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A perfect day in the city always starts like this: My friend Leo picks
me up and we go to a breakfast place called Rick and Anns where
they make red flannel hash out of beets and bacon, and then we cross the
Bay Bridge to the gardens of the Palace of the Fine Arts to sit in the
wet grass and read poems out loud and talk about love.
The fountains are thick with black swans imported from Siberia, and if
it is a fine day and a weekend there will be wedding parties, almost entirely
Asian. The grooms wear smart gray pinstripe suits and the women are in
beaded gowns so beautiful they make your teeth hurt just to look at them.
The roman towers of the Palace façade rise above us, more yellow
than orange in the strengthening midday light. Leo has told me how the
towers were built for the 1929 San Francisco Worlds Fair out of
plaster and papier maché, and even though times were hard the city
raised the money to keep them, to cast them in concrete so they would
never go away.
Leo is an architect, and his relationship to all the most beautiful buildings
in this city is astonishing given his age, only five years older than
me. I make my living as a photographer; since art school Ive been
doing magazine work and living from grant to grant.
The house Leo built for himself is like a fairy tale, all towers and angles,
and the last wild peacock in Berkeley lives on his street. I live in the
Oakland Hills in a tiny house on a street so windy you cant drive
more than ten miles per hour. I rented it because the ad said this: Small
house in the trees with a garden and a fireplace. Dogs welcome, of course.
I am dogless for the moment but its not my natural condition.
You never know when I might get overwhelmed by a desire to go to the pound.
Its a warm blue Saturday in November, and there are five Asian weddings
underway at the Palace of the Fine Arts. The wedding parties outfits
do not match but are complementary, as if they have been ordered especially,
one for each arch of the golden façade.
Leo reads me a poem about a salt marsh at dawn while I set up my old Leica.
I always get the best stuff when nobodys paying me to shoot. Like
the time I caught a bride waltzing with one of the caterers behind the
hedgerow, his chefs cap bent to touch the top of her veil.
Then I read Leo a poem about longing in Syracuse. This is how we have
always spoken to each other, Leo and I, and it would be the most romantic
thing this century except that Leo is in love with Guenevere.
Guenevere is a Buddhist weaver who lives in a clapboard house on Belvedere
Island. She makes cloth on a loom she brought back from Tibet. Although
her tapestries and wall hangings have made her a small fortune, she refuses
to use the air conditioner in her Audi, even when shes driving across
the Sacramento Valley. Air conditioning, she says, is just one of the
things she does not allow herself.
That Guenevere seems not to know Leo is alive causes him no particular
disappointment, and that she forgetseach time she meets himthat
she has met him several times before only adds to what he calls her charming
basket of imperfections. The only Buddha I could love, he says, is one
who is capable of forgetfulness and sin.
Guenevere is in love with a man in New York City who told her in a letter
that the only thing better than three thousand miles between him and the
object of his desire would be if she had a terminal illness.
I could really get behind a relationship with a woman who had only
six months to live, was what he wrote. She showed me the words as
if to make sure they existed, though something in her tone made me think
she was proud.
The only person I know of whos in love with Leo (besides me, a little),
is a gay man named Raphael who falls in love with one straight man after
another and then buys each one a whole new collection of CDs. They
come, Leo says, as if from the Columbia House Record Club, once a month
like clockwork, in a plain cardboard wrapper, no return address and no
name. They are by artists most people have never heard of, like Cassandra
Wilson and Boris Grebeshnikov; there are Andean folk songs and Hip Hop
and Beat.
Across the swan-bearing lake a wedding has just reached its completion.
The groom is managing to look utterly solemn and completely delirious
with joy at the same time. Leo and I watch the kiss, and I snap the shutter
just as the kiss ends and the wedding party bursts into applause.
Sucker, Leo says.
Oh, right, I say. Like you wouldnt trade your
life for his right this minute.
I dont know anything about his life, Leo says.
You know he remembered to do all the things you forgot.
I think I prefer it, Leo says, when you reserve that
particular lecture for yourself. He points back across the lake
where the bride has just leaped into her maid of honors arms, and
I snap the shutter again. Or for one of your commitment-phobic boyfriends,
Leo adds.
I guess the truth is, I cant blame them, I say. I
mean if I saw me coming down the street with all my stuff hanging out
Im not so sure Id pick myself up and go trailing after.
Of course you would, Leo says. And its because
you would, and because the chance of that happening is so slim, and because
you hold out hope anyway that it might . . . thats what makes you
a great photographer.
Greatness is nice, I tell him. I want contact. I want
someones warm breath on my face. I say it as if its
a dare, which we both know it isnt. The flower girl across the lake
is throwing handfuls of rose petals straight up in the air.
I came to this city near the ocean over a year ago because I recently
spent a long time under the dark naked water of the Colorado River and
I took it as a sign that the river wanted me away. I had taken so many
pictures by then of the chaos of heaved-up rock and petrified sand and
endless sky that Id lost my balance and fallen into them. I couldnt
keep separate any more what was the land and what was me.
There was a man there named Josh who didnt want nearly enough from
me, and a woman called Thea who wanted way too much, and I was sandwiched
between them, one of those weaker rock layers like limestone that disappears
under pressure or turns into something shapeless like oil.
I thought there might be an order to the city: straight lines, shiny surfaces
and right angles that would give myself back to me, take my work somewhere
different, maybe to a safer place. Solitude was a straight line too, and
I believed it was what I wanted, so I packed whatever I could get into
my pick-up, left behind everything I couldnt carry including two
pairs of skis, a whole darkroom full of photo equipment, and the mountains
Id sworn again and again I couldnt live without.
I pointed myself west down the endless two lanes of highway 50The
Loneliest Road in America say the signs that rise out of the desert on
either side of itall the way across Utah and Nevada to this white
shining city on the Bay.
I got drunk on the city at first the way some people do on vodka, the
way it lays itself out as if in a nest of madronos and eucalyptus, the
way it sparkles brighter even than the sparkling water that surrounds
it, the way the Golden Gate reaches out of it, like fingers, toward the
wild wide ocean that lies beyond.
I loved the smell of fresh blueberry muffins at the Oakland Grill down
on Third and Franklin, the train whistle sounding right outside the front
door, and tattooed men of all colors unloading crates of cauliflower,
broccoli and peas.
Those first weeks Id walk the streets for hours, shooting more film
in a day than I could afford in a week, all those lives in such dangerous
and unnatural proximity, all those stories my camera could tell.
Id walk even the nastiest part, the blood pumping through my veins
as hard as when I first saw the Rocky Mountains so many years ago. One
night in the Tenderloin I rounded a corner and met a guy in a wheelchair
head on who aimed himself at me and covered me with urine. Baptized, I
said to my horrified friends the next day, anointed with the nectar of
the city gods.
I met a man right off the bat named Gordon, and wed drive down to
the Oakland docks in the evening and look out at the twenty-story hydraulic
boatlifts which I said looked like a battalion of doberman pinchers protecting
the harbor from anyone who might invade. Gordons real name was Salvador
and he came from poor people, strawberry pickers in the central valley,
two of his brothers stillborn from Malathion poisoning. He left the valley
and moved to the city when he was too young by law to drive the truck
he stole from his fathers field boss.
He left it double-parked in front of the Castro Theater, talked a family
in the Mission into trading work for floor space, changed his name to
Gordon, changed his age from 15 to 20 and applied for a grant to study
South American literature at San Francisco State.
He had his Ph.D. before he turned twenty, a tenure-track teaching job
at Berkeley by 21. When he won his first teaching award his mother was
in the audience; when their eyes met she nodded her approval, but when
he looked for her afterwards, she was nowhere to be found.
Can you believe it? he said when he told the story, his voice
such a mixture of pride and disappointment that I didnt know which
was more unbelievable, that she had come or that she had gone.
If one more woman I used to date turns into a lesbian, Leo
says, Im moving to Minneapolis.
The wedding receptions are well under way and laughter bubbles toward
us across the lagoon.
Its possible to take that as a compliment, I say, if
you want to bend your mind that way.
I dont, he says.
Maybe its just a choice a woman makes, I say, when
she feels she has exhausted all her other options.
Oh, yeah, like you start out being a person, Leo says, and
then you decide to become a car.
Sometimes I think its either that or Alaska, I say.
The odds there, better than ten to one.
I remember a bumper sticker I saw once in Haines, Alaska, near the place
where the ferries depart for the lower forty-eight: Baby, it said, when
you leave here youll be ugly again.
In Alaska, I say, Ive actually had men fall at
my feet.
I bet a few men have fallen at your feet down here, he says,
and I try to look him in the eye to see how he means it, but he keeps
them fixed on the poetry book.
He says, Arent I the best girlfriend you never had?
The last woman Leo called the love of his life only let him see her twice
a week for three years. She was a cardiologist who lived in the Marina
who said she spent all day with broken hearts and she had no intention
of filling her time off with her own. At the start of the fourth year,
Leo asked her to raise the number of dates to three times a week, and
she immediately broke things off.
Leo went up on the Bridge after that. This was before they put the phones
in, the ones that go straight to the counselors. It was a sunny day and
the tide was going out, making whitecaps as far as he could see into the
Pacific. After a while he came down, not because he felt better but because
of the way the numbers fell out. There had been 250 so far that year.
Had the number been 4 or 199 or even 274 he says he might have done it,
but he wasnt willing to go down officially with a number as meaningless
as 251.
A woman sitting on the grass near us starts telling Leo how much he looks
like her business partner, but theres an edge to her voice I cant
identify, an insistence that means shes in love with the guy, or
shes crazy, or shes just murdered him this morning and she
has come to the Palace of the Fine Arts to await her impending arrest.
The great thing about Californians, Leo says when the woman
has finally gotten up to leave, is that they think its perfectly
okay to exhibit all their neuroses in public as long as they apologize
for them first.
Leo grew up like I did on the East Coast, eating Birds Eye frozen vegetables
and Swansons deep-dish meat pies on TV trays next to our parents
and their third martinis, watching Whats My Line and To Tell the
Truth on television and talking about anything on earth except what was
wrong.
Is there anyone you could fall in love with besides Guenevere?
I ask Leo, after hes read a poem about tarantulas and digger wasps.
Theres a pretty woman at work, he says. She calls
herself The Diva.
Leo, I say, write this down. I think its a good
policy to avoid any woman who uses an article in her name.
There are policemen at the Palace grounds today handing out information
about how we can protect ourselves from an epidemic of car-jackings that
has been taking place in the city for the last five months. The crime
begins, the flyer tells us, with the criminal bumping the victims
car from behind. When the victim gets out of the car to exchange information,
the criminal hits herand its generally a womanover the
head with a heavy object, leaves her on the sidewalk, steals her car and
drives away.
The flyer says we are supposed to keep our windows rolled up when the
other driver approaches, keep the doors locked, and say through the glass,
Im afraid. Im not getting out. Please follow me to the
nearest convenience store. It says under no circumstances should
we ever let the criminal drive us to crime scene number two.
You couldnt do it, could you, Leo says, and slaps my
arm like a wise guy.
What do you think they mean, I say, by crime scene number
two?
Youre evading the question because you know the answer too
well, he says.
Youre the only person I know whod get your throat slit
sooner than admit youre afraid.
You know, I say to Leo, to change the subject, you dont
act much like a person who wants kids more than anything.
Yeah, and you dont act like a person who wants to be married
with swans.
Id do it, I say. Right now. Step into that wedding
dress, no questions asked.
Lucy, Leo says, seriously, do you have any idea how
many steps there are between you and that wedding dress?
No, I say. Tell me.
Fifty-five, he says. At least fifty-five.
Before Gordon I had always dated the strong silent types, I think so I
could invent anything I wanted to go on in their heads. Gordon and I talked
about words, and the kind of pictures you could make so that you didnt
need them and I thought what I always thought in the first ten minutes:
that after years and years of wild pitches Id for once in my life
thrown a strike.
It took me less than half a baseball season to discover my oversight:
Gordon had a jealous streak as vicious as a heat-seeking missile and he
could make a problem out of a paper bag. We were asked to leave two restaurants
in one week alone, and it got to the point fast where if the waitperson
wasnt female, Id ask if we could go somewhere else or have
another table.
Car mechanics, piano tuners, dry cleaners, toll takers, in Gordons
mind they were all out to bed me and I was out to make them want to, a
honey pot, hed called me once, and he said he and all other men
in the Bay Area were a love-crazed swarm of bees.
When I told Guenevere how Id fallen for Gordon she said, You
only get a few chances to feel your life all the way through. Beforeyou
knowyou become unwilling.
I told her the things I was afraid to tell Leo, how the look on Gordons
face turned from passion to anger, how he yelled at me in a store so hard
one time that the manager slipped me a note that said he would pray for
me, how each night I would stand in the street while he revved up his
engine and scream please Gordon, please Gordon, dont drive away.
At one time in my life I had breast implants just to please a man,
she said. Now I wont even take off my bracelets before bed.
Guenevere keeps a bowl of cards on her breakfast table between the sugar
and the coffee. They are called Angel Cards and she bought them at the
New Age store. Each card has a word printed on it: sisterhood or creativity
or romance, and theres a tiny angel with her body in a position
that is supposed to illustrate the word.
That morning I picked balance, with a little angel perched in the center
of a teeter totter, and when Guenevere reached in for her own word she
sighed in disgust. Without looking at the word again, without showing
it to me, she put the card in the trashcan and reached to pick another.
I went to the trashcan and found it. The word was surrender, and the angel
was looking upwards with her arms outstretched.
I hate that, she said, her mouth slightly twisted. Last
week I had to throw away submit.
Guenevere brought me a cookie and a big box of Kleenex. She said that
choices cant be good or bad. There is only the event and the lessons
learned from it. She corrected my pronunciation gently and constantly:
the Bu in Buddha she said is like the pu in pudding and not like the boo
in ghost.
When I was twenty-five years old I brought home to my parents a boy named
Jeffrey I thought I wanted to marry. He was everything I believed my father
wanted: He had an MBA from Harvard. He had patches on the elbows of his
sportcoats. He played golf on a course that only allowed men.
We spent the weekend drinking the wine and eating the paté Jeffreys
mother had sent him from her fermette in the southwest of France. Jeffrey
let my father show him decades worth of tennis trophies. He played the
piano while my mother sang her old torch songs.
I waited until I had a minute alone with my father. Papa,
I saidit was what I always called himHow do you like
Jeffrey?
Lucille, he said, I havent ever liked any of your
boyfriends, and I dont expect I ever will. So why dont you
save us both the embarrassment, and not ask again.
After that I went back to dating mechanics and river guides. My mother
kept Jeffreys picture on the mantel till she died.
The first time I was mugged in the city Id been to the late show
all alone at the Castro Theatre. Its one of those magnificent old
movie houses with a huge marquee that lights up the sky like a carnival,
a ceiling that looks like it belongs in a Spanish Cathedral, heavy red
velvet curtains laced with threads that sparkle gold, and a real live
piano player who disappears into the floor when the previews begin.
I liked to linger there after the movie finished, watch the credits and
the artificial stars in the ceiling. That Tuesday I was the last person
to step out of the theater into a chilly and deserted night.
I had one foot off the curb when the man approached me, a little too close
for comfort even then.
Do you have any change you can spare? he said.
The truth was I didnt. I had scraped the bottom of my purse to put
together enough quarters, nickels and dimes to get into the movie, and
the guy behind the glass had let me in thirty-three cents short.
I said I was sorry and headed for the parking lot. I knew he was behind
me, but I didnt turn around. I should have gotten my keys out before
I left the theater, I thought. Shouldnt have stayed to see every
credit roll.
About ten steps from my car I felt a firm jab in the middle of my rib
cage.
I bet youd feel differently, the man said, if
I had a gun in my hand.
I might feel differently, I said, whirling around with more
force than I intended, but I still wouldnt have any money.
He flinched, changed the angle of his body, just slightly back and away.
And when he did, when his eyes dropped from mine to his hand holding whatever
it was in his jacket pocket, I was reminded of a time I almost walked
into a female grizz with a nearly grown cub. How we had stood there posturing,
how she had glanced down at her cub just that way, giving me the opportunity
to let her know she didnt need to kill me. We could both go on our
way.
Look, I said. Ive had a really emotional day,
okay? As I talked I dug into my purse and grabbed my set of keys,
a kind of weapon in their own right. And I think you ought to just
let me get in the car and go home.
While he considered this I took the last steps to my car and got in. I
didnt look in the rearview mirror until I was on the freeway.
By mid-afternoon Leo and I have seen one too many happy couples get married
and we drive over the Golden Gate and to Tiburon to a restaurant called
Guymos where we drink margaritas made with Patron tequila and eat ceviche
appetizers and look out on Angel Island and the citywhitest of all
from this perspective, rising like a mirage out of the blue green bay.
We watch the ferry dock and unload the suburbanites, then load them up
again for the twice-hourly trip to the city. We are jealous of their starched
shirts and brown loafers, how their clothes seem a testament to the balance
in their lives.
The fog rolls over and down the lanyard side of Mt. Tamalpais, and the
city moves in and out of it, glistening like Galilee one moment, then
gray and dreamy like a ghost of itself the next, and then gone, like a
thought bubble, like somebodys good idea.
Last night, I say, I was walking alone down Telegraph
Avenue. I was in a mood, you know, Gordon and I had a fight about John
Lennon.
Was he for or against? Leo says.
Against, I say, but it doesnt matter. Anyway,
I was scowling, maybe crying a little, moving along pretty fast, and I
step over this homeless guy with his crutches and his little can and he
says, I dont even want any money from you, Id just like
you to smile.
So did you? Leo says.
I did, I say. I not only smiled, but I laughed too,
and then I went back and gave him all the money in my wallet, which was
only eighteen dollars, but still. I told him to be sure and use that line
again.
I love you, Leo says, and takes both of my hands in his. I
mean, in the good way.
When I was four years old and with my parents in Palm Beach, Florida,
I pulled a seven-hundred-pound cement urn off its pedestal and onto my
legs, crushing both femurs. All the other urns on Worth Avenue had shrubs
in them trimmed into the shapes of animals, and this one, from my three-foot
point of view, appeared to be empty.
When they asked me why I had tried to pull myself up and into the urn
I said I thought it had fish inside it and I wanted to see them, though
whether I had imagined actual fish, or just tiny shrubs carved into the
shape of fish, I cant any longer say.
The urn was empty, of course, and waiting to be repaired, which is why
it toppled over onto me. My father rolled it off with some of that superhuman
strength you always hear about and picked me upI was screaming bloody
murderand held me until the ambulance came.
The next six weeks were the best of my childhood. I was hospitalized the
entire time, surrounded by doctors who brought me presents, nurses who
read me stories, candy stripers who came to my room and played games.
My parents, when they came to visit, were always happy to see me and usually
sober.
I spent the remaining years of my childhood fantasizing about illnesses
and accidents that I hoped would send me to the hospital again.
One day last month Gordon asked me to go backpacking at Point Reyes National
Seashore, to prove to me, he said, that he could take an interest in my
life. I hadnt slept outside one single night since I came to the
city, he said, and I must miss the feel of hard ground underneath me,
must miss the smell of my tent in the rain.
Gordon borrowed a backpack, got the permit, freed the weekend, studied
the maps. I was teaching a darkroom workshop in Corte Madeira on Saturday.
Gordon would pick me up at four when the workshop ended; wed have
just enough time to drive up the coast to Point Reyes Station and walk
for an hour into the first camp. A long second day would take us to the
beach, the point with the lighthouse, and back to the car with no time
again to spare before dark.
I had learned by then how to spot trouble coming and that morning I waited
in the car with Gordon while first one man, way too young for me and then
another, way too old entered the warehouse where my workshop was going
to be held.
I got out of the car without seeing the surfer, tall and blond and a little
breathtaking, portfolio under the arm that usually held the board. I kept
my eyes away from his but his handshake found me anyway. When he held
the big door open I went on through. I could hear the screech of tires
behind me through what felt like a ton of metal.
That Gordon was there when the workshop ended at 4:02 surprised me a little.
Then I got in the Pathfinder and saw only one backpack. He drove up the
coast to Point Reyes without speaking. Stinson, Bolinas, Dogtown and Olema.
The white herons in Tomales Bay had their heads tucked under their arms.
He stopped at the trailhead, got out, threw my pack into the dune grass,
opened my door and tried with his eyes to pry me from my seat.
I guess this means youre not coming with me, I said,
imagining how we could do it with one pack, tenacious in my hope that
the day could be saved.
What youre thinking, right now, is why didnt I do it, get
out of that car without making eye contact, swing my pack on my back and
head off down the trail. And when I tell you what I did do, which was
to crawl all the way to the back of the Pathfinder, holding on to the
cargo net like a tornado was coming, and let go with one ear-splitting
head-pounding scream after another till Gordon got back in the car, till
we got back down the coast, back on the 580, back over the Bridge, and
back to Gordons apartment, till he told me if I was quiet, hed
let me stay, you would wonder how a person, even if she had done it, could
ever in a million years admit to such a thing.
Then I could tell you about the sixteen totaled cars in my first fifteen
winters. The Christmas Eve my father and I rolled a Plymouth Fury from
meridian to guardrail and back four full times with nine complete revolutions,
how they had to cut us out with chainsaws, how my father, limber from
the Seagrams, got away unhurt. I could tell you about the neighbor
girl who stole me away one time at the sound of my parents shouting, how
she refused to give me back to them even when the police came with a warrant,
how her ten-year-old hand must have looked holding my three-year-old one,
how in the end it became a funny story that both sets of parents loved
to tell. I could duplicate for you the hollow sound an empty bottle makes
when it hits formica, and the stove is left on and the pans started
smoking and theres a button that says off, but no way to reach.
I could tell you the lie I told myself with Gordon. That anybody is better
than nobody. And you will know exactly why I stayed in the back of that
Pathfinder, unless you are lucky, and then you will not.
Did I ever tell you about the time I got mugged? Leo asks
me, and we both know he has but its his favorite story.
Id like it, I say, if youd tell it again.
Before Leo built his house on the street with the peacocks he lived in
the city between North Beach and the piers. He got mugged one night, stepping
out of his car fumbling for his house keys; the man had a gun and snuck
up from behind.
What Leo had in his wallet was thirteen dollars, and when he offered the
money he thought the man would kill him on the spot.
You got a cash card, the man said. Lets find a
machine.
Hey, I say when he gets to this part, that means you
went to crime scene number two.
The part I hate most is how he took Leos glasses. He said he would
drive, but as it turned out he didnt know stick shifts, and the
clutch burned and smoked all the way up Nob Hill.
My names Bill, the man said, and Leo thought since they
were getting so friendly, hed offer to work the clutch and the gear
shift to save what was left of his car. It wasnt until Leo got close
to him, straddling the gear box and balanced against Bills shoulder,
that he smelled the blood under Bills jacket and knew that hed
been shot.
They drove like that to the Marina Safeway, Bills eyes on the road
and his hands on the steering wheel, Leo working the clutch and the shifter
according to feel.
At the cash machine Leo looked for help but couldnt get anyones
eyes to meet his, with Bill and his gun pressed so close to his side.
They all think were a couple, he thought and laughter bubbled up
inside him. He told Bill a lie about a hundred-dollar ATM limit, pushed
the buttons, handed over the money.
They drove back to Leos that same Siamese way, and when they got
there Bill thanked Leo, shook his hand, asked one more favor before he
took off.
Im going to give you a phone number, Bill said. My
girlfriend in Sacramento. I want you to call her and tell her I made it
all right.
Sure, Leo said, folding the paper.
I want you to swear to God.
Sure, Leo said, Ill call her.
Bill put the end of the gun around Leos belly button. Say
it, motherfucker, say, I swear to God.
I swear to God, Leo said, and Bill walked away.
Back in his apartment Leo turned on Letterman. When the shaking had stopped
he called the police.
Not much we can do about it, the woman at the end of the line
told him. We could come dust your car for fingerprints, but it would
make a hell of a mess.
Two hours later Leo looked in a phone book and called a Catholic priest.
No, the priest said, you dont have to call her.
You swore to God under extreme circumstances, brought down upon you by
a godless man.
I dont think thats the right answer, I had said
when I first heard the story and I say it again, on cue, today. The first
time we had talked about the nature of godlessness, and how if a situation
requires swearing to God it isby definitionextreme.
But today I am thinking not of Bill or even of Leos dilemma, but
of the girlfriend in Sacramento, her lover shot, bleeding and hijacking
architects, and still remembering to think of her.
And I wonder what it was about her that made her stay with a man who ran
from the law for a living, and if he had made it home to her that night,
if she stood near him in the kitchen dressing his wounds. I wonder how
she saw herself, as what part of the story, and how much she had invested
in how it would end.
Im so deeply afraid, Gordon had said on the docks our
first night together, that I am nothing but weak and worthless.
So I take the people close to me and try to break them, so they become
as weak and worthless as me.
I want to know the reason I could hear and didnt hear what he was
saying, the reason why I thought the story could end differently for me.
Things ended between Gordon and me in a bar in Jack London Square one
night when we were watching the 49ers play the Broncos. It was Joe Montanas
last year in San Francisco; rumors of the Kansas City acquisition had
already begun.
It was a close game late in the season; the Broncos had done what they
were famous for in those days, jumped out to a twenty-point lead, and
then lost it incrementally as the quarters went past.
The game came right down to the two-minute warning, Elway and Montana
trading scoring drives so elegant it was like they shook hands on it before
the game. A minute twenty-seven left, ball on the Niners twenty-two:
Joe Montana had plenty of time and one last chance to shine.
Dont tell me youre a Bronco fan, a guy on the
other side of me, a late arrival, said.
Its a tough job, I said, not taking my eyes off the
TV set. For about the hundredth time that evening the camera was off the
action and on a tearful, worried or ecstatic Jennifer Montana, one lovely
and protective hand around each of her two beautiful blonde little girls.
Geez, I said, when the camera came back to the action several
seconds too late, youd think Joe Montana was the only football
player in America who had a wife.
The guy next to me laughed a short choppy laugh. Joe took his team seventy-eight
yards in seven plays for the win.
On the way to his Pathfinder, Gordon said, Thats what I hate
about you sports fans. You create a hero like Joe Montana just so you
have somebody to knock down.
I dont have anything against Joe Montana, I said. I
think he throws the ball like an angel. I simply prefer watching him to
watching his wife.
I saw who you preferred watching, Gordon said as we arrived
at the car and he slammed inside.
Gordon, I said, I dont even know what that man
looked like.
The moon was fat and full over the parts of Oakland no one dares to go
to late at night and I knew as I looked for a face in it that it didnt
matter a bit what I said.
Gordon liked to drive the meanest streets when he was feeling meanest,
and he was ranting about me shaking my tail feathers and keeping my pants
zipped, and all I could think to do was remind him I was wearing a skirt.
He squealed the brakes at the end of my driveway and I got out and moved
toward the dark entryway.
Arent you going to invite me in? he asked. And I thought
about the months full of nights just like this one when I asked his forgiveness,
when I begged him to stay.
I want you to make your own decision, I said over my shoulder,
and he threw the car in second, gunned the engine and screeched away.
First came the messages taped to my door, the words cut out from ten different
typefaces, held down with so many layers of tape it had the texture of
decoupage. Then came the slit tires, the Kayro syrup in my gas tank, my
box set of Dylans Biograph in a puddle at the foot of my drive.
One day I opened an envelope from a magazine Id shot for to find
my paycheck ripped into a hundred pieces and then put back in the envelope,
back in the box.
Leo and I trade margaritas for late-afternoon lattes, and still the fog
wont lift all the way.
What I imagine, I say, is coming home one night and
Gordon emerging from between the sidewalk and the shadows, a Magnum 357
in his hand, and my last thought being, Well, you should have figured
that this was the next logical thing.
I dont know why you need to be so tough about it, Leo
says. Cant you let the police or somebody know?
I say, This is not a good city to be dogless in.
Leo puts his arm around me; I can tell by the way he does it he thinks
he has to.
Do you wish sometimes, I say, that you could just disappear
like that city?
I can, Leo says. I do. What I wish more is that when
I wanted to I could stay.
The ferry docks again in front of us and we sit quietly until the whistles
are finished and the boat has once again taken off.
Are you ever afraid, I say to Leo, that there are so
many things you need swirling around inside you that they will just overtake
you, smother you, suffocate you till you die?
I dont think so, Leo says.
I dont mean sex, I say, or even love exactly,
just all that want that wont let go of you, that even if you changed
everything right now its too late already to ever be full?
Leo keeps his eyes fixed on the city which is back out again, the Coit
Tower reaching and leaning slightly like a stack of pepperoni pizza pies.
Until only a few years ago, I used to break into a strangers
house every six months like clockwork, he says. Is that something
like what you mean?
Exactly, I say. A band of fog sweeps down, faster than the
others and takes away the city, even the site of Leos mugging, even
the apartment where Gordon now stays.
When I was eighteen years old I met my parents in Phoenix, Arizona to
watch Penn State play USC in the Fiesta Bowl. Id driven from Ohio,
theyd flown from Pennsylvania, and the three of usfor the
first time evershared my car.
My father wanted me to drive them through the wealthy suburbs, places
with names like Carefree and Cave Creek. Hed been drinking earlier
in the day than usual, they both had, and he got it into his head that
he wanted to see the worlds highest fountain shoot 300 gallons of
water per minute into the parched and evaporative desert air.
We were halfway through Cave Creek, almost to the fountain, when the cop
pulled me over.
Im sorry to bother you, he said, but Ive
been tailing you for four or five minutes, and I have to tell you, I really
dont know where to start.
The cops nameplate said Martin Mad Dog Jenkins. My father
let out a sigh that hung in the car like a fog.
Well, first, Officer Jenkins said, I clocked you going
43 in a 25. Then you rolled through not one but two stop signs without
coming to a safe and complete stop, and you made a right hand turn into
the center lane.
Jesus Christ, my father said.
Youve got one tail light out, Officer Jenkins said,
and either your turn signals are burned out too, or you are electing
not to use them.
Are you hearing this? my father said to the air.
My I see your license and registration?
I left my license in Ohio, I said.
The car was silent.
Give me a minute, then, Officer Jenkins said, and Ill
call it in.
What I dont know, my father said, is how a person
with so little sense of responsibility gets a drivers license in
this country to begin with.
He flicked the air vent open and closed, open and closed. I mean
you gotta wonder if she should even be let out of the house in the morning.
Why dont you just say it, Robert, my mother said. Say
what you mean. Say daughter, I hate you. Her voice started shaking. Everybody
sees it. Everybody knows it. Why dont you say it out loud.
Ms. ORourke? Officer Jenkins was back at the window.
Lets hear it, my mother went on. Officer, I hate
my daughter.
The cops eyes flicked for a moment into the back seat.
According to the information I received, Ms. ORourke,
Officer Jenkins said, you are required to wear corrective lenses.
Thats right, I said.
And you are wearing contacts now? There was something like
hope in his voice.
No sir.
She cant even lie? my father said. About one little
thing?
Okay now, on three, my mother said. Daughter, I wish
you had never been born.
Ms. ORourke, Officer Jenkins said, Im just
going to give you a warning today.
My father bit off the end of a laugh.
Thank you very much, I said.
I hate to say this, Ms. ORourke, the cop said, but
theres nothing I could do to you thats going to feel like
punishment. He held out his hand for me to shake. You drive
safely now, he said, and he was gone.
When the Fiesta Bowl was over, my parents and I drove back up to Carefree
to attend a New Years Eve party given by a gay man my mother knew
who belonged to a wine club called the Royal Order of the Grape. My father
wasnt happy about it, but he was silent. I just wanted to watch
the ball come down on TV like I had every year of my childhood with the
babysitter, but the men at the party were showing home movie after home
movie of the clubs indoctrination ceremony, while every so often
two or three partygoers would get taken to the cellar to look at the bottles
and taste.
When my father tried to light a cigarette he got whisked outside faster
than I had ever seen him move. I was too young to be taken to the cellar,
too old to be doted on, so after another half-hour of being ignored I
went outside to join my father.
The lights of Phoenix sparkled every color below us in the dark.
Lucille, he said, when you get to be my age, dont
ever spend New Years Eve in a house where they wont let you
smoke.
Okay, I said.
Your mother, he said, as he always did.
I know, I said, even though I didnt.
We just dont get love right, this family, but . . .
He paused, and the sky above Phoenix exploded into color, umbrellas of
red and green and yellow. Id never seen fireworks before, from the
top.
Come in, come in, for the New Years toast! Our host
was calling us from the door. I wanted more than anything for my father
to finish his sentence, but he stabbed out his cigarette, got up, and
walked inside. Ive finished it for him a hundred times, but never
to my satisfaction.
We pay the bill and Leo informs me that he has the temporary use of a
twenty-seven-foot sailboat in Sausalito that belongs to a man he hardly
knows. The fog has lifted enough for us to see the place where the sun
should be, and its brighter yet out by the Golden Gate and we take
the little boat out and aim for the brightness, the way a real couple
might on a Saturday afternoon.
Its a squirrelly boat, designed to make fast moves in a light wind,
and Leo gives me the tiller two hundred yards before we pass under the
dark shadow of the bridge. I am just getting the feel of it when Leo looks
over his shoulder and says, It appears we are in a race, and
I look too and there is a boat bearing down on us, twice our size, ten
times, Leo tells me, our boats value.
Maybe you should take it, then, I say.
Youre doing fine, he says. Just set your mind
on whats out there and run for it.
At first all I can think about is Leo sitting up on top of the bridge
running numbers in his head, and a story Gordon told me where two guys
meet up there on the walkway and find out they are both survivors of a
previous jump.
Then I let my mind roll out past the cliffs and the breakers, past the
Marin headlands and all the navigation buoys, out to some place where
the swells swallow up the coastline and Hawaii is the only thing between
me and forever, and what are the odds of hitting it, if I just head for
the horizon and never change my course?
I can hear the big boats bow breaking right behind us, and I set
my mind even harder on a universe with nothing in it except deep blue
water.
You scared him, Leo says. Hes coming about.
The big boat turns away from us, back toward the harbor, just as the giant
shadow of the bridge crosses our bow. Leo jumps up and gives me an Americas
Cup hug. Above us the great orange span of the thing is trembling, just
slightly, in the wind.
We sail on out to the edge of the headlands where the swells get big enough
to make us both a little sick and its finally Leo who takes the
tiller from my hand and turns the boat around. Its sunny as Bermuda
out here, and Im still so high from the boat race that I can tell
myself theres really nothing to be afraid of. Like sometimes when
you go to a movie and you get so lost in the story that when youre
walking out of the theater you cant remember anything at all about
your own life.
You might forget, for example, that you live in a city where people have
so many choices they throw words away, or so few they will bleed in your
car for a hundred dollars. You might forget eleven or maybe twelve of
the sixteen-in-a-row totaled cars. You might forget that you never expected
to be alone at thirty-two or that a crazy man might be waiting for you
with a gun when you get home tonight or that all the people you knowwithout
exceptionhave their hearts all wrapped around someone who wont
ever love them back.
Im scared, I say to Leo and this time his eyes come
to meet mine. The fog is sitting in the center of the Bay like its
over a big pot of soup and were about to enter it.
I cant help you, Leo says, and squints his eyes against
the mist in the air.
When I was two years old my father took me down to the beach in New Jersey,
carried me into the surf until the waves were crashing onto his chest
and then threw me in like a dog to see, I suppose, whether I would sink
or float.
My mother, who was from high in the Rocky Mountains where all the water
was too cold for swimming and who had been told since birth never to get
her face wet (she took only baths, never showers) got so hysterical by
the waters edge that lifeguards from two different stands leapt
to my rescue.
There was no need, however. By the time they arrived at my fathers
side I had passed the flotation test, had swam as hard and fast as my
untried limbs would carry me, and my father had me up on his shoulders,
smiling and smug and a little surprised.
I make Leo drive back by the Palace of the Fine Arts on the way home,
though the Richmond Bridge is faster. The fog has moved in there too,
and the last of the brides are worrying their hair-dos while the grooms
help them into big dark cars that will whisk them away to the Honeymoon
Suite at the Four Seasons, or to the airport to board planes bound for
Tokyo or Rio.
Leo stays in the car while I walk back to the pond. The sidewalk is littered
with rose petals and that artificial rice that dissolves in the rain.
Even the swans have paired off and are swimming that way, the feathers
of their inside wings barely touching, their long necks bent slightly
toward each other, the tips of their beaks almost closing the M.
I take the swans picture, and a picture of the rose petals bleeding
onto the sidewalk. I step up under the tallest of the arches and bow to
my imaginary husband. He takes my hand and we turn to the minister, who
bows to us and we bow again.
Im scared, I say again, but this time it comes out stronger,
almost like singing, as though it might be the first stepin fifty-five
or a thousandtoward something like a real life, the very first step
toward something that will last.
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