I
distinctly remember that day when we went to the MET. I was wearing the red
strapless dress that I thought was flattering at the time. The one that looked
like a rug with its vaguely paisley, somewhat floral pattern. I remember
because I had volunteered to teach a kindergarten class in the Bronx for a day,
and one of the little girls in the class grabbed the fabric just below my hip
and gave it a firm tug, nearly pulling my (almost unfortunately) strapless
dress down a lot lower than I was prepared to handle. “I really like your
dress!” I remember that I had been in kindergarten that day because as I
started to come up on whatever the fuck you put in those pill casings, I was
thinking about how fucked up it was that I had spent all day teaching
kindergarteners about saving money and family values, and now I was sitting on
a park bench with you grinning, as we watched tree bark shift and wiggle along
its trunk. For me this was new. For you this was familiar. I couldn’t negotiate
that.
We took the pills at the MET because
it was air-conditioned and we would wait a while to start coming up. We sat in
the open room with the Egyptian temple in the middle, surrounded by wishing
fountains. I love that room because it feels both foreign and familiar. It
happened slowly. Slow enough to forget what I had swallowed, but you wouldn't
forget. “Do my pupils look dilated?” You kept yourself busy, checking the time
every few minutes, trying to gauge your physicality in your reflection on a
tiny cell phone screen. I sat still.
It started and we got up. We went
outside and walked across Central Park at a pace that was brisk; refreshing but
uncontrollable. It wasn’t a whopping 96 and humid anymore; it was perfect
outside. We had energy in our bones and a mutual understanding that the city
was ours now. We also had nowhere to go. So we headed to your house on 78th
Street. Your grand, lonely-looking apartment that I had visited on multiple
occasions. No one was home but your parakeet was calling out from its cage in
the kitchen, “Don’t forget about me!” We ended up on your couch, watching White Chicks on TV.
Your mom came home fifteen minutes later… half an hour
later?… an hour later? I remember she started talking to you and you were eager
to answer. I thought about the other times I had been there and you had ignored
her completely, or she had ignored you. It was hard to tell. I started to talk
and got self-conscious in the middle of a sentence. I was worried she would be
able to tell that our conversation was bridging two very different worlds. You
were so calm though, I don’t think she noticed. Now I wish that she had. I wish
she had screamed at us and kicked me out of her house. But she just turned and
walked into the kitchen.
You got us up abruptly and we took to the streets again. We
headed uptown towards my house even though I didn’t want us to be there. If I
had been alone, I would have moseyed up the street and stayed out until the sun
set and the air cooled down, allowing the heat trapped in the sidewalks to rise
up all around me. But you were never one
for strolling so we sped up to the taco place between 107th and 108th
and Amsterdam. We sat at a tiny table for two and ordered guacamole and chips.
We may have sat there for an hour relishing in the refreshing mixture of
avocado, onions, and hot peppers.