Dedication

  This book is for Andy and Miles Mingo,

  who brought me back to life.

  Epigraph

  I go where I love and where I am loved,

  into the snow.

  —H.D.

  Disambiguation

  Muse : /myooz/noun : Origin /Greek

  • In Greek and Roman mythology, each of nine goddesses, the daughters of Zeus and Mnemosyne (the goddess of memory), who preside over the arts and sciences. The Muses were both the embodiments and sponsors of performed metrical speech: mousike (hence the English term “Music”) was just “one of the arts of the Muses.” Others included Science, Geography, Mathematics, Philosophy, and especially Art, Drama. Inspiration, stimulus.

  • A woman, or powerful force personified as a woman, who is the source of inspiration and agency for a creative artist. An imagined feminine.

  Contents

  Dedication

  Epigraph

  Part One

  The Girl

  The Writer

  The Violence of Children

  The Writer

  Women and Children

  The Photographer

  The Photograph

  The Hands of a Boy

  Part Two

  The Widow’s Watch

  The Photographer

  The Poet

  The Playwright

  Nightmaking

  The Filmmaker

  Moving Action

  Expression

  The Painter

  The Playwright

  The Art of Identity

  The House of Art

  Part Three

  Love Is an Image

  Where White Is

  Bloodsong

  An Invisible Union

  Journey to the Underworld

  The Violence of Language

  Triptych

  White Space

  Motherlands

  Atomization

  Part Four

  Making Art

  The End. One.

  The End. Two.

  The End. Three.

  The End. Four.

  The End. Five.

  Fatherlands

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Also by Lidia Yuknavitch

  Credits

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  Part One

  The Girl

  You must picture your image of Eastern Europe. In your mind’s eye. Whatever that image is. However it came to you. Winter. That white . . .

  One winter night when she is no longer a child, the girl walks outside, her shoes against snow, her arms cradling a self, her back to a house not her own but some other. It is a year after the blast that has atomized her entire family in front of her eyes. She is six. It is a house she has lived in with a widow woman who took her in—orphan of war, girl of nothingness.

  But that night has never left her . . . it is an unrelenting bruise. Its blue-black image pearling in and out of memory forever. Nor will it ever leave her body, the blast forever injuring her spine, a sliver of metal piercing her flesh and entering her, so that all her life she will carry the trace of that moment between her vertebrae.

  And then again her mind moves to the moment of the blast, the singular fire lighting up the face of her father, her mother, first white, then yellow, then orange and blue, then black, then nothing, her head swiveled by the force of the blow away from them. This does not frighten her. What used to be nightmares have transformed into color and light, composition and story. It is with her now. Lifelong companion. Still life of a dead family.

  The snow begs her senses now, and she wishes she had a coat. She wishes she had tied her shoes properly, worn proper socks. The moon, however, makes an entire setting for her motion, and in this way she feels . . . lit up.

  She hears something not her and not the night and not the white expanse waiting before her. Her feet are cold and she can suddenly feel how numb her hands are, shoved in her armpits. She does not know, at first, what she is hearing. At first it seems like the sound of hummingbirds’ wings, but that is not possible. A fluttering whir, quiet as secrets, there and then gone.

  She remembers her father: his eyes, his word.

  She hears it again, then, and knows it—a wolf caught in a trap. She looks down near the fence line. It is a wolf, beyond beautiful, with its leg caught in a trap. She moves closer, aware now of how the cold is biting into her. She studies the wolf. The wolf is smart. It is almost finished. She thinks, in only the briefest of thoughts, of releasing it.

  The wolf is nearly free.

  In its freedom it will lose a leg.

  It will be worth it.

  She holds perfectly still.

  More still than a dead person.

  Which she has seen, many times—a corpse in snow.

  She watches the wolf chew its own leg by the light of the moon, by the rhythm of its journey. The moon makes its slow arc in the sky, and inside the moon’s movement, reflected in the girl’s eyes, the wolf finally frees itself.

  It is then that she does something pure bodied. Child minded. She goes to where the rust-orange and black metal of the trap sits holding its severed limb, to where blood and animal labor have reddened and dirtied the pristine white of the snow—like the violence against a canvas. There, without thinking, she pulls down her pants, her underwear, squats with primal force, and pisses and pisses where the crime happened. A steam cloud moves upward from the snow and the blood as the relief of rising heat warms her skin.

  Her eyes close.

  Her mouth fills with spit.

  This is how the sexuality of a girl is formed—an image at a time—against white; taboo, thoughtless, corporeal.

  She opens her eyes.

  The piss smell and the blood smell and the youth smell of her skin mingle. She licks her lips.

  The wolf runs.

  It runs three legged, like all damaged creatures, across the snow.

  She thinks: this is true.

  She thinks: this is a life.

  She thinks: I do not want to die, but my life will always be like this—wounded and animal, lurching against white. She bends down and rubs her hands in the blood. She lifts her hands, her eyes, her heart to the heavens, in the space where they say god is, a god she has never known, a god she will replace with something else. Her small hands make what might look to an outsider like a prayer shape. But she is not praying.

  She closes her eyes. This is the night it happens. She looks down at her red hands. She laughs, up. She bends down and wrenches the severed limb from the trap. And then she runs toward a self.

  What is a girl but this? This obscene and beautiful making against the expanse of white. This brilliant imagination, inventing meaning.

  The Writer

  A woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to write fiction.

  What a crock. Virginia, fuck you, old girl, old dead girl.

  I am in a midnight blue room. A writing room. A room of my own making—with its rituals and sanctuary. I can see my husband and son in the next room fiddling with a video camera. Looking at them together makes my heart feel crushed like a wad of paper. I reach down below my desk and pull up a bottle of scotch. My scotch. Balvenie. Thirty year. I pour myself a shot. I drink. Warm lips, throat. I close my eyes. I am not Virginia Woolf. Do you know how many women can’t afford the room, or have no help, or scratch away at things in bars, buses, closets? I much prefer a different line of yours, anyway: Arrange whatever pieces come your way. Or this: Someone has to die in order that the rest of us should value life more.

  I know something about death.

  Inside everything
I have ever written, there is a girl. Sometimes she is dead, and haunts the story like a ghost. Sometimes she is an orphan of war. Sometimes she is just wandering. Maybe the girl is a metaphor, or maybe she is me, or maybe a character who keeps coming.

  I write her and write her.

  Sometimes I think I am following her into another place or self. She is leading me. Directing the traffic of my life.

  I’ve always been suspicious of narrators. And of characters, for that matter. Of the figures of speech we create to stand in for people. Or selves. There is something weird and unnatural about them—how they do what we tell them, how they obey. I don’t trust them. Narrators especially. Chickenshits.

  I have been someone else many times.

  I was a competitive swimmer for eighteen years.

  I was a secretary in a lawyer’s office for a year and a half.

  I was a waitress for eight days.

  I was a heroin addict for six years. China White.

  I was married two times—eleven years, first, and now going on thirteen.

  I have slept with women for twenty years.

  I have slept with men all my life—from the time I can first remember things—if by sleeping with men one means sexual encounters with men and their dicks.

  My father figures here.

  My mother’s suicide attempts happened when I was eight, eighteen, and twenty-eight. Before she got it right.

  I flunked out of college once, quit twice, then battled my way through to the telos of a Ph.D. Became a teacher of literary things. Whatever those things are.

  I have been drinking scotch for twenty-six years. Balvenie, thirty year.

  Off and on.

  I was incarcerated the first time as a minor for eighteen months.

  I was incarcerated the second time, of age, for eight months.

  I was incarcerated the third time for eight nights.

  I was a mother the first time for nine months, just nine, then the mother of a dead daughter. Now I am the mother of a son. Strange and alive boy.

  I was depressed at age eight for one year, but it just felt like being underwater, which was familiar to me, the swimmer. I was depressed the second time at age eleven for two years, then again at eighteen for one more. Then I went under—depression—second self—and resurfaced violently. Recurringly.

  Everyone I love is an artist. None of us knows what we mean. Oh, we pretend that we do. Some of us win prizes and lift strangely off the surface of things; others of us toil away, making our own labor into an overrighteous romance. Some of us have jobs, or tenure, or family; some of us are rich, others ride the grant trains; some of us are homeless or nomads, others addicts or recovering or lapsing. Aren’t we all just shooting for a life where art matters?

  What a cast we make.

  My brother the New York playwright, winner of American status, seizer of material wealth.

  My now-husband the filmmaker, driven to create images for audiences who long for escape from that other movie, life.

  My onetime lover the war photojournalist, image purist, traumatized by her own shooting star.

  My friend the performance artist, generational do-over, her youth our only chance at passing something on. Fake legacy.

  My dearest and fiercest friend, the poet, lover of women and sexual excess and language.

  My ex-husband the painter, who held in one hand a brush he used to create new worlds, and held in the other the gun he tried to shoot me with.

  We make art, but in relation to what exactly? All the artists we admired from the past came out of the mouths of wars and crises. Life and Death. We come out of high capitalism. Consumerist monsterhood. Even when our lives went to shit, they were still just our lives. Our puny, overdramatic, American lives. And where we are from—our so-called country, defined by the smell of a well-made latte, the silent hum of an all-consuming war machine, and the televised face of Oprah—are we for something? Against something?

  All our artistic origins have been atomized. Dead fathers and brave mothers against the kitsch and speed of this glossy and disposable new century.

  I love them all. I write them all. Does love make art?

  What is the story of a self? What is chronology? The history of a life? Which story should I tell to make a narrator, an American woman writer at forty-five—which plot, which pathos? Because any writer’s life knots are embedded in whatever story they tell.

  I have invented hundreds of selves. Men and women.

  I have peopled the entire corpus of my experience with fictions.

  Who is to say they are not I? I them?

  And if I tell the truth, this once, will it be any different from all the other tellings? How? In what sense would it matter?

  We are who we imagine we are.

  Every self is a novel in progress.

  Every novel a lie that hides the self.

  This, reader, is a mother-daughter story.

  The Violence of Children

  When violence comes to the door of a child’s house it is not comprehensible to her. Even if she has some small awareness of the war or violence or danger surrounding them, the truth is that the faces and hands of the people in her family, the horses in the barn, the mouse she is secretly keeping as a pet, the potatoes frozen underground, the kick ball made from animal skin and straw and twine, the glass in the windows and the shivering walls of the house are infinitely more real to her. She cannot help it. The sound of a mother’s voice singing her to sleep, the alto of a father reading a poem, the smell of a brother’s skin just before dreams, the moon’s giant eye, all of these overshadow whatever violence is at the door. Think of Anne Frank writing about trees.

  When violence came to the village near the girl’s family’s house, there was no stopping it coming to her door, her body, as well. The six-year-old body of a girl.

  Seventeen times against the wall or in the barn: You move or scream or say anything I will kill them all. In front of you. First I will torture them and then I will kill them. Her eyes as dead as she can make them. Her arms as limp as she can make them. Her heart as hidden as she can make it. A soldier’s cock entering the thin white flesh of a girl, into the small red cave of her, the fist of her heart pounding out be-dead, be-dead, be-dead.

  Counting.

  In the world around them, violences became perpetual. Men were sent to icehouse prisons. Women and children were raped repeatedly. Children were bought and sold on the open market. Systemized violence became part of ordinary experience, so that it was not unusual to see—not blood and body parts, but displaced fear and horror in micromotions. The tremor of a hand or the twitch of an eye; bullet marks in the side of a house; women with scars around their eyes and mouths as deep as archeological finds; little boys who could not sit in chairs.

  There were blood and body parts too.

  And the end to reality every other day.

  America—that great maker of realities—blind and deaf to all of it.

  A story that never existed, since no one ever saw it represented.

  And then, one day, her family was blown to bits.

  An inconsequential blast.

  Just an anonymous explosion.

  Behind the girl, a photojournalist on a prestigious assignment. In that moment the girl’s mouth opened wide as a child’s scream, but no scream emerged, either in the instant of the blast or forever after. Her breath caught in her lungs like an animal’s. Her eyes locked, her skin blanched, bloodless, her hands and arms flying upward, without control.

  There were people around on that day to whom she could have run. There were, of course, soldiers; surely even amid their brutality there was one kind heart, one man who could still remember his family and would at least send her to an orphanage. There were other people nearby, neighbors from the village, watching or hiding. And, without her seeing them, there were foreigners: underground photojournalists chasing the perfect image, reporters dying to lasso the story, “human rights” workers milling abou
t in “safe houses.”

  But she did not run toward any people. None of the people there had anything to do with her. When the blast happened, she ran to the woods. In her smallness and her quickness she disappeared, a girl’s body torn from the heart of love.

  What luck for the photographer. To be so accidentally present. And what cocksure instincts, her editor would say. Right on the money. You can see how she got the assignment.

  We think of children as innocent and helpless, she scribbled on a note to her editor, but really this is and isn’t true. Think of how many children survive the darkest atrocities and violences. Hundreds of thousands of children. Armies of them. Not news. She folded the note in two and sealed it in with the undeveloped film before handing it over to the press shipper.

  In the moment of the blast, the girl could have died with her family.

  But she did not.

  And so, now, she runs.

  In her running, her mind leaves her.

  And she can hear nothing but her heart, the blast making her deaf.

  There is a great white silent empty in her running.

  She runs.

  She runs to the dark oncoming line of the forest.

  Her hands making little man fists of anger.

  The edge of the forest coming into focus.

  Her teeth clenching in her mouth.

  The moon, Ménuo, big white eye in the dark.

  It is snowing.

  Miraculously, the snow will cover her tracks.

  The branches of trees opening their arms.

  Her panting.

  Finally the forest holds her.

  She keeps running.

  The forest is black and white—illuminated through the trees by the moon.

  She runs until her legs and lungs cry child.

  She stops.

  She looks up at the night sky, visible through the treetops.

  She looks at her own breath making fog in front of her face.

  Then she walks and walks, placing her hands on the bark of trees for courage.

  Tree by tree, her breathing comes back to her.

  She has no thoughts, just this body.