The lights were off in Misty’s room.
“Mirabella,” I said with a small coloratura, knocking gently.
“I’m asleep.” I could just make out a lump under the quilt on the far bed. “And please don’t call me that.”
I poured some vodka in a glass and sat on the cushioned chair across from her. “Don’t you think this rejection of our given names bespeaks a certain juvenility?” I said. “A not wanting to grow up?”
“You’re the expert in that.”
“My, aren’t we just a pepperbox of wit tonight.”
She might have shrugged under the blanket, but I couldn’t see. Beyond the window the moon painted its glissando on the bay. It was my grandfather who had taught me the phases of the moon, I remembered, the spherical dance that gave rise to them; he had once been a scientist and delighted in teaching us, his grandkids, about the composition of the world around us, the dynamics of its interactions: tides, stars, the aeronautics of sailing, the geology of the coast.
“I’m sorry,” I said.
“For what?”
For what. It wasn’t for teasing her, of course. It wasn’t for anything I could very well name. Misty was sitting up in bed now. She leaned her head to one side and then the other, stretching her neck. She looked at me. I wanted to tell her that she could say anything to me, that she could cry or stop enacting herself however briefly, that everything was going to work out, although I didn’t know that it would, that wherever I was going she was coming with me, although she wasn’t. I had no business advising anyone on how to live. My own life, far from coming into focus with success, had blurred to the point that I hardly believed anymore in the concept of “a life.” Whatever ongoing first-personhood I continued to experience seemed more a fantasy or structureless joke than a project in integral coherence, and the untethered feeling visiting me that summer might have been no more than the confirmation, on realizing certain far-fetched dreams, that there was no track governing life’s direction, life was indeed surprising, and if it was full of more good than you could anticipate, by implication it was full of more bad too. And yet, all the same, in spite of my dubiety of the stories we tell about who we are, starting with my own, I was writing at the behest of some inner scream, some reckless anger and love far too specific not to originate in me, in whatever idiosyncrasy distinguishes all the me’s that appear to be just fucking everywhere in the world. And the form this anger and this love took could perhaps most simply be described in the metonymy of Misty, her weirdness, the child she once was, the desire to nurture that person, and the rage I felt at anything and everything that did not lift her up.
“I know you are,” she said at last. Her eyes in the dark held dabs of moonshine. And what, really, was the chance some one ray of light would leave the sun and carom off the moon and continue to the tiny sphere of her eye, so far away, and leave from there to enter my own?
“Do you want to hear a bedtime story?” I said.
“Tell me what happened with Gaby and the meth,” she said.
“All right,” I said. And I told her.
* * *
Misty had known Gabrielle since my freshman year of college. This was when Gaby and I first met, founding the closeness that would carry us through the next four years of school, a closeness that had come at such a critical juncture in our intellectual and social self-orientation that our friendship, in later years, seemed more a case study in comparative morphology, pointing back to the time when two species were one, and our minds, which had formed during countless hours of decoding and reconstructing the world, in how they moved to the same language and ideas, resembled constructivist projects, or so I thought — in the architectural sense, in the artistic sense. And now I was an artist. And now Gabrielle was an architect.
When she got back from Rome and came to visit me at the cottage where I was house-sitting, Gaby was excited about what she’d seen. She had a notebook brimming with sketches: buildings in profile and perspective, details of decorative flourishes, felicitous proportionalities, stabs at capturing the subtle enmeshments of public and private space. The only thing getting her down was Rome’s implicit critique of contemporary practice, which had come, she explained, to privilege concept and style over what she termed the experience of space. The experience of space was harder to talk about. It was largely private and rarely came across in images or floor plans. The true experience of a space, she said, might only reveal itself over time, months—years—of being in the space and using it.
“And it’s emotional too, right. How does this space make me feel?” I said.
“Which could have to do with sunlight or shade. How a building frames its views, works with a landscape. Which could simply be the absence of nuisance. So not necessarily things people even notice.”
“Art should be habitable, not merely visitable.”
Gaby grimaced. “You need some new quotes.”
“What’s wrong with Barthes?” I said. “Barthes is cool.”
“Really? No, you know this. There’s this very clear statute of limitations on invoking post-structuralism after college. It’s like three years. After that you’re the unreconstructed guy who lives in the lobby of some film archive with his sweater on backwards.”
“That’s the opposite of a statute of limitations.”
“What do I mean?”
“A grace period.”
“Yeah, well, you’re out of grace.”
We spent the first few days of Gaby’s visit drinking and smoking into the early morning on the second-story balcony overlooking the field. Our catching-up had less to do with new information, generally, than with returning again and again to our reservoir of shared stories, comparing perspective and interpretation, amending and gently challenging what had set as memory, and testing new conceptual frameworks on the before and after, the ever-expanding context, the ramifying that never ends, until it does. The idea that started taking shape in me as I listened to Gaby talk about Rome and its built textures, the textures that gave rise to the experience of its space and that in a sense therefore were Rome, was that we might correspondingly describe literature as an experience of information, one with its own utopian aspirations to improve on the assaultive chaos of existence, to give it form, to act as docent in this makeshift exhibit culled from fleeting and desultory scatterings. Just as we needed and relied on more conscious order in the spatial dimension than we often realized, so too when it came to information — for whether we realized it or not, I now hypothesized to Gaby, without some pretty robust structuring principles our experience of information was going to be inarticulate mayhem. It was just that we didn’t see these principles when they were working, the same way, as Gaby had said herself, you didn’t typically remark the endless potential inconveniences always passing you by, always not happening. We rarely noticed the narratives we had let slip into place until events conspired to thwart them.
There are many examples, on varying scales of significance and disruption, but at its most simple, I expatiated, you might think of having a carefully scheduled day ahead of you and blowing out your tire at 10:30 a.m. Or similarly, taking a long-awaited weekend trip and arriving at your rental to discover that the roof leaks and you can expect thunderstorms all weekend. The inconvenience is annoying, yes, but what is really upsetting, what is emotionally trying, is seeing the story you’ve been telling yourself collapse and having to start again on the tiresome process of building a narrative to give shape to your day, a plausible little ecology of plans and hopes and chores. I don’t mean by these examples to suggest that this is a first-world problem, either. It is a consequence of living in the dimensionless present, and the size of the disruption entails the scope of the revision. Gaby and I brainstormed some lugubrious options — accident, illness, or perhaps discovering after a childhood of abuse from old Russian tutors and devoting yourself to the minute beauty of the game that a computer will always beat you at chess. That technology has supplanted your life’s work. Or to take an exceedingly trivial example, but one Gaby and I discussed at some length, the time I visited her when she was studying abroad and walked her friend halfway across town late one night only not to be invited up.