“I think I’m done with treatment work,” he mumbled to Chris.
Chris turned around, propped himself up on his elbow, and faced Hector, who remained with his eyes closed, his head smashed in a pillow. Chris smelled funny, Hector noted — some mix of putty and dirt. Not necessarily a bad smell, but a weird one.
“I think having this to focus on over the next year or two will be really good for you,” Chris said. “We already have a lot of funding promised up front from different private groups. But we also need someone to communicate back to the big movement, and you know you’re the only non-asshole of the four of us to do it. The only one people really like.”
“That’s true,” Hector mumbled.
“Clinton’s probably coming in in January. We need to be on the protease trials all day, every day for the next few years if they’re going to be structured right.”
“Protease,” Hector sneered out the term. “Fucking protease. I hate that word.”
“Oh, Hec,” Chris clucked. He brushed Hector’s hair off his forehead. “I’m so sorry, honey.”
Finally, Hector looked up at Chris. “If only you fucking knew how to say that a little bit more to people,” he said.
Chris smiled coyly. “That’s why we need you, Hector. We’re all major cunts but you.”
“I’ll give you an answer in a few days.”
Chris brushed Hector’s bangs again. “I’ll let you sleep now.”
Chris took a shower, pulled on his clothes, did a bump of coke, and then clattered down the stairwell and stepped out into the cool October quiet of a Greenwich Village side street at 5:30 A.M. He barreled down the street, his fists thrust in the pockets of his denim jacket. He realized he was still high, so instead of going home, he speed-walked toward the East Village, to an unmarked dive between Avenues C and D, where he knew he could find more drugs and probably somebody to fuck him again. Times like this, he could feel himself, almost on a cellular level, masochistically putting more stress on his stressed-out immune system, perversely, pleasurably, pushing it to its limits. How much strain, how much toxicity and decay, could it withstand before his body really turned against him? The guys who got all into the macrobiotic natural juices and the yoga and the Marianne Williamson lectures and the positive visualization — well, how much sadder were they when they finally got sick anyway? At least this way he had some say in the matter. He pulled out a cigarette and sucked on it furiously as he walked.
And yet he only had to think of a term like pathogenesis or prophylaxis or cytokine—or, now most beautiful to him, protease inhibitor, because it contained the same shiny promise of future redemption that the term ddI had contained a few years ago — and some channel would switch in his brain and self-obliteration was the last thing he desired. The complex words, which put him in a circle of conversation populated only by doctors and a few other lay elites, girded him, gave him the comforting feeling that he could find his way out of the microscopic labyrinth of his own disease. And of course that special knowledge came with prestige, earning him respect from the people with medical degrees and a certain amount of awe from everyone else. All this buoyed Chris and made him hungry to see the future. Then he’d vaguely wonder why he wanted to live so badly on one hand yet behaved as though he wanted to die, bingeing on alcohol, cigarettes, and cocaine. He chalked it up to “taking breaks,” rewarding himself by letting off steam between long periods of work — preparing for and then attending a conference, for example — but he had a harder time understanding the visceral and gritty satisfaction he took in his drug runs, how it felt cathartic to tax his body to the point where he could barely get out of bed for three days. When he was finally able to get up, shower, eat, and continue with his important work, he’d feel strangely as though he’d earned back his purpose.
As he walked, he passed a brownstone on East Seventh Street between First Avenue and Avenue A — a building with a discreet plaque near the door reading JUDITH HOUSE. A woman who had not slept well was sitting in the front window on the third floor in a little room she shared with another woman. She looked down and saw him and thought, with an inner giggle because she knew exactly the kind of place he was going to at this hour, sucking on his cigarette, hands thrust into the pockets of his denim jacket, Oh, that’s Chris! She thought about all the boys and how she had barely seen them in months, not going to meetings or rallies, which was how she wanted it, but it didn’t mean that she didn’t miss them.
A few girls from the movement — the dykes and the handful of straight ones — she’d let come see her. Esther Hurwitz, whose frowning bluntness had terrified her initially, but who then became one of her best friends, came by faithfully nearly every day, usually with some wheatgrass or wheat-germ or lemongrass — what was it? — drink she’d make for her at her own apartment a few blocks away. Esther sat with her in the sitting room downstairs, or, when the other ladies got too loud and crazy in there, they’d walk around the neighborhood, and Esther would unload on Issy every single story of stress and contention from the movement, from the last meeting or affinity group. The through line was always that people — the boys, mostly, but some women, too — were trying to “undermine” and “marginalize” Esther because they were annoyed by her message of radical change and social justice, one that went far beyond the epidemic.
“Oh, Esther” was all Issy could think to say. Actually, Issy appreciated the updates. They cheered her up and let her know that work was still going on. Prior to Issy’s disappearance, the big issue for the women had been getting the government to change the official definition of AIDS to include things that only women got, like pelvic inflammatory disorder or menstrual irregularities, which Issy had endured, and Issy had played quite a role in that effort, surprising herself with how much information she was able to both take in and explain back to other, newer people.
Then, about six months ago, she’d gotten sicker than she’d ever been — and then she was barely over that harsh episode when she got that other news. Then her heart just sort of went out of the whole activist thing, and it was too weird to see a certain someone at the meetings, and her new level of sickness qualified her for a place at Judith House. Here, she helped out Ava quite a bit with grant writing and any number of administrative things.
“When are you coming back to meetings, Issy?” Esther asked her. “You’re well enough now to come back, and we need you.”
Issy shrugged, kicked some orange leaves on the pathway in the park. “I feel weird going back right now.”
“Nobody’s going to judge you because you’re having a baby. You’re on meds — you’re not passing it to the baby. Everybody in the meetings knows that.”
Issy felt super-squirmy. “I just wanna break, Esther!” She felt pinned down. “I showed up one day three years ago because I thought I was gonna die and I didn’t know where else to go. I didn’t show up looking for an activist career.” All these were excuses, Issy knew; she’d stopped going to meetings because she didn’t want the boys, especially him, knowing she was pregnant; Esther and some of the other women had promised her they’d keep it to themselves.