1.5.12

ICARUS and the OTHERS



For Albert and Diego.  And for all of his amazing “others”…

 

     IF YOU PROMISE TO KEEP A SECRET, I might tell you one.  And, if after you hear my story you prove to be trustworthy, I might tell you another. But if you really want to know everything you will have to earn that privilege. Come ‘on now, let’s face it: after all, nothing in this world comes cheap, and nevertheless free. Perhaps, as in those silly game-shows where the winner gets all, I might even give you a bonus prize at the end, how’s that?  But I won’t tell you what it is; not now, and not like this.  We wouldn’t want to ruin your little surprise; plus, it wouldn’t be fun then, right?  Let’s say it will only depend on how lucky your day has been so far; so just make sure not to screw what’s left of it by reading the rest of this.
     Oh well… I see that you’re still here.  I guess you must be either incredibly stupid for not listening or just plain brave.  I vote for the second, hoping that you realize soon enough that you have made a terrible mistake for allowing your child-like curiosity to interfere in men’s affairs.  You are ambitious, I can tell; but I tell you this:  there’s nothing you can do to get me to confess everything.  But I’m a man of my word, and I do as I say; so I will tell you my first secret. And we’ll see what you think after I’m done. Who knows, you might get lucky after all. Oh, and one last thing: if for any reason you end up falling short to your own expectations and, as a consequence, you fail on earning the privilege of having it all; or, if you do get everything you are here for but then you don’t like the “bonus prize”, don’t come after me; believe me, I will be long gone.  So, now, I did warn you, right? And taking in consideration that after all you might be flat stupid, I am warning you again.
     Very well then; where shall we begin?
     The first thing you should know about me is that despite my actual appearance, I am woman. I know… I know… I tricked you with my previous statement; you thought I was a man, didn’t you? But don’t be so tough on yourself; most people can’t see what’s laid in front of their eyes even if you force them. People just see what they want to see and, in addition, I admit that it gives me great comfort knowing how easy it is for me to get what I want with only a trick or two.  I tell you this because it’s important, not because is relevant; as neither is relevant my place of birth or the day I was born.  By now, just by listening to my voice, you might be having ideas –you know– things in your head.  That’s why I said it was important to establish that I am a woman; well, let me clarify that: almost a woman. Testosterones and hormones are a motherfucker, as unpredictable as any living organism. Talking about testosterones and hormones and living organisms: trust me; they’re even worst when they all hide in your head.  And even though my body resembles the body of a woman, there are still a few-tiny things to work with: like my voice for example.  Some friends tell me it gives me an edge, that it makes me unique; but I hate it anyhow.  Well, enough with this nonsense.  I’m not here to discuss what is hanging between my legs, or how round my tits are; I’m here to tell you a secret.  And that’s the only reason you’re here; well, and to see how lucky you are as well. 
     My mother named me Icarus against my father’s will.  She had promised him to name me Boris after my late grandfather, but then, out of nowhere and without a warning, she named me Icarus. “Who told him to waste such a special day at the bar?” – I remember her saying once.  Unfortunately, my father turned out to be stupid enough to believe her when she claimed to have named me after the young character in a Greek mythology story.  But the truth is far simpler; and yet, incomprehensibly alarming:  I was named after Icarus Samaos, my mother’s Greek and hairy lover.      You see?  What I just said is relevant to my story, but not important.  Trust me.  My real name is not important at this moment and, to tell you the truth, sometimes I even go by other names, it all depends on my mood; or so Dr. Beck mildly explained it to me the first time we met.  
     As I was saying; the first thing you should know about me is that despite my actual appearance, I am a man. Once again I fooled you, didn’t I?  But hey; all this is far simpler, like I previously said, than you might think. I am a woman and I am also a man.  In fact, if you get close enough and take a closer look and stop rolling your eyes from wherever you are now and, if you do the math with your fingers, you will understand that inside of me, there’s more of a man than a woman, and the other way around.  Of course I wasn’t born like this, nor was I turned or forced to be what I am now.  Let’s say it happened; it just had to happen. So, what gives you the right to judge me?  Go on and roll your eyes somewhere else.
     For the sake of courtesy and in case you didn’t notice, that was my first secret.  And I’m sure that by now, once again, you might be having ideas –you know– “things” in your head. So before I go any further, I think I should clarify one or two things, considering that you are still here, handling yourself so admirably, so confidently; believing that I will go on and on, rambling, talking my guts out and giving away what I have protected so well for the last five years.  And I must admit that you might be right, but just this once.  Alright; I will go on now with my second secret.  Now, I highly encourage you to pay close attention to what I’m about to say; because it’ll draw the line between you and your prize.  In exactly 33 minutes I will kill three people: I will kill two men and a woman.  Now I really think I went way ahead; so, let me get a grip on myself, go back a little, and begin by telling you how I ended up in this fucking mess…

II

     I’m not completely sure but I think it all began on the following months after my graduation from N.Y.U, when my life took an unexpected turn to my favor, and after which I couldn’t be any happier considering the good fortune.  The long-dragged and asphyxiating heaviness on my shoulders and the excruciating restlessness caused by a lifetime living at the mercy of the others, none of which belonged to me but to hell, was a story of the past; or so I forced myself to believe.  There was only one remaining thing to mend, one last important decision to be made; and I knew it would be nearly impossible to fight them on my own.  That was the only reason why I allowed Diane Lebintos, once again, to step one inch closer into my life that night at “The Ward”.   Against my doctor’s recommendations, I chose to abandon treatment and stopped taking the medications during the first semester at Law School.  It was an act of rebellion against the odds, against everyone; and the consequences didn’t matter much to me.  But something incredible happened: for the first time since I was around six or seven years old the parasites had ran away, they vanished.  And this time it seemed they were gone for good.  The last time I spoke to Dr. Beck, the gray-haired man couldn’t believe me at first; and it wasn’t until a full year without incidents had passed that he dared to claim the credit for “fixing” me.  As for myself; well, been able to finally live a normal life was no small miracle.  But miracles don’t happen very often, if they ever happened at all; I knew that very well.  It wouldn’t be the first time since the diagnosis that I had experienced short and fragmented periods of lucidity; but this time I was strongly set on the belief that I had freed myself from the other two, from the “parasites”, as I often refer to “Dee-Dee” and Boris:  the abstract inhabitants with whom I have shared the same skin, and the same two who found hospice and refuge inside my head for the most part of my life.

     Dr. Beck died a happy man, a month or so before Diane’s path and mine crossed. He died believing that in fact he had reached his goal, which was to assure a permanent and honorable resting place on the books for his name as a leading authority in psychotherapy.  He wanted nothing more for him than to clear his family name, which had been tainted with blood during the Second Great War.  Not long after Dr. Beck’s funeral, life took me back to my hometown in Omaha, Nebraska.  Having sworn to never go back, I handled better than what I anticipated the initial fears of returning, and even managed to put at rest the mixed-emotions when Omaha International, a very successful and lucrative law firm at Vinton Street hired me for a big chunk of money, right after graduation.  <<I guess that some people are luckier than others, even with their condemnations>>. I also got the key to one of their corporate-properties, which was exclusively reserved for their greatest investments.  After graduating top of my class and becoming one of the youngest to ever graduate from the New York University School of Law with honors; a high-ceiling and nicely decorated apartment, not far from the decaying walls where I grew up, was well deserved.  During the initial days in Omaha I struggled avoiding the recurrent memories from childhood, memories from the very same old structure I was then looking from the terrace, and also trying to forget.  But even around all the accomplishments,  I still enjoyed amusing myself with the confirmation that I had also succeeded on erasing the shameful remaining bits and pieces of my miserable childhood. Instead of tormenting myself remembering the piteous days at the orphanage, I adopted a more suitable past; a better life in which I have successfully replaced with harmony all my resentments, a life that had served, in same proportion, my torments and my ambitions. 

II

     It was at the funeral where Icarus met Dr. Beck’s son, Boris: a rather handsome, well-mannered young man with a funny mustache.  His sole presence bothered Icarus, but he couldn’t understand why, or in fact he did but refused to. His eyes were familiar, yet foreign. Perhaps, it was the cold and piercing stare from between the trees what finally moved Icarus to walk towards him, introducing himself, almost crushing Boris’s fingers when they shook hands.       
I couldn’t help noticing the way you stared at me during the whole ceremony…  I’m sorry, where are my manners? - I’m Mr. Samaos, I was a friend of your father”.
I know you”, he replied.  You are Icarus, right?  I’ve heard so much about you, you poor thing.  I truly admire your spirit”, he glanced at his wristwatch, fixed his tie and continued:  “But is never too late to find success, right?  Or defeat.  So, I guess we both should be more careful from now on…,” he paused for a moment and exhaled, clearly ignoring Icarus’ extended hand. “I’ll be seeing you around, young man.            I suppose we don’t have a better alternative; not yet, not just yet...” 

III

     There’s a nice place on Vinton Street not far from Icarus’ building, a disco-pub of some sort conveniently called “The Ward”.  Are you listening to me now?  Could I sound more foreign than that? – Disco-pub?  Well, as I was saying; The Ward is a disco-pub on Vinton, and the only place around here where you can actually meet another human being away from the mirror.  And, after a long and tedious afternoon under a burning Sun at the funeral, nothing could beat the pleasure of an evening spent next to the white piano at The Ward better than a few glasses of red wine; especially if they were free, and they usually were.  Talking about mirrors:  It takes me a great deal of time to look this beautiful.  I would say without a doubt that it takes me about two hours in front of it to get the results I want.  And ever since I cut my hair, right before college, it takes me even longer.  I go by Diane Parish, but my real name is Diane Lebintos; but don’t worry, you may call me “Dee-Dee”.  Of course no one knows my real name around these parts; such foreign name would only bring shame and misery in small towns like this.  Plus, it suits me better, it brings strength and distinction.   But tonight I refuse to be so proper and, I will not come back home empty handed.  All I need is someone real, a face next to mine whose reflection in the mirror is not another trick of my perverse imagination.

IV

     From the opposite side of the bar at The Ward, Boris buried his eyes on Icarus’ reflection through his glass of red wine.  He had been watching him from a close distance since his father’s funeral in New York City, and ever since he secretly arrived at Omaha a month before.  But they both knew they were also been watched from someone else, someone far more dangerous and deceiving: a woman.  Ever since Icarus decided to get rid of Diane and Boris once and for all, things turned somehow edgy.  Icarus loved moving in the most distinguished circles, at least for the last two or three years and, their ever-close presence was becoming no less of a burden.  His long relationship with Diane had come abruptly to an end, when he finally chose to believe Dr. Beck and accepted that she wasn’t real.   After their separation, a few months after his admission to Law School, there was no one with whom Icarus could be in friendly terms, and Boris knew it.  Being alone was his weakness and, just like Diane, Boris also remained in the shadows; planning his return and his vengeance against Icarus for stealing the one and only love of his life.   He was about to make a move to expose him at all costs, to destroy him; and it would most definitely happen during that night.  
     A moment later, under the neon lights, a woman’s figure appeared from nowhere and disappeared again in the crowd. Several minutes later, she reappeared and greeted Icarus; whispering something to his ear, and then sat next to him.  That woman was Diane Levintos, his childhood friend, his teenage-years lover, and for the last month: his accomplice. Boris continued looking at them from a corner for quite some time, waiting patiently for the signal.
     No one could blame Diane for playing both sides, with God and the Devil simultaneously.  If you see how it is, it’s a matter of self preservation and anyone would do the same thing; like they say: “if it comes to you or them, send flowers.”  Boris and Diane, they grew up nearby.  They all lived just a few blocks from each other –you know, them and the others–  not far from the orphanage where Icarus spent most of his youth; although he never dared to escape, not even for a few hours at night when everyone was sleeping to feed his increasing curiosity in life outside those walls.  Outside the orphanage walls, Icarus knew, they all had parents, pets, beautiful houses, a warm bed, a bedtime story and a kiss on their foreheads every night, and he didn’t.  Icarus grew up with 46 other strangers, all orphans with whom he shared the same reality: no one loved them.  So one day, it was a Sunday I’m sure, while the other kids were playing outside, at a birthday party, Icarus walked to the back fence.  He hated the feeling of being alone, among the unloved, and that’s when he met them.  He was six years old, I remember now.  Back then, little Diane had freckles below her eyes, and that made her look even prettier than she already was.  Boris was tall, thick-haired, and he looked surprisingly strong for an eight year old.  Every Sunday faithfully during mandatory religious service, Icarus would sneak out and jumped out the kitchen window and ran to the back fence, climbing over it and daring his way outside; spending the entire morning playing with Boris and Dee-Dee in the forest.  
<<How powerful is the mind of a young boy in captivity?>> 
     Diane and Icarus liked each other instantly, and Boris, like any other kid his age, didn’t like the idea of being rejected.  They could spend countless hours, “Dee Dee” and Icarus, throwing rocks to the trees and guessing about how their lives would be; growing and all, under the ever-close and watchful eyes of Boris.  Time passed, and their friendship got stronger, and eventually became inseparable.  Sometimes, they even played pretending that they were someone else, somewhere else:  Icarus would dress like her and she would wear his baseball cap and act like him; and again, Boris wouldn’t like the idea of been neglected.  Every Sunday, she would tell him about how her life was at the other side of the fence, Boris would add a few dignified stories about weekends spent with his family at the lake, and Icarus would remain silent, ignoring him, simply admiring “Dee-Dee’s” freckles.  One afternoon Boris didn’t show up at their usual meeting place, a small recess at the center of the forest, and for the first time they spent the evening together, alone and unbothered.  That same night, under a mid-June starry sky, they kissed; and then they kissed again.  The stars were falling everywhere around them.  But it wasn’t too long until some of those “falling stars” turned into levitating pairs of red-dots-of-lights, dancing slowly and quietly, stalking them from behind the trees.   
     That evening Boris and Icarus got into an intense brawl. One of them defended his love and the other his pride. They fought like wild beasts, with sticks and stones.  Diane ran screaming for help, but it turned useless: no once could hear them from their location in the forest.  Later that night, when Icarus opened his eyes and tried to explain what had happened to the orphanage nursing team who found him, lying barely conscious on the dirt, still bleeding and not far from the south fence; the team began an intense search that extended for several days.  The nearest town was almost two kilometers away from the orphanage, and even though the authorities conducted a door to door search for a young boy named Boris and a girl named Diane; the search ended unsuccessfully, without any evidence of the alleged attack or the existence of any of them.  During Icarus’ recovery process at the orphanage clinic, the findings of the medical team who treated him were far more disturbing than what they initially anticipated: Icarus had hurt himself beyond comprehension.  But life had another plan for him and the others; they lost contact for a long time, visiting occasionally when least expected.  After the diagnosis shortly after that incident he began treatment, but the complexity of his condition made it harder for the orphanage to find a family for him; so he ended up growing up inside those walls, alone; watching the other kids moving out, and others moving in.  And then, the days turned into months and the months into years and Icarus’ life took an unprecedented turn: he won a full scholarship from New York University and moved away in the summer of 94’.  He didn’t see her or Boris for a long period of time, and not until a few weeks after Dr. Beck’s death.
     Back at The Ward, Boris’s increasing anxiety was taking the best of him.  He had remained hidden at the far corner of the bar for over an hour, watching; waiting for Diane’s signal to engage.  The plan was no less than extreme; and it consisted on following her to Icarus’ flat.  She would sedate him with a drink and trick him to bed.  Once Icarus was finally defenseless, they both would tie him up to his bed, burn the place down and disappear into the night not to be seen ever again.  But Diane and her first love had under their sleeves a plan of their own.


V

     Once again I have gone way ahead, or way back, haven’t I?   I wanted to tell you about my secrets and I ended up telling you about my whole life.  But if you’ve paid attention to what I have said, you will agree with me on the fact that I’m a man of my word, or a woman; who cares now. I have given you two secrets, like I said I would, and a little-extra frosting on top of it.  But I see that you are still here, looking for more, I admire that; so, this is your chance to win it all and to finally get your hands around the bonus prize.  
     In exactly 13 minutes I will kill three people: two men and a woman.  And two of them have no idea of the fate that awaits them.  In 13 minutes I will finally get rid, once and for all, of the other two, of the parasites: Diane Levintos and Boris Beck; the abstract inhabitants who had lived inside my head for the most part of my life.  <<What did you say?  Who’s the third victim, you asked?>>   Well, that my friend is the third and final secret, the one secret that if you prove to be trustworthy will get you the biggest and most incredible bonus prize of them all. 
     But let him be the one who tells you the last secret.  Let the other victim, the other parasite tell you about the events that have taken place on the last twenty minutes; which were decisive for my mission.  Let’s give him one last chance to redeem himself before I fucking kill him too. 

VI

     Just as planned, Diane Levintos got up and walked towards the bar and ordered two drinks.  I knew I was being watched, but he didn’t know I was also watching him: that ugly and insignificant twisted fucker.  When the bartender served our drinks, Diane scratched her nose twice – that was the signal.  How creative, I thought. From her purse, she took a small bottle containing a bluish liquid and poured it on one of the drinks.  Even from my position and through the crowd, I noticed that Boris was getting ready to leave, and I lowered my head until Diane arrived with the drinks.  When Diane sat in front of me she gave me the drink that contained the bluish liquid, the sedative; and I drank it rapidly as I noticed that Boris was walking out the front door.  The mission was going on well, precisely as it was planned.  There was only one little twist…  Boris wanted me dead, and I knew it.  Diane wanted him dead, but she managed well to make him believe the contrary.  Here’s the twist: I wanted them both out of the picture, out of my life, out of my head.  After finishing my drink, I began acting sleepy, just in case Boris was still watching.  Diane helped me getting up and escorted me outside. 
     Boris had told Diane that in order for the sedative to work faster, she had to make me walk the short distance from The Ward to my building.  He would be walking at a safe distance behind us. But there was no sedative on my body, and it was time to make him sweat a little.  I raised my arms, waved and called for a taxi.  I needed a few extra minutes to set everything for the surprise I had back at my flat.  When the taxi began moving forward, I could only imagine Boris’s face full of anger.  It only took us a few minutes to arrive and we rapidly headed for the elevator.  We laughed like little kids, just like the old days on our way up.
“Are you sure that you want to do this, Icarus?”
“There is no trace of doubt in my mind, Dee-Dee”
“I know… I just can’t believe that we will finally be left alone.  At last we will be together.”
“Just like I dreamed…”
     What Dee-Dee ignored was that once inside my flat, everything that we had planned in order to get rid of Boris would no longer be necessary.  The purification ritual which I had carefully designed for the last year will finally put an end to my misery and to her life as well.  Once inside my flat, I asked Dee-Dee for my cigarettes.  She headed to my room and I walked to the balcony.  From there, in the darkness, I took one last look at the decaying walls of the orphanage.  A moment passed and she joined me and handed me a cigarette.
“Would you please light it for me?” I asked.  She looked at me as if trying to read my thoughts and then she answered: “Of course.  That’s the least I can do for the man I love.”
     Well, to be honest; that would’ve been what she probably had said if I hadn’t pushed her.  No one light my cigarettes; that’s the truth.  I turned around, walked back inside and sat down at the sofa on the living-room, waiting for a knock on the door.  I checked for the gun hidden under the pillow and waited patiently.  But Boris never came.  I waited for several hours.  The morning was coming fast and that fucking bastard never came.

VII

     A loud beeping sound woke me up in a state of confusion.  With my eyelids as heavy as bricks, still closed; my first thought was that while I waiting for Boris to come, I had fell asleep at the sofa while smoking. 
<<Is that the fire alarm?>> 
     I tried to move, to get up; but my arms and legs were also heavy.  I tried to scream, but my mouth was dry and felt like someone had knotted my tongue.  There was pressure on my chest.  I couldn’t scream.  I couldn’t move.
<<What is happening to me?>> 
    The touch of soft hands followed by a female voice tried to calm me whispering something to my ear.  And then, a sharp pull and the pain on my eyelids an instant before the sunlight burned my eyes brought me back from the darkness, as abruptly and painful as the most diabolical of all confirmations.  The familiar face of nurse Darien, with her gentle features tried to calm me down.  I stopped moving, screaming.  I couldn’t believe my eyes.  She was trying to say something while pointing desperately to a corner of the room. 
“Calm down, Angela, and look; please look…”  I slowly moved my head and followed her finger to the wall where she was pointing:
“You need to calm down, Angela.  Don’t let them take control of you. They’re not real.  Calm down and look.”
     At the far corner, near an open window, there was a large white sign with a message written on it.  There was also a young man with a cigarette in one hand, smiling; sitting on a chair next to it.  I recognized my handwriting. It read:
______________
MY NAME IS ANGELA REINHART. I AM 35 YEARS OLD. I AM AT THE WARD 3A AT THE KARL HENX HOSPITAL IN NEBRASKA.  I AM SICK. I SEE THINGS THAT ARE NOT THERE. MY NAME IS ANGELA REINHART!  I HAVE EARNED MY FREEDOM. I’M NOT BORIS OR DIANE. AND I’M NOT ICARUS OR THE OTHERS… 
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