Authors: Renee Manfredi
Fifteen minutes later when he went back into the living room, Jack was still there. He walked to the birdcage with fresh newspaper.
“I stand here in the doorway.”
“Go through it,” Stuart said, as he opened the birdcage and spread seed, “and don’t come back.”
“Before I go,” Jack said quietly, “I want to ask you something. I have no right to ask this. But, even if you have to lie, tell me you love me just one last time.”
Stuart wheeled around. “I won’t say that. I will never say those words to you again. How could you ask that? It’s the same as asking me for my forgiveness.”
“No,” Jack said.
“There is no forgiveness that will change this. In five months, in five years, this will be as devastating as it is right now. There is no past tense
with this.”
Immediately after Jack left Stuart picked up the phone, started to dial Jane and Leila’s number, then stopped. He looked up Pamela’s number, but he didn’t want to talk to her, either. He sat for a minute, then before he thought about it, he was calling home. His father answered.
“Dad? It’s Stuart.” He heard a sportscaster droning in the background and instantly he was transported to the damp basement with its conditioned air, big-screen TV and brown furnishings. Stuart could almost smell the mildewy pool chalk in the air, the dust coming off the 1972
Encyclopedia Britannicas
that no one ever opened.
“Hey, hey. How are you, son?”
“I’m doing well.” Stuart said. “It’s just been a while so I thought I’d call.”
“Good. It’s good to hear from you. How’s school?”
“I still haven’t officially transferred to one of the Boston schools yet, but that will happen soon. I’m taking a few classes.”
“How’s Jack? How are you two enjoying Boston?”
“We like Boston a whole lot.”
“Good. You just missed your mother. She’s at her girls’ night out thing. She’s become a gallivanter, that woman. I suspect she’s been to some male strip clubs.”
Stuart laughed. “What? My mother? The church deaconess?”
“She’s running with a rough crowd. She and her high school friends are getting together twice a month. They stay out late, and I don’t ask. But your mother comes home with alcohol and cigarette smoke on her breath.”
“Well, good for her.”
“Yeah, that’s what I think, too. Though I pretend to be shocked.”
Stuart asked after his brothers and his sister. “How are Kevin and James? Did Carol decide to take the job in Maryland?”
Stuart listened to his father run through the litany of what his siblings and their kids had been doing. He envisioned his aging father in front of the football game, his mild, farsighted eyes blinking behind his glasses, his hands becoming arthritic. His father hoped for modest things—health, a little travel, children and grandchildren who visited. Stuart felt a lump in his throat. He’d gone so far outside of his father’s realm, had at various times pitied and scorned his parents for what he believed was a cowardly,
limited life—work, church, family. No hobbies, no real interests.
“Is everything all right, son?”
“I think so. I hope so.”
His father paused. “Your mother and I love and miss you. You know you and Jack are welcome here anytime.”
Stuart’s throat got tighter. “I’ll come and visit soon. Give my love to Mom,” he said, and hung up after his father’s goodbye. His father was a kind man, a good and generous man; for so long he’d underestimated the value of that.
He remembered the fall day when he was with four or five of his friends in the backyard. They were boys from his class, two of them the most popular in school. Stuart had gotten their attention for his irreverence one day in art class when he drew a nasty portrait of their teacher, Miss McCarthy, naked with strategically placed chopsticks and the caption, “Two sticks are better than one!” The trip to the principal’s office, the stern lectures and the call to his parents were well worth the reward of getting the attention of these popular boys. And now here they were, in his backyard, throwing a football around with him while his father cooked hot dogs on the grill. He was only a little ashamed of his father, much less than other boys. His father had played football in high school and was still in decent shape, although the way he acted that day was like a telegram announcing that Stuart rarely had anyone over. Parents who were used to their children’s friends didn’t tell so many corny jokes or hang around and smile so much. His father had the same ridiculous grin he wore while watching Stuart’s sister in the junior high production of
My Fair Lady
.
That day was the first time Stuart knew something was different about him. When Tim Eberhardt caught a pass and Stuart went in to tackle him, he was aware of the boy’s body in ways too particular not to be disturbing, even at nine. The silky hair on his legs, the musky boy sweat at his hairline and armpits. Stuart’s legs were entangled with Tim’s, his pelvis tipped in so he felt the boy’s small penis against his own. This felt so right, the boy beneath him with the smell of fall leaves and the light through the canopy of maples, that he had to will his body not to move, stop himself from burying his face in the hollow of the boy’s neck.
“Get off me, Carpenter,” was all Tim said, but his expression was as astonished as if Stuart had kissed him. Much later, Stuart thought the boy
probably felt his half-hard penis against his leg. Luckily, Tim had never said anything—maybe, like Stuart, he was too young to understand what it all meant.
By the end of that day, he was miserable. He took a cool bath, lathered his hair with Breck shampoo, his body with Ivory soap.
He turned down his bed and opened the windows. Outside, the air already had the ashy smell of autumn. The nighthawks and crickets made him feel a little less lonely. His brothers were away on a Scout trip that weekend so he had the room to himself.
He combed his hair with a blue plastic comb, then took out his Superman comics. He felt as if he had lost something, or, crestfallen, like the time his grandfather promised to take him on a fishing trip then canceled at the last minute Stuart had been preparing and daydreaming about the trip for three weeks.
He slid his hand inside his pajama bottoms, cupped his scrotum. There were magnets in here. Here was where the magnets in him attracted the magnets in the body of a lady. When he kissed a girl, this part of him stuck to that part of her until a baby grew inside her. A special water was formed in him, and came up through his penis then flowed into a girl’s space. But it must be that his magnets were turned around somehow, shaped like a girl’s, in a horseshoe. Nothing had ever happened when he spied on the girls with his friends. His penis didn’t get hard; he didn’t want to touch himself through his Speedo at the pool like his friends did when they watched the girls. This was the problem: His magnet was facing the wrong way, attracted another boy instead of a girl.
His father knocked on the door, and then waited for Stuart to invite him in—he was always so good about that, never barged in or snooped. “It’s me, son.”
“Come in.”
His father had changed into his pajamas and slippers. He walked in and sat on the edge of the bed, smiled over at the Humpty Dumpty lamp on the night table. “We really need to get you boys some new furnishings. I think you’re getting a little too old for Humpty Dumpty lights and Bugs Bunny blankets.”
Stuart shrugged.
“I just wanted to come in and congratulate you on having such a good
day. I enjoyed your friends. You positively shone.”
Stuart looked away, ashamed, though he couldn’t say why. Once, at a family reunion, Stuart took his cousin’s Kennedy half-dollar collection. Stuart’s aunt called the next day, and he heard his father say, “My sons don’t steal. I will walk through fire defending that belief.” He felt like that now, as though he had lied to his father.
“What’s the matter?” his father said.
“I don’t know.” He couldn’t hold back any longer and he started to cry, his breath coming in jagged waves. “There’s something wrong with me.”
“No,” his father said firmly, “there isn’t.” He pulled Stuart onto his lap, as though he were a very young child. The comfort he felt soon erased any awkwardness. His father didn’t say anything further, but he must have known, must have felt the odd tension that had sprung up between his son and the boys he tackled. His father let him cry, and after a little while bade him good night.
The next morning, when he and his father were driving across town to the hardware store, his father broke the unbearable tension. “I was thinking this morning about the Fourth of July parade last year.” Stuart looked over at his father’s profile. “I had to help you find a place where you could see, remember? The man with the hat, those tall teenagers.”
Stuart nodded.
“The world’s a big place. You have to find yourself a clear view. You need to move to the place where you can see best. The place where you’re most comfortable. Do you understand this? There will be a place for you. It just might take you a little bit longer to find it.”
Stuart brewed a pot of tea now, then went in to take a cool shower. He slid into his freshly changed bed. Outside the street sounds lulled him to sleep, the voices of teenagers, the blaring of radios. Normally he would have been irritated. But now, he found the noise rather poignant, their innocence about what the world was yet to deliver to them, the myriad ways it would tell them no.
N
early a month after Poppy and her family were due in, the phone rang just as Anna was heading out the door. The machine picked up and gave her Marvin’s voice, the hesitating baritone that even after all these years made the hair at the back of her neck stand up. There were no gradations of emotion where her son-in-law was concerned; fury was what it always boiled down to, unadulterated anger like a chalky residue left in a test tube after some weird experiment.
She slipped the T-shirt emblazoned with the words “Mood Team” over her head and slammed the front door. It was still early, but Mike and Greta were out already working in the garden.
“Mood Team, doing a random house-to-house check,” Anna called over, flashing an imaginary badge.
“Halfway between good and great,” Greta called back, and smiled. “Are you going to be home later?”
“Oh yeah, oh hell yeah. My daughter is coming in tonight. Just got a call.”
Greta’s eyes widened. “Finally.”
Anna nodded like it was no big deal, though already her heart was pounding with anticipation. “But come over. I haven’t seen you in days. Poppy has never in her life, including the first day of her life, been on time. My guess is they’ll be in around midnight.”
Greta’s eyes swept over Anna’s shirt, took in the thermal undershirt she had beneath the T-shirt.
“We’re playing hockey. I mean, they are, so I’ll be in an ice rink,” Anna said.
Mike chuckled. When was the last time Anna saw this? In fact, both he and Greta seemed unusually upbeat. Under the best of circumstances, Mike had a sullen, melancholy air about him. “C’mon Anna, I want pictures of you with a goalie mask on. I would pay money to have that.” He laughed, clipped a row of daises and delphiniums and added it to a voluminous pile of flowers between him and Greta.
“Jeez,” Anna said. “You have enough for a fleet of July Fourth floats.”
He flushed and laughed again—was Anna hallucinating? Was this tall, secretive, lugubrious man actually laughing? She looked over at Greta, incredulous, but Greta’s expression wasn’t giving anything away.
“Anyway, keep up the good moods. I’ll be at the ice rink with the sick and dying if anyone needs me.”
Anna got into her car and checked the directions to the ice rink. After the fiasco with Amy, Anna was convinced that none of her current students was really qualified, regardless of Nick’s claim otherwise. At the same time, Boston General’s administrators determined that even a Saturday overflow group was still under the auspices of the hospital and they sent down a strict policy about staffing. Facilitators had to be psychiatrists, psychiatric residents, or psychologists. A licensed clinical social worker was acceptable, but only in “conjunction with a co-leader trained in the medical field.”
“I’m off the hook!” Anna said, when Nick called three weeks ago to tell her the new rules. “Though I guess now I won’t get my new microscopes.”
Nick began, “Actually, Anna…” and ended with not only a guarantee of new lab equipment, but also a promise to endow a scholarship—pending her college’s approval. Nick wanted Anna to agree to sit in on the meetings as the co-leader just until he could get someone else. He found a young social worker who was eager—“thrilled, in fact”—for the opportunity to get field experience. Anna’s status had been cleared through the appropriate channels. According to the language of the policy, Anna’s instruction of technicians, along with her phlebotomy work, meant that she worked in the medical field.
“The hospital said you would be fine until I can find a medical resident or intern,” Nick had said. “Oh, and I have to change the name, since my group is technically the official support group. You and Christine, the social worker, will be running the Mood Team.”
“Charming,” Anna said. “Though, personally, I’d like to call us the Mood Rings. I like the secret underground echo of that.”
Nick wasn’t amused. “So, please, Anna? New equipment, and rare specimen slides are on their way to you.”
“How rare?”
“It’s a surprise. But don’t be surprised if you find yourself in possession of the Hantavirus and Nipah Virus Encephalitis.”
“Nice!” Anna said. “Can you find me histology samples from The Elephant Man? I’d also like rabies, slides from both the dumb and furious stages.”
“Now, Anna….”
“Oh, Christ. All right,” she said, which was how she found herself now, weeks later, on yet another outing with the exuberant Christine.
Anna admired Christine’s energy and high spirits, though she was a bit overzealous in planning special events. In the six weeks Anna had been co-leading, the group met at the hospital just twice. With Nick’s approval (delight, in fact), Christine had organized two picnics, a Sadie Hawkins dance (half the men dressed as women), and participation in the Fourth of July PFLAG float where she rode with about a hundred Marilyn Monroes. She and Christine were the only two not in costume other than big dark glasses and headscarves, twin Jackie O’s.