: Chapter 3
Before We Were Strangers: A Love Story
âMatt, Iâm talking to you.â
I looked up to see Elizabeth peering over the cubicle partition. âHuh?â
âI said, do you want to get lunch with us and go through the new slides?â
âWhoâs âusâ?â
âScott, Brad, and me.â
âNo.â
âMatt . . .â she warned. âYou have to be there.â
âIâm busy, Elizabeth.â I was playing the Sudoku game printed on the brown paper bag from the deli where I buy my turkey sandwiches. âAnd, Iâm eating. Canât you see that?â
âYouâre supposed to eat in the break room. I can smell those onions down the hall.â
âThatâs because youâre pregnant,â I mumbled into my sandwich.
She huffed and then turned and walked down the hallway, muttering something to herself.
Scott came up to my cubicle a minute later. âWe need to go over those slides, buddy.â
âCanât I just eat in peace? By the way, did you look over my request?â
He grinned. âYou get in touch with Subway Girl yet?â
âI rode the subway to Brooklyn every day for a month and didnât see her. I tried.â
It was true, I had been looking for Grace. After work, I would go to all of our old haunts in the East Village; I even hung out in front of the NYU dorm rooms where we had lived. Nothing.
âHmm.â He scratched his chin. âWith all the technology out there, youâre bound to find her. Maybe she wrote a Missed Connections ad. Did you look there?â
I set my sandwich down. âWhatâs a âmissed connectionsâ ad?â
He walked into my cubicle. âGet up, let me sit there.â I rose from my chair. Scott sat down to pull up Craigslist on my computer, navigating over to the Missed Connections section. âItâs like when you see someone in public and have a connection but donât know how to reach them. You can post about the experience here and hope they find it.â
âWhy wouldnât you just ask for their number when you see them?â
âItâs one of those sensitive-guy, new-wave things. Like, if you donât have the balls to approach someone but maybe thereâs an attraction, you can post here. If they were feeling it too, they might see it and respond to your post. No harm, no foul. You write where it happened and what you were wearing and all that so the other person knows itâs you.â
I was squinting at the screen, thinking it was a stupid idea. âYeah, but I actually used to know Grace. I might have said hello if I had more than a second before the train pulled away.â
He swiveled the chair around to face me. âLook, youâre not gonna find her on the subway. The odds are against you. Maybe she wrote one of these?â
âIâll look. Although, Iâm pretty sure if she wanted to find me, sheâd have no problem. My name hasnât changed and I still work at the same place.â
âYou never know. Just read them.â
I spent the entire afternoon reading posts like, I saw you in the park, you were wearing a powder blue jacket. We kept stealing glances at each other. If you like me, call me. Or, Whereâd you go that night at SaGalls, you were talking about a cherry-drop martini and then you were gone. I thought you liked me. Whatâs up? And the-oh-so-common, I want to do nasty things to you. I thought you knew that when you were droppinâ it like itâs hot and grinding on my leg at ClubForty. Gimme a buzz.
Grace wasnât there, and I was relatively sure no one under the age of thirty could be found in the Missed Connections section. And then I read a post called âA Poem for Margaret.â
Once there was a you and me We were lovers We were friends Before life changed Before we were strangers Do you still think of me?
âJoe I couldnât imagine twenty-year-olds named Joe and Margaret who spoke of the past in that manner. In an eerie way, it conveyed exactly what I felt for Grace, and I wondered for a moment if it was her. I called the number and a man answered.
âHello, is this Joe?â I asked.
âNope, thatâs the third time someone has called today asking that. Joe sure is a popular guy, but he doesnât live here.â
âThank you.â
I hung up. Suddenly, the room darkened, with the exception of one set of fluorescent lights over my head and the desk lamp in my cubicle. From the hallway, Scott shouted, âIâll leave that one on for you, Matt! Get to it.â He knew exactly what I was doing. Maybe Grace would find the post, maybe she wouldnât. Either way, I had to write itâif for nothing else, my own peace of mind.
To the Green-Eyed Lovebird:
We met fifteen years ago, almost to the day, when I moved my stuff into the NYU dorm room next to yours at Senior House.
You called us fast friends. I like to think it was more.
We lived on nothing but the excitement of finding ourselves through music ( you were obsessed with Jeff Buckley ), photography ( I couldnât stop taking pictures of you ), hanging out in Washington Square Park, and all the weird things we did to make money. I learned more about myself that year than any other.
Yet, somehow, it all fell apart. We lost touch the summer after graduation, when I went to South America to work for National Geographic. When I came back, you were gone. A part of me still wonders if I pushed you too hard after the wedding . . .
I didnât see you again until a month ago. It was a Wednesday. You were rocking back on your heels, balancing on that thick yellow line that runs along the subway platform, waiting for the F train. I didnât know it was you until it was too late, and then you were gone. Again. You said my name; I saw it on your lips. I tried to will the train to stop, just so I could say hello.
After seeing you, all of the youthful feelings and memories came flooding back to me, and now Iâve spent the better part of a month wondering what your life is like. I might be totally out of my mind, but would you like to get a drink with me and catch up on the last decade and a half?
M (212)-555-3004