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All Things
Are Labor: Stories by Katherine Arnoldi
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Photo of
Katherine
Arnoldi and
daughter by
Drew Kilgore
for the
Fayetteville,
Arkansas
Townfolk
Project
Summerhill,
Tennessee
photo by
Katherine Arnoldi
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N E W Y O R K,
-N E W Y O R K
By Katherine Arnoldi
1999 from
A Gathering of the Tribes, excerpt from novel, Melanie Farkle.
Melanie is looking for a sign. She sees a woman in a huge white dress covered
with mirrors. She sees a woman wrapped from head to toe in gauze
and wearing a helmet. She sees a man throwing boomerang aluminum
dishes and tying his sculpture to fences. Everywhere she goes,
Melanie is looking for a sign.
At Ray's, she buys Nickey ice cream and meets Junior,
ex-mayor of Tompkins Square Park.
"Everything is in disarray," he says.
"Hereafter," he says, "Did you ever think about
it. Here. After."
He shows her a shack on 9th Street, where he says she can live.
"Just until I get my feet on the ground," Melanie says.
"They forget it was the disenfranchised who started this
country," Junior says, "They had a vision."
"That's what I'm looking for," Melanie says, "A
vision. I'm supposed to have a vision."
"You got vision, don't you? I mean, you can see, can't you?"
"I mean a vision that will tell me what to make."
"Just don't think too much," Junior says, "Thinking
can mess you up, seeing-wise. You know what I'm saying?"
But Melanie can't stop thinking about it. She visits the
Whitney, the Museo de Barrio, The Museum of Modern Art. She goes
to the Metropolitan, the Museum of the American Indian, the Frick.
She takes Nickey to the Statue of Liberty, the Empire State Building,
to see the dinosaurs at the Museum of Natural History. At
night while she's working at Life, if its slow, she sits out
at the sidewalk tables and looks up at the sky.

"Show me a sign," she says, "Or even a star."
But there are no stars.
"I don't even know who Charlie Christian is," Melanie
says, one night at Life. Her one table is on desert, but the
bar is crowded.
"Charlie Christian?" a man in a raincoat and dark glasses
that are askew says. "Only the best jazz guitarist ever."
"The best?" someone else says, "The first."
The man in the raincoat puts his head down and starts singing
notes. He makes his feet move like he is trying to remember something
by dancing to it all over again.
Then they all start in yelling about what tune that is
and, yes it is, no it isn't, and you don't know anything and
you got your head up your ass, everyone knows what tune that
is, but fool you.
The man keeps singing, "Boop bop sha do ba."
"What's that?" Melanie asks.
"Charlie Christian," the man says, "I thought
you asked about Charlie Christian?"
"Does everyone in New York know who Charlie Christian is?"
"What kind of crazy talk is that. I don't know what everyone
In New York is thinking. When'd you blow into town?"
"A month ago."
"Oh, you new," he says, "Why on earth did you
come to this neighborhood with these degenerates." He waves
his hand over the crowd yelling about how old Charlie Christian
was when he died, where he died and what he died from.
"I heard a voice."
"A voice?"
"Yes. A voice told me to come here. It was, like, out of
the blue, like from above, but it didn't sound holy, exactly."
"What did it say?"
"I'm too embarrassed to say."
"You can't be doing that embarrassed shit in New York. Embarrassed
is for where you came from, not here."
"It said that I would be a famous artist, a painter. That
I would be rich if I came to New York. That he would show me
a vision of what to paint."
"Case closed," he says, "That's all, then. David.
David. Come here and meet the best goddamn painter on the Lower
East Side. What's your name?"
"Melanie Farkle."
"That's hip. I'm Steve. This is David and that piece of
work over there is John and this is Butch, Jameel and Jose.
Melanie shakes hands with the best goddamn artist, poet, trumpet
player, saxophonist and the best goddamn human being in New York.
"You're not a painter," John says, "If you don't
have any painting."
Then Melanie pulls the gates closed at Life, puts the
chairs on top of the tables, does all her side work, and, finally,
after the bartender starts to flick the lights on and off, Steve
and his group all leave arguing in one big noisy mass down Avenue
B.
Melanie puts Nickey on her hip and starts after them. "Hey,
wait up," she says, "Wait up."
Then there they are, flying down
Broadway. Melanie in her prom
dress, her striped black and white leggings, her green gloves,
her evening jacket, with Nickey on the handlebars, wrapped in
sweaters and a jester's hat. There among the yellow cabs, the
smells of peanuts roasting and sauerkraut and hot dogs and people
who take nothing from nobody and people who take whatever they
can get from anyone and people who stand so still that they draw
a crowd, a crowd in disbelief that these are real human beings,
and the traffic takes off from the red light like horses held
back at the gate, and dancers move in blue light in a parking
lots and poets sell poems for a dollar and saxophonists play
with an open case waiting for tips and tap dancers drum their
feet on plywood floors laid down right there on Broadway and
a guitarist cries, cries, cries through an amp and a man, covered
in brown rags, says, "I won't lie, I want a quarter for
wine," and in front to the card games on top of cardboard
boxes someone yells, "Check it out. Check it out,"
until the cops come and knock the boxes down with their sticks
and a couple entwined in a nook of a building, are dry humping,
kissing, groping, and stopping to look in each other's eyes,
never once looking away at all of this even if they're bumped
by the crowd navigating by, never looking at what New York is
at this one second on Broadway when Melanie and Nickey fly by
like a blip in the middle of more and more movement.
"We're on Broadway," Melanie says, " Look at this.
We're on Broadway."
I was awarded a New York
Foundation of the Arts Award in Fiction in 1991, a DeJur Award
in Fiction, and the Henfield TransAtlantic Fiction Award.---Katherine
Arnoldi
PUBLICATIONS
9/99 A Gathering of the
Tribes, except from novel, Melanie Farkle.
9/98 The Amazing True Story of a Teenage Single Mom (graphic
memoir)
Hyperion Press, NY, NY.
2/98 Blue Collar Review , short story, " We Are Not
Seeing Ourselves Here"
1997 Five Minute Fiction edited by Roberta Allen included
my short story, "Canton,
Ohio." (Story Press: Cincinnati)
1995 Room of One's Own, 18:1, Spring (Vancouver, BC, Canada).
Short story:
"Seventeen"
The World #51, November, 1995: short story: "M"
1994 Longshot #16, Spring: Essay, "Tribute to Bellevue"
Fiction #12 (Winter), Short story, "X"
1993 The Quarterly #25 (Spring). New York: Vintage: short
story "All Things Are Full
of Labor"
ONTHEBUS #13 (Winter) edited by Jack Grapes (Los Angelos:Bombshelter
Press): short story, "Ma Ripple"
1992 Red Tape: Tragicomix edited by Michael Carter: short story,
"Artist Case
History: Melanie Farkle"
1991 A Gathering of the Tribes edited by Steve Cannon (New York):
short story
"Our Landlord"
The Quarterly #18 (Summer): short story, "Canton, Ohio,
1956"
New Observations #82: short story, "Yonder's Wall"
1990 The Quarterly #15 (Fall): short story, "Crosscut Saw"
The Quarterly #14 (Summer): short story, "To Q from Katherine
Arnoldi"
1989 The Quarterly #12 (Winter): short story, "To
Q from Linda Vitale."Original
title: "How I Became a Single Parent by Linda Vitale".
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