Note: I don't know when this would take place because I don't know when the
painting referred to was done, so on the safe side, say the early eighties.
**
No one knew what he thought about. It made him feel both happy and
desperately lonely at the same time. No matter how many others he had
accidentally or purposely coaxed out of hiding, no matter how many strangers
emerged into daylight to follow him, Jack never found someone who really
understood.
So he had given up trying.
Instead, he did what he was best at be himself. And that meant dressing,
thinking sideways and doing whatever the hell he pleased. It was an
astonishingly easy way to go through life. He had missed being snagged by
drugs like most of his contemporaries. He liked his own thoughts to much to
screw with them. There were people on hand to screw or be screwed by, but
that too he felt mostly indifferent to after a while.
There just was. There was music too, powerful and raw, but not to be
taken so seriously to believe that it was the last statement to be made. It
was merely a way to pass the time, a way to connect. A way to communicate.
He admits to occasionally craving conversation. But being a mute has
worked for him so well, it seems a pity to give it up now. Still. The abyss
is there sometimes, threatening to consume him when his thoughts become to
spread and strange to make sense at all and he lies in the smoky hotel rooms,
sweaty and unable to sleep.
His fans think he must sleep in a coffin. The rooms come pretty close.
And they are all the same. Unrelieved sameness. Well, until the band gets
there. Then it's chaos and broken furniture.
A warm body slides next to him and out of the corner of his eye, it's
Curt. The wild wolf he has taken off the street and put in his bed, to save
him from total devastation. Of all of them, Jack thinks that Curt comes the
closest to understanding. To realizing that sometimes there aren't reasons or
grand words, but this kind of throbbing blackness that they are all trying to
shine a light into.
They don't have sex. It would be a waste. Curt craves two things, always
the addict: Brian and junk. There's nothing else to him though he may pretend
and though he may have quit both cold. It is what he yearns for and anything
else is just a substitute. So instead, Jack is something else to him. A
friend, he supposes. They have shared enough to be friends. Someone who
cares what happens to you or where you are the next morning after an all
night binge in some German bar where someone ended up getting in a fight with
some homophobic guy named Franz.
"I read this article about modern art." Curt tells him, breaking the
quiet. "It reminds me of you." The magazine is dumped unceremoniously on
Jack's thin rib cage and then Curt's slinking away to continue his restless
pendulum of motion somewhere else.
After a long minute, Jack picks it up and looks at the pictures. Blocks
of paint. Solid canvases. A urinal hung upside down in a museum. What he has
done to music, done to painting. His fingers linger on the all white canvas
with a single black dot. "Black Sheep" it's called. With long nimble fingers
he folds and tears it from the glossy pages. It goes in his book of random
things that he collects that make him smile. A rare enough occasion that the
book contains perhaps two dozen things after a decade of collecting.
"Ready to jam?" Curt begs him from the foot of the bed.
Jack nods wearily and sits up, letting the blood rush from his head. He
picks up a blue and green lacy scarf and wraps it twice around his neck.
Loves most of all the feeling that clothes have of binding, of tying him to
reality. Tight, tight and tighter is his wardrobe, every piece of clothing
making him look starvation thin. He barley eats anymore. Can't. Curt doesn't
either. Heroin fucked up his appetite, so between the two of them they can't
have more then a hundred and seventy pounds. No one helped either of them.
They were worshipped as gods. But no one cared that their gods might be dying
from malnutrition.
"Come on, Fairy, put your ass in gear, we're going to be late."
No, the world did not understand him, Jack thought, tucking away the
picture of the painting, but then again, he didn't much understand the world.