Sunday, July 7, 2013

3. “Dear Lord”

            The gears in Zach Rivers’ brain began to slip.  Normally his training would kick in and he would execute an immediate and instinctive sequence of actions.  He would simply know what to do, how best to survive the situation, without prejudice or doubt.  Not now.  This bundle of bloody clothes and matted blonde hair was hijacking his training.  He was plagued by questions:  “Who is this?  What is she doing here?  What do I do to protect my seclusion?”  His mind slipped gears into a stall, then free floated in space:  open, empty, not thinking, like those first moments when he was about to solo.  A jazz player’s mind, composing on the spot.
            His mind rested with that image as he unlocked the door of his loft.  He turned on the lights, which bathed the space in gentle illumination from the recessed bulbs.  He picked up the body, feeling the dead weight in his arms, and walked into his vast living space.  “Never,” he thought, “why am I doing this?”  He amplified his question with, “this is insane!” He carried her to the living room area and gently put her on the overstuffed leather couch that faced the sliding glass doors leading to the small deck overlooking the harbor.
            She was out cold; her breathing regular.  Rivers rarely rushed his improvisations, taking an exploratory approach, interested in the journey more than the destination, and this was no different.  Music always focused him.  He remembered some tense situations working for the CIA when he would construct an approach he might have to a tune, which would diminish the anxiety.  Sensing that she wasn’t critical, and he could take his time, he walked to the shelves to the left of the couch that held his music collection and sound system.  He was working on an arrangement of John Coltrane’s “Dear Lord.”  Ballads always gave Rivers trouble.  At their basic level, ballads were simple, sentimental, romantic, and teetered toward taking a deep emotion and making it mundane.  On a deeper level, ballads articulated a longing, a quest for salvation, and verged on being a musical impossibility.  John Coltrane was a master of the ballad - one of many examples of his brilliant journey into the uncharted spaces of his being.  Trane would provide comfort.  Rivers looked under “C” in his large collection of discs, one of the few vices he allowed himself to have, and found “Classic Quartet” box set.  He pulled out disc four, which he put into his player, pressing track four on the remote.  He hit the repeat button, allowing Coltrane’s crystalline lament to fill the space with the spirit of unexplored emotionality.
He moved to his galley kitchen across the room.  Rivers found a ceramic bowl in his cupboard and filled it with warm water.  He fetched a couple of face towels and a plastic dispenser of grapefruit scented soap from his bathroom.  Turning the ceiling lights brighter he returned to the sofa where he saw blood everywhere:  clotted in her hair, smeared all over her face, her dress saturated, trails of dried blood down her beautiful legs.  He didn’t know where to begin, but her face, vulnerable in sleep, held a compelling pull.  He started there.  As he washed away the gore from her cheeks he felt like an archeologist in the process of uncovering some rare and mysterious treasure.  Despite the calming effect of the music, he had doubts about his actions.  He was nagged by the apprehension that what he was doing was nothing but trouble.  Was he losing control to a force greater than himself?  He thought, “Sure, I surrender all the time to the forces of improvisation when I play.  But the only danger there is hitting the wrong notes or running out of ideas.  What shit am I getting into here?”
The woman moaned, shifting his attention.  She was still breathing, and that was good.  He lifted her head and removed her hood.  He thought, “Christ, even as a bloody mess this woman is…” His thought was interrupted by her stirring.  Her body changed position, but she did not wake.  Another thought, “I have to focus. I’m becoming distracted; can’t think straight.”  He wanted to take off her raincoat, but did not want to wake her.  In sleep, she would not be in pain.  In sleep, he would be able to think without having to interact with her.  In sleep, he was safe. He studied her legs and saw what looked like teeth marks.  A small row of indentations between two deep punctures wounds.  “Looks like she was bit by some animal with sharp fangs.” He began cleaning the dried blood from her legs, examining them for further wounds.  Finding no more, he went into the bathroom, found some disinfectant and bandages in the cabinet above the sink, left the light on, and began to patch her up.  He carefully cleaned the wound with disinfectant, wrapped gauze around it, and finally taped the bandage in place.
When he finished administering to her leg he stared at her face.  He wasn’t sure what to do next.  There was so much blood. He wondered if she had been shot or stabbed. To continue to treat her he would have to take off her raincoat and bloody dress, and the potential for unpleasantness caused him to hesitate.  His mind slipped out of gear again.  She made a whimpering sound as if she were waking up.  She opened her eyes,  iridescent green cat’s eyes, and she stared at him.  Expressionless.  He couldn’t read her, which was unusual for him. He just stared back at her while Coltrane’s lamenting ballad filled the room.  For a moment he thought that he was looking into a mirror, those deep green eyes reflecting the same bewilderment. Then something stirred in her.  She grabbed him by his tee shirt and pulled his face down to her blood-drenched dress.  Her pull was strong, assertive, dominating.  It was as if she knew better than him what he needed and she was not going to accept any hesitation.  He found himself surrendering again. This time to her movements, as she found the triggers that sent waves of pleasure through his body.
She moved on top of him, worked her way to his groin and took charge.  He accepted her skills, forgot that thirty minutes ago she was at his mercy, and rested in the rising wave of pleasure that she was giving.  When it came to an end he tried to get up from the couch. She put a hand on his chest, gently pushing him down, and saying, like a mother would say to a child, “Shhhh.”  In the afterglow of being fellated he acquiesced, his eyes never leaving her face.
            She got up from the couch. Seeing the bathroom light on and the door open, she limped in that direction. She found a glass, drank some water, turned off the light, returning to Rivers.  She looked him in the eyes, gently touched his face with her hand.  He attempted to speak, but she put her fingers to his lips.  “Shhh.”  He obliged.  She bent down, kissed him gently on the lips and said, “Spascibo.”  This bloody and beautiful woman then rose from the couch, zipped her raincoat, put the hood over her head and walked out the door without looking back.  Rivers lay on the leather couch, unable to organize this last strange hour into any scenario that made sense.  His head was throbbing.

He got up from the couch to get an aspirin.  Turning on the bathroom light he went toward the medicine cabinet over the sink.  He hesitated when he noticed that on the cabinet mirror, in bright red lipstick, was the word “Grushenka.”

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