It’s a little after seven in the morning, and I’m driving east on I-90, wearing a suit and keeping one eye on the road while I attempt to relight a wind-extinguished joint. A weekend A.M. conservative radio host rants against the propaganda of the H1N1 virus scare, as I am on the way to a funeral to mourn a person who has just died from it. Normally, I’d find myself uncomfortably incensed, but it doesn’t really register. Perhaps I’m reeling from a lack of sleep. Perhaps I’m high. Perhaps it just hasn’t hit me yet.
Daylight blooms into a soulless grey sky, and the landscape slowly devolves from city to suburb to country. And it hasn’t hit me yet. Around nine, I stop at a small gas station in the middle of nowhere and pick up a tall Pabst. The clerk looks at me with a hint of apprehension and asks if I want a bag. It still hasn’t hit me yet.
Driving along the fields, I sip my beer and think about serving her quintuples in oversized styrofoam cups, charging her high fives. I think about her large and warm eyes. I think about idle chatter during cigarette breaks. I think about that whole town, vibrant and driven, because of people like her. A community of unbridled enthusiasm, yet to be put into its place by the ways of the world. Still nothing.
I pull into the church parking lot, the modest building standing out in the middle of nowhere. It feels like a Guns ‘N Roses video. I sit in my car for a moment before stepping out to see Karen, a beautiful acquaintance from the past, her lips bent into a rarely seen frown, her pale face red from the tears. She nods solemnly to acknowledge me. I see Alan, with an unexpected beard and a ponytail, emitting the same expression.
And it hits me. Kimi is dead. And I am still alive.
It’s not the specter of death that gets to me, nor the gravity of the loss. It’s the impermanence and the unfairness. Here I am in a fucking cornfield, wearing a suit, staring into the faces of pain, the faces who no longer parade down High St. without a care. And Kimi is dead, and I haven’t slept, and I’m twenty-six years old and I drive prostitutes around for a living and I’m an adult. I am an adult.
It wasn’t supposed to be this way.
I make quiet hellos in the parking lot, splash some water on my face in the bathroom and take a seat in a pew, staring at the photo of her lifelessly emitting from the projector. An attempt at a hip Christian song plays on loop. As people fill in I daydream about taking a bullet for this one. It’s not so much a daydream as a plea or a silent prayer. Just go back, and take me. I’m an asshole, I drink too much, I do too many drugs, I hurt too many people and quite frankly I’ve never really wanted to be here. And she’s the one who has to go?
The room swells and swells and swells. Ushers scramble to find more seating. I can’t help but think that whether they know it or not, this is everyone’s deepest fantasy. As morbid as it sounds, what more can we ask for, but to have an unexpected turnout for the mourning of our demise?
People clumsily share their memories of Kimi into the microphone, and towards the end of the ceremony, a bald pastor lectures theatrically about the need for Christ to save our souls. He makes little mention of Kimi except to use her name as a means to promote what he’s selling. I think he means well, but he’s the furthest thing from well that I can think of.
His words bring me back to reality — life is not fair, nor is it logical. Good people will do bad things. Bad things will happen to good people. Kimi is dead. And I am alive.
After the ceremony I hug Rebecca in the parking lot. Her face, like Karen’s, is puffy and red. I can feel her organs pumping as I hold her. After the casket has pulled away, all of us make avoiding small talk and take far too much time to plan a trip to Bowling Green for pizza.
I eat a few slices, make a few wisecracks and have a few rum and Cokes before heading off to blow a tire a quarter mile into the turnpike. I wrestle off my suitcoat and light a cigarette, resting against the guardrail while cars whir by. I think about Kimi, and how life isn’t fair.
But I am still alive.
We had a neo-Jesus walking amongst us, and we didn’t recognize it until it was too late.
But I am still alive.