From 6/27/2020
On a gray November morning in 2016 I woke up in my Fort Greene atelier and looked out my window. Condos along Fulton Avenue blocked my view to the west. Thailand and my family lay on the other side of the world.
I hadn't seen my children for over a year. I missed them more and more with each passing day.
Especially little Fenway.
And Angie.
They were growing up without me.
The hurt wouldn't go away. An inner voice spoke a dangerous language. It only had one word.
Jump.
The phone rang.
I answered hoping it might be a job lead.
Instead it was Shannon, my old basketball friend. We hadn't played in a long time.
"You want to join me for a walk across the Brooklyn Bridge. We can have lunch in Chinatown."
"I don't know." I hadn’t left my room in three days.
"My treat."
Shannon knew my weakness for a free meal and agreed to meet at the Masonic Temple on Lafayette Avenue.
"Ten minutes." We lived close to each other. Shannon with his wife. Me all alone.
Seeing a friendly face was a good thing.
"So we're walking across the bridge?" I pointed up. The sky was darker than before.
"You scared of a little rain?"
"No." We were both dressed for the weather, although I was wearing sandals instead of boots.
"Then let's go."
"How's work?"
"I don't have any work." I had been laid off from the Plaza store. "No one's buying jewelry."
"Any idea why?"
"My old profession is dying in the new century, but enough talk of business, let's walk."
The Brooklyn Bridge was thirty minutes from Fort Greene. Shannon and I spoke of the past.
Basketball games, fights, and long-gone loves, then he broached a forbidden subject.
"When are you going to Thailand?"
"No time soon." I was living on food stamps and all my money went to my family. I was lucky to spend $40 a day. "I don't know when I'll get there."
"One day you will."
He knew how much I loved my kids.
Shannon had suggested the name 'Fenway' for my son. I had checked online for Fenway Smith. Surprisingly I found none.
"You know I was walking down Lafayette the other day and ran into a guy with a dog wearing a Red Sox hat. I asked him his dog's name. He said, "Fenway." Now I realized why people don't call their kids 'Fenway'. They call their dogs 'Fenway'.
"Sorry." Shannon was a Yankee fan, but a good friend and I said, "I still like the name."
We had reached the pedestrian pathway and climbed onto the bridge. I wished I had worn shoes, but my feets were comfortable in the flip-flops.
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