— NINA .
Location: Outside of the Limelight Date: August 15th, 1999 Time: 11:13 pm Availability: open to all
To anyone looking, Nina would almost appear to be in communion. Hot forehead pressed against the cold stone of the old Church, thoughts were racing in her mind. And it wasn’t just because of the alcohol. That kind of racing, she could handle anytime. But this, this was different. This was about Joel, walking down Fifth Avenue or a school hallway. About Joel, making watch as she wrote some French rebellion slogan on school properties. Everything just sounds better in French, she had told him. More authentic. About Joel, drowning in the Hudson River, lost forever in 1987.
The club was hot and crowded and the woman had needed some air. Really, she didn’t know what they were supposed to do here, tonight. Partying like they once all did together seemed completely wrong. And not coming had seemed even worst. So what was she supposed to do? Pretend to have a good time? For Hugo’s sake? Eyes closed, she could feel someone lingering by and Nina sighed deeply. “I’m fine. Just felt a little hot. Nothing to worry or see.” The tone was tired and maybe a little harsh, but the last thing she wanted was some completely stranger trying to talk to her.
Theo’s thoughts were, as he suspected with most of their group, occupied by Joel. Or, rather, baby Buchanon, as he’d offhandedly called him sometimes. By God, what a ridiculous thing to dub him. It’d never occurred to Theo until after— after… well. They all knew what he meant by after. On one such anniversary, perhaps one not quite as gauche as this one, Theo had been startled to remember that Joel was older than him. The heights of his own obliviousness seemed to know no bounds, not even for the dead.
He stepped out of the club when his lungs felt like they were about to burst, suffocating from the heat and proximity of so many bodies in one place. He’d always done better in wide open fields, clear air; this had never been his scene. He didn’t think it ever would be. As he breathed in the night air, Theo’s attention was drawn toward a nearby figure — a figure, he was startled to realize, that was actually Nina Lowell. “I’m getting some air,” he said in his own defense, hands raised slightly as if in surrender. “But, uh, isn’t there that saying about protesting too much?”












