Excerpt from Citizen
On the train the woman standing makes you understand there
are no seats available. And, in fact, there is one. Is the woman getting off at
the next stop? No, she would rather stand all the way to Union Station.
The space next to the man is the pause in a conversation you
are suddenly rushing to fill. You step quickly over the woman’s fear, a fear
she shares. You let her have it.
The man doesn’t acknowledge you as you sit down because the
man knows more about the unoccupied seat than you do. For him, you imagine, it
is more like breath than wonder; he has had to think about it so much you
wouldn’t call it thought.
When another passenger leaves his seat and the standing
woman sits, you glance over at the man. He is gazing out the window into what
looks like darkness.
You sit next to the man on the train, bus, in the plane,
waiting room, anywhere he could be forsaken. You put your body there in
proximity to, adjacent to, alongside, within.
You don’t speak unless you are spoken to and your body
speaks to the space you fill and you keep trying to fill it except the space
belongs to the body of the man next to you, not to you.
Where he goes the space follows him. If the man left his
seat before Union Station you would simply be a person in a seat on the train.
You would cease to struggle against the unoccupied seat when where why the
space won’t lose its meaning.
You imagine if the man spoke to you he would say, it’s okay,
I’m okay, you don’t need to sit here. You don’t need to sit and you sit and
look past him into the darkness the train is moving through. A tunnel.
All the while the darkness allows you to look at him. Does
he feel you looking at him? You suspect so. What does suspicion mean? What does
suspicion do?
The soft gray-green of your cotton coat touches the sleeve
of him. You are shoulder to shoulder though standing you could feel shadowed.
You sit to repair whom who? You erase that thought. And it might be too late
for that.
It might forever be too late or too early. The train moves
too fast for your eyes to adjust to anything beyond the man, the window, the
tiled tunnel, its slick darkness. Occasionally, a white light flickers by like
a displaced sound.
From across the aisle tracks room harbor world a woman asks
a man in the rows ahead if he would mind switching seats. She wishes to sit
with her daughter or son. You hear but you don’t hear. You can’t see.
It’s then the man next to you turns to you. And as if from
inside your own head you agree that if anyone asks you to move, you’ll tell
them we are traveling as a family.
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