Episode 125: Voyeurs Apply Within | Painted Bride Quarterly’s Slush Pile (2024)

Well, this could be awkward: when we last featured a story on the podcast a year ago, it also focused on parasocial relationships and included masturbation! This time around, we are again in deft hands. Marie Manilla’s short story “Watchers”, set in 1968 Pittsburgh with both the steel mills and Andy Warhol as vital elements, is replete with narrative and thematic echoes that satisfy and leave us wanting more at the same time. Tune in for this lively discussion which touches on budding creative and identity-based aspirations, celebrity, performance art, pain in public and private, and much more. Give it a listen -- you know you want to! (Remember you can read or listen to the full story first, as there are spoilers! Just scroll down the page for the episode on our website.)

(We also welcome editor Lisa Zerkle to the table for her first show!)

At the table: Kathleen Volk Miller, Marion Wrenn, Lisa Zerkle, Jason Schneiderman, Dagne Forrest

Listen to the story Watchers in its entirety (separate from podcast reading)

Parasocial relationships

https://mashable.com/article/parasocial-relationships-definition-meaning

Andy Warhol’s childhood home in Pittsburgh (the setting of this story)

http://www.warhola.com/warholahouse.html

“History” article about Andy Warhol’s shooting by Valerie Solanas

https://www.history.com/news/andy-warhol-shot-valerie-solanas-the-factory

I Shot Andy Warhol, 1996 film

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I_Shot_Andy_Warhol

** Fun Fact 1: the original poster for the 1996 film hangs in Jason's apartment.

** Fun Fact 2: the actor who portrayed Valerie Solanas in “I Shot Andy Warhol”, Lili Taylor, is married to three-time PBQ-published author Nick Flynn.

Nick Flynn’s author page on PBQ

http://pbqmag.org/tag/nick-flynn/

Dangerous Art: The Weapons of Performance Artist Chris Burden

https://www.theartstory.org/blog/dangerous-art-the-weapons-of-performance-artist-chris-burden/

Episode 125: Voyeurs Apply Within | Painted Bride Quarterly’s Slush Pile (1)

In her fiction and essays, West Virginia writer Marie Manilla delights in presenting fuller, perhaps unexpected, portraits of Appalachians, especially those who live in urban areas. A graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, Marie’s books include The Patron Saint of Ugly, Shrapnel, and Still Life with Plums: Short Stories. She lives in Huntington, her hometown, with her Pittsburgh-born husband, Don.

Instagram and Facebook: @MarieManilla, Author website

Watchers

Zany lies amid clutter on the floor beneath the dining room windows hugging herbandaged arm. She huffs loudly enough to reach the front porch where Mom and Aunt Vi imbibe scotch. Vi still isn’t used to afternoon drinking. They can’t hear Zany over the Krebbs’ cryingbaby on the other side of the duplex wall. Stupid baby. Plus Zany’s little sister overhead dancing to the transistor radio, rattling the light fixture dangling from the ceiling.

The fingertips on Zany’s bandaged arm are cold and maybe even blue. This is slightly alarming. She considers running to Mom but knows better. Take the damn thing off then, Momwill say.

There’s nothing wrong with Zany’s arm, but that isn’t the point. At breakfast, withoutpreamble, she wound an Ace bandage from her palm to her armpit. The family no longer askswhat she’s up to. Last week during Ed Sullivan she sat at her TV tray dripping candle wax overher fist. Aunt Vi blinked with every splat, but Mom only said: “If you get that on my rug I’ll takeyou across my knee. I don’t care how old you are.” Zany is thirteen.

Week before, Zany taped a string of two-inch penny nails around her throat at the kitchentable where Dad rewired one of Mom’s salvaged lamps. “Why don’t you do that in your room?” Dad didn’t like sharing his workspace. Zany shrugged and the nail tips jabbed her collarbones. She could have done it in her room, but doing the thing wasn’t the point. It was having someonewatch that mattered. If no one watched, who would believe she could endure that muchdiscomfort?

Nobody is watching now, so Zany grips a dining table leg and pulls it toward her, or tries to. It’s hard to budge through Mom’s junk piles, plus the weight of the extra leaf Dad insertedwhen Aunt Vi and Cousin Lester moved in after their apartment collapsed. Aunt Vi brought cansof flowery air freshener to hide the hoard smell—rotten food and cat piss. They don’t own a cat. Lester, sixteen, bought a box of rubble-rescued books.

“You better be setting the table!” Mom calls through the screen.

Zany hates Mom’s manly haircut and has said so. “It’s Gig’s turn!”

Overhead, Gig stomps the floor in the bedroom they now share. Aunt Vi got Zany’s attic where Mom’s hoard had been disallowed, but it’s begun trickling up. “No, it’s not!” Gig’s transistor blares louder.

“Zany!” Mom calls. “I swear to God! And close those drapes!”

Mom can’t stand looking at the neighbor’s wall she could reach across and touch, butZany craves fresh air, as fresh as Pittsburgh air can be. Plus, she likes counting the yellow bricks Andy Warhol surely counted when this was his childhood home, the dining room his make-shift sickroom when he suffered St. Vitus Dance. Zany is certain his bed would have been right here by the window where he could see a hint of sky if he cricked his neck just right. She lies in his echo and imagines the day she’ll appear at his Factory door in New York City and say: “I used to live in your house.” Andy will enfold her in his translucent arms before ushering her inside, not to act in his films or screen print his designs, but to be his equal. Partner, even. Zany just has to determine her own art form. It sure won’t be cutting fruit cans into flowers like Warhol’s mother did for chump change.

Zany’s legs start the herky-jerky Vitus dance as if she’s running toward that Factorydream. Her pelvis and hips quake. The one free arm. The back of her head jitters against the floor. It’s a familiar thrum even Aunt Vi and Lester are accustomed to now. Mom yells: “Stopthat racket!” She mutters to Vi: “We never should have bought this place.”

A kitchen timer dings and Aunt Vi comes in to disarm it. Her cooking is better thanMom’s, and Vi wears an apron and dime store lipstick while she does it. Fresh peas instead ofcanned. Real mashed potatoes instead of instant. Vi is a better housekeeper, too, organizing Mom’s trash into four-foot piles that line the walls. Every day Mom trolls back alleys andneighbors’ garbage in dingy clothes that make her look like a hobo. That’s what the kids say: Your mom looks like a hobo. She pulls a rickety cart and loads it with moldy linens, rolled-uprugs, dented wastebaskets. Zany wonders if Dad regrets marrying the wrong sister. She knows he regrets not having a son, a boy who could have been Lester if Dad had a different heart. Instead,Dad got Lester on at the blast furnace, because “No one sleeps under my roof for free.” Whoneeds a high school diploma?

In the kitchen, Aunt Vi lets out one of her sobs. She only does that in private after Mom’sthird scolding: “He’s dead, Vi. Crying won’t bring him back.”

Zany misses Uncle Mo, too. His pocketful of peppermints. The trick coin he alwaysplucked from Zany’s ear. The last time Zany’s family visited, she walked through their decrepitFranklin Arms apartment with its spongy floors and clanking pipes, but no maze of debris to negotiate. No cat piss smell or sister blaring the radio. She found Lester in his room at a child’s desk he’d outgrown, doughy boy that he then was, doing homework without being nagged. Astounding. His room was spartan, plenty of space for a second bed if Zany asked Aunt Visweetly enough. But no. Zany couldn’t abandon Andy in his Dawson Street sickbed. Lester’s only wall decoration was a world map strung with red yarn radiating from Pittsburgh to France, China, the South Pole. She wanted to ask why those destinations, but didn’t, entranced as shewas by all that fresh-aired openness, plus his feverishly scribbling hand.

Now, Aunt Vi leans in the dining room dabbing her face with a dishtowel. She’s aged adecade since moving here and it isn’t all due to grief. She targets Zany on the floor. “Everythingall right in here?”

Zany has stopped breathing. Her eyes are glazed and her tongue lolls from her mouth. She’s getting better at playing dead.

“All right then.” Aunt Vi is getting better at not reacting. The screen door slams behindher.

Zany pulls in her tongue and inhales. She starts counting bricks again until Aunt Vi calls:“There they are!” as she does every workday.

Zany pictures Dad and Lester padding up Dawson. Wet hair slicked back because theyshower off the stench before coming home. Zany appreciates that. Their boots scrape the steps tothe porch where Aunt Vi will take their lunchpails. And there she is coming through the door anddashing to rinse their thermoses at the kitchen sink. Mom will stay put and pour Dad a finger ofscotch.

Lester bangs inside and pauses in the dining room entryway. He’s leaner now on accountof the physical labor. Taller too. He eyes Zany’s bandaged arm, not with Aunt Vi’s alarm, butwith the kind of baffled wonder Zany has always been after. Their eyes meet and it’s the samelook he gave her the day she walked backward all the way to the Eliza Number Two—not because Dad and Lester worked there, but because it was lunchtime, and a gaggle of men would be eating beneath that pin oak by the furnace entrance. And there they were, her father amongthem, not easy to see having to crane her neck as Zany picked her way over the railroad tracks.

“What the hell is she doing?” said Tom Folsom. Zany recognized her neighbor’s voice. “She’s off her nut,” said another worker.

Zany twisted fully around to see if her father would defend her, but he was alreadyhustling back to the furnace.

“Something’s not right with that girl,” said Folsom.

“Nothing wrong with her,” said Lester from beneath a different tree where he ate hischeese sandwich alone.

Folsom spit in the grass. “Shut up, fairy boy.”

Lester wasn’t a fairy boy, Zany knew.

Today, leaning in the dining room, Lester looks as if he can see inside Zany’s skull to theconjured Factory room she and Andy will one day share: walls scrubbed clean and painted white. Her drawings or paintings lining the walls in tidy rows. Maybe sculptures aligned on shelves. Ormobiles overhead spinning in the breeze. Lester nods at her fantasy as if it’s a good one. He hashis own escapism. Zany knows that too, and she looks away first so her eyes won’t let him know that she knows.

Lester heads to the cellar where he spends most of his time. Mom partitioned off the backcorner for him with clothesline and a bed sheet. Installed an army cot and gooseneck lamp on acrate. Andy Warhol holed up in the cellar when he was a kid developing film in a jerry-riggeddarkroom. Zany constructed one from an oversized cardboard box she wedged into that shadowyspace beneath the stairs. She cut a closable door in the box and regularly folds herself inside tocatalogue her achievements in a notebook. Stood barefoot on a hot tar patch on Frazier Street for seventy-two seconds. Mr. Braddock called me a dolt, but I said: You’re the dolt!

From below, the sound of Lester falling onto his cot followed by a sigh so deep Zany’slungs exhale, too. Whatever dreams he had got buried under apartment rubble along with Uncle Mo.

Outside, Dad has taken Aunt Vi’s creaky rocker. “He’s a strange one,” he says aboutLester. “What’s he up to down there?”

Mom says, “Who the hell knows?”

Zany clamps her unbandaged hand over her mouth to keep that knowledge from spilling. She saw what he was up to the day she was tucked in her box and forgot time untilfootsteps pounded the stairs above her. She peeked through the peephole she’d punched into her cardboard door as Lester peeled off his shirt, his pants. He left on his boxers and socks. Didn’tbother to draw his sheet curtain, just plopped on the cot and lit a cigarette. His smoking stillsurprised her. The boy he once was was also buried under rubble. Zany regretted not making herpresence known, but then it was too late with Lester in his underwear, and all. Plus, she wascaptivated by his fingers pulling the cigarette to his lips. The little smoke rings he sent up to the floor joists. She wondered if he was dreaming of China or the South Pole, or just sitting quietlyat his too-small desk back in his apartment inhaling all that fresh air. Finally, he snubbed out thecigarette in an empty tuna can. Zany hoped he would roll over for sleep, but he slid a much-abused magazine from beneath his pillow and turned pages. Even in the scant light Zany made out the naked lady on the cover. Zany’s heart thudded, even more so when Lester’s hand slippedbeneath his waistband and started moving up and down, up and down. She told her eyes to close but they wouldn’t, both entranced and nauseated by what she shouldn’t be seeing. She knewwhat he was up to, having done her own exploring when she had her own room. She’d conjureAndy Warhol’s face and mouth and delicate hands—because those rumors weren’t true. Theyjust weren’t. Harder to explore in the bed she now shared with Gig. Stupid Aunt Vi, and stupidcollapsed Franklin Arms.

What Lester was up to looked angry. Violent, even. A jittery burn galloped beneathZany’s skin and she bit her lip, drawing blood. But she couldn’t look away from Lester’s furioushand, his eyes ogling that magazine until they squeezed shut and his mouth pressed into agrimace that did not look like joy. The magazine collapsed onto his chest and his bellyshuddered. Only then did Zany close her eyes as the burn leaked through her skin. When Lester’ssnores came, she tiptoed upstairs to collapse on Andy’s echo. She caught Lester seven moretimes, if caught is the right word, lying in wait as she was, hoping to see, hoping not to. “You better be setting the table!” Mom yells now from the porch.

Zany grunts and makes her way to the kitchen where Aunt Vi pulls a roast from the oven. Zany heaves a stack of plates to the dining room and deals them out like playing cards. “Don’t break my dishes!” Mom calls. I hate your hair, Zany wants to say. There is a crash, but it’s not dishes. It comes from overhead where Gig screams. Thumping on the stairs as she thunders down, transistor in hand. “Zany!” Gig rushes into the dining room, ponytail swaying, eyes landing on her sister. “He’s been shot!”

Zany’s mind hurtles back two months to when Martin Luther King was killed. Riotserupted in Pittsburgh’s Black neighborhoods: The Hill District and Homewood and Manchester. “Who?” Zany says, conjuring possibilities: LBJ, Sidney Portier. But to Zany, it’s muchworse.

“Andy Warhol!”

Zany counts this as the meanest lie Gig’s ever told. “He was not.”

“Yes, he was!” Gig turns up the radio and the announcer confirms it: a crazed womanshot Warhol in his Factory.

Aunt Vi comes at Zany with her arms wide, because she understands loss. “Oh, honey.” Zany bats her hands away. “It’s not true.”

Vi backs into Mom’s hoard. “Is he dead?”

Gig says: “They don’t know.”

Zany can’t stomach the smug look on Gig’s face, as if she holds Andy’s life or deathbetween her teeth. Zany wants to slap that look off, so she does.

Gig screams.

“What the hell’s going on in there?” Mom calls.

“Zany hit me!” Gig says at the very moment Aunt Vi says: “Andy Warhol’s been shot!” “No he wasn’t!” Zany says again, wanting to slap them both.

Mom and Dad hustle inside where Gig cups her reddening cheek and bawls louder. “It’s nothing,” Mom says at the sight of her sniveling daughter, but Dad enfolds Gig inhis arms. “There, there.”

“Don’t coddle that child,” says Mom, and for once Zany agrees.

“Now, Mae.” Dad cups the back of Gig’s head and there’s a different look on her face. Triumph, maybe.

Pounding on the shared duplex wall, Evie Krebbs, who never could shush that wailing baby. “Andy Warhol’s been shot!” she calls to them. “Did you all hear?”

“We heard,” Mom answers as the baby cries louder, and so does Gig, who won’t beupstaged. Mom says: “That’s the price of fame I guess.”

“Being shot?” says Aunt Vi.

“Put yourself in the public eye and anything’s liable to happen. Lotta kooks in thisworld.”

The neighbor kids’ chant sounds in Zany’s head: Your mother’s a hobo.

“I’d rather be shot than a hobo,” says Zany.

Mom’s head snaps back. “What the hell’s that supposed to mean?”

Zany doesn’t fully know what she means, or maybe she does.

Dad says, “Turn up the radio and see if he’s dead.”

Zany doesn’t want to know the answer, and to keep him alive she runs to the basem*nt where Andy will always be a sickly boy developing film. Never mind Lester in his bed sendingsmoke rings up to the floor joists. Never mind her family still jabbering overhead.

Zany dashes to her cardboard box and closes the door, her body shaking, but not fromany disease. Andy can’t be dead. He just can’t, because if he is Zany will never make it to NewYork. Will never pound on his Factory door. She will never be famous enough for someone toshoot.

She doesn’t know she’s sobbing until Lester’s voice drifts over. “Zany?”

It’s hard to speak with that hand gripping her throat and her father overhead stillbabbling: “Turn it up, Gig.” All Zany eeks out is a sob.

Lester’s skinny voice slips through that slit in her door. “Zany?”

The grip loosens and Zany puts her eye to the peephole.

There he is, Lester, on his narrow cot in the windowless cellar where he now lives. He slides his hand into his waistband and he tilts his head toward her. “Are you watching?” Zany’s breathing settles, and the overhead voices disappear taking with them the possibility of Andy’s death. Her eyes widens so she can take it all in, the violent strokes, his contorting face, because she won’t look away from Lester’s pain, or hers. Finally, she answers him: “Yes.”

Episode 125: Voyeurs Apply Within | Painted Bride Quarterly’s Slush Pile (2024)
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