many of them have somehow gotten hold of your name, your walk, the same tactile net of warmth that used to hover between your hands, binding me to you.
But they all have the same face under their masks, once theyâre off: Slack, and white, and hollow.
I only want to be yours again: Only that. And with such a righteous goal to drive me, I think I can be forgiven for making a few errors in judgement.
They say the moment just before you die is the loneliest moment in the world. Well, Iâm pretty lonely now. Iâm full. Iâm empty. Iâm nothing but what I want, nothing but my own need. And when thatâs all gone, there wonât be a part of me left to hurt.
So find me, baby, before I forget why I wanted you to, in the first place. Find me, and hold me.
Hold meâhard. Hold me . . . tight.
Blood Makes Noise
DEPTH DRUNKENNESS BRINGS strange thoughtsâstranger than usual, at least. Right at the moment, itâs like Iâm seeing my deaf paternal grandmotherâs hands hover in this darkening air, signing the scenes of my life away syllable by syllable: Old, new, in and out of order.
These slippery reminiscences, repetitive and elusiveâsquid-ink images written on oil, squirming from close examination. A memory flip-book, curling at the corners: Nanny Bookâs crepe-paper skin, laced with pale blue veins; the vestigial webs between her arthritic fingers, spread to catch the light.
My unit bracing to take their turnâpulses shallow, impatient with dismay, most of them more terrified to gauge the true limits of their shameful, mounting fear than consider the circumstances prompting itâas Captain Kiley lies propped up against his bunk, making rabbit-shadows on the holding cell wall.
The sky over Pittsburgh when I was five years old, dirty as a bed of nails.
A map I saw once of the twin moons of Mars.
Hit, flash: Popped bulb, clicked lensâimage, then absence. Whispers in my skull, like the roar inside an empty shell: Blood echoes. Music toâinâmy ears.
And just what the hell is that word for the fear of fear, anyway?
Fear: Phobos. Fear of: Phobia.
Phobophobia?
. . . must be it.
I press my eyes closed, momentarily forgetting to remember just how deep we must already be. HPNS regulations at least breached, for certainâsure, if not exceededâmore than deep enough to check my hands for tremors, and count off the rest of those prospective High Pressure Nervous Syndrome symptoms our mission literature listed:
Increased excitability, motor reflex decay; aphasia. Mental glitches.
. . . under the deep black sea, who loves to die with me . . .
âglitches. Psychosis. Cyanosis.
And eventually . . .
I slam my head back, skull on wall, hard enough to ring myself trueâshort, sharp shock, broken left incisor into lip, tweak of clarifying pain. Instant coherence. Kileyâs rules, channeling themselves: Keep alert. Tell it through. No opinion without research. No solution without . . .
. . . withâout . . .
âBook,â the Doctor whispers, beside me. I shift a bit towards him, deliberately trying to find the floorâs sharpest angle, to bend my hip in such a way as to make the pain flare just so, girdling my pelvis. Making myself uncomfortable.
âDoctor,â I answer.
âBook, Regis. American. No . . . registered rank.â
âSpecialist.â
He coughs. âI . . . didnât know that.â
âNo reason you would.â
The Doctor gives a snuffling gasp, a liquid retch. Something catches in his throat, rattles there brieflyâthen flicks out again, splattering the floor between us with wet, red bile. I glance back at the wall I just used for a memory aid, which could frankly use a few shadow animals right about now. And as though heâs read my mindâ
âwhich may, I suspect, no longer be quite as hard to do as it once wasâ
âBlack . . . Ops . . . operative. âWet . . .