another Stoli and another and another bar and another and he’s
putting down ten dollar bills for the bartender and I see the
vodka in front o f me and I drink it, and we talk about
H em ingway, and Ginsberg, and Whitman, and we duck into
another bar, and it’s almost empty, they all are, the weather
makes everything deserted and quiet and we seem like the only
people on earth, really, and the streets get darker, and the wind
gets colder, and the Stoli goes down smoother, easier, faster,
and he unrolls the bills faster, easier, more, and I’m saying shit
I’m tired and I’m telling him m y sad story o f this night and
how I didn’t have anywhere to go and how I don’t have no
money and how things are and he’s concerned, he’s listening,
I’m saying how frightened I was and he’s taking it all in; and
shit I can drink like any man, you know, I mean, I can drink, I
don’t fold, and I say I can outdrink him and he don’t think so
but I fucking do because he stops but he keeps ordering them
for me and I know I’m going to be crashing soon so I’m not
concerned, there’s nothing I have to do but sleep, alone,
warm , inside, and we get to his place and I ask for his keys and
he says he’ll open it because it’s hard and he opens it, it’s a lot o f
locks, it’s locks that slip and slide and look like they have jaw s,
they m ove and slide and spring and jum p, and the door finally
gets open and he says he’ll take me up and inside the door
there’s steps but first he locks the locks from inside, he locks
them with his keys and he says see this is how you do it when
you come in, don’t forget now, and he pockets the keys and I
think I have to remember to get them so when he leaves I’ll be
able to lock the door behind him, it’s unfamiliar to me and I
don’t want to forget, and then there’s the steps, these huge,
wood steps, these towering flights, these creaky, knotted
steps, these splintery steps, there’s maybe a hundred o f them,
it’s so high up you can’t see the top, so you go up the first
twenty or something and there’s a big, em pty room, more like
a baseball field, it’s not like an apartment building where
there’s other people on the first landing, there’s no one there
and it’s em pty, and there’s another twenty or thirty steps and
it’s knottier and there’s holes in the middle o f the steps and
you’re trying to get up them without looking like a fool or
falling and there’s another floor that’s some cavernous room
with canvases and boxes and it’s brown, all brown, stretched
canvases and paintings wrapped in brown paper for shipping
and huge standing spirals o f brown twine like statues and
brown masking tape and these vast rolls o f heavy brown tape,
the kind o f tape you have to wet and you use it to reinforce
heavy boxes, and there’s brown boxes, cartons, unfolded and
folded and there’s brown crates, it’s a kind o f dead brown
room, the air’s brown, not just dark but brown as if it’s
colored brown, as if the air itself is brown, and the walls and
the floor and everything in it is dull brown and it’s not a room
in the normal sense, in the human sense, it’s more like an
airstrip, and you keep climbing and then there’s this next
floor, it’s big like a fucking commercial garage or something
and it’s completely covered in paint, oil paint, you could park
a hundred cars in it but the whole floor is thick with dried red
paint, oil paint or acrylics you know, like the blob’s all dead
and it died in here, the paint’s fucking deep on the floor, it’s
shocking pinks and royal blues and yellows so bright they hurt
your eyes, I don’t mean the floor is painted like someone put
paint on a brush and used the brush to paint the floor or a wall
or something, it’s more like the paint is spilled on gallon after
gallon, heaps and heaps o f it, it’s inches thick or feet thick, it
dries hard and sticky, you walk on it with trepidation thinking
you will sink but it’s firm, it gives a little but it’s firm, it’s dry,
it’s like an artist’s palette like you see in the movies but it’s a
whole real floor o f a room as big as a city block and you walk
on it like yo u ’re outside in the hills walking on real ground
that’s uneven and it’s been wet and you sink in some places or
at least you expect to, the earth’s higher and lower by inches
and you got boots to help you find your footing, your feet sink
in but not really, the ground just gives a little and it ain’t even,
you don’t fall but your footing ain’t sure, but it’s paint, not
earth, paint, it must be a million paint stores all emptied out on.
the floor and then rising from the paint, from the thick, dried,
uneven, shocking paint, there’s canvases and there’s paint on
them, beautiful paint, measured, delicate by contrast, esthetic,
organized into colors and shapes that have to do with each
other, they touch, you see right aw ay that there is meaning in
their touch, there’s something in it, it’s not random, it’s too
fine, almost emotionally austere, your heart sort o f skips a beat
to see how intelligent the paint is, you look up from the chaos
o f the paint on the floor to the delicacy o f the paint on the
canvas and I at least almost want to cry, I just feel such sorrow
for how frail we are. I just had never seen it so clear how art is
about mortality, finding the one thin strain o f significance, a
line o f sorrow, the thread o f a meaning, an idea against death,
an assertion with color or shape as if you could draw a perfect
line to stand against it, you know , so it would break death’s
heart or something. I can see w hy he wanted to walk me
through this because it’s his paintings, precious to his soul.
Y ou w ouldn’t want some stranger rooting around in it; or
even touching it. Y ou have to go through the whole room, the
whole distance o f it, its full length, to get to the stairs that take
you to the top floor where he lives. I keep being afraid I’ll sink
in the paint but I get to the stairs and they’re normal, ju st wood
stairs, even, sanded, finished, with a bannister, and I climb up
after him; it was different N ew Y ear’s Eve, soft and glow ing,
with grand tables and linen and crystal. N o w it’s pretty
empty, big, vast really; there’s a big blow heater hanging from
the ceiling and he turns it on and it blows hot air out at you, it’s
like being in a hot wind, it dries the air out, it’s a m usky,
lukewarm , smelly draft, and he puts it on higher and it’s like
being in a hot wind, warm but unpleasant, an awful August
day with a wind so steady and stale that the air pushes past