FRESH
YARN presents:
The
Man Who Could be Hung
By Hayward
Hawks Marcus
"Whoever
called it necking was a poor judge of anatomy."
Groucho Marx
The Great
Byron 1890's Bazaar was great indeed -- or at least it was for me. An
outdoor festival coordinated by entrepreneurial bohemians, it happened
during the summer of 1972 and was set in the dusty hills fifty miles east
of San Francisco, at the defunct Byron Hot Springs resort. This centenarian
spa -- once an elegant architectural grand dame -- had attracted wealthy
and famous world travelers in her yesteryear heyday, but, much like a
prim Victorian lady, had fallen out of favor during the swinging sixties,
and was of little use to the current owners except as fairgrounds for
a themed event such as the Bazaar.
Bedizened
with 1890's trappings, the Bazaar was hung throughout with red, white
and blue bunting, and this patriotic frippery seemed a bit out of place
amongst the anti-establishment, anti-Nixon peaceniks and flower children
who were running the shebang. Still, most of these social fringe participants
presented the crowds with a somewhat straitlaced representation of nineteenth
century Americana. All vendors and hawkers had repackaged themselves and
their saleable items in pseudo-vintage wrappings. Unshaven earth mothers
costumed themselves in the long gowns and parasols of their suffragist
grandmothers, but eschewed corsets and hairpins to keep their freak flags
and bosoms liberated. Hippies sporting curly waxed mustaches pedaled dangerously
tall antique bicycles with front wheels as high as their pot-headed riders.
Entertaining the masses on several open air stages were San Francisco's
finest motley gangs of musicians, hoofers, and street performers, rounded
up from squalid North Beach dives and Haight Ashbury communes -- silent
mimes and barking sideshow men, sultry flamenco and jiggly belly dancers,
twangy bluegrass troupes and brass bands squawking out John Phillip Sousa's
Favorite Hits.
And then
there was me, publicly billed as The Lovely Olivia. I was pulchritudinous
stage dressing and perpetually smiling cohort to William Wizard; a master
of prestidigitation, legerdemain, or, for those of you who don't like
long words, magic!
I was barely
fourteen years old, and had just embarked on my career as magician's assistant.
William Wizard was my mother's current boyfriend and my reluctant chaperone
during the weekends that we worked the Bazaar. We traveled together in
his car from San Jose and camped over at the fairgrounds on Saturday nights,
and William had the unenviable task of keeping me out of trouble. I may
have been fourteen, but I had just sprouted a body like that of a mature
eighteen-year-old and, as I paraded myself through the ersatz 1890's throng
in an olive-green bathing suit-like costume, legs clad hip to ankle only
in black fishnets, I discovered my new power to turn male heads.
My very first
weekend there, I was smitten by the charms of an older man of twenty-four,
a thespian by the name of Richard Kelly. Dark-haired and possessed of
a sensuous, mellifluous voice, Richard's act was titled, Abraxas, the
Man Who Could Be Hung. A macabre performance that would have fascinated
the Victorians, Abraxas was condemned to die for killing a man over the
woman he loved. Led by an executioner to the gallows, his hands tied behind
his back, he strode bravely to his doom while a band droned a slow dirge.
Stepping onto a stool, a noose was placed over his handsome head and tightened
around his throat, and a curtain drawn to obscure the upper part of his
body. After a long, nerve battering drum roll, the stool was kicked violently
away. Abraxas struggled frantically for an interminable moment while we
watched, breathless, until he finally fell limp. His lifeless legs swung
eerily to and fro, the only sound came from his hempen necktie as it creaked
with his weight against the wooden gibbet. The connection between mock
death and sex was visceral. Audiences gasped, and wondered aloud. I
fell in love.
I had caught
Richard's attention as well, although he had no idea that I was only fourteen.
We flirted whenever we met, and I saw in his eyes a mysterious glint absent
from the eyes of the eighth grade boys I knew. This eye sparkle of Mr.
Kelly's caused me to have romantic daydreams, wherein Richard would lead
me down a sun-specked path to the edge of a tinkling creek, and lay soft
kisses over my face and neck. Beyond this, my daydream became vague and
nondescript. The bare fact was that I had no idea what adults did with
each other once kissing had commenced.
My puerile
naiveté did not last through the course of the Bazaar, however.
One bright Sunday morning, just as the fairgrounds were opening, I was
searching for my diary that I'd stashed with my gear inside William's
dilapidated Honda. Not finding it in my bag, I began to hunt through the
usual collection of fast food containers, magical gimmicks, and unpaid
bills that carpeted the floor of his car. As my hands pawed beneath the
seats, I was lost in romantic Richard reverie, my idyllic innocence intact,
when I suddenly pulled a paperback out from among the old combs and candy
wrappers. The cover not only caught both my eyes, but it changed how I
saw through them forever.
NICE GIRLS
DON'T SWALLOW CUM ON SUNDAYS it declared, in large white letters against
a bright pink background. Beneath its blaring font, a naked nymphet performed
an act upon a male protuberance that may have ultimately led her to do
exactly what it was you wouldn't do should it happen to be Sunday,
and you were a nice girl. And, as if this weren't enough, inside were
more photos of things nice girls didn't do on Sundays, complete with erotic
commentary, of course. It even had a glossary of lewd sexual terms to
answer my immediate question about what this cum stuff was. I was transfixed.
Facing the stark, graphic truth about human sexual congress, I was repulsed,
embarrassed, and thoroughly fascinated.
Now,
my parents were both artists, painters of realistic works of human anatomy,
and our home library was chock-full of books of nude males and females,
but nothing like this. Also, the sex education that I'd received
in 1968 at age ten had been sparse; a birds and bees pamphlet that my
mother shoved my way before slinking off for a peach daiquiri. It had
described sexual intercourse in the most boring, frictionless way possible,
apparently to underplay the inherent fun of it all -- When a husband
and wife love each other very much and want to have children, they lie
very close together. He inserts his erect penis inside her vagina and
ejaculates his sperm to fertilize her egg. Nine months later, a baby is
born.
I sat in
the car and read Nice Girls until the red-hot profanity was burned
deep into my gray matter. I closed the book and realized in an epiphanous
flash that this cheaply printed text I clutched in my fevered hands had
changed me, better than any pituitary gland ever could, for I now saw
the full spectrum of my sexual capabilities. This stunning insight was
more transformative than the Wizard's bellowing incantation during our
Hindu Basket Trick, when he turned me -- twice daily -- from girl into
snake.
I placed
the book back under the seat. To look for my diary now seemed pointless,
since my virginal scribblings were made positively anemic by this latest
discovery. Besides, how could I ever begin to chronicle this? And then
I noticed it -- a libidinous warmth which germinated from deep within
my pelvic region. It crept up my spine like some blob-like monster escaped
from a cell, growing in girth and strength, and soon reached my brain
and began to eat it, rendering me nearly witless.
I exited
the car, the Lust Monster happily gnawing at me while I roamed the Bazaar
in a daze. Making my way through the crowd of 1970s faux Victorians, I
envisioned every adult I saw engaged in unspeakable acts, doing some very
un-Victorian things to one another. And I suddenly understood why parents
locked their bedroom doors at night, and it was not -- as I'd previously
thought -- to keep the burglars out, but rather to keep the pure minds
of their youngsters safe and sane.
I headed
for the Wild West Saloon Stage where, at noon and four o'clock, William
Wizard brandished swords and guillotines to perform feats of magical mayhem
upon my lithe body while I grinned and gestured like a numb idiot. There,
next to the stage, I spotted Richard, my would-be paramour, breakfasting
on a hay bale beneath an oak tree, looking none the worse for having been
hanged three times the previous day. My mind was suddenly filled with
fantasies of what might transpire after we kissed by the tinkling
creek, and, in this newly revised daydream, I was definitely not a nice
girl anymore. Worse yet, this was Sunday.
Richard looked
up at me and smiled, and the monster in my brain grew wildly electric.
The air turned to some viscous substance, and I froze -- a just-ripened
fruit suspended in Jell-O. Breathing was out of the question. Yet everything
inside swirled and pulsated in a sexual vortex.
I found myself standing before Richard without ever feeling my feet touch
the ground. As he spoke in some unintelligible foreign language, I tried
vainly to apprehend the meaning of, "Have a seat." Repeating
the phrase -- which I guessed to be either Finnish or Hungarian -- he
patted the hay bale while pulling me by the hand toward it. As soon as
I sat I was struck by an odor. In junior high school, we would have called
it B.O., but, as it exuded from Richard, it could only be dubbed the Essential
Perfume of Man. My monster reeled at the scent. Speaking in tongues
again, he attempted to hand feed me a bite of his sweet roll. I stared
stupidly at him, the morsel hanging from the side of my mouth. He poked
it in further, and, as my lips closed around his little fingertip, I knew
it was Richard Kelly I wanted to devour, and not some tasteless
bit of food.
With a gust
of primordial feminine cunning, I looked at him with huge, limpid, Bugs
Bunny eyes. "I need to lie down," I muttered, spewing forth
a fountain of crumbs over my lap and his. Summoning what little saliva
I had, I swallowed the remaining bready sawdust and added, " -- backstage."
Richard nodded, understanding that my desire to be horizontal had nothing
to do with any sudden illness.
I was totally
unprepared for the rapidity with which the experienced male moves when
faced with the promise of promiscuity. Whisking me through the wooden
door to the empty dressing area just behind the stage, Richard found an
unclaimed tie-dyed poncho and spread it over the dirt and sawdust floor.
Then he pulled me with him to the ground, and kissed me. Not the soft
kiss of my daydreams, this, but a forceful, penetrating, wet kiss. The
French kiss of rumor. The kind of a kiss one giggles about while watching
late-night uncensored movies at a girlfriend's slumber party. My Lust
Monster was now hopping up and down, making gleeful noises like that of
a rapidly beating heart. I had never kissed this way before, and began
exploring the endless possibilities of kissing as I fell and tumbled,
like a triple X rated Alice, down a bottomless rabbit-hole of sex. Hands
and fingers began to dance over my flesh. Juices I never knew I had magically
appeared. Saliva was no longer a problem.
I had just
begun to investigate Richard's body and the carnal possibilities of The
End of My Girlish Niceness, when I heard a familiar voice calling from
far, far away. The kiss ended. The voice grew loud and harsh, scolding
in tones unsuitable for lovemaking. Suddenly Richard was scrambling to
his feet, not looking at all like the sophisticated lover he had been
just seconds before, and I could see a wizard's goatee wagging furiously
in the doorway while words like fourteen and jailbait flew
violently about the room. That was the last time I saw Richard, who, I
imagine, spent the rest of the Great Byron 1890's Bazaar pursuing less
illicit female prey.
William,
on the other hand, spent the better part of that Sunday informing any
potential lotharios that any solicitations towards me would not be dealt
with lightly, thereby killing my prospects for offering up my virginity
at the Great Byron 1890's Bazaar. I was understandably peeved, and still
sometimes wonder how different my defloration might have been, if, instead
of eventually succumbing to a fumbling adolescent with a swarm of pimples
and dearth of chest hair, I had actually roped The Man Who Could Be
Hung.
©All
material is copyrighted and cannot be reproduced without permission
|