May 29, 2026

The Room of Books

           The last stop on our search for an art deco vanity was a place out on the Bar Harbor Road, lousey with buoys and little foot bridges leading nowhere, that (I always assumed) only sold ceramic lighthouses and lobster keychains. 
          G— suggested it as soon as I walked in the door. My desire for a dressing table had triggered an old, shared but long-abandoned pleasure: antiquing. My very specific vision—and the hopelessness of it—brought out the best in him. It was an old way of loving, his running ahead of me into the different booths so that he could return, barely composed, a cat with a mouse dangling in its jaw, announcing his find.
          I'd been rather ashamed of my interest. It took me some time to tell him.
          Now I was feeling that I had caught my beautiful firefly again, this man whose attention I so desperately wanted. Like folds of a deep and heavy curtain, the decades obscure vulnerability—what had been the easy kinetics of new love.
          The silo at the side of the building seemed a literal prop.
          But we'd barely entered before the I Love Lucy kitchen table and the mannequins in Mamie Eisenhower dresses promised—on one of these floorsa vanity with the walnut bookmatch veneer and bakelite pulls that had become my obsession.
          We climbed stairs, stepped onto landings, and passed through different rooms whose progression had the dissociative effect of an art museum. In one, a seller shifted her wares on shelves with determination: ambitious—or desperate for a sale. In another, I sat on the floor and tried on an old penny loafer whose leather was the color of milk chocolate. 
          I'd given up looking for furniture when I asked G— what was in the room he'd just returned from.
          Just books.
          We were both depressed about the end of my search. There were no more places near.
          I left G— resting on a chair beneath a tree of hatboxes and started into the room of books.
          The last room of our vanity shopping.
          The space was incredibly large. It had both the size and formal arrangement of a proper, public library, but there were no overhead lights with which to read the spines. My gaze searched for some order. Little pieces of white card had been taped onto some of the shelves but had torn away or fallen onto their faces; with my thumb and index finger, I lifted one or two.
          Other labels remained in place. An old arrangement began to emerge like beds of an abandoned garden. I saw "Engineering," then "Prayer." A section on Eastern Religions was of respectable size.
          An empty spindle-back chair sat facing one of the stacks, giving the impression of its last occupant as he must have sat, straining to read the spines or flipping the pages of a potential purchase—years ago
          The atmosphere was still and dark, and feeble daylight from a bank of windows at the end of the room never disturbed the darkness in which the books lived: some lying on their sides like toppled headstones, others packed tightly—unremoveable, out of reach.
          Loose papers and slender, spiral-bound publications seemed to litter the shelves the way fresh flurries blur the edges of the curb from the road: annual reports, real estate licensing workbooks, and church cookbooks.
          I saw a scratched, jacketless LP record that said If You Find Me Annoying, Tell Your Friends. A broken shellac 78 announced a Fox Trot. 
          Instinctively, I moved toward a source of light, around a corner.  
          It was at the end of a corridor marked "Travel"—a small open window.
          It had briefly rained as we had gotten lost in the labyrinth, and there were faded travel brochures and maps on a shelf beneath the window that had blown up and gotten wet. And I looked out the little window down to the parking lot and into the gray field beyond.
          I smelled the rain that had fallen and saw the drops on the cars, the small puddles.
          I felt suddenly that faraway feeling: of vacation, of an unknown place, of being temporarily outside of your life—of new love.
          The sensation quickly passed.
          I grabbed an old, floral-covered Osbert Sitwell I wanted to show G— and retraced my steps through the cavernous room.
          He wasn't interested in the Sitwells anymore, and we left by what seemed a secret stairway, partially blocked at the bottom, that put us in the middle of another floor we hadn't yet seen.
          This had been, in fact, a large, genuine barn.
          But we were tired of looking at antiques.

February 17, 2026

A Late-Life Charm

Find your light; they can't love you if they don't see you.
—Bette Midler
          
          I'm just borrowing from the idiom.
          That's the phrase that came to me as I crossed Main Street in front of the Airline pub.
          The sidewalk and curb were February dirty. The ice was the color of spilled coffee with milk, and the snow lay where it had fallen—a fossil in the neck of the curb.
          I was headed for a meeting with an engineer at the Old Jail. We'd probably traipse through the icy cell block and go "down cellar," into that long, narrow, pointless black corridor flanked by the fat sewer pipe.
          I do like being male. I was pretty certain about that.
          I liked mencertain kinds of men. The ones with the short auburn hair at their temples and the luxurious, superfluous, unconcealable eyelashes. Those with arms—too longlike gangly alabaster levers with down
          It's worth mentioning—for the sake of accuracythat these arms invariably originate from the short sleeves of a pale yellow Supima cotton polo shirt.
          Or am I simply describing G— in that early 1980s photo they took of him on Martha's Vineyard? Everybody knew what was happening in that situation.
          Am I happy that the moment was documented? Or (more likely) bitter that he was not then mine (nor would he have consented to be even if we had met).
          I married above my sexual station. It comes with its own set of difficulties.
          Yet in my fifth month of being sober I started wearing charm bracelets. Not the unisex ones or (even worse) the wrist accessories designed for "men" but the full Grace Kelly, clacking against the desk as I type here. And last month I granted myself permission to graduate from the questionable leather clutches that drew derision from the guys in Garden Club to a proper purse.
          I have one in cognac and another in black pebble.
          The question of whether I'm coming or going is apt, here. Whether I am taking leave of the carnality of my body at its youthful bestin the face of testosterone's betrayal somewhere around sixty-fiveor coming home to a broken childhood that sought refuge in adult women.
          Ladies with handbags and driving gloves. Elementary school teachers with rayon crepe scarves and car keys in folded leather cases the color of cornflowers.
          I'm just the snap of a cigarette lighter or a furtive application of lipstick away from feeling safer, breathing deeper. The noise my bracelets make against the dinner plates as I wash them does for me what ocean breakers do for writers, or woebegone lovers.
          I spent my childhood in my great-aunt's closets, among shoeboxes with labels like Air Step and Naturalizer, touching the beaded fox's eye of a fur collar with my index finger, or clicking open a shiny alligator purse that hadn't seen the light of day since Truman.
          Chic in his unconcern, blind to peers or expectations, solopsistic, sissified, that child's temerity is something I could use, here, in these years beyond my erotic career. All the work of fitting out this vessel—so late in my life—knowing it to be henceforward incapable of sail, feels pointless. 
          Yet to wear, again, something like the pixieish face I had in my early thirties is, I deem, a worthy game. More and more each night it smiles back at me when I brush my teeth, now conjoined with a neck of flesh gathered and dangling beneath the chin.
          Functioning like a beta-blocker, the flash of metal from my wrist in meetings speaks louder, now, than my old uncertaintya little bitchier, taking its tones from the trombone's smear, like a spoken smirk.
          The effrontery of others, so many decades of disparagement, fits easily into my purse rather than my heart.
          Ironically, it was my half-brother who said it best:

I maman
So I'm an elegant man
I'm a man
Clara Bowes and open toes
Are what I am

          Yes, I think I am coming home.