The Paris Review

Quarantine Morning

Climbing the stairs, slowly, on my palmsand soles, bent far forward, I seemy shins closer than usual—their indigo and red-violet fireworks,their royal-blue wormholes—how much differencebetween me and a cadaver?I know I won’t come, after I’m dead,though it does seem a little strange, to me,and strange that what we learned in Seventh-Grade Healthis not a structural part of each of us like heartbeat and breath,though sometimes people die of a heart attack in bed.I think my mother’s father did, when he was with his mistress,then they said to his wife he had fallen down the cellarstairs that weren’t there. I told my son that—in his late forties, when he said I nevertold him anything about my family—and he said, What did they do then, throw him down the cellarstairs?This morning, in a dream, his father came into a restaurant, I waswaiting on the banquetteand I saw him at a distance, taller than everyone,and with that light in the air around his faceI had seen, sometimes, when I’d arrived late to meet him.It was not his whiteness—I had seen it around my boyfriend’s facein high school.With Joey I thought it was genius, inspiration almost like possession,and I think it was,with my ex I thought it was goodness but I think it was sexual loveand the illusion his tolerance for me would be lifelong.I don’t remember the last time we made love before I moved into theliving room when I understood he was really going toleave me.I didn’t know it was the last time,but it was like all the other times, complete, and wrenching,though I think I said, after the series of orgasms, One more? anddid he kiss me,or smile, or grunt,and I came again, although I was dead.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Paris Review

The Paris Review1 min read
Afrika
Ayé Aton (1940–2017) was born Robert Underwood in Versailles, Kentucky. His artistic career had its start in early-sixties Chicago, where he befriended a group of older men who played checkers and discussed philosophy in Washington Park on the South
The Paris Review26 min read
Unit One
The building, a brick row house, was only a few blocks from the subway, and Amy got there first. A rose had been left on the stoop, laid vertically on the slanting top of one of the stubby walls that descended on either side of the steps. Against the
The Paris Review42 min read
Naked
Lately I’d become obsessed with sewing stuffed animals. I’d seen a bear in a store and thought it was cute, so I went to a hobby shop and noticed they were selling kits that included the yarn, needles, and other little things you’d need to make them.

Related Books & Audiobooks