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The Jewel Thief
The Jewel Thief
The Jewel Thief
Thief
Jessica Stockholder
© 2010 JESSICA S T OC KHOL DE R
The Jewel Thief
The gem glitters in its bezel. Flashes of lightning illuminate the cave
walls. Mounted on a large rectangular column — tall and sometimes
short, shrinking and swelling, filling the room, and then retreating to a
shrine offering up for just one person.
The gem draws a crowd as its owner melts with pride becoming a
thin yellow pool on the floor. The gem’s shine encompasses the inti-
mate and the spectacular. Attention is drawn by glitter in the bezel
intimating private entrance into a grand intimate universe within, and
then to flashing stripes of light that seem to be emitted by the gem,
bouncing from the wall to the microphone at the podium and off the
facets of the hanging disco ball.
The crystal ball and the glow of the flame in the hearth, hover in the air,
enveloped by speech balloons, as the heart of the speaker representa-
tive at the podium opens, and he shares with his mouth. Straight from
the heart, the gem is shared and bellowed through the mob and across
the nation. Shattering it falls in sparkling bits over civilization.
Questions of veracity arises as the sparkling bits of care for the pre-
ciousness of private property spread across the town square, over tel-
evision networks, from Internet to Blackberry. The same and different
care inspires the guarding of the gem on the finger of the young
woman who will grow into the matron sitting at the table with her feet
soaking as she peels carrots and drinks vodka?
Just as floating algae on the water’s surface obscure and bend sunlight
traveling through molecules of H2O, myriad mixed up intertwining
strands of emotionality inform the proceedings in the courtroom.
Emotions freighted on the backs of logical structures form invisible
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lines surrounding owned objects. The soft squishy formless clouds of
feeling are tied with very fat colored ropes to structures that look like
wooden beams of sequenced thought leaning heavily against solid
cubes of transparent air.
Blocks of ice in the cave full of flickering candle light and blocks of ice
on the shore filled with rays of all colors from the sun. Separated by
space, but time passes at the same pace for both blocks of ice. A pile of
wires catching glints of light bouncing off the higgledy-piggledy
strands resists the weight of gravity even as they submit. (Alan Serrat.)
The space of mind is kept and guarded in privacy. The thief travels
the terrain between pain in the body and solitude. Perhaps he mounts
the staircase taking him away from gravity and carousel of time.
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There is a gem, alone, set apart, extraordinary and precious in its
uniqueness. There are also mountains of gems in a pile, in many
department stores in many malls, in the bank vault at the US mint, in
Britain, in Switzerland, and in China; and there is, as we all know, a
very very large pile of precious jewels in a pile in the dragon’s lair. It
might not be wrong to steal from this pile. It’s not clear. We have
established rights to private property and thought space — but there
are limits — hording and greed that eclipse the possibility of flow are
frowned upon. We care about justice.
The thieves are on a boat in the ocean because it’s very safe there and
they are worried about being caught. It’s a pleasure to share the fan-
tasy of the thieves in that wild nether land. But they need to get into
the bank vault, the dragons lair, and into the courtroom where the
heart of the speaker moves from mouth to crowd.
• The Thief takes refuge in the living room where the floor plan of
the apartment, or the footprint of the house encases him. A
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truce is called and he is tamed by love and possession. He
ceases to be a thief at all. The jewels displayed in the living
room bring much joy to those living in the apartment and
become part of what glues people together at dinner parties.
• Historically the Thief has been very fond of the public library
where all the ideas he can imagine are boxed with lines drawn
between them for easy access. Here he takes on a
professorial air. The jewels are rarely glimpsed, but they are
stored in the library in many metaphoric cases, and
sometimes in real ones too.
• The thief is having a field-day online but the stakes are low
here. There are no real jewels online — only metaphoric ones
and arrows pointing. Of course what happens online does alter
and inflect what real bodies do in space. The character and
affect of the thief is multiplied as he travels The World Wide Web
with its mutable structure. New flavors accrue to his narrative.
The authority and control embedded are more mutable and less
predictable. The thief online is equivalent to his medium. Here
he is less distinct from his background. The seductive corporeal
glint of light on the jewels is only thought about.
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The Story:
The thief, like a magpie, is drawn to panels of light flashing as the tin
foil wrapping moves against the hard cut surfaces of the emerald rock
embedded in its crinkled folds. She feels light, cut like a blade into the
softness of her cheek, the skin of her body, even as wanting flies away
from her, out of every orifice, towards the dense poignant center of
the gem.
At the edge of her vision she glimpses a cloud coming towards her.
She can feel the volume of her body caught and seared throughout
before the cloud touches her. Moving faster than a body can, at the
speed of thought, her skin is left on the floor. Her core flees to the cen-
ter of the Piazza where for a long long while she holds still, disguised,
contemplating her skin left behind. Under the net that descended on it,
her skin has, here and there, melded with the knots that form the net.
Invisible strings control the net, like a marionette; the skin interlaced
has little autonomy.
The thief’s core, like the gem she was after, seemed to glow from
within. The thief’s core, in contrast to the gem she was after, glowed
with light of its own making. Now, divorced from the skin she was …
very difficult to discover.
Now, she is on trial for public dissolution. She couldn’t help it, despite
her wish to keep the lines crisp around her center, her concentration
wandered and she found herself muddled up with many others. Her
hands too were uncontrollable. It seemed that she had many more
than two, and other people’s thoughts were always in them.
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It’s hard to say how long the thief stayed immobile and largely ignored in
the center of the public plaza. Here she was prominently on display and
hardly noticed as crowds rushed by her, sipping from cardboard cups of
various coffees, unwavering in their determination to arrive promptly at
their destinations. The thought bubbles were numerous, but very few of
them included notice of the glowing core in their middle.
She understands that the onus is on her — she could live for centuries
in this plaza, or she could put herself somewhere else. She searches
her mind for a corner. She walks to the nearest subway station and
goes home. Comfortably ensconced in her couch she has turned on
the television where she watches her story told over and over again, in
so many different ways. She knows she is hunted. She is both thief
and object of desire.
She must have fallen asleep on the couch. When she awakes sun is
streaming in the windows. There are many plants on her windowsill.
She takes very good care of some of them. These are lush and free
from desiccated old leaves. The others, that haven’t appealed to her
taste, she waters once in a rare while, just enough to enable them to
stay alive. These are bent over in part with the weight of the dried old
leaves they carry. The thief’s eyes take in the plants on the sill and
then move to take in the view out the window. This view has been the
subject of volumes. It is breathtaking. Layers and layers mounded on
top of one another form this landscape. Old stone castles, wooden
farmhouse, blond grassy meadows, green rolling pastures, flowerbeds,
and wild flower fields. She sees jungles, and deserts, rocky and lush
stacked up and intermingled so that it is very hard to tell with cer-
tainty which layer is in front. She loves this view; she knows that it
doesn’t belong to her alone but her window does frame it.
The face is the jewel of the body; the eyes set in like sapphires. The
body is a setting, or bezel, for myriad jewels like a gaudy expensive
ring. Eyes in the face, face on the body, nipples on breasts — and gen-
italia. Eyes are very compelling.
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The jewels change shape and location, transforming form from one
thing into another depending on circumstances. The eyes are dia-
monds at a dinner party — the genitalia are glittering emeralds in bed
later in the evening.
She remembers one evening when the banging in bed of jewels
together did transport her.
This evening she left the party alone with the painting tucked discretely
under her arm. The painting mounted on the wall, in just the right
place, approximately at eye level, hugging the ceiling, hugging the
floor, gathers points of light towards itself. It seems alive as if a spirit
resides inside it. Those whose eyes linger on its surface feel them-
selves drawn deep into a pool as limitless as the pool of their own con-
sciousness. This pool is located on the other side of their eyes. The
painting in front, consciousness behind — the membrane between the
body and the rest of the world holding firm for the time being.
The air starts to shimmer as if heat waves are filling the room. Feelings
of anxiety fill the thief and his vision blurs. It is hard to say how much
time has passed; in fact time seems to have stopped for the time being.
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this volume of air inside his body with the others in the room. The
physical sensations in his body parallel the feelings in his heart, and the
various glints he absorbs into his heart and soul through his eyes and
mind resonate with his own structure. This resonance occupies him for
a good long while.
He feels very well fed. The energy generated as a result of the photo-
synthesis of the plankton in the sea under the boat, and by the mani-
cured lawn outside the window flows through his body and soul. For
breakfast he had sourdough bread made from three kinds of grain,
grown in fields by people he doesn’t know, ground into flour by the
grain grinder on his kitchen counter. The bread was toasted and
smeared with butter from grass fed cows whose eyes he has not gazed
into, and covered with slices of avocado grown on a tree, picked by
Mexican hands, and freighted by train from west to east. His body feels
whole and well nurtured. He is very lucky. His breasts round and firm
like avocados glint a little in the ray of sun shining in at an angle
through the thick transparent pane of glass separating the exhibition
space from the larger volume of moving air outside.