At the end of the hallway she brought me to a window where we could look out into Manhattan. More than looking out, it wasn’t clear. Tall and gray, maybe a tower down the end of an Avenue. “Well, this is a good view!” she exclaimed in the hushed voice of one who was dying. She knew by then what I couldn’t comprehend. “Are you looking forward to Paris?” I asked her, partly playing the optimist, the good boy at her side, believing in the possibility. “Look at that view!” she said once more, dignifying our position. To me it was a street in indistinct but noteworthy light. Nothing more. I held her arm, though our arms were linked already. More than a view, it was the place we had to stop. And then, after we’d stood there for the longest seconds, as if she found joy in indefinition, she admitted, “I can’t tell what we’re looking at, can you?”
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