What is more annoying than coming home after a long day of temping and opening the door to find your unemployed live-in boyfriend fixed in front of the TV with the kind of permanence that compels you to believe that he has been chain-watching it all day?
Primo’s muddy eyes were staring sedately at the TV set, which was blaring a mile a minute with strange sounds and snappy, zippy images. His sweet lips were casually shut. His dumb dog, Numb, had propped its narrow muzzle under Primo’s small bony hand and was rocking its bell-shaped head back and forth gently. Primo, in his alpha-state, thoughtlessly pet the ever-shedding canine.
Only the dog’s territorial stare flicked over to me—it was a mongrelization of every horny mutt that ever scurried through the local dogrun. I resisted the intensifying urge to be nasty. I asked Mr. Cool if he would like some vermicelli.
“Yes,” he blurted. Our East Village dump—one of the many built to absorb the great flood of immigrants at the beginning of the last century—had a bathroom and kitchen separating a small living room and an even tinier bedroom. Our bed, an old twin-sized mattress, doubled as Primo’s couch during his wasted hours before the tube.
In the course of the eight minutes it took to fix dinner, I told him the low-lights of my Xeroxed day. Although he seemed to be listening, I knew that he was holding me in silent contempt, watching his goddamned TV, waiting for my culinary labors.
By the time I brought over his bowl of overcooked pasta with crushed garlic, stale Parmesan cheese, and a dab of olive oil, I realized that he hadn’t even said hello since I had entered. Passive-aggressively, I placed the moderately hot bowl directly on his sunken T-shirted chest.
“So, what TV shows did you watch today?” I asked, no longer able to restrain my disgust.
He obviously didn’t care for my attitude and was ignoring me as a pathetic form of protest. The dog sniffed the dinner, but the bastard kept watching the tube, not even taking a bite.
“All right,” I finally said, finishing my half of the low-budget meal. “I know you were looking for a job. I’m sorry.” He had told me over the past few days how he had made nonstop efforts at finding a career and was going through his worst unlucky streak in thirty-odd years.
In the nonresponsive silence, I twirled some pasta and watched as he didn’t so much as touch his—a final insult, as he always scarfed down whatever garbage I put before him.
“Don’t take it out on me!” I shot back, offensively defensive. Still no response; his dark eyes remained fixed to some infantile commercial. They needed Visine.
Deciding to rile him, I got up and changed the channel, expecting him to start screaming. But he must have been really pissed, because he just sat there. He didn’t even use the remote to flip it back.
I finished my pasta, and as I rose to go to the kitchen, I snatched his uneaten dinner off his TV-tray chest and dropped it in the sink, thinking this would break his silent treatment. But no, his Mexican standoff was still standing.
While I was in the kitchen, Numb finally rose and came over to beg off me. Finally, I cracked a smile. It was just too incredible. I began chuckling; I couldn’t stay angry. All for the sake of this single dry and labored joke, Primo was exerting a Zen of self-control.
The detail that caught my attention was how dry his eyes seemed; they lost all their gloss. When I slowly put my finger on his right eye, he didn’t so much as flinch. He was icy cold.
When I tugged back Primo’s head to open his airways, the dog growled protectively. I tried giving him CPR, but I couldn’t remember if I had to pump his chest five times for every single breath or breathe into him five times for every heart massage. I only knew that I resented having to do it.
Mr. Cool had tried to keep it from me, but I knew that he had been shooting up. No one could eat that much junk food, stay that long in front of a TV, and miraculously lose weight. Once in the course of our six-month relationship, while going through his cash-free pockets, I had discovered a Narcotics Anonymous pamphlet.
“Did you ever have a habit?” I had asked him, waving the brochure between him and the blaring, glaring nineteen-inch screen that held his attention hostage.
“Not really,” he’d retorted. When the commercial came on, he lowered the volume and equivocated, “Drugs aren’t a habit in the East Village—they’re a tradition.”
He produced a fingertip list of boring Beat scribblers—Burroughs, Hubert Huncke, Alexander Trocchi—all writers from the moronic romantic East Village who had taken drugs and allegedly had their brains enlarged.
I always had to do everything for him, and now, to avoid being single, I was breathing for him. Finally, winded, I gave up, turned off the TV, and called 911.1 told the emergency operator my boyfriend was dead. She asked me the color in his face.
“Chalky blue under sixty watts,” I said.
Looking at him now, I realized his complexion wasn’t a result of the reflection of the black-and-white TV.
“How stiff is he?”
“Turgid.” As the erection he never had.
The operator said that it sounded like he had been dead for a while.
“What’s his name?” she asked.
Thanking her and hanging up, I waited for the dead boyfriend ambulance. Locating a pack of American Spirit cigarettes in his pocket, I lit one.
Three other boyfriends had left me over the past six years, but Primo was the first to require a stretcher. Exhaling plumes of smoke over his remains, I eulogized silently. He wasn’t a creep or a cheat. He never hit or robbed or even fought that much. On the other hand, I never felt particularly close to him; he was intimacy-impaired, challenged in the bonding department.
I opened my desk drawer and took out the Valentine’s Day card he had made. Under a simple silhouette drawing, supposedly of me, he had written a poem:
IMPRESSIONS OF A WRITER
All typewriter keys jammed up into a black block of hair,
two millennia of scrolls and hieroglyphs
curl into two pouty lips.
Beautiful eyes tanned blue
by a computer monitor’s monochrome hue.
keyboard-manicured fingers,
an italicized wit,
a cigarette smoke of attitude.
I should have dropped him immediately when I discovered he composed “poetry.” Actually, when we first met he kept saying that he was a novelist, but when I asked what he wrote, he never elaborated. Ultimately, I had never been poeticized before, and probably stayed with him because of a schmaltzy stanza.
Even though my friend Zoë had met him first, she was able to do something I could not—resist him. He had a dark Mediterranean appeal. His short and muscular torso reminded me of a Roman centurion. He had a dry and garlicky sense of humor, a geriatric GenXer. But I always sensed that there was something more at work, an intelligence in his eyes that he wasn’t sharing—a secret he wasn’t divulging.
While waiting for EMS to arrive, I called Zoë, but as her outgoing message unspooled, I remembered that she was on another of her endless dates. At the age of thirty-one, Zoë was panicky. She was terrified of a lonely, childless future. So she had put out an all-points bulletin. Every singles dating agency, every personals, every Internet bachelor website—all had notices posted by her. A large bosomy blonde, she had blue eyes and a blurred smiling face that hinted she had been to one too many parties. After years of girling around, she was in the bargain-basement boxes, elbowing and clawing with others of her burned-out ilk for the last of the nice Jewish husbands.
On my third cigarette, I realized the true reason I was with a corpse. He had caught me on a rebound. Simple as that. I’d been reclaimed from the dump, given eleventh-hour validation, and maybe a little something else. He was everything Gregory, boyfriend number three, was not: cool where the Gregor was hotheaded, and caliente where the Greg was frio. At that time, that was more than enough. Over the past few weeks, though, the rift between Primo and I had widened drastically.
Finally I heard the siren. Opening the window, I could see two of New York’s chubbiest in their uniform blues squeezing out of their car. I wanted to holler that they needn’t hurry, but I didn’t and they didn’t either. I could hear their walkie-talkies echoing through my narrow hallway as they came up the stairs.
“What happened?” asked the heavier cop, whose inspection of my body made me wonder if I was a suspect. I instantly wished I had worn something more revealing.
“My boyfriend died,” I said.
“Did you touch anything?” the smaller, rounder cop inquired.
“I tried to revive him.”
“You did the right thing, dear,” said the first. I think he was trying to be polite, but only condescension was coming through.
The alpha cop, who was the weightier of the two, explained that three types of death required investigation from the medical examiner: youthful deaths, violent deaths, and accidental deaths. The insignificantly thinner cop departed. The first officer’s last name was Miranda, and he asked if he could watch TV. Before I could lie and say it was broken, he plunked himself down on the couch and snatched the channel changer from Primo’s cold hand. On top of everything else, I now was nervous because Primo had illegally rigged cable. Despite the wide variety of channels, the cop flipped to Cops, maybe hoping to learn how the job was done. Rattled, I grabbed my jacket and was about to leave.
“Whoa there.” He stopped me. “I’m afraid you have to stick around, hon.”
“How long?” I looked at the spot on my wrist where a watch should be.
“Till the ME gets here, dear.” The dog rubbed up against the cop, and the cop rubbed the dog.
“My name is Mary,” I said, transmitting my disdain for terms like “dear.”
“Mary, I ain’t trying to suggest something, but”—he pointed to the body as if I could forget it—“your boyfriend just died. Have a seat.”
Al Camus’ The Stranger, or more specifically the Cliff Notes for the book, states at first the stranger is emotionally disassociated from his mother’s death. I wondered if I too was disassociated, but quickly realized, as I informed the doughnutarian, that I wanted to “get on with my life.”
“Get on with it tomorrow,” he advised, adding, “there’s a pretty good show on.”
Some cop who looked like Officer Miranda was arresting some guy who looked like Primo. Defiantly, I went over to my desk and took out the latest draft of my work-in-progress, entitled The Book of Jobs. It was a collection of stories about the people I had worked with in different chain stores ever since high school. The first franchise-themed story was just a coincidence. It was about this sad lady named Janice Fyro who I briefly worked with at a Baskin Robbins in Long Island. She had been employed there since she graduated from high school in the early seventies when the ice cream shop was still the youthful center of town. As other, newer franchises scooped up business, her place went under. Soon after it closed, she killed herself. The story was called “The Melting of an Empire.” I wrote a variety of stories about the disenfranchised, but when I wrote one story called “Big Mac,” about the urban survival of an inner-city McDonald’s food handler, my hippie writing professor, who remembered my Baskin Robbins story, suggested I develop a thematic collection.
“But I can’t stand franchises,” I explained.
“Nowadays it’s not enough to be a good writer,” he explained sincerely. “You need a catchy idea. If an editor found a mediocre collection of stories, she’d reject it in a flash, but if they were all about mall jobs that the writer worked at, the publicity would click in—that’d sell.”
Over the years of living in the city, though, first-draft writing became increasingly labored. I found it infinitely easier to rewrite. So, even though I probably had enough pages to fill three books, I still couldn’t finish this one book of stories. When my writers’ group disbanded a few years ago, I was the only one who decided not to look for a new one.
As I reread and marked up the same printed pages over and over, I realized I wasn’t making them better, just different. I hadn’t been able to dream up any new stories for a while. It was as though the strip mall of my mind was full—there was no room for any new franchises.
Soon, my thoughts magnetized toward the unrefrigerated corpse of Primitivo Schultz, still reclining on my bed. He had lived in the East Village for years. At only thirty-two, he had dabled in the “Allied Arts”—as he called them—which included painting, music, and writing. (Though I never saw, heard, or read anything he did.) He had a mother who lived somewhere in Fiatbush. That was his obit.
At ten P.M., three hours after I had discovered Primo’s demise, the medical examiner finally arrived with a big black briefcase, like some commuting husband gone berserk. He snapped the case open and took out a large Polaroid camera. He was a tall ghoul in a gray flannel 1950s suit, with yellowing gelled-back hair, who looked like he’d crumble in direct sunlight.
“Does it usually take you this long?” I asked, having watched the balance of the Fox Tuesday-night lineup with Officer Miranda, who mindlessly rubbed Numb’s head throughout.
“There’s been a lot of strange deaths tonight,” the ghoul replied mundanely. As he looked at the body, he summoned up a mental roster. “An auto-asphyxiation in Ozone Park, an accidental overdose on the Upper West Side, a probable suicide on the Grand Concourse.”
He snapped some photos of the body and asked, “Was the deceased sick in any way?”
“Nope.”
“On medication?”
“None that I knew of,” I replied honestly. His occasional forays into drugs hardly qualified as medication.
“You didn’t dress him?” he asked, a question that struck me as odd.
“Not today.”
“I know this is odd, but when was the last time you had relations with the deceased?”
“Well, he wasn’t deceased when we last did it,” I muttered, slightly embarrassed.
“I just need to know about his physical prowess.” He leaned close to me, not wanting the cop to hear.
“Let’s see, not in the past month or so,” I responded. I was not counting all failed efforts. He looked Primo over. I told him that when I first came home, I thought he was alive. I thought he talked to me, but it must have just been the TV.
“Do you have any idea what he died of?” I asked.
“Not yet,” he replied without looking up. The ME filled out some forms and asked about next of kin. I explained that his mother lived in the Fiatbush section of Brooklyn.
“We won’t be able to release the body just yet, but you can make arrangements,” the ME said.
“What do you mean?” I asked, nervously.
“We take the body for an autopsy, then afterward, you pick him up and handle the interment.”
“Hey, I don’t … I’m not …” I tried to say I wanted nothing more to do with any of this.
“So call the mother,” the ME said, suggesting he had been down this road before. “I’m sure she knows what to do and would rather hear the news from someone she knows.”
“I guess I can handle that,” I replied, not hiding my reluctance. Then a warning light went off. “Suppose she doesn’t want him?”
“Then the city will dispose of his corpse.”
“Oh.” A new thought bubbled up. “Is it possible that he knew he was going to die?”
“I’m sure he knew when his heart stopped,” the ME said, looking at the cop. Both smiled at the shallow gallows humor.
“I mean, was he sick? Is it possible he had some terminal illness?”
“Offhand,” he replied, “I’d say probably not. But I won’t know till I get him on the slab. It’ll all be in the death certificate.”
“You couldn’t call me?” I smiled, trying to play the helpless female.
“You can get the death certificate downtown. I don’t make house calls.”
With his big black briefcase in hand, the ME walked out, commuting to a new death scene. Officer Miranda called EMS on my phone, then slowly rose to his feet, about to walk out the door.
“You don’t want a dog, do you?” I asked him as Numb licked the cop’s hands and rubbed up against his large legs.
“Sorry, but I already got one,” he said as the phone rang. The machine answered. It was my old neighbor, Joey Lucas. I picked up before he could hang up.
“How you doing, hon?” Joey asked in his usual Breakfast of Champions tone.
“Primo died.”
He paused reverently, perhaps twinged with guilt, as he had never cared for Primo. Then he offered, “Why don’t I come over?”
“I think I should be alone. I’m still waiting for the ambulance to remove his corpse. I feel like we’re on our last date.”
“I’ll be thinking of you,” he said somberly. “Call if you need anything.”