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A Trip Up River
by Robert Klein Engler
As he nears the Clover Grill on the corner of Bourbon
and Daumaine, Alan Roberts marvels at the boom, boom, boom of dance music
that echoes down the street. The rhythm is continuous, like a heartbeat,
or the lapping of a river against the shore, or the endless drip of water
into a stone basin. Just another block and Alan will be at the source,
the biggest gay disco in the French Quarter. Here are the head waters,
the place where begins that stream from which Alan has been so long hoping
to quench his thirst.
Even though he is still hesitant and unsure, Alan comes
here to be at the gay bar and feel the beat of dance music vibrate in
his bones. He comes to Parade Disco to drink vodka and to be in a space
that is neither inside nor outside, a space he may call his own, a space
that does not ask questions, a space that is loud, smoky, gay and if you
know who to ask, one that offers adolescent beauty for sale. The river
of money, the river of forms and the river of dreams make a confluence
here, their currents mingling gold, clay and blood. The locks are open.
Step in.
Ryan Patton was born in Gafton, Texas eighteen years
ago and is seen often at Parade Disco. He is one of those young men who
offers himself for a price. Such a price is sometimes more than men bargain.
One risks love here, too, and that may be almost as treacherous as the
Mississippi that bends its way a few miles from the discos high,
French doors. But dont ask Ryan now about love and risk. He is young
and thinks he is an excellent swimmer. He cannot imagine the scourge of
autumn ravaging his good looks.
Ryans father made a lot of money from real estate
investments and sent his son to boarding school, where at the very least,
Ryan learned self-confidence. After boarding school, although bright and
possessing the resources to get into any college he wanted, Ryan decided
to go to the University of New Orleans, not so much to study but to experience
the freedom of the city. He dropped out of the university after a year
and went into business for himself, even though his parents send him more
than an ample monthly allowance on which to live. The money Ryan earns
from being an escort, he spends on expensive clothes, scents and jewelry.
Because it is a new generation, with e-mail and the internet, Ryan does
not have to dissipate himself traveling between the cities of the night
looking for clients. At this point in Ryans life there never is
an occasion for him to sing of troubles. He does not know the song, River
stay away from my door. He advertises himself as drug and
virus free. In fact he is much more healthy and delicate than the
run of the mill French Quarter hustler who passes more as a poster boy
for heroin than an object of schooled desire. Yet many men like the look
of rough trade, so they would not buy Ryan. Ryan appeals to the man who
likes bodies that are smooth and young, and has the money to pay for them.
Alan first made contact with Ryan online. They had an
exchange of e-mails, and agreed to meet after Alan arrived in New Orleans
to spend the winter. At first, Alan was suspicious of meeting someone
who described himself as an eighteen year old escort. Would
this be a police set up, or worse, some kind of dangerous situation he
could not get out of safely? Once Alan arrived in New Orleans and realized
he needed to talk to someone besides the drunks he kept meeting at the
disco, he decided to take Ryan up on his offer to get together. They agreed
to meet at Jackson Square. Alan would walk from his apartment on Dauphine,
and Ryan would drive in from Metairie. They planned a one-oclock
rendezvous.
It is a chilly afternoon when Alan walks around the square,
looking for a young man who told him he would be wearing chocolate colored
leather pants, a purple pullover and carrying a shopping bag from Saks
5th Ave. This is how the ladder that leads from flesh to ideal forms appears
these days. At about ten minutes to one, Alan stops and takes a few pictures
of the cast iron gates that lead into the gardens. He brought his camera
to not only take a few pictures of Ryan, but to also pretend he is at
the square on other business if something out of the ordinary happens.
You see a lot of tourists at Jackson Square with cameras, Alan reasons
so, he will just pretend he is one of them if things do not work out as
planned. Alan studies the couples walking hand in hand, secure in the
affection towards one another, at least for today. Alan is suspicious
of these relationships because he is both jealous and disappointed. All
his adult life Alan has been trying to ground a relationship with something
that keeps floating away. As he walks around the square looking for Ryan,
he recalls Proverbs 30: 18-19, Two things I do not understand: the
way of an eagle in the sky, and the way of a man with a girl.
Sure enough, around ten after one, Ryan shows up, wearing
exactly what he said he would be wearing. Alan recognizes the young man
instantly. No mistaking you, he says to Ryan as they approach
one another, each smiling. Hi, Alan, Ryan says enthusiastically.
Alan feels reassured after this welcome, and so does Ryan.
Hey, let me take a few pictures of you right now?
Alan asks.
Id like that, Ryan says. He is vain
enough not to turn down the offer. Alan asks Ryan to stand in front of
a fan palm and then snaps close-ups of Ryans profile and face. He
then asks Ryan to put his sunglasses back on and takes a few more photos
of Ryan looking mysterious.
Ill have these developed next week,
Alan says. It will be a good excuse for us to get together again.
They both smile knowingly.
Alan suggests they go across the square for coffee at
Café du Monde. Ryan agrees, and they spend about an hour there
getting acquainted and searching each other out. You dont
work for any law enforcement agency or police department? Alan asks
Ryan bluntly once they had finished their coffee. Oh, my gosh NO,
says Ryan, throwing his head back and finishing his sentence with laughter.
Alan realizes this young man, although with dark features, is very beautiful.
His hands are small and soft, and Alan can imagine they are warm and know
their way by experience around a mans body. I charge a hundred
dollars an hour, seven-fifty if I stay the night, Ryan says without
blinking an eye.
Young men born into wealth often have an air of arrogance about them.
Such was the case with Ryan. Alan sensed Ryans arrogance immediately,
and did not like it. Ryan would spend more money on a pair of faux-snakeskin
pants to wear at the dance bar than Alan would spend on food in a month.
Alan never let on to Ryan that he works hard to have the funds for a semester
off from college teaching to pay the rent for a modest apartment in the
Quarter. Yet in spite of Ryans arrogance, Alan is drawn to the young
man. Ryan has such an air of refreshing self confidence. Furthermore,
Alan is fascinated by the stories Ryan tells of his adventures,
especially the story about the prominent New Orleans doctor who only likes
to watch. He gave Ryan and his tall friend Eric four hundred dollars just
to see the two young men together.
Eric is fun to be with, Ryan says, and
we make an interesting pair, me being so slight and he being a college
jock. Besides, its good to have Eric along just in case.
After Ryan finishes his story, Alan feels the tide of
eroticism rise in him. Then he wonders if to kiss Ryan is to drink from
a common sewer. Nevertheless, Alan decides to ask Ryan, Would you
like to come back to my place?
Ryan looks at his watch. OK, I dont have
to be anywhere til five.
Later, Alan and Ryan sit on the couch at Alans
apartment. Ryan makes sure he sits with his legs spread open so that Alan
can see the mound of his crotch. Alan does notice it. They talk effortlessly
about Alans trip next week up river. Alan tries to explain to Ryan
his interest in steamboats. Ryan listens, but Alan senses he is growing
restless. Alan goes on with a story he heard. Sometimes, he
says, when a steamboat dies, it becomes a towhead. This is what
happened to the packet Belle of Helena, one of the most opulent steamers
ever built. It caught fire one night in 1875 and sunk in the middle of
the river. Since then, the mud and debris of the rivers flow has
collected around the ruins and formed an island, or a towhead. Today,
there are trees and shrubs growing up where the wreck occurred, and you
can hardly see the boards of a once fine steamer that used to ply the
Mississippi between Memphis and New Orleans. What started life as a boat,
ended its days as an island. Ryan nods approval, but is unimpressed.
So, it is that when Alan asks Ryan if he would like some tea, Alan hopes
he will not end up as a wreck on a sandbar, an old towhead made of ash
and burnt timber.
Do you have Earl Grey tea? Ryan asks.
Indeed, Alan replies. Give me a moment
to boil the water.
Alan nervously fills the electric teakettle with bottled
water and plugs it in. He tries to keep a conversation going while he
measures out some tea into a mesh tea ball. Finally, the water boils and
he pours it into the teapot. Steam rushes out of the top of the pot like
the steam that issues from the pipes of a riverboat. Eager to please Ryan
without delay, Alan dunks the tea ball a few times, and without waiting
for the tea to steep, pours a cup of rather weak colored tea.
Alan realizes the tea hasn't brewed once he hands the
cup to Ryan, but Alan does not say anything. He wants to hear more about
Ryans amorous adventures, and is now debating with himself weather
or not he should take a hundred dollars from his wallet and set it on
the coffee table. Instead, they talk about modeling and photography. Ryan
agrees to do some nude modeling for Alan, then looks at his watch and
concludes he has to go.
I need to change my shirt first, Ryan says.
Standing up, he removes one of the knit shirts he bought from Sax earlier.
He carefully unfolds it. Ryan then removes the shirt he is wearing and
slips into the new one. Alan see for a moment the soft flesh of Ryans
stomach and his breath hesitates. Is this his last opportunity, Alan wonders?
Should I make a move now? But Ryan is determined to leave, and so he will.
Yet they agree to meet again in about a week. Alan can hear the footfalls
as Ryan walks across the patio flagstones on his way to the front door.
He sits on the couch and catches his breath. Later, on the TV news, Alan
hears that the river is low this month. All the ice up north has not yet
melted.
Alan always wanted to take a steamboat trip up the Mississippi
River. This visit to New Orleans, Alan promised himself he would do just
that, even if he has to go alone. Alan hates to travel on cruises alone,
but he doesnt have a partner, so there is no other way. Ryan would
be bored to tears on a poky steamboat, and Alans sister and her
husband are embarrassed to travel with Alan, so he just goes
off alone and does the best he can. He has booked passage on the Bayou
Queen. They leave the port of New Orleans in an hour and will go up the
Mississippi, stopping at various river towns, and returning back to the
Crescent City a week later. Usually, there are some friendly women on
the cruise who keep Alan company at diner, and he is good at being by
himself now, having had a great deal of practice at it, so the trip should
be enjoyable.
When he was younger, Alan would not only pack too much
for a trip like this, but also have the burden of his personality to carry
around. Alan wasted a lot of time feeling sorry for himself then. These
days, he knows just what to pack and his personality is not so heavy with
worry and self-reproach.
In the Gentlemens Card Room aboard the steamboat
Bayou Queen there is an old stereopticon. It is a primitive device for
viewing images in three dimensions. Cards printed with double images are
inserted into a slot in front of binoculars and when viewed, the stereopticon
gives the illusion of seeing a place or object in depth. The Victorians
loved these views. A two dimensional image is turned by a trick of the
eye into one having three dimensions. Usually, the cards hold images of
what was popular but often unattainable for many: exotic places like the
Amazon River, crystal rooms in European castles, or scenic wonders like
the geyser Old Faithful. Often, the cards were sold to tourists the way
postcards are sold today. People would collect them as mementos to their
travels abroad. Other cards tell a story. Sometimes the story is for children,
but other stories are for adults, and titillate the way only the Victorians
could, about grave matters like seduction, betrayal, and furtive romances.
Such are the series of stereopticon cards left in part on a table in the
Gentlemens Card Room. Were they left there to discourage or encourage
shipboard romances? Or are they an unintended cruelty, a way of forcing
retired couples who vacation on this steamboat to wonder about their youth,
their dried up passion, their past opportunities for happiness missed
and squandered? Or are they here to encourage dreams?
It is to their credit that when the Victorians decorated
a room they left no surface untouched. The Womens Tea Room on the
steamboat Bayou Queen is a good example of their use of organic forms
to do just that. Sunlight filters through lace curtains and painted shades
are decorated with floral motifs. The pillows on the couch are embroidered
and the wallpaper is patterned with golden, flowing flowers. Every piece
of wood, the arms and legs of tables and chairs, are all carved with angels,
leaves, and claws. There are doilies and fringed shawls, gilded cups and
hammered silver teapots. The cold meat forks, soup ladles and cake knives
are covered with silver ivy and polished to a shine. A swirl of pink and
white roses against a blue background completes the carpet on the floor.
Such is it that some men like Alan Roberts come to desire the things of
women, but not the women themselves.
Even the atmosphere can be decorated with incense and
perfume. Since ancient times the scent of vanilla was used in love potions
because of its power to compel. This morning Alan goes to
the steamboats gift shop and uses the tester to spray a sample of
Evangeline on the back of his neck. He reads that this perfume
has a vanilla base, with other notes of violet and freesia. There is no
one on this cruise Alan would want to attract except Roger, the young
man who busses his table and supposedly has a girl friend in Utah, but
still Alan can pretend.
Alan passes the first afternoon of his cruise walking
the promenade deck. On either side of the Bayou Queen, the Mississippi
River twists and turns through the low lands of Louisiana like the meandering
of Alans thoughts. In the low light of shadows, the river water
could be the color of muddy vanilla. Alan is compelled to follow.
Alan watches the pitman arms of the steam engine thrust
back and forth like the force that makes the generations, back and forth,
turning the steamboats red paddlewheel. Now the paddlewheel is churning
the muddy water into a riot of coffee and cream colored foam. Listening
to the forlorn melody of the calliope, Alan thinks of all the grace that
leaves the world through conflict and confusion, and all the lost causes
that drift away with the current of time. Now the aging men sit in the
grand salon next to their aging wives. The dull wheel of time keeps them
in bed late and slows their bowels. Alan thinks about the long river of
desire that follows these men from one generation to another, thrusting
us into a life that remains forever open to the mystery of who we are.
Is this river long enough to quench our thirst? How am I any different
from all the rest that travel here, Alan asks himself? Now the boat is
in the middle of the river with the rest of the traffic: barges, ships,
steamers, fishermen, and tugboats all making for a port, all churning
up the muddy flow. Live steam, thats what they say powers
this boat, thats what they warn against, thats what they marvel
at, and thats what sends the melody through the pipes of the calliope.
Live steam. Back and forth go the pistons, bursting with power, back and
forth, translating their oiled thrusts to roll the wheel round and round.
While on the river, Alan thinks of those men who pray
to the Lord for rain, those farmers of the dust who think little about
the pleasures of the flesh. He thinks, too, of those men who tramp the
desert in search of water holes. What glory is a river for them and how
they shun the city with all its diversion and depravity. Could Ryan ever
survive such a life, and why should he? And Alans life, why has
the flow of it come to this point, thinking his thirst can be satisfied
with Ryan? On the river we learn to appreciate the...well, Alan doesnt
know what exactly now. On the river minds wander. All Alan knows now is
that he is far from where he set out. Thoughts, like the river have a
main channel, but there are weary places where the river bends and then
gets cut off, just like an argument heading to a conclusion, but instead,
meandering to an association. In those lost eddies of water and thought
the streams dry up. Then the alligators leave because the fish are gone
and they wont be back until the flood comes and brings with it high
water.
For a moment the fog makes time stand still. Something
constant from the past may only be seen by shadows and fog. So it is that
even these days along the Mississippi the fog softens the profiles of
men and makes their hearts seem younger. There is always someone here
dreaming their way out of the mud. Today, a poor boy rides his older brothers
bike down to the river when he hears the steamboats calliope play.
From the bluff, he sees the white boat with its twin black stacks issuing
smoke. He watches the passengers board with their bags and packages. How
wonderful they look to him, sailing from wealth to wealth. Someday,
he says, someday, and then turns to ride back home and swallow
the lump in his throat.
Bending over the guardrail, Alan stares into the river
water below. Even the bottom of the river here is not solid. Below the
flow of water there is a flow of mud. The depth to bottom may vary as
much as thirty feet in places, as the mud flow shifts and slides. No matter,
ask any steamboat man and he will tell you all he wants below his hull
is mark twain, or twelve feet of water. When Alan looks down to see if
he can fathom the bottom, there is too much silt being churned up for
anything to be seen. Instead, he stands and watches the passing shore.
They say the river that runs through Paradise is so clear the bottom seems
to be the top. Alans eyes follow the tree line the way a man would
unroll and read a scroll. Then Alans heart reaches out to an image
of Ryan. Below the blood flow there is a salt flow.
Alan lays in bed that night and listens to the hush of
water rush by the steamboats hull. A whistle blows. There is a rush
of water and steam, then the pistons relax. Alan slips back into the sheets,
shuts his eyes and floats on the water of his dreams. Somewhere in Alans
sleep, muffled voices call, contending across fog draped shores.
The origins of great rivers are insignificant. The river
starts with a trickle, then waters a farmers garden and launders
the clothes of maid. Then it turns a mill, and in its widening course,
the river ends by cutting its way through mountains to reach the sea.
So, too, something small begins in us when we are children; a word, a
dream, a face seen once from a passing car, and then it grows, calls in
tributaries, and before long we have become what we are. To change this
may seem beyond our will. Mighty rivers make their own course. Only a
force of nature or a beam of grace can alter what the deep waters have
carved.
Upon returning to New Orleans, Alan sends Ryan a terse
e-mail: Your photos are ready. You may pick them up anytime.
Ryan agrees to come by Alans apartment at two the following afternoon.
After thinking it over, Alan realizes it would have been better to meet
Ryan again on some neutral ground, instead of having to deal with the
temptation of Ryan being one wall removed from Alans bedroom.
When Ryan arrives at Alans apartment he looks irresistible.
The new knit shirt he bought last week shows off his youthful form much
better in the full light of a sunny afternoon then it did on the cloudy
Wednesday when they first met. They exchange pleasantries, and Alan offers
Ryan something to drink, but he declines. Ryan wants to see his photographs.
Not wasting any time, Alan displays them on the coffee table. They both
agree that the ones showing Ryans profile against the fan palms
are the best. Then there is a pause in the conversation. Alan knows Ryan
is waiting for him to make an offer. Ryan fidgets on the couch and moves
closer to Alan.
Now Alan realizes where the current that carries him
leads. His spirit moves in harmony with the course of his desire. Ryan,
Alan says, trying not to be patronizing, I have concluded I am too
much a child of the sixties.
What does that have to do with us messing around?
I told you I prefer older men.
Thats just it, Ryan, in the sixties we believed
in free love. Love should be free. You should not have to
pay for it.
Well, how the hell do you think an old guy like
you is going get a guy like me if you dont pay for it?
I was hoping maybe we could mean something more
to one another, thats all, Alan says apologetically.
Its just not going happen, at least not here
in New Orleans, honey.
I am afraid you may be right, Ryan.
I am right, Ryan says, moving away from Alan.
If not paying means going without, then I will
go without, Alan continues. Besides, I have concluded I can
be alone in the world. Perhaps you will see my reasoning someday.
I doubt it. I will see you as just cheap,
Ryan says sarcastically. Then he looks at Alan not knowing what to say
next. Ryan realizes he is over his head and in water that is muddy and
moving with a current he cannot control.
After Ryan leaves, Alan fixes himself a martini. He sips
the drink slowly and paces back and forth in his apartment, mulling over
what has just happened. When he looks at his watch, it is almost five
oclock.
Alan gathers up his keys, pen, and notebook. Somewhere
on one of those pages he has written his new resolve. He locks the French
doors, walks across the courtyard flagstones, opens the font door and
steps out to Dauphine Street. It is just a three block walk to the coffeehouse.
A carriage rattles past him and then stops. The driver points out some
iron grill work on a nearby building to a couple, sitting arm-in-arm in
the back seat. Alan walks on. He listens to the white noise of the French
Quarter as he turns the corner to St. Philip. Alan has cast off his lines
and is caught up with the current now. It is all down stream. Let the
river take him home.
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