Savanna (c) Ken Hunt For everyone who has been tested for HIV this blood which is being drawn for the test is not familiar blood: like watching your closest friend go mad, you don't quite know the exact nature of the change. It is the vehicle which has allowed me to pass through all these situations which have led me to this clinic where I give only my first name. As the needle goes in it makes a prick like every laser light beam that hit me square in the eyes as I lived the accidental, the ironic, the physical life. And these veins which yield the sample are unfamiliar interstates, the construction project everyone forgot about prone to inducing the spill of cargo. Careful, I tell the clinician, I've been brusing more easily lately and I don't know why. This is a bald-faced lie. I want to say further, at night I lie awake listening to the traffic roar and gurgle inside me, gridlock inside the skull. Perhaps that is why all this has come to pas: to cut the noise, decongest, relax. And the regimen to come, I know it already: Cut the misbehavior, stay at home for a couple weeks with herbal tea and the everyday pressure of waiting. Eat healthy, just in case, take vitamins, and (you should have done this already) stop smoking. Concentrate on work and find the Fox station which broadcasts reruns of The Simpsons three times a day. And the voices, they will be there too, figures from memory that do not merit the dignity of being called ghosts: c'mon ken, one more vodka and coke, one more shot of Jaegermeister, one more joint, one more popper, one more hit of X, one more line of speed, one more -- How many of us stumbled through high school singing along with the Violent Femmes, "just one kiss," and imagined it would come down to this? As the needle is withdrawn I rise above my body and watch it unfold into a landscape untouched by human works. Savanna. Plains covered in tall, reedy grasses. First the field mice come, and then the grass snakes, and then the gazelles and giraffes, the wildebeests, and needless to say the lions and tigers, and finally the elephants. Birds of prey circle, dive, kamikaze contact with the earth. I watch them progress in waves until I realize it's an exodus, that the fires have started, and I am jarred back to my body to feel hundreds of thousands of panicking hooves and paws and wings storming over every inch of my skin. I'm pinned down and suffocating. No I bolt up in the clinic chair to call out to anyone I love enough to have hear me: I refuse to become one of those friends you will have to bury. But the fact is, my body is a landscape and I don't know what lives there.