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    Mercy

    Page 26
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      then you hear this thin thread o f something inside, and the

      words ride on it right or they don’t but if you get the words

      perfect they are ju st right on that thread, balanced just right. I

      can’t really do it though because I’m always tired and I’m

      always afraid. I shake. I can’t quiet down enough. The fear’s

      new. I w asn’t some frightened girl. I’m afraid to sit still. I’m

      afraid to be alone. I’m afraid when it’s quiet. A n y time I

      remember I’m afraid. A ny time I dream I’m afraid. A ny time I

      have to sit still alone I’m afraid. I just got this shake in me, this

      terror; it’s like the room ain’t empty except it’s hollow , worse

      than em pty, like some kind o f tunnel in hell, all dark with

      nothing, a perfect void, I’m part o f the void and the air I’m

      breathing is part o f it and the walls o f the room are the tunnel

      and I’m trapped in a nothing so damned real it’s fixed forever. I

      shake bad when I’m alone. I work on the stories barely able to

      hold the pencil in m y hand. I don’t have no dope to calm me

      down. The shake gets less if I smoke some dope, even a small

      joint. Mentally I concentrate on calming m yself down so the

      shake’s inside but I ain’t trembling so bad in m y body, I’m

      more normal. So I sit for as long as I can, writing words down

      and saying the sentences out loud to m yself and then I start

      speeding up inside with fear and there’s no reason and so I have

      to start calming m yself all over again, I concentrate on it until

      I’m sitting still, not shaking. Then he just came right inside.

      The door opened and he was in. I heard the locks unlocking—

      N ew Y ork locks, real locks, I heard the cylinders turning, but

      I didn’t grasp it, it was just a noise I couldn’t associate with

      anything, and the door opened before I could register the

      sound and he’s there, the g u y’s there, short, dark, w iry, sort o f

      bent but from rage, a kind o f twisted anger in his muscles, he’s

      tied in knots and it twists him all up and he’s raging all over the

      apartment touching things and screaming and it’s him, they

      told me he was locked up, it’s the guy, paranoid schizophrenic

      they said, a very smart guy they said, but out o f control,

      locked up, smart they said, a very smart guy but really fucked

      up in the head, hears things, sees things, paranoid, has

      delusions, and the landlady’s not here and no one’s here to

      calm him down who knows him or to say who I am and he’s

      screaming and I am saying who I am and saying the names o f

      the landlady and his neighbors and saying, oh, they didn’t

      know he’d be back, and I was just here for this second, a few

      hours, a day, and I was just leaving, just now, and he’s

      screaming and he’s hitting the table and he’s suddenly silent

      and staring and he’s between me and m y stuff and I say I’ll be

      back for it and he shouldn’t w orry and it’s all okay and o f

      course it’s his place and I haven’t touched a thing, and I’m

      trying to get m y coat but he’s in the w ay and he’s between me

      and m y laundry bags, and me and m y papers, and I grab the

      coat in a fast ju m p and swoop and I say the landlady will come

      back for m y stuff or he can put it outside and he’s standing

      there rigid and I run, I have the coat, I keep talking, I get out,

      out o f the apartment, out o f the building, down the steps in the

      hall, down the stoop, out, and I’ve got the keys to m y old

      friend’s apartment, m y old peace friend, for the sofa outside

      the kitchen and she got me the loony’s room and she said to

      come back anytime so I turn to her, I’m pretty scared and I’m

      shaking and I’m running and I don’t know if he’s calling the

      police because there’s no one in the building to say who I am or

      that they said I could stay there and I’m running to m y old

      friend’s place and it’s a bitter cold night with the wind at about

      fifteen miles an hour, under zero, the streets are deserted, they

      are bare, and I think well okay, I’m safe, I got out, anybody’d

      be shaking, I took everyone’s word that he wouldn’t be back

      without enough warning, I relaxed, I took things out o f my

      laundry bags, I was there a couple o f months nearly, I mean, I

      never completely relax and I never completely unpack; and I

      w asn’t asleep, thank God, but now I have to figure out where

      to go, and I run to m y old friend’s apartment and I have the

      keys in m y hand but I knock first because maybe she is there

      and she is inside and she asks who it is and I say I am me and I

      say what happened, that the guy came back, showed up,

      opened the door, was in, and I ran and I need a place to sleep

      tonight and it’s, ah, freezing out there, and she says there’s

      someone with her and she doesn’t want me to come in because

      he’s with her and I say okay, fine, yeah, it’s fine, yeah, it’s

      okay, yeah, okay, because you don’t press yourself on

      someone even if they told you always to come to them and

      they gave you keys, they have freedom and if they say no then

      you ain’t wanted there, and I think about saying to her you

      have to do this because I have nowhere to go and nothing and I

      will die out there, this ain’t no joke, tonight’s a dying night,

      but you can’t push yourself on someone and I figure she

      knows that anyway and you can’t count on no one, they will

      let you die and that’s just the truth, and she don’t even open the

      door to see my face or pass me money, she keeps it locked and I

      hear her fasten the chain, and I’m in the hall o f her building and

      I think I can go to Jill’s art opening, it’s all I can think of, a bar’s

      more uncertain, more dangerous, and I can spend at least a few

      hours there inside and there’s people there I know and I can

      find a place to sleep maybe on someone’s floor, I don’t want to

      fuck anyone, I just know I don’t, but maybe I can find

      somewhere, I only got a couple o f dollars and it don’t last long

      and you can’t stay warm through a whole night on it and I

      don’t know anything past I have to find a place to sleep tonight

      and get out o f the cold and I will w orry about the rest

      tom orrow, where to go and what to do, I will think about it

      tom orrow, and I say to m yself that I ain’t scared and so what

      and this is nothing, absolutely nothing, piece o f cake, no

      problem, I’ll just go and have a drink or something at the

      opening and I’ll ask around and the art opening will last maybe

      until two a. m., and then there’s only four hours or maybe five

      until dawn, five really, and I can do that; I can do it; if I think

      four hours I can do it and then after it’s only a little more time

      and there’ll be light; I can do it; it ain’t new and I can do it; and

      probably I can find somewhere to sleep and if I have to fuck I

      will but I don’t want to but so what if I do but I w on ’t; I can last

      through tonight. I’m walking in the wind, it’s like swim m ing

      in the ocean against a
    deep and deadly tide, I’m walking down

      to Soho, the streets are bare and the wind is cruel, just fucking

      brutal cruel, I get about half a block at a time and I try to find a

      doorw ay, warm up, walk as much more as I can stand, the

      wind just freezes you, your chest, your blood, your bones; it

      fucking hurts; it ain’t some moderate pain, it’s desperate like

      some anguish possessing you. Soho’s industrial lofts and.

      galleries and a couple o f bars, there’s long streets with

      nowhere to go, it’s as if the doorw ays disappeared because the

      buildings are industrial buildings and there’s elevators you

      have to use to get inside, not normal doors, the painters living

      there are illegal and there’s no shops or stores to step into and

      Jill’s gallery is w ay downtown, near Canal Street, a long walk,

      and the cold’s hurting me and I’m afraid. M y mind is rocking

      back and forth from I can find someone and if I have to I’ll fuck

      them even no matter what and I can make it from two to six if I

      have to, I can. There’s no bums out, there’s no whores,

      everyone’s folded inside some crease somewhere and anyone

      who ain’t might not live until morning; there’s nights like that;

      and I get there and I take the warehouse elevator up and it’s

      white, it’s a huge warehouse room painted a glossy white and

      there’s all these people dressed in real clothes, you know,

      outfits, for style, and the w om en’s all acting nice and flirty

      with the men and it’s warm and the men’s all acting smart and

      polite and civilized and there’s wine, white wine, and there's

      Stoli and bourbon and ice, and there’s cheese and some little

      pieces o f food, some little sandwiches, tender little things you

      can eat in one bite, yo u ’d be hard pressed to take two, you

      know those funny little sandwiches that are always wet and

      sort o f wilted, and the room ’s so shiny and white and big the

      people almost disappear in it, the ceiling’s so high you feel like

      a little ant, and it seems the people are sparse though there’s a

      lot o f them, they don’t look like the wind got to them but

      rather they’re all polished up, all shined, and there’s paintings

      on the walls, Jill’s paintings, and in the middle o f the room

      there’s Jill but she’s not looking all polished up, she’s sort o f

      gray and miserable, and I say hi and I congratulate her and

      she’s mad and sad and I say well it’s a big deal, really, and your

      nerves are bound to get frayed, aren’t they, and she gets darker

      and stranger, and Paul comes over, and she glowers, and he

      says some pleasant things, and she and he seem to agree that

      the paintings are on the wall and the people are in the room,

      and there’s a certain amount o f tension over this, and Paul’s

      saying normal things like hey have something to drink and

      there’s food, take some, or have some, and I’m saying the sort

      o f foolish things people say about paintings, aren’t they

      strong, aren’t they interesting, haven’t they grown, don’t they

      dominate the room, and it works kind o f like Valium because

      Jill evens out and there’s a small smile out o f one side o f her

      mouth at least and I think I should just walk around and see

      about finding someone I can ask for a place to sleep, and I walk

      around, and I have one drink to warm up because I can’t drink

      because I don’t know what the rest o f the night will be and

      relaxing isn’t in the picture until there’s shelter and I have a wet

      sandwich and I chat with this woman and this man and they’re

      mostly painters and they really all want to say something

      about the relationship, Paul and Jill, not the paintings, so

      there’s this catty, gossipy quality to everything and also it’s all

      secretive because no one wants to be accidentally overheard by

      Jill or Paul and while Jill is staying one place, dead center in the

      room, just standing there by a particularly big painting, Paul is

      all over, behind people, in conversations, introducing people,

      the real host, the scout leader; and he chats with me awhile too.

      But I’m scared, because I know this will end and real life will

      come back. I know the trick’s not to look desperate. I know

      the trick’s to seem as if there’s nothing wrong; w hy the hell do

      you need to sleep on someone’s floor if nothing’s wrong? I

      can’t think o f any plausible reason but I figure it’s not rational

      as such, you know, reasons, it’s attitude, you have to have a

      kind o f calm as if it’s just normal so no one thinks they’ll have to

      give you anything; or care for you. So I make m yself steady

      and I think this is normal and I ain’t so scared as actually I am

      and I think well Jill knows everyone here and she’s m y friend

      so I’ll ask her and I take her aside, meaning just a little o ff her

      mark, and I say I need a place to sleep and is there anyone here

      who might put me up ju st for one night, and she says she’ll

      think about it, and I smile and act as if it’s okay one w ay or

      another and I drift o ff and more time passes, and I’m drinking

      soda and thinking, every second thinking, m y heart beating

      too fast in fear, but outside I’m calm and simple, and Jill comes

      up and says, listen, I’m going home with Paul so w hy don’t

      you stay at m y loft, and I say that’s great, because it is, and I am

      fucking happy, I think even it will be nice, it’s a big place, it’s

      sort o f dark but it’s fine, you know, with a bed on a kind o f

      platform, a mattress really, and it’s really nice, you know, so

      I’m at ease, I mean I am really happy, and I pour m yself a stiff

      drink, a real fine drink, and I’m chatting aw ay like a real

      person, you know, I can’t emphasize enough how m y heart

      slows down and how m y blood stops racing and how inside

      m y head calms down and I’m just a person, not so shiny as the

      others but not scared no more, more like a happy girl o f the

      regular kind, and then, once the adrenaline has subsided

      altogether, I feel how tired I am, I feel how it’s worn me out, I

      feel how cold I got and how I’m just dragged out and

      enervated, weary, and it’s midnight by now , I been at the

      opening a long time, and I think it’s decent to leave, so I go to

      Jill, and she and Paul are holding hands and they are looking

      happy and I am glad there’s a truce and I ask if I could go to her

      loft now , and she’s upset or confused or something, and m y

      heart sinks, but he says, look, I’m going to stay at Jill’s loft

      with her, it’s ju st easier, so w hy don’t you go to m y place, it’s

      empty, there’s no problem, I’ll give you the keys, okay? I say

      things like I don’t want to put you out and arc you sure it’s

      okay and he says what is obvious, I ain’t putting him out

      because it’s a big night for Jill and he’s staying with her at her

      place because it’s ju st better for her that w ay; and I say fine; and

      everyone says fine; and he’s going to give me the keys and

      directions because I’m not su
    re where it is from here and I’m

      waiting for him to come tell me these things, he said he’d write

      them down, and fatigue is dragging me down, and I get my

      coat and he comes and says hell I’ll just walk you there, it’s no

      big deal, Jill’s going to be here for a couple o f hours yet, I’ll

      walk you and come back, it’s just a few blocks away; and I was

      glad because I didn’t want to get lost and I don’t know it

      around here so good and it’s late and the streets are a little scary

      down here, it’s not a regular neighborhood, and the wind has

      made the streets bare and menacing as if it’s blowing dark

      shadows in your face to smother you, and we go out, and it’s

      colder than before, you are turned half to ice and the streets are

      empty, just this naked cement with tides o f wind sweeping

      over it like a sandstorm in the desert, and he says shit let’s get a

      drink, and we step into a bar, we fucking dive into it, grateful

      it’s there, and w e’re at the bar and I’m drinking my Stoli

      straight up and I don’t have no money and I say so because I’m

      planning to pay half because that’s fair and also I don’t want

      wrong ideas communicated or to take advantage because he’s

      a famous painter and he’s saying shit it doesn’t matter, it’s so

      fucking cold we w on’t make it if we don’t take care o f

      ourselves, and we talk about Hem ingway or something, and

      we take o ff again, and we get a little further and there’s another

      bar and we dive in, grateful, and we sit at the bar and there’s

      another Stoli in front o f me and w e’re talking about some actor

      he knows w h o ’s shooting cocaine and he’s saying it’s a tragedy

      and I’m thinking yeah it is; and I’m saying Jill will w orry and

      he’s saying there’s plenty o f time and I’m saying we should

      just brave it and walk to his place and he’s saying it’s Jill’s

      opening and she’s the center o f attention and that’s how it

      should be and it’s good for her, she needs to stand more on her

      own, and he’s proud o f her, and it’ll be fine, and there’s

      another Stoli and another and another bar and another and he’s

     


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