OINKEL SAM
By
James Nowlan
There stands Sam, on the mantel of the chimney
that is seldom used since my spacious villa finds itself in a fairly
temperate climatic
zone which is lucky for him for it keeps him from being exposed to
heat that might very well hasten the deterioration of his stuffed self
and I wouldn’t want to see him rot and have to get rid of him
since he was my first love.
We first met on a farm, one of the few in the rural region that
I grew up in that hadn’t been given over to the ugly industrialization
of agribusiness and where one could come in more direct contact with
the elements that are sacrificed to sustain our lives. I don’t
really remember much of this first encounter other than me and Sam
rolling playfully around in the mud together; I guess it was just one
of those special pastoral moments that gets cut and spliced by memory’s
emotional editor so that it comes out as a commercial for bucolic bliss.
Later episodes, me raising Sam and weaning him from his mother are
so confused with the numerous snapshots that were taken of us at the
time that I can’t distinguish memory’s images from the
photographic.
The first day that truly stands out on its own is the fatal day
that was to change our destinies; the 4h contest. I or I think
maybe it
was my parents had had the cute idea to dress up my entry as our
nations symbol, Uncle Sam. Undoubtedly as a symbol of defiance
towards recent
attacks to our freedoms (can freedom be plural? Isn’t it an abstract
noun? Okay maybe if you’re talking about constitutionally mandated
freedoms) and values. Sam seemed to understand prancing pridefully
along and even rising up on his hind legs to walk upright. A photographer
for a national magazine happened to be on hand and caught a picture
of us, Sam with his snout in the air star-spangled top hat and blue
sequined tailed jacket, me beaming in my worn overalls and the picture
made national headlines with the caption ‘‘Patriotic Piggy’’.
A few days later the phone rang with an offer that exceeded my
wildest dreams. I was to be an actor in the spectacle of Eurodisney’s
mainstreet parade. The farm boy with the star spangled hog come to
proudly show the colors of his country in France. I was ecstatic about
the idea of going to a place that was at the time so close to my idea
of the cultural center of the universe, of course I would have been
happier going to Orlando or better yet to the original Disneyland in
Anaheim which though rather rundown is a more personal product of Walt’s
genius but I was more than enthused by what I had been offered.
When I landed at Charles De Gaulle airport the welcome agent
offered to take me on a tour of the city of lights. I thought
it was one
of the lands of Disney so I said of course but when I found
out she meant
Paris I demanded emphatically that me and my pig be taken directly
to the magic kingdom to roam about soaking up the ambiance.
I then led Sam off to his kennel and then retired to my room
in
a theme
hotel made up like a dude ranch. I woke up early the next morning
and after
putting on my coveralls and straw hat ran down to get my companion
out. We then spent the first part of the day welcoming the
crowds come from around the world to see this monument that
America
had offered
to Europe. After the parade me and Sam had some burgers and
some fries and then spent the afternoon like the morning. And
so it
went on and
would have continued if it wasn’t for a strange group who had
been hatching dark plans for me and my pig before we had even arrived.
Most of the other employees called them the Calartians after
a school that they had all gone to that had some obscure
connection with Disney.
Someone once mockingly said that they were even more Saint
Germain de Prés than Saint Germain de Prés and though I didn’t
understand it at the time now the memory of their black clad beret
wearing gitan smoking selves makes me smile instead of filling me with
dread like their presence did at the time. They seemed to have some
sort of special knowledge or power and what exactly their jobs were
was hard to tell, they appeared to be there as a sort of malevolent
presence. If I had known what they had had in store for me I would
have taken the first plane back to Iowa.
The first contact I had with one of their number was the
last. I was sitting in the cafeteria one morning eating
my wheaties
when I looked
up to see the pale face of one of the few attractive female
members of their clique staring intently at me. I was hypnotized
by her
large
violet brown eyes. When I snapped out of the trance I don’t know
how much later and she had vanished leaving me to wonder what had happened
(from the medical examinations conducted later it was surmised that
she had spiked my breakfast cereal with a heady cocktail of drugs including
ecstasy, LSD, methedrine and several artificial opiates. Anyway I finished
eating and hurried off to find my co-star.
I don’t know what
sort of mind control technique this woman had used on me but several
hours had passed and the parade was just beginning. I skipped out to
catch up with the departing floats and costumed characters not really
noticing the heady euphoria that was overtaking me. As we frolicked
before the gathered vacationing families of the world I felt overcome
by waves of joy emanating from the spectators. I remember looking at
the twitching tail of my piglet and feeling an uncontrollable love
for him and thinking that I must show the beauty of this love to everyone.
I woke up in a holding cell wondering how I got there.
None of the police spoke English and I wasn’t able to get an explanation
for my presence there until the translator arrived. He seemed overjoyed
to meet me telling me not to worry and saying what a hero I was and
that they would find a lawyer to get all of this sorted out. Then he
had a call on his portable that he had laid out before him on the table
and answered with a strange change of accent that made his voice almost
unintelligible for me. He said, ‘‘yes I’m here with
him now the american pigfucker yes I’m sure he’ll be glad
to tell his story to your paper as soon as he gets out of here’’.
After that everything passed in a blur; signing the papers
to get released then meeting with journalists, trying
to explain what
had happened,
authorizing the distribution of the pictures of me
and Sam copulating
in front of the shocked crowd. Before I knew it I was
rich and famous living in luxurious hotels dining in
the finest
restaurants,
screwing
vogue models on silk sheets while my pig pranced joyfully
about. I tried reading some of the articles about what
happened and
they talked
about scatological street theater protest and I didn’t understand
a word of it. The agent that had been found for me advised me to only
give prepared interviews. It seemed that the less I said the more they
read into it.
I was soon contacted by a then famous artist
Martin Gros who requested that me and Sam participate in one of his
performance
paintings. Large canvases were to be set out and
me and Sam were to strip naked and engage in our amorous frolics
upon them after being
splashed with a special shade of paint called ‘Martin Gros Red’ that
supposedly resembled the shade of the blood that jets from the neck
of someone who’s been freshly guillotined. I have one of the
canvasses hanging now in the same room as Sam to remind me of that
day which was to be one of the last joyful ones of our life together.
To get myself in the right mood I had taken the same
drugs as the first time and after I had to spend
several days
in my spacious
hotel suite
to recuperate. I was awoken by a knock at my door.
It was a pink and pudgy girl with pointed ears and
turned
up nose.
She
had
come
to tell
me about the coming armageddon and the saving grace
of our lord Jesus Christ. I don’t know how she got into the hotel (maybe the security
was drunk) or why I let her in (the drugs must have still been affecting
me) but we sat on the sofa and she showed me some naively drawn photos
of the end of days and the earthy smell of her got control of me and
I sadly took advantage of her. She left weeping several minutes later
and I felt a pang of regret that the photo numeric perfect bodies of
the top models had never been able to solicit from me.
In spite of these feelings I had almost forgotten
about her a month later when the call came. Apparently
the
lord had
willed offspring
upon us (glory hallelujah). She wished to know
if I intended to do my christian duty and marry her
and
I was surprised
to hear
myself
agree. For the third time in less than a year my
life was completely changed so fast I felt as if
I had been
in car
wreck. We moved
into a small bungalow on the outskirts of Paris
and spent our days going
door to door to convert the unemployed so that
they would take that miserable minimum wage job just like
God wanted
them to
do.
We were
often spit on and insulted and occasionally physically
assaulted; sometimes welcomed in by some tragically
alcoholic individual
who would invite
us to have a drink with him and then spit on
us insult us and attack us when we refused. But soon my wife
was too large
to
get through
the gates and doors of those who needed to hear
of the approaching apocalypse
and I made this sad circuit alone as she sat
at home with the pig who bit her hand whenever she tried
to pet it and
gave
me
a look
of sullen
betrayal when I came back.
I wasn’t too successful in finding new soldiers for the end of
days so the church let me go and we had serious money worries. We had
just about run out when a call came. It was Martin Gros. He had been
following the story of my life since my fall from fame and had a new
project for me. A documentary that was already presold to french television
and for which my share of the receipts would take care of my little
family for the rest our lives.
The film was planned as a sort of counter propaganda
against the aggressive pimping of the American
dream by the numerous
rejects
of the American
elite in Europe at the time. An american couple
reduced to abject poverty would be forced to
slaughter and
eat their
family pet
(my unfortunate
pig) in order to survive. The camera followed
me to the local dump where I searched for garbage
to feed
to Sam
and observed
the progressing
obesity of my first love and my second.
The final
scene was difficult and it would have been
impossible if
it had not
been for the
wise tragic look in Sam’s eyes; knowing, understanding and forgiving as I
slit his throat.
A crew of work men have come and gone and
Sam is now in a specially constructed humidity
and temperature
controlled glass case
that is guaranteed to preserve him for decades
so he
can
look down
beneficently on my children and grand children
as they squeal
and prance about
on the carpet their round pink cheeks, upturned
noses and pointy ears
twitching
joyfully. Which is only just, since it is
he, my patriotic piggy, who has made this, our beautiful
life, possible.