The Sounds of Pandemic Apartments
The Sounds of Pandemic Apartments
By Paul Rousseau

March 2020, NYC

I am quarantined in a ramshackle building constructed in 1920. The structure pitches sideward, slowly submitting to gravity’s insistence. Inside, the lights are dim, the hallways dark, the walls skinny and distempered. A smell of blight and obsolescence permeates the air. There are forty-two apartments; thirty-eight occupied, four vacant by death. I know the occupants of neighboring apartments by sound only: the plodding footsteps, the wailing newborn, the shrill blender, the blaring television, the nightly quarreling. I contemplate what they hear of my tenancy. A flushing commode? The beep of a microwave? The click of a dead bolt? Or do their noisy commotions erase my slim existence? I fear I could perish, and no one would know. Nevertheless, there are intervals when the apartments are quiet. It is then that I stand in my living room and listen to my presence: the hum of the refrigerator, the clanging of the radiator, the scuttling of cockroaches, the cooing of pigeons, and the scream of sirens.

Paul Rousseau (he/his/him) is a semi-retired physician, a writer, a lover of dogs, and an occasional photographer published in sundry literary and medical journals. He was nominated for The Best Small Fictions anthology from Sonder Press, 2020. Find him on Twitter: @ScribbledCoffee

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