Jennifer Spiegel

Love Slave


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      Love Slave

      UNBRIDLED BOOK

      This is a work of fiction. The names, characters, places and incidents are either the product

      of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living

      or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

      Thank you to the journals and anthologies in which portions of Love Slave originally appeared. These include the following: In Our Own Words: A Generation Defining Itself, Journal of Truth and Consequence, > kill author, Literary Lunch, Paradigm, Persona, The Scrambler, and Toasted Cheese.

      Unbridled Books

      Copyright © 2012 by Jennifer Spiegel

       All Rights Reserved

      This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any form without permission.

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Spiegel, Jennifer.

       Love slave / by Jennifer Spiegel.

       p. cm.

       ISBN 978-1-60953-082-2

       I. Title.

       PS3619.P539L68 2012

       813'.6—dc23

       2012010212

      1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2

      book design by sh·cv

      First Printing

      f o r W e n d y a n d M e l o d y

       Subway's no way for a good man to go down.

      Bernie Taupin

      in Elton John's

      "Mona Lisas and Mad Hatters"

      Prologue

      GOING HOME WITH THE POETS

       New York City on Sunday, December 11, 1994

      Madeline and I are walking home from the Nuyorican Poets Café, where these people with lousy day jobs, like waitressing or temping or sometimes dealing, read their poems, which are always about having really good sex or being a black woman.

      We go there on Friday nights, always Friday nights, and we fold our legs beneath us on wooden floors, sipping cheap drinks and sweating under bare bulbs that make the place look ghoulish.

      Next to us, the poets. Ahh, the poets! People of mystery, of magic, of words. We know they write quatrains and couplets on paper napkins at cafés on Sunday afternoons, stirring lattes, buttering croissants, consuming raspberry tarts— oh, we envy them their free verse!

      Madeline and I, two in the morning, eye makeup black and thick, walk fast because we're in Alphabet City, which is like a sub urb of the East Village but not really. We can handle the East Village freaks, but crack houses are another story.

      Despite winter, I'm on fire— the kind of fire wrought by that rare and special combo of man and lyric together. Tonight, the poetry wasn't great— not great at all— but there was this one man, this one poet, a guy from Jamaica with dreadlocks, a black lanky body, and a somber long face. His poetry— sparse, unpretentious, not about being a poet— crawled over to me on the floor and punctured internal organs under a crystalline glare. It made me want to say something to him: anything.

      In that moment, maybe like other moments before, I forgot my own paramour, my own backlash boyfriend, rarely present, rarely even imagined.

      I forgot and no one reminded me, so I turned to this Jamaican poet with a searing, easy lust— I turned to him with famished, desperate eyes— and I listened to what people said: Teaches high school English in Brooklyn. A cab driver, a bard.

      So I knew; I knew then he was both soulful and earthy.

      I made my approach, touching his arm lightly. " Yours was the best."

      He turned, his eyes lifting to mine, a honeyed Jamaican voice haunting his breath. "You are the only one who thinks so."

      I do, I do, but I do.

      It was like being thrown against the wall by a great gust of wind, and this is why I live in New York. This is why.

      Now, walking fast with Madeline, I imagine this Jamaican poet/ Brooklyn high school English teacher and me owning a loft in TriBeCa. In our loft, there'd only be a mattress. The room would be strewn with sheets, white and gauzy, blowing in a breeze that sallied through open windows offering up the scent of city, skin, and naan bread from the Indian restaurant below.

      I think about meeting the Jamaican poet on corners at nightfall, how he'd see me coming and I'd see him standing there with his I Don't Care body posture— that lovely, lanky I Don't Care body posture— which would briefly, fleetingly, shift to reveal his thrill at seeing me walking toward him. I'd stare into his sleepy sad Jamaican poet face, and I'd probably have to weep just for the beauty of his poet approach.

      Madeline, the only thing I've kept from a long string of temp jobs, points to a torn poster on the wet ground. " Glass Half Empty is playing at the Fedora on Friday."

      Glass Half Empty plays there monthly, and we go religiously because, we say, when we analyze the situation over coffee at a diner or a Village café, it makes us feel like we have a community, and we know from our private dwellings— our beds and the places we stand alone, places in front of Xerox machines and other instruments of capitalist alienation— that we have no community, no community at all.

      And this is what I want, what I need, what I choose. I temp, my lust is fruitless as temp lust always is, and whomever I love today will not be the person I love tomorrow.

      And so: we watch Glass Half Empty play. It's the repetition of action, the sanctity of ceremony, the joy of the familiar. We need it to make us believe we are alive. To prove we are, indeed, alive.

      I heard from some girl at Yaffa Café that the singer's wife died a year after they married and he still, seven years later, wears his wedding ring around a swollen finger. Though some may find this morbid, I think it beautiful. Perhaps he understands what it means to have loved and lost. Perhaps he really understands.

      This time, in my head, it's the singer and me.

      We're on a shag carpet because Rob is rather retro— a throwback to a time never had. It's the shag carpet, a messy apartment, a pizza on the coffee table. He probably bought this coffee table at a sidewalk sale on the Lower East Side one Saturday afternoon, after wandering for hours and hours in search of used CDs by Buffalo Springfield and old paperback novels with prices like seventy-nine cents on upper right-hand corners.

      He's my kind of man, as the elastic of his Scooby-Doo boxers surely attests. I'm certain I'd be far happier with Rob than with my beautiful Jamaican poet. The poet would want profundity, and I am simple.

      Madeline lets out a yelp of disgust, an Ewhh! a Don't look now!

      Of course, I turn my head to the steps of NYU's business school— the bane of my existence— and, here's what I see: some guy getting a blow job, the girl not even visible.

      Must I be privy to this? Did anyone hear me ask for such a sight?

      Madeline and I look straight ahead, walking fast until we're well into Greenwich Village, which is