We pull up in front of a ramshackle
tenement on 9th Street. The brass numbers above the entrance are
askew and the crescent of the 5 is clipped off, but not as intriguing a detail
to spend time figuring out how or why.
Certain sections on certain blocks
there are patches or patch-worked architecture with spit, brick and cement
holding a façade or stoop together. This
is one.
At the door I stare at the old
chrome, tape stained panel searching for 4C. The numbers are faded and I always
get the logic of the arrangement confused: horizontal or vertical? It never
fails to piss me off. 4C pops out at me
and I press the buzzer and immediately a click and I enter the vestibule where
the echoing electronic beehive of torture alarm cuts off and I see that it is a
walk up which is no surprise.
A walk up.
Having not lived in the East
Village for over 15 years I am struck by how frozen in time and consistent the
narrow stairs look from the pink and white, black grouted inch-square tiled floor: Mismatched
and also patch-worked together from years of repairs. Left over tile from
someone’s bathroom renovation, or something left on the sidewalk that will do.
The stairs are steep and narrow, which I know are identical
to every other in the neighborhood. Creaky stairs covered with brown rubber lined
linoleum unevenly nailed into place with rusty brown nails. Three centuries of layered paint cover the bannister and more of the mid 20th century
bathroom tile and stucco work adorn every wall. Easy jazz, dog chatter and the
smell of pot and patchouli is here. I
cannot get over how none of this has changed a bit. Like an in vivo time capsule.
I get to 4 and search for C. At the end of each floor the
doors frames hug each other at a 45degree angle, like an open book. One
with a dusty dried flower wreath opens and a frail woman with pre-Raphaelite
hair to her waist is standing there. I hand her the bag.
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