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excerpt: Complete Fiction
by Serge Fauchereau
June 2003
Brushings not enough and the comb would pull too hard. In plunging my fingers into your hair to untangle it, I rediscover the sliding of the fresh-water plants of my adolescence: youd part them with your hands as you swam and youd feel them brushing along your whole body. But now Im far from a page boy. Im like a mule hitched to a millstone, going around in a circle for the benefit of philistines. The blinders make my eyes deader than the eyes of the blind, since I cant imagine anything: all I can see is you, you.
You love your supple hair, which has to be cut regularly to retain its beauty. In our time, women kept their hair for themselves; a Berenice doesnt offer it to Venus anymore, even for Callimachus or Catullus. But men have to have theirs cut; its supposed to be for their own good. An old David ends up pursuing an adventurous Absalom who always dies with his beautiful hair caught in the branches of an oak tree
And yet, now that Im standing here holding a pair of scissors, dont you consider, with my fingertips gently stroking your neck, dont you consider the possibility that three or four bites of these scissors could, in retaliation, quickly ravage your hair and take away the power of its charm? It doesnt matter its too late to shake the columns of the temple.
I work carefully, making the curls even. I go from lock to lock, leaving not a single split end. Then I brush it until it shines. My role is modest and transitory, but it gives me the privilege of seeing the down on your nape. Im neither your valet nor your service man. I cant offer you white pages with polished and elegant words, only the cajoling chitchat of hairdressers.
Packed in its cottony husk, a horse chestnut. Under the sheets, under the covers, its pleasantly warm, and the true source of warmth is that other body, beside you. Above the roundness of shoulder and the wavy hair spread across the pillow, you see the windows rectangle where day is beginning to rise. Outside, the wind makes the trees rustle, and you hear the rain, too. Its nice, its warm. But beyond the shoulder, the glimmering at the window has an airport blinking in the early morning. In the airports, its still night or already night. You arrive or leave again alone. The raw, impersonal light, the searchlights, the brightly lit ramps, the colored runway lights cant part the ambient darkness, the good, the true night. A memory comes back: an inscription on the lintel of a manor house window in Loire-en-Cher: Before leaving.
Day is about to break. Its a bit cold in the room, but a lot warmer in the bed, dovetailed into each other. My legs follow the angle of hers: the backs of her thighs, the bent knees, the calves. The lower part of the belly is packed, with an animal pleasure, against the roundness of her behind, and the chest against her back. The temperature of the two bodies is the same and the contact is so close that neither can tell where the bodies end. One of the arms lies across her body, the elbow pressing against her hip and the forearm on her belly that rises slightly in the rhythm of breathing. Her two hands hold the wrist pressed against her chest, the hand closed over one breast, as if holding a beating heart.
You start to see, as daylight begins to filter through the window. Itll be day soon. For the moment, the eyes make out, a few inches away, only the whiteness of the sheets and a dim mass of hair. You can plunge your face into the warm scent of the hair to look for a little leftover night, or press your lips to the base of the nape to feel her hips move and her hands squeeze the arm tighter against her breast.
Day breaks. You hear cars. Youd like to ignore it, to stay like an animal. Any moment the alarm will go off, and already a hint of distress is working its way between the bodies. You have to get up, go, and pick up living like a man again.
The point is not, you say, to take a nice trip so you can write a book: I have to draw up a detailed and itemized report of my mission. When I turn in this report, theyll see about paying me, this fact being quite secondary when theyre dealing with a writer. Ill have to justify my comings and goings to the accounting office, which will determine the amount, because theres no way theyll simply pay me a flat fee. Since I dont keep a diary, Ive done so many things that I no longer know which Ive actually done and which Ive dreamed. For one long month on the road I have only a few sentences scribbled in a notebook, some ideas and impressions I promised myself Id continue or develop later, but now, like the dream you forget by the end of the day, I no longer know what they refer to or for whom they were intended. Lost among names and telephone numbers that have lost their meaning. By contract. All that remains of my contracts are quick impressions and notations that have become enigmatic:
I wont be the good Samaritan wholl help you get rid of yourself, that is to say your father, your mother, your sisters, and a few other people you envy, scorn, or despise. Hell is the Dallas airport at a perpetual three A.M. Hardness of the dancers thighs in their impersonal roundness. Im such a stranger to myself that even my own smell disgusts me when I go to the crapper. Two big paintings and a smaller one with colors very
Do I stand there stock still, if time has no space, or am I a cycle? Or else a line? In fact, my time, my life is cycloid. SECOND DRAFT. I will watch you in the gait of a passerby, the figure of an assistant in a store, the profile of a stranger sitting next to me on the subway: you can go now; you will never be gone. There is a draft: I will close the door when I leave. In the train an old lady says to her husband, "Tous les noisetiers ont des chatons." All the hazel trees have kittens? Die Hazelnuszsträucher haben Kätzschen? Avellanos con gatitos?
Furthermore, on a stale-dated check stamped Nov. 16 76, the word THANATOS in capital letters. Also:
As her mouth is contorted on the harmonica and the sun on her bandana.
Thats all the marvelous anthology pages Ive brought back from a nice trip. If by chance a sentence is good, its probably because it was copied from something I read. And here I am at the end of a pointless odyssey, head empty, pockets empty, but with contracts fulfilled for you. And Im not the first one, either: "To speak French with you, you must open your hand. Thus my wallet becomes for me the sole organ through which I can clarify the difficulties of the Bible, and make the Centuries of Nostradamus as easy for you as the Pater. Finally, miss, it is of you alone that verily it may be said Nothing for nothing." At actual cost. I traveled at actual cost and now I must assemble tickets, receipts, notes, bills: for 1,311 miles, gas vouchers from Gulf and Texaco, Huybensz and Lipucci, and fifty toll receipts, two Surtram tickets, stubs from parking lots in New Haven, Washington, Philadelphia, and San Antonio. But I cant find the rental contract for the Oldsmobile, so I wont be reimbursed for that. Two L.I. Railroad tickets: Ill have to explain that I have only the outbound tickets because the conductor collects the tickets on the way back into New York. Two Greyhound tickets. And airline tickets, reimbursable or not: American Airlines, two Delta, Texas International, two Braniff, Eastern, two TWA, three Cruzeiro, two Varig, Avianca, two Air France. And then receipts, bits of nondescript paper stamped Caracas, Sulphur Springs, Berkeley, Stedelijk Museum, Annandale-on-Hudson, M.A.S.P.: Di Cavalcanti. I have carefully collected whatever I have been able to learn of the story, as Goethe says. (Ah, Charlotte, Charlotte! Where are you? Help me. Charlotte, I havent forgotten the blondness of your hair. Idiot: Charlotte is an airport where the gawky silhouette of your friend Padgett is waiting, its a city in North Carolina. Carolyn! Carolyn! I havent forgotten the blondness of your hair. Completely insane, this guy.) I say no more. Dont let yourself be mad at me. "The only courtesy I ask of you is that you tear me so gently that I can pretend not to feel it."
Translated from the French by John Ashbery and Ron Padgett
Serge Fauchereau is the author of over thirty books (fiction and essays), most of which have been widely translated. "Complete Fiction" was published by Black Square Editions in the Fall of 2002.
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The Rail invites you to a reading with Jason
Flores-Williams and Brian Carreira, along with musical
guest Steve Strunsky of the Lonesome Prairie Dogs.
Thurs., Sept. 22, 8:30 p.m.
Vox Pop--Flatbush, Brooklyn
www.voxpop.net
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OFF THE RAIL FALL 2005 at the Central Branch of the Brooklyn Public Library - Grand Army Plaza
(718) 230-2100 in the 2nd Floor Auditorium
Tuesday, Sept. 13 from 7 till 9
John Ashbery
Leslie Scalapino
Tuesday, Oct. 18 from 7 till 9
Kenneth Bernard
Lynda Schor
Tuesday, Nov. 15 from 7 till 9
Diane Williams
Christine Schutt
Curated and hosted by the Rail's Fiction Editor Donald Breckenridge
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The Independent Press Association-NY recently honored The Brooklyn Rail with the following awards:
1st place: Best article about Immigrant Issues or Racial Justice--Gabriel Thompson, "One Immigrant's Journey" (September 2004).
1st place: Best article about the Arts*--Amy Zimmer, "The Brownsville Rec. Center" (April 04)
2nd place: Best article about the Arts--Brian Carreira, "Harlem Arts: A Faux Renaissance" (Dec 03/Jan 04).
2nd place: Best editorial or commentary--T. Hamm, "The Issue is Free Speech" (Dec 03/Jan 04).
3rd Place: Best Investigative News Story--Marjory Garrison, "Minimum Matter of Survival" (May 04)
Honorable mention: Best Investigative News Story--Williams Cole, "Housing vs. the RNC" (June 04).
Honorable mention: Best Original Feature--Yvette Walton, "My Life in the NYPD" (Dec 03/Jan 04).
Come to the Brooklyn Waterfront Festival.
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