After a rainy week in February, Jack awoke to pale sunlight that gave his room a silver-like glow. The one window in his room offered no view other than the rooftops of old buildings that surrounded the hotel. It was a single residence hotel where he had lived for a year – one of a rapidly diminishing number of such hotels in the poorer neighborhoods of San Francisco.
Two telephone messages were waiting for him at the front desk. The first was from Judy who had just returned to San Francisco from a two-year absence while getting a master’s degree from University of Hawaii. She wanted to see him, she said. The second was from his ex-wife who was visiting a friend in San Francisco. She left a phone number; she also wanted to see him.
Jack was in his mid-fifties, his hair white but retaining a youthful bushy waviness. In the last two years he had returned to sporadic drinking binges. His face was drawn and he had lost some lower back teeth. It was 1983; unemployment was at an all time high in what Jack called “Reagan’s economy”. He made a meager income selling paintings and even less with his poetry. His latest book of poems was published two years ago by a publisher that would soon go out of business like many others who had published him. The glory days of the San Francisco poetry scene of the 50’s and 60’s were in the final stages of disappearing.
He tried calling Judy from a pay phone down the block from the hotel but there was no answer. She was out, maybe for a moment; he decided to walk to her apartment on the chance she would return before he arrived. His walk took him through various neighborhoods; there was hardly an area that he did not know nor where someone didn’t wave to him, recognizing him from a poetry reading or seeing him on his walks through the city. He wore an almost threadbare denim jacket over a gray unbuttoned vest over a dirty white shirt, baggy light grey pants, and a new pair of shoes.
Judy’s apartment was near where she lived two years ago, in an area between Noe Valley and the Mission District. The buzzer buttons did not have apartment numbers nor first names listed. Jack looked at the names and tried to remember Judy’s last name, finally picking one that seemed familiar. He was buzzed in about a minute later.
Standing in front of her door for a moment before knocking, he tried to remember how many years they had known each other. He pictured various years, trying for a year in which he didn’t know her.
“Who is it?”
“It’s Jack.”
“Jack?”
“Yeah, Jack,” he said. “I got your message. tried calling you but there was no answer so I thought I would just come by. Warning! I have some teeth missing and I don’t look too good.”
The door opened and Judy stood, wearing her usual blouse with the top few buttons unbuttoned and a pair of blue jeans. They hugged and as they did, he recognized the perfume she always wore. She said “Jack” in a voice so soft he thought he imagined it. If anyone not knowing who they were saw them just now they would think they had been lovers, he thought.
“Come in,” she said and he found a spot in the living room that didn’t have boxes.
“I got your letters,” she said. “Did you get mine?”
“I got them,” he said grabbing her shoulders. “You look great. I look like shit, right?”
“You look older.”
“I am older. It’s true. You look the same as when I last saw you,” Jack said. “How long have you been back?”
“About two weeks. I was staying with a friend. She found this apartment for me. It was hectic. I had to call the moving company with the address. And then I had a job interview. With the University of California Family Health Project.”
“How did it go?” He walked over to one of the two windows facing the street. The sun was still out, and the street and sidewalks were littered with leaves from last week’s storms.
“Alright. I think. The woman interviewing me is head of the program. It was one of those interviews where we talked more about the job than asking me a bunch of questions.”
While she went into detail about the interview Jack tried again to remember when he first met her. He knew it was at one of his poetry readings. Maybe 1975. Jack described her to his poet friends as “a social worker who thinks she’s taking care of me.” The two of them would get together, sometimes at her apartment, other times at Old Uncle Gaylord’s Ice Cream Parlor on Market Street, giving each other advice. He wrote a poem about the two of them once; describing them as two spheres orbiting around each other – impossible to tell if any sphere was motionless. He may have read it to Judy but could not remember.
Judy finished talking about the interview, ending with some words about capacity building.
“What the hell is ‘capacity building’?”
“Sorry. It’s jargon. It means a lot of things I guess.”
“Well just give me one thing.”
“Giving people the means to take care of their lives.”
“And you think she liked you?”
“I think so. I hope so. It all depends on whether they get enough money. And in this regime, social programs are not a big priority.”
“A rainbow in other words.”
“I wouldn’t call it that.” She went into the kitchen and set up a coffee maker she had unpacked. Jack sat down at a table just outside the tiny kitchen. “I’ll make some coffee if you want.”
“If you’re making it, I’ll drink it.” He took out a notebook from his denim jacket and a pencil stub from his shirt pocket and wrote something down.
“What are you writing about?”
“I just wrote ‘A cop decided not to arrest me for being drunk and singing on the street. I saw him at one of my readings once.’”
“Is that true?”
“I can’t honestly remember whether it happened or I dreamed it. But there’s truth in what I write, whether it happened or not.”
She laughed. “I missed you, Jack.”
“I missed you too, Judy.”
“How are you doing?”
“OK. Fine. Perfect. How is anyone doing?
“Are you drinking again?”
“Yes.”
“How often?”
“Once in a while.” She said nothing. “Every few weeks,” he added. More silence. “Maybe more frequent than that.”
She was busy with making coffee and a minute passed with no further mention of his drinking. The topic of his drinking was finished. Time to change the subject; just to make sure.
“How’s your social life?” he asked.
“You sound like my father.”
“Is that bad?”
“No. It isn’t bad. I like it when he asks. I hate it when my mother asks, though.”
“Why?”
“It seems like meddling.” She frowned. “She tends to be critical of me. I don’t know; I just take it that way.”
“Yeah. That seems to be the way things are: mothers at odds with daughters, fathers at odds with sons. I didn’t get along with my father. He lost all his money in the 1929 stock crash, and that’s the year I was born. I’ve always felt he blamed me for it. Not that he ever said so. I’m rambling.”
“I don’t mind.”
“What was I talking about?”
“My social life.”
“Right. How is it?”
“Too early to tell.” Judy smiled. “I assume you want your coffee black,” she said, handing him the cup.
“Nice of you to remember.” She suddenly became busy, unpacking a box in the living room, taking out a stack of books and setting them on the floor by the window.
“What are you not telling me?”
“I called Karl,” she said.
“Karl? I thought you had broken up with him.”
“Well... Yes. I did. Or he did. He left me. But he kept writing me postcards after we broke up. He went to Germany once for a vacation and even wrote me postcards from there. So, I thought that maybe he really wanted to get back together. People do. And enough time has passed that it seemed possible.”
“How long has it been?”
“About six years.”
“Jesus. That’s a prison sentence.”
“Interesting metric, Jack. Anyway, so I called him.”
“And?”
“And he’s getting married.”
“Oh.”
“It was the first thing out of his mouth after I asked how things were going. It felt like he had to say it because if he didn’t, we might get together.”
“What did you say?”
“I told him I’d like to meet her.”
“Are you going to?”
“Believe me, she doesn’t want to meet me. If in fact Karl even told her about me. And she probably told him the same thing.”
“Which is?”
“That I wouldn’t want to meet her. And I don’t.”
Judy went on about how she wanted to get together with him, but at the same time she wanted to get off the phone.
While she talked Jack imagined the two of them getting together, having sex in her apartment. A poem Jack would write, maybe.
“Sometimes I wonder if I’ll ever get married again,” she said.
“You don’t seem the type who needs to be defined by a relationship.”
Judy went back into the kitchen, putting plates in a cabinet, making more noise than Jack thought necessary.
“What makes you think I need a relationship to define me?”
“I just find it interesting that you need to find a guy, along with an apartment and a job.”
“So what, Jack? You’re the one who asked about my social life.”
Judy returned to the living room, looking in various boxes. She glanced over her shoulder at Jack. He smiled at her and waved. “I’m still here.”
She turned away. He waited for the anger to pass. She started talking again after a few minutes.
“I’m thirty-six, Jack. Most people I know my age are married. Or re-married. And they got their master’s years ago. I feel late to the game. I’ve returned, but to what? I hate feeling like I’m in between. I like it when I’m no longer that way. When I know how things worked out.”
“I don’t think about the future.” he said.
“Must be nice.”
“It is. Most of the time, anyway.”
“How do you define yourself, Jack?”
He sat back in the chair and looked across the room. The sun was still out, now casting shadows of the spindly trees in planters across the street. “Define myself or see myself?”
“Is there a difference?”
“Some people define me as a beat poet. I see myself as a poet. And in either case, a poet is not something I ever wanted to be. It just happened. I wrote something once; in my twenties, I think. Various thoughts I had about something that I no longer remember. Someone looked at what I wrote and said I was a poet. I didn’t believe him. Eventually I saw myself as he defined me. I think that’s how it works. If you’re not dead you’re defined by something. Life defines me. I write what I see and call it poetry.”
Judy reached into a box and pulled out an amplifier, a turntable and wires. She’s young, he thought. It takes time to know who you are.
“It takes time,” he said.
“What takes time?”
“Everything.” He watched her connect the turntable and amplifier. When she finished, she came over and sat at the table. “How’s your social life, Jack?”
He smiled. “I’m not lacking friends. But since you asked, I got a message from my ex-wife. She’s in town, staying with one of her friends. I don’t know who the friend is; she didn’t say. She says she wants to see me. I have no idea why.”
“When’s the last time you saw her?”
“About a year ago. In L.A. She rarely comes to San Francisco. I think it must have been five years ago.”
“You said she’s visiting a friend. So maybe she just wants to say hello.”
“Yeah. Maybe. It can’t be that she wants money from me because I’m broke and she knows it, unless she knows about the twenty dollars I won at the track last week. And I spent that.” He lit a cigarette and used his empty coffee cup as an ashtray.
“Do you not get along?” she asked.
“We get along as long as we’re not together.”
“Do you love her?”
He ran his hand through his hair and then over his eyes.
“Yes. Sometimes. Maybe all the time.”
“Does she love you?”
“I think she does. We’re in different worlds. Sometimes she reminds me of you.”
“How so?”
“She’s interested in politics. Local politics. She reminds me of you in that way. Trying to ‘build capacity’,” he added.
She smiled at this. “Is that how you define me?”
“Back to that again? I don’t know how I define anyone. You and my wife want to save the world. It’s how I would write about you. And my wife if I were to write about her. But I mostly write about the down and out, the marginal, the fringe, the dispossessed. I make the invisible visible. People draw their own meanings and do what they want with it.”
“Do you think about her?”
“Sometimes. When I’m walking. I talk to her. I talk to a lot of people in my head when I walk. Sometimes you, sometimes her. Sometimes even out loud and people think I’m one more crazy person on the street.”
“What do you talk about?”
Whether she meant his wife or people in general didn’t matter. The conversation with Judy was over.
“I have to go,” he said, standing up and patting the paunch of his stomach. “I need to think about what to say.”
“You’ll think of something. She probably wants to see how you’re doing.”
“Yeah,” he said, opening the front door. “Maybe.”
They hugged. He lit a cigarette before starting down the stairs and turned to her. “I always enjoy talking with you, Judy.”
“Me too,” she said and closed the door.
Outside the sun cast a bluish silvery light – a winter light that gilded the branches of leafless trees and even those that still had them. He thought about painting a picture of a tree with silver branches; or writing a poem about them.
He walked up a hilly street that took him to Bernal Heights, where gothic looking houses appeared to be floating in the sunlight. He stretched out his arms; they were now wings and he was a glider, floating in and out of wind currents that pulled him up the hill.
When he arrived at the top, he was at Precita Park, across from a cafe/bar, one of many he had visited over the years. There was a pay phone in front of the bar which he looked at from a bench in the park for several minutes as if it held the answers to the universe. He finally walked over to it, put in a dime and dialed the number his ex-wife had left him.
The phone rang six times before a woman with a husky voice said hello.
“This is Jack; is Patricia there?”
“Jack? Yes, she said you might call. How are you, Jack? I’m Loraine. An old friend of hers. From Pittsburgh. I met you once. It was at your wedding. We danced. You probably don’t remember.”
“I don’t remember. It was twenty years ago. Was I a good dancer?”
“Yes, you were. Anyway, Patty’s just visiting; she thought you could come over for dinner.”
“I’ll check my calendar.”
“OK, let us know.”
Jack laughed. “That was a joke. I don’t have a calendar. Anyway, I can call back later.”
“Where are you? Are you at your hotel?”
“No. I’m in a park at the top of a hill.”
“Well, here’s my address.”
She gave it to him, but he couldn’t find his pencil. He’d get it again when he called later.
“Can you give her a message?” he said. “Do you have a pen?”
“I have a pencil,” she said.
“Even better. Tell her this. Tell her I’ll call again later and tell her I’m surrounded by the light of the winter sun. Tell her it’s a light unique to San Francisco. It cannot be painted, but it can be written about. I might write about the light. And maybe her. About how we once loved each other and probably still do.” He waited; there was silence on the line.
“Did you get all that?”
“Yes, Jack. I’ll tell her you’d like to come over for dinner and you’ll call her later.”
“Exactly right,” he said and hung up.
He looked around at the park and beyond, at people walking on the streets that lifted them to the multiple levels that made up Bernal Heights and started his way back to the hotel. On his walk he waved to people he knew or thought he knew. Almost all of them waved back. His head was full of conversations with people he knew, some friendly, some not, some alive and some dead. He walked along different streets than the ones he took on the way to Judy’s and