
disclaimer: spa not shown actual size
They told me the pool by the sales center was heated. As I walked there through a damp night, the dampness swirling under the street lamps and settling into my lungs, I looked forward to swimming laps. I craved exercise. I’d worked all day, true, but it was an easy day and a big greasy lunch. We are prone to big greasy lunches.
Swimming laps would be fun and I looked forward to the warm water. But as I jumped the fence I looked hard for any trace of steam rising and saw none. I dipped my toe in an edge and it turned black and fell off, a frostbitten sausage lying on the bottom of the pool.
I went to the spa. At least I could still have a hot soak, to hell with the exercise. But it was a kiddie pool, a slab of ice.
I went to another pool down the road of this concrete complex. Right and left shitty apartments, leftovers from the sixties, the condensation streaming down their shitty windows. Now I just wanted to be in a spa.
This pool was large and lit up, and despite its turquoise appeal the smell of piss and decay lingered. It, too, is freezing. I go to the spa, where a man and a woman talk loudly.
I say hello as I pass and their heads incline my way: no response. This was entertaining, like I was a ghost that had breathed a cold whisper against their shoulders but was invisible when turned upon. Either that or they were rude. Certainly they were loathe to be interrupted, for it was clear they were getting to know each other.
The woman won’t shut up. The jets are bubbling, confusing the water so completely it’s impossible to see below the surface. So I can’t see what she looks like. Not really. She is only a decapitated head floating in boiling soup.
The man’s head is decapitated too. He has carefully trimmed hair that would look respectable if not for the hopeless balding that already commands the pinnacle of his skull, shiny even in this dull light. He is pale, bland. Like flour. His head and hers bob near to each other occasionally, as if to sniff if the other is done cooking yet. Then they bob apart again. Her head is not unpleasant, and this is what he is thinking. To him, she must have been beautiful. Her nose a little long and her chin too, but her skin clear and young, her eyes blue, her hair curly and blonde and put up so as to avoid the bubbling cocktail of chlorine. Her hair would turn green in it.
The most unpleasant thing about her face is the hideous wails issuing from her mouth. She won’t shut up. Still ignoring the ghost at the other end of the spa, who is staring at them as blatantly as he is blatantly being ignored, she spews the story of how “Bo is out of prison now and I don’t want him talking to the kids. But I can’t stop him like when he was in jail. Then I’d just tear up the letters. Now he emails them and I can’t do shit.”
Her kids, she explains, are reprobates. “One more slip up and Jake goes to Juvy. It’s great. It keeps him in line. Used to be I couldn’t even leave him and Randy alone. I went out with a guy one time and when I came back they weren’t there but they’d spray painted a huge fucking swastika on the back porch.” She laughs. “I’m a renter, I can’t have that shit. I must have used a hundred goddam products trying to scrub that thing off. Finally got it off.”
The man listens, nodding. What he wants to get scrubbed off is Milimeter Peter, you can tell.
“Kids won’t have nothing to do with me now. Sometimes they come back from school sometimes they don’t. They disappear on the weekends. If I want em to hang out with me I have to do something really big. Like a few months ago, I took em both to the skate parks in Venice, took em to all the fuckin places in that Dogtown movie. But I can’t get em to do nothing else, you see what I mean?”
I start wondering how old her children are when there’s a clang at the back fence, and I turn to see what the hell is going on. A young kid has pushed through the bushes and is hanging onto the black iron fence. He’s maybe 13, and toting a skateboard. He stares at us with a little smirk, not really acknowledging any of us, and I turn around. The couple who are not a couple but are sniffing each other’s assholes like dogs have already ignored the intrusion. There is a crash, and I turn back around. The kid has jumped the fence, clumsily. Like somebody who doesn’t give a damn what noise he makes or who looks at him crooked.
He walks over to the couple and squats on his hams behind them. Strikes a real pose. Symmetrical. Spreads his legs around his skateboard, one end of which is on the concrete and the other tucked under his chin, his hands wrapped around either side. He ignores me who is staring at him. They ignore him who is staring at them. He is a ghost too, and I am a ghost even to him. When it was painfully obvious he would not be acknowledged, he skates off along the lap pool, through the gate and into the drooling night.
No wonder. Your mom in a spa with some lardass, neither of whom have the balls to face you. The man awkward, the woman intent on ignoring you until you go away. Which you did.
“Their father was a mean fuckin drunk. I’ve been sober now for three years.” She pauses and nods like perhaps she will receive applause. “Three years now. I been too long getting them everything they want, so I got me my bike. Best thing I ever did for myself. I go on the sober retreats. Got sober poker runs we do once a year.
“This one year this biker guy won’t leave me alone man. He follows me all over, even to my tent. So we go out dancing and I can tell he wants to just screw me, man all the guys want to screw on these retreats because how many biker chicks do you know? and so we dance all night and get all messed up and his friends are pissed so they come up and tell him it’s time to get back to the fuckin wife and kids. Can you believe that? I was like, awwwwwww maaaan.”
The man nods. It must be unpleasant, hearing the disappointment in her voice. She wanted to screw that dumbass. Was disappointed to find out that he was married, that he wouldn’t be able to screw her now. Not now. But next year she saw him again, this time with his wife and kids. “Man, he beat feet. Can you believe that fucking bastard?”
The man nods. Shakes his head. Confused, probably not listening, but this is the price sometimes to get Milimeter Peter a little time in the spotlight. You must aim low, listen to stories that roll like trash in the gutter. But it is crucial to act like he is listening, so after this gigantic story he rubs his bald spot and says, “Well, it sounds like you’re doing good.”
She seems confused by the response so she cackles. Then she says, “I’ve spilled all my beans, now how about you?”
He paws his neck, says, “My ex-wife fucked me. We’re still fighting over it all, but the divorce is through. She took $200,000 from me clean.” The woman’s eyes light up in disbelief. She just spent a half hour going on about how broke she is, about how she almost got fired for throwing a chair across the office and locking herself in a bathroom, and this fatass with his story about more money than she can fathom.
“She wouldn’t let me sell my restaurant when we had the offer, soooo. And she wouldn’t let me reduce karaoke to one night a week. She wanted it every night and it broke us. Costs about $1,500 a night to run the whole thing, and it just wasn’t bringing that in. But she thought it was fun.”
The previous number astounds the wench. Her lips part, moist, wanting to unzip the pants of this mystery and get a bit more intimate with the numbers. “What about karaoke could cost fitteen hundred dollars a night?”
“We had to rent the machine and a guy came with it. Anyway, she run the business into the ground, and we just sold it for what it was worth, plus stock. Didn’t lose money on the property, but lost everything we put into it. About $150,000.”
Her lips are parted, she leans in closer and backs off, her decapitated head swirling this way and that on currents of dreamy numbers. “Wow, that’s a lot.”
He nods, wiping the sweat from his big forehead. God knows how long they were sharing stories before I got there, laboring through a damp night to forge a relationship based on bonds of depression and failure. If there were bodies under that frothing cancerous water they must have been decaying.
Still they have not acknowledged me. I’ve stared at them an hour or more point blank. I’ve enjoyed my existence as a ghost. Invisible to them, I was able to smile at the funny parts, frown at the pathetic, and leave my eyes to flicker from face to face. I was never a part of the conversation and yet I feel as if I could not have been a bigger part had I been speaking along with them. That’s why I was unable to bend or break my ludicrous silence, and sat there listening to the obscene chatter and its idiotic synonym: the bubbles.
Here were the lonely. The losers of the world. The failures. Without wanting to I multiplied their existence throughout the spas of the world; to the extremes of the earth; I felt the burden of the lonely uneducated wasted lives of despair as it floated in this damp evening air. I was overwhelmed by it.
Near to the end I wanted to protest, to rebel against it all like the reprobate childen, and then I realized how. And while they were sitting there, he wanting to screw and her teasing him, torturing him, perhaps deciding whether to go for it or not, what she might get out of it and so forth, I pissed into the water. It wasn’t an urgent calling, but the pressure of my disgust made me realize that I could piss if I wanted to. It was a conscious decision. I squeezed it out. I’d been working that day, and it had been hot, so I knew my piss would be yellow and strong and meaty, like lemonade concentrate.
I couldn’t help but smile. They were jabbering on and I was baptizing us all. I could see piss streaming into the water, the jets dispersing and diluting it, making an even broth of it, and these two sat there marinating in it and me too, but I have no fear of my own filth. I actually laughed out loud. It was the only time I broke the sacred silence, but it didn’t matter.
Nobody can hear the laughter of a ghost.