Sunday, February 10, 2008

Hotel USA

You don't need ID yet to travel by train. You can take the yellow line north and west to some small town far out from the city. Find a hotel where they won't ask your name. Pay in cash and they will give you a room key that's still a real key, cold cut metal on a steel ring, painted with a little white number.
Climb the stairs to the fourth floor, which is the top floor, so its the furthest from anywhere. Close the door behind you. Twist six locks, and if there is a phone, unplug it from the wall. The windows are already closed, white shades down behind thick white curtains. Everything outside this room does not exist anymore.
Everything inside is white and scuffed and nothing smells like anything. If there are paintings they are just lines and colors. They don't remind you of anything. There is tea on the counter, small bags wrapped in paper, next to a white chipped porcelain coffee cup. Pour yourself some hot water from the dispenser, just to watch the steam curl up. It moves like dreaming. Rest seems to be a thing you could hold, distance is a sound that maybe you could hear if your head was clear and empty like this room.
Peel your clothes down. Leave them on the floor. No one cares about those things anymore. Leave the bathroom door open while you take a piss. No one exists to listen. The shower is running for seventeen minutes before you even get in because you like watching the steam twist into the white room. The clouds and curls bring comfort to you.
Everything beyond this tiny room has just switched off. This is everything you want. The water is hot. You laugh out loud; hot water is good. The sound bounces off the tiles and you smile to hear the sound of yourself happy. The bed will be soft. The white towels are clean and so are the sheets. Everything outside the empty walls has ceased to be.
Ivory soap and mint toothpaste. Your skin smells like a stranger. Naked in bed, you have no identity. The TV is off because quiet is better. You're no longer a person who watches television, and in the morning you will not read the paper.
The world outside here has turned out the lights. The dark doesn't scare you like it did before. You can dissolve. Inside the dark, inside the white walls, all you can hear is your own pulse. Beating heart, slowing breath, a building music inside your head. The swelling sound drowning out everything but this island. All the world is in this room. You catch yourself smiling again. It will end soon. But now there is this:
Yourself inside the shell of a white room, ivory smells, the folding light, steam and clean sheets, ironed smooth, and the music inside.
Hold it in your mind. Write it on a folded piece of paper and tuck it into your back pocket. Keep it in your mouth under your tongue behind your teeth. Press it into a pattern and tattoo it in black ink under your skin to remember when you are called back again.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

And I long a little for the impersonality of those hallways of doors. The impersonal nature of not having anywhere to hide until that key opens your door. Absorbing every feeling that you can from the guests by running your finger tips across their fireproof doors.