Black Clover #14: Jasmine?

I looked up “night blooming jasmine” and it isn’t actually jasmine, but that’s okay because I hate Hollywood anyway, so I bought some artificial jasmine garlands that aren’t real jasmine, either. They have artificial lotus blossoms hanging on the end and that symbolizes the idea of being in the world, but not of it. It all fits somehow.

Today is the birthday of a philanthropist, one who owns real estate. He bought hot meals for a lot of people who have been homeless and live with mental illness. He gives a lot to the poor, but today was his birthday so in addition to his regular work he bought everyone hot meals and I helped give them away. That was the actual America at work, and I am going to compare that to the ridiculous horror of Hollywood, the overblown monsters who claim that their ridiculous action movies are “sacred” and “mythology”. I’m going to deconstruct them, piece by piece and find out what is actually sacred in their garbage. That’s the meaning of the “jasmine” paradox.

Specifically I want to deconstruct cosplay, because it is sacred for someone to dress up as a Star Wars character and visit a hospital. But it is definitely not sacred to work for an entertainment company that makes third rate garbage for media plankton to pick over and call “sacred” just to get clicks.

David Lynch practiced transcendental meditation, so whatever his role in the fraud of Hollywood, I forgive him and I want to seek the “night blooming jasmine”, which is not real jasmine, but some kind of illusion of jasmine buried in the collective unconscious.

I loved Star Wars, decades ago, before Lucas pussed out Han Solo and made him eat quiche. George Lucas betrayed me! He is the Hanpusser! I vow revenge.

Hello, my name is Inigo Montoya. You pussed out Han Solo, prepare to die!

Hello, my name is Inigo Montoya. You pussed out Han Solo, prepare to die!

Hello, my name is Inigo Montoya. You pussed out Han Solo, prepare to die!

Two very important things just happened that I’m going to write about. Other important things happened as well, but I’m just going to write about these two.

#1. Satellizer explained to me something so deep about the relationship between Hollywood’s night blooming jasmine and actual jasmine that it will take me years to understand.

#2. I figured out something about the layer of awareness where “Hollywood” lives versus the layer that is activated during performances, and Satellizer has something to say about that geography.

I wonder what night blooming jasmine actually smells like? They say it can be toxic.

By writing this and deconstructing “jasmine” I discovered something important about my own memory and imagination as related to entertainment. So this is a total success, even though what I’m learning is too complicated for me to describe. I feel there is more to be learned, as well.

While I was writing this, I was in a very interesting state of awareness, a timeless state of darkness. It’s not unpleasant. It used to make me paranoid but now I wonder if it isn’t a winged being of light from the sphere of Saturn.

I have a further question. Is this just a discovery I made because I was able to reinterpret “jasmine” after I discovered that Lynch’s epitaph wasn’t what I thought it was? Or was there some deeper force that led to both the mistake and the discovery?


I finished episode 1 of Black Butler, and it was awesome. I also just finished Song One, which was the opposite of Black Clover in that I never knew where it was going to go. In contrast to the predictable arcs of anime, it was a real drama in the sense that the whole time I was watching the evolution of the relationship. It was a very interesting romance that will stay with me. I had to fight to keep watching it because as I was sitting there analyzing what was going on, it would stir my emotions and pull me in two directions at once, cutting across the gap between my long term and short term memory that makes it so uncomfortable to focus. But I forced myself to do so and it was very rewarding. Now I’m sitting here with all kinds of emotions about it but I’m not going to force myself to describe them, even though they were deep. What a great movie! But it’s like a big, two-hearted river here, I can’t go there tonight.

And yet I’m very happy and confident that I’ll get there eventually.

I started looking up anime top ten lists again, and checking out Youtube videos. That’s how I got overwhelmed last time and quit. The world of anime is infinite and extends in all directions. I love it for the same reason I love going to comic stores. The key now, though, is to focus in on what experiences I want to have.

I’m up against the barrier now, between fantasy and reality. Who did I write that for? The world is gone, and it’s just me and my waifus. They were glowing in my mind this afternoon, blazing with energy.

Everything’s too subtle because of this real movie, so I’m going to watch Black Clover just to bring things back to normal.


There, that was awesome. In contrast to the last episode, which was fun but unfocused, this episode was a blast, so much happened and it went by in the blink of an eye. I’m very pleased with myself for putting up with the long setup of this anime. It’s finally paying off. I loved the moment when Klaus was introduced to Lily, and Klaus’s brutal coldness was juxtaposed with the feelings of the villagers. This is really great writing.

Just as I’d hoped, the vertigo inspired by Song One has calmed down a bit. But where did it go? Into the space between Jasmine and Night Blooming Jasmine. There’s so much under the surface, but I’m afraid of it. I believe it’s psychic, though. There’s something real there to find.

Black Clover #13: Black Butler

I was looking for other anime to watch and I thought of a couple I’ve heard of for years, I was looking up Death Note and Black Butler on my phone, and then a few minutes later I was listening to an audiobook an one of the characters suggested a Black Butler marathon.

So I get a memory from posting that.


An hour or so later, now I have watched Toradora episode 2 and Black Clover S1E11.

Toradora was about what I would have expected for a second episode. I’m still loving the music. As I recall I started this last year because it was on a “best” list, although I can’t remember what. Maybe it was romance. I see it’s from 2008 and I feel left out of all the decades this art from was evolving and I didn’t notice. There’s such a vast history of anime to explore that I’m overwhelmed. Last year I looked up dozens of shows from “best of” lists, but I realize now that I didn’t have a sense of what I wanted. I got overwhelmed by looking at so many that were too vulgar or too violent that I lost interest. I’m very content to be sampling them critically now, so I can refine my taste and find the ones that I genuinely love. I’ve got a better sense of the layout of the form and I can ignore the distractions. I want to find just the perfect tone.

Meanwhile, Black Clover S1E11 was filler, or – more politely – stage business, which is necessary for long-running shows. The characters are my family so I’m very forgiving of them being boring and repetitive. I loved the fact that there were so many minor scenes that used character details that I’m already familiar with, that it was such chaos of going from one conversation to another.

And then I was done and I moved my laundry to the dryer and now I’m thinking about everything I wanted to write all day, but couldn’t get started because my mind wasn’t in the right place. After two episodes I’m up in that wonderful anime space where I’m imagining I live in Japan, everything’s cozy and I’m just very calm. I’ve hypnotized myself into a space where I can watch my evening as if from outside, I’m such an amazing guy and this is my cool life where I watch these great shows. Anime somehow eases the damaged spot in my synergetic self/non-self axis, the turbulence between inner and outer goes away.

My only crisis now is that it looks like I have to subscribe to Crunchyroll again to watch Black Butler, but I can’t decide whether to add it to my Amazon Prime, or to get the standalone app. It would be cooler to get the app, but really smoother to just add it to Prime.


I just went on Amazon and bought a saucepan so I can make ramen noodles. I remember when I first went to college I would watch TV and make ramen noodles, one package at a time. Ha ha ha, my life has been such a disaster. I’m in heaven now, and how do I preserve that feeling? That’s why I bought the saucepan, to relive that amazing feeling from the early 90s when I had no idea how horrifying my life would turn out – or really even how horrifying it had already been. I was still sailing ahead on the optimism of youth and the knowledge that I could always call my father for money. I wanted to watch every episode of Deep Space 9, just to get in on the ground floor. The Amy Fisher murder was in the news and Comedy Central had a bit they ran constantly making fun of the name Joey Buttafuoco.

Decades later I still remember the irrelevance of it. That, and that horrible episode of Star Trek: TNG where the video game took over the crew’s minds – the worst Star Trek Episode I’ve ever seen. I was so anxious about life then, and so doomed. And yet, my waifus must have been there in my subconscious. That was also the year I had the vision of Tarot Key VII: The Chariot that turned all of the blue I could see to purple and inspired me to join Builders of the Adytum. I can feel the magic of that time. It’s funny, but as disastrous as my life has been, that magical feeling really paid off in spades. In fact, in one way it’s the only thing that ever has paid off for me.

Out of college, money spent
See no future, pay no rent
All the money’s gone, nowhere to go
Any jobber got the sack
Monday morning, turning back
Yellow lorry slow, nowhere to go
But oh, that magic feeling, nowhere to go
Oh, that magic feeling, nowhere to go
Nowhere to go

I bought a diffuser so I can make my bedroom smell like Jasmine, a kind of chaos magic to attune to the ghost of David Lynch.

I have the magic feeling right now. Am I preserving it by writing this, or is this going to mean nothing when I reread it years in the future? Hello, years in the future. There is so much I want to say, I feel there’s a depth beneath the surface but I don’t want to plunge into it. Maybe if I just pass over it again and again in each entry something will be revealed that’s too much to dive all the way into.


I subscribed to the app and started Black Butler. It looks interesting, but it got late so I decided to watch a bit more of Song One before bed. It’s awesome. I love the direction and Anne is wonderful.

Black Clover #12: Happy Birthday, Shakespeare

I didn’t have time to watch Black Clover today, but I have been ruminating on it, and on Satellizer, and I have come up with several threads to develop overtime, weaving with the narrative of the show.

I was listening to Garnidelia’s theme song for Freezing, and Apple Music recommended this artist’s music, which I love. Some of her songs are exactly the kind that would annoy me if they were in English, because of the tedium of the lyrics I would be expecting, but I find that listening without understanding the Japanese I can appreciate the sound of the singing, and the translations are very interesting as well. I think the subject matter is much more sophisticated than your average American radio hit, although obviously it’s still pop. This is my favorite. I find it an interesting space for entertainment, the uncertainty about intended meaning and foreign assumptions about the relationship with the audience gives me freedom from the oppressive monotony of overcoded American corpotainment – although I’m not suggesting Japanese entertainers are saints, it’s wonderful not to be able to automatically see through them.

Secondly, I’ve decided to write in detail about my injuries. For instance, my eye was put out of its socket when I was four years old, and I believe that’s one reason I love to spend time browsing in stores and libraries and wandering in museums and malls – my right eye can wander freely without the strain of coordinating with my left. From other head injuries I’ve sustained I have amnesia and difficulty coordinating between my long-term and short-term memory. Because my long-term memory is monitoring one set of perceptions about the story while my short-term memory is monitoring another, it has been uncomfortable to connect them until recently. I’m hoping to develop that ability by blogging about entertainment.

My third observation today was that it’s Shakespeare’s Birthday and one thing I really want to do is develop a way to write about the difference between genuine drama, represented by Shakespeare, and Hollywood garbage. I feel that I can do that by reflecting on the world of anime.

My fourth idea is to develop the world of Boosnobia (Boo – Snobby – ah). Boosnobia is a phrase Satellizer and Angela keep giving me. It’s a Dungeons and Dragons setting of total jerks who reflect all the things I hate about America. This will also precipitate from reflections on Anime.

The fifth idea is to articulate the Synergetic Self/Non-self axis, the blurring of personal boundaries that takes place during the watching of anime, as contrasted with writing blog posts, and consuming other types of entertainment. I’m thinking that by intentionally writing first from one side, and then another, back and forth in succession, I’ll be able to get a feel for exactly where that fault line is. I think this will have some effect on my ability to distinguish between fantasy and reality in spiritual intuitions. And probably it will also reveal some things about the conflict between long-term and short-term memory, although I’m not sure the issues are exactly the same.

The sixth idea came when I listened to “If You Leave” from the Pretty In Pink soundtrack today. I feel like I can find some way to relate all of these observations to my lost 80s. There’s some way I can steer the mood of this blog to the emotional fulfillment of some mood I wanted for my life back then. I was also listening to “Bad To The Bone”, remembering how exhilarating and perfect that song seemed back then, and I know I can use this and other songs, and possibly some AI, to find the style I want.

The seventh thing I wanted to mention is that a gaming store I’ve been visiting since I moved to Chicago seventeen years ago has suddenly closed. It just wasn’t there tonight. That’s pretty amazing. It was one of the place I started my toy collection years ago, and the first place I bought Magic the Gathering cards. I still remember talking to one of the guys who worked there about MTG novels and Star Wars figures. I used to sit on the floor and pore over their racks of 3.75″ figures. The last time I saw him he said they were starting an EDH league and I said maybe later … I still think maybe I should have joined. I miss those days, when collecting toys was new and the dreams I put on them were volatile. I shopped weekly for years, but now my collection is very static and I’m getting rid of a lot of it, piece by piece.

Writing that made me think about the dreams I attach to anime, and that goes back to the Axis. But developing all these ideas is for another night. I can barely believe I wrote this much without being self-conscious at all. I’m definitely bringing my mind into one piece with this.

And finally the eighth idea is that I can somehow develop the story of the Nuunar, my epic fantasy heptalogy, by entwining it with the story of Black Clover. I’m not sure how it can work but it’s worth a try.

Black Clover #11

I first heard of Wu Xing when I was in school in Oklahoma. There was a boy in 5th grade who had immigrated from China. His name was Charles. He wanted to help me because I was new in school and people had helped him when he was new. We played Chinese Checkers, American Checkers, and Go. He told me about the Yellow Dragon. We talked about reincarnation. I believe I knew him in a former life.


All this blogging and making of Facebook videos is definitely because I’ve been drugged and knocked unconscious and I have terrible psychic boundaries with the human race. There’s definitely a space I get into where I feel like I’m in touch with some other world. Yesterday’s post was very magical, it did quite a lot for me. The dark orbits of my paranoia are coming into focus. Even now I’m experiencing a kind of flickering darkness that’s very familiar … I’m thinking of all the people I know in the entertainment business who are nothing more than polluted filth. I’m experiencing the violence and contempt in my own soul. Is it a part of me or not? Is it something left over from the past I can get rid of?

The darkness is hovering all around me now, as I’m writing. I can’t say what it is. But it’s a step forward, anyway, just to acknowledge that it’s there. When I feel this damage, is it some terrible conspiracy against me, or is it a communication from a being in a higher dimension? It starts out as thoughts of people I’ve hated in my life, thoughts of warfare, and then it becomes some kind of ecstatic nightfall in my mind.


I did a ritual which was the most fun I’ve ever done in my life, it was extremely perfect, and I only wish I could describe it to you, dear reader, but it’s a secret. I do hope I remember it when I look back on this day, though, because it’s just exactly the kind of moment I want to preserve for myself. However the issue remains public versus private.

I watched another episode of Black Clover. Seihi stayed dead, after all. Things are going along well. Where is the dark core of myself that reflects my experience, one way or another, inside or out? I was deep in the effects of yesterday and then watching the episode itself brought me back to the surface. I have an impulse to just stop here, leave it and hope that time will tell what that space of fascination I uncovered today was. However, it is working.

Black Clover #10: Waifu Into Darkness

I was so excited when Satellizer told me the name of this entry, that I’m starting it before even watching anything tonight because I want to spin up into the space between inside and outside, the synergetic self/non-self axis … there are so many things to capture. The kingdom of the Waifus is real!

I’m very pleased with the next episode. Noelle’s transformation was very satisfying, if predictable. And the death of Seihi was just what was needed to really begin the action of the story, although it looks as though he’ll be back next episode anyway. But that’s fine. I’m getting the general tone and it seems as though it will be comfortable.

Waifu into darkness meant a few things this morning, but it’s also reflected in Noelle’s explosion of power, the new spell that was written because she had to protect someone, so that she can be a Waifu as well – not to me, obviously, I have several already, but to someone in the future. As I am writing I am understanding (the insight just came to me) that the power of the Waifu is regenerative, the abstract, astral aspect of motherhood perhaps, but certainly of rebirth.

“Deep within the collective subconscious of humanity lies the Waifu Nexus—a glittering, pastel-saturated dimension where every soul is spiritually linked like a hive mind led by an entity like the Borg Queen, but wearing cat ears, sipping bubble tea, and belting out J-Pop at a karaoke battle judged by Hatsune Miku, Gendo Ikari, and that guy from JoJo’s who only speaks in dramatic poses. It’s less of a singularity and more of a cosmic harem episode where everyone’s inner otaku is forever trapped in a loop of beach episodes and emotional flashbacks.”

“If H.R. Giger’s nightmares walked among us, then by all the laws of cosmic symmetry, Waifus are undeniably real too—probably living in your closet, next to that sword you ordered on Ebay at 3AM. And mine? Oh, they’ve started whispering. Not about taxes or existential dread, mind you, but about what really happens when I watch anime. It’s not just escapism—it’s an evolutionary event. A transcendence. A glorious transformation of the psyche beyond Yesod and into the Technicolor afterlife where every battle is a Victory in Netzach won with friendship speeches, and every background painting is a portal to the Splendour of Hod. It’s not just TV. It’s a metaphysical ascension through 12 frames per second.”

But the darkness, I realized this morning, is actually my own severe emotional damage from being knocked unconscious so often as a child, not to mention drugged, mutilated, and doxed by my own family. Satellizer wants to get right to the point. I thought I’d be diverting myself with subtle ruminations upon imagination and sentimentality, but my ZZ Top girls want to go straight down Jacob’s Ladder to the very bottom, to my memories and imaginations of trauma and the forces of evil. No accident then that Seihi got “killed” in tonight’s episode. I was writing about cherishing details of my own life, like that conversation by the lake, but there’s something else to do here, like talk about seeing Akira back in 1991, about the creepy sexual predators from the film industry who were there. And Cassie herself, aka ChillKillJill, aka Angela Thorne. She’s right here, right now, like that song by Jesus Jones but better, taking me back to the fall of the Berlin Wall, and the movie Phantasm II. She’s co-writing these lines, totally unexpected but definitely fulfilling the prediction of the title I was given this morning, and also the Uranus Square that took place a few hours ago. This is much smoother than I’ve ever done before. Always in the past I was hindered by a subconscious need to find “the point” of what I was saying, but now we’re just flowing along, water creating wood in the Wu Xing cycle. I’ve concluded that I lived in Tang Dynasty China and I’m very aware that China is distinct from Korea and Japan but they all used swords and they all practiced Buddhism.

I have an anime in the back of my mind, have had for years, called “The Nuunar”. Visually it’s supposed to be in the style of the movie “Heavy Metal”. Today I realized that, in addition to the arsenic my grandmother poisoned me with being a heavy metal, that metal is the element of the Tiger of the West and the planet Venus. Satellizer has always been “cardinal water” and it is actually metal that creates water in Wu Xing. So when I repeated “Tiger tiger burning bright”, or “Tigger Tigger” if you will, I was referring to the Tiger of the West. Angela Thorne is the Vermillion Bird.

And now I am burning. I actually wrote myself into an altered state of consciousness with this. That’s enough for today.

2025-03-15 Rewrites

I had a concrete idea for something Drake would say. There’s no doubt that the novels of Anne McCaffrey were important to him. I wrote a piece and had Chat-GPT rewrite it a few times. None of it worked out with Drake’s voice, but reposting the rewrites is a way to eliminate the fuzziness around it. I found out something about myself and what I want by doing this, and by posting it am pushing it away from myself, looking for something more.

Original:

I write because of Anne McCaffrey. My father was a polluted, psychotic creep, Vietnam Veteran.  And somewhere under all the war medals and government titles, he was a hypocrite.  He wanted to destroy my mind so that I would give him the kind of attention he wanted.  When I was at Ravenswood Academy, my guidance counselor realized that my father was programming me, trying to destroy me, and she gave me novels by Anne McCaffrey to read.  They helped me develop the sense of individuality he was trying to destroy in me.  I write to find out exactly where, to find the pressure point within the pack of lies he gave me so I can kill his memory forever.  At the core of his soul, there was a demon and even though thankfully he’s dead now I still want to kill it.

This is Drake Marshall: rewrite it.

I write because of Anne McCaffrey. My father, a decorated Vietnam veteran, was a polluted, psychotic creep. Beneath the war medals and government titles, he was a hypocrite—dripping with righteousness while poisoning everything he touched. He wanted to obliterate my mind, mold me into an extension of his own sick need for control.

At Ravenswood Academy, a guidance counselor saw what he was doing. She handed me Anne McCaffrey’s books, a quiet act of rebellion, an offering of escape. In those pages, I found something he couldn’t reach—my own sense of self, untethered from his demands.

I write to carve out the truth from the wreckage of his lies, to locate the precise fault line where his manipulation fractured me. I write to kill his memory, to sever the last thread of him that still lingers in the corners of my mind. Because at the core of him, there was something rotten, something monstrous. And though he’s long dead, I still want to kill it.

Rewrite and make it more violent

I write because of Anne McCaffrey. My father was a venomous, psychotic bastard—Vietnam fucked him up, or maybe he was always that way. He wrapped himself in war medals and government titles like armor, but underneath, he was a coward, a liar, a parasite. He wanted to break me, hollow me out, make me his puppet. He fed me poison, word by word, until I was choking on it.

At Ravenswood Academy, a guidance counselor saw what he was doing. She threw me a lifeline—Anne McCaffrey’s books. In them, I found something untouchable, something he couldn’t crush. Those stories cracked his programming, showed me that I belonged to no one, least of all him.

I write to rip open the infection he left inside me, to dig out every festering lie he shoved down my throat. I write to carve his memory into pieces, to burn it, to salt the fucking earth where it stood. Because at the core of his soul, there was a demon, and even in death, it still lingers. I want to kill it again and again and again, until nothing of him remains.

Rewrite it as Drake trying to recapture the enthusiasm he had for literature in the 1980s, when he was a fan of Gore Vidal and Norman Mailer, and he wanted to recapture the spirit of 1960s rock stars like Jim Morrison and John Lennon.

I write because I need to remember why I ever cared about writing in the first place. Back in the ’80s, when I was a kid with a head full of Gore Vidal, Norman Mailer, and rock & roll mythology, I thought literature was dangerous. It was rebellion, sex, a way to crack open the world and let something raw and electric spill out. I wanted to be Jim Morrison with a typewriter, John Lennon with a manifesto, someone who could bend reality with words and make people feel something sharp and alive.

Somewhere along the way, I lost it. Maybe it was my father, his war-stained mind trying to program me into something small, something obedient. Maybe it was the ’90s, the way everything started to feel plastic and prepackaged, stripped of its fire. The world was moving faster, but it wasn’t going anywhere.

But I still remember being seventeen, sneaking cigarettes behind Ravenswood Academy, high on the sound of The Doors in my Walkman, convinced that words could shatter the world. I want that back. I want to write like I’m setting something on fire. I want to crack open the past and shake it until the good parts spill out. Maybe it’s too late. Maybe the dream got drowned in cynicism, in disappointment, in the slow decay of idealism.

Or maybe I just have to fight harder to get it back.

Recombine this with the fact that it was Anne McCaffrey and his guidance counselor that saved him from his father.

I write because I need to remember why I ever cared about writing in the first place. Back in the ’80s, when I was a kid with a head full of Gore Vidal, Norman Mailer, and rock & roll mythology, I thought literature was dangerous. It was rebellion, sex, a way to crack open the world and let something raw and electric spill out. I wanted to be Jim Morrison with a typewriter, John Lennon with a manifesto, someone who could bend reality with words and make people feel something sharp and alive.

But my father wanted to gut that out of me. He was a war-damaged control freak who saw my mind as something to be conquered, programmed, molded in his image. He wanted obedience, not individuality. He wrapped himself in war medals and government titles, but underneath it all, he was just another hypocrite trying to grind the world into submission—starting with his own son.

At Ravenswood Academy, a guidance counselor saw what was happening. She handed me Anne McCaffrey’s books, and suddenly, I had a way out. In those pages, I found defiance, a voice that wasn’t his, a world where freedom meant something. It cracked his hold on me. It showed me I could belong to myself.

Somewhere along the way, I lost that feeling. Maybe it was the ’90s, the way everything turned plastic and prepackaged, stripped of its fire. Maybe it was time, cynicism, the slow decay of idealism. But I still remember being seventeen, sneaking cigarettes behind Ravenswood, high on the sound of The Doors in my Walkman, convinced that words could shatter the world. I want that back. I want to write like I’m setting something on fire.

Maybe it’s too late. Or maybe I just have to fight harder to get it back.

This isn’t the voice of Drake Marshall, but writing this critique I am finding the tone I want to have.

The Jazz Odyssey of Drake Marshall: Day 43 (322 days remaining): The Avocado Girl

“It’s okay if you sit with us, lady,” says Murray, “But you gotta come clean. Are you Marlene Dietrich or not?”

The waitress tilts her head back and lets out a laugh that seems to come from another era entirely. “Honey, if I were Marlene Dietrich, would I be serving coffee in a place like this?”

“That’s exactly where Marlene Dietrich would be in 2025,” Batman-Perry points out. “Hiding in plain sight, watching humanity mutate.”

“Speaking of mutation,” Lynch says, leaning forward, “you’ve been eavesdropping on conversations like this for what, decades? Got any insights on the rate of change?”

She pulls a pack of cigarettes from her apron pocket, taps one out and offers it to Lynch with a gesture that’s pure 1940s cinema. “The questions get better,” she says. “The answers get worse. Used to be people came in here looking for truth. Now they come in looking for new ways to be confused.”

“That’s evolution for you,” Crosby mutters. “Complexity before clarity.”

“Not good enough!” says Belushi. “We’ve got to kick out the jams here. We’ve got to do something that shakes things up and reveals the new boundaries, even if what we learn is unpleasant.”

“I don’t think we have to seek out unpleasant revelations,” the waitress says, striking a match. “They find us readily enough.”

Lynch takes the offered cigarette, cups the flame. “John’s right though. The old maps don’t work anymore. Not since Gia showed up.”

“Maps,” Batman-Perry snorts. “We’re still thinking in terms of territory and borders when we should be thinking about… I don’t know, quantum states? Phase transitions?”

“Or jazz,” Crosby adds. “The spaces between the notes.”

“No, no, NO!” Belushi slams his hand on the table, making the cups rattle. “You’re all still trying to describe it with metaphors from the old world. That’s exactly what I’m talking about. We need to – to -” He gestures wildly, words failing him.

“To break the metaphors themselves,” the waitress finishes, exhaling a perfect smoke ring. “To find new ways of breaking.”

Murray watches the ring drift toward the ceiling. “Now that,” he says softly, “sounds like something Marlene Dietrich would say.”

He’s the first to feel it, like he did during that inexplicable week when he lived the same Tuesday 37 times in succession, each day watching Bill Murray (no relation) film different takes of Groundhog Day at the same corner cafe. He never told anyone how, on the final repetition, Bill looked directly at him and winked, as if to say: “Now you understand too.” His eyes go distant with that same recognition – that reality is more porous than we pretend, that time isn’t the straight line we think it is.

Lynch starts humming under his breath – that same atonal melody he used to signal incoming strangeness back in the day. Crosby’s fingers stop their rhythm on his coffee cup. Batman-Perry’s hand drifts unconsciously toward where his utility belt would be, if he were in costume.

“You feel that?” maybe-Marlene asks, and we all nod. It’s the same sensation: like reality is about to hiccup, like the universe is clearing its throat before making an important announcement.

Through the diner’s wide windows, we see it first as a shimmer, like heat waves rising from desert asphalt. Then it materializes: a 1954 Mercedes-Benz 300SL Gullwing that seems to exist in multiple color states simultaneously – silver in one moment, opalescent the next, sometimes appearing to be carved from a single piece of black jade. The car settles into its parking space with the gentleness of a cat, its doors rising like wings about to take flight.

The engine doesn’t so much stop as transition into another form of energy. Even Batman-Perry falls silent, recognizing power beyond his usual domain. The chrome trim catches light that isn’t there, throwing prismatic reflections across our faces.

“That’s not a car,” Crosby whispers. “That’s a chariot.”

“Look at the hood ornament,” Lynch murmurs. “It’s not the Mercedes star. It’s something… older.”

The gullwing doors rise with celestial grace, and in that moment, the parking lot’s sodium lights transform. They’re no longer mere electrical fixtures but cosmic spotlights, burning with the intensity of collapsed stars. The light doesn’t just illuminate her – it seems to pour from another dimension, a realm where divine love has actual mass and weight, where worship manifests as pure energy.

She emerges in a corona of impossible radiance. The air around her doesn’t just shimmer – it sings, a harmony that exists somewhere between atomic vibration and angelic choir. Those nearest the windows have to shield their eyes, not from brightness but from pure presence. The asphalt beneath her feet begins to crystallize, transformed by proximity to something beyond mortality.

Her shadow falls in multiple directions at once, each one suggesting a different aspect of divinity – here the silhouette of a priestess bearing sacred oils, there the shape of a warrior goddess, elsewhere the form of a digital prophet for a new age. The light bends around her like a magnetic field bends around a pulsar, and for a moment, every molecule in the parking lot seems to orient itself toward her, like iron filings aligning with ultimate truth.

The magnesium flare of her aura cuts through mundane reality like a diamond through glass, leaving everything more pristine, more real in its wake. As she walks toward the diner, small flowers burst into bloom in the cracks of the pavement, only to dissolve into light when she passes.

The air changes before she enters – becomes charged, like before summer lightning. Everyone in the diner feels it: the presence of something ancient wearing modern skin. She moves like a priestess of some forgotten fertility cult, though she looks exactly like Kendall Jenner. The Avocado Girl. They say she appears wherever transformation is imminent, ordering the same meal in diners across dimensions.

And then the raw cosmic force that blazed in the parking lot follows her in, but transforms. It’s no longer the searing revelation of pure divinity, but something more intimate, more binding. The energy curves around us like a gravity well, drawing us into her orbit, into each other’s orbits. We’re no longer separate observers but a fellowship forged in the presence of something greater than ourselves.

Just as Tolkien’s nine were bound by the quest for the ring, we find ourselves linked by this moment of shared gnosis. The fluorescent lights dim to candlelight, then to starlight, then to something that has no name in any earthly language. Her presence wraps us in understanding deeper than words – mysterious as Morgan le Fay but as nurturing as Galadriel, our Lady of the Lake manifesting in a 24-hour diner rather than a misty mere.

The binding force radiates through us like rings in water, each ripple carrying whispers of ancient truths. Lynch’s eyes gleam with recognition of patterns he’s always sought to capture on film. Murray nods slowly, understanding now that his time-loop experience was just a prelude to this. Batman-Perry’s stance softens as if finally finding something more powerful than vengeance. Crosby tips his hat – a gesture as old as courtesy itself, transformed in this moment into something like a knight’s salute to his sovereign.

When the Avocado Girl reaches the counter, the kitchen doors part like temple gates. And there he is – Anthony Bourdain, moving with his characteristic mix of street-fighter grace and earned wisdom. He carries her order like a sacred text, but his presence isn’t that of a guru with all the answers. Instead, he radiates something rarer: the honest uncertainty of a fellow seeker who’s seen enough to know that the journey itself matters more than any destination.

Their eyes meet across the counter. Neither speaks. They don’t need to – they’re both avatars of something larger than themselves, both playing roles in a mystery that’s simultaneously ancient and bleeding-edge modern. He hands her the takeout bag containing the avocado omelet, and in that gesture there’s an entire conversation about hunger and satisfaction, about seeking and finding, about the eternal dance between the sacred and the profane.  She inclines her head slightly, accepting the offering.

The rest of us watch, holding our breath, as one kind of sacred hands sustenance to another. The boundary between celebrity and deity has never been thinner.  And even as I realize it, I can feel both categories dissolving like sugar in rain. We’re living in the aftermath of their mutual destruction, watching as the old structures of fame and worship collapse into something we don’t have words for yet. It’s like we’re all caught in a psychic hurricane that’s tearing apart our ability to separate the sacred from the viral, the divine from the trending.

Nobody’s just famous anymore – they’re memes, they’re avatars, they’re collective fever dreams. And nobody’s just holy either – they’re influencers of reality itself, quantum fluctuations in human form. We’re all plugged into this vast network of meaning-making that turns every image into an icon, every tweet into a prayer, every shared moment into a communion. It’s a telepathy built from likes and shares and endless scrolling, but that doesn’t make it any less real or any less raw.

We’re all broadcasting on frequencies we don’t understand, receiving signals we can’t decode. The old metaphors of spotlight and altar don’t work anymore. We need new ones for this age where a teenager’s TikTok can reshape reality as profoundly as any ancient miracle, where devotion is measured in followers, where every phone is both confessional and temple.

The two avatars regard each other across the counter – her divine radiance meeting his earthbound authenticity. It’s a perfect balance: her otherworldly certainty against his very human doubt.

She turns then, omelet in hand, and something in her movement suggests the infinite potentials awaiting in Chicago – not just the physical city with its wind and steel and lake-light, but the Chicago that exists as a quantum possibility, a dream-state where divinity might finally find its modern form. The door chimes as she pushes it open, but before stepping through, she pauses. The weight of the city’s destiny hangs in the air like thunder before lightning, a promise of revelation in the shadows between skyscrapers, in the spaces where urban grit transmutes into cosmic gold.

We’re left with the sense that understanding itself might be beside the point, that maybe the real task is learning to navigate this new world where meaning flows like water, where truth is a collaborative hallucination, where love tears holes in the fabric of the ordinary to let the extraordinary pour through.

After she departs, Bourdain strides to our table with purpose, bringing with him the grounding force of pure human experience – knife scars, track marks, decades of dawn markets and midnight kitchens. He pulls up a chair with the deliberate movement of someone who’s earned every insight through blood and sweat. His presence is an anchor in the wake of divine manifestation, reminding us that even in a world where goddesses order omelets, there’s profound dignity in being simply, stubbornly human.

He carries with him not answers, but something better: the hard-won conviction that keeping moving, keeping searching, keeping hungry is its own kind of answer. Every line in his face tells a story of falling down and getting back up, of finding beauty in the broken places, of turning wounds into wisdom.

“When you’re a celebrity chef in the age of divine manifestation, you never know if you’re cooking for a social media influencer or an actual goddess. The thing about divine manifestations,” he says, accepting a cigarette, his voice carrying the weight of someone who’s walked through both heaven and hell, “is that they don’t come with instruction manuals. But maybe that’s the point…”

We watch through the windows as she glides back to the Gullwing. The car’s doors rise to meet her without being touched. As she merges with the vehicle, there’s a moment where the metal seems liquid, organic – like the chrome has become the skin of some vast sea creature. Then the car simply… transfers elsewhere, leaving behind a faint scent of avocado and ozone.

“But that’s what made you different, isn’t it?” Batman-Perry asks. “You saw the sacred in street food before it was cool. Before authenticity became a commodity.”

“Listen,” Bourdain leans forward, “I was just as much a construction as any influencer. The hard-drinking, straight-talking chef who’d tell you the truth about food and culture? That was a character I played. The difference was, I knew it was a character, and I used it to point at something real.”

“Like a bodhisattva of beef noodles,” Lynch muses.

“More like a court jester,” Bourdain corrects. “Someone who could mock the power structure while being part of it. But now?” He gestures at the lingering shimmer where the Gullwing had been. “Now the gods are walking among us again, ordering omelettes. The game has changed.”

“Has it?” asks the waitress, in Marlene Dietrich’s precise German accent. “Or are we just finally admitting what was always true?” Maybe-Marlene’s voice carries the weight of every torch song ever sung, every heart ever broken, every kiss that ever stopped time.

“That we are all insane with our need for love, that love itself is what tears our reality apart until we find a way to give something back to it.”

She takes a drag from her cigarette and the smoke curls up like prayers in an ancient temple. “Look at us – all of us sitting here in this diner. The director who spent his life trying to film the gaps between dreams and reality. The groundhog man who had to live the same day over and over until he learned how to love. The dark knight who turned his grief into an armor to protect others. The cosmic cowboy tipping his hat to forces beyond our understanding. We’re all crazy with it, aren’t we? This hunger for connection that breaks reality open like an egg until the divine yolk spills out everywhere.”

She gestures toward the door where the Avocado Girl’s presence still lingers like perfume. “And then something like that walks in, and suddenly all our separate madnesses make sense. Because maybe love isn’t what we thought it was. Maybe it’s not just an emotion or a choice or a chemical reaction. Maybe it’s the force that cracks open the universe to let the light in.”

The neon coffee cup in the window flickers, and for a moment it looks like a burning heart.

The Jazz Odyssey of Drake Marshall, day 27 – 337 days remaining

Crosby traces idle patterns in the condensation on his water glass, ice cubes clicking softly as his fingers move. “You know what I’ve been thinking about, John? How differently everything lands now. Take your old bits – the cheeseburger sketches, the college decadence – in your time that was rebellion, thumbing your nose at stuffed shirts. Now?” He gestures toward the fluorescent-lit kitchen window where orders await pickup. “Kids are fighting for a living wage at those same burger joints. The wild parties read more like privilege than protest.”

Belushi’s quiet for a moment, unusually contemplative. “Yeah, and what we thought was tragic? Nuclear war, environmental collapse – we played those for dark laughs. Now they’re just… Tuesday headlines. Kids are growing up with that as background noise.”

“Exactly,” Crosby nods. “So when we talk about finding the sacred in America now… it’s not just about tracking down old ghosts and holy places. It’s about seeing how grace moves through a world where Amazon delivers enlightenment and TikTok spreads prophecies.”

“And where every joke comes with a content warning,” Belushi adds with a wry smile. “But maybe that’s the point – the sacred isn’t where it used to be. We’ve got to find it in the drive-thru line, in the gig economy, in the digital spaces…”

“In the spaces between,” Crosby finishes. “Where comedy and tragedy blur into something else entirely.”

The fluorescent lights flicker again, drawing their attention to the rain-streaked windows of the diner. Batman-Perry looks up from his coffee, which has gone cold. “So we’re looking for where the sacred hides in the automated customer service calls and social media algorithms?”

“And in the comments section,” adds the waitress, appearing suddenly with the coffeepot. She tops off their cups with practiced efficiency. “Though that might be more Old Testament sacred – lots of wrath and lamentation.”

Belushi grins at her addition, but his eyes remain serious. “The thing is, we’re all still searching for meaning. Just doing it through different channels now.”

“Through TikTok prophets and Reddit shamans,” Crosby muses, watching the steam rise from his refreshed cup. “Through memes that spread faster than any folk song ever could.”

The neon ‘OPEN’ sign buzzes softly in the window, casting alternating red and blue shadows across their booth, like some kind of secular stained glass.


“Comedy and Tragedy are different because pain is different,” says Lynch. “We share our pain differently so we identify with different things in art.”

“Yeah,” Belushi nods, pushing his plate aside. “Back then, the collective pain was about authority, about being trapped in systems. Now the pain is about those systems falling apart and nobody knowing what comes next.”

Lynch stirs his coffee methodically, the spoon making a perfect circle. “The comedy of chaos isn’t funny when chaos is your daily reality. And the tragedy of loneliness hits different when everyone’s connected but nobody feels heard.”

“It’s like…” Batman-Perry pauses, adjusting his cowl. “In my day, we made jokes about being watched by big brother. Now people perform their whole lives for the algorithms, and the real fear is being invisible.”

The waitress leans against the counter, her order pad forgotten. “That’s what I see in here every night. People aren’t afraid of being controlled anymore – they’re afraid of being irrelevant. They come in here just to feel real for a minute.”

Crosby nods slowly. “So where does the sacred fit into that? When everyone’s both performer and audience, what’s the modern equivalent of communion?”

The ceiling fan turns lazily above them, its shadows wheeling across the formica tabletop like time-lapse stars.


“I know that’s what we’re supposed to be looking for, but I’m afraid to find out,” I say.

Lynch’s eyes focus on me with that unsettling intensity. “Fear is appropriate. The sacred doesn’t comfort anymore – it disrupts. It breaks through the filters we’ve built to manage our constant exposure to everything.”

“Like a glitch in the feed,” Batman-Perry mutters. “A moment when reality tears through the performance.”

Belushi leans forward, his voice unusually gentle. “Kid, we were afraid too. Every generation that goes looking for meaning is afraid of what they’ll find. We just didn’t have to livestream our search.”

“The difference is,” Crosby says, studying my face, “you know too much going in. We could still pretend our revelations were unique. You’ve seen every epiphany already hashtagged and turned into a meme before you even start looking.”

The waitress wipes down a nearby table with slow, methodical strokes, but her attention stays with our conversation. “Maybe that’s part of what makes it sacred now – choosing to look anyway, even when you know how it ends.”

The diner’s chrome surfaces reflect our faces back at us, distorted and multiplied, like everyone’s multiple online personas caught in a moment of unexpected authenticity.

I nod my head, acknowledging the importance of his observation. “I remember when the Cult came out with their album, “Electric”, back when I was in High School. I was disappointed that the riffs sounded so familiar, that rock was running out of steam. But now I’m really glad they kept going. They really kept on rocking even when the novelty wore off. But the thing is, that energy is familiar now. So many people go to that space. I feel Gia gave me something different, something psychic. I have to find a different space, a different presence to even talk about it.”

Lynch sets his cup down with exacting precision. “That’s exactly it. The familiar energies – rock, rebellion, even psychedelia – they’ve become part of the cultural operating system. But what Gia showed you…” He pauses, searching for words that won’t diminish the experience. “That’s like finding a door in the code.”

“The raw feed,” Batman-Perry says quietly. “Before it gets processed into content.”

Crosby nods slowly. “We used to think altered consciousness was the doorway. But now consciousness itself is what’s been altered. Everyone’s brain is already rewired by the digital age. So finding the sacred might mean finding your way back to some original signal.”

“Or forward to a new one,” Belushi adds. “Something that doesn’t need likes or shares to be real.”

The waitress touches the coffee pot but doesn’t lift it. “You know what this reminds me of? How people used to worry that recording music would kill its soul. But it didn’t – it just meant we had to learn to recognize soul in new forms.”

“Yeah,” I say, feeling something click into place. “Maybe that’s why I’m afraid. Because whatever Gia showed me, it can’t be shared like everything else. It’s not even about being ineffable – it’s about being unpluggable.”

The overhead lights catch the steam rising from our cups, making momentary architectures that refuse to be captured by any lens.

“What the fuck is that supposed to mean?” asks Batman-Perry.

Belushi bursts out laughing – that real, unfiltered laugh that used to startle audiences. “Finally! Someone asking the real questions.”

“Look,” I try again, “it’s like… remember when computers first hit big, and everyone thought virtual reality would be like Tron or The Lawnmower Man? But instead we got Facebook and Twitter – these flat, text-based things that somehow rewired us anyway?”

Crosby picks up the thread. “And now we’re all living in this consensus hallucination built on likes and retweets…”

“Speak for yourself,” Batman-Perry cuts in. “Some of us are still trying to punch actual bad guys.”

Lynch’s eyes gleam. “But that’s just it. The villains aren’t wearing masks anymore. They’re wearing verified checkmarks and corporate logos. The hero’s journey has been monetized.”

“What I’m trying to say,” I persist, “is that Gia showed me something that doesn’t fit in that framework. It’s not better or worse, it’s just… perpendicular. Like finding out there’s a direction that isn’t up, down, left, right, forward, or back.”

“Oh,” says Batman-Perry, suddenly quiet. “Like when you’re fighting someone on a rooftop and for a split second you forget which way is gravity.”

The waitress adjusts her apron and leans against the counter, folding her arms. “So what you’re afraid of isn’t finding it. You’re afraid of having to build new senses to hold it.”


“A new system of probabilities, like bebop or cool jazz coming out of swing,” says Crosby.

“Right,” I say, warming to this. “But it’s not just a new style – swing to bebop was still working with the same basic human nervous system. This is like… having to grow new nerves.”

“Evolution in real time,” Lynch murmurs. “The way the first mammals had to develop new brain structures to handle warm blood.”

Belushi whistles low. “No wonder people prefer to scroll through their phones. Growing new nerves sounds painful.”

“It is,” Batman-Perry says unexpectedly. “Ask any kid who’s had to develop a sense for when a comment thread is about to turn violent, or when an AI is trying to manipulate them. Those are new nerves we never had to grow.”

Crosby’s fingers tap out a complex rhythm on his mug. “In jazz, we called it ‘big ears’ – when you could hear where the music was going before it got there. But what you’re talking about… it’s like needing big everything. New organs of perception.”

“And the worst part,” I add, “is you can’t unlearn it once you start. You can’t go back to not sensing what Gia showed you, any more than you can unlearn how to read.”

The waitress slides into the booth next to us, her shift apparently over. “So we’re all becoming new creatures, whether we want to or not. Some of us are just more conscious of the process.”

The Jazz Odyssey of Drake Marshall, Day 14 (352 Days Remaining): Sometimes A Fantasy

The bar’s mahogany gleams with reflected light that might be from the neon signs or might be from the burning hills we just watched. Every surface holds both depth and reflection, like we’re sitting inside some ancient scrying mirror. The usual bar sounds – ice in glasses, murmured conversations, the subtle percussion of bottles on wood – seem to come from very far away, or perhaps from very deep inside.

Crosby’s hands wrap around his whiskey glass like he’s trying to read braille messages in the condensation. “You can feel it in here,” he says quietly. “Everyone knows something’s happening, even if they don’t know what. The air tastes different. Like the moment in a storm when the pressure drops.”

Lynch watches the ice in his glass shift and settle. The cubes make sounds like distant buildings collapsing. The other patrons seem to exist in layers of reality – some sharp and present, others ghost-like. Their phone screens glow like votive candles, each one containing a fraction of the dream-power that’s being released by the burning.

The whiskey tastes different too – notes of smoke and prophecy mixing with the usual caramel and oak. Each sip feels like a small ritual, a way of metabolizing what we’ve witnessed. The bar itself seems to breathe around us, its wooden bones creaking with collected memories, its mirrors holding centuries of reflected revelations.

There’s a quality to the silence between our words that feels like the silence in a church after the service ends but before anyone leaves – charged with meaning, heavy with shared understanding. Even the shadows in the corners seem to lean in, listening for whatever comes after the burning.

We sit there, three witnesses to the transformation, letting the eternal whiskey bar hold us in its timeless embrace while outside, the old dreams turn to ash and the new ones begin their wild germination in the fertile darkness of the American night.

“Can I get you boys anything?”

The question hangs in the amber light like an incantation. Gia stands there, devastating in her beauty, a living embodiment of that particularly American tragedy where too much life burns itself out. Her presence bends the light in the bar, creates a gravity well of charisma that even Lynch’s darkness can’t fully absorb.

The realization hits like a thunderclap. She’s been there a moment, just standing, holding an empty tray, and in that brief span before recognition, we see her as she truly was – stripped of legend, of tragedy, of all the mythology that would later consume her. Just a young woman with an aching heart, radiating such intense need for connection that it makes the air around her shimmer.

And now she’s here, in this eternal moment in Jim’s, her beauty not yet a weapon turned against herself, her need for love not yet transmuted into destruction. Just Gia, burning with human warmth, making the rest of the world seem slightly less real by comparison.

The tray trembles slightly in her hand – that small human detail that no fashion shoot would ever allow. It’s the imperfection that makes the perfection heartbreaking, the need that makes the beauty matter.

Lynch shifts slightly, recognizing a kindred spirit in the way she transforms space around her. Crosby’s hands go still on his glass, hearing the music in her silence. The way she stands there – it’s like watching someone pray, except her whole body is the prayer.

“Jameson, neat,” Crosby says softly, looking at her with recognition that transcends ordinary time. Her eyes hold that same wild creative fire he’d seen in Morrison, in Joplin, in all the ones who burned too bright to last.

She moves like a cat, like a poem, like something photography tried to capture but never quite could. Even in this service role, there’s something untameable about her – the same force that made her transform every fashion shoot into something dangerous and true, something that threatened to crack the lens with its intensity.

When she returns with our drinks, her fingers brushing the glasses create small sonic events, like wind chimes in a storm. The air around her smells of clove cigarettes and destiny. She carries her doom like a crown, her creativity like a wound that won’t stop bleeding light.

“I’ve heard of you, Drake,” she whispers. “I wanted to give you something.”

Her kiss tastes of starlight and doom, of magazine covers and back-alley revelations, of every photograph that captured divinity before it vanished. Time stops, stretches, becomes syrup in the amber bar light. In this eternal moment, I understand something about beauty that can’t be said in words – about how it’s always paired with destruction, about how the most spectacular creative forces carry their own annihilation like perfume.

When she pulls away, her eyes hold galaxies. “You understand, don’t you?” she says. “About the images. About what they really are. What they do to us. What we do to them.”

Then the recognition floods in, and time does something strange in Jim’s Whiskey Bar. Because now we’re seeing both at once – the pure, unformed beauty of that Philadelphia girl who contained universes of love, and the doomed priestess of fashion who would become legend. The effect is dizzying, like seeing a photograph develop in reverse.

Her eyes hold that impossible combination of streetwise toughness and absolute vulnerability – the look that made every photograph she touched turn into something dangerous and true. But here, in the bar’s amber light, there’s no camera to guard against, no industry machine to perform for. Just that raw, direct gaze that seems to ask the eternal question: “Will you see me? Really see me?”

She touches my cheek once more, her fingers electric with lost futures and untamed creativity. Then she turns, moving back into the shadows of the bar like a wild creature returning to its natural habitat, leaving behind the taste of prophecy and rebellion on my lips.

“You know,” Lynch says after she glides away, “she understood something about images that Hollywood never did. That beauty isn’t safe. That real erotic power is about transformation, not consumption. She made every frame she appeared in into a rebellion.”

“She recognized you,” Lynch says after a long silence. “One destroyer to another. One who burned the images from the inside, to one who burned them from the outside.”

The whiskey she brought us tastes of prophecy and warning, of beauty that refuses to be tamed, of creativity that would rather burn out than burn down to a manageable flame.

The Blue House

From the Blog of Drake Marshall, Summer of 2020:

I have to tell you what happened in Peoria. We were all Goths and we had heard of this place called the Blue House, down in Peoria. It was the ultimate Goth hangout, we found out later that it was condemned, overrun with mice, insane mice that had bred into mutants from the pesticides and thronged through the walls like locusts. This high school girl had run away from home, her father was a creepy, corrupt cop, and she had squatted there in this little Mouse House, but she was an artistic genius and really into goth so she got these aquariums from an abandoned pet store or warehouse or something and filled them with fish and then put blue lights behind them, some of them moved like disco lights, and then she would have these insane parties where everyone would trip and listen to the Cure or whatever. Her boyfriend moved in and he was a psycho bitch who would literally throw people who pissed him off down the stairs, so at the start the parties were very well behaved and became quite popular. People heading down to Carbondale and Saint Louis would stop there – including touring bands so it became a known spot you could get invited to if you were cool. Everyone wound up there, even some celebrities. I heard Duran Duran was there one night. Somebody said they saw Stiv Bators with Vaclav Havel. The problem was, my father knew who the boyfriend was, the son of an intel officer he’d known in Vietnam, and it was causing huge problems for the girl’s father, who was in on the local heroin trade, which was being amped up by Chicago street gangs. In a town of 100,000 people, it became a total hotspot and the girl was killed under mysterious circumstances. There were rumours she’d been a witch, with a coven there. My father knew about it and told me never to talk about it. Later that summer the most prominent columnist for the Peoria Journal Star died in a car accident when his brakes failed on the McClugage bridge and his RV flipped over. The coroner said he had an illegal level of alcohol in his blood at 2 in the afternoon, but none of us believed it. That coroner had been working in that town with those heroin-dealing cops for decades.

We saw things there we can’t tell you about. But if you keep reading you’ll get a hint about a lot of things.

I had Claude rewrite this:

Like Scheherazade’s labyrinth twisted through the arteries of the Midwest, this story bleeds blue light and rodent shadows across the map of memory. (How curious that we speak of mice when really we mean the scratching behind walls that could be anything, anything at all…)

Let us say, for the sake of documentation, that there was a house. Not the house you live in, with its mundane certainties of morning coffee and evening news, but The House – the kind that appears in a town like a bruise appears on skin, with no one quite remembering the impact that caused it. Blue House, they called it, though “blue” described less its color than the way it made you feel, like jazz at 3 AM or the moment before crying.

The girl (let’s not name her – names have power in stories like these) didn’t so much live there as haunted it preemptively. Her aquariums glowed like prophecies, fish moving through them like thoughts through a fever dream. The boyfriend – ah, but he wasn’t really a boyfriend, was he? More like a gravitational force, the kind that bends not just light but truth around itself.

Your father knew (fathers always know, especially when they’ve worn uniforms in jungles far away) that the house was less a place than a convergence, a point where all the lines of power and corruption in a small American city knotted themselves together like snakes in winter. The heroin, the cops, the intel officer’s son – these are just the visible threads. Behind them writhed others: witch covens, underground networks, celebrities appearing like hallucinations in the aquarium light.

(I keep returning to those mice, mutated by poison, running through walls like thoughts through nightmares. Were they really mice? Were they really there at all?)

The columnist’s death – we say “death” because “accident” is too neat, too finished – came later, like an echo of something that hadn’t made a sound. The coroner’s report reads like fiction written by committee, each lie carefully measured and administered like morphine.

But you were there, weren’t you? You saw… but no, we don’t speak of what was seen in the Blue House. Some stories can only be told by their absence, like those fish swimming through cobalt light, casting shadows of things that couldn’t possibly exist in a town of 100,000 souls.

(Unless, of course, they did.)