โDid I cause any embarrassment?โ
Rosie had been concerned that I might make inappropriate comments during our tour of the World Trade Center site. Our guide, a former ๏ฌre๏ฌghter named Frank, who had lost many of his colleagues in the attack, was incredibly interesting, and I asked a number of technical questions that he answered intelligently and, it seemed to me, enthusiastically.
โYou may have changed the tone a bit,โ she said. โYou sort of moved the attention away from the emotional impact.โ So, I had reduced the sadness. Good.
Monday was allocated to visiting popular tourist sights. We had breakfast at Katzโs Deli, where a scene for a ๏ฌlm calledย When Harry Met Sallyย was shot. We went to the top of the Empire State Building, famous as a location forย An A๏ฌair to Remember. We visited MoMA and the Met, which were excellent.
We were back at the hotel earlyโ4:32 p.m. โBack here at six thirty,โ said Rosie.
โWhat are we having for dinner?โ
โHot dogs. Weโre going to the baseball game.โ
Iย neverย watch sports. Ever.ย ๎e reasons are obviousโor should be to anyone who values their time. But my recon๏ฌgured mind, sustained by huge doses of positive reinforcement, accepted the proposition. I spent the next 118 minutes on the Internet, learning about the rules and the players.
On the subway, Rosie had some news for me. Before she left Melbourne, she had sent an email to Mary Keneally, a researcher working in her ๏ฌeld at Columbia University. She had just received a reply that Mary could see her tomorrow. But she wouldnโt be able to make it to the Museum of Natural
History. She could come Wednesday, but would I be okay by myself tomorrow? Of course I would.
At Yankee Stadium we got beer and hot dogs. A man in a cap, estimated age thirty-๏ฌve, estimated BMI forty (i.e., dangerously fat), sat beside me. He had three hot dogs!ย ๎e source of the obesity was obvious.
๎e game started, and I had to explain to Rosie what was happening. It was fascinating to see how the rules worked in a real game. Every time there was an event on the ๏ฌeld, Fat Baseball Fan would make an annotation in his book.ย ๎ere were runners on second and third when Curtis Granderson came to the plate and Fat Baseball Fan spoke to me. โIf he bats in both of these guys, heโll be heading the league on RBI. What are the odds?โ
I didnโt know what the odds were. All I could tell him was that they were somewhere between 9.9 and 27.2 percent based on the batting average and percentage of home runs listed in the pro๏ฌle I had read. I had not had time to memorize the statistics for doubles and triples. Fat Baseball Fan nevertheless seemed impressed and we began a very interesting conversation. He showed me how to mark the program with symbols to represent the various events, and how the more sophisticated statistics worked. I had no idea sports could be so intellectually stimulating.
Rosie got more beer and hot dogs and Fat Baseball Fan started to tell me about Joe DiMaggioโs โstreakโ in 1941, which he claimed was a uniquely odds-defying achievement. I was doubtful, and the conversation was just getting interesting when the game ended, so he suggested we take the subway to a bar in Midtown. As Rosie was in charge of the schedule, I asked for her opinion, and she agreed.
๎e bar was noisy and there was more baseball playing on a large television screen. Some other men, who did not appear to have previously met Fat Baseball Fan, joined our discussion. We drank a lot of beer and talked about baseball statistics. Rosie sat on a stool with her drink and observed. It was late when Fat Baseball Fan, whose actual name was Dave, said he had to go home. We exchanged email addresses and I considered that I had made a new friend.
Walking back to the hotel, I realized that I had behaved in stereotypical male fashion, drinking beer in a bar, watching television, and talking about sports. It is generally known that women have a negative attitude to such behavior. I asked Rosie if I had o๏ฌended her.
โNot at all. I had fun watching you being a guyโ๏ฌtting in.โ
I told her that this was a highly unusual response from a feminist but that it would make her a very attractive partner to conventional men.
โIf I was interested in conventional men.โ
It seemed a good opportunity to ask a question about Rosieโs personal life.
โDo you have a boyfriend?โ I hoped I had used an appropriate term. โSure, I just havenโt unpacked him from my suitcase,โ she said, obviously
making a joke. I laughed, then pointed out that she hadnโt actually answered my question.
โDon,โ she said, โdonโt you think that if I had a boyfriend, you might have heard about him by now?โ
It seemed to me entirely possible that I would not have heard about him. I had asked Rosie very few personal questions outside the Father Project. I did not know any of her friends, except perhaps Stefan, who I had concluded was not her boyfriend. Of course, it would have been traditional to bring any partner to the faculty ball, and not to o๏ฌer me sex afterward, but not everyone was bound by such conventions. Gene was the perfect example. It was plausible that Rosie had a boyfriend who did not like dancing or socializing with academics, was out of town at the time, or was in an open relationship with her. She had no reason to tell me. In my own life, I had rarely mentioned Daphne or my sister to Gene and Claudia or vice versa.ย ๎ey belonged to di๏ฌerent parts of my life. I explained this to Rosie.
โShort answer, no,โ she said. We walked a bit further. โLong answer: you asked what I meant about being fucked up by my father. Psychology 101โ our ๏ฌrst relationship with a male is with our fathers. It a๏ฌects how we relate to men forever. So, lucky me, I get a choice of two. Phil, whoโs fucked in the head, or my real father, who walked away from me and my mother. And I get this choice when Iโm twelve years old and Phil sits me down and has this โI wish your mother could be here to tell youโ talk with me. You know, just the standard stu๏ฌย your dad tells you at twelveโโIโm not your dad, your mother, who died before you could know her properly, isnโt the perfect person you thought she was, and youโre only here because of your mother being easy, and I wish you werenโt so I could go o๏ฌย and have a life.โโ
โHe said that to you?โ
โNot in those words. But thatโs what he meant.โ
I thought it highly unlikely that a twelve-year-oldโeven a female future psychology studentโcould correctly deduce an adult maleโs unspoken thoughts. Sometimes it is better to be aware of oneโs incompetence in these matters, as I am, than to have a false sense of expertise.
โSo I donโt trust men. I donโt believe theyโre what they say they are. Iโm afraid theyโre going to let me down.ย ๎atโs my summary from seven years of studying psychology.โ
๎is seemed a very poor result for seven years of e๏ฌort, but I assumed she was omitting the more general knowledge provided by the course.
โYou want to meet tomorrow evening?โ said Rosie. โWe can do whatever you want to do.โ
I had been thinking about my plans for the next day.
โI know someone at Columbia,โ I said. โMaybe we could go there together.โ
โWhat about the museum?โ
โIโve already compressed four visits into two. I can compress two into one.โย ๎ere was no logic in this, but I had drunk a lot of beer, and I just felt like going to Columbia.ย Go with the ๏ฌow.
โSee you at eightโand donโt be late,โ said Rosie.ย ๎en she kissed me. It was not a passionate kiss; it was on the cheek, but it was disturbing. Neither positive nor negative, just disturbing.
I emailed David Borenstein at Columbia, then Skyped Claudia and told her about the day, omitting the kiss.
โSounds like sheโs made a big e๏ฌort,โ said Claudia.
๎is was obviously true. Rosie had managed to select activities that I would normally have avoided but enjoyed immensely. โAnd youโre giving her the guided tour of the Museum of Natural History on Wednesday?โ
โNo, Iโm going to look at the crustaceans and the Antarctic ๏ฌora and fauna.โ
โTry again,โ said Claudia.