I've
been thirsty for months now, thirsty in the middle of the night,
thirsty in the morning, thirsty now. That terrible choking rasp in my
mouth, a thought bubble thick with crosshatching hanging over me. And
the water, this thing with no savor is so curiously delicious: cold,
frustratingly viscous at first but then exquisitely fluid. It shoots up
into the center of my brain just as it enters my belly and I am saved.
Tuesday, May 11, 2004
Monday, May 10, 2004
The
echoic, chlorine ambiance of the pool. The roiling foam in the Jacuzzi.
The woman who stands in the steps to the shallow end and lifts her leg
in the water again and again and again.
Labels:
Swimming
Friday, May 07, 2004
A
couple weekends ago I was sitting on the train on the way back from
somewhere late at night, I don't know where. Had to have been the 2 or 3
‘cause that's my train.
I
think it was at 14th Street, the train stopped. Well of course it stops
at 14th but it stopped a long time. The doors were just wide open there
like nothing, like the end of the world had come and gone.
There was staticky babble on the intercom about a police action.
The passengers sat all New York impassive in the glow of their inebriation or the gloom of their late-shift blues.
A
cop walked by on the platform, his gait urgent but two steps short of a
jog. It's like he was in a hurry to get somewhere but not that much of a
hurry when you think about it. Then another went by, and another. And
another. And then cops in twos. And another. Then one with his hand on
his holstered gun, snaking around like Pecos Bill. Then two with
nightsticks in hand. More.
By
this time the younger guys were leaning out the door to look. Some
stood brazenly on the platform and tiptoed around. A guy returned to the
train and told his girlfriend, I've never seen so many cops in my life.
I
went out on the platform. Cross-current to the cops and curious stares,
there walked an elderly, dignified man in tweed, expressionless.
Something incredibly bad is going on down there, said the girlfriend guy.
We
could not see the end of the platform where the cops had disappeared.
They just kept striding on down until you couldn't see them anymore and
you got a sense that the dimensions of space itself were distended there
and some vortex might be swallowing them up. For all we know the earth
dropped off and they were tumbling without complaint into the void.
There was no shouting and there were no shots and you could not see a thing.
Then the conductor said next stop Penn Station and we got in and finally the doors closed.
Labels:
Cops,
The Subway
Saturday, April 24, 2004
I've looked the way I change at you. I change at you differently now.
Heard
a terrific industrial horn blast outside on some street somewhere,
reverberating between the buildings, and it seemed to beckon me out into
the city. The signal defined itself in the city spaces like foam in a
mold. I heard it but I saw it too. And I want to be in that space.
Labels:
Nothing
Tuesday, April 13, 2004
Monday, April 12, 2004
Two
white kids in the train, maybe from out of town, maybe 13. Their shirts
hang a bit voluminously on their scrawny frames but otherwise they have
not completely adopted ghetto chic. A black kid gets on, a bit older,
accompanied by his girlfriend with a big round butt in tight jeans and a
long dyed-blond perm. He looks very street, a baseball cap over a
do-rag, a shirt with an airbrushed black cartoonlike figure on it. He's
on the phone with the wireless earpiece in his ear, speaking brusquely
and somewhat officiously to a friend: Where
you at? I'm on the train. Where you at? Fourteenth? I'll be there in
five minutes. I'm with my girl. I'll be there in five minutes.
The
white boys have been watching him as I've been watching all of them.
One white boy gives a nod to the black guy, that upward only nod, a
complicated gesture meant to summon attention but also evincing tones of
recognition and admiration.
"'at's…
awesome!" the white boy says, and the other white boy nods and says,
"Yeah!" self-consciously touching his fingertips to his chin.
The
black kid plays it stone cool, acknowledging the others only by
glancing at them momentarily and giving the ghost of a nod. Next stop
the white kids get off and the couple remains, he scrolling through the
numbers on his phone while she faces away and stares at the darkness out
the window or perhaps her reflection in it. He puts his phone away and
nuzzles into her leonine hair.
Labels:
Overheard,
The Subway
Tuesday, March 30, 2004
Before
I became lost gazing at the burbling froth in the hot tub I had a drink
from the water fountain and I thought: water fountain. There's
practically nothing to think about when you think about a water
fountain. But then there is. The one on the outside of the Middle
School, on that huge, brick, south-facing wall. It was a beacon to those
parched from playground exertions. All the way across the blacktop and
down a little dirt path across the lawn and all for a sip of salty
lukewarm water.
A
fountain that frequently contained some kid's spat-out gum. Green, or
pink, or white, clean and glistening among the silvery beads. Bearing
the useless forensic truth of orthodontic tooth marks.
Thursday, March 25, 2004
Wednesday, March 24, 2004
On the train in the café car the man looked like William H. Macy, those little beady eyes below the thick blonde brow in the creased, genial face. The thin lips around a wide, vaguely vulnerable mouth.
"What'll it be?" he asked genially.
I said I didn't know yet sorry. He helped the woman behind me as I continued to gaze upon the different-colored menus with the pictures of chips and nuts and beer.
"Have you decided yet?"
"I, well…"
"Whiskey?"
That was exactly what I wanted. "You… Yes! That was uh, good."
He turned and got it as though it was nothing. Later I returned for more and he seemed to be in a trance, leaning against the inside of the side counter, arms folded. I waited.
"I, sorry, I must have…"
"S'OK!"
I ordered, paid, tipped. As I walked away I heard the transaction behind me: a woman ordered a cup of coffee.
"Nice!" he exclaimed ridiculously.
It occurred to me that perhaps he was some sort of modern mythic figure, heroically guarding his spirits against soul-killing tedium. A whistling Sisyphus.
Tuesday, March 16, 2004
They seem to like being naked, the men at the gym, bankers and judges and salesmen and all, after a day spent trussed in pants and undershirt, belt and tie. They like standing ungainly with their balls dangling, sheltered from the bemused and judgmental regard of women. It's a sort of unerotic exhibitionism. They like being reduced in each others' eyes.
Labels:
The Gym
Friday, March 12, 2004
I heard you coughing clear across the continent.
A construction worker walking ahead of me around the corner of Greenwich and Canal drops his plastic coffee lid to the ground, not tossing it so much as loosing it from the rim and letting gravity perpetrate the misdemeanor. Like he's entitled to not even think about it. And I sort of believed he was.
Labels:
New York City,
Nothing
Friday, February 27, 2004
On the cab ride home.
I had just kissed L. in front of her place in the cold and she'd stopped shivering as soon as we kissed and we kissed at length, elaborately but not extremely, she reticent with the tongue. Yet when I pulled away her lips were dewy, her eyes misty, and she bore an expression I'd never seen before, a faintly melancholy yet expectant look, and I kissed her again, pressing her left shoulder blade with my hand.
On the cab ride home there were men climbing into a hole in the street.
Labels:
Sex
Tuesday, February 24, 2004
We had that simple life, you and I. We scrounged up change for coffee. With our needs attenuated by our means we were happier than happy.
Labels:
Nothing
Friday, February 20, 2004
I slept with K. all last night but didn't fuck her. Wanted to of course, sort of, maybe not. And not that it was necessarily an option. I sensed a stiffness in her frame, something closed. But it was no different than it ever was with her so who really knows. Nothing she did, no gesture, no movement, no words seemed to indicate the slightest desire or even inclination. Besides the time I caressed her back and stopped and she protested with a pleading murmur. So I continued.
I should have caressed the small of her back and slid my fingers under her waistband and caressed her ass and moved my hand lower as I kissed the nape of her neck and her spine and stroked her thighs where her legs meet her ass. Finally touched her cunt, seen her try to maintain that passive composure.
Which I'm sure she would have. But with a little strain now.
And then this, that, the bleary pauses when someone takes off a shirt or underwear, trying not to slow the sex momentum.
And before you know it.
But I didn't and I don't know why. I was reluctant, afraid she didn't want it perhaps, finally daunted by her melancholic and icy Scandinavian manner.
And then there were the bones in her emaciated torso: her shoulders and rib cage seemed scarily sharp, poking her skin into stark relief like the buttresses of a circus tent.
Labels:
Sex
Tuesday, February 17, 2004
On the subway platform Saturday or was it Sunday. A disheveled black man with lunatic eyes played the violin for change. He sounded surprisingly good – he played shit like "Ma Vie En Rose" with a delicate touch. A beautiful young woman put a dollar in his case and he immediately stopped playing and handed her the fiddle and bow to play. Strangely, she accepted them without hesitation, as though that were exactly what she'd expected in the transaction. She was French or Italian or something and so he gestured to her how to play. She held the violin stiffly in the crook of her collar and clutched the bow like a knife. The man bobbed his head and pointed for each string he wanted her to play, Like that! Like that! and she drew the bow across the open strings, articulating in succession WANH WANH WANH WANH, four hideous rasping notes; a jagged, tuneless melody from someplace in hell. He nodded and smiled vigorously and she smiled and handed him back his instrument then slipped sprite-like into the dour crowd.
I gave him all my change on the way onto the train: quarters, dimes, nickels, pennies.
Labels:
Music,
The Subway
Thursday, February 12, 2004
The cabbie again. Went the wrong way. I didn't even notice until the neighborhood got shitty on 3rd Avenue. 101 Street, 102 Street.
"You have to go across and stop on 105th and Fifth."
He didn't seem to understand.
"I go left, I come back up."
"No, you have to take a right." I felt my voice tighten into the speech of an unapologetic and resolute prick. There was a mean pleasure there. "You have to go right on Madison. No I mean right on Park. Right up to 106th. Then 105th and Fifth."
There were some unfamiliar garbage cans in the street before my building.
The suicide note said, "I love you! Bye!"
Labels:
Death,
New York City
Wednesday, February 11, 2004
On the fuselage at the edge of the doorway a faint trace of a word had been left, in paint that perhaps had permeated some tape or a sticker since removed. The word was repeated five or six times in a column: VOID.
VOID
VOID
VOID
VOID
VOID
It was the muffled, lustful plea of all the plane's pressurized contents, static yet animated with the potential to explode into cold, dark space.
Coffee maker 1.
Labels:
Airplanes
Thursday, February 05, 2004
I tried to go to the Y the other day and was put off by the entire experience, spoiled as I was by the other gym I'm trying, the New York Health & Racquet Club, with its petty amenities and sickly sweet odor of eucalyptus and complimentary body wash, the beautiful front desk girl, the carpeted locker room, the mustachioed attendant dressed in blinding, immaculate white.
Labels:
The Gym
Wednesday, February 04, 2004
Monday, February 02, 2004
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