: Chapter 2
Before We Were Strangers: A Love Story
I took the damn F train, an hour-long ride to Brooklyn from Midtown and back every day, at lunch, hoping I would run into Grace again, but I never did.
Things were bad at work. I had submitted a request to go into the field three months earlier but had been denied. Now I had to watch Elizabeth and Brad walk around in bliss as people congratulated them on the baby and Bradâs promotion, which came right after the announcement.
Meanwhile, I was still rejecting any forward motion in my life. I was a stagnant puddle of shit. I had volunteered to go back on location to South America with a National Geographic film crew. New York just wasnât the same anymore. It held no magic for me. The Amazonian jungle, with all of its wonderful and exotic diseases, seemed more appealing than taking orders from my ex-wife and her smug husband. But my request hadnât been approved or denied. It just sat in a pile of other requests on Scottâs desk.
I pondered the current state of my life while I stared at a blank wall in the office break room. Standing next to the water cooler, holding a half-empty paper cone, I tallied the insubstantial years I had spent with Elizabeth and wondered why. How had things gone so terribly wrong?
âWhat are you doinâ, man?â Scottâs voice came from the doorway.
I turned and smiled. âJust thinking.â
âYou seem a little brighter.â
âActually, I was thinking about how I ended up thirty-six, divorced, and trapped in cubicle hell.â
He walked to the coffeepot and poured a mug full then leaned against the counter. âYou were a workaholic?â he offered.
âThatâs not why Elizabeth was unfaithful. She fell right into Bradâs skinny arms, and he works more than I do. Hell, Elizabeth works more than I do.â
âWhy are you dwelling on the past? Look at you. Youâre tall. You have hair. And it looks likeââhe waved his hand around at my stomachââyou might have abs?â
âYou checking me out?â
âIâd kill for a head of hair like that.â
Scott was the kind of guy who was bald by twenty-two. Heâs been shaving it Mr. Cleanâstyle since then.
âWhat do women call that thing?â He pointed to the back of my head.
âA bun?â
âNo, thereâs, like, a sexier name for it. The ladies love that shit.â
âThey call it a man-bun.â
He studied me. âJesus, youâre a free man, Matt. Why arenât you prowling the savannahs for new game? I canât watch you mope around like this. I thought you were over Elizabeth?â
I shut the break-room door. âI am. I was over Elizabeth a long time ago. Itâs hard for me even to remember being into her. I got caught up in the fantasy of it, traveling with her, taking photos. Something was always missing, though. Maybe I did work too much. I mean, thatâs all we talked about, thatâs all we had in common. Now look where I am.â
âWhat about Subway Girl?â
âWhat about her?â
âI donât know. I thought you were gonna try to get in touch with her?â
âYeah. Maybe. Easier said than done.â
âYou just have to put yourself out there. Get on social media.â
Will I find Grace there? I went back and forth between wanting to do everything I could to find her and feeling like it was totally pointless. Sheâd be with someone. Sheâd be someoneâs wife. Someone better than me. I wanted to get away from everything reminding me that I still had nothing.
âIf you care so much, why havenât you approved my request?â I asked.
He scowled. I noticed how deep the line was between his eyebrows and it occurred to me that Scott and I were the same age . . . and he was getting old. âI donât mean the actual savannahs, man. Running away isnât going to solve your problems.â
âNow youâre my shrink?â
âNo, Iâm your friend. Remember when you asked for that desk job?â
I walked toward the door. âJust consider it. Please, Scott.â
Right before I left the room he said, âYouâre chasing the wrong thing. Itâs not gonna make you happy.â
He was right, and I could admit that to myself, but not out loud. I thought if I could win an award again, get some recognition for my work, it would fill the black hole eating away at me. But deep down, I knew that wasnât the solution.
After work, I sat on a bus bench just outside the National Geographic building. I watched hordes of people trying to get home, racing down the crowded sidewalks of Midtown. I wondered if I could judge how lonely a person was based on how much of a hurry he or she was in. No one who has someone waiting for him at home would sit on a bus bench after a ten-hour workday and people-watch. I always carried an old Pentax camera from my college days in my messenger bag, but I hadnât used it in years.
I removed it from the case and started clicking away as people flooded in and out of the subway, as they waited for buses, as they hailed cabs. I hoped that through the lens I would see her again, like I had years before. Her vibrant spirit; the way she could color a black-and-white photo with her magnetism alone. I had thought about Grace often over the years. Something as simple as a smell, like sugared pancakes at night, or the sound of a cello in Grand Central or Washington Square Park on a warm day, could transport me right back to that year in college. The year I spent falling in love with her.
It was hard for me to see the beauty in New York anymore. Granted, much of the riffraff and grit was gone, at least in the East Village; it was cleaner and greener now, but that palpable energy I had felt in college was gone, too. For me, anyway.
Time passes, life goes on, places change, people change. And still, I couldnât get Grace off my mind after seeing her in the subway. Fifteen years is too long to be holding on to a few heart-pounding moments from college.