By July 11, I
will have been in five major cities in hardly a month: Montreal, New York City,
Boston, Reykjavik, Paris.
I’m excited
to see how much longer the list is in another month, once I’m in Europe.
About a week
ago, I stopped by Evan’s apartment on my way back from meeting with Nora about
my internship. Evan had just woken up from a nap after a very exhausting
morning of Bikram yoga – so exhausting, in fact, that he passed out during the
class and woke up being cradled by a bunch of loving yogis. Apparently he didn’t
eat enough.
“I should
eat again,” Evan said. “Wanna get food?”
Yeah, I was
going to grab something anyway,” I said.
“Where do
you want to go?”
We went
through the list – Greek, Thai, Tibetan, Mexican, Delish, that new bistro on
Margaret Street, fast food …
“I’m so sick
of all the food in Plattsburgh,” I said. I’ve been using my tip money the last
couple months to get takeout twice a day since getting to the grocery store is
such a pain in the butt.
Ok, fine. I
just hate cooking.
“Looks like
we’ll just have to go to Montreal,” I joked.
“You wanna
go to Montreal?” he said.
“If you were
like, ‘Let’s go to Montreal right now,’ I’d go.”
“Alright.”
“Wait, we’re
really going to do this? Yes! Let’s do it! Right now! I have work at 10 p.m.” I
looked at my watch. It was almost 3 p.m. “Fuck it. Let’s go. Actually, I don’t
know … Should we? … Yes! Yes, we should!”
Evan grabbed
a hoodie and his passport, and we drove to my place so I could grab my passport
and an umbrella, and we were off. It was 3:15 p.m.
In Montreal
we walked maybe six blocks from where we parked and found a restaurant where he
got French onion soup and I got fries and mayo, and we each got a beer. We sat
on the patio and listened to the flute band playing in the square. Of course,
right when we were about to leave, it started to pour. Good thing I brought my
umbrella! Oh wait, no. I left in the car. Duh.
We ran back
to the car, but it was fruitless. We were both drenched. A double rainbow
decorated the sky as we drove back to Plattsburgh. I was right on time for
work.
A little
more than a week later, Tony and I were gliding down the Taconic State Parkway
to Liz’s house in Yorktown, forty minutes north of the city. I’d never driven
on the Taconic before – I didn’t know the trip to NYC could be so beautiful! I’d
always staken I-87 all the way down.
This time,
instead of cringing past 18-wheelers and ugly construction, I got to gaze out
over green trees and hills while coasting at a steady 60 mph through a tunnel of
arching maples.
Tony didn’t
complain when I popped in the only c.d. I could find in my apartment – a small-city
California bluegrass band’s only album that a friend gave me to me while I was
out there. Tony did do plenty of hillbilly “har-har” laughs when the music got
particularly backwoods, but I was just happy not to be listening to his music.
Eminem and heavy bass hip-hop just somehow wouldn’t have fit the mood. (Does it
ever, though?)
I recognized
Liz’s house from a photo on Facebook. An adorable dark red house with white
trimmed windows and a magical yard with a sloping hill, a chicken coop, a mini
vineyard, and woods that definitely look inhabited by fairies or dwarves or something.
Which is funny, because we did end up talking an awful lot about midgets while
we were sitting up there together later on … (Sorry, Tony.)
Alex, Liz’s
brother, answered the front door and led us up to Liz’s room. She swung open
the door when I knocked. “FLEAAAAA! Delivered right to my door!” We spent the
night talking and watching Netflix in her opium den.
Speaking of
her opium den, a mummified leg protected me last night.
A piece of
driftwood hangs from the ceiling of the den that looks EXACTLY like a mummified
leg cut off at the knee – foot and all. It’s even the right size and
proportions. One of the last things Liz said to me before I fell asleep was, “The
foot will watch over you.”
Saying
goodbye to Liz at 7:30 a.m. the next morning wasn’t too sad. It’s the most temporary
farewell I’ve exchanged with a college friend, since she’ll be moving to Europe
soon enough, too. She’ll be in England, but we’ll practically be neighbors.
Tony and I
passed the sign for Yonkers on the way to the city. “Yonkers!”
“I love
those things,” Tony said.
“What? Tony,
did you think I said gnocchis?”
“I guess I’m
just hungry.”
We got into
the city at about 10 a.m. Tony was a natural driving. I don’t think I’m
aggressive enough. We parked and arrived at 10 E 74th Street an hour
before my appointment at the French consulate. We may or may not have run a few
red lights in Harlem.
A man in a guard
uniform opened the metal-grated door for me, asked for my name, and checked me
off on the list. We chitchatted for a moment, and I went through the metal
detector. “Here’s your number for when you go upstairs.” He handed me a little
plastic card. 25.
“Thank you.”
“I should be
thanking you. Keep that personality!” I wasn’t sure what I did or said to make
him think I was great during our brief encounter, but in forty minutes I would
be thanking my lucky stars for it, whatever it was.
“Make sure
you have all your papers ready,” he said. “They hate when people rustle through
all their papers and don’t have them. Also, if you’re phone goes off, they’ll
have me come escort you out,” he whispered.
I checked
that my was off for a third time and his hoarse whisper disappeared as I went
up the stairs and entered a smelly sauna.
The room was
at least 100-degrees, and the windows were only cracked open. People were
speaking in hushed whispers all around me – I heard Arabic, French, Spanish,
and English. Everyone was nervously tapping fingers and shaking feet, or both.
It was ten times worse than a doctor’s office waiting room. I’ve never felt
such dense, apprehensive energy.
I thought of
my friend Meg, who is moving to Australia in September, and of Liz, who is
moving back to England, and how they just had to mail in all their visa
paperwork. They wouldn’t have to go through this hell.
The
loudspeaker called Number 19 to Window 1. Everyone’s wide eyes followed a girl
not much younger than I as she walked to Window 1.
I couldn’t
see Window 1’s face, but I could hear her voice. “Where is your acceptance
letter?” she demanded.
“It’s there.
I gave it to you – see? It says, ‘We are pleased to inform you that – ‘”
“This isn’t
good enough. I need a copy. Where is ….” On and on and on.
The
conversation kind of reminded me of a trip to the principal’s office in fourth
grade, and the rest of us were the bad kids waiting for our turns.
When the
girl sat back down, everyone looked away like they hadn’t been watching the
whole thing like an episode of Mean Girls the whole time, but I saw her face
was beet red. She sat down in the chair next to me.
“You ok?” I
said.
“Yeah. But
that woman is NOT pleasant.”
I shuffled
through my folder to be sure for the 20th time that I had all my
paperwork and copies of that paperwork, and copies of the copies of that
paperwork. The air was getting stuffier and stuffier. At one point my eyes got
dizzy like they do when I take off my glasses and I felt very faint – like I
might have an Evan moment. I might as well be doing Hot Yoga with how hot it
was in there and how fast my heart was beating.
Thank
Neptune there was a water machine. I gulped three cups.
The only
person in the room who didn’t look nervous was a handsome,
30-something-year-old French man. He sat with his legs crossed comfortably,
reading a newspaper, with the most pleasant look on his face. He looked like he’d
done this before. I hated him.
“Number 25.”
Oh no. Window 1. Not the principal lady.
“Your
passport and application.” She was pretty and younger than I expected. Her blue
eyes were naturally slanted, making her look perpetually suspicious. I wondered
if that helped get her hired.
I handed her
document after document. “Your au pair contract. What is this? These are two
originals. I need a copy.”
“I thought
you could just take one of the official ones since I got two, anyway ….”
“No.”
My heart
sank. Surely she would send me away and make me come back another time when I
was prepared. I heard her send away one girl already, who was crying, “But this
is my second time coming back already!” I’d have to find a way to get back down
here and somehow come up with the money to do so and probably have to
reschedule my plane ticket, which would cost a couple hundred dollars, and I’d
have to tell Maia and Matthieu and Gael and Laetitia that I wouldn’t be in France
until way later than expected, and I’d have to postpone all of my adventures …
Oh god.
The
principal wrote something on a post-it note and handed it to me. It said, “11:41.”
“Come back
here by 11:41 with copies, and I’ll see you.” I looked at my watch. It was
11:28.
I rushed out
to the guard. “Where can I make copies?!”
“Uh, Madison
Avenue. Right up there.”
Tony was
outside. I ran past him without explaining. “Come on!” We bolted up 74th
Street and then back and forth on Madison Avenue looking for a place to make
copies. I asked multiple people on the street and walked into three or four
stores to ask. Three people said, “There’s a FedEx on Lexington and three
blocks that way.” I didn’t have time to go that far without being sure I’d even
find it.
I ran back
to the guard. “What’s the address?! Nothing is there!”
“Up there
somewhere,” he said frantically. He was pointing at a florist.
I looked at
my watch. 11:43. But I wasn’t giving up that easily.
This time, I
sprinted up 74th, purse smacking pedestrians and clutching the
folder that held every proof my identity. My brother was jogging effortlessly
behind me.
Lexington
Avenue.
“Where’s
FedEx?!”
“Left.”
I burst
through the doors, probably slamming them into my poor brother behind me. I
took a deep breath so my mind could slow down and comprehend how to use this
weird copying machine. Ten minutes and three paper jams later, my insides were
crying and my face was dripping sweat. I never sweat. I hate sweating.
I was keeled
over and panting when the guard opened the door for me for the third time. My
hair was sticking to my burning face. It was 12:03 p.m. I was more than 20
minutes late.
“Go on
upstairs,” the guard said quickly. “She’s waiting for you.”
The
principal lady was waiting for me? How did he know that? He must have talked to
her for me …
I didn’t
have time to think about it. I ran upstairs to Window 1. “My colleague will
help you at Window 4.”
My fingers
slipped in sweat as I crossed them behind my back, another thing I hadn’t done
since fourth grade. I watched the guy behind the window stamp a receipt. “Come
back next Wednesday between 9 and 10 a.m. to pick it up,” he said. I thanked
him in French with an earnestness I’m sure he’s used to seeing.
Downstairs,
the guard was on the phone. He set down the receiver, came to the door, and
hugged me. “You did it, sweetheart.”
Outside, I
high-fived my brother, who sat patiently waiting by a spikey fence. “Now what I
really came all the way down here for,” he said.
We stopped
at the first pizza place we saw. I don’t remember what it was called, but it
didn’t matter. The slices were cheesy and floppy. That warranted another
high-five, of course.
Before
realizing I hadn’t washed my hands all day, I licked some sauce off my fingers.
That was the first time I ever tasted New York City. I could taste it on my skin.
It tastes just like it smells – like sewage and peanuts, and it left a burning
feeling on my tongue like battery acid. As much as I’ve never been fond of the
Big Apple, (it tires me out really fast in most parts and I always feel grimey
after walking around there), I embraced the acidity and the smell of sewage and
thought about all the nice people who’d been more than happy to take a break
from their city life to give me directions. Of all the cities I’ve been in across
the United States, I must say New Yorkers are the friendliest people. They’re always
more than happy to help. I’ve read that in Paris you should apologize profusely
if you stop to ask someone for help. I’m interested to see if this is true,
especially since my favorite way to get around in a new place is through approaching
strangers.
Even so,
going to New York felt like a dreaded chore, and I’m happy to at least have
that part out of the way, even if that means I now have to go back to the black
hole that is summertime Plattsburgh. It’s a strangely suffocating town when you’re
there more than 4 months at a time, especially when college is out and most of
your friends are gone. Ben took me on a 20-mile ride on his motorcycle the
other day, and even just being two towns over made me feel like I could breathe
again, just not being in Plattsburgh.
It’s a good
place, though, really, with good people; I’m sure I’ll miss it once I’m
gone. I’ll miss talking to the Del’s regulars and chatting with people at
Koffee Kat and having political discussions with my 80-year-old friend Vince at
the book store and going to the co-op every day, and being on a first-name
basis with the workers at most shops downtown. I’m grateful for my time here,
but I’m definitely ready to get out.
As Anaïs Nin said, “I’m restless. Things are
calling me away. My hair is being pulled by the stars again.”
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