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Gabriel Descending
by Feech
thanks to Channing and to Michael Bix
"Hayden Heath University does not
discriminate on the basis of sex, race, color,
age, religious practices, creed, sexual practices
or degree of exposure to either Martian Flu or
Stein's Chronic Accelerated Biomorphic Syndrome.
Individuals with disabilities are encouraged to
take part in all University activities including
tours. For information contact Hayden Heath
University central office, Hayden Heath,
Minnesota."
Very interesting. I drop the brochure
casually on the table and think about it one more
time.
Three hours from home. Smallish town,
smallish school. Of all the schools I've heard
from, it's the only one that seems to take a stand
on the SCABS issue-- and that a positive one. I
admire that. My dad works with people who have
the syndrome and I suppose I've gotten a little
too used to the responses when he talks about his
work. SCABS? Do you really have many patients
with that? Where does your real income come from?
I've spent a school year working, debating
the majors I studied in my freshman year, but I
feel ready to jump back in as a sophomore. But
not at Edgewood.
Somewhere a little further from home, but not
too big.
Good arts program, decent general studies.
I look at the brochure again.
It has decided me.
I pick up the phone.
Five-foot-seven. Female. Blonde(ish) hair,
shoulder length. Blue eyes. A nine-year-old
blue(ish) denim jacket that I got on sale. I have
never been able to find another one that fits me
well. That about sums up the Feech.
I stand on one leg in the black box of Hayden
Heath's Performing Arts Building. My left foot is
braced backward against the wall. I relax, hands
in denim pockets, looking around.
Almost 10:20 am.
A light touch on my shoulder might have gone
unnoticed, but the slight "scritch" of something
sharp and dry on the denim turns my head.
It's the dramaturg, Mr.Leonen. "Hello,
Professor," I say.
Mr.Leonen, still hanging from the black wall
by his four rear limbs, shows me the thin white
pad attached to his arm and writes something on
it.
"'Professor' will not be necessary.
Everybody calls me Shadow" [he pauses in his
writing] "or Dom. Is the rest of your class
coming? Just us today?"
I laugh. "Sorry, Mr. Shadow, everyone else
fled when they found out you were giving the
lecture today. All you have is little ol' me.
Actually, no. They're all drumming up sponsors
for Park Play next semester. They'll be here."
"Enthusiastic bunch," he writes. "You're not
helping?"
"I bravely volunteered to be the only class
member to show up on time."
I fancy I see an amused expression in the way
Shadow's wings part, but it may be my overactive
imagination. Other students in the Department say
that until last semester, just before I arrived,
Shadow was virtually unapproachable. I've seen
him around the halls with Melodie, our regular
instructor, and he seems to be doing okay. I
think there's a story there somewhere.
The large Swallow tailed butterfly takes a
little flapping leap to the floor. "Do you mind
setting up the chairs in a semi-circle?"
I read the message, nod and obey. Now, don't
get me wrong, I think SCABS can be a rotten thing
to have happen to a person, but I spend a lot of
the next few minutes stealing glances at
Mr.Leonen. He really is quite striking, in a
charcoally sort of way. The Swallowtail he has
become is mainly black, with a few lined-up spots
of muted buttercup yellow. Life could be worse.
On the other hand, life could be fucking
fantastic, like mine is. Only then, one spends a
lot of time wondering when their luck's going to
run out. You never know, as Mom says. If it
happens it happens, and then you cope.
Or maybe not.
Gabriel shlogs into the black box like some
kind of deliberate, human affront to the coping
philosophy.
He fights his own footsteps. I offer a
puke-pink plastic chair.
Shadow is hanging upside-down from the
revolving greenboard, chalking something on it.
He barely looks up as Gabriel groans and sinks
onto the chair. Or perhaps he stares. Hard to
tell with compound eyes.
Gabe's head drops into his hands, but even
this gesture of defeat is strained. The muscles
pulse all over his body under oddly-matched
clothing. I know he can't keep a wardrobe
together for more than a few days. A lot of this
outfit has been randomly donated by some of the
bigger guys in the Department.
"God, Feech, I'm diseased," he says to his
piecemeal hands.
"I know, Gabe, I know." I've found it's best
not to get him going on a conversation like this.
Keep it low-key, I've learned, or you're fuelling
a war.
"Fully three shop owners turned me down, and
when approached by another student, gave in. I'm
friggin' diseased."
"Yes, Gabe, you are," I agree, sitting on
the harvest-orange chair next to him. "But so are
a lot of the students. Maybe it's your approach."
He looks at me. One hand is changing,
forcing itself into a crude imitation of some
kind of a hoof. The ache that he feels is
evident only in some small part of his almost
sweetly defiant expression. He used to have brown
hair and clear brown eyes, or at least he
sometimes does now, but over his pale face the
tousled hair may be brown or blue-grey or white on
any given day or in any given hour. His eyes span
the spectrum with every headache he battles.
He grins and says,"Feech, you are a shithead."
"I know that too, Gabriel."
Two more students enter the space, and most
of the rest of Playwriting I follows.
Bahni and John come in, not arm in arm
because this is class, but they might as well be.
No one seems to be able to figure out how they get
_all_ of their classes together. Especially since
Bahni graduates in the spring and John doesn't
have his degree until the end of next year. They
make an interesting pair, with little black-haired
Bahni leaning against the tall John, whose sandy
hair and stubble accentuate the rough-handsome
lines of his features.
Bethuel isn't in this class, but his
girlfriend, Juliet, is. The darling of the
Department. I didn't know what to make of her at
first. It wasn't until I saw her in a show that I
understood her magic. Juliet has a disorder which
prevents her from conceptualizing linear time, or
cause-and-effect, as others do. Someone has to
help her backstage at every show, giving her the
scene she's about to go on and perform. But once
she's out there in the lights, the combination of
her intense concentration and the character's
complete possession of her body makes her
dazzling. I've talked to her a couple of times.
She's sweet and hauntingly fragile.
Juliet's black leopard companion, Calico,
comes to class too. He seems to have taken a
shine to me, and of course I am flattered although
I don't really get his motives. Never question an
animal's affection, I guess. For that's what he
is. A real leopard. Bethuel tells me that the
University wouldn't remove Calico from Juliet
anyway, since the constant companion is good for
her, but he is not quite certain that the school
knows Calico's true species. It's very possible
that most people assume he is actually a female
victim of SCABS, sharing Juliet's dorm room.
Stranger things have happened on this campus, I
think, and believe Bethuel is right that the
school might not even question such a strange pair
on its campus. I have been beginning to see that
SCABS, or some strain of it, is especially
prominent among these buildings that make up
Hayden Heath University. There certainly is a
high incidence of it among those who transfer
here. Maybe I'm a fool to have registered here,
or to stay now.
But I know that I am likely to be exposed to
SCABS wherever I go. I could run. But those who
run, as my father has seen among his patients many
times, are escaping their friendships and family
connections while running from a disease that is
almost certainly unavoidable anyway.
When and if I contract the virus, I want my
friends near me. I figure those I'm making at
this school are as good a bet as any. I'm
sticking.
Bahni helps Shadow adjust the greenboard for
his lecture. Normally, this class would be held
upstairs and Melodie would be teaching it, but the
dance class needs the special floor in our room
upstairs and Melodie is at a textbook-choosing
meeting. We sit in our semi-circle like good
little boys and girls and pay attention to
Shadow's interpretation of Alexander Leaf's
_Waterslide_.
He's really good. I sense that Gabriel is
paying no attention, however. He shifts slightly
in his chair and an elbow brushes me. I turn to
look, and realize that from beneath a now-humped
back Gabriel is fighting to turn his chin up
towards me; Shadow sees it at the same time and
then everyone turns.
"Gabe, are you--" Bahni barely gets the
words out of his mouth before Gabriel sits up at a
weird angle...
I'm not sure what he says but I believe a
whisper escapes him. Then, a tremendous bellow.
And this is Gabriel we are dealing with. Angry
and truly at war. In the middle of class. God.
He runs for the wall, not the door, and I
know what he's doing. I've seen him at it, but
he's never given in to his anger during class or a
show. He begins pounding on the paint, screaming
and clawing as though he might destroy the
theatre. The rest of us are frozen for a moment.
Then Juliet gets up and goes to him, and Calico
follows.
Gabe turns on them, tearless eyes blank,
temples tight and furious.
"Gabriel, this is no time to be acting up."
She really believes he is not diseased.
He seems about to answer, but Calico nudges
gently between him and Juliet, evidently not
trusting the look on Gabe's face. He sneers down
at the leopard and spits, "Yeah, Calico, you fit
right into this damn zoo."
Juliet makes an affronted sound, and
Gabriel's arm jerks up-- I believe to grab his own
face, but Calico is taking no chances. By the
time the rest of us are surrounding them, the
one-hundred-eighty-pound pitch-black leopard has
wrestled a seething Gabriel to the dusty floor and
is sitting on him. Gabriel fights the gentle grip
of the big cat, but Calico concentrates on keeping
him down.
John turns to Gabe while two or three others
touch Juliet lightly. She is pleading in a soft
voice for Calico to stop, but will not approach
him.
"It's all right, Juliet, Gabriel's not hurt,"
John looks up to reassure her. She is
unresponsive, but as Calico is carefully coaxed
off of our classmate Gabriel breaks into a tirade.
His body seems stuck in the shape of some
half-beast, but his voice is his own.
"Gabe's not fuckin' hurt! He's FINE! He's
frickin' FINE! Wanta see another scene?? I can
do GABE CLIMBS A LADDER TO THE CAT WALK AND JUMPS!
I can rip off my own face if you like! Won't hurt
any more than normal everyday for old GABE!"
By now Juliet is white and shaking. Calico
is at her side, yellow eyes firmly on the ranting
Gabriel just in case, but she pays no attention to
him. Shadow writes something quickly to one of
the students, who replies, "I think he's in the
design lab. I'll get him," and runs off. John is
holding Gabriel by one arm and Bahni is helping.
"Shush, Gabe, pull yourself together. Come
on now. Calm down." John submits to a spitting
growl from Gabe, then speaks more softly, to me.
"Call an ambulance."
"NO! No." Gabriel sits up and Bahni and
John let go of his arms. He shudders. His voice
falls to a carefully controlled whisper. "Sorry
to interrupt the class, Dominiq. Sorry..." His
grey gaze turns to Juliet and something almost
draws back the mask of control. Then he stands
up.
The class backs off for Gabriel. His unsure
form limps stoically to the puke-pink chair. Gabe
sits, shaking with the tightness of forced-normal
muscles. "It's all right. You may go on with the
class, Shadow."
"Gabe..." I say softly in his ear, but he
carefully raises a hand and pushes me away.
Shadow considers a moment, watching as I retreat
from my classmate's determined form, then returns
to the greenboard. The shaken class rebuilds
itself. The discussion of the drama in
_Waterslide_ continues.
After about two minutes of quiet Bethuel
arrives. He and the student who went to find him
approach Juliet worriedly. She immediately throws
her arms around his neck like a little girl, then
lets go and stares at him. A moment of
concentration later she speaks: "I want to leave
from this class, Bethuel."
He nods his blond head and leads her out.
Calico pads after them. I sense no movement from
Gabriel. The whole group smells like sweat. But
we know now that Juliet has not been badly shocked
by Gabriel's violent actions. Her leaving means
that she wants to clear her mind; she will be back
tomorrow.
During the remainder of the class Gabriel
does not move. I glance over at him frequently,
but his eyes are fixed on a point beyond Shadow
and his jaw is dangerously clenched. Class ends,
and he rises like the rest of us. Almost like the
rest of us. As he turns and begins to force
himself into a walk, to exit the black box, I
notice a trickle of blood making its way
surreptitiously out the corner of his tight mouth.
"Gabriel. I want--"
But in that instant he is gone, his walk
unnaturally quick.
I run into Kent Dryer on the way out the door
after Gabriel. "Whoa! Feech! First Gabe and now
you. Is he all right? Didn't say anything to me."
I look up at the amber-eyed, effeminate man.
Kent's gold hair has a silver-grey grizzling to it
and his slim, chiseled look gives his strong frame
a lightweight attractiveness. But his eyes are
stern now, and he discreetly whiffs the air above
my jacket.
"What the hell happened in there?"
I'm a bit shy of Kent, he already having had
a play produced as well as being a talented singer
and set designer, but at this point I feel he's
the strongest one I can talk to.
"Gabriel went off the deep end. Calico
pinned him, but no harm done. Not by the cat,
anyway. John suggested we call the ambulance but
he wouldn't have anything of it. I don't know
where he's headed now."
I don't realize I'm shaking until I feel
Kent's slim hand gripping my shoulder. "S'not so
bad, Feech. Let's just go see if he's made it to
his next class."
We do, and he has. But Gabriel is sitting as
stiffly and painfully as in the black box. I'm
afraid to interrupt the class, to disrupt his
pattern. As long as he's in control... But that's
a fallacy. Gabriel is not in control. Kent and I
move away from the door and look at each other.
Kent speaks quietly. "I wonder if you'd help
with a those damned paper scrolls for the next
show. The printer ink isn't cutting it. Smears
when we apply the glue. So now I have to color
all of the words in by hand. And those markers
smell _bad_."
"Sure, Kent, I'll help. And I think I've got
some cinnamon smelly-markers downstairs if you
want 'em. I get the feeling that Gabriel's not
going back to normal-- for him anyway-- after
this. Maybe we can talk..."
"Of course."
We retrieve the smelly-markers. So sue me.
I'm a sucker for that sort of thing. Anyway, this
way Kent and I won't have to slave away with those
noxious pens. Once in the design lab, we test the
ink and find it suitable. We sit down to work,
and I wait for Kent to start the talking.
"He should have been in the hospital a long
time ago. Before you transferred here." Kent
speaks to the wall as much as to me, and I can't
quite translate the slight hmphing sound that
follows each sentence. He seems almost--
vulnerable.
"He hated the idea today. He's got to be in
agony."
Kent makes that sound again and replies,
"Gabriel's fighting something. But I'm not quite
sure what. Not just the disease." Pause. "What
are you doing after Gabe would be done with
rehearsal tonight?"
"Nothing much. I'm pounding things together
in the scene shop for awhile and then I'm going
home. But what about Gabe? We should really
check up on him. If we let him finish rehearsal,
maybe he'll be more amenable to talking later. I
don't have a car..."
"That's what I was thinking. I know you and
he are friends. Maybe he'll talk to you, if he's
better later. I have a car. I'll pick you up at
11:00, after my rehearsal. You're in the green
house on Prentiss, right?"
"Yep. Thanks."
"No problem at all, Feech. I'm worried about
him too. Nobody's seen him eat in days. So far
as I can tell, he lives on beer."
He's not joking and neither am I. "His
metabolism seems to react well to the sugars
digested in the beer. I've offered him nutrition
drinks, but even though he's tried to hide the
fact I know he-- throws them up."
That sound again. "He's got to get to a
hospital. Got to let them stop the fight. He's
fighting himself to death. If they could
tranquilize him or something--"
Kent stops suddenly and I feel strange
talking again. We work in silence. The pall of
SCABS never feels so strong in Hayden Heath as
when someone is refusing help. We're a tight
bunch. We love to be asked for help. Gabriel
won't ask. It leaves the rest of us uncomfortable
and angry.
I don't see Gabriel again all day. I walk
home for supper-- my house is two blocks off
campus while Gabriel's is across town. After
dinner, all through nailing set pieces together in
the scene shop, I worry. I'm a worrier. I can't
help it. Back at home I wait, fidgeting, for
Kent. I tell myself that Gabe is fine, that he
would know enough to get help if he really needed
it. But I cannot make myself calm down.
Kent pulls up in a beige Pontiac and I hop
in. "He'll have driven home by now. Maybe he'll
be in a better mood," I say. Kent nods his
fine-boned head but says nothing. We drive to
where Gabe lives.
Upstairs in a needs-paint white house, having
come up by the outside staircase by the sidewalk,
Kent and I wait for a response to Kent's knock.
We breathe several times, call Gabe's name, wait,
knock again. Kent's strange amber eyes catch
mine, and his nostrils flare slightly. I almost
see his ears twitch back as he listens. Then,
knowing I'm thinking the same thing he is, Kent
sways back slightly and comes at the door in a
smooth slamming motion. The door cracks. The
next swift motion strips the moulding harboring
the latch, and Kent steps into the room with me
close behind.
The only sound in the room is from Gabe's
computer. Its soft seashell-echo seems to drown
our ability to speak. The room's main light is
on, and the monitor adds its own brightness with a
message-scrolling screen-saver.
I look at the dresser opposite the computer
table and manage to say, "His portable stereo is
gone. He must have taken it with him to
rehearsal."
"No, he's been home and gone again." Kent
has bent over a glass of beer sitting near the
mousepad. "He had a sip out of this glass not
long ago." His eyes shift to the scrolling
screen-saver as I confusedly eye the rest of the
room. "Where would he have gone out agai--" I
begin, but Kent is stiff, watching the monitor.
I, slow person that I am, finally turn and do the
same.
Gabriel Descending
Gabriel Descending
Gabriel Descending
Gabriel Descending
Gabriel
Descending
I grab the mouse and, as I do so, the last
screen used turns up-- the screen used to program
the scroll.
Blink, blink, blink... the silent cursor in
front of the two words "Gabriel Descending."
"He just wrote this," Kent growls.
I'm already at the phone, seizing it while
tension clenches my heart and throat.
"Bahni and John," I say, shakily dialing the
numbers. "Maybe he's there."
No answer. I try again. Kent takes the
phone from me and I stand away.
"Don't panic," he tells me. I see him dial
Bethuel's dorm room number. He taps his foot, ear
cocked carefully to the receiever. "Beth," he
says at last, and I sigh. "Kent. Yes. Feech and
I are at Gabriel's and wondering where he went."
I feel the pause at the other end. I know
Bethuel does not speak for some time. Then Kent
listens hard, and hangs up the phone without
saying another word to Beth.
I head for the car.
We get to the Performing Arts Building as
clouds begin dispersing, revealing a clearer night
sky. I don't need to ask Kent what transpired.
Bethuel worried about Gabe at rehearsal. And he
wouldn't be out for fun with Bahni and John. Not
in his recent state. Beth thinks he's gone back
to the theatre by himself. We think he has too,
know he has.
The screams reach our ears thinly, floating
somewhere near the ceilings of the halls, like
sounds from a show in progress somewhere in the
building. Angry and anguished, they compete with
a faint, pounding song. Gabriel's portable
stereo. I know the song. His frustration,
hatred, pounded out along with it on many
occasions.
"I GET KNOCKED DOWN..."
Loud, faint to our ears, the song Gabriel
does his hating to is in discord with inhuman
shrieks.
Kent is moving so fast I can't keep up with
him. I am grateful when he reaches back and grabs
my chilled hand. "I'm sure he's all right. Just
mad." Kent is a bad liar.
Even Kent jolts back at the sights, sounds,
scents of the black box. Only one creature is in
existence here tonight-- Gabriel, on the floor in
blood and thin vomit and things I can't seem to
identify.
"I GET KNOCKED DOWN, BUT I GET UP AGAIN,
NEVER GONNA KEEP..."
In the blaring sound I smell the red stuff I
know Kent is balking at, and I know we are both
thinking-- the world has gone inside out-- there
is never real blood, never real damage, in the
theatre.
I step forward into "--GET UP AGAIN, NEVER
GON--" and snap the stereo off. Only there is not
silence. Gabriel is screaming from parts of his
body that should not be able to scream. Kent
bends down, stepping from the space behind me, and
grips Gabe's hands. He stops injuring himself.
But the screams continue, strangled yet piercing.
Kent is murmuring to the battling form but I can't
hear him. I stumble, turn and bolt for the
office. Dial emergency. Give the information
without even hearing myself.
Gabe bleeds on the black floor, fluids edged
with dust from rehearsing feet. Tears are
streaming into crevasses that appear and disappear
painfully in his face. My jacket comes off,
presses against a wound I can find, one I can
affect. I shout, not knowing I am going to,
"Gabriel! Gabe! What the hell are you
fighting!?"
I know the tortured eyes turn towards me, for
Kent reacts to the movement to. Gabe is still
struggling. But for a moment, less than a second,
there is a connection. Almost surrender. Then we
are back to restraining the violently shifting
figure on the floor until the paramedics arrive.
I watch as the white-clad men do their thing.
Kent and I both find voice to tell the unheeding
Gabriel that we will be with him at the hospital.
Then we return to the car and drive in silence.
The sky is a clean obsidian dark. I always notice
the night sky and the stars. Even at a time like
this.
Once there, of course we can't see him, not
yet, say the nurses. A doctor comes to tell us
that he will give us an update-- later.
I get on the phone and begin calling theatre
people.
Soon there is a small collection of Gabe's
concerned friends from the Department, standing
around near the empty, soft chairs of the
reception area. Nobody says a word.
It's after dawn when they let us in. We're
all starving, but have no appetite. We're tired,
but have not taken seats. The doctor says that
Gabriel's wounds will heal, but that they have not
completely stabilized his changing body. "He's no
longer resisting," the man tells us. "He is exhausted.
We believe Gabriel is beginning to settle into a
certain form. He will need constant observation
until we are certain he will not harm himself again,
however."
We all look hurt, as though the admission of
self-inflicted wounds is an insult to Gabriel.
Kent and I enter the room with the others in
a quiet half-circle behind us.
A white-clad Gabriel slides grey eyes over to
look at us.
"Kent," he says. His voice has changed. It
matches the large, maned, bovine head. Fingers
smoothly furred with blue-grey hairs trace a line
of shadow in the hospital sheets. I know what
sort of creature rests before us, but I find it
difficult to define Gabe as any one creature.
After all this fighting...
"Kent," he repeats, and the tall young man
is at his side. "Sorry about that. Sorry.
Feech, sorry. Shadow, sorry. Juliet, sorry.
Juliet..." He's babbling. I move forward and
take one of his hands-- Kent seems somehow unable.
The roomful of theatre people falls dead
silent. Then Gabe says, clearly, "Only one good
thing could have come of this disease, Feech. One
good thing. Damn!"
I take my cue and ask,"What, Gabriel?"
"Okay, you all laugh at this answer, okay?
It's a joke, see? My life is a friggin' joke.
Could I fight it into the one good result? No. So
now I'm a man and a wildebeest. My voice is
screwed and all of you have seen me throw a fit.
Most of you, anyway.
"I thought I could do it. Make it bend to my
will. But I wasn't that strong. So here's your
new Gabriel, the fucking blue-grey African
wildebeest-man with undeniably masculine
features." He fakes a bow from upon the bed.
"Thank you, thank you."
The group is still silent. I marvel that
Gabriel has been able to shut up a bunch of
theatre folks more than once in the last
twenty-four hours. Kent finds his missing voice.
"I broke your door open," he falters.
I startle. Kent's eyes are deep, expressive.
Fixed in some vulnerability on Gabriel's exhausted
person.
Gabriel sees it too, and lets out a short,
inexplicable laugh. It comes out as a deep snort..
But it sounds like Gabe.
The other members of the visiting party move
to the bed, chatting now, making sure their
Department companion knows they care. I feel my own
fatigue and sink onto Gabe's hospital bed,
combining rest and comforting. Kent does the same
on the other side. And now he takes hold of
Gabe's hand.
I stay for an hour, then volunteer to get
breakfast for those who are staying. "I'll go
with you," Kent says. But Gabriel grips his
hand.
"Will you please stay here?"
Kent responds with a slight nod. Melodie
goes with me instead.
I look back as we exit the white room.
Kent's slim hand is wrapped in Gabriel's blue-grey
fingers. The chest of the man under the sheets
rises and falls evenly with his quiet breathing.
Gabriel's body is otherwise perfectly still.