I leafed through a Variety and tried to ask casually, "Is it dangerous?"

"Completely harmless," he said. He raised his glass and examined the amber liquor, then sipped slowly, his eyes closing in satisfaction.

I hadn't expected good news. "What's it for, then?"

"It helps drugs absorb through your skin. That's how the nicotine patch works, and those seasickness patches. You put it on and the DMSO lets it get through your skin into the bloodstream. Marvelous stuff. I remember when they used to worry that hippies would mix it with LSD and paint the doorknobs of public buildings/' He laughed into his drink. "As if anybody would waste their acid on a bunch of straights."

I LOOKED FOR the bottle of DMSO. I couldn't find it anywhere. I looked under the kitchen sink and in the bathroom, in the drawers — there just weren't many places to hide things in our apartment, and anyway, hiding things wasn't my mother's style. I waited up for her. She came back late, with a handsome young man whose dark curls trailed halfway down his back. She held his hand.

"This is Jesus," she said. "He's a poet. My daughter, Astrid."

"Hi," I said. "Mom, can I talk to you for a second?"

"You should be in bed," she said. "I'll be right back." She smiled at Jesus, let go of his hand, and walked me out onto the screen porch. She looked beautiful again, no circles under her eyes, hair like falling water.

I lay down in my bed and she covered me with a sheet, stroked my face. "Mom, what happened to that stuff from Mexico?"

She just kept smiling, but her eyes told me everything.

"Don't do it," I said.

She kissed me and stroked my hair with her cool hand, always cool, despite the heat, despite the wind and the fires, and then she was gone.

THE NEXT DAY I called Barry's number.

"Tunnel of Love," a girl answered, stoned, giggling. I heard his voice, velvet, in the background. Then he came on the line.

"Hello?"

I was going to warn him, but now all I could remember was my mother's face when she came out of his house that day. The way she rocked, the square of her mouth. Anyway, what could I tell him — don't touch anything, don't eat anything, watch out? He was already suspicious of her. If I told him, they might arrest her, and I would not hurt my mother, not for Barry Kolker and his screwing Shivas. He deserved it. He had it coming.

"Hello," he said, as she said something and laughed, stupidly. "Well, fuck you too," he said, and hung up.

I didn't call again.

WE SAT ON the roof and watched the moon, red and huge in the ash-laden air, hovering over the city laid out like a Ouija board. All around us was a Greek chorus of sirens, while my mother's mad low voice murmured, "They can't touch us. We're the Vikings. We go into battle without armor for the flush and the blood of it." She leaned down and kissed my head, smelling of metal and smoke.

The hot wind blew and blew and would not stop.

4

THEN CAME A TIME I can hardly describe, a season underground. A bird trapped in a sewer, wings beating against the ceiling in that dark wet place, while the city rumbled on overhead. Her name was Lost. Her name was Nobody's Daughter.

In my dreams, my mother walked through a city of bricks and rubble, a city after war, and she was blind, her eyes empty and white as stones. There were tall apartments all around her, with triangles over windows, all bricked up and burning. Blind windows, and her blind eyes, and yet still she came toward me, inevitable and insane. I saw that her face was melted and horribly pliable. There were hollows in the tops of her cheeks, under her eyes, as if someone had pressed into soft clay with their thumbs.

Those heavy days, how heavy the low gray sky, my wings were so heavy, so heavy my panicked flight under the ground. So many faces, so many lips, wanting me to tell, it made me tired, I fell asleep as they spoke. Just tell us what happened. What could I tell? When I opened my mouth, a stone fell out. Her poor white eyeballs. Just where I hoped to find mercy. I dreamed of white milk in the street, white milk and glass. Milk down the gutter, milk like tears. I kept her kimono against my face, her scent of violets and ash. I rubbed the silk between my fingers.

In that place under the ground lived many children, babies, teenagers, and the rooms echoed noise like a subway. Music like a train wreck, arguing, crying, the ceaseless TV. The heavy smell of cooking, thin sickly urine, pine cleaner. The woman who ran it made me get out of bed at regular intervals, sit at the table with the others before platters of beans and greens, meat. I dutifully came out, sat, ate, then returned to the cocoon of bed and sleep, plastic sheet crinkling under me. I woke up soaked to the armpits more nights than not.

The girl in the other bed had seizures. The niece told me, "There's more money in disability children like you all."

Roses drifted down the walls in brownish slants in the room. I counted roses. Diagonal rows of forty, ninety-two across. Over the dresser, Jesus, JFK, and Martin Luther King, Jr., all in profile, facing left, like racehorses at the starting gate, Jesus on the outside. The woman who ran the home, Mrs. Campbell, thin and raisinish, dusted with a yellow T-shirt. The horses all lined up, straining at the barrier. Hers was number seven, Medea's Pride. That was a day with a trapdoor, and we all fell through. I ran the belt of her kimono over my mouth, over and over, all day long, the taste of what had been lost.

THE DAY OF her arrest returned in my dreams, they were tunnels that kept coming around to the same place. The knock on the door. It had been very early, still dark. Another knock, and then voices, pounding. I ran into her room as the cops, cops in uniform, not in uniform, burst in. The manager stood in the doorway, his head in a shower cap. They pulled my mother out of bed, voices like snapping dogs. She yelled at them in German, calling them Nazis, calling them blackshirts. "Sckutptaffel. Durch Ihre Verordnung, mein Fiihrer." Her naked body, tender breasts swaying, stomach welted red from the sheets. It was impossible, a faked photograph. Someone had cut out these policemen and stuck them on our apartment. They kept looking at her, a dirty magazine. Her body like moonlight.

"Astrid, they can't keep me," she said. "Don't worry, I'll be back in an hour."

She said. She said.

I sat on Michael's couch, slept and waited, the way dogs wait, all day, and then the next. A week went by, but she didn't come. She said she would, but she never did.

WHEN THEY CAME to get me, they gave me fifteen minutes to make up my mind what to take from our apartment. We never had many things. I took her four books, a box of her journals, the white kimono, her tarot cards, and her folding knife.