Название: August and then some
Автор: David Prete
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Современная зарубежная литература
isbn: 9780007402694
isbn:
In the East Village I buy a six-pack at the deli and bring it up the stairs of my building. On the sixth floor I see someone has propped open the roof door with a brick. This is supposed to be an emergency exit only, and a red warning sticker on the door says an alarm will sound if opened, but I seriously doubt this alarm has ever worked. From the roof I see strips of orange and red fading at the horizon; the summer tar smell stings my nose. I take a few steps and hear a slow slapping noise and out-of-breath breathing coming from the front of the building. I walk toward it and under the water tower Stephanie and her boyfriend are going at it. He’s behind her with his shirt draped over her ass and pants halfway down his thighs, one hand grabbing a chunk of her hip, the other holding a fistful of her ponytail. Stephanie’s jeans are attached only to her right ankle, a light blue pair of underwear tangled in them. She’s kneeling on her shirt to protect her knees from the roof’s baked-in heat. Now that I see more of her skin I realize how dark it is. And she’s skinny. I’m maybe twenty feet away and can count her ribs. She’s humming in between breaths. “Um hum. Um hum.” I backpedal quietly and leave them to it.
I walk to the other side of the building with my six-pack of Corona, sit on the short brick wall at the back of the roof, and look at downtown Manhattan and drink.
Three beers into it I hear the roof door slam behind me and tiny pieces of rubble get crushed under someone’s feet. I turn around; Stephanie is walking to the edge of this roof about ten feet to my left. Her arms folded over her chest. She stops at the edge and we catch each other’s eyes for a second.
I say, “What’s up.”
“What’s up.”
I look behind her for the boyfriend. No sign. I look back to her and she shrugs like she don’t care he’s gone. She sits down, takes the elastic out of her ponytail, puts it in her mouth, reaches back, re-gathers her hair, then ties it back again. She sniffles, wipes her finger under her nose then on her jeans, folds her arms over her stomach, leans her chest close to her knees. She’s got a nervous twitch, more like a twist—the ball of her right foot twists on the top of the roof like she’s repeatedly grinding out a cigarette.
We sit for a good few minutes, her twisting foot making the only sound.
Without eye contact she says, “I saw you see us.”
My jaw freezes. What do you say to someone who calls you on watching them get fucked from behind? “Sorry. I didn’t know anyone was up here.” I take a long swig.
She shrugs, looks at me, her foot stops. “It’s OK.” It feels weird and comfortable staring at her. She turns her face away and her foot goes back to doing its thing.
We both look at the skyline against its now black background. The city breaks itself down from neighborhoods to blocks to buildings to rooms—millions of tiny pieces—and offers nothing for keeps; it just doles out the same-sized impermanence to everyone. Beautiful selfish city. It makes us eat, sleep, and fuck right on top of one another, makes us breathe the backwash of each other’s breath, daring us to survive a lonely life lived so close to so many people.
The sun’s leftover heat still seeps out of the black roof. Stephanie’s foot keeps twisting out the perpetual fire beneath it. We sit under the arc of airplanes taking off and landing in Queens as two virtual strangers this city has thrown together for the night, wondering if this place might sometime feel like a home.
July 6
Grand Central Terminal. Hundreds of people move under the green ceiling of constellations that hear every voice. I walk to the main concourse; the heartbeat in my head reminds me how much I drank last night. I squint at the departures board. 12:07 Hudson Line local to Poughkeepsie departing from track 32, making stops at 125th Street, Morris Heights, University Heights, Marble Hill, Spuyten Duyvil, Riverdale, Ludlow, Yonkers … I could recite that shit in my sleep, if I slept.
Coke in hand, turkey hero with mayonnaise in mid-bite, I flip around toward my track, and crash lunch-first into a woman hustling to get her train. She glances back and throws me a “Sorry,” with an I’m-too-late-to-be-too-worried face. I wipe the mayonnaise off my mouth … Oh, shit. I vaguely remember walking down Avenue A last night crashing into another woman. Did we crash? No, I think I grabbed her. Probably grabbed her. Maybe she smacked me. Did I get smacked? Yeah. I think I did.
On the train I take my last bite, crumple the wax paper, put it back in the brown bag, and lay it on the seat next to me so no one sits there. I lean my head against the window and try to get comfortable in the seat that was designed by an idiot. My face feels ten degrees hotter than it needs to be. Beer, my head keeps telling me with every heartbeat, beer, beer… I touch my cheekbone. Yeah, I think I did get smacked last night. The details aren’t clear. Probably wasn’t as bad as a couple weeks ago when I was walking down Avenue A, saw this girl coming at me, and decided to grab both of her shoulders. I stopped her in mid-stride and her boyfriend asked me if I had a fucking problem. I told him the last time someone asked me that they were in the third grade and still sleeping with their mother. When he tried to shove me I was quick enough to grab him by his wrists and yanked him off the curb smack into a parked car. But I was too sloshed to stop his fist when he came back at me. He only got off one punch because girlfriend was yelling at him to stop. With my ass on the street I told him that he just proved the opposite of what he was trying to prove. It sounded like a good line at the time. It made him turn back around, made his girlfriend grab his arm and yell at him to stop already. Which he finally did. I just wanted to gum up the works of their relationship, separate them for a second, see how they handle drunken scrutiny. Yeah, I’m guessing last night was a milder version of that.
Me and Stephanie didn’t say much beyond what’s up last night. We sat up there invisible to the rest of the neighborhood until my first six-pack ran out and I went to the deli for more. I asked her if she wanted one, but she said no. Sad girl.
After 125th Street the train crosses the East River, hugs the banks of the South Bronx, and shoots up the Hudson. I see signs fly by with the word Yonkers on them. My heart rate speeds up and my insides try to make a B-line out my ass. This stop always comes too soon. I think about staying on. Taking this train as far as it goes then hitching a one-way ride north, which is stupid because people don’t hitchhike anymore.
I step onto the platform and my t-shirt gets blown in the trail-wind of the train. I watch the train go up the tracks and get smaller until I can’t see or hear it.
The river is about a mile wide here and seems to separate nature from nurture. I stand on the nurture side with the new apartment buildings and cafés. Cliffs inhabited only by trees stand on the New Jersey side and look down perpetually forgiving the Yonkers side.
I pass a café lined with bay windows that has a new co-op building above it. Right now it’s past lunchtime and the place is practically empty. A few waitresses lean on the bar and pick at their fingernails while the television over their heads plays last night’s Yankees highlights. A few tables are taken by people sitting across from each other, talking to someone else on their cell phones. This café’s valet wears a white shirt and a bowtie, and sits on a stool in a chained-off parking lot that can hold maybe ten cars. He stares at the water and fingers the stack of unused parking stubs.
I walk three blocks away from the water on a street lined with tall brick housing projects. Cages cover the first floor windows, graffiti covers front doors, and smashed lights hang above entrances. The buildings resemble the СКАЧАТЬ