Wednesday, July 27, 2022

FURY FORGOTTEN by Peter Nolan Smith

Throughout the new century in New York successful friends have moved into exclusive enclaves of wealth, while less fortunate emigres to New York City have forced by the disappearance of well-paid jobs and affordable housing to desert this ever-expensive metropolis. Many of those quitting New York have succumbed to the siren’s song of a birth city or town, whose unliveability as a youth has been replaced by the need to spend the golden years in comfort.

Like Old Moses says in THE SEARCHERS, “All I want is a rocking chair.”

While I have no intentions of returning to Boston, I have to admit that getting of job in Manhattan isn't easy after your turn 50.

Several years ago I heard that a good female friend, her husband, and two teenage children were setting out for California.

“So you’re going back home.” Our conversation was over the phone.

“Back to my roots.” She had left the West Coast in 1993.

“What about one last night on the town.” I invited her to the Mudd Club / Club 57 reunion in late October.

“I don’t have time for that.” Garette wasn’t in the mood to see old friends.

“I understand. The West is calling.”

I looked out the window of my top-floor apartment in Fort Greene.

The sun was setting beyond the low skyline. Summer was giving way to autumn. The green trees were turning red and yellow, signaling an early Winter this year.

"Where you going to live?"

“Agora.” Her hometown lay on the dry side of the Santa Monica Mountains. The TV show MASH had been filmed below her mother's house. I knew the vista well from having visited her family during my 1995 stay in Southern California.

“Give my best to your brothers.” We had surfed El Matador and Ventura. They were the tallest white men above Santa Monica. I liked them a lot.

“I don’t talk with them anymore,” Garette said and then added, “My brothers abused me as a kid.”

“Oh.” I didn’t have to ask how. Garette’s mom had eight kids. They were as wild as feral cats. I thought sex, but it was worse.

“They beat me.”

“I never hit a woman like that,” I answered without thinking about the past.

“What about the time you hit your girlfriend in Paris. That 17 year-old model.”

Garette and I had met at the Bains-Douches in the summer of 1984. We were just friends. No one believed that, especially not her husband.

“Candia.”

I nodded with the recollection of entering the Rue Danzig apartment to find the Puerto Rican teenager naked with her Italian boyfriend. One punch dropped him into the kingdom of whimpers. Candia slapped at my fists. My fingers unfolded to open palms. Red murder flooded my blood.

“I didn’t hit her. I threw her on the bed.”

“Are you sure?” Women have better memories than men. “What about whipping them out of the apartment with a ripped telephone wire. Naked into a snowstorm.”

“It was a flurry.” Flakes had fallen as softly as volcanic ash. The snow's still beauty must have been lost on their unclothed flesh and bare feet.

"The weather was unimportant. Did you hit her or not?"

"Maybe." I might have been a little rough, but I didn't punch or slap her and riding in a taxi afterward I remember feeling that they gotten off easy, besides even a double murder was forgivable before the judge in France. They understood passion.

“So don’t tell me that you’ve never hit a woman. Liar. Like all men.”

The phone clicked off and my ear was glad that people weren’t able to slam the receiver of a cell phone somewhere else, but Garette was right. I had been violent toward women and scourging Candia and her young boyfriend into the wintery night wasn't the first time.

In 1960 My older brother and I had chucked rocks at a family of eight sisters for ascendancy of our neighborhood south of Boston. They never beat up another boy.

As a hippie I had picked up my youngest sister from a Wollaston Beach bowling alley twenty minutes late.

“I hate you.” Her tirade scorched my ears on the drive through the Blue Hills.

Inside our split-level ranch house she said something so despicable that I threw a Frye boot at her. It missed her head by inches and dented the steel door to the garage. What she said was forgotten.

So I really didn’t hit her, but two other women were on the list.

Back in 1978 my hillbilly girlfriend Alice had disappeared from CBGBs with the band Shrapnel.

An hour later I found her in the alley behind the punk club. She smiled at me, as if I were stupid to have worried about her. Nothing had happened between her and the band, but that smile earned her a slap. I don’t recall ever apologizing, but Alice and I stayed together, until I left her for Lisa.

The blonde model from Buffalo was as beautiful and cold as a Swedish movie starlet.

We lived in London together the autumn of 1978. The studio was next to Chelsea football pitch. She modeled with David Bailey, while I wandered the wet streets thinking the worst. The next winter she left New York for Europe seeking fame and fortune on the runaways of Paris and Milan. Within a month she had disappeared, but at the summer's end she called me at summer’s end to pick up her things.

“Why did you leave me?” I asked her, as she got in a waiting taxi on First Avenue. Her boyfriend was a Russian gangster. He had an luxury apartment on East 57th Street.

“Sometimes you don’t get all the answers.” Lisa sneered at me, as if she was getting revenge for something else that someone else had done to her.

“No answer.” I snapped and kicked her ass with enough force to propel her inside the taxi.

“Fuck you.” She slammed the door shut and the taxi drove her out of my life forever, then again she was already out of it.

Garette was once more right.

The only difference between me and a woman-killer was the length of my rage. I could have killed Candia, kicking Lisa had come natural and slapping Alice happened faster than a rattlesnake fanging a desert mouse.

All three incidents were decades ago, but later that day I googled Lisa. Her last name was too common to find on the web.

Candia was in a sisterhood down the south of France. They didn’t believe in modern technology.

The only one to whom I could apologize was my hillbilly girlfriend, since I was certain she would attend the fetes for Club 57 and the Mudd Club and I would be doing the same.

That week I rehearsed my apology in my Fort Greene apartment.

Men had been beating women for time immemorial.

Cavemen supposedly clubbed women and dragged them by their hair into slavery.

There was no foreplay involved with the rape of the Sabine Women.

I stood accused of a crime and only forgiveness could help me forget my sins.

The first night of the Club 57 re-union Alice was too busy greeting old friends for a conversation about forgiveness. She was still a star and I was just another old boyfriend. Our friends regaled each other with tales from the 1980s. I gathered everyone for a group photo. Alice was going out to dinner with a famous painter. She was still beautiful. I had been a fool to leave her, then again I had been a fool about a lot of other things.

Morning found me alone in my bed. I was slightly hung over and soaked in my bath for a good hour.

The razor slid over my face. I wanted to look good tonight.

Several film makers had contacted me for interviews.

In August 1980 I had worked every night at the Mudd Club to pay for my sister’s wedding present. Mostly I had hung out at the downstairs bar listening to music.

SEX MACHINE by James Brown had been my favorite and the DJ played it once a night.

The reunion was at a bar next to the Williamsburg Bridge and I arrived early to avoid paying a cover, plus the only time I had purchased a ticket at the Mudd Club was for the Marianne Faithful show. The price was $10. Her voice cracked on BROKEN ENGLISH. The concert was cut short by a hail of beer cans aimed not at the singer, but Steve Mass the owner. Everyone wanted a refund. Steve didn’t give back a dime.

“You don’t come here for the music. You come here to be you,” Steve shouted at us, because at the Mudd Club Joey Arias, Klaus Nomi, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Kenny Scharf, Anita Sarko, Richard Boch, Anya Phillips, James Chance, Michael Holman, and countless others were the stars of nights fueled by sex, drugs, and rock and roll.

Not all of us made it.

At the re-union I was more unknown than known, but when I sat down on the garden rooftop, passing party-goers stared at me, as if they had known me. I didn’t think that I had changed that much, but I had stopped looking in the mirror after the age of 50.

“I only look at my shadow,” I later told an interviewer along with the story of ordering Alice to wipe a Jean Michel painting off our refrigerator. I could have sold it ten years ago for a million.

“I was so smart.”

I had thought that I was going to make something of my life. The drugs, the drinks, the late hours, and the sex had destroyed my body and soul. In truth I was lucky to be alive and found myself sitting with Alice.

She was as sweet as the first day I met her through our now dead friends; Andy Reese and William Lively. We entertained a throng of onlookers with our remembrances. Michael Holman joined us to explain the separation of fun at the Mudd Club versus Club 57.

“They were art and fun and we were sex and drugs.”

I didn’t beg to differ and after the camera stopped rolling I asked Alice for a second.

“What is it?” She was nervous, as if I was going to ask her to sleep with me.

“I want to apologize for hitting you behind CBGBs. It was wrong.”

“You really scared me and I probably should have left you right then, except I wasn’t brought up that way.” Her family from West Virginia was like mine from Maine; LEAVE IT TO BEAVER on the outside and a John Waters film on the inside.

“I wish I had never done it.” My excuse was that I had been worried about her, but that had been an excuse.

“Me too. But that was a long time ago.” Alice smiled with forgiveness and excused herself.

“Thanks.”

“Yeah.” She had done me a favor and I did her one by ending our conversation on the matter.

I went to the bar, convinced that I was no Ted Bundy, the mass murderer, but neither was I a saint, since most men are simply something in between good and bad, which wasn’t such a horrible thing to be in this day and at my age.

I drank my drink and looked

Old men never look good angry, but they get better looking with an apology.

As long as they really meant it.

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