The Art of Passivity

“Are you gonna be here the next few minutes?”

I look up from grading research papers, the late ones, the worst ones, the ones written hurriedly or were plagiarized, the long, undocumented paragraphs reading like Walter Isaacson, because they could be Walter Isaacson.

 

Given the abrupt ending to this young man’s life, I wanted to impress on these 16 and 17-year-olds that Horace’s ode had it right: don’t bank on next winter, but rather prune your trees today.”

A shorter, younger, thinner Lance Armstrong wearing a two-day shadow stands in front of me. Flip-flops, Bermuda shorts—or what passes for them today—green sweatshirt, and burgundy baseball cap with an intricate letter logo looking like a T and an S having excellent sex. He is one of maybe 150 passengers waiting at the gate to board the Southwest Airlines flight from Buffalo to Chicago. Before standing, he had been sitting in the last seat in the row perpendicular to ours, two arm lengths away.

“Um, yeah,” I say. I mean, where am I going? My wife, Tia, has just left for the restroom, and we’ll be boarding in ten minutes. She left me guarding her purse and our seats, so I’m stuck here.

“Would you mind keeping an eye on my stuff?” He holds up a lime-green translucent tube. “I just want to go fill my water bottle.”

Without thinking (it’s a habit), I bark, “Sure,” a Golden Retriever trying to please, happy to fulfill expectations, wanting to be liked.

Then he is gone, and I’m staring at what he left for me to guard, his stuff so close I could kick the pair of shiny white running shoes tied to the gray, bulging backpack leaning against a navy blue duffle bag named “Niagara University.”

It takes ten seconds for me to realize there might be a bomb inside any or all of the items, including the shoes. What I’ve done is exactly what a terrorist would ask me to do if he or she wanted to plant an explosive in the Buffalo airport. How many times have squawky admonitions in stations and airports insisted, “Report any suspicious activity to authorities;” “Be vigilant;” and “Wake up and smell the fucking roses.”

Most people today have learned not to ask strangers to keep an eye on unattended bags, and most people have learned not to accept that responsibility. Unaccompanied bags are the modus operandi of low-incentive terrorists like the Boston Marathon bombers. My diminutive Lance Armstrong looked and behaved like he kept up with today’s terrorist zeitgeist, which suggested he was no naïve, long-distant runner who needed to fill his water bottle, but a fanatic bent on drawing an unsuspecting American into his demonic plan.

My imagination’s x-ray vision inspects the backpack and duffle bag and sees hundreds of nails ready to spray across the room, on a cell phone’s launch. Like steel sparks exploding outward from a bursting firework, they spear the flesh and bone of my fellow passengers waiting to board. I turn to look for Lance so I can retrieve him, but he’s vanished, confirming he’s ISIS or Taliban or kook. He successfully picked out the biggest dupe, recognized by his thinning, snowy, Robert Frost hair, button-down shirt, khaki pants, and white canvas tie sneakers. “This moron will accede to anything,” Lance surely sized me up. “He’d conform to the will of a goat.”

The question becomes not “Are there bombs about to explode?”, but “What do I do now?” I go over my options quickly, as who knows when he’ll detonate his artful packages?

Option 1: Sit there and wait for the bombs to go off. I like this option. My death will be quick and painless. Unless, I concede, 3,000 nails find my calves and thighs to nest in, leaving me a paraplegic.

Option 2: The right thing, the correct thing, the legalistic thing: March over to the woman behind the desk who prepares to board us. “You might want to check those bags for bombs,” I’d tell her. What then? Flight delay or cancellation. Robots and/or dogs brought to check the suspicious articles. Stuck for four hours in a neon-lit, two-way mirrored room where TSA agents interrogate me about why I agreed to watch a stranger’s bags, leading to a possible criminal record.

Option 3: Take Tia’s purse and my backpack and seek refuge behind the nearest wall, hoping it’s a supporting wall that won’t disintegrate upon a percussive impact, and listen for the explosion from a position of relative safety. I tell myself this is a coward’s way out, a selfish act of self-survival, a throwing over of my fellow passengers. Additionally, this scenario has me shirking my duty, going back on a promise that, even given to a terrorist, is still a promise that I’d keep my eye on his stuff. And what if I missed Tia coming back from the women’s restroom, only to have her sit by the danger, worrying where I’d gone, the first to receive the bomb’s deathly deliverance? I’d feel really bad.

I run the options through my mind again and again. Which to choose? I turn around again, hoping to see Lance striding back, water bottle filled, a smile on his face thanking me silently for my vigil. But he’s nowhere in sight, confirming his diabolical plan. I have to decide. Do I do what’s easiest, what’s right, or what’s selfish?

If you’ve stayed with this me up to now, surely you guessed that I do nothing. Yes, I continue to sit there, ready to be deafened, then filled with lead or obliterated into shreds smaller and less meaty than shaved beef.

Nonetheless, one benefit results. Three minutes earlier, grading research papers had been drudgery worse than pouring hot tar, but now, simply being alive and not in pain, what once felt like a chore has turned boon; I don’t exactly indulge in the pleasure of grading papers, but it’s better than dying ignominiously.

Of course, a few minutes later Lance returns, his water bottle brimming. Without saying “Thanks,” he sits back down, and I continue grading. When Tia comes back and Lance gets up to board, I’m too ashamed to tell her what just occurred. Not until the next morning, when we’re in the kitchen getting ready to leave for our respective teaching jobs, do I reveal the story.

“That was stupid,” she affirms, then adds speculatively, “maybe he was an undercover TSA agent doing research on how gullible people are. Or maybe he really was a terrorist testing out ploys to get people to watch their stuff.” Then she asked, “Did he get on board the flight?”

He did, I answer. I know for sure he did, because during the flight I had to stand in the aisle while a woman by the window went to the bathroom. Looking at the other passengers, I discovered Lance a few rows back, his burgundy hat still riding his head, the TS or ST logo still a mystery.

That day, in my high school English classes, I tell them the story. They like it because it’s self-deprecating, and who doesn’t like hearing their teacher behaved like an irresponsible coward? But I also tell it because I want to stress the theme of carpe diem. A popular senior at our school was killed the Friday before in a freak parking lot accident, the very day we’d left for Buffalo for our daughter’s graduate school graduation. He’d been riding on the running board of a large, slow-moving SUV when the driver turned sharply. The kid fell off, and given a hundred ways he could have fallen and walked away with scrapes, he landed on his head, was airlifted to a nearby trauma center, and died that Monday morning.

Earlier in the year we’d read the Romantics, Thoreau and Emerson, along with Jon Krakauer’s Into the Wild. We watched Robin Williams wow his classes in Dead Poets Society reciting “To His Coy Mistress,” impressing students with life’s brevity. Recently we’d covered the Modernists, William Carlos Williams urging readers in his American vernacular to notice red wheelbarrows glazed with rainwater beside white chickens, to listen for the gong of fire engines, and to taste the delicious pear while eating it. Given the abrupt ending to this young man’s life, I wanted to impress on these 16 and 17-year-olds that Horace’s ode had it right: don’t bank on next winter, but rather prune your trees today.

In my honors English class, when I get to the part about Lance’s mysterious logo on his baseball cap, kids started searching online possibilities and holding up their finds.

“Like this?”

“No.”

“Like this?”

“No.”

“Is it like this?”

A boy sitting in the front row holds up his screen. I glance down, and there’s Lance’s burgundy hat and logo.

Thrilled, I yell, “What is it?”

“Florida State.”

I study the F, so shrouded by the baroque S that its lower staff gets lost, leaving the impression of a T. Mystery solved.

“If he’s from Florida State,” another student queries, “why’s he flying from Buffalo to Chicago?”

Better to leave an essay with at least one question unanswered, leaving the reader wanting more, asking more.

Richard Holinger’s work has appeared in The Southern Review, The Iowa Review and Boulevard His collection, Not Everybody’s Nice, won the 2012 Split Oak Press Flash Prose Chapbook Contest. He writes a newspaper column, teaches high school, and facilitates a writing workshop.

Unbroken

I pull into the park district lot, rain pelting against the windshield, and as usual there are no
spaces available near the building entrance so I make a bee line toward a spot at the far end
where I’ll tuck in next to a hulking black Suburban displaying both a Wisconsin badger logo and
a tiger-striped Princeton decal leading me to wonder if badgers and tigers could coexist, but
meanwhile I inch into the space cautiously because the car flanking my passenger side has its
door propped open as an old man rummages around in the back seat, so I heave my tackle box
filled with oil paint out of the wayback and wrestle with the giant canvas which I have wrapped
in plastic to shield it from weather and prying eyes, but just as I place everything on the wet
pavement in order to dig out the repurposed diaper bag that holds my brushes, rags and
turpenoid, the old man next to me starts talking which is a little disconcerting because I’d really
like to get inside before the wind whips up further and turns my canvas into a sail, but I pause
because my mother always taught me to be kind to strangers unless they were old men in cars,
but this guy isn’t beckoning me near with the promise of a Snickers bar so I wait as he sifts
through his belongings and announces, with his head buried in the trunk, that he’s a little
nervous because he’s never been to an art class before and since I am the only one within
shouting distance I assume the comment is directed at me, so I wait there, bag straps
crisscrossing my body, a cartoon character disappearing beneath a pile of luggage, but I ask
him if he needs help getting oriented and although he just keeps to his running monologue I
take that as a ‘yes’ as the rain begins to drip off the tip of my nose, and when finally, he has
gathered himself and emerges from the depths of the vehicle a little discombobulated but
holding one small box and a large plastic bag, we trudge along side by side heading toward
the building until I veer off the path finding a hidden side door, a shortcut, and prop my body
against the door jam as my companion hobbles into the dry back corridors of the rec center, I
find myself assessing his stamina to see if he can make it up the flight of stairs to the art area
directly above us or should we walk the length of the building to the elevator, but based on his
incessant chatter I judge his lung capacity to be sound and, by extension, the rest of him, so I
encourage him up the stairs while he chats about his dog and his daughter in Cleveland, and
by now we are within spitting distance of our goal and as I throw my body against the last door, I
can feel the pull of the classrooms just a few feet away but my companion is now shouting a
wheezy question as he mounts the stairs, asking me if I like to read which makes me smile, I
hope in a kindly way, as I marvel at how this guy is chock full of non-sequiturs but I reply that
yes, I do like to read, at which point he pauses on the stairs and I fantasize about jettisoning
my hundred pounds of oils and repositioning the diaper bag strap which is threatening to wear
a permanent groove in my shoulder but he is leaning heavily against the handrail while yanking
a book from his plastic bag, and he pulls himself to the top step where he extends his hand
saying here, you might like this and I heft the hardcover copy of Unbroken by Laura Hillenbrand
and say a silent prayer of thanks that he hadn’t handed it off at the base of the stairs, and think
that he should keep this expensive item for himself, but no, he’d received three copies recently
for his birthday, causing me to wonder why so many had deemed it the perfect gift, could it be
his connection to that time period? – and, if so, had I just led a 95-year-old World War Two vet
on a forced march up a flight of stairs just to save myself the interminable walk to the elevator,
so I wince a little not just because I have now lost all feeling in my right arm, but also because I
blame myself for doing what was expedient, but at long last we are standing in the corridor with
the art room doors flung wide in welcome, so I ask him what class he’s taking and usher him to
the threshold and as he enters he turns, making eye contact for the first time, thanking me
for being so kind, as I cradle his book in my arms.

Jane Donaldson grew up in Cambridge, Massachusetts and currently lives in Wilmette IL. This is her first published piece which was written as a response to a one-sentence prompt.

Flat-Bottomed Canoes of the New River

I never wanted to share the dawn.  This slow August sunrise on the New River belonged to me.  Patterns in the moving fog spoke a language beyond words.

As a child, I resented the old boatmen.  These figures, clad in gray, standing in their long, narrow, flat-bottomed river canoes, silently poling, reminded me of the great blue herons that also rose out of the mist, but unlike the herons they suggested that the river was never entirely mine.

The emergence from the heavy fog of the unstable river canoe’s square prow numbers now among those sights that will not come round again.  The last of the old boatmen are gone.

I wanted the river to myself.  I wanted to know the river as it was before the hundred years of abuse, before the mining, before the dams.”

These men poled their boats of weathered wood up and down the river for profit, hunting the giant flathead catfish, using mostly smallmouth bass for bait, a practice outside the law.  By my time, the frog gigging, the duck hunting, and the trapping largely belonged to the past.  In my youth, I shared the dawn with the last of these gray clad figures as I cast for smallmouth bass.  Sometimes I caught enough for a meal, but nothing I brought home came close to a paying wage.

I stood outside the store near the bridge when Mr. Fowler, the last of his kind, carried in a nineteen-pound walleye.  He dressed it just before he sold it.  The toothy monster’s heart pulsed in the open hand he extended forward to the crowd gathered around him.  He didn’t speak.  He couldn’t.  He was mute.  Boys and sometimes grown men tried to follow him to find out where he hunted or fished only to lose him. I wasn’t one of those who followed.  Somehow I always knew that the lessons of the river couldn’t come to me in that way.

The sight of Mr. Fowler crossing the river bridge on his rusted bicycle toward where he moored his boat under an ancient sycamore was an almost daily backdrop for my early years.  The people called him “Dummy” because he couldn’t speak.  Maybe they resented that he knew things they couldn’t.  I always thought of him as Mr. Fowler, not that I ever bothered him.  He was just there.  Burton, who ran the store, and bought the occasional fish, never said what he paid for the great walleye, but I knew the small exchange couldn’t have been worth the life lost.  I couldn’t imagine killing the great fish just to sell it.  That was years before I had any understanding of deep poverty.

I wasn’t there for Mr. Fowler’s last day on the river.  He fell face first in the shoreline mud and couldn’t get out.  He would have died if my youngest brother, Joe, hadn’t found him and taken him home.  His daughter told Joe that he was ninety-nine years old.  He never came back to the river.

I wanted the river to myself.  I wanted to know the river as it was before the hundred years of abuse, before the mining, before the dams.  I grew up fishing with layabouts, bums, moonshiners either just out of prison or on the river for a period of drying out as they rested the worst of their alcoholism.  Names came back: Jerry, Doc, Tookie, all trying to take something from the river because that’s all they knew.

I spent more time with Jerry than any of them.  I wasn’t ten the day he had a flathead catfish as long as the bed of his Ford pickup truck.  I asked him if it could be a state record.  Why a person could care about such a thing, or would want such attention was beyond Jerry.  Attention meant revenuers.  Attention meant jail.   He didn’t weigh the catfish.  He ate it.

The old boatmen are gone.  In my time I have taken fish from the river, killed ducks and geese, but mostly it was like this morning.  The little spinner I cast made small rings as it broke the surface in those seconds before the tiny impression disappeared in the current as I cast to empty waters.  No feeding frenzy of the small bass began with this dawn.  My time here will make no more impression on the river than my little spinner touching its surface.

No one much now knows how deep every hole is, or where the bottom is sand or solid rock, or tracks how the riverbed changes every time it floods, or knows where the underwater springs bring in cooler water where fish sometimes lay.  These old boatmen loved the river in a way that is no longer known.

Echoes in the fog bring voices.  I have this moment, alone with what it was like before.  The sun will come soon enough.

Edd B. Jennings runs beef cattle on the banks of the New River.  His work has appeared in a couple dozen literary magazines in the past year.

Tending Imaginary Sheep

“Mama, can you help me shear my sheep?”

Although we live in a big city apartment, my three-year-old is blossoming into a fine imaginary shepherd. Equipped with a pair of red plastic tongs, he gently coaxes his herd out of the dining room and into the kitchen where we work together to snip wool from each member of his sheep family. We scratch them behind the ears and nuzzle their wet noses. They baa, giggling when we tickle their tummies. We diligently load the invisible wool into his small plastic dump truck, sending it off to be spun into imaginary yarn.

Longing to share his purposeful concentration, I commit myself to sheep shearing. In the privacy of our kitchen, I allow myself to become unselfconsciously, luxuriously absorbed.”

As a writer, I understand how deeply satisfying it is to be completely absorbed in an invented world. As a mother, I’m honored to be invited to tend my child’s imaginary flock. It means he trusts me to take his creative work as seriously as I expect adults to take my own. But also there is a special purity to his endeavor. While I must stay focused on my final product, he is free to be blissfully process oriented.

At three, my son has yet to internalize the adult concept of time. He is gloriously unburdened by my grown-up notion that time must be spent productively. Flow, the deeply satisfying feeling of being immersed in the creative thought process, is immediately accessible to him.

Longing to share his purposeful concentration, I commit myself to sheep shearing. In the privacy of our kitchen, I allow myself to become unselfconsciously, luxuriously absorbed. But I cannot hold back the passage of time. Church bells confirm that evening has arrived. The baby cries to be nursed, dinner must be cooked and dishes are piled high in the sink. Practical concerns always seem to invade our creative space just as we hit our imaginative stride.

Putting an end to our play is painful for both of us. My five-minute warning functions only as a premature interruption, turning a sweet moment bitter by disrupting our suspended disbelief. I attempt to keep playing even as I nurse the baby while pulling ingredients out of the fridge. But the jig is up. I’m no longer a carefree shepherd and we both know it.

“The sheep are tired now. It’s their bedtime.” I suggest, hoping for a graceful exit. “No, it’s not.” My son whispers, betrayed. I’ve broken the spell and let my rushed tone, my real world urgency shatter his calm. Poof, the sheep evaporate, our happy moment of focused cooperation along with it.

Imagination is the mechanism by which children explore the mysteries of the world, making important connections and discoveries. We adults, even those of us in creative fields, can easily sabotage our imaginative potential when we undervalue process in our rush to work more efficiently. But serious thought, especially creative thought, requires blocks of focused time.

This is a need I want to honor in my children. But often I find myself modeling just the opposite, for instance pestering my son with urgent demands when he is deeply engaged in imaginative play. He’ll be attentively tending a feverish teddy bear and I’ll step right into the middle of it, ordering him to put on his shoes and socks, “Right now!” When he doesn’t switch gears immediately and jump at my orders, I lose my patience and snap unkindly. Conflict escalates — calm evaporates. Remorse comes tumbling after.

My discomfort with slowness, guilt about time wasted or unproductively spent makes me fret if I’m not doing multiple things each moment I’m not truly maximizing time’s potential. It’s not for lack of knowing better. I have read  about the downside of maternal multitasking. When we multitask we subject ourselves to an increase in negative emotions, stress and feelings of conflict. Yet, there are places to be, chores to complete, deadlines to meet and commitments to honor. How then can I teach my children to move gracefully between their creative pursuits and practical responsibilities?

The glimmer of an answer comes with my son’s favorite question, “Can I help?” He stands atop a wooden chair next to me at the kitchen counter, peeling carrots. I hold them steady while he carefully positions the peeler. Orange ribbons dance to the cutting board in long fluttering strips. He laughs, delighted. His eyes have that same look of intense concentration he gets when we are shearing our sheep. He works deliberately, gaining confidence with each turn of his wrist. I tune out my peripheral thoughts, slow myself down and join him in the flow.

Hallie Palladino is a playwright and essayist. Her most recent essay Gather the Stars appears in The Point Magazine and her plays have been featured in Idle Muse’s Athena Festival, PFP’s LezPlay and Something Marvelous. She has performed at a numerous Chicago live lit venues including Tuesday Funk which she co-founded. She lives and writes on the north side of Chicago.

 

Through the Wall

I had been the only English-speaking tenant in my building for almost five years when my New York story happened.

I remember that day in early spring when I walked to my tiny rent-controlled apartment in Chinatown to find two men standing rigidly, like posed mannequins on the stoop, on either side of the giant orange gate that served as the door to our building. No one ever hung out on those steps, so I knew they were cops of some kind even though they were in plain clothes. I now understand how the TV cops on reruns of Law & Order always get “made” by street punks and seasoned criminals.

It was true. My building was like a ghost town. I rarely saw other tenants in the halls.  Out of 20 apartments, I only recognized three people.”

As I approached the gate, I did not acknowledge them, but the one on the right, a stalky, five-foot-five-ish Asian, held out a piece of paper with two mug shots on it and said, “Have you seen these men in your building?” The other cop, a six-foot, skinny Caucasian, at least as tall as me, stood idly by, seemingly uninterested.

I briefly studied the sheet in front of me, and said, “No, I haven’t. Sorry.” I reached for my key to unlock the gate.

He must have thought I was blowing him off because  in an air of disbelief, he said, “You mean to tell me that you’ve never seen either of these people?” and stabbed his petite forefinger at the picture on the left side of the page. “He hardly looks like anyone else in the building, so you should’ve seen him.”

As far as I knew, I was the only person of color in my neighborhood who did not live at the housing projects down the street. I didn’t know whether to be insulted by the insinuation that the black guy in the photo didn’t “belong” in our walk-up or not.

I looked down into the cop’s face for the first time. “Seriously, I’ve lived here for nearly five years now, and I barely know what the lady across the hall looks like. So, I wouldn’t know if they’ve been in the building or not.”

It was true. My building was like a ghost town. I rarely saw other tenants in the halls.  Out of 20 apartments, I only recognized three people.

The woman across the hall from me was old. I saw her peek through her cracked door once when I gave her a package that was accidentally delivered to me. As far as I knew, she never left that apartment. The only thing I was sure of was that once in a while someone who I assumed was her son would stop by, and that she didn’t start watching TV until 2 am on weeknights. I would hear the same Chinese soap operas blaring through the insanely thin wall we shared, because she was most likely half deaf and slept through the daylight hours.

The woman farther down the hall would stop by my apartment with her baby on her hip and plead with me in very broken English to call the landlord because she had no heat and her baby was cold. I couldn’t stand the thought of a child suffering like that. Who could? So, I would always say, “I know! I definitely will,” nod profusely, and immediately call 311 and the landlord in rapid succession, even though I had already done so earlier the same day. I had no heat or hot water either, but I chalked it up to the price of cheap rent. I would deduct money from the eleven-hundred-and-change for each day heat was absent, and my landlord never had an issue with this. He was an Italian man in his late 30s who lived in Jersey. Oddly, I had a good relationship with him, but it still took him two years to install a new boiler. The point is, I knew what that lady looked like only because I answered the door for her. She lived on the same floor, but I didn’t even know what her husband looked like. I suspected he was a raging alcoholic and most likely a wife beater from what I could gather from the sounds emanating from their apartment. I was constantly tormented about when to call the police. Their baby cried constantly. They led a miserable life. But, I couldn’t have identified him in a lineup or otherwise. I had never seen his face.

The only other person I could even begin to recognize, was the new girl upstairs. She was the second non-Chinese tenant in that building and had moved in a few months prior. She was a Swedish woman, also in her mid to late twenties, with an out-of-date blond bob identical to that of Chynna Phillips in the 90s. I met her on the stairwell. She was carrying a bag of recycling down to the dumpster when the flimsy plastic ripped. Empty handles of liquor and beer bottles flew in every direction as they hit the stairs and bounced unpredictably like Plinko chips. I helped her to gather them for two flights down, and we introduced ourselves. Her name was Inga. After that, I would occasionally say hi to her on my way in or out of the building.

The cop looked me up and down, and decided to give up the fight, so I unlocked the gate and went up the four flights of stairs to my apartment.

It was an unusually hot summer that year, and Inga had a slew of people coming in and out at all hours nearly every single night of the week. With windows open and the music blasting (a mixture of alternative and classic rock – my kind of music – so I never complained), I could hear them as they came in, as their conversations got progressively louder and stranger in what I believed to be drunken, coked-up rants. I figured that because of the frequency of revolving individuals, someone was most likely dealing out of that apartment. And, because I had served a month on the jury of a murder trial for a drug deal gone wrong the previous year, I always half expected a shootout and a stray bullet to tear through my walls, CSI style. That summer, LCD Soundsystem lyrics looped endlessly in my head: New York, I love you/ But you’re bringing me down. I also half expected that one day the woman down the hall would bring her limp, lifeless baby to me and actually beg me to call the police— Like a death in the hall/ That you hear through your wall— in the back of my mind, both of us were somehow the foregone casualties of wayward urban violence. But, of course, those fears were only minimal and never strong enough to warrant moving out.

In late September, I was awakened by loud pounding on my door. It was daybreak, but my windows were on the backside of the building where the bricks of six adjacent structures smashed together to form a perpetually dark cubby with cement and weeds below. It was still dark. The banging continued though, so I jumped out of bed and went to the door. I looked out of the peephole and saw four men in black vests. They had guns. It’s possible that the logos on their gear read FBI, but that could just be another TV memory now implanted in my brain. I recognized the two furthest as the cops from the stoop incident. I cracked the door with the latch, and chain still attached.

“Who is in there with you?” the knocker said, holding what I assumed was his badge, which also may have read FBI.

“No one. Well, I mean it’s just me and my cat.” I said this more out of confusion and sleepiness than concern for their presence.

“I don’t believe you. Open up, we’ll need to search.”

“Okay, you won’t find anything in here.”

I opened the door. One agent swooped in and looked around. “Where is he?” another said.

“Where is who?”

“I bet he’s in the tub. Check the tub,” he said to the one wandering around my 400-square-foot apartment as if a hidden room would somehow magically appear.

In that moment, watching this stranger poke around in the bathtub, under my bed, in the closet, under the kitchen sink— Who could fit in there?— I thought of Inga and the long hot summer. I also thought about how often people miscount the number of flights in pre-war walkups.

“You may actually want to be upstairs,” I whispered to no one in particular as I pointed to the ceiling above me. “I think that’s who you’re looking for.”

The agent at the door looked at me with the tiniest flash of panic, “There’s another floor above this one?”

Then, the thick static of radios: Chrrrchrrr… “I can see him on the floor through the back window. Where are you?” This had to have come from someone stationed on the roof of the building on the opposite side of the courtyard.

Before I could process what was happening, they tore up the stairs, one saying “We’re going in now!” through the radio on his chest. The agent in my apartment ran past me through the door and slammed it so hard on his way out that it hit the latch and swung back open. There was no apology or acknowledgment of me. I stood in my open doorway. My cat must have been hiding, because he didn’t try to make his usual daring escape. All I heard next was the thud of a door, unintelligible yelling and a lot of shuffling of feet. One very audible, “Get up!” and then more shuffling. New York you’re perfect/ Don’t change a thing. I closed the door; my alarm clock went off, and I got ready for work.

When I arrived back home that evening, I went up the extra flight of steps to find that yellow police tape had been strung in a giant X over Inga’s apartment door. It was like that for a couple of weeks until the apartment was released by the authorities, and my landlord decided to “renovate” it by removing the wall that made our tiny units one-bedrooms. He later explained to me that he had replaced the wall with a small glass partition because he thought a studio would appeal more to the influx of hipsters moving into the neighborhood.

A month later, he rented that apartment out for more than three grand, and within a few months later there were several more renovated apartments in our building with English speaking tenants who introduced themselves to me in the halls, which they frequented regularly.

That’s when I moved out.

M. P. Nolan is an English professor and writer of identity-driven poetry, creative non-fiction, mystery, and academic texts. She is the author of Stratification. For more information visit www.mpnolan.com.