a lot o f pride to lie. I wanted; what did I want? I wanted:
freedom. So they are ripping me apart and I smile I say I have
freedom. Freedom is semen all over you and some kinky
bruises, a lot o f men in you and the certainty o f more, there’s
always more; freedom and abundance— m y cup ran over.
There’s a special freedom for girls; it doesn’t get written down
in constitutions; there’s this freedom where they use you how
they want and you say
I am, I choose
,
I decide
,
I want
— after or
before, when you ’re young or when you’re a hundred— it’s
the liturgy o f the free woman— I choose, I decide, I want, I
am— and you have to be a devout follower o f the faith, a
fanatic o f freedom, to be able to say the words and remember
the acts at the same time; devout. Y ou really have to love
freedom, darling; be a little Buddha girl, no I, free from the
chain o f being because you are empty inside, no ego, Freud
couldn’t even find you under a microscope. It’s a cold night,
one o f them unusual ones in N ew Y ork, under zero with a
piercing wind about fifteen miles an hour. There’s no coat
warm enough. I lived in someone’s room, slept on the floor. It
was Christmas and she said to meet her at M acy’s. I followed
the directions she gave me and went to the right floor. I never
saw anything so big or so much. There’s hundreds o f kinds o f
sausages all wrapped up and millions o f different boxes o f
cookies all wrapped up and bottles o f vinegar and kinds o f oil
and millions o f things; I couldn’t get used to it and I got dizzy
and upset and I ran out. I lived with the woman who helped
me when I was just a kid out o f jail— she still had the same
apartment and she fed me but I couldn’t sleep in m y old room,
her husband slept in it now, a new husband, so I slept on a sofa
in the room right outside the kitchen and there were no doors.
There was the old sofa, foam rubber covered with plaid cloth,
and books, and the door to the apartment was a few feet away.
When you came in you could turn right or left. I f you turned
left you went to the bathroom or the living room. The living
room had a big double bed in it where she slept, m y friend. If
you turned right you came to the small room that was the
husband’s and past that you came to the open space where I
slept and you came to the kitchen. The husband didn’t like me
being there but he didn’t come home enough for it to matter.
He was hard and nasty and arrogant but politically he was a
pacifist. He looked like a bum but he was rich. He ordered
everyone around and wrote poems. He was an anarchist. M y
old room had to stay empty for him, even though he had his
own apartment, or studio as he called it, and never told her
when he was showing up. A friend o f hers gave me a room for
a few months in a brownstone on West 14th Street— pretty
place, civilized, Italian neighborhood, old, with Greenwich
Village charm. The room belonged to some man in a mental
institution in Massachusetts. It was a nutty room all right.
T w o rooms really. The first w asn’t wider than both your arms
outstretched. There was a cot, a hot plate, a tiny toilet, a teeny
tiny table that tipped over i f you put too much on it. The
second was bigger and had windows but he filled it up so there
wasn’t any room left at all: a baby grand piano and
humongous plants taller than me, as tall as some trees, with
great wide thick leaves stretched out in the air. It was pure
menace, especially how the plants seemed to stretch out over
everything at night. They got bigger and they seemed to
move. Y ou could believe they were coming toward you and
sometimes you had to check. The difference between people
who have something and me is in how long a night is. I have
listened to every beat o f m y heart waiting for a night to end; I
have heard every second tick on by; I’ve heard the long pauses
between the seconds, enough time to die in, and I’ve waited,
barely able to breathe, for them to end. D aylight’s safer. The
big brown bugs disappear; they only come out at night and at
night yo u ’re always afraid they’ll be there so you can’t help but
see them, you don’t really always know whether they’re real
or not, you see them in your mind or out o f the corner o f your
eye, yo u ’re always afraid they’ll be there so if you see one slip
past the corner o f your eye in the dark you will start waiting in
fear for morning, for the light, because it chases them away
and you can’t; nothing you can do will. Same for burglars;
same for the ones who come in to get you; daylight; you wait
for daylight; you sit in the night, you light up the room with
phony light, it’s fake and dim and there’s never enough, the
glare only underlines the menace, you can see you’re beseiged
but there’s not enough light to vaporize the danger, make it
dissolve, the way sunlight does when finally it comes. Y ou can
sleep for a minute or two, or maybe twenty. Y ou don’t want
to be out any longer than that. You don’t get undressed. Y ou
stay dressed always, all the time, your boots on and a knife
right near you or in your hand. Y ou get boots with metal
reinforced tips, no matter what. Y ou don’t get under the
covers. Y ou don’t do all those silly things— milk and cookies,
Johnny Carson, now I lay me down to sleep. Y ou sit
absolutely still or lie down rigid and ready for attack and you
listen to the night m oving over the earth and you understand
that you are buried alive in it and by the grace o f random luck
you will be alive in the morning— or w on’t be— you will die or
you w on ’t and you wait to find out, you wait for the light and
when it comes you know you made it. Y ou hear things break
outside— windows, you can hear sheets o f glass collapsing, or
windows being broke on a smaller scale, or bottles dashed on
cement, thrown hard, or trash cans emptied out and hurled
against a cement wall, or you hear yelling, a man’s voice,
threat, a wom an’s voice, pain, or you hear screams, and you
hear sirens, there are explosions, maybe they are gun shots,
maybe not— and you hope it’s not coming after you or too
near you but you don’t know and so you wait, you just wait,
through every second o f the night, you wait for the night to
end. I spend the change I can find on cigarettes and orange
juice. I think as long as I am drinking orange juice I am
healthy. I think orange juice is the key to life. I drink a quart at
a time. It has all these millions o f vitamins. I like vodka in my
orange juice but I can’t get it; only a drink at a time from a man
here and there, but then I leave out the orange juice because I