ChrisGibson
JUB Addict
THE OTHER NIGHT RALPH WOKE up with the most dreadful charley horse. This is life. You don’t know you’re in pain until you’re awake. Cedric was never able to be asleep for long, this was the difference between Ralph and his friend and, Ralph knew after nearly thirty-eight years of friendship, the other man’s main complaint about him. It had been the ability to sleep through experiences that had gotten him past high school and a great deal of seminary. It had been this ability which had gotten him through or sent him to his first year at Sainte Terre.
The sleep had ended with a drunken caterwauling in January of 1969. Ralph heard it coming from downstairs in the common room of First College.
“Ralph, you motherfucker! Get down here you motherfucker! Com’ on motherfucker!”
He lay in bed wondering who in God’s name this could be, and daring to hope that maybe this was a dream.
There was a tap on his door, and Ralph said, “It’s open.”
A splinter of light went across the floor as Jeremy Tosca entered.
“Ralph,” he said. “It seems you have a friend here.”
Ralph came downstairs in his housecoat and pajamas and found Cedric DuFresne dressed to the nines, his good shoes impeccably bright as his feet dangled over the couch. He was swilling a bottle of something, and two Samsonite suitcases were on the couch before him.
“Ralph!” he cried.
“Cedric DuFresne?”
“No,” Cedric tried to stand up, failed, and grumbled, “Goddamnit, I need a cigarette.” He fumbled for his Pall Malls. “Fitzgeralds to the rescue.”
“What?” said Ralph.
“I said Fitz-GERALD. How you like that shit?” Cedric laughed. He turned to the innocent Jeremy Tosca, and demanded, “How you like that shit? Motherfucker?”
“Please, Ced?” begged Ralph.
“Please my ass,” Cedric said, and then, lighting a cigarette he began ashing on the floor, and continued, “I have gone from being a Frenchman to an Irishman that quick. Fitzgerald is Irish, ain’t it? You Irish, baby?” he asked the alarmed Jeremy Tosca.
“I’m Italian,” the other boy stammered.
“Are you in the Family... You know that mafia shit?”
“Oh, God, Cedric.”
Jeremy Tosca smiled ruefully at the other nineteen year old, and said, “No.”
“I bet you are,” Cedric disagreed. “I bet that’s how your mama and daddy sent you here. Ain’t nothing wrong with that,” he waved it aside. “We all need to get our education somehow.
“Now, Ralph, I need to tell you all about New Orleans,” Cedric went on, not stopping for breath. “And about the name change. And about Haiti. And—yes—Minnesota. I went to Minnesota. You know why?” When no one answered, Cedric went right on and answered himself, “Cause I’d never been.” He laughed out loud. “I’d never been to the motherfucker! So, why don’t you get some clothes on, and we’ll go for a walk.”
“It’s the middle of the night, and its cold,” Ralph protested, upset at everything.
“You bastard!” Cedric declared, full of venom. “I travel all this way and you give me some crap like this. Put some goddamn clothes on. Now! Jeremy!”
“Yes?”
“Get me some goddamn coffee. I’m drunk as hell!”
Jeremy stared at him.
“I meant now,” Cedric said.
“A- ” Jeremy Tosca stammered, “Alright.”
It was early in the morning when Cedric sat on the edge of Ralph’s bed, and lit another cigarette clenched at the corner of his mouth.
He offered Ralph one.
“Naw, I don’t do that now,” Ralph said.
“Really, since you gon be a priest?”
“Exactly,” Ralph said.
“Seems like you’d want to do it for that very reason. Seems like you’d need some diversion around a dull ass place like this.”
“It’s not dull.”
“It’s dull as fuck,” Cedric protested. “And cold as fuck too. Speaking of fuck, when’s the last time you got... fucked?”
“You know I don’t do that kind of thing... anymore.”
“Well,” Cedric said, negligently, “neither do I. But I still like to think about doing it. Actually, I’d like to think about going to sleep. I’m tired as hell.”
“How long you staying?” Ralph asked as Cedric made his way to an easy chair, and wrapped himself in a blanket.
“Oh,” Cedric said, as the sun began to peak up over the frozen lake. “I thought I’d told you. I’m going here now.”
And then he immediately went to sleep.
*****
His ass was like a peach, gently cleft and covered in a light fuzz in the early morning as she caressed it again and again after a night of unrelenting passion....
Ida Lawry put down the pen and bit into the peach, reflecting on it. She liked what she’d made. She had quit her job at the college. It was just too much having to see David everyday. And then she didn’t really like the college. She was collecting alimony, writing porn and taking in borders to make ends meet. All in all she liked her life.
Ida came out onto the porch. The border, Mr. Stanley, was sitting out there smoking cigarettes and looking at the sunflowers, heads hanging now that the day was done. Aileen was asleep upstairs.
“Mrs. Lawry,” he said in his smooth Southern voice. Ida resolved to use him in her next porno, which she would dedicate to Cedric for helping her get her life somewhat on track, “You look so lovely this evening.”
Ida made herself blush, and said, “Oh, just stop that.”
She sat down and began to smoke with him. Mr. Stanley came a little closer. When Ida did not protest, Mr. Stanley came closer still.
“Mrs. Lawry, you smell wonderful.”
“Why... thank you.”
He took another drag from his cigarette.
“I read your wonderful little novel,” he told her.
“Really?”
“Oh, yes,” said Mr. Stanley. “It got me thinking about how long it had been sense... I’ve enjoyed the company of a real lady.”
Ida looked at him, playing with her yellow headband.
“Mrs. Lawry, when’s the last time you enjoyed the company of a real man?”
“Oh, God!” Ida laughed like crazy. “I don’t think I’ve ever enjoyed the company of any man.”
“A woman who writes so passionately!”
“It’s all for the books. Has very little to do with the reality.”
Mr. Stanley fixed his smoldering gaze on her.
“Would you like for it to have something to do with the reality?” he asked. “You’re a beautiful woman. I could enhance your reality.”
He kissed her hand. His lips lingered on her fingers, on her wedding ring. His eyes went up to her.
“But only if you want me to.”
Ida’s heart was racing. Aileen was asleep. Her ex-husband was off in Belmont. She realized suddenly that in all of her twenty-six years she had never had an orgasm, and it was about high time she did.
So she stood up, took Mr. Stanley’s hand, and led him into the kitchen.
A second later, the kitchen light went out, and the house on Windham Street was immersed in darkness.
Aileen would not remember Mr. Stanley, and because of this Ida had never seen a reason to tell her about him. In fact, very few people would know anything about Mr. Stanley, and so very few people were informed about those days of wine and hashish when she burnt the ties to the old life if not, geographically, then at least sexually. The man with the yellow Volkswagen van painted with flowers, the sheepskin coat, the sheepskin condoms, and the Ted Coppell hair and a handle bar mustache was a private chapter in the book of Ida’s life. She hid it away for only the truly determined to find.
They drove all over the Midwest, and then into the south. They had adventure. Aileen was usually with them. They saw Arizona. Saw the sun rise up and paint the cliffs of New Mexico. They had marvelous sex in Utah, mind-shattering orgasms in Colorado. They smoked their way through Mendocino County. Ida knew that a good Catholic was supposed to repent of these things once they were over, and feel wretched while they went on. But she didn’t and she didn’t. So she didn’t tell anyone about them. Sometimes she smiled to herself and then one of her sisters would say, “What are you smiling at?” And she would murmur, “Nothing,” and light another cigarette.
But she knew how Meghan felt years later, when she was running around with Harv Berghen, and she knew how Ally felt now. Neither of her sisters knew there had been a time of delectable sin in her past. This is why Ida felt sorry for Aileen a great deal and Ashley as well. Their sins were never delectable. No one ever taught in Sunday school that some things that were supposed to be wrong never felt wrong at all. You never repented of them. That some confessions could make you laugh your way out of the little cramped rooms where you whispered through the lattice to the man in his white robe. They never taught at Saint Mary’s that real sins were not sexy and glamorous, but sad, and pathetic, and wearisome.
In early April of 1969, they had come back from Louisiana of all places, and Wallace- that had been his name- was swatting her ass, and threatening to take her on the kitchen table when Ida began going through her mail. Once a week Evelyn- the only person in Jamnia she trusted- came by the house, and took the mail out of the mailbox placing it on the kitchen table. There was a blue note stuck to one envelope, and Evelyn had written, “READ AND CALL ME RIGHT AWAY IDA! ! !- EV.”
It read:
Mr. Cedric Fitzgerald
Balfour College
Izmir, IN
Ida opened it immediately, telling Wallace to “Stop!” as he nibbled on her ear.
Ida!
This was the worst mistake I ever made in my life. Ralph is throwing his life down the tubes. He’s miserable. I can’t make him happy. I’m miserable. Hate this place! Cannot wait till the semester is over. I thought college was supposed to be FUN. I want to have fun....
Ida had called Evelyn up immediately. Not Gladys, whom she had never thought of as Cedric’s mother.
They discussed the letter for some time. Then Ida said, “Well, that’s all there is to it. We’re going up there.”
“It sounds like a serious little place,” Evelyn said over the phone.
“I think it is,” said Ida.
“That’s not for Cedric. Some people like seriousness. Cedric was never meant for it.”
So they showed up a few days later. There was a yellow van covered in butterflies parked in front of Balfour College, and a white woman in a yellow headband and blue bellbottoms came out—breast feeding, and wearing fabulous yellow framed shades. She was followed by her Southern lover, and a fine looking—though very mature—Black woman.
Ralph was in Cedric’s room, looking miserable, and Cedric jumped up from his bed where he’d been smoking too much and looking resigned to his fate.
“Well, let’s go,” said Ida.
“Where are we going?” Cedric said.
“I don’t know.”
Ralph had to be dragged along. It was the middle of the week. They were missing classes. Didn’t they know how serious this was? Cedric didn’t give a shit.
“I think I’ll give up on this whole college thing,” he said. “Maybe I’ll just go back to being Cedric DuFresne and be a jazz singer. Or I can take up the trumpet, and go back to New Orleans.”
“Or you could go to school,” Ida said one night at Friendly’s, over the last of a float.
“Hum?”
“Sainte Terre isn’t the only school. There are fun places. Like, I never got much out of Saint Clare’s because my cousins and all. But we could look at it.”
They were only- Wallace reasoned- about five hundred miles away, and so it wouldn’t hurt to visit.
To make a very long story short, when they returned on Monday morning, Cedric went to get his midterm grades, laughed at how remarkably low they were, and said to Ralph, “This place is wretched!”
“Some people like it.”
“Some people like Spam. Don’t make it good,” Cedric shook his head. “Naw, baby, I gotta fly. I like that Saint Clare place. I think it’s calling my name.” Cedric cupped his hands around his mouth: “Cedric! Cedric! Cedric!”
MORE TOMORROW, AND MORE OF WARM DARK STONE
The sleep had ended with a drunken caterwauling in January of 1969. Ralph heard it coming from downstairs in the common room of First College.
“Ralph, you motherfucker! Get down here you motherfucker! Com’ on motherfucker!”
He lay in bed wondering who in God’s name this could be, and daring to hope that maybe this was a dream.
There was a tap on his door, and Ralph said, “It’s open.”
A splinter of light went across the floor as Jeremy Tosca entered.
“Ralph,” he said. “It seems you have a friend here.”
Ralph came downstairs in his housecoat and pajamas and found Cedric DuFresne dressed to the nines, his good shoes impeccably bright as his feet dangled over the couch. He was swilling a bottle of something, and two Samsonite suitcases were on the couch before him.
“Ralph!” he cried.
“Cedric DuFresne?”
“No,” Cedric tried to stand up, failed, and grumbled, “Goddamnit, I need a cigarette.” He fumbled for his Pall Malls. “Fitzgeralds to the rescue.”
“What?” said Ralph.
“I said Fitz-GERALD. How you like that shit?” Cedric laughed. He turned to the innocent Jeremy Tosca, and demanded, “How you like that shit? Motherfucker?”
“Please, Ced?” begged Ralph.
“Please my ass,” Cedric said, and then, lighting a cigarette he began ashing on the floor, and continued, “I have gone from being a Frenchman to an Irishman that quick. Fitzgerald is Irish, ain’t it? You Irish, baby?” he asked the alarmed Jeremy Tosca.
“I’m Italian,” the other boy stammered.
“Are you in the Family... You know that mafia shit?”
“Oh, God, Cedric.”
Jeremy Tosca smiled ruefully at the other nineteen year old, and said, “No.”
“I bet you are,” Cedric disagreed. “I bet that’s how your mama and daddy sent you here. Ain’t nothing wrong with that,” he waved it aside. “We all need to get our education somehow.
“Now, Ralph, I need to tell you all about New Orleans,” Cedric went on, not stopping for breath. “And about the name change. And about Haiti. And—yes—Minnesota. I went to Minnesota. You know why?” When no one answered, Cedric went right on and answered himself, “Cause I’d never been.” He laughed out loud. “I’d never been to the motherfucker! So, why don’t you get some clothes on, and we’ll go for a walk.”
“It’s the middle of the night, and its cold,” Ralph protested, upset at everything.
“You bastard!” Cedric declared, full of venom. “I travel all this way and you give me some crap like this. Put some goddamn clothes on. Now! Jeremy!”
“Yes?”
“Get me some goddamn coffee. I’m drunk as hell!”
Jeremy stared at him.
“I meant now,” Cedric said.
“A- ” Jeremy Tosca stammered, “Alright.”
It was early in the morning when Cedric sat on the edge of Ralph’s bed, and lit another cigarette clenched at the corner of his mouth.
He offered Ralph one.
“Naw, I don’t do that now,” Ralph said.
“Really, since you gon be a priest?”
“Exactly,” Ralph said.
“Seems like you’d want to do it for that very reason. Seems like you’d need some diversion around a dull ass place like this.”
“It’s not dull.”
“It’s dull as fuck,” Cedric protested. “And cold as fuck too. Speaking of fuck, when’s the last time you got... fucked?”
“You know I don’t do that kind of thing... anymore.”
“Well,” Cedric said, negligently, “neither do I. But I still like to think about doing it. Actually, I’d like to think about going to sleep. I’m tired as hell.”
“How long you staying?” Ralph asked as Cedric made his way to an easy chair, and wrapped himself in a blanket.
“Oh,” Cedric said, as the sun began to peak up over the frozen lake. “I thought I’d told you. I’m going here now.”
And then he immediately went to sleep.
*****
His ass was like a peach, gently cleft and covered in a light fuzz in the early morning as she caressed it again and again after a night of unrelenting passion....
Ida Lawry put down the pen and bit into the peach, reflecting on it. She liked what she’d made. She had quit her job at the college. It was just too much having to see David everyday. And then she didn’t really like the college. She was collecting alimony, writing porn and taking in borders to make ends meet. All in all she liked her life.
Ida came out onto the porch. The border, Mr. Stanley, was sitting out there smoking cigarettes and looking at the sunflowers, heads hanging now that the day was done. Aileen was asleep upstairs.
“Mrs. Lawry,” he said in his smooth Southern voice. Ida resolved to use him in her next porno, which she would dedicate to Cedric for helping her get her life somewhat on track, “You look so lovely this evening.”
Ida made herself blush, and said, “Oh, just stop that.”
She sat down and began to smoke with him. Mr. Stanley came a little closer. When Ida did not protest, Mr. Stanley came closer still.
“Mrs. Lawry, you smell wonderful.”
“Why... thank you.”
He took another drag from his cigarette.
“I read your wonderful little novel,” he told her.
“Really?”
“Oh, yes,” said Mr. Stanley. “It got me thinking about how long it had been sense... I’ve enjoyed the company of a real lady.”
Ida looked at him, playing with her yellow headband.
“Mrs. Lawry, when’s the last time you enjoyed the company of a real man?”
“Oh, God!” Ida laughed like crazy. “I don’t think I’ve ever enjoyed the company of any man.”
“A woman who writes so passionately!”
“It’s all for the books. Has very little to do with the reality.”
Mr. Stanley fixed his smoldering gaze on her.
“Would you like for it to have something to do with the reality?” he asked. “You’re a beautiful woman. I could enhance your reality.”
He kissed her hand. His lips lingered on her fingers, on her wedding ring. His eyes went up to her.
“But only if you want me to.”
Ida’s heart was racing. Aileen was asleep. Her ex-husband was off in Belmont. She realized suddenly that in all of her twenty-six years she had never had an orgasm, and it was about high time she did.
So she stood up, took Mr. Stanley’s hand, and led him into the kitchen.
A second later, the kitchen light went out, and the house on Windham Street was immersed in darkness.
Aileen would not remember Mr. Stanley, and because of this Ida had never seen a reason to tell her about him. In fact, very few people would know anything about Mr. Stanley, and so very few people were informed about those days of wine and hashish when she burnt the ties to the old life if not, geographically, then at least sexually. The man with the yellow Volkswagen van painted with flowers, the sheepskin coat, the sheepskin condoms, and the Ted Coppell hair and a handle bar mustache was a private chapter in the book of Ida’s life. She hid it away for only the truly determined to find.
They drove all over the Midwest, and then into the south. They had adventure. Aileen was usually with them. They saw Arizona. Saw the sun rise up and paint the cliffs of New Mexico. They had marvelous sex in Utah, mind-shattering orgasms in Colorado. They smoked their way through Mendocino County. Ida knew that a good Catholic was supposed to repent of these things once they were over, and feel wretched while they went on. But she didn’t and she didn’t. So she didn’t tell anyone about them. Sometimes she smiled to herself and then one of her sisters would say, “What are you smiling at?” And she would murmur, “Nothing,” and light another cigarette.
But she knew how Meghan felt years later, when she was running around with Harv Berghen, and she knew how Ally felt now. Neither of her sisters knew there had been a time of delectable sin in her past. This is why Ida felt sorry for Aileen a great deal and Ashley as well. Their sins were never delectable. No one ever taught in Sunday school that some things that were supposed to be wrong never felt wrong at all. You never repented of them. That some confessions could make you laugh your way out of the little cramped rooms where you whispered through the lattice to the man in his white robe. They never taught at Saint Mary’s that real sins were not sexy and glamorous, but sad, and pathetic, and wearisome.
In early April of 1969, they had come back from Louisiana of all places, and Wallace- that had been his name- was swatting her ass, and threatening to take her on the kitchen table when Ida began going through her mail. Once a week Evelyn- the only person in Jamnia she trusted- came by the house, and took the mail out of the mailbox placing it on the kitchen table. There was a blue note stuck to one envelope, and Evelyn had written, “READ AND CALL ME RIGHT AWAY IDA! ! !- EV.”
It read:
Mr. Cedric Fitzgerald
Balfour College
Izmir, IN
Ida opened it immediately, telling Wallace to “Stop!” as he nibbled on her ear.
Ida!
This was the worst mistake I ever made in my life. Ralph is throwing his life down the tubes. He’s miserable. I can’t make him happy. I’m miserable. Hate this place! Cannot wait till the semester is over. I thought college was supposed to be FUN. I want to have fun....
Ida had called Evelyn up immediately. Not Gladys, whom she had never thought of as Cedric’s mother.
They discussed the letter for some time. Then Ida said, “Well, that’s all there is to it. We’re going up there.”
“It sounds like a serious little place,” Evelyn said over the phone.
“I think it is,” said Ida.
“That’s not for Cedric. Some people like seriousness. Cedric was never meant for it.”
So they showed up a few days later. There was a yellow van covered in butterflies parked in front of Balfour College, and a white woman in a yellow headband and blue bellbottoms came out—breast feeding, and wearing fabulous yellow framed shades. She was followed by her Southern lover, and a fine looking—though very mature—Black woman.
Ralph was in Cedric’s room, looking miserable, and Cedric jumped up from his bed where he’d been smoking too much and looking resigned to his fate.
“Well, let’s go,” said Ida.
“Where are we going?” Cedric said.
“I don’t know.”
Ralph had to be dragged along. It was the middle of the week. They were missing classes. Didn’t they know how serious this was? Cedric didn’t give a shit.
“I think I’ll give up on this whole college thing,” he said. “Maybe I’ll just go back to being Cedric DuFresne and be a jazz singer. Or I can take up the trumpet, and go back to New Orleans.”
“Or you could go to school,” Ida said one night at Friendly’s, over the last of a float.
“Hum?”
“Sainte Terre isn’t the only school. There are fun places. Like, I never got much out of Saint Clare’s because my cousins and all. But we could look at it.”
They were only- Wallace reasoned- about five hundred miles away, and so it wouldn’t hurt to visit.
To make a very long story short, when they returned on Monday morning, Cedric went to get his midterm grades, laughed at how remarkably low they were, and said to Ralph, “This place is wretched!”
“Some people like it.”
“Some people like Spam. Don’t make it good,” Cedric shook his head. “Naw, baby, I gotta fly. I like that Saint Clare place. I think it’s calling my name.” Cedric cupped his hands around his mouth: “Cedric! Cedric! Cedric!”
MORE TOMORROW, AND MORE OF WARM DARK STONE

























