A 90-Year-Old Was Trapped on the Tenth Floor. Then the Log Printed.-tantan

Morris Feldman stood in the apartment lobby while the elevator opened and closed without him.

The doors parted with a tired metal sigh, waited three seconds, and slid shut again.

He tapped his gray plastic fob against the reader.

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The light stayed red.

He tapped again.

Red.

The lobby smelled like floor cleaner, old radiator heat, and the garlic lunch somebody upstairs had reheated too long.

Outside, traffic moved along the curb in Queens with its usual impatient coughing.

Inside, Morris stood with two pharmacy bags looped over his wrist and tried not to look as frightened as he felt.

He was ninety years old.

He lived on the tenth floor.

He had been living in that building for thirty-six years, long enough for people to stop calling him Mr. Feldman and start calling him Morris, long enough for babies to become adults and for neighbors to ask him about rent increases, laundry machines, missing packages, and which bus stopped closer to the pharmacy in bad weather.

He knew everyone.

He knew Mrs. Alvarez in 4B liked her mail sorted by hand because her eyesight was getting worse.

He knew Mr. Patel from 8C pretended to read the newspaper in the lobby because he was lonely after his wife died.

He knew the super’s youngest daughter had once wanted to be a veterinarian and then changed her mind because math got hard.

Morris’s great crime, according to his son David, was that he liked to talk to people.

David called it wandering.

He called it confusion.

He called it a safety issue.

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