Part 16 (1/2)

”I'm not making this up!”

”Or Alison. Or anybody, you would have had to call somebody, and they would have had to call me. Which to my knowledge did not happen.”

”I'm going to go take a shower.”

”Hi!” she chirped. ”I'm over here at the apartment, and Tina has just told me an interesting story.”

Right across the hall was a bathroom-the one with the silver-spotted wallpaper-but it needed a good cleaning, and several tiles had come up around one of the corners, so it was frankly too depressing to take a shower in. There was also a pretty capable blue bathroom right behind the kitchen off the great room, but Len had all sorts of apparatus set up in there. And just to the right of the TV room and the bedroom, there was a quite tidy peach-colored bathroom, but it had one of those shower chairs in it for people who are too old and decrepit to stand up, which was simply too depressing to contemplate. But if you walked down the hall off the TV room, past the laundry room, and around a corner, there was a fourth bathroom, which was painted periwinkle, and had a lot of sixties-looking groovy flower stickers stuck to the ceiling and all over the cheap plastic door of the shower stall. So although it was a little inconvenient to walk a quarter mile to take a shower, it was a nice bathroom and worth the effort. I left my nightmare of a sister to her devilish shenanigans and hiked off to take a shower to clear my head.

By the time I got back, Lucy was done with her phone calls and having a cup of tea. She glanced up at me, set the cup down, and stood. Then she smiled, like we were good friends who had had some sort of minor misunderstanding. ”I talked to Ira,” she informed me.

”Good for you.”

”He told me that they do in fact have a record of you being taken down to the Forty-ninth Precinct.”

”Did you think I was lying?”

”Well, Tina-it didn't make sense. And by the way, you weren't actually arrested. They just had you in for questioning, at least that's what they have on record.”

”They have anything on record about an injunction?”

”Well, that's the interesting part,” she said, still smiling. ”There was in fact an injunction. Ira accepted service, and he did tell me about it, but he a.s.sured me that he didn't think it would stick.”

”And then you just forgot to tell me.”

”I didn't forget, for heaven's sake, no one thought they would arrest you.”

”So you deliberately didn't tell me?”

”This is not my fault, Tina. I am not the one who had you arrested,” Lucy claimed, staying right on point. ”And if you would just calm down long enough to listen, it might interest you to know that the injunction is gone. Obviously it would never have held up to a court challenge, which Ira was going to file this week.”

”They just dropped it? When?”

”Just this afternoon apparently. So no worries about that, okay, Tina? Although honestly, if the police come by, you will call me, right? Even though they just took you in for questioning, that is completely unacceptable, and you should never ever talk to the police without a lawyer present. Ira got really upset when he heard that you let them take you down there and no one called him.”

”I don't even know him,” I said.

”But you should have called me, and I would have called him. Listen, tell me you understand this. If you're being hara.s.sed, it's important that you let us know.”

”Why, because you're so worried about my safety? Is that why you didn't even warn me?”

”I'm not going to get into some long argument about this, Tina, especially when everything came out all right. I already said I'm glad it was nothing worse. I don't know what more you want out of me, but then I never do.” She sighed, looked at her CrackBerry, and started doing that little thing with her thumbs.

”Why are you here?” I asked.

”What?”

”You never just show up. You always have a reason,” I said. ”So what's your reason today?”

”A friend of mine is coming over.”

”What friend?”

”His name is Dave, he works on the city page of the Times, he's going to come take a look at the apartment. He might be interested in writing about it.”

”No. Come on,” I said, suddenly overwhelmed. ”No.”

”What do you mean, no?” she said, looking up at me sharply.

”I mean no. No reporters in here. No.” I thought about Len talking about privacy, and Pete Drinan not even setting foot in his home for years and years, and that tenderhearted paint job in the kid's bedroom, and I just couldn't bear the thought of some f.u.c.king reporter wandering around my apartment. ”No,” I repeated.

”You know, I don't actually need your permission, Tina,” Lucy observed, with that nasty edge she could not keep out of her voice. ”You can stop acting like you own the place, when you're just staying here for all of us.”

”I can't believe you,” I said, trying seriously not to lose it. ”I spent the night in jail because you-you-”

”I'm only taking care of my interests and yours. And as to spending a night in jail, it's not the first time, so I don't know what you're making such a big deal about.” She stood up, turned away, and went to the little kitchenette, where she started wiping down the counters deliberately, like I had not done a good enough job.

”f.u.c.k you,” I said, sounding like a peevish teenager. ”f.u.c.k you. Call me when he's gone.”

”He might want to talk to you,” she said, all deliberate and chilly and mean, like some nasty old high school nun. ”About being hauled into the police station. We're in the middle of a real estate war! And they had you arrested? You should tell him about it, it might help sell the story.”

”Go to h.e.l.l, Lucy.” As I left I slammed the door behind me, good and loud. I am sure Mrs. Westmoreland heard it and took notes.

Wandering the Upper West Side of Manhattan can be entertaining when your life is less screwed up, but when you're in a bad mood, both about having been arrested and having a sister who consistently behaves like a jerk, it is not all that much fun. I walked up and down Amsterdam for a while, then cut over to the park and wandered around, hoping that a little urban nature would make me feel better. It was a lonely and pathetic endeavor, but after an hour it started to have a little bit of a positive effect. That section of Central Park was in fact particularly utopian; old ladies and their dogs wandered along charming, curling pathways where young boys and girls on Rollerblades flew by, calling to each other with hopeful, nonsensical glee. College kids lay on the gra.s.s and laughed at each other while inching ever closer to having s.e.x. I pa.s.sed a mossy lake and a giant statue of an angel coming down to earth. An Arab guy at a little Plexiglas stand under a green-and-white umbrella was selling falafel sandwiches and cans of soda. Life was coming back into focus, and the exhausting, endless night finally seemed over.

Which is when I tried to buy a can of lemonade. It seemed like a sane enough idea, as I had been walking and thinking for quite a while and was feeling rather thirsty. Unfortunately, I was so thoroughly peeved with Lucy when I left the apartment that I had been more concerned with making an exit than with grabbing my backpack. All I had on me were my house keys and a dollar twenty-five in my back pocket, and the Arab guy in the falafel cart wouldn't spot me the quarter.

In fact he was dismissive. ”One fifty. You need one dollar and fifty, young lady,” he explained, which I was perfectly willing to accept, if he hadn't so quickly and needlessly worked himself into a lather over it. ”What is the matter with you?” he asked before I had a chance to scrounge the three quarters, four dimes, and two nickels out of my pocket. ”Can you step aside, please? If you are not going to purchase something, step aside!”

”Cool your jets,” I muttered. This sent him even further over the edge.

”You have no money! Step aside! Step aside, please! You have no money!”

”Could you just relax for a second,” I said. ”I have it. For f.u.c.k's sake.”

”Why are you using obscenity?” the guy howled suddenly. ”STEP ASIDE,” he raged. I couldn't move. I was in trouble, serious psychological trouble. After my awful night and day, I had nothing left. I was actually contemplating leaping onto his little cart and hurling cans of soda at him when some girl came up behind me.

”I'll buy her a lemonade,” she said.

”It's fine,” I said, trying not to sound as insane as I felt. ”I didn't want his stupid f.u.c.king lemonade.”

”This crazy woman is cursing me! I do not have to serve people who speak to me with this language!”

”Yeah, I'm sure you've never heard that word before,” said the girl. ”Relax.” She reached past my shoulder and handed the guy a five. ”Make it two,” she said. I turned to snap at her and stopped. It was Jennifer White, my sullen teenage neighbor from 9A.

”Oh,” I said.

”Yeah,” she said. ”You're welcome.” She handed me my can of lemonade and turned back to reach for her change.

”Here, here is your change, now please go!” growled the way-too-uptight Arab. ”There are customers who are waiting!” Jennifer ignored him, holding her lemonade under her arm while she slowly took the two dollars off the Plexiglas stand and carefully folded them into a tiny pink change purse. ”Please!” he howled, but he sounded now like he was begging. Still ignoring him, she dropped the change purse into the side pocket of an enormous backpack and finally stepped aside.