In New York, they call police
stations precincts. You and I went to
the precinct. Well, we went to my
designated precinct, which happened to be in East Harlem. So we took a taxi deeper into Harlem than I’d
ever been. There was a Christmas tree at
the precinct. It was decorated in silver
and blue tinsel. You commented that the
Christmas tree at your office looked worse.
I realized that this was the first Christmas tree I had seen this
season. Beside the tree was a box for
donating coats for the homeless. It was
a miserably cold night. And the cold
seemed to have followed us into the precinct, where we sat on a concrete bench,
behind a metal gate, beyond which were office desks, police, and the Christmas
tree and the box of coats. The cold felt
like it was coming up out of the concrete bench, up through my coat and my
jeans and into my bones. I shivered and
said to you that when this was over we should donate coats. I knew we each had old but still perfectly
warm winter coats that we no longer needed.
I had every intention of doing this, as I said it aloud. I was convinced it would feel good to help
someone else – warm, maybe it would feel warm.
A man
sat down beside us on the concrete bench and asked if we knew the time. I checked my phone and told him. He was shivering too. I wondered what he was there for. I was there for you. At least, you were the only thing in the
world that would ever inspire me to call a Special Victim’s Unit Detective,
take a taxi into Harlem, and go to a precinct to attempt to report a rape. I didn’t need to have it on record. It was already in me. There were bruises on my skin. That was enough.
What I
needed was for someone to lie in bed and hold me, someone to go with me to the
movies and tell me jokes and laugh even when I told bad ones. I needed someone to look at the bruises on my
hip and hug me until I felt comfortable enough to cry. You had cried two nights before. And I suspected you had cried more than that,
when I wasn’t there to see. You had said
you couldn’t go on as long as the person who did this got away with it.
And so
there we were, at the precinct, waiting to talk to the detective. It was exactly two weeks before
Christmas. I think you thought reporting
the rape would make it better. I didn’t
think so, but I wanted you to be better.
I also wanted you to hold me at night, instead of turning onto your side
and whimpering and demanding not to be touched.
I wanted to be touched. I wanted
to be normal and pretty and happy and not raped.
You
held my hand as we sat waiting for the detective. I was rambling, telling stories about my
childhood, Christmas, whatever came to mind.
I have never been comfortable with silence.
The
detective was a large, sturdy, Irish woman with a shaved head and a single
pierced ear. She led us through the
metal gate, passed the Christmas tree and the box of coats, past the desks and
the police officers who didn’t even look at us.
I looked back at the man who had asked me for the time, before we turned
a corner into a stairwell. Upstairs, we
came to a room that was familiar even though I had only ever seen such a place
in movies. It was one of those small
windowless, wall-to-wall concrete rooms with a single florescent light hanging
from the ceiling, where detectives question people (suspects?). She told you to wait outside.
Inside,
the room was oppressively hot. The
detective sat at a small folding table.
I sat across from her. She told
me she had heard about my case from the nurse that had been on duty when I went
into the ER three nights earlier. I felt
betrayed by the nurse. I felt like the
detective had judged me even before I had decided to report the rape. And as I set about telling her what had
happened, I began to feel like any sense of strength or righteousness I had
left was being put on trial. She asked
me to tell her everything I ate the day of the rape. She said I didn’t eat enough carbs. She asked me how much I drank. She said repeatedly, “I like to party
too.” I stared at her earing, her shaved
head. I pictured her in a Metallica
t-shirt and acid washed jeans with a gage in her ear. I pictured her doing lines. Before going to the precinct I had put on my
pearl earrings and changed into my new cashmere sweater, because I thought it was
important to dress respectably when reporting a crime.
The
detective told me how things would proceed if I decided to go ahead with
pressing charges. She told me she would
take my case, but that I had a little to no chance of winning it. She told me again, “As a woman, I
understand. I like to party too.”
I wanted a drink.
She told me to take the rest of the week to think about
what I wanted to do and then to call her Sunday afternoon. It was Wednesday night. She gave me her card and I slipped it into my
wallet.
I think
I already knew I wouldn’t call her. I couldn’t call her. And I think I knew too that my choice not to
call her would mean the end of whatever was left between me and you. Or maybe it had already ended. Maybe it had ended the second you saw the
nurse in the ER draw vials of my blood or saw her collect my underwear as
evidence. Or maybe it had ended long
before that and that’s why you couldn’t bring yourself to roll over in the
night and hold me and I couldn’t bring myself to go through with pressing the
charges for you. Or maybe you couldn’t
hold me because it hadn’t ended and that’s why this hurt you so much. And I just couldn’t press the charges no
matter how much you said you needed me too, no matter how much I loved you.
In the
taxi that was taking us away from the precinct and Harlem and back to my
apartment, I told you that I needed a drink first. I told the driver to stop at Eighty-Eighth
and Third. I told you I wouldn’t be able
to sleep without something to calm me.
What I meant was that I knew better than to expect you to calm me. Also, I think I wanted to delay the
inevitable moment of watching you crawl into my bed and turn away from me onto
your side and insist your stomach hurt and that you needed to be left alone. After which I would lie down beside you and
watch you and think about how this hurt more than anything else.
On the
taxi ride to the Italian restaurant where we were going to go sit at the bar, I
kept making sarcastic comments about how the detective had told me that she too
liked to party. I hated her. And I hated myself. There wasn’t enough hate left over for the
person who put me in this mess in the first place. That was the problem.
The
look on your face and the feeling that hovered between us when I told you I
couldn’t go through with pressing charges broke my heart. And not in a cliché way. It really broke my heart. It made me sure that I would never be capable
of loving anyone as much as I had loved you ever again because this hurt so much
that it really did cause something in me to break.
At the
Italian restaurant we sat at the bar. I
ordered a glass of Pinot Noir. You ordered
a Peroni. The old Italian bartender was
watching the Knicks game on TV. You
pointed out Woody Allen sitting courtside.
Woody Allen was our first shared loved and our lasting one. If I had any faith left, I would have thought
it was a sign or a small gift from God.
I commented that Woody Allen says that if he could choose between never
watching sports again and never watching another movie, he would choose
sports. (Something about how sports are
the real theater, maybe?) I didn’t have
it in me to recite my favorite Woody Allen line from Annie Hall about how life is divided into two types of people: the
horrible and the miserable. And the
horrible are the death, the blind, the terminally ill. And the miserable is everyone else. “You’re lucky that you’re miserable,” Woody
Allen tells Diane Keaton’s character as they stand in a bookshop where he has
just discouraged her from buying a cat book.
I thought
then that I should take you to see Woody Allen play his clarinet at the Carlyle
next Monday night. I thought that would
be a chance to un-break everything. I
pictured myself wearing a new dress and you seeing me as beautiful again, as
opposed to someone who has been bruised.
I pictured you smiling.
But we
wouldn’t go to the Carlyle to see Woody Allen Monday night because I had to go
to my last graduate class ever. Though,
really, the class seemed so trivial to me at that point. Everything seemed trivial except for the
bruises on my skin and the look on your face.
I ordered
a second glass of wine. You had another
beer. We weren’t talking, just staring
at the TV and listening to the people at the end of the bar converse. They were discussing existential
philosophy. One of them said she read
Camus in college.
The
wine was heavy. I felt a bit light
headed. I wished I hadn’t felt I needed
it. I don’t want you to agree with the
detective, that this is all my fault because I like to party. I didn’t want
you to look at me sipping my Pinot Noir, wishing it was magic, and see a sad,
stupid woman who drank gin and tonics and went out dancing and then woke up burning,
sore, scarped and bruised. I don’t want
either of us to think about choices. I
don’t want you to think what I think, that regardless of how it happened, I
betrayed you.
Back in
my apartment, you and I laid in bed. You
sang Frank Sinatra, “My Way.” And you cried. And so did I.
And when you fell asleep, I sat up in bed and watched you. In the morning I watched you walk down the
stairs until you turned a corner and disappeared.
I don’t
think you need to spend a lifetime with someone to share a lifetime worth of
love with them. But maybe I’m wrong. Maybe you just felt bad for me and I was just
pathetic and so you did what you thought was your duty until you felt you had
done enough. But I still think that
loving is the only chance anyone has at redemption for the choices we make and
what the world makes of us.
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