dry land that surrounded it.
    “Water’s a good idea. He would want her to decompose as fast as possible,” said Chase. “Do you think there’s a well?”


    “Or rainwater might collect somewhere,” I suggested.He said, “Let’s not search. We’ll just allow ourselves to be led.” I agreed. “You track him. I’ll track her.”


    The doors and windows were boarded up efficiently, but behind a piece of plywood awkwardly placed against the front steps we saw a hole. Walking up the drive I thought I saw faint marks of another vehicle, and Chase gestured to me to stay away from them. Do soul-travelers leave footprints?


    The plywood bristled with threats: Danger, Toxic Conditions, Unsafe Building.
    “Corso’s handwriting?” asked Chase.
    Mentally I thought, Mistake number 708. I was keeping track.


    He pulled aside the piece of plywood and instantly we both saw a shiny new flashlight.
    “Let there be light,” said Chase, and I said,
    “Mistake number 709.”


    “He’s getting sloppy. Sloppiness for him equals hope for us. “ He flourished a hand. “After you.”
    “No, after you.”
    We went in side by side.
    “Hear that?” hissed Chase.


    I did hear it. The sound that haunted all my dreams. Water dripping equals the slow drip of despair.
    “Be careful,” I said nervously. The subfloor was broken and exposed and the dripping came from underneath us, as if the factory was built over not a well, but a lake. We stepped around the holes, sharing the flashlight, Chase kicking out of our way boards and bricks and lumps of plaster.
    “Sorry to hang on you so hard,” I apologized, but I didn’t stop doing it.
    He said, “If we fall, we fall together.”


    He shined the flashlight down every hole. I looked and said, “Nope.” “Nope.” Always relieved that she wasn’t there, partly worrying that she had sunk so deep, or was covered with such muck, she’d be invisible anyway. Then I saw something.


    “A flower!” I cried out loud. No. Couldn’t be. Something else that shimmered whitely. Arms locked around each others’ waists we looked so closely, holding our joint breath, that what we saw might have been a reflection of our shocked faces were it not for the 3-D effect of suppurating flesh. Decomposing skin shimmering like a water lily in the darkness. A water lily waving its color-blocked tendrils up at me…


    “Oh my God,” I panicked, “She’s wearing my scarf. There can’t be another scarf in the world like that.”


    And there went the flashlight. We heard the clink and splash. Around us all was darkness. We stood amidst traps and gaps and pools of pullulating puke…even bodiless you’d hate to experience them. Scariest thing ever.


    “Goddamit,” I said. Then, “Sorry. How can we get back?”


    He held me, nuzzling. “We don’t need the light. We’re soulmates, remember? We have each other. We know where she is and that’s all we wanted. But explain to me why she’s wearing your scarf?”
    “Corso took it from me. He said he needed something personal of mine.”


    Chase snorted. “You should have known better than that!”
    “But what could I do? I only had the clothes that I walked in with. I wasn’t expecting that…I didn’t know what to do.”


    “I’m sorry,” said Chase. “I’m stupid to make it sound like your fault. He’s always doing that, looking for ways to make people think he has magical powers over them. Just so he can think he’s caught us.”


    “He has caught us.”“Never. I’ll never uncle to him. We have to expose him. Tell the
    truth is all we can do. If they hear what he’s done, then we hope…”
    It sounded feeble even to me and I’d said the same thing myself. We needed more than reassurances; we needed a place to stand. I could imagine Corso’s silver tongue eloquence running rings around our confused protestations, “We just kind of knew” “We were there except we weren’t”.


    If he was exposed, then so were we, and who looked worse? The eminent psychologist or the hardscrabble, drug-taking, very confused and sexed-up students? From TV I knew enough of police procedure to know that the first thing they would do would be to separate us. I wasn’t a weakling, but I didn’t relish hours without Chase, tying to explain the inside of my brain to a group of skeptical men who looked just like the Fluffernutter dads.
    And if our challenge collapsed, what was left for us? Corso had invaded not just our minds and bodies, but our futures as well.


    “We can’t tell them about the sleep soaring,” I whispered into Chase’s neck. “I don’t want them knowing.” It was too private, too secret, too much our special strength. I feared they might have the ability to take it away. I wanted to keep the knowledge of our bond between us forever, growing as naturally as it needed to, a flexible unseen strength linking us to eternity.
    “See?” he said gently, reading my thoughts. “You’re coming around to where I am. Don’t you agree it’s easier just to kill him?”


    “No,” I protested. “No. Violence is one of the circles of hell. We can’t go there. We can’t…”
    “I’m in hell already,” he said. Maybe we both were. But intuitively I knew that the very reason we walked harmless through this hell, now, was because we had not accepted Corso’s invitations to rage, spite, deceit, plunder. To all the sick, sick sins.


    My lips came closer to Chase’s mouth as I whispered, “We’ve got something he can never have.“ Even if he stole our futures, he could never possess our now. The power parts hadn’t captured.
    “You’re right.” He sounded so uncertain but he was trying to believe it.


    In answer I just kissed him, massaging the back of his neck until he went limp against me, and I fell limp against him and we soared into each other’s minds and spirits, dancing up into the stratosphere with the stars to keep us company. We didn’t need tea, or ocean sounds or candles. We only needed each other. And so home. Because we were exhausted and people have to sleep.

  • I’ll Sleep When You’re Dead

    Chapter 21 – Paradise

    Somehow we had broken the window and we lay tangled up together in venetian blinds and glass. I had cut my face and Chase had cut his arm, but it was nothing serious. Chase helped me get vertical. We were safe in Chase’s room, and we were alive. How ever many lives we were “down”, it seemed we had some left. Life itself seemed an incredible treasure.


    We collapsed together on the bed. “Thank God for transitional objects,” I gasped.
    Chase passed me a water bottle. We blotted each other’s wounds.
    “Am I the transitional object?” asked Chase, kissing my knuckles. I felt the solidity of the bed with its honeycomb quilt and Spiderman sheets.


    “I think everything that’s not us is a transitional object,” I said slowly. “We have to look for the pieces that don’t fit. Remember the vase I hit your father with?”
    Chase nodded. “That was so weird. My Dad despised what he called “femininities” – he would never have allowed an object like that in his Man- cave. Have we seen it before? ”


    I had recognized it. “It was on the terrace at Mrs. Corso’s…full of dead chrysanthemums.”
    We looked at each other, both saying at once, “Transitional object!”


    “It shows our voyages are all connected.” He took the water bottle from me, shuddered as he sipped, threw himself on his back. “You were right there, but I can’t believe we experienced the same thing? Did you go through what I went through?”


    That was a good question. Could it ever be answered?


    “It was crazy,” I said, drinking. I was so thirsty, but I didn’t have the terrible hangover of the first time. “Celebrating your mother’s birthday in a Norman castle at Christmas.”


    Light sprang into his eyes as he leaned forward intensely. He could have been anyone seeking news from home. Then the light failed as he remembered and fell backwards. Rubbed the eyes that had seen too much. “I guess my unfinished baggage derailed us from what we should have done”.


    Always with the self-punishment! I shook my head. “No. Because we finally found out the truth.” And then I remembered what the truth was, and the full horror of what we had discovered swarmed over me. Could that be real, that, minds banished, bodies hijacked for indentured servitude? And did I really want to know?


    “Do you think she forgave me?” Chase inquired wistfully. I tried following his thought. “Your mother?”He wiped his face, which was wet. With water or tears?


    “Her birthday actually is in August. But she killed herself the Christmas I refused to come home.”
    So that’s what he’d been living with! Poor Zoya! I was aghast. No wonder he needed to see her again. “She toasted to life,” I recalled. “Don’t you remember? To life…and she said what’s past is past. I recall that distinctly.” I touched his chest, massaging his heavy heart to keep it going. “I know she’s forgiven you. On the other hand, your father…”


    Chase shook his head from side to side, tossing away the painful thoughts. “You know we never lived in that house. That was the house they were building when my Dad declared bankruptcy. But you know the Many Worlds theory of quantum mechanics says if more than one outcome of events is possible, all of them occur. Just in different universes.”


    “None of the bad stuff is your fault,” I asserted forceful as I knew how. “Your father was a monster.”
    “Yeah.” agreed Chase hopelessly. “Everything for him is a dominance struggle. And he’ll cheat to win.”


    “Those plaster statues of you and your sister…” Deliberately I changed the subject, someone backing away from a raging fire.


    “Those were life-casts. Mom made them, but I wrecked mine. It took hours and we had to breathe through straws. It was really unpleasant, being naked in cold plaster and having to hold still, but Mom was very determined. I was so angry that she didn’t have the nerve to make mine anatomically correct. I felt like a Ken doll. It was during the Corso years and she made me look unfinished, like a girl. Dad was already teasing me for singing soprano… I was so full of rage. I smashed it to pieces.”


    “Bex shot us,” I said. “Do you think Bex could really have a gun?”
    “And I wrecked Shelby. Like I wreck everything.”


    “But if we’re still here the Shelby must be, too. Where would Bex get a rifle? Maybe he traded in his motorcycle.” That really scared me. He would be giving himself no way out. “And where would Bex get a car?”


    I answered my own question. “That’s a no brainer. He’d steal it. He always bragged he could get into any car. Wouldn’t faze him.”


    “Maybe he stole a rifle,” said Chase without thinking. We looked at each other. Not cheered up. “Or it’s just symbolic or something,” suggested Chase. “A transitional object.”
    Yeah…symbolic of learning to judge people and see inside them. Like now I had seen inside Chase. I clutched his hand. “We took a bath together…don’t you remember that?”


    He kissed my arm all the way up. “It was like being reborn. Like we were kids together.”
    “We are kids together. And I learned your real name.”“Don’t say it!” he touched my lips superstitiously as if those secret words had the power to send us back.


    I fell back on the bed, looking at the ceiling, trying to clear my mind. Now that Chase had transferred his roiling thoughts to me, my mental crystal ball felt cloudy. “What I don’t understand is how we can experience things that never happened, in places that don’t exist.”
    He said, “It’s a fractal. A repetitive pattern.”


    “From the past?”
    He shrugged. “You can dip your hand in the same river twice…unless the river doubles back. I think we voyaged in my head. ” He didn’t sound enamored of the idea.


    “Or we created a parallel universe together.” I suggested, more confidently. “It’s like a poem, or a symphony. You take the pieces that exist and rearrange them, the better to show off their power.”
    “Did you hear about the maze worms?”


    The threatening wind poured in the broken window so I pulled up the coverlet. “Tell me about the maze worms. Please please please.”


    “Well, after these worms got really good at negotiating a maze, they ground them up and fed them to newbie worms. And the newbie worms figured out the maze immediately.”
    I shuddered. “I don’t want to be ground up and fed to future generations so they can avoid my mistakes!”


    He laughed out loud. “You’re missing the point of the story! It proves memories are chemical!”
    “Well, I want to forget mine,” I said soberly, pulling the covers over my head.
    He held me. He rocked me. “I’m sorry,” he whispered. “Can you ever forgive me? I thought the pain would keep me awake. But I guess you can get used to anything.”


    So that explained the disgusting sore he’d cultivated. I pulled my covers off abruptly. “Is it true? Did Corso really turn dream lab into internet sex-walking?” Here was the dragon in the room. The question was whether Pandora’s box was smashed forever.


    “It makes sense to me.” Chase almost choked. “I’m sorry. I’m sorry. I should have killed him before he could –” He struck his forehead hard with his fist. I pulled his hand down.


    “Stop it. We can’t let this tear us apart. You know that’s what he wants — to keep us weak, to keep us from fighting back. We’re closer than ever. That means we’re stronger than ever.” Now I really knew what Chase had been through. Body – stolen – identity – ruined – future — compromised.


    We held each other as tightly as we could until our two hearts beat together.
    “I swear I didn’t know,” said Chase. “But the hell of it is, I could have guessed.”


    “Forgive yourself,” I insisted. “I’m trying to forgive myself. He injured us both of us — together.”
    “If you can do it I can try.” Hipbone to hipbone, chest to chest, knee to knee, we clung together. We’re soulmates, and soulmates are invincible.


    ““I love it that our dream’s a mix of both of us,” said Chase. “It’s like a child we had. Makes me feel like a creator.” He expelled a long sigh. “My grandmother believed that man and woman form one angel.”


    “Sounds like a forward-thinking lady,” I murmured. “Maybe we knew each other in another life?”
    He kissed my hair. “We know each other in this one. That’s a lot. “
    It’s like we’ve climbed the highest mountain there is.


    I said, “To defeat a body thief we’ve got to use our brains. The secret’s hidden in our soul-flights. Have to be.”
    He held me tight. “I love your bravery. But what if there is no answer?”


    “But there has to be. You left dream lab before you heard all the stories, but they were full of meaning. Koo’s vision was of unzipping body bags – well, we would have had to unzip those suits. Soliz dreamed of being naked and ashamed. But Zane dreamed he was walking through an abandoned factory—“


    “Now you’re talking!” said Chase excitedly. “You dreamed of Mrs. Corso’s body…and then we found it! An abandoned factory would be a great place to hide Howk’s body! These transitional objects are like doors into the next puzzle,” said Chase. “The one we haven’t solved is the Hadleigh one. That was overtly about Howk’s body so the answer must be there. What was the weirdest thing about it? The piece that doesn’t fit?”


    He had always possessed this magic ability to fill me with confidence. “You’re right. I can do this. Well, the oddest part is, it wasn’t a thing – it was a person. Officer Blofil, the policeman we spoke to. He was the thing that didn’t belong. I read his nameplate so carefully, thinking at the time it was a funny name, kind of treasuring it. Because it was so memorable.”


    He snatched his Smart phone off the coffee table. “So it is. Spell it.”
    I spelled. He typed.


    “No Officer Blofil on the campus force, or the town police. Here goes a general search.” He drummed his fingers impatiently.


    I was impatient, too. The ghosts of all the murdered memories banged on my heart; an arrhythmia acquired when our hearts skipped and our bodies unsynched. If we wanted to re-possess ourselves, we needed a way back in.
    “Let me know what you find.”


    I wandered into the bathroom and looked in the mirror. This mugshot face was too familiar. I picked up Chase’s hair scissors and attacked my head. Snip, snip. Without my luxuriant locks, Corso would never have chosen me.


    I’ve got it!” shouted Chase from the other room.


    I brushed myself off and joined him.
    “Recognize me?” I challenged. “I don’t want to look like anyone else any more.”


    He smiled his most beautiful smile. “I’ll always recognize you.” I threw myself into his strong wrestler’s arms. We fit together perfectly, like interlocking parts.


    He rubbed the top of my newly pinked head. “I know the feeling,” he reassured me. “Here’s the dream right here.” I could have wept from gratitude.


    “So what did you find?” Now I could face it. Now I wanted to know. “You look,” he said, swiveling the phone towards me.


    Headline: “Insulation Factory Closes, 50 Jobs Lost.” The sign on the gate said “Blow-fill”.
    “Abandoned factory a hundred miles away,” suggested Chase. “”Trust Corso to invent a crime scene that provides its own cleanup.”


    “We could get there in the Shelby in a couple of hours.”


    “Or…” I murmured.
    He understood me immediately. “You think it’ll work again?”


    “No harm trying. I think we’re getting better at it. The first two times hurt so much I had a hangover. Now it’s not so bad.”


    He laughed. “Other than the feeling of being beaten like a rented mule.”


    Well, we couldn’t go through what we’d experienced and come off scot-free. I didn’t mention Bex lurking somewhere outside, with or without a gun. If we left our bodies, even though he might pursue he could wreak less damage.


    Chase’s bed became our rocket ship.

  • I’ll Sleep When You’re Dead

    Chapter 20 – Revenge

    “I’m so sorry,” said Chase. “He’s a monster. But I’ll get even with him. I’ll get him eventually.”
    “Slow down,” I said, braced against the dashboard, scrabbling for my seatbelt. “Put your seatbelt on.” He was driving like a maniac.


    “He never pinned me,” said Chase, grinding his teeth. “It’s a question of how low you’re willing to go, and no one’s ever willing to go as low as him.” Which father was he talking about now? In some perverse way, were they both the same to him?


    The car raced upward through the gears. I tried attaching Chase’s seatbelt. He rocked in his seat, rejecting restraints.


    Probably not a good time to bring up what we had just seen, right now, when I was in fear for my life. Before my eyes danced raucous headlines; framed gothic visions of Mom and Annika viewing my shattered corpse. How could they know that before my death my body had been stolen, my shell invaded by hermit crabs and passed around like an intoxicant? If I had been beamed into outer space as an alien plaything then what was left for me? Who was I now? Could I ever get myself back? I had never felt so separate from Chase; with this dissonance our flying must become destructive and destroy us both.


    My panic boiled into words. “Tell me it’s not real! The sex tape he showed us?” Corso’d deliberately banished our souls, disinvoked the spirits he had no use for…
    Chase turned to me the stricken face of a drowning man going down for the last time.


    “Of course it’s real,” he said. “Don’t you see it explains everything? Sexsomnia. I knew it was something like that. If you flood the hippocampus it can’t make any memories to retrieve. He did always want to be the only brain in the room.”


    “You mean…he rufied us?” I was as disgusted at myself as at Corso. Madder, if anything. I knew Corso was a snake. Why had I taken the chance when deep inside I could see perfectly well how dangerous he was?


    “He must have used something extra to jumpstart the acetylcholine flood, to overcome sleep paralysis. Maybe propanolol. That’s been found to erase adrenalin-fueled memories. We were sleepwalking.“


    “This is your fault,” I yelled angrily, bracing my body against the tinted window. “You led us there; we were lambs to the slaughter.”


    “You’re right.” Chase looked sadly at me with terrible eyes. “It’s all my fault. They always say they’ll let you go if you bring another one. I’m a hellhound. Someone better put a stop to me.”
    But he was also putting a stop to me…Obviously a very bad time to stage a fight — angry, scared, insulted as I was.


    “Don’ t you see at least it’s the evidence we’ve been looking for? But to tell them we have to survive. If you don’t slow down Corso will win.”


    Once again I’d found the magic incantation. Our speed slackened. Then Chase said, “I can’t slow down with that guy on my tail.”


    I checked my side mirror. There was a silver car right behind us as if hooked to our bumper. At first I thought it must be Cutter Farrell looking for payback, refusing to give up, then I saw the unmistakable grinning face extend outside the window a long, black gun.


    “Oh, my God, it’s Bex!” I cried. Who let Bex in? Who was allowing Bex to steer? It could only be me.


    The shot was synchronous with a muzzle flash and Shelby’s back window exploded. A tree flew up suddenly in front of us. Panic clogged my brain to slow motion as I tried working out the problem. We flew all right; separate and upside down. I felt my own teeth shatter as they telescoped into the dashboard; Chase shot through the windshield like an astronaut and the whole back of the car reared up to flip us over. Tree branches grasped me upside down and warm blood flooded my eyes. I heard rather than felt the bones in my body dissolving; veins and sinews shredding, yet somehow I was speaking.


    “Wake up.” I pleaded. “Hold me.” The part of myself that Corso didn’t want was talking to the spark of Chase’s essential self as we struggled back to life.

  • I’ll Sleep When You’re Dead

    Chapter Nineteen – Inferno

    We were saved from the Tale of the Five High Schools by the door to the garage blowing open. A man and a dog flew in. The dog was an Irish setter, just like the one on Zoya’s card. Rushing Chase, she wagged so hard she was moving as much sideways as forwards.


    “Hi, Honey,” said Chase, offering cheese. “Her name is Honey,” he confided out of the side of his mouth to me.


    ”Don’t feed Honey from the table,” lectured Zoya, but not as if she really thought she’d have an impact. She was looking hard at the man slowly removing his muddy outdoor gear.


    If I had ever wondered what Chase would look like at sixty, here was one way to guess. This man was a little shorter than his son, a little broader, head crested by an unkempt pelt of graying ginger hair standing straight on end. He kicked off his boots, hung up a glittering mackintosh and stood twisting a leash over and over in his hands as if undecided who to sentence to home confinement.
    His gin-colored eyes froze me. Chase had his mother’s eyes, thank God. This man was like one of the Fluffernutter dads; always conducting some internal experiment with me as bound captive. His eyes rolled me in a way that made me shiver.


    Zoya, who had been throwing ice, bitters and boozes into a glass tall enough to match her own, rushed forward on her teetering high heels.
    “Drink?” she asked hopefully.Good call. He pocketed the leash to accept his drink.

    “My father, Cutter Farrell,” Chase introduced formally.
    Now I knew Chase’s real name — Steven Farrell. Was this magic I could use?


    Cutter advanced in a stiff-kneed walk, studying me to the point of embarrassment as if purchasing livestock. I felt like one of those maiden offerings in the Bible; scoured for “blemishes”. Damn Chase anyway for arguing against masks and makeup in his silver-tongued way. With my mask on, I would have been more bulletproof!


    And it was not as if my judge was blemish-free. His skin was stained raw with weather or drink and so heavily lined you could lose large objects in those crevices. The seams assumed a jigsaw pattern; as if he had been cobbled together from the rejected parts of his perfect children.
    “Jasmyn Suzino,” said Chase. Since I was holding my breath.


    I felt mysteriously handed over, as if he was giving me away. It’s not so much your beloved’s parents that are the problem; it’s the way your beloved acts around them. I was being introduced to the dragon I was meant to battle. Like a desperate deb ejected from the cotillion I offered my hand; palm up. He took it, holding it too long; stroked the palm, counted out some crazy incantation and folded my fingers inward as if a mysterious something had passed between us. His own hands felt mangled, like someone let a chisel slip. I could perform no mind or muscle reading on this man. That might have been the spell he’d attempted to invoke; certainly his was a very unpleasant mind to read. In fact, I flushed hot beneath his raunchy gaze. Was it me and Chase he trying to imagine in bed together? Or me and him?


    “Jasmyn just had the most horrible experience,” gushed Zoya the Great Distracter, plainly expert at throwing herself in front of problematic conversations as if they were runaway trains. “A girl fell out of her window and was killed.”


    Cutter Farrell took a long drink, still staring. He didn’t say, “Poor Jasmyn.” He said, “That’s one way to get rid of a roommate.”


    Naked-faced and undisguised, I blushed that deep and painful flush that old men so relish.
    Chase’s father smiled. He seemed profoundly uninterested in strange women falling out of buildings, compared to this live woman, brought into his house by his son and currently standing right in front of him. I picked up my glass; needing booze but also requiring something to throw. Now I get why people clutch these things so fiercely at parties, along with anything else they can find; cigarettes, bongs or Desert Eagles.


    “Suzino,” Cutter drawled. “What kind of a name is that?”
    “Portuguese,” I told him bravely. “I think my Mom took out some syllables so people could pronounce it.”


    “Lot of that going around.” Cutter slyly eyed his frozen son. “So, is your father still in the picture, so to speak?”
    “Dad,” warned Chase.I gave the short answer. If the truth hurts, you had better get used to
    it. “No.”


    “That’s the Portuguese in him,” said Cutter, laughing mirthlessly. He pulled a grape off the plate and popped it in his mouth.


    “Dad, that’s a rotten thing to say,” said Chase. I had never heard Chase’s voice this weak, this emotional. I admit it scared me. By now he ought to know insulting comments from family members are better ignored. Otherwise, where could we all go from here?
    Cutter turned his attention to his son. “Nice of you to show up,” he sneered. Without taking his eyes off his son, “When’s dinner?”


    “Maybe an hour. Maybe forty-five minutes.” The priestess seemed suddenly vague and dispirited, as if the magic might not come together after all. As if ultimately, no one could be nourished. Maybe the whole concept of food was just a tiresome illusion.
    “Good,” said Cutter, drumming his fingers on the granite counter top. “I’d like to speak to the pair of you in my study.”


    As I climbed off my barstool he said, “Bring your drink. You’ll need it.”
    I couldn’t stop thinking of the leash in his pocket. This seemed like a man to whom everything was a weapon. But what could he do with it? Tether us to something? To each other? I was plenty scared but determined to hide it. I knew Chase needed me to be brave.
    Argued Chase palely, “We can talk here.”
    I hesitated. I certainly wasn’t going alone.


    “You always preferred hanging with the ladies,” said his father, dragging it out. “The ladeeez…” He popped another grape, chomping furiously. “I’ve got something I guarantee you’ll want to see. Call it a business proposition. Man to man. It’s only fair you give me a chance to get some of my money back.”


    This time Chase didn’t resist. I could see it wouldn’t do any good, any way.
    “Here we go.” He gave the last of his cheese to Honey who was drooling with gratitude and kissed his mother as if kissing her goodbye. She put her hands up to the cheek his lips had touched, trying to rescue the kiss from the oblivion where kisses disappear. Maybe she could paste it in her scrapbook.


    I trailed after the two men, noticing their shoulders identically squared. Genetics are amazing. Chase looked so much like his father but was nothing like him inside. Maybe a little of his rabble-rousing came from Dad. Cutter felt the pessimism of the intelligence, but had clearly never experienced the optimism of the will. That must be Chase’s legacy from Zoya. Cutter acted like a man who thought with his body. He might be heavier and meaner but if it came to a battle my money was on smarter, younger, sweeter Chase. No contest.


    The study was the exact opposite of the blazing dining room. Here was a place where light was not admitted. Although he had the best window in the house – a huge, rounded Palladian – the dusty wooden shutters stretching across it looked inoperable. In the murk I saw a widescreen TV, uncomfortable-looking leather sofas dotted with hook-like buttons, and a massive rolltop desk exploding with papers. Past due notices, doubtless. The decor was oppressively masculine; rifles, creels, pictures of dead animals. It smelled like no one was ever allowed in to clean; more likely no one wanted to. The miasma was too destructive.
    Chase put his hands on his hips and assumed an aggressive stance the moment the door was closed.


    “What’s this all about?” He asked. “Don’t think I’m putting money into any of your schemes.”
    I put down my wineglass hastily in case I had to back him up.His father smiled richly as if about to share a hellatious joke. “You’ll love this one,” he said. “It’s surefire. I found it on the internet!”
    We stood in semi-darkness. I thought it odd that nobody even tried turning on a light. On the other hand, twilight fed my fantasy. If I summoned up the power of invisibility, I could take Chase with me. The party was over.


    Cutter picked up the TV remote and black and white figures, seen from overhead, uncoiled in slow motion and jumped out into the room.


    They were naked. All the archetypes represented,– cheerleader, jock, the gay black guy – Bettie Page — they were us. There in the horribly familiar dream lab six figures slithered and surrendered, piled and unpiled, higgledy-piggledy. All that was lacking was a musical score. Ragtime would have been perfect. Cutter rewound and replayed some treasured moments.


    “Oh, my God, I’m going to be sick,” I said turning away. I looked around desperately for something to use for a basin. Fishing creel? Powder horn?
    The men ignored me.
    “Give me the disc,” said Chase. He charged his father.


    “It’s digital, you idiot,” said Cutter, holding him off effortlessly. “Don’t you think it will make millions? Here’s a fine thing for a father to have to see. I hope they paid you plenty. How much for whoring out your girlfriend? Is that what they give credit for at college these days? I suppose you’ll claim it’s art? “ He raised his voice to a high, mincing screech with a weird Irish accent. “Will you be taking it around to the film festivals?”


    “Give -–me—the remote,” grunted Chase, darting with his father. They grabbed at each other’s heads; cuffing like bears, trying to bring each other down.


    Couldn’t Chase see a fight was exactly what his father wanted? No physical confrontation could repair this disaster. I backed away as father and son struggled together, rocking against furniture, colliding against walls.


    “Isn’t this a fine birthday present for your mother?” gasped Chase’s father. “Always wanted to show the world what a big man you.”


    The remote fell to the floor while they struggled, film frozen on a single frame: the long naked back and bald head of Dr. Corso looming over our pile like a cat peering into a fishbowl. I denied, I prayed, I pretended, I bargained; it couldn’t be real. My intuition reached horrible perfection; my golem-mask had launched into eternity, discreditable and disgusting forever and ever. How does one come back from that? What is left? Could I flee my tarnished body and remain simply spirit, forever? Bereft, abandoned; we needed to awaken from this nightmare, but there was no life to get back to. My body had been stolen. I needed another universe, a place without technology, sex or even self-awareness. A world without betrayal.


    “Run, Jazz,” choked Chase. His father had him in a strangle lock.
    “Too late, Missy,” grunted Cutter. ‘Those pictures are your résumé. Follow you forever until you die of AIDS. Welcome to the big time, buddy! Don’t blow your shot!”


    Chase whimpered with rage. His momentary recoil allowed his father to bend down, grab his son by bicep and ankle, and attempt the cross face cradle I’d been trained to recognize. I shouted something like, “Stop that!” or “Get off him!” but they both ignored me. The moment his son’s shoulders touched the floor, Cutter threw his arms up in a winner’s salute.


    “Pinned,” he grinned, turning his attention to me, “Don’t I get the girl? Everyone else did. To the victor belong the spoils.”


    Panicky, I was feeling for the door. Cutter kicked his son as he stepped over him; Chase grabbed his leg and threw him. On his way down Cutter hit the side of the coffee table, painfully. But like an adrenalin-crazed fighter he didn’t seem to notice it.


    ‘Hey, I won fair and square,” he said. “Who’s the better man? You uncled.”
    “I’ll never uncle to you,” said Chase, hoisting himself up. “Keep going, Jazz. We’re getting out of here.”


    His father lunged for him. I grabbed a hefty vase, broke it over hard his head. Cutter went down.
    Zoya was right outside, cleaning a front hall that didn’t need cleaning. She wore reading glasses not to miss any microbes; tore them off the moment she saw us.


    “Where are you going?” she gasped. “You can’t go. Jasmyn, make him listen.”
    “We’re leaving, Mom,” said Chase. “Can’t stay. Dad’s up to his tricks. But it was good to see you, though. Happy birthday anyway.”


    He picked her up as if she was a doll and set her aside to stand with her plaster children.
    “Please don’t go,” she begged. She started to cry. “Let’s talk it out.”


    “Sorry,” said Chase. “Not this time. You can come with us, but we’re leaving.”
    She backed away, shaking her head as if she feared he might kidnap her. And we were out the door.


    Chase stepped on the gas, making the engine roar while I was still climbing into the car. I was afraid of getting run over – or worse – far worse — left behind.

  • I’ll Sleep When You’re Dead

    Chapter 18: The Ninth Circle

    Zoya appeared at the foot of the stairs carrying a bottle of wine. “Sweetie,” she said, “I need your help with this.”We followed her into the dining room.


    Winter darkness turned the windows into mirrors, multiplying a thousand-fold the chilly light of red and silver candles. Pelmets and chandelier festooned with holly; mistletoe and evergreen looped with golden ribbon. High backed chairs sat before complex place settings of multiple plates; amethyst crystal and violet chintz-patterned china. Under a glass dome sat a white coconut cake decorated with careful icing flowers; lilies rioting with orchids, because sugar has no season. Absence is not presence. The emptiness made me shiver.


    “You look lovely in Cyanne’s clothes, by the way,” Zoya told me, her eyes moistening as if Cyanne had gone forever and would never come back. “You remind me of her, though your coloring’s so different. Snow White and Rose Red. Did you see the scrapbooks? I’m the scrapbooker; I put them together. That’s why we need such a big house, because I save everything. I’d love showing you those books; maybe tomorrow afternoon. They’re all in Cyanne’s room. We can have tea and a good cry. ”


    “God, Mom, not the scrapbooks, please,” moaned Chase, as he deployed a silver and ebony handled wine opener.


    “Looking forward to it,” I promised. I would have pinched Chase if I’d been close enough. Zoya and I would cry and Chase would wear the bear costume! That would be better than cake for me, but one must honor the steps of the hostess’ dance. Rely on Jazz to change the subject.
    “Are you the pastry chef?” I asked Zoya.


    “I make everything,” she said. “I embroidered this tablecloth. And the napkins.”
    Loaded with lace. They were exquisite.


    “Mom was raised by nuns,” said Chase, popping opening the wine. Christmas wine from Lebanon, I noticed. “They beat her into submission.”
    His mother squared her shoulders and rapped him lightly with a tinseled and berried silver cake knife.


    “No blasphemy, you heretic. The past is past, and it’s my birthday. Bring in the wine,” she commanded, “Unless you think it should breathe.”


    She put a hand to her own throat. Self-choking? “My yoga teacher has to always remind me to breathe.” She ran back toward the kitchen, like a convict under electronic monitoring who’d strayed too far.


    Chase captured me in the doorway beneath the mistletoe and we felt each other’s heat, skin flushed from a bubble bath, from love, perhaps also from some nebulous but contagious fear. Rose Red. My next archetype?


    Chase was in no hurry to join his mother.


    “I want this moment to last forever,” he muttered huskily. That’s what I thought. Sacred moments.
    “Isn’t it unlucky to bake your own cake?” I murmured to Chase.
    “That’s a rumor started by people who hate to cook,” he told me. “She’s making her own birthday dinner, too.”


    Extra obligation to enjoy it? Anticipatory shudder, at the mounting pressure.
    “She loves to cook,” Chase reminisced. “Not that she eats. My Dad hates her lumps and bulges – though he likes them enough on other women. She loves bringing people together. And nourishing them.“


    What would Chase make of my amiable but haunted mother, my over-eager sister and our cramped apartment? Let’s admit it, families are impossible. No one plays by anyone else’s rules. We were of the tribe that didn’t cook, venturing out on celebration days to one of those horrible sneeze guard factories where uncontrolled children throw meatballs at each other.


    Granting the birthday wish for togetherness, we joined Zoya in the kitchen. The kitchen was welcoming and warm; not threatening like her dining room with its fish forks and demitasses. This obviously was where people would relax if given a choice. The comfortably padded barstools had backs and brass rails and the ceiling offered hanging copper pans like low-hanging fruit. There were enough knife racks, cherry cabinets and gleaming granite for “chef’s delight”.


    At the center of a ring of gas burners, wearing a black apron dotted with pink hearts, the fire priestess herself officiated over a quintet of bubbling pots. Seeing us, she rattled a pair of wine glasses from an overhead rack. This brought up to five – I counted — the total stemware for which I would be personally responsible this evening.


    “I hope you like Welsh rarebit and Coquille Saint-Jacques,” she said, flushed with an outer heat and an inner excitement that made her rouge stand out in patches. “It’s so hard to keep the rarebit from separating.”


    “Yum,” said Chase, bellying up to a barstool. “If you don’t mind, we’d like to start eating now.”
    “Of course,” said his mother, pushing a mighty trough of fruit, cheese and pâté directly beneath our noses. “I hope you like this wine, Jasmyn. We could have champagne, if you’d rather.” She used her foot to open the wood-paneled refrigerator behind her, revealing a wine bin.
    “Jasmyn is nineteen,” I said, trying to make a joke of it.
    Zoya stared at me uncomprehendingly. In her world people never turned down booze. “But surely you’ll toast with us?”


    So they were one of those families, people over whom the nation’s alcohol laws hold no power. Friends of mine had parents like these, who thought nothing of putting a keg key in a kid’s Christmas stocking. In such families age and time are blurry concepts. Nothing a man ensconced in his castle should have to bother about, anyway.
    Churlish to refuse.


    “Is it rude to ask for ice?” I queried, operating on the theory that less is more. I would have added seven-up if they’d let me.


    “Yes,” said Chase.“Oh, give the girl some ice,” Zoya told her son irritably. “Don’t be so
    doctrinaire. This is a party. People can have what they want.”


    Why is that never, ever true? Chase the negotiator said, “At least try it without,” so I surrendered to his ministrations while he poured me a dram. They watched like a pair of cats as I sipped. Not bad. It smelled like cinnamon and tasted like berries.


    “Wow,” I said, feeling the magical flush radiate throughout. Off to the races. “More please. It’s delicious.”


    Chase poured out for both of us.


    “To life!” cried Zoya, lifting a full highball glass full of what I could only hope was iced tea. She was standing right next to open flame. I looked around helplessly for a fire extinguisher. On the other hand it was her birthday. And she was the fire priestess.


    “To life!” we echoed and drank. I was ready to toss my glass over my shoulder like people in the movies, but I would have been the only one. The others refilled theirs. Remedial again. Jazz was already falling behind.


    While we picked at the cheeses, Zoya made salad.


    “I usually pick my own watercress,” said Zoya, “There’s a wonderful patch in a brook right down the hill. Too bad it’s not in season. Now we must rely on South America. It’s so dangerous, don’t you think, all this Third World dependency.”


    OK, whose mother isn’t strange? I liked her. I felt Chase’s pain evanesce rippling me. “I think lately all the worlds have mixed together,” said Dreamweaver Jazz. “You know, now geisha makeup comes from China? Think how that must upset the Japanese.”


    “They deserve it,” said Zoya. “So what have you two been up to? What have you been doing at school that’s so important?”


    Chase and I looked at each other with wild surmise. What version of our activities could be socially acceptable?


    “We’ve been busy with a research project,” said Chase finally. Guardedly.
    “My,” his mother encouraged, “That sounds exciting.”


    Apparently that was all she needed to hear. Formalities dispensed with she turned to me and unleashed her pent-up question.


    “So, Jasmyn, where did you go to high school?”


    Chase made a warning noise in his throat, presumably directed at his mother, but I saw no reason not to answer. I chose to assume she meant the place I’d graduated from.
    “Archbishop Cavanaugh.” I knew she’d like that.


    Zoya brightened visibly. “You’re Catholic?”


    “Er, no,” I admitted awkwardly. Maybe I should have taken Chase up on his offer of a mendacity tutorial. Can inability to lie render me socially impossible?