Blackout_ Remembering the Things I Drank to Forget
order. I had lost so many things that fall in New York. Sunglasses. Hats, scarves, gloves. I could have outfitted an orphanage with the items I left behind in taxicabs. But what amazed me was how many things I did not lose, even when my eyes had receded back into my skull. I never lost my cell phone. I never lost my keys. I once woke up with the refrigerator door flapping open but my good pearl earrings placed neatly beside the sink, their tricky backs slipped back onto their stems. Part of this was simple survival. You could not be a woman alone in the world without some part of you remaining vigilant. I was a woman who tripped over sidewalks and walked into walls, but I was also a woman who, at the end of the evening, held on to her valuables like they were a dinosaur egg. How did my purse get in my room? This new evidence was forcing me to reevaluate the story I’d already settled on. I suppose I might have dropped the purse off on my way to the guy’s hotel room. But a side trip like that was a serious break in the action that didn’t track with a drunk’s impulsive style. The more likely scenario is that I went upstairs first, decided my room was entirely too quiet, and then headed back to the bar for company, leaving my purse behind. A woman locking up her diamond ring before she leaps into the sea. I called the front desk. “You’re never going to believe this,” I told Johnson. “My purse is in my room.” “I told you this would work out,” he said. “And you were right.” I changed into my pajamas and curled into a fetal position under the covers. An empty bed had never been so divine. Maybe I should have been relieved, but I had the haunted shivers of a woman who felt the bullet whiz past her face. Now that my crisis was resolved, I could start beating myself up for the ways I had failed. All that I could have lost. This was a familiar crouch—staring at the ceiling at 3 am, lashing myself. Such a wretched place to be. Alone in the dark, with your own misery. The phone rang. “I found a leather jacket in the bar,” Johnson said. “Do you think it’s yours?” And here comes the part of the story I wish I didn’t remember. JOHNSON STANDS IN my doorway. He’s so tall. He must be six two. My leather jacket is draped over his arm like a fresh towel. I stand there with my hand on the door and wonder how much to tip him. “Can I come in?” he asks, and there is not an ounce of me that wants him inside my room, but he was so helpful to me earlier, and I can’t scheme quickly enough to rebuff him. I step back from the door and give him entry. I’m still thinking about the tip. Would five euros be enough? Would a hundred? He closes the door and walks to my bed. It’s not far from the entryway, but each step breaches a great chasm. “You broke my heart when you cried earlier tonight,” he says, sitting down on the mattress. He’s only a few feet from me, and I remain with my back pressed against the wall. “I know, I’m sorry about that,” I say, and I think: Who is manning the desk right now? Are we going to get in trouble? He leans forward on the bed, resting his elbows on his knees. “I was thinking, a beautiful woman
like you should not be crying,” he says, and puts out his hand for me to take. I’m not sure what to do, but I walk over to him, as if on autopilot, and let my hand hang limply against his fingertips. “You are very beautiful,” he says. I blink and breathe deeply through my nostrils. Fucking Christ. It is a compliment that makes me want to wither away. I have spent years chasing after compliments, with the ridiculous hope that every man in the universe would find me beautiful. And now a man arrives at 3:30 am to tell me I have succeeded in my pathetic, girlish hopes and dreams, and I want to crush him. I want to scream. “Thanks,” I say. “I saw you Saturday night when you came in,” he says. I stare at the floor, wondering how to get my hand back. I’m not sure what makes me angrier: that he will not leave, or that I will not ask him to. For the millionth time, I’m enraged by a man’s inability to read my mind. Look at how I’m standing here. Can’t you see how revolting I find you? “I’m glad I could take care of you,” he says, and he brings my hand to his lips. “Johnson, I’m really tired,” I say. “It’s been a really long day.” I want him to leave so badly my stomach aches. I think: If tell him to go, he’ll probably stand up politely and walk out of the room without saying more than a few words. So why don’t I? Do I feel I owe him something? That I can’t turn him away? That he’ll be mad at me? What do I feel? He pulls me toward him, and we kiss. The kiss is neither bad nor good. I consider it a necessary penance. I can’t explain it. How little I care. Zapping back to my life in the middle of sex with a stranger seems to have raised the bar on what I can and cannot allow. All I keep thinking is: This doesn’t matter. All I keep thinking is: It will be easier this way. He tugs me toward the bed, and my body moves before my brain tells it differently. I let him run his hands along me, and he strokes my hair. He kisses my nose, now wet with tears he does not ask about. He moves his large, rough hands over the steep slope of my fleshy sides, up along my breast, nudging down my top and gently sucking on my nipple. And the confounding part is how good this feels. It shouldn’t feel this way. My skin should be all bugs and slithering worms. But the truth is I like being held. I like not being alone anymore. None of this makes sense in my mind, because I don’t want to be here, but I can’t seem to leave. I don’t understand it. What accumulation of grief and loneliness could bring me to this place, where I could surrender myself to the hands of a stranger? Who is this person in the hotel room? And I don’t mean Johnson. I mean me. We lie in the bed, and he strokes my face, my body. I can feel him hard against me, but he never asks for more. At 4 am, I push Johnson out the door. I climb into my bed and cry. Huge howling sobs, and I feel a small amount of comfort knowing the story exists only in my memory bank and that I do not need to deposit it in anyone else’s. This whole episode can stay a secret. REAL DRUNKS WAIT and watch for the moment they hit bottom. Your face is forever hurtling toward a brick wall, but you hope that you can smash against it and still walk away. That you will be scared but not destroyed. It’s a gamble. How many chances do you want to take? How many near misses are
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order.<br />
I had lost so many things that fall in New York. Sunglasses. Hats, scarves, gloves. I could have<br />
outfitted an orphanage with <strong>the</strong> items I left behind in taxicabs. But what amazed me was how many<br />
things I did not lose, even when my eyes had receded back in<strong>to</strong> my skull. I never lost my cell phone. I<br />
never lost my keys. I once woke up with <strong>the</strong> refrigera<strong>to</strong>r door flapping open but my good pearl<br />
earrings placed neatly beside <strong>the</strong> sink, <strong>the</strong>ir tricky backs slipped back on<strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong>ir stems.<br />
Part of this was simple survival. You could not be a woman alone in <strong>the</strong> world without some part<br />
of you remaining vigilant. I was a woman who tripped over sidewalks and walked in<strong>to</strong> walls, but I<br />
was also a woman who, at <strong>the</strong> end of <strong>the</strong> evening, held on <strong>to</strong> her valuables like <strong>the</strong>y were a dinosaur<br />
egg.<br />
How did my purse get in my room? This new evidence was forcing me <strong>to</strong> reevaluate <strong>the</strong> s<strong>to</strong>ry I’d<br />
already settled on. I suppose I might have dropped <strong>the</strong> purse off on my way <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> guy’s hotel room.<br />
But a side trip like that was a serious break in <strong>the</strong> action that didn’t track with a drunk’s impulsive<br />
style. The more likely scenario is that I went upstairs first, decided my room was entirely <strong>to</strong>o quiet,<br />
and <strong>the</strong>n headed back <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> bar for company, leaving my purse behind. A woman locking up her<br />
diamond ring before she leaps in<strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> sea.<br />
I called <strong>the</strong> front desk. “You’re never going <strong>to</strong> believe this,” I <strong>to</strong>ld Johnson. “My purse is in my<br />
room.”<br />
“I <strong>to</strong>ld you this would work out,” he said.<br />
“And you were right.”<br />
I changed in<strong>to</strong> my pajamas and curled in<strong>to</strong> a fetal position under <strong>the</strong> covers. An empty bed had<br />
never been so divine. Maybe I should have been relieved, but I had <strong>the</strong> haunted shivers of a woman<br />
who felt <strong>the</strong> bullet whiz past her face. Now that my crisis was resolved, I could start beating myself<br />
up for <strong>the</strong> ways I had failed. All that I could have lost.<br />
This was a familiar crouch—staring at <strong>the</strong> ceiling at 3 am, lashing myself. Such a wretched place<br />
<strong>to</strong> be. Alone in <strong>the</strong> dark, with your own misery.<br />
The phone rang.<br />
“I found a lea<strong>the</strong>r jacket in <strong>the</strong> bar,” Johnson said. “Do you think it’s yours?”<br />
And here comes <strong>the</strong> part of <strong>the</strong> s<strong>to</strong>ry I wish I didn’t remember.<br />
JOHNSON STANDS IN my doorway. He’s so tall. He must be six two. My lea<strong>the</strong>r jacket is draped over<br />
his arm like a fresh <strong>to</strong>wel. I stand <strong>the</strong>re with my hand on <strong>the</strong> door and wonder how much <strong>to</strong> tip him.<br />
“Can I come in?” he asks, and <strong>the</strong>re is not an ounce of me that wants him inside my room, but he<br />
was so helpful <strong>to</strong> me earlier, and I can’t scheme quickly enough <strong>to</strong> rebuff him.<br />
I step back from <strong>the</strong> door and give him entry. I’m still thinking about <strong>the</strong> tip. Would five euros be<br />
enough? Would a hundred?<br />
He closes <strong>the</strong> door and walks <strong>to</strong> my bed. It’s not far from <strong>the</strong> entryway, but each step breaches a<br />
great chasm. “You broke my heart when you cried earlier <strong>to</strong>night,” he says, sitting down on <strong>the</strong><br />
mattress. He’s only a few feet from me, and I remain with my back pressed against <strong>the</strong> wall.<br />
“I know, I’m sorry about that,” I say, and I think: Who is manning <strong>the</strong> desk right now? Are we<br />
going <strong>to</strong> get in trouble?<br />
He leans forward on <strong>the</strong> bed, resting his elbows on his knees. “I was thinking, a beautiful woman