San Diego 2009 : The Tinies Chapter Two “The girls are cool as grapes”

Part One

Although one of the primary reasons for the three of us to be traveling together was playing shows I can barely remember any of the West Coast ones except for that first one in Portland. It’s entirely possible that we didn’t play an Oakland show on our way down at all. Most likely Skadi and Etain had already played an Oakland show in the week leading up to Halloween that I hadn’t heard about and didn’t go to.

[Note: since writing this I stumbled across a folder of photos from a show we must have played together on Larry Bus. I can’t remember where it was parked, who else might have played or anything about it really.]

I was extremely busy preparing the abandoned house for it’s eventual haunting with Popsicle and Sugar Tea so all of my nights were pretty much taken. I can’t even remember where I was staying in Oakland around this time. Either Apgar had not yet dissolved and I was back in my room or Apgar had dissolved and I was either at Trinity’s house in West Oakland or between places. I may well have been crashing with Lux.

Lux is another piece of the timeline that I am having trouble pinning down. I know that Lux and I were already in a relationship by the time I passed back through Oakland with Skadi and Etain but I can’t remember if it started before or after the haunting. I can’t conjure a single memory of Lux at the haunted house so my best guess is after. That November seems to be bursting at the seams with memorable events and meaningful changes as small portions of my timeline often are.

Lux was somebody that Popsicle knew through SPAZ and 5lowershop parties – basically the Bay Area “indie rave” scene. She was originally from Hawaii which perpetuated a pattern where everyone I met with an X in their name seemed to come from a non-contiguous state. Alexis from the Rockaway and a girl I call James in these stories but actually goes by Ajax both came from Alaska. Since then I’ve met people with “X” in their name who came from the lower 48.

Oh yeah, there was a guy named Djynnx (I might be spelling it wrong) in the Katabatik crew who was also from Alaska.

Anyway Lux looked similar to me in terms of “sparkly goth” fashion but skewed a little closer to what was called the “MySpace scene” look. We used to semi-ironically watch a lot of Blood on the Dance Floor videos together – at that time Dahvie Vanity’s patterns of sexual assault and pedophilia were not well known. We formed a death rock band together called Voiheuristick Necromorph that recorded an album with a label lined up to release it but sadly imploded before it was ever mixed.

Like Skadi and Etain, Lux is a powerful visual artist. She also is a Born Again Christian now and may not use the name Lux anymore. For several years there was a silent power struggle over our MySpace page that had an early recording of our song Matryoshka from before the band became a five piece. She would try to delete the page and I would get a notification as co-Admin and veto it. Eventually I forgot to check it for over a year or however long the veto window was and the page was gone.

Of course if she had simply waited it would have disappeared from the internet anyway. I haven’t dug into the story but whatever happened with the MySpace servers is pretty much the burning of the Library at Alexandria for early twenty first century underground music. I can’t even imagine how many artists like me uploaded music then lost the tapes or files and never archived any of it under the false security that things on the internet last forever.

Maybe there is some way to get some of it back with The Wayback Machine but I’ve never heard of it so it probably doesn’t work.

Anyway Lux and I were definitely seeing each other by the time I was back in Oakland with Skadi and Etain. It was even the second place Lux had lived while we were seeing each other – it’s wild that all of this happened in the window between Halloween and Thanksgiving. Her living situation in West Oakland had been kind of weird so it makes sense that she would have moved in the middle of a month.

Anyway the question of sleeping arrangements didn’t really come up that night because I would have been sleeping with Lux. We never talked about it or used the term but what Lux and I had was essentially an open relationship. She was already seeing someone else when we started seeing each other and then stopped seeing him because he didn’t make her feel good. I wanted her to stop seeing him because of how she told me he made her feel but not really for any other reason – I never felt threatened or insecure about the fact she was seeing him.

We were both just naturally predisposed to candid honesty and the total absence of jealousy. I’ve been in other relationships that were fundamentally “open” but there was usually some degree of secrecy, hurt feelings or anguish over not being faithful to someone else. There was none of that with me and Lux or at least none that I was aware of.

Of course I told her about what was starting to happen between me and Skadi and of course she already knew because the energy palpably hung in the air around us. Her reaction to Skadi and Etain was immediate affinity – she loved them and they loved her. It was like the purer form of what would have been between Skadi, Etain and me if physical attraction never entered into the picture.

There’s no way for me to know for sure if my relationship with Lux played a role in Skadi’s eventual decision to deny and resist this attraction but my immediate instinct is that it did not. She had plenty of other reasons that I will go into when the time comes. I wouldn’t describe myself as poly but this wasn’t the first time that I saw multiple people at the same time. When it does happen I try to do everything I can to treat all parties with honesty and respect.

We all went to dance at the Goth Night at DNA Lounge in San Francisco. I can’t remember if Skadi ever did but Etain definitely referred to herself as goth. I’d say all three of us thought of ourselves as goth but none of us looked a thing like the typical definition – Skadi looked like a lost boy from Peter Pan and Etain looked like a Gelfling Princess and I looked like a granny style acid biker.

In the Summer of that same year I got into an argument with a Rastafarian at a Berlin Night Club over whether or not I was goth. He kept saying things like:

I Rastafari! No man is goth!”

It wasn’t until much much later that I realized we were probably getting confused by each other’s accents and he thought I was claiming to be God.

We had a great night, we all had fun dancing. I haven’t done it in years but I used to be obsessed with dancing and go out to do it as much as possible. I wouldn’t say I’m especially good, I seem to completely lack any natural sense of rhythm, but I compensate by being creative, enthusiastic and unashamed. A choreographer friend in Chicago was impressed enough to invite me to join a performance of what had previously been an all girl dance troupe.

The other troupe members were not pleased:

Did she really ask you to join or did you ask her?”

Because of the sparks that were beginning to fly I was paying the most attention to how Skadi danced. She looked defiant – like she was ready to take on the world and lose. Kind of like a main character in a video game or animated movie when the developers are especially angling for a David and Goliath thing. I don’t know that we ever danced together.

I’ve had maybe a handful of experiences with partners that perfectly complement my dance style and we develop spontaneous dancer’s telepathy. I remember one night when it happened on pogo sticks. Me and some mystery woman were wordlessly developing a plethora of new moves together – using our knees to stabilize so we could jump without hands, jumping on two pogo sticks at the same time and then the other person jumps forward and you release one pogo stick and split into two while both jumping backwards.

These dance partners have never been romantic or sexual partners to me. In most cases we never even spoke to each other and I never learned their names. It’s one of the many cruelties of the world that is – it simply has some things it chooses to hold back and deny. I’ve had partners that I danced well with but never transcendently. LaPorsha and I actually used to dance together a bit before an intermediary assured us of our mutual attraction and we became instantly betrothed.

The next stop after Oakland was Los Angeles. I can’t remember how the car configuration worked out but of course I can’t drive so it would have made the most sense for whichever of them wasn’t driving to lay down in the back seat and rest. The slow smoldering of whatever it was between me and Skadi didn’t cause any lopsided-ness in the conversation. I remember it being between all three of us – the constant hunger to learn more about each other disguised the passage of time and made the long hours between cities feel deceptively short.

I hadn’t lived in Los Angeles yet at this point but somebody had connected me with Nora Keyes and I got us onto the Ye Olde Hush Clubbe show at Hyperion Tavern. I would go on to play and help many touring friends play this event when I moved to Los Angeles and the necessity of keeping the volume down was always a problem. For Skadi and Etain it was a perfect fit – both of their performance styles were already on the soft and gentle side.

I don’t know what I did that night. It’s possible I didn’t play at all but knowing me I’m not the kind to pass up an opportunity even if it isn’t ideal. I probably just dialed down the drum machine and reigned in the screaming a bit. I have a scrap of a memory from the night – the three of us wandering up Hyperion to a burrito shop and spending a long time sitting at one of the tables. We were probably a little early for the show.

I have no idea where we slept.

The car we were cohabitating in was a nearly new Volkswagen Jetta that belonged to Etain or someone in her family. It was an early example of the key fob having a computer chip in it meaning it would be both drastically expensive and a logistical nightmare if it were lost. I had just moved into Skadi and Etain’s world but in the short time I’d been there the key was becoming potentially or theoretically lost multiple times a day.

I couldn’t say if this characterized their entire cross country trip or if it was a newer phenomenon. I thought it would help if the keyring was a little larger and looked more like it and the two girls belonged together. I tied on a big loop of rainbow cord I had for making Cat’s Cradles and attached a large acrylic prism. It was the same one a girl named Annapurna used to “sting” me when we first met in Liberty, Maine.

[It’s in The Bus chapters if anybody feels like digging for it.]

That prism had already been through some stuff. When I started hanging around Oakland in 2008 I worked on a three piece version of Bleak End at Bernie’s with Books and Rotten Milk for a big generator show at the Albany Landfill. Rotten Milk made pedal noise and Books added percussion with tap dancing or percussion on a bent saw or scribbling on top of a contact mic’d metal sign depending on the song.

It wasn’t improvised – we spent a long time writing parts and practicing at The Purple Haus. We also took the opportunity to record the three piece versions of the songs on a four track but the morning after an Apgar show my purse was stolen a few feet from the place I was sleeping on the floor and the master tape was lost before we’d had a chance to mix it down. This was the morning that Jesse Short gave me the “Vampire Dicknose” nickname:

Hey Vampire Dicknose! I found some of your trinkets in the gutter!”

Besides the tape the only other things in my purse were trinkets. One of the ones recovered in the gutter was that prism. It had been attached to a contact mic wire and was the source of a power struggle between me and Books because she was teaching me to solder piezos but was inordinately bothered by me wanting to hang different things from the wires that were purely ornamental in function.

Any way she was right – the weight of the prism caused the wiring on that particular contact mic to fall apart and it became part of a keychain. I kind of think she made sure it was poorly soldered out of spite though. That’s not really an excuse for anything – I took Electric Shop in Junior High and should have already known how to solder myself.

I made the changes to the car key in Los Angeles. We were heading down to San Diego to play a show and celebrate Thanksgiving at my mother’s house and we stopped to go swimming at Black’s Beach in La Jolla. When it was time for us to leave the car key was suddenly missing again. If you’ve ever misplaced car keys at a beach you know how daunting it is to search an expanse of sand where they easily could have become buried.

This was the proof-of-concept run for my modifications of the key chain. If my theory had been correct the visual affinity between the new decorations and Etain and Skadi’s style would cause them to be drawn back together. One of the popular activities at Black’s Beach is paragliding from the Torrey Pines cliffs that sit above it. After riding the winds the paragliders land somewhere on the beach and pack up the canvas sailplane to hike back up the trail.

As we approached the trailhead one such paragliding enthusiast was twirling the key on his finger and looking directly at us. He told us it had been beneath his feet the moment they returned to terra firma and he’d been scanning the crowd for its owner. The moment he set eyes on Skadi and Etain he knew that it could belong to no one else so the experiment was a success. I don’t remember looking to see if that stuff was still on the keys when we met back up on the East Coast but I’d understand if it was removed – it was a change that I had unilaterally made to their world.

Black’s Beach is clothing optional but I doubt the three of us were naked. Whatever was happening between me and Skadi prevented the insular world that the three of were building from existing in Eden-like innocence. Most likely we all had underwear or actual swimsuits on. There were other signs of trouble in Paradise as well.

Because of how tall I am I’ve always enjoyed being treated like a piece of furniture and climbed on. The photo up there is me fulfilling this function for Lux some time after we stopped being in an intimate relationship. My feelings are directly opposed to The Rolling Stones famous lyric:

I’ll never be your beast of burden…”

I almost always want to be a beast of burden. It’s not totally gendered – I often raise male friends into the air on my shoulders while they are performing but I’d be lying if I said there wasn’t a special thrill in being scaled by beautiful women. Ideally I would have preferred for Etain to feel equally at home doing this but under the circumstances I can see why my shoulders didn’t quite feel like neutral ground. In fact it was a source of tension:

Etain saw Skadi as looking down on and mocking her from my shoulders – much like a sardonic squirrel. I wasn’t going to put this in here because I’ve already used it in another piece but honestly why would I ever pass up an opportunity to drop in a reference to Ragnarok and the Prose Edda of Snorri Sturluson? Etain saw Skadi in this moment as similar to Ratatosk – the bushy tailed rodent that runs up and down Yggdrasil to ferry insults between Avenir the eagle and Nidhogg the dragon.

I doubt that’s how Skadi would have seen herself.

I didn’t want to make Skadi or Etain feel like I was comparing them to each other but the reality is this probably happened nearly constantly. While Skadi was clambering on me I would have been making remarks about how incredibly weightless she was and it doesn’t seem outside the realm of possibility that weight and self image is a thing Etain struggled with – I have and most girls I know have as well.

More than anything I think she was just feeling ganged up on.

After the debacle with the keys we continued on to my mother’s house. It was the first Thanksgiving since my father’s death and both of my sisters were also in attendance. My mother seemed upset about something, normally this would have been drugs but I wasn’t on any, I asked her if she had some issue with the girls:

Of course it’s not the girls! The girls are cool as grapes!”

I never did figure out what was bothering her. Everybody seemed to get along and be genuinely excited to meet and learn about each other. My older sister Sarah seemed especially taken with Skadi’s music and went on to follow and listen to it for longer than I did. The three of us went to a produce centered grocery store to get ingredients for pies.

I had only learned how to bake pies a couple of years earlier during a courtship with the girl I call James. Since that time it’s remained an often romantic bonding activity for the period where I am just getting to know somebody. Skadi and I worked together and made both a savory and mixed fruit pie – I don’t remember the particulars except that they were novel (or pie-oneering) and perfectly adequate.

Etain attempted to make something out of grapefruits. It might have worked for something chilled in the general order of key lime but that wasn’t how she went about it. She seemed determined to both innovate and buttress her sense of individuality but at the same time wracked by self doubt and misgivings. Pies are a comfort food and expression of domestic contentment and her dismal failure of one was indicative of a lapse in all of these things – she was feeling fundamentally not okay.

She went outside to an area covered by a gigantic pine tree and began to cry. I followed her out and attempted to comfort her – I was doing too much and perhaps a bit smothering but she did seem to appreciate having me there. Seeing her cry made me feel like I wanted to protect her but at the same time I must have been looking for some form of absolution. I knew that this all was intense for her, that she was pulled into a gravitational orbit with me the same way that she had been in one with Skadi for a long time and the more that things grew between me and Skadi the more Etain would be trapped in a place that was both too small for her and impossible to leave.

I don’t think I could have resisted the thing with Skadi but I did know that it wasn’t fair and what made things even less fair was needing Etain to pretend to be okay to make myself feel better.

Skadi was just getting tired of emotional breakdowns and crises and having Etain’s issues fill her horizon. It was like they’d been living in a conjoined twin costume and she needed her leg back. She was guiltless insofar as she had no responsibility to keep things perfectly balanced or be the world for everyone. I took those responsibilities on even as I saw the impossibility of them. There was hubris there but bigger hands than mine were pulling at least some of the strings.

I couldn’t have created or conjured the forces that were pulling us together. Perhaps I participated in a myth that I did but the reality was that I was just as powerless as anyone. We played a last minute show that night – probably at my younger sister’s house. Actually only Skadi and I played while Etain did not feel up to it. It’s a big thing when you’re traveling for the purpose of performing music in front of people but you don’t even feel like doing it.

It means something’s broken.

That’s where things stood when Skadi and Etain left me in San Diego and continued to travel on back toward the Northeastern States and cities they had started from. Yet somehow we were all still determined to reunite and continue to travel and play shows together when I would fly to New York early the next year. It wasn’t like we thought it was a good idea.

It was like we didn’t have a choice.

Part Three

Illinois 2011 : Trains, Talismans and Juggalos Part Five “I thought those meals were coming awfully quick”

Part One

Part Two

Part Three

Part Four

The black leather cap.

I mentioned in an earlier chapter that I viewed this cap as one of my talismans. In a way it was the talisman because losing it had a profound effect on how I viewed the world and magic and ushered in the end of my magical career. I had been self identifying as a “TangleWitch” meaning that I thought my magical abilities were especially suited for entangling things and next to useless for untangling them. I started to see myself and my core talismans as entangled – meaning that the universe was fundamentally incapable of separating us on a permanent basis.

I especially thought this about the cap because of two separate but similar incidents. The first time was at a work party for the Black Butte Center for Railroad Permaculture, coincidentally very close to where I currently live, that I travelled to with Larry Bus. I forget why I was angrily and drunkenly walking through the forest alone in the middle of the night but it culminated in me throwing my cap into the trees.

I’ve been to forests, jungles, savannas and chapparales across a decent portion of the globe and none of them are as visually homogenous as the evergreen forests of the greater Mount Shasta watershed. I figured that my chances of relocating the cap once I woke up sober and regretful were next to zero but I took a walk and there it was. It felt significant.

The second time around was also Larry Bus adjacent. John Benson was making a trip down to San Diego to deliver a power wheelchair he had prepared to my mother, who was suffering from Multiple Sclerosis, and we set up a show in Balboa Park. This was the same trip as the 2010 Tijuana two-parter about getting arrested – the show was a night or two before our trip across the border and when I get around to writing it up you’ll see what a phenomenally shitty week the whole thing was.

I had lost the cap in Balboa Park while getting caught up in a knuckleduster, or in less flowery language my friends and I getting assaulted, so I was reasonably certain that I would never see it again. On a subsequent trip to San Diego nearly a year later it reappeared on my friend Eddie Castro’s porch which is precisely when I started to believe that the thing was karmically bound to me. It had gotten an excessive amount of my juju on it and it started to feel like no matter how far it went invisible forces would slowly but inevitably pull it back to me.

Part of this belief stemmed from the fact that it hadn’t originally been my hat. It had belonged to my cohort Kevin Von Mutant who had undoubtedly added the row of round studs and VIN number plate from a car that was most likely towed out to the desert to be destroyed and I started wearing it during the brief window of time that we had a Death Rock band called Voiheuristick Necromorph. After I had added some colorful buttons, feathers and a rubber bat tucked under the band he declared that there was too much of my juju on it to accept it back.

Anyway enough about this stupid hat: let’s talk about how the three threads of this story come together and I lost it for good. Let’s talk about the 2011 Gathering of the Juggalos.

There are a weird sequence of concentric rings pertaining to unfeigned appreciation of beauty and insulating layers of irony that together map out all the different ways of being a “Hipster” and I can say with reasonable certainty that I fit somewhere in there. I’ve been to Coachella, I’ve had numerous vegan brunches, I’ve bought clothing from American Apparel and I used to look forward to bringing home free issues of VICE when it was still a print magazine.

It is neither the first nor the last adjective that would pop up if somebody was attempting to describe and define me but it is certainly one of them.

There were probably some preliminary rumbles and FOMO aftershocks but by my reckoning 2011 was the year of the great hipsterization of the Juggalo subculture. I don’t mean that Juggalos became hipsters or vice versa – for several years it had parsed over into being a prestigious reference, like when I made a talisman out of the lucky Juggalo dollar, but now every hipster worth their artisanal cocktail salt was trying to show up for the Annual Gathering. Clown paint, oversized ICP shirts and hatchetman everything were popping up in highbrow noise sets and fine art installations.

By now the Juggalo movement has been thoroughly plundered and its aesthetics and iconography have been present in mainstream hip-hop for several years – albeit without a watermark and with the serial numbers filed off.

I had gone to Chicago for Bitch Pork and stuck around for the remainder of the Summer when my good friend Dalton from the bus tour and Living Hell informed me that he had a press pass with my name on it and I needed to get my ass down to Cave-In-Rock, Illinois to check out the 12th Annual Gathering of the Juggalos. I asked around about rides and quickly joined some Facebook groups but nothing materialized so I felt like I had no choice but to try to get myself down there by any means necessary and undertake an odyssey I had just learned was especially perilous.

I hadn’t thought about my 2008 arrest in Sullivan, Illinois since I almost lost my tutoring job over it the year before and I’d assumed that unless I visited the actual town or tried to ride a train through it again it wouldn’t manifest as a meaningful factor in my life. I had just started my year long oath of abstinence from opioid agonists and temporary Catholicism and even more recently learned that I had Hepatitis C when I went in for routine testing with the girl I’d been seeing which caused me to cut out alcohol as well – this all meant that an unhealthy dose of hubris was involved as I had adequate cause to feel untouchable from a spiritual standpoint.

There was a venue on the West Side of Chicago on the edge of the open air market I used to cop dope in called The Dust Bowl – it would become the major venue for next year’s Bitch Pork festival but at this point subculture types were still a relatively rare sight in the neighborhood. I was biking to a show there one night that was either cancelled or I was too early for or something but I biked out of the neighborhood a few minutes after biking in. To the cop car stationed on North Avenue that noticed me in both directions this could only mean one thing.

The ridiculous part about this was that I was absolutely done up to the nines. I was going through a white lace period of my larger goth phase and would have had on bloomers, a white lacy apron, elaborate face paint and yards of lace ribbon wrapped around my arms and legs like a mummy. I didn’t even have pockets and there’s no way the corner boys from any crew would have ever served me in this state but that’s the timeless stupidity of Chicago cops: they honestly believe that hard drugs are bought and sold by people in Halloween costumes like in an ‘80s action movie instead of the reality that every white buyer is trying to blend in with jeans and a hoodie.

They refused to believe my honest explanation of course and after searching me they were angry enough that their assumptions had been wrong and they’d wasted their time that they were excited about the prospect of running my ID and finding something to catch me up on. I’d been in a handful of situations that involved getting my ID ran outside of Illinois but now that I was in the same state as my initial arrest the charges came back to haunt me. They already had me in handcuffs and might have moved me into the cruiser when one of them noticed some fine print: I was apparently only eligible for arrest on these charges if I was south of the Interstate 80 and north of the Interstate 64.

Chicago sits just above the 80 – it was like Illinois was a giant hamburger and as long as I stayed in the top and bottom buns I was safe but stepping into the wide swathe of meat in the middle meant that I was gambling with a “Go Directly to Jail” card. The Juggalo Gathering takes place in Cave-In-Rock which happens to be just under the 64. Chicago was safe, the Gathering was safe but even if I had a ride down there I’d be risking the possibility of getting pulled over in any number of small towns in the middle. It would be beyond stupid to try to hitchhike.

I was going to do it anyway.

There’s a Megabus to Champaign-Urbana and I figured it would stop for a meal break somewhere around Effingham. It stopped at the exact same truck stop we’d slept behind in 2008. My plan was to jump out and try to catch rides down the 33 and then the 45 – really small country road type highways. Every time I had hitchhiked long distance before had been in the company of at least one girl and generally on larger interstates so I was picking a hell of a time to try it as a 6’4” guy on his own. I was wearing close to the same outfit that I have on in the photo I posted with this story – considering the kind of towns I was trying to catch rides through that didn’t help either.

I asked around the truck stop for a minute but nobody was going in the right direction. I didn’t want to let it get dark on me so I had to just try to get moving. I forget what I wrote on the sign – probably “SOUTH”. It would have been one thing if I never got any rides at all, then I would have just turned back around, but I got two or three really short ones. Just enough to get me to the middle of nowhere.

There weren’t very many cars so every time one passed it was a big psych out as to whether any of them would pick me up or not. None of them did. I didn’t even look like a Juggalo and I hadn’t written anything about the Gathering on the sign so even if a group of them passed it was completely possible that they wouldn’t have picked me up. It didn’t look like any of them did.

Maybe the hitchhiking advice that the Teddy Bear Juggalos had given me back in Amarillo would have come in handy – I was trying to get into their world. Someone did drive past me and yell “do you suck dick?” when I was closer to town. Maybe I should have said yes. That’s stupid – I wouldn’t have wanted to do that. I just wanted to go to a weird party and not let my friends down.

It was starting to get dark and I was scoping out a church to get ready to sleep behind it when an SUV pulled up.

Red and blue lights. I was fucked.

It turned out that somebody had called the cops on me because they thought I was standing too close to a mailbox. They said they thought I was stealing mail. Like freaks come all the way from the city to steal their Sears Catalogues and shit. I can’t even blame them – the whole thing was stupid and I should have accepted that I wasn’t getting there long before I had the cops called on me on a lonely rural highway.

I knew exactly what was going to happen. I’d been given an absurdly detailed warning back in Chicago. The cops asked me if I knew I had a warrant from Moultrie County and were a little taken aback when I told them I did. It was a Friday – I had to choose between paying a five hundred dollar bond and waiting until Monday to see a judge. I had the money, though not much more than it, so there wasn’t any way I could not pay it. You can’t really sit in a cement box for two days if it’s within your power to make it stop, or at least I couldn’t.

There was a teenage kid in there with me. He asked me if I knew what time it was:

“It’s probably around seven.”

Morning or night?”

“Night.”

I thought those meals were coming awfully quick.”

The thing that’s stayed with me about this whole experience is the absolute resignation and depression in his voice as he said that last bit about the meals. It turned out that he was in there because somebody had called the cops on him when they saw him and some friends drinking underneath a freeway bridge and he was the only one that was underaged. Normal teenagers doing normal teenage shit and the people in his town decide to call the cops.

I had gone with Snake a couple of Summers earlier when she had to drop off court paperwork from when she’d gone to a camping party in Central Illinois and gotten a citation for curfew because there was nothing else they could catch her up on. I should have known exactly what Central Illinois was like if I had taken half a second to think about it. The kind of place where people call the cops if they see a stranger standing by someone else’s mailbox or a teenager doing the only thing there is to do in their dead end town or for no reason whatsoever.

“Just to be safe.”

There were things I didn’t like about the town I’d grown up in and I couldn’t wait to get out of it but the conformity of San Diego was nothing compared to the absolute emptiness of being young, bored and trapped in a place like Effingham. God damn effing Effingham. Everything about the town pissed me off but the kid wasn’t even pissed off.

He had just given up.

After an hour or so they had finished processing me and they brought me to the heavy metal door and handed me my paperwork and cut me loose. There was a soda machine between the door and the exit and I didn’t exactly want a soda but I had a dollar on me so I bought a Dr. Pepper. It felt like I almost didn’t have a choice – like now that I had my freedom I had to buy a soda if I had the option and Dr. Pepper was just the best of several bad options.

I stepped outside with my soda and a Bluegrass String band was playing on the grass of the town square outside. The last thing I wanted to do at that moment was watch an old timey String band but it wasn’t like I was about to start walking so I sat on the grass and I opened my Dr. Pepper. I think they were called Strings n’ Things. In Effingham even the air of freedom doesn’t taste sweet.

It’s just sad and mediocre.

It wasn’t a long walk to the same truck stop and I went to sleep behind it again just like in 2008. I found an old vinyl sign, like the banner kind, and I wrapped it around myself so the dew wouldn’t get me wet in the morning. The next day was Saturday and I had already missed the first day of the Gathering but I figured that at this point the worst had already happened. I could show my discharge papers if another cop got called on me so I spent a few more hours attempting what was clearly impossible.

I got to the roadside just after the sun came up and by noon nobody had even slowed down much less stopped for me. It was time to accept the inevitable. I flipped my cardboard sign over, wrote “CHI” on the back and walked to the other side of the street. It was like I had been walking against the wind with all my strength only to stay in one place and then turned around and let it carry me. It was like the sun suddenly came out from behind a cloud, the day got a little brighter, the birds got a little louder.

I hadn’t been standing there for five minutes when a family of smiling Christians stopped and gave me a prepaid Subway sandwich card. It wasn’t like I particularly wanted a Subway sandwich but it wasn’t about that. I had flipped a switch and suddenly people were acknowledging and wanting to help me. I was moving in sync with the Universe. Ten minutes later I had a ride and he was going all the way to Chicago.

It had cost me a day and five hundred dollars but that wasn’t the real price. His name was Doug and he was a deer hunter. The conversation was pleasant enough – just enough to put me at ease to the point that I stepped out of the car in Chicago without realizing that I had forgotten my black leather cap. He lived in Humboldt Park, a couple of blocks from The Dust Bowl, so he had some patina of hipness but not to the extent that I would actually have any prayer of seeing him at anything.

Of course I tried to get it back, I expected to, the message hadn’t sunk in yet that I had made a serious mis-step and it was a consequence. I put flyers all around the block of park that he had dropped me off at. I wrote “Deerhunter Doug” and explained that I had forgotten the hat and it was important to me and I wrote my phone number on the bottom. It would have been less of a blow if he never called but to make the senseless loss all the more frustrating he did.

I stuck around Chicago for a couple more weeks but by the time he called I was already back in California. Of course he remembered me, of course he still had my hat but there wasn’t any way he would send it to me for any amount of money or let me have a friend go pick it up for me. It isn’t vanity that makes me say he was attracted to me and kindling hope that a second meeting might go somewhere – it was just painfully obvious. He was an aging urban professional queen who was cosplaying rural masculinity by dressing up in Real Tree and going deer hunting and I was a hipster cosplaying a gay leather subculture that I wasn’t even peripherally a part of.

Neither of us were going to get what we wanted and I never saw the hat again.

The experience didn’t end my magic career entirely but it checked and subverted my faith in things that I never should have had faith in to begin with. I had been getting cocky and I needed a reminder that even if I had gotten lucky a few times if I tried fate it would try me back. It wasn’t that I wasn’t supposed to be at The Gathering of the Juggalos, I just wasn’t going to get there if I was being stupid about it.

To add insult to injury I met someone from our social group a week later that had driven from Chicago to the Gathering at the exact time that I’d been trying to get there.

Things changed for me slowly. The Library of Congress Tape Player for the Blind that had been providing the soundtrack for my life on consecutive charges of its nickel-cadmium battery took the hit for me when a car knocked me off my bicycle. I performed an Invocation to Venus and eventually met my wife. We performed a series of Planetary Invocations to Saturn, the Moon, Mars and Mercury.

I gradually stopped wearing and using and thinking about all of my other talismans and when I lost them I lost them all at once along with everything else I’d accumulated up to that point in my life.

It didn’t feel like it had anything to do with magic.