thinking I’m okay, I’m inside, I’m okay; I’m thinking I will
take out m y notebook and w ork, sit with the words, make
sentences, cross words out, you hear a kind o f music in your
head and you transpose it into words but the words sit there,
block letters, just words, they don’t sing back, so you have to
keep making them better until they do, until they sing back to
you, you look at it and it moves like a song. Y ou hear it
m oving, there’s a buzz on it and the buzz is music, not noise; it
can be percussive but it’s still lyrical, it sings. It’s a delicate
thing, knowing when it’s right. At the same time it’s like
being in first grade where you had to write the words down
careful in block letters and you had to make them perfect;
because you keep trying like some six-year-old to make the
words perfect so they look back at you and they are right, as if
there’s this one right w ay and it sits there, pure and clear, when
yo u ’re smart enough, finally, to put it on the page in front o f
you. I always want to run away from it: putting the words
down, because they’re always w rong at first and for a long
time they stay wrong, but now the cold night keeps me in, the
wind, the killer wind, I sit on the cot, I m ove m y papers to the
tiny table, I get out a pencil and I find some em pty paper, and I
start again, I begin again, I have started again over and over
and tonight I start again, and I hear the words in m y heart. I
came back with two laundry bags, like canvas shopping bags.
I carried them on the plane. T hey were m y laundry bags from
when I was a housewife. One has manuscripts and a couple o f
books. The other has a sweater and some underwear and a pair
o f pants. I don’t have anything else, except a fairly ragged skirt
that I’m wearing, I made it m yself with some cheap cloth, it
has clumps and bulges and I’ve got a couple o f T-shirts. I think
the manuscripts are precious. I think you can do anything if
you must. I think I can write some stories and I think it doesn’t
matter how hard it is. I’m usually pretty tired by night but the
nights are long and if you can write the time isn’t the same kind
o f burden; the words, like oxen, pull the dark faster through
time. I think it is good to write; I think perhaps someday I
might write something beautiful like
Death in Venice
, something just that lovely and perfect, and I think it would be worth a person’s whole life to write one such thing. I have an
invitation to go to Jill’s art opening, her first show ever. It is a
big event for her. Girls don’t get to have shows very easy, and
some people say it is because o f Paul; she’s resentful o f him; I
tell her it doesn’t matter one w ay or the other, the point is to do
it, just do it. I feel I should go but I don’t have clothes warm
enough for this particular night. I walk everywhere because I
don’t have money for subways, I walk long distances, I took
m y husband’s warm coat when I left— it’s the least you can
give me, I said, he was surprised enough when I grabbed it that
he didn’t take it away— it’s a sheepskin coat from Afghanistan
but it doesn’t have any buttons so you can’t stay warm in bad
wind— it’s heavy and stiff and it doesn’t close right and if
there’s bad wind it rips through the opening; I was running
away and I wanted the warm coat, I knew it would last longer
than money, I was thinking about the streets, I was remembering. And he gave me some money too, took some change
out o f his pocket, some bills he was carrying, handed it to me,
said yeah, take this too. It was maybe what you’d spend on a
cheap dinner. I wanted his coat. I was leaving and there was
m y coat and I thought about having to get through one
fucking night in m y coat, a ladies’ coat, m y wife coat, tailored,
pretty, gray, with style and a little phony fur collar, a waist, it
had a waist, it showed o ff that you had breasts, and I thought,
shit, I w on ’t live through one night in that piece o f shit, I
thought, I’d better have a real coat, I thought, the bastard has a
real coat and yes I will risk m y life to get it so I grabbed it and at
first he didn’t want me to have it but I said shit boy it’s a real
cheap w ay to end a marriage and he could’ve smashed me but
he didn’t because he wanted me out and he looked at me and
said yeah take it and you don’t wait a second, you grab it and
you get out. I never was sorry I took it. I slept on it, I slept
under it, I wrapped it around me like it was m y real skin, m y
shelter, m y house, m y home, I didn’t need to buy other stuff
for staying warm , I wore a cheap T-shirt under it, nothing
else, I didn’t have to w o rry about clothes or nothing like that;
but tonight’s too cold for it, there’s nights like that, wind too
bad, too strong, no respite; tonight’s too cold. I think I’m
going to sit still, sit quiet and calm, inside, in a room, in this
quiet room, w ork on m y story, cross out, put new words
down, try to make it sing for me, for me now, here and now,
in m y head now. T hey say Mann was a bourgeois writer. I
never saw it myself. I think he was outside them and I
wondered how he knew when it was beautiful enough and
when it was right. It seemed you had to have this calm. Y ou
had to be still. I think it’s this funny thing inside that I’m just
getting close to, this w ay o f listening, you can sort o f vaguely
hear something, you have to concentrate and get real still but
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