When
you’re on this block, you have one thing in common with anyone else
here: the moment, this moment. Some have lived in it for longer
than you; others’ve just come into it. But you and they and I—are
all in it, for the moment, for as long as we’re here.
Maybe
you really do have to die to leave it. I don’t remember who told
me that. Maybe Adam, maybe mother. Or maybe—like the question you
know not to ask—I learned it simply from being here, just from
being. That’s how Adam and mother left. And the man who fathered
me. The lady whose name I never knew is still here, and Mrs.
Littington, for all that she participated in the gossip, was never
part of it because everybody knew she wasn’t staying. And of
course, after today she’ll be gone again, having flitted into and
out of the moment, the last mother and I will have.
Now,
only now. I’ve been to lots of other places where people lamented
some monument or edifice that once stood in their midst, in their
moment. Then it was smashed, exploded or burned and something else
was assembled in its place. Or maybe the place is left empty. The
people mourn the passing of whatever’d been there before but they
stop remembering it the moment it was gone. No one remembers the
squalid squares in the old railway stations or the drab columns of
office buildings, apartment houses or the local store. Somehow, in
memory, whatever is lost rises into towering arches filled with the
soft, smoky haze of sun through windows high near the ceiling.
Anything—even the moment of this block—can dissipate in that
light.
On
my way back to this block, I passed by the onetime financial center
of this city. Its most famous—tallest—structures were gone,
leveled by what architects, engineers, scientists and those who wrote
and spoke for them claimed their steel-girded glass boxes could
withstand. I called mother when I heard about their destruction.
Just making sure she was all right, even though I knew she’d never
been anywhere near them. Everyone, it seemed, who’d ever seen a
photo of the buildings was calling somebody. Other people’d had to
wait hours to get to one of the phones on the street. Not me—Gail,
whom I’d met while I was still cursing Vivian, slipped a cell phone
into my bag. I didn’t realize I had the phone until the first time
it rang. When the buildings fell, I broke her rule that I use it
only to answer her, and called mother.
Now
I use only cellphones.
I’m
getting away from myself. Those houses of cathode ray screens and
paper, built like a box of drinking straws with the middle straws
removed, were gone. I noticed their absence only because nothing
stood in their place. I recalled how they cast shadows over the
streets, the people, even the other tall buildings around it. But
the fall of those steel beams, and the glass panes shackled to the
fluorescent space around them, did not flood the corners and
alleyways with suddenly-unsealed sunlight. The skyscrapers that
still stood spread over each other and stilted solar pulses through
the channels between offices and cigar stores, the snakeskin-smoothed
sidewalks and the coiled cables of the bridge between that part of
town and the precincts around this block.
“The
Towers,” as everyone called them, were gone. But apart from their
general shape—breadboxes sliced on the ends and sides with serrated
knives—I could recall nothing else about them. Not the details,
scarecely visible on such tall buildings, yet present enough for the
news reports to point out as metalworkers took apart what remained
after the explosions. I vaguely recalled the view from the top, the
end of some trip on a school bus and up a series of elevators with a
bunch of boys who wanted to beat up a “faggot” and a teacher—a
nun who would—could ‘--ve done nothing to stop them. I knew there
was something called an ”observation deck” at the end of the
elevator ride, but it could’ve been a milk crate for all that I
could recall.
It’d
been part f some moment long ago, which might’ve continued to today
had I or the Towers not gone. But the fall was inevitable: the
Towers’ moment wouldn’t, couldn’t, last into this one. Nor
could that moment in which I lived through the births-- and the deaths I
witnessed and helped to cause.
After
mother’s buried, the moment—long as it was—of this block will
end, at least for me. The lady whose name I never knew—I don’t
know. No one else from that time remains here. Then again, the
moment began before Mrs. Littington came to this block, before I was
born, before she or mother were born. And it continued through the
disappearance of the man who fathered me and the day when the police
retrieved a body and gave it my former name.