So go ahead, pretend I'm real.
I'm staying with my father, have for months since I got back from Paris broke and 40-some hours awake, startled at the width of suburban streets.
I explain for myself if not you.
I don't mean to present this as romantic or deliberate or other-than-fuckupped. I came, I wrote, I floundered. I had some idea that I could write truth, so no one read to say I sucked. I sat ripping pages out of Writer's Market, nothing to smoke them with. Phillipe loaned me a couple grand to relocate: "Come to Paris." Whyever not? About the time the money left I left my address book and passport on a car in the Rue de francs bourgeois long enough to get a couple car-lengths away and turn -- oops.
The Embassy folk Place Concord felt I'd behaved badly. The Embassy must be a fun place to work. "You meet the strangest people," as an elegant ancient man with a curling handlebar moustache told my aunt Monica one time on a bus in Culver City as she leaned over and glanced at his sketchbook to verify that he was, indeed, Salvador Dali.
The embassy does filter the people entering. But then, I qualified -- a blue-eyes-no-Qu'ran thing, I suppose: as an American citizen, I had a right to know why I couldn't return home.
"All you have to do is bring in five Americans who do have ID's to vouch for you."
"Can I get them to come into some office in Los Angeles?"
"Don't you know anyone?"
"I'm American."
"The United States Government will not issue a passport with no way of
identifying you."
"Can I get a dozen Frenchmen to say I'm not French?"
"American citizens with identification. Do your best."
Now I wish I were back at le Beaubourg, thankful again at the grey rain slanting outside, proud owner of a chair with a view of two library stacks. Do I miss it? Or does seeing the rainwater jet through the handcarved gargoyle mouths on Rue Saint Denis give me a way to avoid being in my father's home in Lakewood CA speaking Aeromilitary with you --
-- and dealing with my job for ECorp, at LISA, where I classify the documents of said industry in a language which contains just four verbs, none of which involve leak, break down, irradiate, brainfart or fuck up.
No no no: moi, je suis poete: so I've just got to find what rhymes with incident.
4 comments:
Excuse me, I have an appointment on Earth.
I now officially believe in paralell universes.
Are you sure this is how Stephen King got started?
Earth's thataway, but I'm not sure that's where Stephen King got started.
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