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I. Sic Kathryn: Monday
Morning
Doing my usual Monday
morning imitation of Lucifer descending, muttering sullen insurrection,
I Kathryn, Archbitch of San Francisco (self-appointed), hurl myself into
the abyss and thump perilously down the wet brick stairs into the BART
station, mere seconds behind schedule. This particular feat ought to get
me canonized, considering how late I rolled out of bed, groaning in despair,
after having switched off the alarm and closing my heavyheavy eyelids
for just one more minu ....
It was all Author's
fault. OK, OK, a tiny bit my fault for letting him talk me into going
out for a drink on Sunday night when I didn't really want to. At the Noe
Valley Bar & Grill I was so bored and restless I ordered a second
drink instead of insisting that Author take me home, and he was determined
as usual to stay until closing, since his first class isn't until 9, which
means he can get up as late as 8:30 if he doesn't shave, and he never
shaves on Monday. I'm supposed to be at work at 8. What sadist thought
that up, starting work at 8?
So I rushed around,
threw clothes on, fed Catso, gulped a glass of refrigerator-flavored orange
juice, gave my puffy gray face a lick and a promise instead of the thick
mask of makeup it so desperately cried for, and managed to run out of
the house only two minutes behind schedule. I could make up the two minutes
in the six blocks to BART if I trotted along a little faster than my usual
anaerobic, side-stitch pace, and if the lights were with me. If. But this
was Monday morning and everything was against me, the whole physical world,
probably the entire cosmos too if I only knew. Each light turned red as
I approached, and the traffic surpassed ridiculous (where did all these
aggressive assholes come from, is it a population explosion or what?);
at the unmarked intersections, cars simply would not stop to let me cross.
They could perhaps tell I was cross already. Once again I thought about
going down to 15th and Guerrero and seeing if I couldn't get a deal on
an automatic weapon. I could probably get my picture in the paper. "Woman
Goes Berserk in Mission District Commute. Blames PMS." The six blocks
to the 24th Street station had stretched to at least nine. It began to
drizzle. No, actually, I hadn't brought my umbrella. Why would I have
brought my umbrella, it's fucking June.
Near the bottom of
the stairs I easily overtake a man handicapped by an overcoat and a fat
briefcase. He's not bad looking, though a little too normal for my tastes,
here however only an obstacle to be avoided. He stops to fumble for his
ticket. I've got mine in my hand already, slip it into the slot as I bang
through the turnstile ahead of him and run toward the escalator. I'm fast,
but not quite fast enough to shove rudely in front of the two tubby chums
who step together onto the same step, so that I can't get past; looming
and glowering above them I descend slowly, no longer Lucifer but a statue
(the Wingless Fury) settling oh so gradually into boggy ground. Halfway
down I spy the 7:35's doors gliding closed. The dull silver train goes
shooting away into the tunnel like... (I have been meditating on this
image for the past few months) ...a chromed turd through a robot's intestine.
How very passionately do I want to give these two simpering cows a hard
push and send them sprawling. ("Moo, Moove!") Instead I say a little prayer:
Why, God? Why do I have to dress up in these stupid clothes and mix with
crowds? Why didn't I get my period, say, Friday, or even yesterday? I'll
bet you my entire estate that it's going to be today, to help ensure that
this week will be the worst in my life. Right, I mean the worst so far.
On the platform I
commence pacing. It had to be the Concord train I just missed. Isn't it
nice of them to have digital display clocks so you always know to the
precise second how late your train is? It gives the harried commuter something
to watch as the platform fills up and blood pressure soars. At 7:46 the
7:41 five-car Richmond train roars in (somebody's idea of a joke, running
half a train at the height of the morning rush) and all 2,000 of us who
have arrived in the last 12 minutes shuffle and jostle aboard. By now
I am resigned. The die is cast at 7:44-if I haven't boarded a train by
this time, no matter how fast I run, how agilely I dodge, how brazenly
I jaywalk the six blocks from Montgomery Street station to the Pyramid,
even if the elevator awaits me with open doors, I will be walking into
the firm's tastefully decorated foyer at 8:03. And today being Monday
("Get Kathryn Day" in this part of the cosmos), I am willing to wager
what's left of my estate that Mr. Big will be there in his specially made,
voluminous gray suit with a dusting of dandruff on the shoulders, picking
up the Wall Street Journal from my 6-foot by 5-foot rosewood desk, ready
to give me a deeply reproachful look from his piggy little eyes. He's
never ever there when I'm early.
The silver doors
slide shut. I don't have the energy to move any further into the car (excuse
me excuse me excuse me) which means when the train stops at 16th &
Mission, the incoming crowd will crush me. Will crush me more. Deep in
my spongy brain a migraine begins to throb; it feels like (I don't have
to meditate on this image, it arises fully formed) a spike about the size
of a tent peg hammered into the top of my skull until the tip is just
behind my right eye. This is the unmistakable work of hormones (pronounced
Whore-Moans and they didn't name them that for nothing). I also feel extremely
hot. Someone nearby is wearing a lot of perfume, the one that smells just
like Raid and always makes me marvel that anybody could put that on and
think they smell good. Today, it makes me want to retch. Standing more
or less in my armpit is a swarthy little man with the sad eyes of a spaniel,
and I wonder how I smell, since I had no time for a morning shower. Well,
too bad for him, that's what he gets for being so short.
I suppose it isn't
rational that absolutely everything could be hopelessly impossible, but
rational or not, so it all is, hopeless and impossible-writ large. I should
have called in sick and stayed in bed-it was standing upright that assured
the ruination of my day.
At the 16th &
Mission station the train jerks to a stop, the doors open, and two people
get off, giving me the opportunity to ooze past those clinging to the
padded support posts (if they had straps to hang from they'd be strap-hangers;
"post-clingers" doesn't, somehow, sing) and inch my way into the middle
aisle, where I fight for a handhold on the top of the nearest seat. This
is marginally better; I can stand here and loathe all the people seated.
I cast my eyes along the rows. If only my misery loved company, then how
my heart would rejoice, for everyone is looking bad this morning, and
I don't think it's entirely an illusion caused by the color-leaching fluorescent
lights. Even the exquisitely groomed, faultlessly turned out Filipinas
from Daly City seem kind of peaked. My misery, however, does not love
company. Anyway, if they all look almost as bad as I feel, I need only
peer darkly into the windows as we enter the tunnel to confirm that I
am feeling only as bad as I look: Monday morning, pea soup green. Lord
Jesus Christ have mercy on my soul, I murmur to myself two or three times.
It doesn 't help.
I try another formula:
I wish I were dead. Seriously, I do. That would be better. Dead women
don't commute.
Actually, an eternity
of this cramped, vibrating misery under these cold lights would make a
dandy prototype for hell. All of us damned, bilious and miserable, jammed
into a black and gray tube, hurry-hurry-hurrying to what? To boring stupid
work to make money to clothe and feed and sustain ourselves so we can
keep working. I'm only in for three more months, and I suppose they all
need the money to finance their habits, but what I don't understand is
how they do it. Some people get up at 5 or 6 in the morning five days
a week for years and years (I have even heard rumors of people who get
up before 7 on weekends, but I don't believe everything I hear), and they
don't go down to 15th & Guerrero and buy AK-16s and run amok, or not
very often. What is their secret? Drugs? Positive thinking? I hate them,
those lucky bastards. Even when I go to bed early, I can't wake up in
the morning. If a doctor were to come and wake me up at 7 a.m. and evaluate
my condition, he would grade it halfway between critical and guarded.
(He would also remark on my abusive language.) And the worst part is,
I'm in perfect health. I have the blood pressure of a child-not just any
child but a hateful, disobedient one who won't shape up and face reality.
I despise and abhor reality. I'll probably live to be 90, feeling like
this.
As we pull into Civic
Center, it occurs to me how simple it would be to get out, cross the platform
and catch the next train back. I could be home in 15 minutes. Catso would
be delighted to see me (not that he'd show it), and I could be back in
bed before the clock struck 8:30 .... But no, I only have about three
hours of sick leave, and I'm taking next Monday off (an eternity from
now). Besides, if wretchedness is my lot (and obviously it is), then I
will drink it to the dregs, the bitterer the better. Me and my Unconquerable
Soul. Anyway, bed wouldn't save me, there's no escape, it's everything
that is awful. I need the damn money.
I must have thought
the magic word, for right before my jaundiced eyes transpires a tiny miracle.
The woman sitting immediately below me stands up to exit, and I have the
next nearest standers blocked with my arm. I slither into the seat and
find myself face to face with a young man in a well-cut black suit with
a pinstripe. The suit and its pinstripe stink of craftmanship, quality,
expense. The young man is as pinky clean as a freshly bathed and powdered
baby; his hair is moussed, his nails manicured and buffed, even his mustache
is styled and trimmed. I suspect that the soles of his glossy black shoes
are clean. I want to kick dust all over him and set his mustache on fire.
My dislike is so
vehement that it gives me a perverse delight to sit, staring insolently
at him. I know his sort-a positive thinker. If I asked him, he'd boast
complacently that he only needs four hours of sleep a night and he loves
his job (only he'd refer to it as "my position.") He's second in command
somewhere, not Mr. Big, not yet, but Mr. Ambitious Young Man on the Way
Up. One of those know-it-all turkeys who practices being aggressive and
rude on the phone, while in person he simpers and preens. I deal with
them daily. I like to say, "Is he expecting you?" in a fuck-you tone,
and then direct them to chairs and watch them slowly deflate until such
time as someone comes to fetch them. I've been at the Partnership three
months, and I need to stick it out at least three more. It's not a bad
job, as jobs go, but I'm fed up with playing my role, and bored with trying
to cajole a human response out of those self-important popinjays. The
only people who show any good manners are the "sales reps" whose affirmations
in the face of constant rejection precede them like a whiff of discreet
but still offensive cologne. They aren't supposed to be up hustling sales
in the penthouse suites, but if they walk by the guards without hesitating,
they can hustle freely until they are reported and escorted out. I turn
them all away but only after volunteering to pass along their business
cards to the office manager who never does much of anything besides collect
business cards and make personal phone calls. The only people I unreservedly
like are the delivery people, Fed Ex and UPS, as well as the sweaty bike
messengers; they all have the air of nonconformist and outlaw about them.
Mr. Ambitious looks
up at me from his WSJ but I don't drop my eyes or react, and he quickly
turns his glance away to the window. Ha ha, stared you down, I silently
gloat, wishing I'd worn my snake wig. The train barrels into the Powell
Street station and slams to a halt, as if the driver just woke from his
nap in the nick of time. I am catapulted forward, halfway out of my seat,
but brace my feet and plop back again. The woman sitting next to me says,
"Geez," and I almost smile, because I was so nearly launched head first
into Mr. Ambitious' black gabardine, pin-striped lap, as if diving for
treasure. That would have surprised him, I think smugly. Mr. Ambitious,
misinterpreting my smirk, smiles back at me. Oh, no you don't-I instantly
clear my expression to impassive and turn to examine the people across
the aisle.
I look up the car
and then down. It's too much for my frayed wiring. In all my years of
commuting, I have never seen such a ... Maybe I am going mad. Just like
this on a BART train. I've sometimes wondered just how it would announce
itself ... how else but with everybody turning into cartoons. I've gotten
trapped in the dominion of caricature. Many of my fellow passengers appear
to be illustrations of vices, while some could be Brueghel peasants, vacant
with imbecility yet cunning and malicious; not a few resemble animals-there
are a few sheep, a boar, a weasel, many dogs, even more monkeys, but no
cats this morning, no moles. Just across the aisle from me, a woman with
duck lips sits next to Elmer Fudd; facing them a knave and a fool, and
beyond a receding series of freaks, sociopaths and mutations. Down yonder
I spy Einstein, Hitler, Geraldo and Liz. And here am I: Caliban, Thersites
and Timon of Athens all rolled into one. A big green, spleeny one.
The world is so lucky
that I don't have nuclear weapons on Monday mornings. More than anything
I want to stand up and shout, "You loathsome vermin, get off my planet!"
I do stand up, but
merely because we are approaching the Montgomery Street station. This
day will never end and I will never feel better but I don't care because
feeling better is a lie anyway. There's nothing to be done but to get
on with it. Geronimo! I am first up at the door that will end up nearest
the escalators. Just as we coast to a stop an East Bay train comes to
rest across the platform. All the doors open simultaneously: Happy Monday
and chaos come again! I dash out in the clear for two seconds, then have
to dodge to sidestep a tiny woman mincing along in a tight skirt and spike
heels. I want to bellow like a moose, but clench my teeth around "Move
it" and keep going. Someday somebody's going to get killed in here and
golly, I hope it's me. The escalator is already a bottleneck. No way there.
With a color movie of random violence-a comedy-playing in my brain, I
sprint for the stairs and take the steps two at a time.
II. Kathryn in Excelsis:
Friday Afternoon
I'm waiting for the
elevator at 4:30 when Danny comes running out with a bulging manila envelope.
"Hold that elevator," he commands in his executive voice. "I've got to
deliver these important documents ASAP. Fox, Rat, Badger & Big are
counting on me!" We leave together; I can't tell what's making my stomach
go like that, the elevator's descent or 21-year-old, green-eyed Danny
who in three days has won my heart. He says, "If any of them get in with
us, let's stick our tongues out at them." "Good idea," I say, prepared
to agree with anything Danny suggests, and when the young couple in suits,
carrying briefcases and talking enthusiastically about bonds and securities,
gets in at the 24th floor, we both extrude our tongues the merest quarter
inch and ride down to the plaza level gazing at the couple like cats.
The man, pompously blabbing, doesn't notice, but the woman watches us
with a nervous little smile.
See how in a few
tomorrows everything has changed: I love the whole damn beautiful world,
I do, but I especially love San Francisco and if perhaps not quite all
the people in it, most of them. OK, many of them. And even the worst have
their, shall we say, perverse charm. Today I'm even rather amused by the
Yuppies doing their Yuppie thing, blocking the sidewalk, chatting with
fatuous self-assurance, clogging the streets with their BMWs and Volvos,
playing their car stereos or yakking on their cellular phones while the
air outside fills with sulphurous fumes. I mean I enjoy the spectacle,
the bustle. The wind is blowing the fumes over to Oakland anyway. Sorry,
Oakland.
Our elevator alights
in the lobby of the pyramid, which proves to be thronged with people waiting,
I can tell, for their lovers. Not a few of them hold bouquets of flowers
in paper or plastic cones, which pleases me as much as if they had all
been bought for me. Danny pushes open the door, saying "Allow me" in a
comically gallant voice. Outside, the summer afternoon presents revels
of sound and light: A brisk breeze snaps the gaudy pennants above the
plaza, and the sun chips diamonds off the laughing spray of the fountain.
Pigeons dance the pigeon strut beneath redwood benches to the trumpet
call of gridlocked traffic echoing from the architectonic canyons of California
Street. Danny tells me a long story about some amazing adventure that
happened to him and his brother last weekend, lingering a moment at his
turn-off and touching my arm before saying goodbye. Light-headed from
hyperventilation brought on by an acute outbreak of lust, I begin to waltz
down Sacramento Street toward the Embarcadero station, knowing full well
what the future holds and not minding that it is sure to end badly; sometimes
when you see disaster looming, you have to run to embrace it. I will,
yes ... but not today. Today my goals are more modest: I'm going to get
a seat for the ride home or spit.
It couldn't be any
afternoon but Friday. Half the crowd on the sidewalk strides along purposefully
while the other half saunters, yet there are no collisions and all appear
pleased with whatever pace they keep. At Sacramento and Front I heel up
behind a troop of Japanese businessmen all in identical dark suits and
identical striped ties, with identical cameras hanging around their necks,
all staring in apparently identical fascination at the more motley Californian
office people pouring forth from the high-rises. Perhaps because the tallest
of them is just my height, they remind me of a strange bunch of Boy Scouts.
They pivot as one to gawk at a Junoesque black woman arrayed in flowing
white robes and a feathered turban, sailing down the middle of the sidewalk
like a galleon before the wind and parting the crowd with her imposing
prow. Two runners in skimpy outfits of crimson and gold nylon cross her
wake at right angles, leap in unison and speed away. A rotund, bald man
wearing a ring on each finger and-can it be?-a diamond choker stoops to
pick up the quivering little terrier that the nimble-jack runners had
hopped. "Poopsie, are you all right?" he cries dramatically, and Poopsie,
who also wears a diamond choker, licks his face.
Of course Poopsie
all right. Everything is all right. Humming the "Ode to Joy:" Freu-de,
freu-de, I gather it, every last bit I can reach, as it whirls around
me. Festival, procession, pageant. I am so buoyant I rebound from the
pavement with each step as if concrete were rubber, pour mieux sauter.
Down the road I skip, step-sauté, step-sauté in time to the "Ode." At
the corner of Davis Street, waiting for the light to change, I glance
around and behold: There he stands in front of the Embarcadero, the god
Frey himself incarnate as a black haired youth (about Danny's age), radiant
in tennis whites, carrying a squash racket, dancing in the late afternoon
sun. He must have a great tape in his Walkman, because he's playing air
guitar on his squash racket and working it out like some orgiastic rock
& roller, say, Jimmy Page in his heyday. His revel takes place in
complete silence, and if anybody wants to stare, my pagan lord is too
far gone in pleasure to care. Amazingly, no one passing by so much as
turns his head; probably Frey is only visible to the faithful. My mouth
opens, and I have to raise my hand to contain the sugary ooze of my smile.
How I want to run over and give him a kiss, just one (to start with) ...
but the light changes to green, the next thing summons me, and I must
go.
I switch my song
to a devilish old blues numbah and actually sing out loud (but softly,
I'm not crazy yet), and in the ambient enchantment am transformed into
a blues ballerina, all hips and breasts, in funky gossamer white chiffon
with a shimmy of seed pearls. Wearing Friday's freedom-freuden as my tiara
of flame, I do the do the rest of the way to BART, and light as a snowflake
and sweeter than jelly roll, float down the stairs into the station, singing
deep in my throat. The overhead signs start flashing the approach of my
train as I pirouette onto the platform

* K.E. Ellingson prefers reading to writing and only writes because she
secretly believes that if she doesn't, her head will fill up with words
until it explodes. She currently resides in Seattle and dreams of elsewhere.
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