| DrainBy Davis SchneidermanNorthwestern  University Press |  | 
|---|
Note: The novel details a near-past-then-future in  which Lake Michigan empties of water — becoming an endless desert. A  disenfranchised population of Cultists (a.k.a. Maneuverians) that  worships an arcane “World Worm” called Umma-Segnus moves in, and the  Quadrilateral Commission, a planned-community corporation, gradually  supplants these people with towns not unlike Disney’s Celebration,  Florida. Quadrilateral hopes to make the empty lakebed a new state in  the union called Post-America. 
 Yet all are not so easily supplanted. A partisan leader working against  the Quadrilateral communities where she was born, the charismatic  Dial-Up Networking leads the Blackout Angels gang in paramilitary  activities. A second protagonist, the perpetually coughing Quadrilateral  employee Washington Jefferson Lincoln Qui, combs the wasteland of old  Lake Michigan in search of the memory of his burned sister, whom he  knows now only as “blank hiss at the tape-end. 
 The narrative passages alternates between the exploits of the two main  characters and the style shifts radically between these nodes.  In the  first and third sections, Qui finds himself the Quadrilateral candidate  for Governor of this proposed new state. In the second and fourth  section, Dial-Up Networking is a prisoner of the sadistic Signor  Clickermink-Lispsmut, a Quadrilateral functionary, arrested for  terrorist crimes against the planner community and “inhabitations” of  other bodies through sex acts.
—[when we travel by rail, we cultivate the frontier]—
 The Digital Record fish wrap pulses under the door  of Washington Jefferson Lincoln’s private train car at the exact  moment the gubernatorial candidate defeats an almost-overwhelming  accumulation of thick morning sand: a granular narcotic, an opiate  paste applied directly to the skin. The phrase “you’ve got sand in your  eye” is neither accurate (since the substance is not sand but rather a  mixture of sweat, oil and tears collected in the fleshy  caruncle—composed of salt, sugar, ammonia, urea, albumin, citric acid,  and lysozyme) nor merely metaphorical. In these chemicals, Qui perceives  a tangible obfuscation of the world. His knuckles burn from rubbing. As  he flips through the pages of the Digital Record, sips his  coffee, and puts in a quick call to initiate his morning security  briefing, the distance between Lincoln Qui, 2040, and the Lincoln Qui of  only one year prior dissolves as quickly as the accumulated crust of a  single night. 
 The digital record, in this way, creates: collapsing  the distance between inky sand-dune sinkholes that populate the long  night before vanishing under the first pixilated light of morning. The  digital record displays Qui’s campaign manager Bush-Bush Bush, two train  cars distant, applying pancake makeup in the broad dabs of a dry  sponge, creating a white cloud around her features. Her body glows; the  Cultist village burns. Soldiers bugging out from some weird third-world  jungle, hoary defoliant sprays piercing undifferentiated scrub, the  edge of a thatched roof lit by the pin of a red-hot cigar. Neither  Lincoln Qui nor Bush-Bush ever speak, in this new world, of these dreamy  mistakes. 
 The digital records deceive Qui into denying his own part  in those strange events; for days, weeks, he forgets the young girl’s  gleaming knife blade as she removes her mother’s pancreas. He forgets  the smoky mist that hangs deep in his throat until it forces itself out  into a river of paper boats, multicolored, festooned with arcane  calligraphy. At times he even forgets his childhood home, in what he  still hopes is Calibration rather than the unfamiliar spot by the mud  house where his penis first once breathed fire. At times, despite  Dooger’s frequent exhortations, Qui even forgets his own twin sister. 
 The digital record doubles everything, still, and when he  does remember, Qui suspects that Fillmore’s soft touch may be nothing  more than his body stuck in a tape loop. Everything can be faked.  Especially separation. Sure, they slept in the same bed, walked  together, composed outlandish orchestras on a pear-shaped lute.  Recorded sonatas on a vinyl disc, falsifying their original performances  with intricate gears. A model solar system secreting metal chains  behind a southern hemisphere of rotating-revolving plastic balls. 
 The digital record screams like a castrated banshee so that  each whistle-stop crowd flashing blue-and-red pom-poms merges  seamlessly along this campaign trail of truncated stump speeches.  Through thirty-nine Quadrilateral cities and the ramshackle leftovers of  just under seventy-five Cultist shantytowns, Lincoln Qui loses his grip  on simple information transfer: a bumblebee dances a grove of  pollen-bearing bells to the brood through the cracked hairline of the  sixty-four-year-old Zebediah Dooger, mirrored, as he is, in the dry  swells of the desiccated lake bed. His pomade culled from baked clay and  margarine. 
 The digital record shows Zebediah Dooger briefing Lincoln  Qui and Bush-Bush Bush in the rickety interstice between the food and  club cars. “Polls show the measure will pass overwhelmingly.” Ballot  resolution to bring Post-American statehood to the Wildland-Urban  Interface. “What a difference a year makes.” Each morning in his private  rail car, Dooger soaks in an astringent lemon bath to keep his skin  from receding; he foregoes his six p.m. highball as if he had become a  Franciscan; the last time Qui caught anything beyond the carefully  scripted occurred on that day, just over a year ago, when he returned  from Consecration only to be suddenly tapped as the candidate for, as  Dooger put it, “Governor of the future state of Quadrilateral.”  
 “Why me? I thought there were concerns?” 
 “Lincoln, my boy, think of it, you’ll be governor of the new state, a double whammy. Two blowjobs in a row. You can  set policy anyway you choose. You want to outlaw midgets like that  simpleton Woodrow Panaflex, keep his kind out of the way? No  problem! He met you in Consecration, yes?” 
 “Yes, well, we lost track of him after a while. Bush-Bush  may have . . .” 
 “That woman couldn’t keep track of a nine-foot giant if it  were sticking her up the ass with a blaze-orange bowling pin. She only  sees small. Not you, no sir, you’re a visionary. Why  the way you handled yourself out there, Qui, well, it speaks highly on  the faith we place in you, and I should mention, completely alleviates  our previous concerns. Now, any skeletons in your closet?” 
 “Sir?” 
 “We better start vetting.” The snap of a rubber glove. 
 The digital record treats Qui as the governor, except for  his, er, troubles. On the soapbox, in the stump speech, his word hoard  narrows to the rocky channel of a deep blue river. “Focus on the sooty  eyes of just one of these subhuman trolls,” advises the speech coach,  “and she becomes the linchpin, opening her vulva to the warmth of your  message. Picture her eyes like spreading legs, Qui, giraffe necks  stretching freely into the sky.” Qui’s awkward sentences pull apart the  pixels on an enlarged newspaper picture. He grows dizzy, surrenders, in  a sort of daze, to the random swirls of the lizard world. 
 The digital record, a mirror of another more rational  state, whispers to Qui in the middle of the night when the dried-up  eyeball of some wondrous sky creature falls to a watery floor, which,  over aeons, evolves into a field of pressurized carbon; under the dry  inland sea, a body in dark decay sucks all the light from the surface,  spreads the cryptic shadow of birthing liquid onto a bed of broken  coral. Above, the sky doubles itself, wet only by some ethereal quality  of its own flighty substance, reflected on the bronze interior pupils of  sleeping crustaceans. Qui thinks this sky may very well be falling up  from the center of the lake bed. 
 In a more fertile environment, the digital record might  show Washington Jefferson Lincoln Qui’s gubernatorial Freedom Train  crossing a series of lush streams feeding a delta of pregnant seed,  mouth harps twanging against broken jawbones, chrysanthemums harvested  by little girls in white debutante dresses, cotton gins whizzing in  thick marigold air. The Freedom Train carries important First Family  artifacts: the shroud of Fulcrum Maneuvers’s child-bride, The Woman  without a Name; a shard of the knife that pierced the traitor Ari  Ollie’s heart in 2002; and in a specially cooled service car complete  with armed guard, a hand-reproduced copy of The Book of Maneuvers. 
 The locomotive’s chimney publishes steam in a fountain of  black bile. Dooger’s daily briefings: “You must remember your  lines. For worm-sakes, we’re shooting them directly into your  fucking ear. You’re a deafmute half the time, and when you manage to  squeak at all, you sound like a mouse taking a shit while being poked in  the ribs. Ah ah ah . . . keep quiet now.” 
 “Thank you, Zebediah.” Qui starts. 
 The digital record shows Qui choking on the stump, tensing  up, freezing solid. He squeezes the dry pancreas, still decaying in his  pocket, microscopic bits flaking to the floor each time the train  curves sharply around the rail to circumnavigate the ferocious fires.  The digital record is not a memory for Qui but a living reminder of his  failures. He considers placing the base of his tongue against the flesh  of the pancreas wrapped in a handkerchief. Salted metal from a deep  ocean. Endlessly delightful. 
 While his personal physician, Madison Mary Todd, dozes on a  foam mattress near his king-size bed, Lincoln Qui moves stealthily  through three empty train cars to reach the bridge of the Freedom Train  caboose. The air is dry and cold. The night threshed with handfuls of  eye sand. A carafe of stars twinkles over the platform, pouring  uncontained magma onto the earth. The horizon fires pitch a soft  green-and-yellow flicker. Qui thrusts his hands into his pocket and  fingers the pancreas. He has so often been careful not to . . . lick  . . . in the presence of the others. Now, he turns his back to the  desert and faces the door of the caboose. 
 He raises a hand mirror to the expanse behind. The  urine-colored glow of the fires recalls the Cultists’ hard dirt, their  clay pots, arrowheads. Qui may be a Quadrilateral trespasser, but what  claim do these Cultists have? Even Umma-Segnus is an immigrant. “The  Worm is beyond this world, little brother little brother.” Qui’s  eyes are difficult to parse, hazel sunflowers blooming in a field of  spring grass. Qui moves his lips, twenty-one years back. Fillmore’s last  words. Lincoln watches his mirror lips open in slow motion: the upper  jaw mawing the surface of the sky, the lower lip gorging low to the  ground; both halves separate into unattached nothings overtaken by  black dye. Dooger wants her back. The mirror shows Qui nothing  of Fillmore’s face, nothing from his memory. He pictures her tongue  moving again, and in a flash it comes: [a shadow on the neck of the  sun]. Lip-reading in a lightning storm. 
 A lungful of sand whips into Qui’s open mouth. He squeezes  harder on the pancreas and doubles over, coughing. Acid-burn up through  the trachea, and he rips the pancreas from his right-hand pocket.  Fillmore, lost, somewhere inside. Squeezing tight, Lincoln flings the  organ in disgust, watching it bounce off a liquid field made hard by  the rumbling locomotive before it finally sinks, as the train pushes  away, just as Qui vomits little bits of himself, in scatter shot, over  the metal grate of the empty caboose. 
 A prison  
 The exterior of this Quadrilateral Commission prison  appears as a typical industrial nightmare: an oil retention center,  enormous white tanks with toy ladders climbing ramrod stiff along the  sides. Most Maneuverians shun the crass eyesore of these enormous  retention drums, scraggly teeth holding back the remnants of dried and  bloody gums receding into the pits of a primeval mouth. Few  Quadrilateral residents want to actually see where energy  comes from. Circular saws slice an assembly line of feces-bathed  chicken, necks smashed against the cold machinery by linemen dumb to the  sound of cracking neckbones that goes on forever and ever amen. 
 And so the kidnapping and mass liquidation of certain  intractable elements of the opposition party—my Blackout Angels—becomes  a sort of medias res for this story. There are no end times for  the Cultists of Umma-Segnus; no, the world stops dead on its axis at  the first breath of the hoary god’s ancient salt. For the followers of  the Worm, time is entirely pliant. But for the Blackout Angels, time is a  weapon the Quadrilateral fucks must never master. 
 And so, their torture methods are thus staggeringly  regressive. 
 For the dark-night-of-soul scenario, the Quadrilateral  troops attempt to win the hearts and minds of their quarry through the  mobilization of sacred flowers—campanula and violets, scabious and  acorns—photosynthetic collaborators of ambient light, here,  underground, distilled into colorless anodyne. Their apothecary fuck  monks cook up wild herbivorous injections. I smell the elecampane herb  that winged Mercury, god of thieves and turtle shells, shoved down  Hephaestus’s throat. With it, they shock me from the Adams Quincy-Adams  Quincy corpse. 
 “Eat shit prepared in a sautéed bilge, you dried-up candy  bitches!” I scream, now in my own body. It might be wise for my other  captured Angels, None, Nothing, and Number, to cease antagonizing the  guards. But I have trained them well. Standing on the small torture  stage, naked, amid PVC pipes connecting torment apparatuses to the  collection of bodily fluids (stercus in a jar, urine in a lemon  milkshake), the trio act like marionettes jerked by a two-bit demiurge  run amok on one motherfucker of a sixth creation day. 
 I am sectioned off across the room, the leader, in a  separate cell along the curved edge of the prison. The guards have  drained the Angels, split apart their tongues, triggered cyanide caplets  set deep into their most hidden teeth—just enough to make them into  pliable zombies. They stagger through death, lifeless and pale. 
 “Stand up, Dial-Up Networking, it’s time for your regularly  scheduled gang rape.” 
 “Lick my poison twat until your tongue falls out, you  obsequious, sycophantic cur!” 
 A group of nine guards, all eighteen-to  twenty-four-year-old man-pigs sporting commedia dell’arte masks,  long-nosed little shits, saunter into my cell like refugees from a  dot-com office space. Several sport overpriced watches; all are dressed  in expensive Italian suits, shirts of bright, single-color hues,  reversible belts set to brown or black depending on shoe color, facial  hair trimmed with the numerous humming blades of high-end razors. They  circle in my compartment, and at least two of them parry at my body  piled into a ball of sexual heat, a purring and cooing declawed kitten. I  get them hard with the evolution of my primitive backbone. In  Mesopotamian Ur, I prescribe medicines for the tired king, his jaw  hanging so low that his saliva sizzles on the hot ground. I rub a  mixture of sand and mashed berry into the flanks of his penis before the  royal court, each member skinnier than the last, the famine sucking  them dry while I grow fat and nubile. 
 “Rise, penis witch!” The same voice, this time louder, and  the men begin to chatter about year-end reviews, promotions, 401(k)  packages with company matching, stock options offered in a suitcase by  overpriced whores swishing their manicured feet in buckets of steaming  executive feces; they love it, they say, gets ’em off like a burnt  sausage shoved down a well-lubed throat for the money shot of crumbled  kielbasa with shots of their asparagus-flavored cum. 
 “Choke on it, elf-skinned dewberries!” 
 Tonguing the closest suit, I wiggle my body deep into the  crevices of the stone floor. I concentrate on stone and rock, try to cut  through layers of congealed molasses. Picture a still life: Vermeer  grapeshot, apple core, rotten fish bristling with sharp bones, an  emaciated cat frozen above a bread scrap. I’m pulled to my feet and  manage to look back once more at the rotten body of Adams Quincy-Adams  Quincy maggot covered in my bunk; the prisoners march down a long  corridor lit only by a strip of emergency lights and the glimmer of  titanium chains double locking the doors. “If you got eyes, ears, and  genitals,” they talk at me, “even just one eye, little  princess, well then, you’re in here, in your own body, until the Worm  comes back again hardy-har-har.” 
 —[when we speak of the devil, we talk to ourselves]— 
 The digital record absorbs the charred pancreas as a dark  pool might absorb a droplet of muddy rain. The next morning, Qui still  coughs. Hacking, sand-encrusted night sweats. Through the window,  enormous cacti shrivel fast-forward. The ocean feels solid when  encountering high-speed projectiles; why not the opposite? A green  carnation wilts in the lapel of his three-piece suit, as Qui walks,  again, in daylight, to the bridge of the caboose. 
 “Unless Lake Michigan pulls a reappearing act in the next  two weeks,” Dooger says in the corridor, “You, Washington Jefferson  Lincoln Qui, will become the territorial governor, my boy, leader of the  statehood transition team.” The digital record will capture the pores  of Qui’s face during his acceptance speech, the vast mineral richness of  his smile. Today, covered in blackheads, Qui brushes crud from his  carnation; lacking water, he washes his fingers with several dry spits  into his hand. The wind has cleansed the previous night’s puke from the  caboose grate. Disgusted, Qui reenters the train and proceeds to the  green-room car, adjacent to his own quarters, where a select group of  VIP passengers linger, extras in an Orient Express movie, rimmed around  the wet bar, playing hearts on a vibrating table. Video feed from the  Post-American mainland. Morning briefing. 
 “Hey, Joe,” says Qui to one of the many Quadrilateral  employees whose name he forgets, never learned. “Gov’nor Qui,” says Joe,  playing a trump card, “Don’t want to miss our stop in Jubilation.” He  fades into the woodwork like furniture polish. Yes, today. Another  opportunity for his recently appointed secretary for indigenous affairs,  Tyler Harding Taylor Maneuvers, daughter of Fulcrum Maneuvers, to steal  center stage. A former member of the Blackout Angels, in her  undercover guise as the agent called Neutron Janey, Tyler Harding Taylor  titillates the Interface press corps with tales of her former  misbegotten exploits. 
 A: “I’ll try to answer both parts of your question, Ken.  Yes, my alter ego was indeed involved in the Jubilation attack  on Mayor Buchanan Gompers. As a double agent, of course. But no, these  Blackout Angels don’t actually have supernatural powers. Take one of  their stupider agents, goes by the name of Number. Huge blonde Afro,  crisscrossing bandoliers, thinks he’s a some sort of albino Black Power  character . . . He planted a succession of plastic explosives within the  robot mechanisms so that their leader would think she had  developed a sort of basic telekinesis. Quite sad, really . . .” 
 A: “No, that’s only an urban myth. These people don’t have  the ability to jump into other bodies, although some of the  less-educated Angels believe such mugwumpery. They engage in the most  beastly sexual practices, real kinky stuff, in an attempt to inhabit  the form of Quadrilateral residents. Take their leader, Dial-Up  Networking. Yes, you all know how she supposedly took over the body of  Calibration comptroller Adams Quincy-Adams Quincy. Well, most often, yes  . . . these crazies actually think they have become their  victims. That’s not for me to say, but in this case, Dial-Up Networking  had performed a quite ghastly rape on the body of Comptroller Quincy  over a period of several hours before donning her clothes and makeup  and advancing out to wreak havoc at both the Jubilation Senior High  School and the Samhain festival. They found the real Quincy locked up in  the subbasement of an old water pumping station in the middle of the  desert: emaciated, badly bruised from head to toe, and her nose was  completely shattered. Most certainly from the devil beatings of these  Blackout Angels. Next question . . .” 
 In this double-agent capacity, Tyler Harding Taylor reports  masquerading as the one called Neutron Janey with considerable skill,  even parking a series of empty Ryder trucks outside Quadrilateral  governmental buildings in the most populous towns. As local Jubilation  executives and the now-paraplegic Mayor Gompers reviewed the  Quadrilateral covenants went over budgets jerked themselves off, Janey  would crash the truck in a haze of skid and burning rubber, burst out of  the vehicle with the speed of coked-up Hermes, and smash the soft flesh  of anyone who would dare obstruct her blasts of cotton-candy spooge.  All part of the art. 
 Now, she works the other side as Fulcrum Maneuvers’s  daughter; still, her personality became somewhat diffused during in her  Blackout Angel stint . . . no surprise since she claimed to the Angels  to be Neutron Janey inhabiting the body of what we now know to be  herself, Tyler Harding Taylor Maneuvers, on secret missions. Three  thousand of her eggs have been frozen in case Qui can’t pull the  trigger, and Dooger incessantly forces them together, locks them in the  train bathroom as the tracks get bumpy. Qui fumbles with hot-fire  lingerie as Tyler Harding Taylor undoes his tie with her manicured nails  and middle-income dexterity. “Want to join the mile-long club?” as the  train crosses a sallow marsh, a barren meadow. 
 A series of photographs  
 The Italian Suits, these scabies-ridden eighteen-to  twenty-four-year-old rapists, goose-step back and forth in a semifeudal  universe that rewards chest hair with bad cologne. Several of the  smaller men fuck us with everyday objects. No imagination. Their  leader, a right-wing conservative fundamentalist stock analyst with an  auburn beard, goes by the name of Signor Clickermink-Lispsmut. At almost  nine feet, he educates through a bullhorn: tells us that dinosaurs  lived in the Garden of Eden and rode bareback on Noah’s Ark,  hardy-har-har. 
 Sea creatures, too, forced on to the ark’s wooden deck: “I  said two of every animal. You lousy rainbow trout, get ready to hold  your breath for forty days forty nights bunking with the triceratops!”  He shaves me completely hairless with a flat razor blade and poses me  for the digital record. Rats shit over pubic-hair piles in the corner,  and he calls me, “My hairless porcelain doll, about to get a taste of  the holy ghost.” 
 For a dance at the gym, I grip None’s pasty arm, and he my  waist. They cover my ass with a plaid schoolgirl skirt and paint a  widow’s peak out of brylcreem onto None’s bald head. His arms feel  clammy as they stick me in bobby socks and insert a tube running from my  anus to my mouth. Signor Clickermink-Lispsmut yells at us to look  awkward, “You know, a teenage sock hop followed by the old date-rape  gambit.” Flash. 
 “Get bent with a wire-hanger abortion rod!” 
 For a hot time at the beach party, they pose us behind a  blue-screen studio sandlot. Propane and rendered chicken fat power a  small, crackling pit. A facsimile of the Interface fires, this one even  smells artificial. One of the Suits puts on an old Beach Boys record,  “God Only Knows,” as they pose a few of the prisoners warming hands over  a vat of bubbling animal lard, fetid, stinking bone: “. . . Life will  still go on believe me / The Worm will show nothing to me” They take  turns penetrating us with a variety of conch shells and gleaming  bivalves. Flash. “So what good would livin’ . . . do me . .. do  me . . . do me. . .” Machine scratch. 
 For “the Upstanding Molesters Club operates on Tin Lizzie,”  None, Nothing, and Number are bent naked over the engine of an ancient  automobile. Signor Clickermink-Lispsmut folds an oversized wire hanger  fresh from a series of underground abortions into the giant letter M, heats the monstrosity in a two-thousand-degree glory hole where we  blow hot glass during mandatory rec time and then, with a casual  thrust, brand our white hot asses. Flash. 
 None drools like a rabid buffalo, and I begin to compromise  a bit: “I won’t blame you if you forsake our cause,” I whisper. The  Suits take turns nailing their already-shriveled Angel dicks against  butterfly boards, dangling from chains wrapped around their necks,  banging a monkey-wrench symphony against their bloody shins. Flash. 
 For “sewing argyles for the boys,” my body hangs straight  from its arms on enormous meat hooks while a whizzing machine wielding  several dozen knitting needles gores my ribs in furious pulsing pricks,  drawing blood into a small drizzle from the lowest point on my arm, the  crook of my shoulders, streaming onto a pile of half-finished argyle  socks wet with cum and industrial surfactant stretched between the posed  bodies of two anonymous prisoners. Together, we wear cultured pearls  forced on us, Signor Clickermink-Lispsmut tells me, as keepsakes of our  womanhood; we hang in a triangle, socks in our hands, yarn wrapped  around our feet, the probing needle apparatus reaching up our asses and  tickling our vaginas as a dentist drill might entertain a twist of  exposed nerve. The Suits wrap a scarf around my neck, checks and plaids,  pin the flesh of my head against the fabric and shave along the line of  my absent eyebrows. 
 With my head still down, I flip my eyes from the back of my  skull. Needles puncture my skin as the tip of knife might twist  through a plastic bag filled with glowing oil. Flash. 
 And so I absorb, aware, rather than succumb. For I  am still a visitor in my own body, detached from the occurrences around  me as a desk-bound general decamps from a soldier’s desert beheading.  The Interface is a desert, a desert on Post-American soil, a desert of  our own making, a collaborative poison composed of the detritus of  industrial sludge, E. coli blooms, and the coagulant of human  excrement swimming itself into new and better crevices at the bottom of  the water, and then, one day, before I was born, the drainage of Lake  Michigan begins, and then one day, soon after, nothing but the desert  and the fire and the hardy-har-har. 
 The Suits don’t get it, but their tortures have given me  understanding. Fulcrum Maneuvers was on to something at first: the World  Worm is emptiness itself, a body filled only with a yearning  nothingness that exists in the negation of emptiness. And so I enter   this state of emptiness beyond emptiness, this state of never knowing,  and press my arms deep into the meat hooks, my ribs into the needles, my  pussy harder into the brown plunger pumping my uterus in a water well  set miles under the riverbed. I hold my breath while the pressure  expands and, according to my will, my desire, pour myself into their  machines. 
 Just as Neutron Janey taught me.
