: Chapter 19
Before We Were Strangers: A Love Story
The day after Matt left, I auditioned for a grunge band as a cellist at a little venue off Allen Street in the East Village. Their music was like Nirvana, with haunting runs and loud, screaming choruses. I imagined that we would end up on VH1âs Unplugged, and Iâd have an awesome career as a rock cellist, guesting for all the whoâs-who bands in New York. I felt like I was finally following my dreams.
I kept to myself, played well, practiced a lot, and collected my money at the end of the week. For three nights, I made a hundred and twenty dollars. Things were promising, and I was excited to tell Matt about it.
A week and a half after he left, he called for the first time. I was practicing in my room when Daria knocked on my door and yelled, âGrace! Mattâs on the phone for you in the lounge.â
I ran down the stairs, wearing nothing but one of Mattâs T-shirts and an old tattered pair of underwear. I didnât careâI was so fucking excited.
âHello!â I said, out of breath.
âFuck, this phone call is costing me, like, seventy bucks.â
My excitement died a little at his greeting. âOh, Iâm sorry.â
âNever mind. Oh my god, I have so much to tell you.â
âTell me.â
âNational Geographic is launching a television channel in September. Thereâs going to be tons of new job openings, and Iâve already totally impressed Elizabeth.â
âWhoâs Elizabeth?â
âSheâs the lead photographer on this project. Sheâs supercool and she personally picked me for the internship after she saw my portfolio. I didnât even know.â
I wanted to ask him how old she was and if she was pretty. âIâm so happy for you, Matt.â
He yelled, âIâll be right there!â to someone in the background. âHey, Gracie, I had to take a bus three hours to get to this phone. Thereâs nothing down here so I donât know when Iâll be able to call you again.â
âOkay, no worries.â
âI gotta go. The next bus is leaving soon, and theyâre holding it for me. Hey, I miss you.â The last part sounded like such an afterthought that it made my stomachache.
âI miss you, too. See ya.â
âBye.â He hung up.
Itâs not good-bye. Itâs not good-bye. Never say good-bye.
Staring at my bare feet, I thought about how he didnât ask me what I was up to. I never even got a chance to tell him about the band gigs.
Tati stood there, leaning against the doorjamb of the front door with her arms crossed over her chest. âWhere are your pants?â
âThat was Matt.â
âI figured. Are you gonna get dressed today? Iâve come to pick you up for lunch. You can tell me all about it then.â
âYeah.â
âCome on.â She motioned with her head toward the door.
âOkay,â I said. âSandwiches?â
âAnythingâs better than ramen.â
Tati and I met for lunch every Wednesday for the next month. Sometime in early July, she asked if I had talked to Matt, and I told her no.
âHow come he hasnât called?â
âI might have missed him. I donât know, heâs in the middle of nowhere. Itâs hard to coordinate these things. Iâm sure heâs fine.â
When I got home that day, one of the summer RAs had taped an envelope to my door with a note that said, Way to go, Matt! I had told her all about Mattâs internship since she was a photography major at Tisch, plus I was always checking in with her to find out if Matt had called.
I opened it up to find an article from a photography magazine. The cover was a photograph of Matt taking a picture of a woman taking a photograph of herself in a mirror. The headline said, âThe Beauty Behind the Camera.â
I swallowed hard and tried to fight the nausea as I read all about the young, beautiful Elizabeth Hunt, who was making a huge name for herself at National Geographic. And then, at the very end, I read three sentences that changed the course of my life forever.
Hunt points out that her partnership with Matthias Shore, a promising young talent who recently emerged from New York Universityâs Tisch School of the Arts, has proven to be a fruitful union. Their next assignment includes a six-month expedition off the coast of Australia, exploring the Great Barrier Reef and the great white sharkâs breaching behavior while hunting. âMatt and I are thrilled about this opportunity and excited to take our partnership to the next level,â Hunt said.
We were so young, and life was already offering so many twists and turns. But did I have to accept what I had just read without arguing my case?
No way.
I immediately called Aletha in a daze. âHello, Aletha, itâs Grace.â
âSo good to hear from you, dear. How are you? Everything okay?â
âFine,â I said with little emotion. âI wondered if you had heard from Matt?â
âOh yes, sweetie, I just talked to him yesterday.â
I was gutted. Why hadnât he called me? I was practically sleeping by the phone in the lounge. âYou did? What did he say?â
âOh, weâre all so proud of Matt. Heâs really making a name for himself in such a short time.â
âYes, Iâve heard,â I said, somewhat icily.
âNothing can slow down Mattâs career, and his father is so proud of him. You know what that means to Matt.â
âOh, wonderful.â My voice was shrinking by the second. âDid he mention me by any chance?â
âHe said if anyone asks, to let them know that heâs okay.â
Anyone?
âWell . . . I guess if you hear from him in the next couple of days, will you ask him to call me?â
âYes, of course, Grace. Heâs been calling every week, so Iâll let him know.â
Oh, he has, has he?
I hung up with Aletha and ran back to my room, barely able to comprehend all the new information I had just learned. Elizabeth Hunt . . . Australia for six months . . . Weekly phone calls with his mom . . .
Three more days went by, with still no word from Matt. I dragged myself out of bed, too tired to cry and too sad to eat. I went to the lounge and called Tati.
âHello?â
âItâs Grace.â
âHey, how are you?â
âCan you come over?â
âIâll be there in a bit.â She could hear the pain in my voice.
She came thundering into my room fifteen minutes later. I held the article about Matt and Elizabeth out to her. She read it to herself. All she did was shake her head and offer me a cigarette.
âIâm okay, Tati.â
âDonât overreact, Grace,â she said.
âIâm not overreacting.â By then I had stopped crying. âJust let Dan know Iâm in. Iâm going on tour with you guys.â
Tati grinned back at me. âGood. You wonât regret it.â