Disintegral
By Kyle Styron
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About this ebook
Kyle Styron
Kyle Styron is a lifelong resident of Queens, New York, and considers himself a proud “townie.” He graduated from St John’s University with a degree in English and Economics in 2001. He has a myriad of bizarre interests, including following network television ratings, seeking out obscure independent films, and early American Gothic fiction. He still occasionally frequents the nightlife of New York City, but mostly sticks to karaoke, with a preference for 1970s singer-songwriters’ hits.
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Disintegral - Kyle Styron
Copyright © 2014 by Kyle Styron.
Library of Congress Control Number: 2014915297
ISBN: Hardcover 978-1-4990-6549-7
Softcover 978-1-4990-6550-3
eBook 978-1-4990-6548-0
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the copyright owner.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to any actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Any people depicted in stock imagery provided by Thinkstock are models, and such images are being used for illustrative purposes only.
Certain stock imagery © Thinkstock.
Rev. date: 09/02/2014
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Contents
Dedication
Prologue The New Journal
Part 1 The Destroyer
Part 2 The Writer
Part 3 The New Adjective
Epilogue The Gordian Knots
We knew the world would not be the same. Few people laughed, few people cried, most people were silent. I remembered the line from the Hindu scripture, the Bhagavad-Gita. Vishnu is trying to persuade the Prince that he should do his duty and to impress him takes on his multi-armed form and says, Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds.
I suppose we all thought that, one way or another.
—Robert Oppenheimer
Man’s respect for the imponderables varies according to his mental constitution and environment. Through certain modes of thought and training, it can be elevated tremendously, yet there is always a limit.
—H.P. Lovecraft
Miserable! … What mean you, foolish girl? Dost thou deem it misery to be endowed with marvelous gifts, against which no power nor strength could avail an enemy? Misery, to be able to quell the mightiest with a breath? Misery, to be as terrible as thou art beautiful? Woudst thou, then, have preferred the condition of a weak woman, exposed to all evil and capable of none?
—Nathaniel Hawthorne, Rappaccini’s Daughter
Dedication
This novel is culled from so much of my personal experiences and depicts a radically fictionalized version of unpleasant events from the past. The individuals who inspired me in this effort include Brian Alessandro, the Russian, Ricardo Carmona, Craig Byrne, Mom, Dad, Randy, David Lynch, John Carpenter, and David Cronenberg.
Prologue
The New Journal
From the Journal of Chester Syme
January 1, 2003
I did this before, and it was pointless. I wrote pages and pages, day after day, and it became a chore. In short, a new journal is a lousy Christmas gift.
I gave my friend Roger a much better gift in return last week. I bought him Jed Haele’s canon of two novels: Shelby and Dance of the Damned. Not only did Roger groan over a literary gift (Reading is too much work!
), but also complained that I wasted sixty dollars on something I could have just printed out from my own computer.
I guess the latter is a logical criticism from his perspective, but he doesn’t understand the process. Jed distributes the novels through his website. After you purchase them, he e-mails the text to you, and you print it out for your own use. All or many of Jed Haele’s subscribers (there are more than 1,800 of us) could get together and pay for just one subscription and share them. This would be legal because he doesn’t copyright his novels. However, Jed does not need to do so. The majority of his fans understand that such tactics would force him to seek legal protection and pay hard copy publishers. This is a concern expressed on many of the message boards and websites that cover Jed Haele’s novels. I am not aware of any website that contains pirate versions of his texts. I’ve tried all of the ordinary Internet search options, as well as some unconventional ones. This does not surprise me at all, because his fans understand this point well. The continued integrity of his fiction (i.e., its content) depends upon our individual integrity. We are all accountable.
(Later)
Of course, I must concede that it will happen. What’s important is that this is not a common tactic. Most of the readers behave.
January 10, 2003
Okay. Let’s re-start. My name is Chester Syme. I’m a senior at Dog Crap University in Queens. My major is horseshit, and next semester I am taking three courses toward that major: Donkey Fart, Cat Piss, and Dog Puke.
Ugh! You’ll have to excuse me, but my school is so lame! I am too embarrassed to name names even in my own journal. The choice to go there is the saddest concession of my life so far.
I have to go back to school on Monday. This semester is my last semester. That means that I have to look for a job (that would ideally
start the day after graduation, of course) in addition to the term papers and exams. That Dog Puke final exam with Professor Bally and thesis required by Professor Rexic for Cat Piss are legendary. In this newfangled hell on earth, I will be more depressed than usual.
January 17, 2003
Ugh! This stupid book. I hate it! What a lousy gift!
I guess some people garner solace from a journal. They place their thoughts down on paper, and it’s said. They’ve expressed all of their longing, anger, bitterness, etc. I consider this notion toothless. Expression on the page accomplishes nothing at all! It may be a mild opiate, but the pain remains.
Rather, I choose to face my newfangled hell on earth
sober. It is how it is, and I will not patronize my reality by crapping and whining down the page! There are two kinds of people in this world. There are those who rip the bandage off in one quick tear, and those who slowly and painfully pry it away from their skin. I rip it off!
February 8, 2003
Roger finally finished the novels. We talked about them for hours. Well, an hour. He loved how Jed finally reveals the futuristic setting of Dance of the Damned in the section where Andrew, who’s a terminally ill teenager with unlimited resources, has his dick pulled from the freezer and re-attached following three weeks of life as a teenage girl. Such advances in technology! Wow! I didn’t see it coming,
he said.
Sharing the two novels with Roger wasn’t as much fun as I expected. I figured that it would be neat to have a live person with whom I could discuss Jed Haele. It was mildly satisfying, but the victory was pyrrhic. Roger didn’t understand the books, and the insights he threw back at me once I explained them weren’t novel or provocative enough. The worst of it is that he said he wouldn’t bother with the third novel.
The third novel! Jed’s second novel, Dance of the Damned, ends so brilliantly. As its protagonist lies dying, a serum is discovered that could have saved him, but his body is so ravaged that he cannot be saved. I am shuddering with anticipation for the follow-up.
I did the standard check of all the spoiler sites yet again today, and the only one with any information about the third novel is Jerry’s site. He claimed that the plot involves a split personality. There’s a character who is a holier–than-thou born-again Christian by day and a whoring heroin addict by night,
he posted. That is a questionable leak, because Jed is cleverer than that. I know that this book will not be clichéd and patronizing. It will be ferocious and raw, just like Shelby and Dance of the Damned. His characters’ quirks spring from plausible plot twists.
The sources for most Jed Haele spoilers usually allege that they’ve eavesdropped on him at the nightclubs he frequents in the East Village. I’ve seen them in action. This cult of vipers lurks in the corners and shadows of his favorite nightspots. However, when I speak to the cult of vipers
after he leaves, they know nothing.
Besides, I could have read the book by now if I wanted to. I know where he lives, and that he handwrites the novels. I will wait, blissfully. One day a brand-new, thick, and consistently surprising novel will arrive in my e-mail inbox. That’s what I want.
I won’t read those drafts, and I know that the spoilers get most of it wrong. Half of the fun of Dance of the Damned was comparing the speculation on the Internet (which was sporadically peppered with good leaks) to the finished product. For instance, one web site correctly discovered that the plot involved a sex change. However, they speculated that Andrew dies on the operating table, and that the final scene is his funeral, where he is dressed as a girl. There’s a line in the book where he says, I want to die as a female, because they live longer statistically speaking,
and I suspect that Jed must have thrown that line around at a cocktail party as a joke, and a member of the cult of vipers
extrapolated a plot thread from the remark.
February 9, 2003
I think that I can get into this now, because I enjoy writing about Jed Haele. That’s contrary to the premise of a journal (i.e., a document of one’s ongoing stream of consciousness whenever one sees fit to place said consciousness on the page that generally concerns one’s life and times.) On the other hand, it is in accord with the most important rule for writing a journal (i.e., There are no rules. Write whatever the hell you want!), so we’ll see where this goes.
Let me preface this by saying that I’m straight. Okay? With that said, I think Jed is hot. He’s lanky, with brown hair dyed dirty blond, and avocado green eyes. He frequently makes tongue gestures, but they aren’t crass. They’re cute. He rolls it, and licks his lips with that candy red appendage. He is the only man with whom I could have sex, and I would go all the way. Yes, I would do that.
He has unique taste, and that flavor penetrates his novels. His novel Shelby commences with an extended monologue by the character Masha. She struts (most of his characters strut) down Queens Boulevard in the middle of a weekday on her way to meet Shelby. She makes a series of aggressive phone calls while smoking and lapses into Russian when she’s mad. By page two, you know that she is the most bitter and relentless character in the novel. Half of the first page is in Russian. Then the novel introduces us to Shelby: Masha knocked with her distended knuckles. The door opened, and Shelby stood there.
That’s on page five. The chapter ends on that line, and Shelby is absent for most of the rest of the novel. It’s like Bram Stoker’s Dracula, where the titular character only plays a supporting role page for page, but the reader feels his presence throughout.
Part 1
The Destroyer
From the Journals of Shane Lasch
May 22, 2003
When I talk to Justin about Hunter, it always unfolds like a rerun. The conversation starts after work once we’ve had a few drinks. He drolly asks, Why,
and I know he’s referring to the relationship.
You’re right. She has been a miscalculation since day one,
I admit.
Today, he was neurotically handling his already messed up hair so much that I wanted to get him a hair net.
How so?
he asked in response.
She was initially a sport fuck.
He laughed. I groaned and continued. When I met her in L.A. last year I was on vacation and she was shooting.
I paused.
She was shooting porn.
Yeah, it was porn,
I said grimly. She used to be a legit actress, but got older, and she switched to porn.
He laughed again, harder. I grinned and added, Probably soft-core, because I only rent and buy hardcore.
He nodded, as if to say Duh.
It was enticing, and then she followed me to New York.
I paused and sighed hard. Who am I to turn her down? Considering her age and lifestyle, she is still remarkably hot.
If you know what’s good for you,
he said, leaning back, relaxed. What’s up this weekend?
he asked, signaling the waitress for another cocktail.
The holiday weekend? Well, Hunter. She …
I trailed off.
You should read a book. There’s this writer I want to recommend to you. He’s really good. . .
I tuned him out while he went on. When I continued listening, he was thankfully no longer interested in discussing Hunter, my weekend plans, or his new favorite novelist.
May 26, 2003
Drug dealers are twitchy and paranoid. I hate them. I’m sure that they die from strokes or heart attacks, because they are primed to explode. I guess it’s a hazard of the trade, as they are always on edge about getting busted or attacked by their clientele.
Hunter introduced me to this dealer she’s friends with
named Cecil on Saturday. When he answered the door to his cramped basement apartment, I couldn’t help but laugh. He was pale with greasy overgrown dreadlocks and a perpetually vibrating lip. Hunter stepped on my toe with her stiletto heel so forcefully that it made a deep indentation in the leather. This shut me up nicely.
A couple of minutes later, when he went to gather her purchase from a valise across the room, she drew close to me on the surprisingly clean sofa. You know how dealers are,
She explained. The slightest thing provokes them.
Such as laughing in their face?
I suggested.
She withdrew and lowered her voice. Something just like that, and he might shoot you.
This was her last sober exchange of the three-day weekend.
While Hunter was shooting up, Cecil went to puke in his tiny bathroom without closing the door. She fell back smiling. His retching was alarmingly loud, and Hunter giggled as she aped the noise. Yack, yack.
That was Saturday. Somehow I peeled her off the couch much later that evening and brought her to my apartment, where I didn’t fuck her. Maybe it was because I would have felt guilty afterward, or because I was afraid she contracted something from the syringe she used, or because she looked horrible and I knew she would probably throw up on me, projectile style, in the midst of the act.
On Sunday, Hunter’s friend Sharisse came by the apartment unannounced, and the girls did some baking. I couldn’t help but partake, as pot laced baked goods do not involve needle use, and they make a good accompaniment to The Simpsons. I pulled out my DVD and watched episodes of the show until I fell asleep.
She finished the remaining brownies as I woke up this morning. Blackish grimy crumbs stained her stubbed fingers. Mine felt soft, but smelled grungy since I had licked them clean hours earlier. She mumbled something about going to Rockaway Beach with her mouth full, and I grunted a negative answer.
Sure?
she asked.
My first words of the day: Sunlight. Just won’t work for me today.
She licked her fingers clean and got dressed. See you when I see you?
she asked, maybe a half hour later.
Don’t be like that.
Why not?
I’m hung over, and you should be too,
I scoffed.
She flung her overnight bag over her shoulder. While you were sleeping, I snagged some towels.
Not the $100 bill towel?
She opened her bag and yanked out a towel that looked like my $100 bill towel. Actually I took two towels. One for me and your favorite towel as well. It was wishful thinking.
She bopped around neurotically, checking to see if she had left anything she wanted to take with her to the beach and left a few minutes later without saying anything else.
Our relationship has degenerated into this. It’s an awkward hostility in that it comes from both of us, like a bouncing ball that we throw back and forth.
I will not mourn the end of the relationship. I know that her heroin addiction will get increasingly hopeless, and I dread the final stages. I am eager to get that worry out of my life.
A few hours later, I finally gathered enough energy and sat up. I stumbled a bit on my way to the kitchenette and glared at the dirty dishes the girls left for me to clean. My philosophy is if you’re a guest in someone’s house and make a mess while using their dishes, you should clean them. I clean the dishes that I use when I’m a guest. This surprises people, but I always insist.
I did not feel like cleaning my guest’s dirty dishes and pondered the narcotic effects of the crud lining my mixing bowl. Instead, I dressed and left my apartment.
I took the E train to Midtown, with no specific destination in mind, and decided en route to spend my paid holiday shopping with the tourists in Times Square. I was nauseous by the time I got off the train, but had lunch anyway in a food court that served diner-quality burgers. I felt fine after I ate and realized I had felt ill earlier from not eating for so long. It’s easy to confuse prolonged hunger nausea from the about to puke
sort. That used to be such a problem for me.
Next up was the multilevel music store. The street level was crowded, so I wandered downstairs. They kept the classical music, show tunes, and country Western CDs on this more somber level.
What were they thinking? If they display such crap in the basement, then not only is it more likely to be a graveyard, but the resulting isolation will attract transients and perverts.
Just as I was thinking this, two tourists from the Bible belt broke into a fight. Initially I thought the first hillbilly (we’ll pretend his name is Roy) was drunk and that the second (let’s call him Buck) got in his way. Roy was perusing the Travis Tritt CDs when Buck came from upstairs and headed straight for the country section. Two aisles over, I hunted through the New Age CDs in pursuit of an Enya import.
I still hadn’t found it when