Demon Lover
Katy always said she wanted to be the Demon
Lover, the one we desire even when we know it is not us she wants,
but our souls. When she comes back to me now, she comes in that
form and I never fail to think that the shadows at her shoulders
could be wings.
She comes in when I am not quite asleep and brings
me fully awake by laying cold fingers on my warm back. Her pale
skin gleams in the moonlight, reflecting every beam like a mirror
of smoked glass while her teeth and nails shine
phosphorescent.
“Wake up,” Katy whispers, and leans over to bite my
naked shoulder. “Wake up. Wake up!”
“No,” I say, “not you.”
But I knew she was coming. I could hear her echoes
peeling back off the moments, the way Aunt Raylene always said she
could hear a spell coming on. Katy’s persistent. Some of my ghosts
are so faded: they only come when I reach for them. This one
reaches for me.
“Sit up,” she says. “I won’t bite you.” But her
teeth are sharp in the pale light, and I sit up warily. The only
predictable thing about Katy was her stubborn perversity; she would
mostly do whatever she swore solemnly she would not.
“Shit,” I whisper, and roll over. She laughs and
passes me a joint. The smoke wreathes her like a cloak, heavy and
sweet around us. I inhale deeply, grin up at her and say, “My
hallucinations get me stoned.”
“Lucky you. It costs everyone else money.”
She blows smoke out her nose. Katy has a
matter-of-fact manner about her tonight, very unlike herself. It’s
been three years since she OD’d, and in that time she’s grown more
urgent, not less. This strange air of calmness disturbs me. If the
dead lose their restlessness, do they finally go away?
Something falls in the other room, wood striking
wood. It’s probably Molly going to the bathroom a little drunk as
usual, knocking things over. Katy slides up on one knee and
clutches the edge of the waterbed frame. If she were a cat her hair
would be on end. As it is, the hair above her ears seems suddenly
fuller. I reach over and take the joint from her hand, moving
gently, carefully soothing her with only my unspoken demand to hold
her.
“You going to wake me up in the night,” I tell her,
“you might as well entertain me. Tell me where you got this
delicacy. Its mashed pecan, right? Tastes just like that batch we
got in Atlanta that time we hitchhiked up from Daytona
Beach.”
Still in her cat’s aspect, Katy looks back at me,
her huge eyes cold and ruthless. Her expression makes me want to
push into her breast, put my tongue to her throat, and hear her
cruel, lovely laugh again. It would be easy, delicious and easy,
and not at all the way it had been when she was alive. Alive, she
was never easy.
“You an’t got no taste at all. It’s Panama City
home-grown.” She comes back down on the bed, not disturbing the
mattress. “You always talking ’bout that mashed pecan, but first
time I got you really stoned on it, you got sick. Spent the night
in the bathroom being the most pitiful child. I swear.”
“That was Tampa, and that killer Jamaican.” I draw
another deep lungful of the sweet smoke. “In Atlanta, you got sick
and threw up on the only clean shirt I had with me.”
Katy gives her laugh finally, and predictably, I
feel the goose bumps rise on my thighs. She settles herself so that
her naked left hip is against my shoulder. Her skin is smooth,
cool, and wonderful. I put my hand on her thigh, and she leans
forward to sniff my cheek and rub her lips on my eyebrows. I cannot
touch Katy without remembering making love to her on Danny’s couch
with a dozen drunk and stoned people around the corner in the
living room; the tickle of the feathers she wore laced into the
small braids over her ears, and the cold chill of the knife she
always pulled out of her boot and pushed under the pillows, the
sheathed blade that always seemed to migrate down to the small of
my back.
Most of all I remember the talent with which Katy
would bite me just hard enough to make me gasp, her bubbling
laughter as she whispered, “Don’t make no noise. They’ll hear.”
Even now, after all this time, I sometimes make love holding my
breath, trying to make no sound, pretending that it is the way it
always was back then, with drunk and dangerous strangers around the
corner and Katy playing at trying to get me to make a sound they
might hear. It was the worst sex and the best, the most dangerous
and absolutely the most satisfying. No one else has ever made love
to me like that—as if sex were a contest on which your life
depended. No one has ever scared me so much, or made me love them
so much. And no one else has ever died on me the way she did, with
everything between us unsettled and aching.
I slap her thigh brusquely, pushing her back. “You
should have had the consideration to puke into a pot. Ruining that
shirt that way. You were always careless of me and my stuff.”
Katy nods. “A little. Yeah, I was.” She settles
back on the mattress, cross-legged and still just touching my
shoulder. “But I always made it up to you. Remember, I stole you
another shirt in Atlanta.” Her hand trading the joint is
transparent. I can see right through to her smoky breasts, the
nipples dark and stiff. “That cotton cowboy shirt with the yellow
yoke and the green embroidery. Made you look like a toked-up
Loretta Lynn.” She gives her short, barking laugh.
“You still got that one?”
“No, I lost it somewhere.”
I remember going home for the service one of the
local drug counselors organized. People were standing around
talking about the shame and the waste, and Katy’s mama slapped my
hand when I touched her accidentally. “It should have been you,”
she’d hissed. “Any one of you, it should have been. Not Katy.” Her
eyes had been flat and dry. She hadn’t cried at all, and neither
had I. I spent that night in my mama’s kitchen, talking
long-distance to my lover up North about how everybody had looked,
and the way Katy’s last boyfriend had glared at me from beside his
parole officer. I’d hugged the phone to my ear, that yellow cowboy
shirt between my fists, wringing it until I was shredding the yoke,
pulling the snaps off, ripping the seams. I’d torn that shirt
apart, talked for hours, but never gotten around to crying. I
didn’t cry until months later in the Women’s Center bathroom. I’d
been stone sober, but I was standing up to piss, my knees slightly
bent, my jeans down around my ankles, my head turned to the side so
I could see myself in the mirror. It was the way Katy had insisted
we piss when we went road-tripping.
“You’re the dyke,” she’d always said. “Keep your
health. Learn to piss like a boy and keep your butt dry.”
“Piss like a boy,” I’d whispered into the mirror,
into Katy’s painful memory. And just that easy her face was there,
her full swollen mouth mocking me, whispering back, “Like a dyke.
You the dyke here, girl. I sure an’t.”
So then I’d cried, sobbed and cried, and beaten on
that mirror with my fists until the women outside came to try and
see what was going on. I’d shut up, washed my face, and told them
nothing. What could I tell them, anyway? My ghost lover just came
back and made me piss all over my jeans. My ghost lover is haunting
me, and the trick is I am glad to see her.
Katy hands me the joint again, moving her small
hands delicately. She smiles when she sees where my glance is
trained. She flexes her fist, opens the fingers, and wags them in
front of my nose. I laugh and take the joint again.
“I loved that shirt. It was the best present you
ever got me.”
“You forgetting those black gloves with the
rhinestones on the back I got in that shop on Peachtree Street. We
always got the best stuff in Atlanta. Didn’t we?”
“You just about got us busted in Atlanta.”
“Oh hell, you were just a nervous Nellie. Thought
you were the only woman capable of sleight of hand. You just never
trusted me, girl.”
“You were always so stoned. You did stupid
things.”
“I did wonderful things. I did amazing things, and
stoned only made me better, made me smoother. Loosened me up and
made me psychic. I was doing acid when I got you those gloves. That
windowpane Blackie sold us.”
“Purple haze. You always talk about the windowpane,
but we only did it once. You talk about the windowpane ’cause you
like to scare people with the notion of you sticking it in your
eyes.”
“I only did it once with you. I did it lots with
Mickey. We put it in our eyes, in our noses. Son of a bitch even
shoved it up my ass.”
She crushes the joint out on the bedframe. She is
smiling and relaxed now, very beautiful even though I am getting
angry. Mickey was the one took her to California after I ran off.
Mickey was the one who got her back on junk, left her in the motel
room where she overdosed. Mickey was the one threatened me at her
memorial service, with his parole officer standing right there
sweating in the heat. Mickey was the one I’d told to try it.
Come for me, asshole, and I’ll cut off your balls
and push them up your butt. The parole officer had smiled, and my
sweat had turned cold on my back. That wasn’t like me, wasn’t the
kind of thing I’d say. It wasn’t even the thing I’d been thinking.
It was as if Katy had pushed the words out of my mouth. It was
exactly the kind of thing Katy would have said.
But Mickey had overdosed himself at Raiford, and
I’d never seen any of Katy’s boyfriends again. Just Katy, anytime
she gets restless and wants to come back. I look at her now and my
throat closes up. I cannot make casual conversation, cannot talk at
all. I want to reach for her but I am too afraid. She is the
vampire curse in my life. You have to invite them back, and part of
me always wants her, even when most of me don’t. Right now all of
me wants her, flesh and blood, body and soul.
Katy’s thick black eyebrows raise and lower, seeing
right through me, seeing my grief and my lust. “Ahhh, bitch,” she
whispers, and it sounds like lover. She slips one hand under the
sheet and strokes her nails along my leg.
I catch my breath. I could cry but don’t. Will we
be lovers again? Is she real enough this moment to put her filmy
body along my too-tight muscles? She wants to; it shows in the
unaccustomed softness in her face. I feel tears run down my
cheeks.
Now she says it. “Lover.”
“Junkie.” I hiss it at her, beginning to really
cry, making a hoarse ugly sound in the quiet room. “Goddamn you,
you goddamned junkie!”
“Ahh well,” she drawls, her fingers still stroking
my leg. “It’s not a lie.” She drags herself over, rocking the bed
this time, sliding under the sheet. She arranges her body to cup my
side, her toes touch my ankle and her head turns so that her mouth
is close to my ear.
“Not a lie, no.” One hand caresses my stomach; the
other hugs my hipbone.
“Goddamn you!” I try to lie still but start
shaking.
“Don’t be boring,” she says. I feel her tongue
licking my cheek, wet and almost as rough as a cat’s tongue. My
whole body goes stiff, and my hands ball up into fists.
“Why do you keep coming back? Why don’t you leave
me alone? You weren’t worth the trouble when you were alive and you
sure aren’t doing me any good now.” I start to fight her, trying to
pull away or push her away. But she is smoke only, a cloud on my
skin, and I can’t escape her.
“Motherfucker . . .” I give it up to cry and turn
my face into the pillow of her hair. It smells so sweet and
familiar, marijuana and patchouli.
Katy’s shoulders ride up and down. She arches her
back and slides her body over so that her belly is on top of mine.
I almost scream from the intensity of the sensation. It feels so
good. It feels so awful.
“You loved me.” She says it right into the hollow
of my ear.
“You love me still. Even after you left me, you
loved me. You couldn’t stand me, and you damn sure couldn’t save
me. But you couldn’t stand it without me either. So here I am. Feel
me.”
She drums her knuckles on my hipbone. Her teeth nip
my neck. I gasp and arch up into her. “I’m part of you,” she
whispers. “Right down in the core of you.”
I pull myself back down and lie still, giving it
up. “I know.” I push my face up. My mouth covers her, tastes her.
Her tongue is bitter honey, sliding between my lips, filling my
mouth, pushing my own tongue up to the roof of my mouth, expanding
until I think I will choke. But I do not fight. I take her in. I
want to swallow her, all of her. If she is a ghost, then why not?
She could melt into my bones. We could be the same creature.
My hips begin to rock. My fingers curl up and try
to grip her waist. A heated sweat rises all over my body. I want to
rise up like steam into her, pull up right off my own bones, and
become something in the air, a scent of marijuana and patchouli,
something sweet and nasty and impossibly sad. But I cannot get hold
of her. My very movements seem to push her up and away, the cloud
of her becoming mistlike, gossamer and fading.
“No!”
Her thumb is in the hollow of my throat. My own
pulse roars in my ears. Her laughter is soft, too soft.
“Stop,” she says and it comes from very far away.
Too far. “You’ll make yourself sick.”
“I’ll take a pill.”
“Junkie.” She laughs again. Her pleasure in being
able to say that to me almost makes me laugh back. “You take too
many pills.”
That is too much. I go limp again and look up into
her black, black eyes. “Oh, Mama,” I giggle.
“Ooooh, Maaamaaaa.” Her mouth draws the words out
delightfully, rich with lust. She rocks against me, and I can feel
her, the flesh hard and cold and powerful.
“I’ll make it interesting for both of us,” she
promises. Her nails rake me lightly. Goose bumps radiate from every
burning pinprick. I am not afraid. I burn. I want her so badly.
Like a mad-woman, I don’t care anymore what is real.
“You move,” she tells me, “and I’m gone.” The cloud
of her lifts and it is all I can do to hold myself still until she
comes back down.
“You must hold yourself absolutely still.
Absolutely.”
Her skin burns me where it touches. I stiffen,
holding myself for her. Her weight comes down until I shudder with
pleasure. Instantly her body lifts, becomes again a cloud. Her
phantom laughter is rich and close. I bite my lips and hold myself
still again. She comes down again. So cold. So hot. I groan. She
lifts, laughs, and rises again. It goes on and on.
Do you love me? Do you want me? Do you remember me?
Do you hate me? Do you love me? I love you, love you, lover you,
come all over you, come up into the dark of you, the pit of you.
Pull me down into the pit of you. Memory and touch and taste. You
are never alone, never going to be alone. If you cry, I will. If
you scream, I will. If you are, I am.
“I love you,” she says.
I am drifting. I have come so much my bones have
turned to concrete. Their weight immobilizes me. Katy’s hot skin
presses all over me. It is so dark, so still. It is the pit of the
night, and I am drifting off into sleep. I want to wrap my arms
around her and pull her down with me, sleep in the luxury of her
embrace. But hours of conditioning stop me, and I do not move. I
just slide further down into sleep. She says it again.
“I love you.”
“You’re dead,” I mumble.
Her weight increases, presses down on me. I open my
eyes.
“Doesn’t matter.” She has spread out, filled the
room. She is enormous, masses of dark all around me. I am afraid.
Suddenly I am deeply, deeply afraid, and when she laughs I feel the
cold.
“Doesn’t matter at all.”