Confessions of a Memory Eater
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"Complicated, cool and vulnerable at the same time...you can't help falling for Pagan Kennedy's characters."—Stephen Dubner, The New York Times
Once a brilliant historian with a promising academic future, Win Duncan is at a crossroads in his career when he is mysteriously summoned by Litminov, a wild but brilliant chemist from his college days. Litminov has made millions since, and has bought a pharmaceutical company solely to develop MEM, an experimental drug that gives one the ability to recall life’s best memories with crystal clarity. Duncan becomes a beta tester and loses himself to the most delicious moments of his past—those precious few years with his mother who died tragically when he was just a child; ecstatic sex with his wife when they first fell in love—until he discovers the dark side effects of a drug that turns the past into pornography and renders the present useless.
A proven master of underground lit, beat fiction and narrative non-fiction, Pagan Kennedy takes on America’s obsession with the idealized past with freshness, wit, and an uncanny ability to measure the pulse of post-modern culture.
Pagan Kennedy is the author of seven books. The most recent, Black Livingstone, was a New York Times Notable Book and a winner of the Massachusetts Book Award. Her novel Spinsters won a Barnes & Noble Discover Award and was shortlisted for the Orange Prize, Britain’s most prestigious literary award. Her articles appear regularly in The New York Times Magazine, The Nation, Spin, and Salon.
Pagan Kennedy
Pagan Kennedy has published eight books. Her biography Black Livingstone was named a New York Times Notable Book. Her novel Spinsters was short-listed for the Orange Prize and was the winner of the Barnes & Noble Discover Award. She has written for the New York Times Magazine, Boston Globe Magazine, the Village Voice, Details, the Utne Reader, the Nation, and Ms. magazine. She lives in Somerville, Massachusetts.
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22 ratings1 review
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This is a high concept page turner about a guy addicted to an experimental drug that lets him relive his lost youth (in his memories). I never wanted it to end!"
Book preview
Confessions of a Memory Eater - Pagan Kennedy
Confessions of a Memory Eater
Also by Pagan Kennedy
Black Livingstone: A True Tale of Adventure in the 19th Century Congo
The Exes
Pagan Kennedy’s Living
Spinsters
Zine: How I Spent Six Years of My Life in the Underground and Finally Found Myself ... I Think
Platforms: A Microwaved Cultural Chronicle of the 1970s
Stripping
Confessions
of a
Memory Eater
A novel by
Pagan Kennedy
Image4061.tifLeapfrog Press
Fredonia, New York
Confessions of a Memory Eater © 2006 by Pagan Kennedy
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American
Copyright Conventions
No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a data base or other retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, by any means, including
mechanical, electronic, photocopy, recording or otherwise, without
the prior written permission of the publisher.
Published in 2006 in the United States by
Leapfrog Press
PO Box 505
Fredonia, NY 14063
www.leapfrogpress.com
Printed in the United States of America
Distributed in the United States by
Consortium Book Sales and Distribution
St. Paul, Minnesota 55114
www.cbsd.com
First Edition
E-ISBN: 978-1-935248-53-8
Contents
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
About the Author
Chapter 1
The phone was ringing. I stared at it, wishing I didn’t have to answer. The black cord was tangled in knots and nooses; the receiver was smudged with shadows of my own fingers. This morning I’d skipped another meeting. I expected this would be the dean, summoning me to his office. I picked up.
Duncan?
a strange voice boomed at me from the earpiece.
Yeah?
I said.
So you are alive.
Who is this?
Phil Litminov.
It took me a moment to remember. Litminov?
I said. And then I found myself laughing. No shit? Really?
I hadn’t seen him in more than ten years—not since graduate school. An image came to me now: Litminov dismounting his motorbike, yanking a white crash helmet from his head. I remembered, too, that pale scar on his lip that gave him an unvarying expression of sarcasm. I tried to ask him how he’d found me, why he’d called, but he never gave me a chance.
He was talking again, rapid-fire. So, my friend, you ended up in New Hampshire. And you once swore to me that you’d never leave the City. Remember how you used to lurk around that Cuban diner. What was it called? That place you used to hang out?
I forget.
La Taza De Oro,
he supplied.
Yeah, that’s right,
I heard myself say. His words had triggered a wave of nostalgia so intense I had to hold on to my desk, letting the sharp edges of it bite into my hand to keep me anchored in the present. La Taza De Oro—just the name brought back my younger self, hunched over a legal pad at 3 AM scrawling notes, a neon sign reflected in a parabola of a spoon, ideas fizzing in my brain. I’d been happy then.
So how’d you end up teaching at some Catholic college?
he wanted to know. That can’t be fun.
Yeah, it’s not.
What happened, Duncan? You were supposed to be a genius.
I sighed. I’m here partly because of Edie. You remember her, right?
Your girlfriend?
Wife. It was the only place where we could both get jobs.
"So you moved up there because your wife wanted to?" Litminov made a puffing sound of disgust.
Yeah, that’s about the size of it.
It was a relief, I realized, to discuss my situation with someone who had not witnessed my slow ossification, who still remembered me as I used to be, burning like the neon in the diner window. In fact, I was glad Litminov could not see my surroundings now, this cubbyhole office with a view of a trash-strewn ravine and factory buildings in the distance. Above the bookshelf on the wall opposite me hung a crucifix; Jesus’s outstretched arms had turned furry with dust. Years ago, when the college assigned me to this room, I’d tried to pry the crucifix off the wall with a screwdriver. All I’d succeeded in doing was digging scratch marks into the paint. Jesus wasn’t going anywhere. And, it appeared, neither was I.
Duncan,
he said. You don’t sound good.
I’m not,
I said.
Luckily, I’m here to help.
Luckily,
I said.
You know I own a pharmaceutical company now.
You do? How’d you get your hands on that?
The usual way. I bought it.
You just went out and bought the whole thing?
This, actually, I could imagine. Even back in graduate school, Litminov had been freakishly wealthy.
Sure,
he said. Couple years ago. And ever since, I’ve been working my ass off.
Hmm,
I said. The fact was, I’d never seen Litminov do work of any sort at all; his parents had died a few years before I met him, leaving behind a trust fund. I don’t know whether it was being orphaned or inheriting all that money that did it to him, but for some reason, Litminov had developed a voracious appetite for trouble. Back when we were in graduate school, he’d call me at 2 AM to propose that we go for drinks at a whorehouse or to try out the Glocks at an underground shooting range; he preferred exploits that were just this side of legal. For some reason, I always agreed to his invitations.
So, listen, my friend, this company is the best investment I ever made,
Litminov was saying now. He spewed some numbers that meant nothing to me—stock prices and such. And we’re going to make a killing soon. We’ve developed this product—a drug we’ll bring to market soon, if we can get it through the legal pipeline. That’s why I want to get you involved. I need your brains, Duncan.
Mine?
Sure, yours. Why not yours? You’re an expert in drug policy,
he declared.
Not really. I’ve written some papers about laudanum in the nineteenth century.
Good enough,
he interrupted. I want to get you in on this.
Now, that sounded like the Litminov I knew. Back in the old days, he had always wanted to bring me in. He dragged me to his apartment so he could show off shelves full of rare jazz albums, a bottle of absinthe that he’d smuggled out of Spain, a pearl-handled Smith & Wesson from the 1920s. One day I realized that I was just another piece of his collection, less a friend than a bit of loot he had acquired. He thought me worthy because I had won the Whitman Prize for Humanities Research, which had seemed like a big deal back then when we were in our twenties. Do you know,
he said once, swinging his feet as he sat on the railing of a balcony, balancing himself precariously over three stories of air, that pretty much every guy who ever won that prize became famous within ten years? Don’t forget me when you’re famous, Duncan.
But I hadn’t turned out to be famous after all, far from it. So why did he want to collect me now? Are you offering me a job?
I asked.
Yes. Maybe. What I want is for you to come down to the City and meet with me. Pronto.
I don’t know,
I said. I glanced up at the wall opposite me, and my eyes rested on the scratches I’d made there, the punctuation marks of my desperation. Litminov’s invitation tempted me, just as his invitations always had. So what’s this drug you’re making?
I asked.
The drug,
he said slowly, relishing the word, as if he could taste it. The drug, my friend, restores memory. I don’t mean it helps you remember where you put your glasses or anything as inane as that. No, this drug restores you to your very self.
Oh now come on, Litminov!
I said, and I must have been laughing, because he began to laugh too, joylessly.
Really,
he went on. Like, say you wanted to remember what happened in the apartment you used to rent on 114th Street. You take this pill, you go back there, you can see every title of every book on the shelf or that weird stain on the wall. You could re-play anything that ever happened there, any girl you took home, any conversation you had.
That’s ridiculous,
I snapped.
Oh yeah?
he said. Speaking of your old apartment, there was a photo of your mother over the stove. She was leaning against a light-blue car, holding a dog on a leash. A Schnauzer, I believe.
For a moment, I couldn’t find words. That photo now hung in the living room of the house that I shared with my wife Edie. He was absolutely right about it. Is this a joke?
I finally said.
Ask me any question you want about your old apartment. Test me. I can describe the whole place to you, just as it was.
I could hear him breathing into the phone, waiting.
OK,
I said, and then OK
again. But I was too disoriented to come up with anything.
How about this? You used to wear a shirt with the name ‘T. Miller’ on the pocket. Army surplus. Blue.
I reached across the desk and a picked up a pen, and made a note on a scrap of paper. T. Miller.
I could only vaguely remember that name, those stenciled letters and the faded denim. The shirt, of course, was long gone.
Well,
he said, am I right?
Maybe.
I stared at what I’d scribbled. This is so strange,
I said. "How can you know that?"
Because I saw you wearing it just a few days ago. I was planning to use the drug to remember something else, but damned if I didn’t get sidetracked and end up shot back into your old place on 114th. You had these scraps of paper spread out all over the floor, covered with notes. You were working on some grand theory about the history of American history.
I was?
It appeared that he knew more about my twenty-eight-year -old self than I did. A younger Win Duncan lived on inside Litminov’s head, wearing a blue shirt with someone else’s name stamped across it, and arranging his ideas into a grand pattern across the carpet. All of a sudden, I wanted to be that young man. Or, if that was impossible, at least I wanted that young Win Duncan to live inside my head too. By all rights, that memory belonged to me, not Litminov. How did my past end up in his mind? It didn’t seem fair at all. So what else happened? What else was I doing?
Duncan,
Litminov sighed, and I could imagine him shaking his head, it’s a long story. So anyway, you interested in coming down here?
I tried to say yes, but my voice wouldn’t work.
On his end of the phone, someone hooted in the background. Look,
Litminov said, I’ve got to go. You still stay up late like you used to? Two, three in the morning?
It wasn’t exactly a question. The Win Duncan he knew stayed up for days on Cuban coffee, chasing down ideas on a yellow pad.
Sure,
I lied. I couldn’t bear to tell him that most nights I went to bed at eleven now, that I nodded off woozily over my own papers, that a certain light in me had gone out. You know how I am,
I heard myself say, I don’t sleep.
And I gave him my home number, so he could call me as late as he wanted.
Excellent,
he said, and hung up without a goodbye.
• • • • •
Edie ate dinner in the kitchen that night, while I sat in the living room with the TV blaring, picking at a sandwich. For the last year, she and I had been like this—pursuing our own agendas in separate rooms. We didn’t even eat the same foods anymore, now that she’d given up white bread.
Here on the couch, I’d planted the phone next to me, so I could grab it as soon as it rang. Edie must not answer it. I hadn’t told her about Litminov. Not yet, anyway. For now, the strange events of this afternoon were still my secret. At first, I was afraid that she might wander into the living room, notice that I’d moved the phone and start asking questions.
But no, Edie stayed in the kitchen, hunched over the table, grading papers, a bottle of wine beside her. She drank when she graded; she would go through a bottle of wine by herself, to dull the blows of insipid thought and bad grammar. Crazy as this method might seem, Edie had made it her own: She could plow through weeks worth of student papers in an evening, and then return to what she cared about, her reading and her research, her own candlelit interior.
Two hours went by. I continued my vigil on the couch. I was pretending to follow a Knicks game on cable, but actually monitoring the VCR’s clock, those numbers constructed out of dashes of light. 9:58. Still no call from Litminov. 10:14. No call. The numbers under the black plastic of the VCR changed soundlessly, dashes rearranging themselves, an 8 melting into a 9. This bothered me. Seconds should tick. Minutes should click. Clocks should pant, huff with the effort of their work.
10:32. Across the street, the Clark’s living room light snapped out, along with the trapezoid of snow it had illuminated. The plastic reindeer on their lawn became gray wolf-ish creatures. I was beginning to suspect I would never hear from Litminov again. Or maybe, days from now, he’d send me an e-mail message, proving this had all been a gag: GOT YOU!
11:15. 11:28.
OK, I give up,
Edie announced as she padded through the living room and clutched the banister to haul herself up the stairs. Drunk and burned-out on freshman essays about Jane Eyre.
I’ll be up soon,
I called.
I could have told her then. At this point, I assumed Litminov had played me, and I could have spun the events of the afternoon into a bitter, comedic tale. In fact, I almost called out, Hey, Eeds, wait a second. I forgot to tell you something.
But I didn’t.
Why not? Because she didn’t want to be told. She liked her privacy. Edie had grown up in Montana, wandering back roads with an entourage of invisible friends, disappearing into an imaginary city she’d constructed out of bits of pieces she’d read in books. When she was ten or eleven, she named her city Eglantine and gave it topiary ramparts so high that no one else could enter; she stocked its larders with quince pies and elderberry wine, all the foods she’d read about but never tasted. This was what had charmed me about her in the beginning—the way she could have been one of those women in the Victorian novels she studied, as happily self-sufficient as a Brontë sister, lying in some fire-lit parlor playing with paper dolls. But in the past few years, what had once seemed most endearing about her began to strike me as stagy and artificial.
I hardly saw her these days. She holed up in her office with Angela Carter, the Brontës, that woman who wrote The Yellow Wallpaper—what the hell was her name?—and a coven of French philosophers. And now she had her mad women too. The whole lot of them plotted together like a clique of high-school girls. Edie and I would be pushing a shopping cart through the supermarket, and she would suddenly stop in the cereal aisle, whip out her notebook, and begin scribbling. She wrote theory in the bathtub. A show-off, I thought. And was I envious? Damn straight, I was. I’d stopped writing. I’d stopped burning. Ideas refused to come to me. My mojo had left me; my winning streak was over. And meanwhile my wife was on fire; she had so many thoughts they spilled out on notepads and stray pieces of paper all over the house.
A few months ago, Donna Perkins—yes, that Donna Perkins—had called my wife and asked her to co-edit a collection of writings by nineteenth century mad women. Any woman who was certifiable would do—schizophrenic, hysteric, baby killer. Edie gorged herself on this autobiography of transgression,
manuscripts piled all around the bed, dusty books taking up the entire backseat of her Ford Escort. Check this out, Win,
she said to me one night, and read me the letter of a Mrs. Dearie who in 1843 had fantasized about murdering her husband with a handkerchief soaked in ether.
Did she actually kill him?
I asked.
Of course she did. I can’t believe this is my job. This is so fucking cool.
A few days ago, she’d sent an e-mail out to the English department, which she C.C.’ed to me. My friend and co-editor, Donna Perkins will appear on NPR this morning. As you know, Donna has become one of the foremost public intellectuals to raise questions about—
blah, blah, blah. I listened to the show in my car, alone, staring out at the chewed-up football field and the sleet spitting down, patiently, dot by dot, covering the hood of my old orange Saab. A year from now, Edie might be the one on the radio, talking about her mad women. And how would I stand that?
• • • • •
At 12:30, the phone squatted in its corner of the bedside table, stubbornly silent. I climbed under the sheets, and leaned over to touch Edie on the arm.
You awake?
I said. If she’d answered, everything might have gone differently. The glare of a streetlight filled our bedroom with a kind of pink moonlight, and Edie’s face blended with the pillow. She’d drunk too much wine. I could not wake her. And soon, I too, drifted off to sleep.
I woke up at three in the morning—according to the angry red numbers on the digital clock—and it took me a moment to realize what was wrong and what I must do. The phone was ringing—not its usual demure purr, but a kind of obscene shriek. I grabbed it off the table, and hurried into the bathroom, shutting the door behind me.
Duncan,
he said, It’s me. Listen, we’ll have to make this fast. I’m on the West Side Highway, and I think I’m going to lose you when I go through the tunnel.
We could talk tomorrow morning,
I suggested. I was sitting on the toilet, watching a slice of moonlight shiver on the tiles, still half asleep.
Oh, for God’s sake, Duncan.
Litminov’s voice had changed since this afternoon—it had sped up, was curled at the edges with impatience. Listen. You’re going to come down and hang out with me in the City.
How about this weekend?
The line crackled, and I lost Litminov, except for a few mutilated words. But he came back again. —meet my associates,
he was saying. You could see my place here.
So how about this Saturday?
Yes. Goddamn it, yes, Duncan.
In the morning?
Yes. Fine.
I wanted to ask about the job. But I knew better than to push him.
OK, fine, Saturday,
I said.
I’ll have my assistant, Andrea Lu, e-mail the directions to you tomorrow. OK, here’s the bridge. I’m going under it.
And then the line broke into particles of sound, little stabs of static in my ear. He was gone.
I padded down the hall and settled under the covers. Curling myself against the bow of Edie’s back, I knew I would not tell her. You’re doing business with a guy like Litminov?
I could hear her saying. And then she’d catch herself—Edie is not a mean person—and add, Well, that could be cool.
Still, she would have already made it sound so small.
And besides, I liked having a secret.
• • • • •
But I decided I would tell Bernie. He was my closest friend at Mercy College, and what’s more, he was likely to remember Litminov, since he had also been in New York back when everyone, everyone in the world was getting a Ph.D. at Columbia.
The next day, I tapped on his door and let myself in to his office, a junkyard of old documents and academic journals. He had piled books on his windowsill, leaving only some chinks through which the light from outside could gleam, so that I had come to think of the room as a kind of ant farm, a series of tunnels through the dirt of his research. He looked up now, and there was something ant-like about him, the bug eyes of his eyeglasses and his air of unflappable determination. Have a seat,
he said, gesturing to the armchair in the corner, its split seams repaired with duct tape.
But I couldn’t sit. I paced around, in the little paths through his piles of documents. You remember Phil Litminov? From grad school?