Jennifer Spiegel

Love Slave


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you come to New York to

      find a pure heart?

      When I first moved to

      Manhattan, a pigeon crapped on

      my head. Settling into the

      Village, everything made me

      very, very nervous. All those

      people, many of them hip. Fear

      of economic opportunity,

      ideological redundancy,

      philosophical paralysis, a

      multitude of fashion no-nos.

      What next? I knew I didn't

      belong. I had no AC and it was

      August. Because my linens were

      still packed, I slept flat on my

      back on a bare mattress— no

      doubt fraught with invisible

      bedbugs and body lice. It was so

      noisy you'd think the St.

      Patrick's Day Parade was taking

      place on a summer night on

      the street below. I missed every

      ex-boyfriend who'd ever cheated

      on me, and I desperately wanted

      my mommy.

      When the sun finally rose on

      that fateful first Manhattan day,

      I went for a walk, determined to

      find the Strand Book Store and a

      good cup of coffee.

      I sat on a bench near the dog

      run in Washington Square Park

      with an okay cup of decaf. While

      I watched the city dogs frolic

      like they were free in the

      Catskills, a pigeon took a dump

      on my head.

      Befuddled and frightened, I

      headed home. I was on the verge

      of tears. New York hated me.

      The dogs were indifferent to my

      suffering. Even the birds

      despised my very presence. I

      trudged off, knowing the crap

      was hardening on my hair,

      knowing a shampoo polemic

      awaited me at home, if home it

      were. I tried to saunter; I

      waddled: crap on the brain.

      Then, the freaks!

      A guy with a stack of pancakes

      tattooed on the top of his bald

      head. Another dude with safety-

      pinned features and a t-shirt

      declaring, "I lie to women." A

      girl in a fuchsia wedding dress,

      carrying a boa constrictor.

      After the deviants, I felt okay

      about the pigeon shitting on me. Suddenly, with all the subtlety

      of a dog with gas, I knew the

      world and all it contains is

      absolutely, unreservedly, and

      utterly about things other than

      me— which made my bout of

      self-absorption seem

      insignificant.

      Freaks say, "You are not the

      center of the world." A good

      freak points a finger at what's

      wrong with society. Freaks

      refuse to participate. Freaks are

      necessarily nonmyopic. Their

      deviation points to that from

      which they deviate.

      If I love freaks so much, why do

      I still go to the Gap? Why do I

      shop at Banana Republic? Why

      haven't I even gotten a tattoo?

      I'll tell you why. I'm a voyeur.

      New York isn't my porn

      flick; it's more like PBS. Like the

      glory days when I lived for

      Sesame Street, I'm learning to

      read. I want to get the

      subversion, the nihilism, the

      rejection. I just want to get it. I

      want to understand the

      landscape and, possibly, stand in

      the space between complacency

      and nihilism. Maybe cowardice

      prevents me from getting a

      tattoo of a stack of pancakes

      on the top of my shaved scalp.

      But the voyeur in me takes

      comfort in knowing someone,

      somewhere, is saying

      something about this old

      planet.

      Send in the freaks. There ought

      to be freaks.

      Oh.

      Don't bother.

      They're here.

      Three -New York Shock

       Still Saturday, January 7, 1995

      Carefully, ever so slowly, the paper falls slack in Rob's lap. It curves over his knee. With grave seriousness, he reaches for my eyes with his. "Freaks keep you here?"

      I look out the window. Greenwich Village looks cold, blustery. The brownstones across the way are beautiful, idyllic, atmospheric. Sometimes I imagine hardwood floors, stair banisters, dried flowers in vases, wood-block cutting boards in kitchens. A wine rack with reds and whites, a big dog, a four-poster bed, an excellent collection of jazz CDs. Sometimes I imagine myself walking down West Fourth pushing a baby buggy. A woolly scarf covers my mouth. The baby wears footed pajamas.

      A man in pink barrettes and a fur coat enters to do his laundry. Kim says hi while Rob and I have this quiet question between us. In the background, Anne Murray sings, You needed me, you needed me.

      "This is my last year in New York," I say. "I'm thirty. I don't want to be thirty-one here." Already, four wiry gray hairs refuse to play the game, refuse to take part in style.

      "I'm thirty-one," he says. "It's fine." He uncrosses his legs. New York Shock settles into its new position.

      "I can't do it; I can't grow old here." I watch the man in barrettes empty a duffel bag.

      "Then why don't you leave tomorrow?" Rob's voice is sardonic and sharp. "Or today?"

      I'm taken aback by the tone of his voice. I've got my reasons. I'm here to be alone, to accept my liabilities,