FRESH
YARN presents:
Destination
Nowhere
By Jason
Kordelos
I always
fantasized about going on an exotic sea cruise to Puerto Rico or San Tropez
or the Greek Islands. A gorgeous ship filled with gorgeous people drinking
gorgeous champagne, and me, in the middle of it all, being adored and
caressed by salt water-scented sunshine.
This, however, was not that cruise.
On
September 11th my best friend Marian lost her firefighter husband, Dave
Fontana. When I learned that Dave had gone to the World Trade Center I
ran fifteen blocks from my place to Marian's in a frantically thrown together
outfit that I feared would be my last (the United States was under attack,
after all). The result: sweats, winter coat, running shoes and ski hat.
It was nearly 80 degrees that day. In my trembling, sweaty hands I clutched
my cell phone, my ATM card and my worn Reach toothbrush.
From Marian's
tiny brownstone apartment in Park Slope, Brooklyn, we watched the television
as the second tower buckled and collapsed, crushing beneath it her high
school sweetheart, and the future she'd been building with him. Like so
many others, Marian was left alone to raise a young child, a five-year-old
dynamo named by his Irish firefighter dad -- Aidan. The Gallic translation:
"Little Fire."
Oh, yes,
and the day, September 11th, also happened to be Marian and Dave's eighth
wedding anniversary.
A week later
I quit my job, a hideous waiter position that was supposed to support
my acting career, but had only succeeded in supporting my hatred for all
people who dine out. I decided to take care of Marian and Aidan. She said
it was unnecessary. I said, "It's what anyone would do." She
said no, it wasn't. I said, "Well, then, it's what Susan Sarandon
would do." She laughed and it was agreed.
What I didn't
tell Marian was what her hippie neighbor Dorothy said to me on September
12th. When she dropped off a pot of squash and lavender soup, she recognized
my name. "Jason," she said, "you know just last month Dave
told me the darndest thing. He said he felt good knowing that if anything
bad happened to him, that you would be there for Marian." And in
a whirl of patchouli oil and hand-dyed chenille scarves she was gone,
leaving me stunned that, among other things, anyone still used the word
"darndest."
While once
just Marian's "Gay Best Friend," now she spoke about me to all
the people in her life -- to the firefighters, the widows and the cousins
-- as her new "Gay Husband." "Like Liza and David Gest,"
I'd say. And despite the tragic circumstances, our makeshift family worked.
I felt a satisfaction in caring for Marian and Aidan like I had never
experienced. Sure there's the revival of Oklahoma! and Barney's
Warehouse Sale, but neither one of those ever hugged me at the end of
story time.
And then
came this cruise. Immediately after the 11th, donations of every kind
poured into Marian's life: money, poems, food, letters, prayers and trips
all over the world. When Royal Caribbean generously offered a private
cruise to all the 343 firefighter families who lost loved ones, Marian
asked me if I was interested in going with her and Aidan. As the Gay Husband,
I envisioned a kind of gay family vacation -- sort of Will and Grace
meets Love Boat meets Six Feet Under. I declared, "Absolutely!"
I even agreed to make all the arrangements.
The next
day, I called Royal Caribbean and spoke to a surly woman, a Ms. Shapiro.
By the sound of her voice, I was confident she had chain-smoked menthol
100's since Kindergarten.
"Where's
the ship going?" I asked.
"Nowhere,"
she said, hacking.
"What
do you mean?"
"I mean
nowhere," she hacked again.
"Well,
it must go to Puerto Rico or Acapulco or somewhere."
"No,"
she said, "it goes nowhere."
"What,
does the ship just stay in port?"
"No
it goes out to sea," she said, then hacked once more.
"Where?"
I asked.
"Nowhere."
This woman
sounded as if she was reciting lines from an Ionesco play, poorly and
with stage four lung cancer.
"I'm sorry," I said, "I'm just not getting this -- the
ship has got to have a destination."
"Well,
yeah," she answered, "it leaves New York harbor, it floats out
to sea and then it floats back. Two nights. We're calling it a 'Cruise
To Nowhere'."
I paused
and waited for Rod Sterling to begin his voiceover. She hacked. "So
let me get this right," I continued, "you're sending a ship
full of widows and their grief-stricken, terrorized families onto something
called a 'Cruise To Nowhere'?!"
"Yup."
Wonderful.
I should have known then that this cruise had the potential to sink me.
Cruise
day arrived as did Marian, Aidan and I at Manhattan's Pier 58. It was
a splendid day for a sea outing with 343 widows: 35 degrees, windy and
sleeting. The ship, called "The Adventure of the Sea," was so
enormous it seemed like a joke. (Had we learned nothing from Leo and Kate's
ill-fated nautical romance?) Eight blocks long and fourteen stories tall,
there was no doubt that the ship was visible from space.
The Adventure
of the Sea boasted, among other things, three pools, seven dining rooms,
a rock climbing wall, three theatres, a casino, a shopping mall and its
very own ice skating rink. It employed all of South America and most of
Queens. Also in line to board were 5,000 other people. Apparently the
trip had been offered to the entire New York Fire Department and they
all seemed to have accepted, which was a wonderful thing for them. Not
me. Widows I can handle. Macho, emotionally fragile firefighters in Jacuzzis,
not so much.
Still, I,
the Gay Husband, waited in line with the other men for three excruciating
hours, cursed with low blood sugar and chapped lips. There is little worse
for a gay man than chapped lips except, of course, for being in line with
thousands of men who use the word "fag" like cheap toilet paper.
Finally,
with boarding passes between my cracked lips, I dragged our four stuffed
suitcases up the six-story ramp. It was at this point, I believe, that
I was knocked over by a pack of squealing men in spandex. In a cloud of
designer cologne, the all-male Ice Capades dance team trampled me. I was
left splayed like gay roadkill. As I rose to my feet, from the pockets
of my brand new Dolce and Gabbana puffy white ski jacket fell Aidan's
Star Wars action figures. Screaming, he ran up to me and accidentally
squirted me with his Verry Berry Juice box. All over my brand new Dolce
and Gabbana puffy white ski jacket. Tears of frustration welled up as
I tried desperately to keep it all together: my emotions, my hair, my
outfit. Aidan then hit me because "Queen Amidala got all messed up!!"
"Not the only queen," I thought.
At last we
boarded the ship. The glorious ship! The interior looked as though it
had exploded out from the asses of Siegfried and Roy: murals of swirling
jungles and glittery galaxies, teams of bouncing European acrobats, barber
shop quartets, two-story chandeliers, and neon, and jazz hands, and American
flags everywhere, and metallic everything, and kids screaming, and widows
crying and firefighters guzzling beer. My very tasteful gay male aesthetic
began to have a sort of panic attack amidst this heterosexual theme park.
So I just chanted the mantra I had chanted since the beginning of all
of this, "This is about Marian, not me. This is about Marian, not
me."
I took a
deep, calming breath and we set sail. To nowhere. And if you're wondering
just how long it takes to sail to nowhere, the answer is about 18 hours.
Which is distressing because it's taken me over 35 years.
Devastated
by the fact that there was no tan to be had on the November seas of the
Atlantic, I rallied for Marian as best as I could. She introduced me to
the firefighters as her Gay Husband. I curtsied politely. But no one got
it. No one got me. No one got that I hadn't been around another gay man
for three months because I'd been putting Aidan to bed, because I'd been
cooking and cleaning, because I'd been giving Marian foot massages like
her husband used to, because I'd been providing her with support, sympathy
and sleeping pills. And I looked around and saw that I was the only Gay
Husband on board. I was the only gay anything. And what began to come
into focus was that, surprisingly, there wasn't a high demand for a Gay
Husband in the world of a wife of a firefighter. Which is odd because,
with all due respect to the wives of firefighters, these women could really
benefit from our help. Really. Just that first night I offered my services
to a chubby widow, a Catherine Herrera of Staten Island. We were chatting
over Red Bull Mai Tais when I suggested, "You know, Cathy, you're
really much too pretty to be wearing THAT much lip liner. Just soften
it. It looks like you've been giving head to a car exhaust."
Well, I could
tell by the tears that she didn't care for my humor. Back in Brooklyn
I made sense in Marian's life but on this ship I was as useful as roller
skates on a quadriplegic.
The
second night started off even worse. Marian and I left Aidan with another
mom and dined in the Grand Ballroom. Admittedly, it was nice to see that
Barbie's interior decorator was still working; glass elevators and bubbles
always bring a space together. During our crab bisque the orchestra played
Marian and Dave's wedding song, "At Last," and like a house
of cards, Marian's face fell. We decided to take a stroll on the deck.
The cold air outside was playful and distracting. I gave Marian my jacket.
We rested our elbows on the rail and gazed at the winter moon glowing
over the black waters. The romance of the setting was embarrassingly obvious
and I saw that Marian was about to cry again. I had now learned to gauge
her emotional moods like a seismologist reads a Richter scale. So I searched
for something funny to say. "It's like our gay honeymoon." She
forced a giggle and then went away in her mind to a place even I couldn't
get to. I stared ahead into our destination, nowhere. And for the first
time I began to miss my old life, my old self-obsessed, narcissistic,
no room-for-anyone-else-but-me kind of life filled with my own depressing
issues of self-hate, loneliness and tanorexia. Clearly we should have
both been there having that moment, but with different people. Her with
her husband, Dave, and me with -- I don't know, the all-male Ice Capades
dance team. And I started to wonder, and maybe it was selfish, but I wondered
whether this was all that my life was going to be now? Was I just a gay
man married to this wonderful yet kind of high-maintenance woman? Was
this what it's like for Star Jones and Al Reynolds?
And then,
like a gift from the gods, Marian heard this beat, a disco beat. Directly
above us was a disco and, it sounds so queer, but Barbra Streisand and
Donna Summer's "Enough is Enough" started playing. The 70's
anthem infected Marian. She squealed, "Let's dance."
"I don't
really," I said.
She grabbed
my tie and we were off.
The disco
was called "Jesters" and it was booming, filled with medieval
"artifacts": stone walls, gargoyles, stained glass windows,
axes, dripping candles and dry ice. Nothing says disco quite like the
Crusades. Marian immediately began dancing while I went at it with a pouty,
half-assed Jewish wedding dance step, uncomfortable in this disco filled
with heterosexuals, draft beer and Christian instruments of torture. I
was about to flee when I heard the pitter-patter of Patti Labelle's "Lady
Marmalade" begin. This was my song. This was the song that was playing
when I came out to my best girlfriend, Natasha, 20 years ago. I fell into
its gay disco trance, a trance that transformed those Staten Island widows
into drag queens, and Jesters into the Roxy. I was powerless to Patti
and took to the dance floor like Helen Keller to a plate of cake. Across
from Marian I grooved and gyrated and twirled as months of despair and
sadness dripped off us -- in the middle of this dance floor in the middle
of this ship in the middle of fucking nowhere. And suddenly it no longer
mattered where we were or what kind of cruise it was because my best friend
Marian and I were dancing, we were having a good time, we were laughing
and she was smiling and sweating and we were mouthing those immortal lyrics,
"Gitchy-gitchy-ya-ay da-da!!" And for a moment it felt like
nothing had changed, that in the words of Gloria Gaynor, "I Will
Survive."
And then
who should spill out onto the dance floor but the entire all male Ice
Capades Dance team. Nine men in make-up and sparkly costumes. I was stunned
because I hadn't spoken to another homosexual for three months. I observed
them curiously; so intrigued by their movement and pageantry. I was in
conflict -- I wanted to dance with the Ice Capades dancers, but I was
dancing with Marian. Ice Capades, Marian, Ice Capades, Marian. The music
was blaring and she saw my longing and motioned to me with her hands as
if to say "Go Jason. Go. Be with your people." And so I did.
I introduced myself to the skaters as a Gay Husband and one of them, wearing
a silver headdress, said to me "Like Liza and David!" And we
all laughed and I felt fantastic until I looked over my shoulder and saw
Marian alone at the bar, sipping a watery Cosmo and wiping her watery
eyes with a tattered cocktail napkin. I began to walk over when this fire
captain -- this handsome fire captain -- approached her with a fresh drink.
She blushed. And that blush punched my gut. "Of course," I realized,
"Of course, eventually I'm going to be replaced."
There was
a high-pitched "hoot" behind me because a Cher song had come
on and recharged the Ice Capades dancers. And the one with the silver
headdress asked me if I wanted to dance. I looked at him and then I looked
at Marian. I looked at him; I looked up at his headdress. I mean, come
on, he was wearing a silver headdress. So I said, "Sure."
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