staring, I laughed and said, âI know this person.â You said, âLet me see where you work.â
I didnât really want to take you inside. We passed two desks and I had to introduce you: âThis is my friend, Tom Murphy.â
â Friend? âyou said loudly.
I hated that you had caught me in my office personality.
You wouldnât sit on the visitorâs chair in my little cubicle. You went to the window and frowned out at the view. You wanted to get me out of there, to have me come downstairs.
I tried to explain I couldnât do that. Secretaries didnât just leave the premises unless it was lunch hour. Itâs a rule everyone understands about work, but as I tried to explain it to you that day, I suddenly felt you were right. It made no sense. Why couldnât a person go where they wanted to?
âCome on,â you said roughly and pulled me up off my chair and I had to walk out with you. We went down in the elevator to some hamburger place off the lobby where there were no customers because it wasnât lunch hour. We sat in a torn, gloomy booth and you said very sadly, âI feel terrible. I put you in that place. Wasnât it me that put you there?â By then Iâd realized that youâd been drinking. I asked you what was going on. I said, âWhere did you get that awful suit?â
âOn the Bowery,â you said. âFor seven dollars.â
âForgive me,â you said, taking my hand, though I didnât know what I was supposed to forgive you for. âThis has been a significant day,â you said, and when I asked you why, you told me it was because youâd finally gotten yourself a job, just like me. Market research. âYou didnât think Iâd do it, did you?â
So that was the reason you got the suit. âAll us working fuckers got to look the same.â
IV
Chrystie Street
Summer 1962
11
A T THE CEDAR , everyone was talking about a sculptor who was quitting, giving up art. Others had quit, always very quietly, but the way Howard Stricker was going about it was odd and spectacular. Heâd been building a boat in his studio, a twenty-five-foot catamaran. He planned to launch it in the East River in a few weeksâ time. Then he was going to sail it by himself all the way down to Key West. He said he would live on rice and fresh fish. What he was going to do with his life after he reached Key West he never told anyone. People hadnât paid much attention to Howard Stricker before. They didnât exactly admire him now, but they were awed by his craziness. No one believed the boat would float. A bullet would be faster, one painter said.
Leon said we should definitely look at Howard Strickerâs studio, which was downtown on Chrystie Street between Grand and Hester, just around the corner from the Bowery. He said heâd seen it and it was cheap and big and that Howard Stricker was said to be looking for key money so he could finish his pontoons and leave on schedule. Tom called him one evening and he told us to come over.
Howard Stricker had worked in stone and had stubbornly kept sculpting the human figure as if he lived in some century of his own. He was forty years old and it was said heâd never sold one piece. I donât know whether his work was good or bad, because when heâd decided to build his boat, heâd taken a sledgehammer and a power drill and broken up everything heâd done. When we met him, he referred to this with a kind of pride. âIt took three days,â he said, âbut of course that was much less time than it took to make them.â The broken pieces were all upstairs, so no one who took the studio would have to deal with them. âIt seemed better to put them there,â he said, âthan out on the street.â
Above the studio were two empty floors where thereâd been a fire thirty years ago. Howard Stricker said, âYou can use them
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