A Little Life: A Novel - A Little Life: a novel Part 7
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A Little Life: a novel Part 7

Every Saturday, Harold would call and ask him about work, and he'd tell him about his boss, Marshall, the deputy U.S. Attorney, who had the unnerving ability to recite entire Supreme Court decisions from memory, closing his eyes to summon a vision of the page in his mind, his voice becoming robotic and dull as he chanted, but never dropping or adding a word. He had always thought he had a good memory, but Marshall's amazed him.

In some ways, the U.S. Attorney's Office reminded him of the home: it was largely male, and the place fizzed with a particular and constant hostility, the kind of hissing acrimony that naturally arises whenever a group of highly competitive people who are all evenly matched are housed in the same small space with the understanding that only some of them would have the opportunity to distinguish themselves. (Here, though, they were matched in accomplishments; at the home, they were matched in hunger, in want.) All two hundred of the assistant prosecutors, it seemed, had attended one of five or six law schools, and virtually all of them had been on the law review and moot court at their respective schools. He was part of a four-person team that worked mostly on securities fraud cases, and he and his teammates each had something-a credential, an idiosyncrasy-that they hoped lifted them above the others: he had his master's from MIT (which no one cared about but was at least an oddity) and his circuit court clerkship with Sullivan, with whom Marshall was friendly. Citizen, his closest friend at the office, had a law degree from Cambridge and had practiced as a barrister in London for two years before moving to New York. And Rhodes, the third in their trio, had been a Fulbright Scholar in Argentina after college. (The fourth on their team was a profoundly lazy guy named Scott who, it was rumored, had only gotten the job because his father played tennis with the president.) He was usually at the office, and sometimes, when he and Citizen and Rhodes were there late, eating takeout, he was reminded of being with his roommates in their suite at Hood. And although he enjoyed Citizen's and Rhodes's company, and the specificity and depth of their intelligence, he was in those moments nostalgic for his friends, who thought so differently than he did and who made him think differently as well. In the middle of one conversation with Citizen and Rhodes about logic, he recalled, suddenly, a question Dr. Li had asked him his freshman year, when he was auditioning to be accepted into his pure math seminar: Why are manhole covers round? It was an easy question, and easy to answer, but when he'd returned to Hood and had repeated Dr. Li's question to his roommates, they were silent. And then finally JB had begun, in the dreamy tones of a wandering storyteller, "Once, very long ago, mammoths roamed the earth, and their footprints left permanent circular indentations in the ground," and they had all laughed. He smiled, remembering it; he sometimes wished he had a mind like JB's, one that could create stories that would delight others, instead of the mind he did have, which was always searching for an explanation, an explanation that, while perhaps correct, was empty of romance, of fancy, of wit.

"Time to whip out the credentials," Citizen would whisper to him on the occasions that the U.S. Attorney himself would emerge onto the floor and all the assistant prosecutors would buzz toward him, mothlike, as a multitude of gray suits. They and Rhodes would join the hover, but even in those gatherings he never mentioned the one credential he knew could have made not only Marshall but the U.S. Attorney as well stop and look at him more closely. After he'd gotten the job, Harold had asked him if he could mention him to Adam, the U.S. Attorney, with whom Harold was, it happened, longtime acquaintances. But he'd told Harold he wanted to know he could make it on his own. This was true, but the greater reason was that he was tentative about naming Harold as one of his assets, because he didn't want Harold to regret his association with him. And so he'd said nothing.

Often, however, it felt as if Harold was there anyway. Reminiscing about law school (and its attendant activity, bragging about one's accomplishments in law school) was a favorite pastime in the office, and because so many of his colleagues had gone to his school, quite a few of them knew Harold (and the others knew of him), and he'd sometimes listen to them talk about classes they'd taken with him, or how prepared they'd had to be for them, and would feel proud of Harold, and-though he knew it was silly-proud of himself for knowing him. The following year, Harold's book about the Constitution would be published, and everyone in the office would read the acknowledgments and see his name and his affiliation with Harold would be revealed, and many of them would be suspicious, and he'd see worry in their faces as they tried to remember what they might have said about Harold in his presence. By that time, however, he would feel he had established himself in the office on his own, had found his own place alongside Citizen and Rhodes, had made his own relationship with Marshall.

But as much as he would have liked to, as much as he craved it, he was still cautious about claiming Harold as his friend: sometimes he worried that he was only imagining their closeness, inflating it hopefully in his mind, and then (to his embarrassment) he would have to retrieve The Beautiful Promise from his shelf and turn to the acknowledgments, reading Harold's words again, as if it were itself a contract, a declaration that what he felt for Harold was at least in some degree reciprocated. And yet he was always prepared: It will end this month, he would tell himself. And then, at the end of the month: Next month. He won't want to talk to me next month. He tried to keep himself in a constant state of readiness; he tried to prepare himself for disappointment, even as he yearned to be proven wrong.

And still, the friendship spooled on and on, a long, swift river that had caught him in its slipstream and was carrying him along, taking him somewhere he couldn't see. At every point when he thought that he had reached the limits of what their relationship would be, Harold or Julia flung open the doors to another room and invited him in. He met Julia's father, a retired pulmonologist, and brother, an art history professor, when they visited from England one Thanksgiving, and when Harold and Julia came to New York, they took him and Willem out to dinner, to places they had heard about but couldn't afford to visit on their own. They saw the apartment at Lispenard Street-Julia polite, Harold horrified-and the week that the radiators mysteriously stopped working, they left him a set of keys to their apartment uptown, which was so warm that for the first hour after he and Willem arrived, they simply sat on the sofa like mannequins, too stunned by the sudden reintroduction of heat into their lives to move. And after Harold witnessed him in the middle of an episode-this was the Thanksgiving after he moved to New York, and in his desperation (he knew he wouldn't be able to make it upstairs), he had turned off the stove, where he had been sauteeing some spinach, and pulled himself into the pantry, where he had shut the door and laid down on the floor to wait-they had rearranged the house, so that the next time he visited, he found the spare bedroom had been moved to the ground-floor suite behind the living room where Harold's study had been, and Harold's desk and chair and books moved to the second floor.

But even after all of this, a part of him was always waiting for the day he'd come to a door and try the knob and it wouldn't move. He didn't mind that, necessarily; there was something scary and anxiety-inducing about being in a space where nothing seemed to be forbidden to him, where everything was offered to him and nothing was asked in return. He tried to give them what he could; he was aware it wasn't much. And the things Harold gave him so easily-answers, affection-he couldn't reciprocate.

One day after he'd known them for almost seven years, he was at the house in springtime. It was Julia's birthday; she was turning fifty-one, and because she had been at a conference in Oslo for her fiftieth birthday, she'd decided that this would be her big celebration. He and Harold were cleaning the living room-or rather, he was cleaning, and Harold was plucking books at random from the shelves and telling him stories about how he'd gotten each one, or flipping back the covers so he could see other people's names written inside, including a copy of The Leopard on whose flyleaf was scrawled: "Property of Laurence V. Raleigh. Do not take. Harold Stein, this means you!!"

He had threatened to tell Laurence, and Harold had threatened him back. "You'd better not, Jude, if you know what's good for you."

"Or what?" he'd asked, teasing him.

"Or-this!" Harold had said, and had leaped at him, and before he could recognize that Harold was just being playful, he had recoiled so violently, torquing his body to avoid contact, that he had bumped into the bookcase and had knocked against a lumpy ceramic mug that Harold's son, Jacob, had made, which fell to the ground and broke into three neat pieces. Harold had stepped back from him then, and there was a sudden, horrible silence, into which he had nearly wept.

"Harold," he said, crouching to the ground, picking up the pieces, "I'm so sorry, I'm so sorry. Please forgive me." He wanted to beat himself against the floor; he knew this was the last thing Jacob had made Harold before he got sick. Above him, he could hear only Harold's breathing.

"Harold, please forgive me," he repeated, cupping the pieces in his palms. "I think I can fix this, though-I can make it better." He couldn't look up from the mug, its shiny buttered glaze.

He felt Harold crouch beside him. "Jude," Harold said, "it's all right. It was an accident." His voice was very quiet. "Give me the pieces," he said, but he was gentle, and he didn't sound angry.

He did. "I can leave," he offered.

"Of course you're not going to leave," Harold said. "It's okay, Jude."

"But it was Jacob's," he heard himself say.

"Yes," said Harold. "And it still is." He stood. "Look at me, Jude," he said, and he finally did. "It's okay. Come on," and Harold held out his hand, and he took it, and let Harold pull him to his feet. He wanted to howl, then, that after everything Harold had given him, he had repaid him by destroying something precious created by someone who had been most precious.

Harold went upstairs to his study with the mug in his hands, and he finished his cleaning in silence, the lovely day graying around him. When Julia came home, he waited for Harold to tell her how stupid and clumsy he'd been, but he didn't. That night at dinner, Harold was the same as he always was, but when he returned to Lispenard Street, he wrote Harold a real, proper letter, apologizing properly, and sent it to him.

And a few days later, he got a reply, also in the form of a real letter, which he would keep for the rest of his life.

"Dear Jude," Harold wrote, "thank you for your beautiful (if unnecessary) note. I appreciate everything in it. You're right; that mug means a lot to me. But you mean more. So please stop torturing yourself.

"If I were a different kind of person, I might say that this whole incident is a metaphor for life in general: things get broken, and sometimes they get repaired, and in most cases, you realize that no matter what gets damaged, life rearranges itself to compensate for your loss, sometimes wonderfully.

"Actually-maybe I am that kind of person after all.

"Love, Harold."

It was not so many years ago-despite the fact that he knew otherwise, despite what Andy had been telling him since he was seventeen-that he was still maintaining a sort of small, steady hope that he might get better. On especially bad days, he would repeat the Philadelphia surgeon's words to himself-"the spine has wonderful reparative qualities"-almost like a chant. A few years after meeting Andy, when he was in law school, he had finally summoned the courage to suggest this to him, had said aloud the prediction he had treasured and clung to, hoping that Andy might nod and say, "That's exactly right. It'll just take time."

But Andy had snorted. "He told you that?" he asked. "It's not going to get better, Jude; as you get older, it'll get worse." Andy had been looking down at his ankle as he spoke, using tweezers to pick out shreds of dead flesh from a wound he'd developed, when he suddenly froze, and even without seeing Andy's face, he could tell he was chagrined. "I'm sorry, Jude," he said, looking up, still cupping his foot in his hand. "I'm sorry I can't tell you differently." And when he couldn't answer, he sighed. "You're upset."

He was, of course. "I'm fine," he managed to say, but he couldn't bring himself to look at Andy.

"I'm sorry, Jude," Andy repeated, quietly. He had two settings, even then: brusque and gentle, and he had experienced both of them often, sometimes in a single appointment.

"But one thing I promise," he said, returning to the ankle, "I'll always be here to take care of you."

And he had. Of all the people in his life, it was in some ways Andy who knew the most about him: Andy was the only person he'd been naked in front of as an adult, the only person who was familiar with every physical dimension of his body. Andy had been a resident when they met, and he had stayed in Boston for his fellowship, and his postfellowship, and then the two of them had moved to New York within months of each other. He was an orthopedic surgeon, but he treated him for everything, from chest colds to his back and leg problems.

"Wow," Andy said dryly, as he sat in his examining room one day hacking up phlegm (this had been the previous spring, shortly before he had turned twenty-nine, when a bout of bronchitis had been snaking its way through the office), "I'm so glad I specialized in orthopedics. This is such good practice for me. This is exactly what I thought I'd do with my training."

He had started to laugh, but then his coughing had begun again and Andy had thumped him on the back. "Maybe if someone recommended a real internist to me, I wouldn't have to keep going to a chiropractor for all my medical needs," he said.

"Mmm," Andy said. "You know, maybe you should start seeing an internist. God knows it'd save me a lot of time, and a shitload of headaches as well." But he would never go to see anyone but Andy, and he thought-although they had never discussed it-that Andy wouldn't want him to, either.

For all Andy knew about him, he knew relatively little about Andy. He knew that he and Andy had gone to the same college, and that Andy was a decade older than he, and that Andy's father was Gujarati and his mother was Welsh, and that he had grown up in Ohio. Three years ago, Andy had gotten married, and he had been surprised to be invited to the wedding, which was small and held at Andy's in-laws' house on the Upper West Side. He had made Willem come with him, and was even more surprised when Andy's new wife, Jane, had thrown her arms around him when they were introduced and said, "The famous Jude St. Francis! I've heard so much about you!"

"Oh, really," he'd said, his mind filling with fear, like a flock of flapping bats.

"Nothing like that," Jane had said, smiling (she was a doctor as well: a gynecologist). "But he adores you, Jude; I'm so glad you came." He had met Andy's parents as well, and at the end of the evening, Andy had slung an arm around his neck and given him a hard, awkward kiss on the cheek, which he now did every time they saw each other. Andy always looked uncomfortable doing it, but also seemed compelled to keep doing it, which he found both funny and touching.

He appreciated Andy in many ways, but he appreciated most his unflappability. After they had met, after Andy had made it difficult not to continue seeing him by showing up at Hood, banging on their door after he had missed two follow-up appointments (he hadn't forgotten; he had just decided not to go) and ignored three phone calls and four e-mails, he had resigned himself to the fact that it might not be bad to have a doctor-it seemed, after all, inevitable-and that Andy might be someone he could trust. The third time they met, Andy took his history, or what he would provide of it, and wrote down the facts he would tell him without comment or reaction.

And indeed, it was only years later-a little less than four years ago-that Andy had directly mentioned his childhood. This had been during his and Andy's first big fight. They'd had skirmishes, of course, and disagreements, and once or twice a year Andy would deliver a long lecture to him (he saw Andy every six weeks-though more frequently these days-and could always anticipate which appointment would be the Lecture Appointment by the terseness with which Andy would greet him and conduct his examination) that covered what Andy considered his perplexing and infuriating unwillingness to take proper care of himself, his maddening refusal to see a therapist, and his bizarre reluctance to take pain medication that would probably improve his quality of life.

The fight had concerned what Andy had retroactively come to consider a botched suicide attempt. This had been right before New Year's, and he had been cutting himself, and he had cut too close to a vein, and it had resulted in a great, sloppy, bloody mess into which he had been forced to involve Willem. In the examining room that night, Andy had refused to speak to him, he was so angry, and had actually muttered to himself as he made his stitches, each as neat and tiny as if he were embroidering them.

Even before Andy had opened his mouth at his next appointment, he had known that he was furious. He had actually considered not coming in for his checkup at all, except he knew if he didn't, Andy would simply keep calling him-or worse, calling Willem, or worse yet, Harold-until he showed up.

"I should fucking have had you hospitalized," were Andy's first words to him, followed by, "I'm such a fucking idiot."

"I think you're overreacting," he'd begun, but Andy ignored him.

"I happen to believe you weren't trying to kill yourself, or I'd've had you committed so fast your head would've spun," he said. "It's only because statistically, anyone who cuts themselves as much as you do, and for as many years as you have, is in less immediate danger of suicide than someone who's less consistently self-injurious." (Andy was fond of statistics. He sometimes suspected he made them up.) "But Jude, this is crazy, and that was way too close. Either you start seeing a shrink immediately or I'm going to commit you."

"You can't do that," he'd said, furious himself now, although he knew Andy could: he had looked up the laws of involuntary commitment in New York State, and they were not in his favor.

"You know I can," Andy had said. He was almost shouting at this point. Their appointments were always after office hours, because they sometimes chatted afterward if Andy had time and was in a good mood.

"I'll sue you," he'd said, absurdly, and Andy had yelled back at him, "Go right ahead! Do you know how fucked up this is, Jude? Do you have any idea what kind of position you're putting me in?"

"Don't worry," he'd said, sarcastically, "I don't have any family. No one's going to sue you for wrongful death."

Andy had stepped back, then, as if he had tried to hit him. "How dare you," he'd said, slowly. "You know that's not what I mean."

And of course he did. But "Whatever," he said. "I'm leaving." And he slid off the table (fortunately, he hadn't changed out of his clothes; Andy had started lecturing him before he'd had a chance) and tried to leave the room, although leaving the room at his pace was hardly dramatic, and Andy scooted over to stand in the doorway.

"Jude," he said, in one of his sudden mood changes, "I know you don't want to go. But this is getting scary." He took a breath. "Have you ever even talked to anyone about what happened when you were a kid?"

"That doesn't have anything to do with anything," he'd said, feeling cold. Andy had never alluded to what he'd told him, and he found himself feeling betrayed that he should do so now.

"Like hell it doesn't," Andy had said, and the self-conscious theatricality of the phrase-did anyone really say that outside of the movies?-made him smile despite himself, and Andy, mistaking his smile for mockery, changed directions again. "There's something incredibly arrogant about your stubbornness, Jude," he continued. "Your utter refusal to listen to anyone about anything that concerns your health or well-being is either a pathological case of self-destructiveness or it's a huge fuck-you to the rest of us."

He was hurt by this. "And there's something incredibly manipulative about you threatening to commit me whenever I disagree with you, and especially in this case, when I've told you it was a stupid accident," he hurled back at Andy. "Andy, I appreciate you, I really do. I don't know what I'd do without you. But I'm an adult and you can't dictate what I do or don't do."

"You know what, Jude?" Andy had asked (now he was yelling again). "You're right. I can't dictate your decisions. But I don't have to accept them, either. Go find some other asshole to be your doctor. I'm not going to do it any longer."

"Fine," he'd snapped, and left.

He couldn't remember when he had been angrier on his own behalf. Lots of things made him angry-general injustice, incompetence, directors who didn't give Willem a part he wanted-but he rarely got angry about things that happened or had happened to him: his pains, past and present, were things he tried not to brood about, were not questions to which he spent his days searching for meaning. He already knew why they had happened: they had happened because he had deserved them.

But he knew too that his anger was unjustified. And as much as he resented his dependence upon Andy, he was grateful for him as well, and he knew Andy found his behavior illogical. But Andy's job was to make people better: Andy saw him the way he saw a mangled tax law, as something to be untangled and repaired-whether he thought he could be repaired was almost incidental. The thing he was trying to fix-the scars that raised his back into an awful, unnatural topography, the skin stretched as glossy and taut as a roasted duck's: the reason he was trying to save money-was not, he knew, something Andy would approve of. "Jude," Andy would say if he ever heard what he was planning, "I promise you it's not going to work, and you're going to have wasted all that money. Don't do it."

"But they're hideous," he would mumble.

"They're not, Jude," Andy would say. "I swear to god they're not."

(But he wasn't going to tell Andy anyway, so he would never have to have that particular conversation.) The days passed and he didn't call Andy and Andy didn't call him. As if in punishment, his wrist throbbed at night when he was trying to sleep, and at work he forgot and banged it rhythmically against the side of his desk as he read, a longtime bad tic he'd not managed to erase. The stitches had seeped blood then, and he'd had to clean them, clumsily, in the bathroom sink.

"What's wrong?" Willem asked him one night.

"Nothing," he said. He could tell Willem, of course, who would listen and say "Hmm" in his Willem-ish way, but he knew he would agree with Andy.

A week after their fight, he came home to Lispenard Street-it was a Sunday, and he had been walking through west Chelsea-and Andy was waiting on the steps before their front door.

He was surprised to see him. "Hi," he said.

"Hi," Andy had replied. They stood there. "I wasn't sure if you'd take my call."

"Of course I would've."

"Listen," Andy said. "I'm sorry."

"Me too. I'm sorry, Andy."

"But I really do think you should see someone."

"I know you do."

And somehow they managed to leave it at that: a fragile and mutually unsatisfying cease-fire, with the question of the therapist the vast gray demilitarized zone between them. The compromise (though how this had been agreed upon as such was unclear to him now) was that at the end of every visit, he had to show Andy his arms, and Andy would examine them for new cuts. Whenever he found one, he would log it in his chart. He was never sure what might provoke another outburst from Andy: sometimes there were many new cuts, and Andy would merely groan and write them down, and sometimes there were only a few new cuts and Andy would get agitated anyway. "You've fucking ruined your arms, you know that, right?" he would ask him. But he would say nothing, and let Andy's lecture wash over him. Part of him understood that by not letting Andy do his job-which was, after all, to heal him-he was being disrespectful, and was to some degree making Andy into a joke in his own office. Andy's tallies-sometimes he wanted to ask Andy if he would get a prize once he reached a certain number, but he knew it would make him angry-were a way for him to at least pretend he could manage the situation, even if he couldn't: it was the accrual of data as a small compensation for actual treatment.

And then, two years later, another wound had opened on his left leg, which had always been the more troublesome one, and his cuttings were set aside for the more urgent matter of his leg. He had first developed one of these wounds less than a year after the injury, and it had healed quickly. "But it won't be the last," the Philadelphia surgeon had said. "With an injury like yours, everything-the vascular system, the dermal system-has been so compromised that you should expect you might get these now and again."

This was the eleventh he'd had, so although he was prepared for the sensation of it, he was never to know its cause (An insect bite? A brush against the edge of a metal filing cabinet? It was always something so gallingly small, but still capable of tearing his skin as easily as if it had been made of paper), and he was never to cease being disgusted by it: the suppuration, the sick, fishy scent, the little gash, like a fetus's mouth, that would appear, burbling viscous, unidentifiable fluids. It was unnatural, the stuff of monster movies and myths, to walk about with an opening that wouldn't, couldn't be closed. He began seeing Andy every Friday night so he could debride the wound, cleaning it and removing the dead tissue and examining the area around it, looking for new skin growth, as he held his breath and gripped the side of the table and tried not to scream.

"You have to tell me when it's painful, Jude," Andy had said, as he breathed and sweated and counted in his head. "It's a good thing if you can feel this, not a bad thing. It means the nerves are still alive and still doing what they're supposed to."

"It's painful," he managed to choke out.

"Scale of one to ten?"

"Seven. Eight."

"I'm sorry," Andy replied. "I'm almost done, I promise. Five more minutes."

He shut his eyes and counted to three hundred, making himself go slowly.

When it was over, he would sit, and Andy would sit with him and give him something to drink: a soda, something sugary, and he'd feel the room begin to clarify itself around him, bit by blurry bit. "Slowly," Andy would say, "or you'll be sick." He would watch as Andy dressed the wound-he was always at his calmest when he was stitching or sewing or wrapping-and in those moments, he would feel so vulnerable and weak that he would have agreed to anything Andy might have suggested.

"You're not going to cut yourself on your legs," Andy would say, more a statement than a question.

"No, I won't."

"Because that would be too insane, even for you."

"I know."

"Your anatomy is so degraded that it'd get really infected."

"Andy. I know."

He had, at various points, suspected that Andy was talking to his friends behind his back, and there were times when they would use Andy-like language and turns of phrase, and even four years after "The Incident," as Andy had begun calling it, he suspected that Willem was going through the bathroom trash in the morning, and he'd had to take extra cautions disposing of his razors, bundling them in tissue and duct tape and throwing them into garbage cans on the way to work. "Your crew," Andy called them: "What've you and your crew been up to these days?" (when he was in a good mood) and "I'm going to tell your fucking crew they've got to keep their eyes on you" (when he wasn't).

"Don't you dare, Andy," he'd say. "And anyway, it's not their responsibility."

"Of course it is," Andy would retort. As with other issues, they couldn't agree on this one.

But now it was twenty months after the appearance of this most recent wound and it still hadn't healed. Or rather, it had healed and then broken again and then healed again, and then he had woken on Friday and felt something damp and gummy on his leg-the lower calf, right above the ankle-and had known it had split. He hadn't called Andy yet-he would do so on Monday-but it had been important to him to take this walk, which he feared would be his last for some time, maybe months.

He was on Madison and Seventy-fifth now, very near Andy's office, and his leg was hurting him so much that he crossed to Fifth and sat on one of the benches near the wall that bordered the park. As soon as he sat, he experienced that familiar dizziness, that stomach-lifting nausea, and he bent over and waited until the cement became cement again and he would be able to stand. He felt in those minutes his body's treason, how sometimes the central, tedious struggle in his life was his unwillingness to accept that he would be betrayed by it again and again, that he could expect nothing from it and yet had to keep maintaining it. So much time, his and Andy's, was spent trying to repair something unfixable, something that should have wound up in charred bits on a slag heap years ago. And for what? His mind, he supposed. But there was-as Andy might have said-something incredibly arrogant about that, as if he was saving a jalopy because he had a sentimental attachment to its sound system.

If I walk just a few more blocks, I can be at his office, he thought, but he never would have. It was Sunday. Andy deserved some sort of respite from him, and besides, what he was feeling now was not something he hadn't felt before.

He waited a few more minutes and then heaved himself to his feet, where he stood for half a minute before dropping to the bench again. Finally he was able to stand for good. He wasn't ready yet, but he could imagine himself walking to the curb, raising his arm to hail a cab, resting his head against the back of its black vinyl banquette. He would count the steps to get there, just as he would count the steps it would take him to get from the cab and to his building, from the elevator to the apartment, and from the front door to his room. When he had learned to walk the third time-after his braces had come off-it had been Andy who had helped instruct the physical therapist (she had not been pleased, but had taken his suggestions), and Andy who had, as Ana had just four years before, watched him make his way unaccompanied across a space of ten feet, and then twenty, and then fifty, and then a hundred. His very gait-the left leg coming up to make a near-ninety-degree angle with the ground, forming a rectangle of negative space, the right listing behind-was engineered by Andy, who had made him work at it for hours until he could do it himself. It was Andy who told him he thought he was capable of walking without a cane, and when he finally did it, he'd had Andy to thank.

Monday was not very many hours away, he told himself as he struggled to stay standing, and Andy would see him as he always did, no matter how busy he was. "When did you notice the break?" Andy would say, nudging gently at it with a bit of gauze. "Friday," he'd say. "Why didn't you call me then, Jude?" Andy would say, irritated. "At any rate, I hope you didn't go on your stupid fucking walk." "No, of course not," he'd say, but Andy wouldn't believe him. He sometimes wondered whether Andy thought of him as only a collection of viruses and malfunctions: If you removed them, who was he? If Andy didn't have to take care of him, would he still be interested in him? If he appeared one day magically whole, with a stride as easy as Willem's and JB's complete lack of self-consciousness, the way he could lean back in his chair and let his shirt hoist itself from his hips without any fear, or with Malcolm's long arms, the skin on their insides as smooth as frosting, what would he be to Andy? What would he be to any of them? Would they like him less? More? Or would he discover-as he often feared-that what he understood as friendship was really motivated by their pity of him? How much of who he was was inextricable from what he was unable to do? Who would he have been, who would he be, without the scars, the cuts, the hurts, the sores, the fractures, the infections, the splints, and the discharges?

But of course he would never know. Six months ago, they had managed to get the wound under control, and Andy had examined it, checking and rechecking, before issuing a fleet of warnings about what he should do if it reopened.

He had been only half listening. He was feeling light that day for some reason, but Andy was querulous, and along with a lecture about his leg, he had also endured another about his cutting (too much, Andy thought), and his general appearance (too thin, Andy thought).

He had admired his leg, pivoting it and examining the place where the wound had at last closed over, as Andy talked and talked. "Are you listening to me, Jude?" he had finally demanded.

"It looks good," he told Andy, not answering him, but wanting his reassurance. "Doesn't it?"

Andy sighed. "It looks-" And then he stopped, and was quiet, and he had looked up, had watched Andy shut his eyes, as if refocusing himself, and then open them again. "It looks good, Jude," he'd said, quietly. "It does."

He had felt, then, a great surge of gratitude, because he knew Andy didn't think it looked good, would never think it looked good. To Andy, his body was an onslaught of terrors, one against which the two of them had to be constantly attentive. He knew Andy thought he was self-destructive, or delusional, or in denial.