Chapter 1
It was a Wednesday
afternoon in the Senate Bar. Schilling, the proprietor, stood behind the
curved counter, stroking the shot glasses with a towel. Every part of the
bar was reflected in the mirror wall behind him: the marble and black onyx
floor, the oiled cherry-wood counter, the brass bar rail. A chandelier hung
in the center of the ceiling. Rows of cut-glass decanters filled the shelves.
Schilling ran his towel over their glass stoppers. In the corner, on the
big screen, Cher danced and sang a song for the U.S. Navy. Schilling had
the sound off.
There were three customers.
Two sat together at a table near the door. They were businessmen. One
of them smoked. Both of them drank.
Every time either of them
picked up his glass and set it down again, he made a new wet ring on the
table between them. They were careful to keep the spreadsheet out of the
water.
The third customer, a college
student, sat at the bar, drinking his way through an unexpected romance
with a woman old enough to be his mother. He'd asked Schilling to bring
him three drinks at once, three different drinks--a Bloody Mary, a Sex
on the Beach, a Velvet Hammer. As a compromise, Schilling had brought
him the Bloody Mary and put in a MTV tape, picture only, out of deference
to the businessmen and as a matter of personal preference.
A fourth man came into the
Senate Bar from the street. A shaft of sunlight sprang into the room when
the door opened and vanished when it closed. "Give me a drink," the man
said to Schilling.
Schilling glanced at the man
briefly as he polished the wood bar with his sleeve. "Get out of here."
"Give me a drink."
The man was dirty and dressed
in several tattered layers, which still left a bare hole the size of a
tennis ball above one knee. He was smoking the stubby end of a cigarette.
It was not his cigarette; there was lipstick on the filter. He had retrieved
this cigarette from the sidewalk outside the bar. "You pay your tab first,"
said Schilling.
"I don't have any money,"
said the man. Cher closed her eyes and opened her mouth.
"Where's my Sex on the Beach?"
asked the boy.
"You're disturbing my customers,"
Schilling told the man at the door. "You're stinking up my bar." He reached
under the counter for a bottle of gin.
"He gave me my first drink,"
the man at the door said to the boy at the bar. "I used to be just like
you." He took two steps into the room, leaving two gritty footprints on
the black onyx. "Finish what you started," he told Schilling.
"Get out," Schilling said.
The boy rolled a quarter down
his nose and let it drop, catching it loudly in his empty Bloody Mary
glass. "Can I get another drink?" he asked. "Am I going to get another
drink?"
A second shaft of sunlight
appeared in the room, collided with the mirrored wall. Inside the sunlight,
barely visible, Cher danced.
She turned her back. Schilling
heard a woman scream, and then the Cher in the mirror broke into five
pieces and fell behind the counter. The sunlight disappeared. "Madam,"
said Schilling, hardly breathing, in shock. A nightmare dressed in black
stood at the door of his bar, a nightmare in the shape of an enormous
postmenopausal woman. In one hand she held a hatchet. She reached into
the bodice of her dress with the other and pulled out a large stone. She
wore a bonnet with black ribbons.
"Glory be to God!" shouted
the woman. "Peace on Earth! Goodwill to men!" She hit the big screen dead
center with the rock. The screen cracked and smoked, made spitting noises,
blackened. She took a step, swept the cigarette from the shabby man's
mouth with one hand. "Don't poison the air with your filthy gases!" she
said. Then she held her hatchet at the vertical. She charged into the
bar, clearing the counter. Maraschino cherries and stuffed olives flew.
"Madam!" said Schilling. He ducked.
"You purveyor and protector
of obscenity!" the woman shouted. "Has your mother ever been to this place?"
The boy at the bar slipped from his stool and ran for the rear door. In
three steps the woman caught him. She picked him up by the neck of his
sweater as if he were a kitten, throwing him to his knees. She knelt over
him, singing. "Touch not, taste not, handle not. Drink will make the dark,
dark blot." He struggled, and she let him go, calling after him, "Your
mother did not raise you for this!" The back door slammed.
The businessmen had taken
cover under their table. Schilling remained out of sight. The shabby man
was gone. The woman began, methodically, with her hatchet to destroy the
bar. She punctured the decorative keg behind the counter and then, apparently
disappointed to find it empty, she brought her hatchet down on the counter,
severing a spigot from one of the hoses. A fountain of soda exploded into
the air. She broke the decanters. Pools of liquor flowed over the marble
and onyx floor. The woman's bonnet slipped to the side of her head.
Excerpted from Black
Glass by Karen Joy Fowler. Copyright © 1998 by Karen Joy Fowler.
Excerpted by permission of Ballantine, a division of Random House, Inc.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted
without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpted from Black Glass © Copyright 2008 by Karen Joy Fowler. Reprinted with permission by Ballantine. All rights reserved.
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