Things fall together
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4 LITTLE BY LITTLE
Household’s still asleep. Scan the Times online. A flurry of articles recently around and about the hundredth anniversary of the subway. Here’s one on the graffiti artists of the ‘70s – whose presence has been expunged from the official records of the MTA. Here’s a picture of Lee Quinones, whose full cars you remember well, in his Brooklyn studio. He stands before a fascinating canvas. He’s still at it, still evolving. “If people are going to live in the dark, I’ll leave the light on for them. The art will explain it all.” Off to Ba Gua in the mauve and green dawn. The Empire State a blank, slate gray, but for the amber crown she wears by night. That’s enough.
November 17 – Le G. – Early Morning So many of your extended family in manifest despair since Bush coup two. Can’t read the papers. Don’t find the Daily Show funny any more. Which makes sense, particularly given that in times like these, satire, instead of stripping power of its mystique lends an ephemeral buzz of self-congratulation to the circular logic of the powerless: See, we’re smarter than those idiots. Yeah, but if we’re so smart then why…? Like a boomerang wide of its mark, the energy of wit loops back on the thrower.
So all around you sense folks falling into a default position, an emotional line of least resistance, a strategy of avoidance. It’s easier, perhaps, less disturbing, to imagine that Bush “won” than it is to acknowledge that the election was rigged, the Democrats went along for the ride and that we in the opposition lack whatever it takes to rise up and jail these bastards.
Thus much time at Writing X last night spent in a kind of grieving cum kvetching session. Some of it had to be aired, but you it let go on longer than you should’ve since it took energy away from work in the room. So easy for the group, yourself included, to collude in dismissing mere writing in the face of stark mad power.
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And then at one point, Marc, who’s been threatening to emigrate to Canada, uttered an aside on Kerry’s rollover that sounded so defeatist and rationalizing you found yourself nearly shouting back, involuntarily mimicking the tone and cadence of Bea’s long-dead cousin Aaron, the firebrand Yiddish Communist: The billionaire is dead – long live the
And how now with these Notes…? Barring any major perturbations in your flightpath, before long you’ll have two books to go out with – this one and the novel. But out into what? Hard to imagine a welcoming committee composed of agents and editors who, even before the great onslaught of fear and literalism routinely found your books “too difficult.” No controlling that. Your job is to keep writing. Even if it’s only for Katie and Gwen. For your own pleasure when you can take it. Fleeting moments of power too, in writing it right. There ain’t no hammer this side of this mountain that ring like mine… Eventually some of the rocks get smaller.
November 20
A scuffle between players during a Pistons-Pacers game in Detroit last night escalated into a brawl with fans in the stands, then a full-fledged riot on the court. What a spectacle: enraged black giants vs. white fatties.
Whatever’s bubbling beneath the surface of the country that’s sent its kids out to claim Iraq for the multinationals – to plant their rifle butts in the backs of others – is beginning to crack through. Uglier and uglier. It all veers into the zone of extreme danger now, very, very fast.
Is it just your own neuroses – you who live in a city of seven-something million Woody Allens – or can you really smell it walking these streets: a stench in the wind. Rank in your nostrils as the meatbox you used to have to scrub out when you worked at the 9th Circle back when you were, what, twenty?
Funny place, the 9th Circle. A West Village venture by the founder of the far more famous Max’s Kansas City. Similar look, white-on-black graphics, cave-like inside and redolent of hip. Grill-based food, excellent steaks, burgers and salads. One of the benefits of working there was definitely the chow. Then someone bought the place, a horrible, hirsute, man-like toad, who made a habit of ordering you, in the nastiest possible way, to scramble eggs for his Yorkie. Despite which you lasted there around
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three months – long-term employment in those days. Until you showed up for your shift and the bartender-manager announced that the Circle was becoming a gay bar – effective immediately. Now, did you want to switch orientations, or find another job? He himself had seized the opportunity and already sported a bandana and earring – the Buccaneer look. Which was something to see since, as a nominally straight fella, he looked not entirely unlike Lee Van Cleef. For an instant he seemed puzzled by your decision, then turned back to inventorying his bottles.
Back then the restaurant business – and from what you can see it hasn’t much changed – cultivated a fine disdain for such niceties as unemployment insurance, two weeks notice or severance pay. Nonetheless, when you walked down the steps and into a balmy late afternoon, you celebrated your sudden liberation from work with an extravagantly expensive take-out croissant and cappuccino from Sutter’s on the corner of Greenwich Avenue. No benches then, but plenty of parked cars, so you hopped up on the hood of the poshest one nearby, reclined against the windshield and drank into your every fiber the fullness of the gathering dusk.
However cynically motivated, the decision to take the 9th Circle gay caught the wave of the changing West Village demographics and downtown culture as a whole. So it turned out, at least in the short term, to be a terrific business decision. The place had always been pretty busy. Now it was packed every evening, and the bar must have doubled its business.
A couple of years later, maybe ’73, when you started driving a cab, you’d occasionally get a backseat full of conspicuously straight guys from out of town. They’d give you some bogus destination, but after about three blocks one of them would lean forward through the partition window and half-whisper: So where can we,
that you and all cab drivers were, then drop them at the 9th Circle. Gesture up the stairs. Go get ‘em fellas, they’re wet for you.
• • •
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to the traditional speedbump of Thanksgiving? Flattened by the great Hummer of marketing. And what’s to be thankful for? Just cut to the frenzy.
The art, in the face of all real evidence, of pretending conditions are the same as they once were. Such as riding your bicycle as though the herds of lunatic, or merely distracted drivers in evermore huge vehicles had never transformed the streets into an exponentially more unforgiving place.
As you pedal toward the café down the east side of Ninth Avenue, you look over your shoulder to see if you can start edging over to your right. Usually it’s a solid wall of rushing cars, but this time, the pack is thin. So you stick out your arm to signal them, and start to cut across the lanes. Two of the three oncoming cars respect your move. But the third, furthest to the right, a slick, black SUV keeps bearing down – won’t give you a break. You signal more emphatically, put on a burst and pass just in front of him nearly overshooting the café. What an asshole.
Slightly wobbly in the knees you lean your bike against the green parking sign pole it shares most mornings with a rusting, abandoned three-speed that’s been chained there since the dawn of the Pleistocene, its basket held on with wires twisted round the handlebars, their ends sticking out and jagged enough to furnish you a nasty scratch if you’re not careful to keep clear of them when you lock up. Wouldn’t it make sense to bend them down? Caught up in your thoughts, the rogue SUV entirely flown out of your head, you sense someone’s presence nearby and turn to see Robert, père de tout les petits Gamins standing next to you, his broad face alive with distress.
“I almost killed you,” he says. “I was on the cell and I didn’t see…” He points to the big black monstrosity parked just down the block. Then you both crack up at the prospect, the miss as good as a mile, the bullet dodged – safe now to laugh about it. “What if I had run over my first customer?” You weren’t really his first, but it makes a better story this way. So print the legend. “I would have to take a handprint of your blood and put it up by your table. Here sat Eric…” On and on spins the yarn. He would have to take the lucky dollar bill down off the wall by the register and rip it up. Still red-faced from laughing, he holds the café door open and in you go.
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Ah, the joys of car ownership – the endless alternate-side-of-the street game that keeps you one jump ahead of sanitation sweepers and parking tickets. One more rhythm, another step added to the dance.
This morning, when you move the car from 24th Street to a new space, you’ll do an urban guerrilla job of it. Back up a dozen yards or so to the corner of Ninth Avenue then, as soon the opportunity permits, swing the tail round into the intersection and shift into drive just as the lights change and the traffic swoops south bearing you along with it. Of course you’ll have to be careful not to back into the path of any oncoming cars or run over pedestrians in the process. And given the increased density of folks on the street and the fact that most of them are walking around utterly out of it, the whole enterprise carries more risk than it did twenty years past in the days of your VW bus. And then too, it’s flagrantly illegal and a cop might nail you. By accident you’ve done this shenanigan right under their noses – not having seen them till afterward – but they’ve either been oblivious or simply didn’t care. Its amazing what you can get away with if you move with deliberate intent and don’t otherwise draw notice.
Silly really, performing this whole maneuver just to avoid blowing a precious New York minute driving across to Seventh Avenue, then down and around. But something in you still relishes the efficiency of the move, and at the same time, the deliberate against-the-grain of it – the imposition of your own micro-choreography on the official dance. When you do this backup trick, it’s executed, if you say so yourself, with great care and impeccable timing. Thought out and acted though, paying full attention.
In general though, road rules are off. Lots of drivers blind to the existence of anything else – man, woman, child or mechanical beast. Who signals before turning any more? Precious few. When changing lanes? No one you’ve seen in a while. And some cyclists, particularly the restaurant delivery guys, have a very bracing “life is cheap” mode of action. Any direction, any surface, any time. Gotta stay sharp or else – voom! – they’re on top of you.
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Apache helicopters you helped pay for, point and click and tear up human beings who have done neither you nor them any harm, you reverse the gray, dinged-up ’91 Taurus Katie inherited from her mom into the intersection and turn it round. Cut across lanes and take the corner by Le Gamin too fast to see who’s at Table 4 or 5. Sweeper JOHNSTON’s just been through – you can see it at the far end of the block, swishing the debris around and wetting it down – plenty of parking spaces available. Nothing to do but sit and wait out the forty-five minutes till the clock makes you legal.
Turn on BBC news. Listen to their species of rationalization. A woman you recognize from the neighborhood approaches, walking her black Labrador. Wife of a veterinarian. Wavy hair, cream white skin, deep brown eyes and astonishingly broad cheekbones. Wide, full mouth – a kind of stillness to her features, yet all components integral in way that suggests a both a mask and a reincarnated beauty from some long- vanished Near Eastern Ipanema. She passes not more than five feet from the side of the car. You don’t wave and she doesn’t notice you there. In your salad days you played drums briefly for a punk band called the Fake Germans – its lead singer and song writer Tim Milk, a brilliant fellow. One of his lyrics described a man’s face through the window of a jet on the runway: “a Napoleon sealed in glass.” You be he.
Every night, if she’s finished her homework, showered and hopped into bed on time, you read Gwen from Kipling’s Kim. There’s a character, Father Victor, a regimental chaplain who shows Kim some kindness. His stock exclamation sticks in your head: “Powers of Darkness below!” You feel them rise up every afternoon when the sun sets, seep through the cracks in the windows, rule your mood until midmorning the next day. And then, a little respite while they take their nap, gathering strength for the next assault.
While you read, Gwen draws. She swears that it calms her, makes her work leap forward. Tough for her to put her pencil down when ten o’clock rolls around. Tough for you to turn out the light over her bed – though her great-grandfather’s glass lamp on the nightstand, with its tiny bulb, stays on through the night.
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Tired. Too tired to write or think. Loads of right-now reading on your plate, all of which you resist. Not so much the subject matter as the contemporary voice itself you can’t face. Whether a friend’s novel, or a Times article on the port, it’s all the same: every word reinforces the moment, nails you deeper into your mood. Instead, you pick up Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds, find your bookmark somewhere in the middle of his chapter on the Crusades. On the march to Jerusalem, Mackay sows this casual footnote:
Go ahead, twenty-first century, beat that. November 26
For Thanksgiving, one stuffed America, self-serving. Dignity-free. Whereas the Ukrainians, whatever their shortcomings, at least have the chutzpah to turn out en masse to contest their stolen election. Granted that the opposition is backed by us. Still seems to be some genuine thermal energy pushing from beneath – an urgency to the protests that, at least from a distance, doesn’t seem entirely contrived.
Early this morning at the café, a happy convergence of personalities. Gary’s there first, then Thomas M. Next Mike, just in from Washington and soon to depart for Texas, after which, most likely Hawaii to write the new novel. Tom too, bound for Vietnam on Monday. As genial a group as could be imagined, all known to one another and primed for conversation. “Ah,” says Clara, delivering Tom’s mocha on ice, “all the boy scouts are back.” And the talk is good, while it lasts.
Slowly, without your taking notice of it, the place has been filling up with people who’ve got Friday off, post-Thanksgiving. Suddenly, the atmosphere goes critical – EEric Darton NOTES OF A NEW YORK SON 582
hysterical – poisonous with cell rings and braying laughter and the two of you find yourselves, on the strength of the vibe alone, nearly precipitated into the street. “Who are those people?” asks Tom, looking back over his shoulder, almost furtively as if he expected to be pursued. You unchain your bike and walk doubletime, trying to put some distance between yourselves and the assaultive mob you’ve just fled. His question is rhetorical. You both know full well they are the clowns and clownettes who snap up the million dollar condos in the new highrises sprouted and sprouting west of Tenth Avenue. You can’t see or hear the cacophony any more, but rather feel, even at the distance of half a block the ravenous energy of these beastfolk as they tear up Le Gamin.
The handlebars feel cold to the touch, but some part of you is too paralyzed or passive to reach into your pocket for your gloves. If it were really freezing out, and not just chilly, maybe that would motivate you.
“We’re out of here in January,” says Tom, “we’re bailing.” “Where will you go?” “Uptown… maybe…”
• • •
More frequently than usual these past days, you revisit certain sinking, nauseous moments, not once, but over and over. Moments that felt, even in realtime, like keys turning in locks, loosing frightful things from their cages. Reagan breaking PATCO – firing all the flight controllers, gambling with thousands of airborne lives – just a breathtaking power play. Flash on a phone call with Larsen way back during Contragate – Oliver North on trial, a Marine colonel assigned to the NSC who’d sold missiles to the Iranians to fund his covert war on Nicaragua. Neither of you generally at a loss for words, but this time, each sentence wandered off a cliff:
“Yeah man, they better convict this motherfucker…” “He better do some serious time…”
drawn: the gap between your revolutionary yout’ and the dawn of a spineless new day. Or else what? Not being prophets, you couldn’t describe the world on the other side of EEric Darton NOTES OF A NEW YORK SON 583
that threshold, nor what exactly hung in the balance. Years passed and now the embryonic words speak aloud: Or else they can get away with anything.
November 27 You come across an arresting idea whose lineage travels back through Giorgio Agamben and Walter Benjamin to Carl Schmitt, a Weimar-era legal theorist. Writing in
every state, its basic sovereign authority, must itself be considered originally and ultimately exempt from the juridical order it enforces. The power that ‘upholds’ the law, must always be in some way beyond the law, ‘exempted’ from it…”
So the “paradox of sovereignty” lives always in a Kafkaesque space where “the force of law confronts the law of force.”
• • •
What were you thinking when you arranged to meet Uwe at Le G. at noon on a Saturday? Completely overrun. You fight your way through to the inside, scan the tables, spot him standing, jammed in near the cash register. First you register his playful fedora, brown with leopard spots. Then his expression beneath it, utterly aghast. A repeat of yesterday, the atmosphere flings you out the door. As you walk south a block to the comparative sanity of La Bergamote, Uwe shakes his head. “Like flies!”
November 28
Sunday, and an absolute deluge for most of the morning. Couldn’t see 23rd Street for the whiteout. Still, moved the car to a better parking space and hit the not- too-crowded Gamin for a coffee. Bad weather keeps most of the locusts at bay.
Back home only few minutes before Kelvin buzzed and came upstairs, half soaked from the torrent, dreads bundled under a jaunty woolen hat. Here to pick up some papers Katie drafted for him. Here’s another first rate, absolutely uncompromising fiction writer whose work is all but unpublishable in the current market. Four novels waiting to go. Ten years past, his second novel fetched a six figure EEric Darton NOTES OF A NEW YORK SON 584
advance. He’s bearing up, posting his fables on his website. By training, Kelvin’s a scientist. You don’t know the details – it was before you met – but in the early ‘80s he worked in the lab at Harlem Hospital, where he developed a new kind of blood test.
How are his kids? Fantastic – fantastic. Doing great stuff all of them, twenty-one at last count, mothered by a succession of highly independent women on several continents. He’s deeply proud of these children, almost in awe of their achievements: this one’s a doctor, another’s a Rhodes scholar, that one’s a rising soccer star. You’ve met several of them and if they are in any way a representative sample, it’s a remarkable set of progeny. Each one carries forward, it seems, some aspect of Kelvin’s brilliance along with his signal trait: ambition tempered by discipline. If he had a coat of arms, that might be his motto, in Latin.
One of his sons, several grades Gwen’s junior, goes to PS 11. So you dropping her off, you’d run into Kelvin there once in a while. Initially Kelvin came off overbearing and blustery, really turned Gwen off. So you gave her the lowdown: he’s an old friend, known him years – since before she was born. When he first meets someone, he tests them to see what they’re made of. Don’t let him intimidate you. Counter his challenges, he can handle it. In fact the only people he respects are those who stand their ground. Next time Kelvin razzed her, she kept her cool, and his response was to extend her the protection of his not inconsiderable powers.
Now, overhearing your conversation, Gwen runs out of her room, down the hall and barrels into him with a nearly overpowering hug. You talk for a few minutes more, but he’s got to go. In the hallway, as the elevator door opens, he wags his finger at her, repeats what he’s said more than once before. “Listen to me, Gwen. Anyone gives you any trouble, you come to me. I’m your nigger.”
For an instant you think, while there’s Kelvin, there’s hope. Does he know you’re as solid behind him as he’s been for you and yours?
• • •
This was it: the most beautiful sunset a city has ever seen. A gift of the heavens powerful enough to shake the faith of the devoutest atheist. First, that incendiary red- gold flashing off the highrise windows, all the facades to the east painted in Grand EEric Darton NOTES OF A NEW YORK SON 585
Canyon chromas. And out your bedroom window, up the Empire State spire, a subtle compliment of iridescent, dragonfly green. It took you a second to think: that’s not the color of the building, those are floodlights. In an hour, it’ll turn saturation kelly, and below that red to mark the approach of Xmas. But for now, solar power plays down any human glow.
Then the glass-reflected embers die and comes the violet oranges to the west atop a bright band to the southwest, almost canary, that passes across the bay, makes a backdrop to the skyline. And then the layered clouds conspire, for five minutes – no more – to form a mock election map, blue on their far surface, liquid red facing toward the sun.
The covering lid of clouds goes mauve now – what Wilde called purple masquerading as gray. And below, the horizontal, once-canary band deepens, bloodens, assumes the palette of Arizona sand and stone and clay. Here they come, moving pinspots traversing the cloud ceiling, darkened except for a ragged blue gray gap: the approaching planes. And moving slowly east, across the southern band, a herd of clouds, treading on the color-demarcated air, as though it was the solid earth itself.
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