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But if the question was whether Billy was still sleeping with Gregory Savalas, then the answer was that they had barely slept together in the first place. Billy was a blond boy, on the sturdy side, with a thug/angel thing going, so there was a line of sad bastards queueing at his door; half of them married, most of them in suits. And Billy hated the closet. What Billy wanted was big, shouty unafraid sex with someone who did not cry, or get complicated, or hang around after the orange juice and the croissant. Billy was across the threshold and cheerfully out and he wanted men who were basically like him; sweet guys, who lifted weights and fucked large, and slapped you on the shoulder when it was time to swap around. He did not want someone like Greg — blanked out by the fear of death, neurotic, stalled. There were a lot of neurotic guys in the East Village in those months and years, there were a lot of magnificent guys, and the different personalities that they had are all gone now too.

Greg was the kind of guy who had a hand mirror in the bathroom cabinet so he could check the skin of his back for marks and lesions, and he used this hand mirror, once, twice, six times a day. On two occasions he had to leave the restaurant just before a lunch engagement and run back to work and lock himself in the washroom to strip and check himself over and then dress again and run five blocks so he could arrive at his table on time, sliding along the banquette with a smile while, on his back, the prickle of sweat became the itch of cancer pushing up under the skin.

Of all the signs, the purple bruise of Kaposi’s was the one we hated most because there was no doubting it and, after the first mother snatches her child from the seat beside you on the subway, it gets hard to leave the house. Sex is also hard to find. Even a hug, when you are speckled by death, is a complicated thing. And the people who would sleep with you now — what kind of people are they?

We did not want to be loved when we got sick, because that would be unbearable, and love was all we looked for, in our last days.

So Gregory Savalas, art hustler, dealer, executor, smiles and sweats through two courses and coffee, and when he is back in his tiny gallery downtown and nothing new is coming in — except the imagined lesions on his back — he picks up the phone and he dials.

The people who are at home are mostly sick too, and the people who are not sick do not like being called up during work hours, because these are long and aimless calls full of hints and silences and it is hard to take the solid tension that Greg pushes down the line at you. He used to ring Max who worked in his studio all day, but Max was just so arrogant, and then he died. He used to ring a lot of people. His girlfriend Jessie has abandonment issues — or whatever — she is mad as a snake, these days, so Greg rings Billy up because although Billy is a bit normal, sometimes normal is what you need.

‘Graphics.’

‘Hello, cubicle man.’

‘As I live and breathe.’

And Greg is away. First up he tells Billy that Massimo spent the afternoon in Oscar’s talking over the lighting for his autumn show and this woman came in with four hundred bags and a boy to carry them, turns out she is the Maharani of Jaipur, which is, like, the Jackie O of all India and she has an emerald on her chest that is bigger than your left eye. The bag boy, it turns out, is an actual prince — as in, turban with a plume at the front — and Massimo has bagged him for dinner Thursday night. Greg says he has offered to do a risotto but he can’t find the one everyone liked the last time, the one with the red wine. He says his mother called from Tampa, with an earrings-plus-tracksuit dilemma, and did not mention his father, not once. And when he pointed this out to her she said, ‘Oh for Christ’s sake, Gregory!’

This is all dangerous talk. Words like ‘risotto’ pull at Billy like he is back in his boyhood bedroom in Elk County, Pennsylvania: there are years of loneliness in a word like ‘risotto’. Billy is working on the news today, writing ‘New York Fire Chief in Mattress Hazard Warning’ on his Quantel Paintbox. He uhuh’s and ahah’s and dabs about with his stylus until the risotto effect wanes, while Greg talks and talks and doesn’t ever really get there. Finally, after a small silence, Billy heaves it out.

‘So, how are you?’ and Greg says, ‘I have a kind of pain in my lung.’

‘Oh?’

‘Just, you know, when I inhale.’

‘OK.’

‘Like a stitch.’

‘Well maybe it is a stitch,’ says Billy, knowing that this is the wrong thing to say as well as the only thing to say, waiting for Greg to untangle the silence enough to reply.

‘Maybe.’

You couldn’t put the phone down on a dying man, but in those days we were putting the phone down on each other all over New York, gently, we were extricating ourselves.

‘You need an X-ray, maybe?’

We were letting each other go, back to the various rooms and beds in which we would die — but not yet. Not until we put the phone down. Because nobody ever died on the phone.

‘Maybe. It’s just a kind of catch. Like. . there.’

‘There?’

‘You probably can’t hear — there! — you hear that? You probably can’t hear it over the phone.’

‘You want me to come round?’ says Billy. And because Greg is so difficult these days, he says, ‘Not tonight. I am really behind.’

‘Or go out, maybe?’

‘I can’t go out.’

Of course he can’t go out, Greg has lost his looks. How could Billy ask him to come out?

‘All right. I’m coming round.’

When he was nineteen years old, fresh in from New Jersey, Gregory Savalas fell in love with a gallerist called Christian whose eyes were the colour of ice when it is blue. Christian was an actual Dane who tested as soon as there was a test to take, after which he kept trying to kill himself in a deliberate, very Danish sort of way. Greg never knew what he would find when he opened the door to the apartment. Blood everywhere — Christian bleeding into the bathwater, or bleeding into the Brazilian linen sheets; Christian shaking on the bed, the floor beneath him littered with empty paracetamol bottles, his chin gleaming with bile. Ironically, it took him for ever to die from the disease itself. He wasted and wasted. He trembled under the sponge when Greg gave him a bath and his eyes were stone-crazy chips of blue.

They were in St Vincent’s, on the seventh floor, with the staff in space suits and six different tubes coming out of Christian, when his mother finally showed. Handsome, of course, her blonde hair shading into silver, she hurried over to her unrecognisable son and leaned over his hospital bed.

‘Hey.’

They looked at each other, ice to ice, and whispered in Danish and something happened to Christian. He became human again. He became pure. They gazed at each other for three days straight and then he died.

Greg could recognise, as much as the next person, a moment of grace, but he still thought that death was a big surprise for being the most horrible fuck-up possible. Beyond anything known. Christian was dead and the sight of the living filled Greg with contempt. This was 1986 and the horror was everywhere: your neighbours used a Kleenex to press the elevator button, and strangers shouted ‘I hope you die, faggot!’ when they passed you in the street. Greg found it hard to remember his lover as a person. He spent a lot of time thinking about the sex they’d had and about all the blood he’d mopped up and touched, but the truth was, it was ages before he’d let Christian inside him, it wasn’t really his thing.

That was back in the day, when Gregory the Greek was plump and smooth as a Caravaggio boy. By the time Billy came to town, some years later, on a mission to eat risotto and much cock, Greg was gymmed up and slimmed down, he was almost ‘mature’. They hooked up between the shelves of the bookshop on Christopher Street and tricked in the staff toilet. Then they went for coffee, which was sort of the wrong way around, really. A few weeks later, they spotted each other watching some guys make out at the back of Meat on 14th and Billy nodded to say, ‘Let’s get out of here.’ Which Greg immediately did. Of course.