Title: Ugly Neon Lights
Author: MelWil
Rating: PG
Archive: Just let me know where
Disclaimer: I don’t own them, they just do dances for me
Feedback: Is welcome - lina_wilson@hotmail.com
Summary: “We’ve been tainted by the nonsense of history, and the
stain has been sucked into the marrow of our bones.”
Author’s note: I just let Toby pour his little heart out to you. This
is pre-Bartlet.
~*~
I hate the way the lights buzz. Ugly neon lights, and they’re
buzzing right above my head. They’re buzzing and they hurt my head
and it’s just one of the things that doesn’t make sense anymore.
There are a lot of things that don’t make sense. I suppose I always
knew that.
It seems ridiculous to care about a buzzing light. I should be
moping over other things, the real things. Global warming, Republican
control of the house, the way no one wants to hire me any more, my
failing marriage. But the glass in front of my is only half empty,
and there’s a whole night left to mope about important things. Right
now, I am concerned about the light.
It wouldn’t be a hard thing to change, a light. I’m sitting in a
respectable bar, not some run down honky tonk. They should be able to
change a light bulb. A light bulb is temporary, barely a blip in the
greater scheme of things. How many liberals does it take to change a
light bulb? One, the world revolves around them. How many
conservatives does it take to change a light bulb? I suppose it
depends how many conservatives it took to shoot it down. There’s
usually a better punch line than that, but I don’t seem to remember
it.
The point of this ramble is that it’s quite easy to change a light
bulb. It’s not easy to change a marriage.
I’m not sure where that came from. I’m sorry, I didn’t intend to
talk about my marriage until I’d had more to drink. There’s still a
quarter glass of scotch sitting in front of me. I’m pretty sure it’s
still my first glass. Sometimes I forget to count how many glasses
I’ve had, and then people tell me that I’m drunk. So I drink without
my friends these days. That’s not difficult, so many people abandoned
me first. Like Andi.
Well, she hasn’t really left me yet. She’s threatened to, she’s
packed her bags and stacked them next to the door. One of these days
the door will slam, and she will be gone. I don’t doubt that it will
happen. In all reality it has to happen, it’ll be for the best.
Do you know Andi? You may have seen her on TV? She’s amazing, all
firecrackers and star shine. I used to write poetry about her when I
first met her. She was a friend of my younger brother, and she would
tease him, and when she got to know me, she would tease me as well.
Then she went to a school across the country, and I went to law
school, and I forgot that she even existed. She rang me up when I was
working on my first campaign. We used to hold hands in movies.
As I said, she’s on TV a lot at the moment. She’s thinking about
running for congress. I said I would help her, help write for her
campaign. She laughed, and refused my offer. She didn’t want to hurt
her chances before she started.
I make her sound so horrible when I say that. She’s not, she’s
just smart. She’s smarter than me, and we know it. Some of those
things you just understand. She refused my offer because she wants to
win. And I want her to win, so I don’t make a fuss about it all. So
now I’ve told you all this, and there’s no scotch in my glass, and
I’m going to have to get another one. Neat, no ice. I want it to
burn.
Things don’t make sense. This I realise, I know. Most of my
lifetime has been spent in a continuous stream of nonsense. The Cuban
Missile Crisis, the Kennedy assassination. Lyndon B. Johnson, the
Vietnam War. Nixon and Watergate, Carter and Ford. Ronald Reagan and
the weirdness of the eighties. Nothing about any of that was
understandable. Nothing about any of us is understandable. We’ve been
tainted by the nonsense of history, and the stain has been sucked
into the marrow of our bones.
The light still buzzes above me, and there’s still scotch in my
glass. It’s a heavy glass, so different to those cheap glasses I used
to drink from. When we were students we scavenged our glasses from
any possible location. One of my friends was a busboy at a diner, and
he’s steal cups and plates and cutlery for me. We used to spend hours
trying to get them clean.
Cleanliness is next to godliness, which is why no political
candidate is ever going to end up campaigning in a halo. We have a
hard enough time hiding their horns. It doesn’t matter how many times
that we tell the public that they have clean records, there’s always
some reporter, or some opponent who is going to find a smidgen of
dirt. If they can’t find, they’ll plant it. It’s the American way.
I’m sorry, I never intended to rant and rave this way. There’s a
pretty girl behind the bar, and she’s staring at me. I suppose she
thinks that I’m a vagrant, or a drunk. I’m not, you’ve got to
understand that. I’m just a man trying to forget about the fights
with his wife. I’m just a political advisor who has run out of honest
men to represent.
Who am I kidding? Not myself, anyway. There never was an honest
politician, they’ve been corrupt since the days of Solon and
Cleisthanes. You need some deceit, the people don’t want to know
everything. The truth is to bland, and confusing. The Wizard of Oz
wasn’t half as interesting when he stepped out from behind the
curtain.
Sometime I’ll have to stop drinking. Sometime I'll have to go home
to have a fight with Andi. Sometime she’s going to slam that door on
my, and neither of us will be able to open it again. Soon I’ll
probably pack a bag, a light one, just clothes and blank notebooks,
and the pen my father gave me when I graduated from high school. Soon
I’ll drive to New Hampshire, hoping that my car will be able to
handle the cold. I’ll go to New Hampshire, because everyone involved
in politics goes to New Hampshire early in an election year.
Maybe I’ll find someone who hasn’t heard about my losing streak.
Maybe I’ll end up somewhere where I can forget that Andi doesn’t want
to love me anymore. But if that doesn’t happen, at least I can
entertain the idea that the cold will freeze my emotions. And if I
freeze, the scotch will warm me up. There’s always something to look
forward to.