Authors: Jeff Schilling
Tags: #young adult, #coming of age, #gender, #identity, #lgbt, #high school, #outcast
“Naked guy surfing,” I muttered. I remembered my friend in the stained shirt. “Seems about right.”
I tossed his erotic literature on top of the boxes, deciding to resume my search for the exit. This time, I found it.
I smacked the “someone's here” bells to see if anyone would come running, but no one did.
I was about to leave when I caught the edge of a conversation. I moved a little closer, down a narrow aisle that was almost a tunnel.
“Did your friend leave?” a voice asked.
“I don't know.”
“Do you want to catch up with him?” the voice asked. “We can talk later.”
“No.”
I found a break in the shelves and peered through. I could just see Michael hunched over a wobbly stack of books on the floor. He reminded me of a caveman beside his kill. Mud Flap was standing above him, leaning against a bookshelf, arms folded.
“What's his name?” Flap asked.
“Who?”
“Your friend, Michael,” he said patiently.
“He's not my friend. He just followed me here.”
“Was he giving you a hard time?” Flap asked, straightening.
“No.”
“Oh. I'm confused.”
Michael sighed. “He helped me out the other day.”
“Helped you?” asked Flap.
“This kid at school was bothering me.”
Flap didn't say anything right away. Then, finally, he said, “Why?”
Michael looked up.
“You said he wasn't your friend, right?”
Michael nodded.
“So why did he get involved?”
“He said he wants to help me,” Michael said.
“Help you
what
?”
Michael didn't answer. He pulled a book from the stack on the floor and studied the cover.
“Are you still having those dreams?”
Michael shrugged.
“Is that a yes?”
“Kind of.”
“I'm concerned about the violence, Michael.”
I raised my eyebrows.
“Have you called my doctor yet?” Flap asked.
“No.”
“It's just someone to talk to, Michael. That's all it is.”
“I talk to you, Jimmy.”
Flap smiled. “But I'm just some guy who runs a bookstore. You need to get in touch with someone who knows what they're doing. Someone who can actually help you.”
“You help me.”
“Well, thanks, but . . .”
I decided to leave. The interesting part was over. Michael had violent dreams. Mud Flap's name was Jimmy.
Jimmy Flap.
Jimmy Flap corn and I don't care.
I made it to the front of the store, grabbed the bells with one hand, and opened the door with the other.
I said goodbye to the woman on the sign, the one with the flower hair, and walked back to the main road. It didn't take long to find Michael's street again.
On the way back to school to pick up my car, I realized that Michael was now more than a diversion. His violent dreams had lifted him to the status of passing interest. I decided to make a surprise visit to the cafeteria tomorrow before school. Jimmy Flap was rightâhe did need to talk to someone. There was something pathetic about the way he'd said, “But I talk to you, Jimmy.” No one should have to talk to a guy with a mud flap.
I remember thinking the whole thing might actually turn into a good deed of some kind. It might even be possible to make a few tweaks and reduce the size of the target on Michael's back. Well, it would take more than a few tweaks, but you know what I mean.
I started to daydream, preparing for any interviews that might result from my noble work with Michael.
“So Matthew, tell me why someone like you, someone at the apex of the food chain, decided to help a bottom-feeder like Michael.”
“Well, it was pretty clear to me that he desperately needed some help.”
“And you say his only friend was some guy with a beard?”
“Mud flap, actually. Mud flap.”
Falling asleep that night, I was almost looking forward to seeing Michael again. There was only one problem, though: The next day, Friday, Michael wasn't there.
I had to find him.
Fortunately, Mom was working from home again. Getting the car on two consecutive days was unusual, so I had to deal with a few objections.
“What if I need to go to the store?” Mom complained.
“You're working from home,” I said, taking the keys from their little hook over the writing desk in the kitchen.
“And?” she said, impatiently.
“And you should be working, not going on joyrides to the store.”
In the middle of her response, I slipped into the garage, jumped in the car, strapped myself in, and waited. I sat for about thirty seconds, watching the door, then shrugged and pulled out of the garage.
I was glad to have the car but vaguely disappointed. I'd expected a better fight. It's not like the garage is half a mile from the kitchen. The least she could have done was scream at me from the door as I left.
It was a fairly quick trip by NOVA standards. On the way, I tried to work out an opening lineâone that would at least get a foot in the doorâbut I found Michael's house too quickly.
It's important to have some lines ready when asking someone to do something they don't want to do. I always try to have a little somethingâeven if it's not much.
I parked on the street and headed up the cracked asphalt to the side door. I still wasn't sure whether an angry dog lived behind the fence, and I wasn't about to get caught halfway to the front door when one rumbled around the corner of the house.
I banged on the thin metal door, trying to look through the cloudy plastic window. I couldn't see muchâjust the back of an ugly brown couch that looked like a piece of furniture you'd see at the end of someone's driveway with a sign that said “Free.”
So here I am, squinting through the plastic, when this big fat stomach suddenly blocks my view.
Michael's father?
Beer gut, scraggly goatee, blue work shirt (untucked). Replace the blue shirt with a sleeveless white one and you'd have an exemplary ensemble.
“Yeah?” he said, pulling the door toward him.
I almost said, “You can't be Michael's dad. You're not a geek.”
Instead, I said, “Michael home?”
“No. You know where he is?”
I paused for a minute. “Nooo . . . that's why I'm looking for him.”
“Yeah, well, he left last night and didn't come back,” Beer Gut said. “His mom's all upset.”
“Why?”
“That's what
I
said,” Gut said. “I keep tellin' her he'll come back when he gets hungry.”
“You got that right.”
“Probably at that bookstore,” he said.
“Oh yeah?”
Gut nodded. “Playing that game or something. Probably ran up against a couple mean-ass dwarves and had to fight 'em all night.”
I laughed.
Good one, Gut.
“You want me to let you know if he's there?” I said.
Gut shook his head. “He's there. He don't have nowhere else to go.”
“Want me to tell him you said âhi'?”
“Tell him his mom's about to have a stroke,” he said as he disappeared back inside.
Gutâyou've get old if you had to live with him. And judging from our brief conversation, I figured it was a safe bet that Gut and Michael weren't best buds.
I could see Michael getting all worked up about something Gut said or did, which isn't productive at all. You need to study your opponents/parents. Understanding the how and why of the parent is essential. You have to learn to distance yourself from your subjects. Otherwise, your work is tainted. If you let feelings get in the way, you'll never develop the techniques that will help you get what you want.
Obviously, Michael didn't know how to have fun with someone like Gut, an exercise that might make a good starting point for our “reconditioning.”
Unfortunately, Michael was “sensitive.” I was sure he took Gut seriously, and there's just no reason to take someone like Gut seriously. People like Gut remind me of dinosaursâlarge creatures with walnut-sized brains. You'd think someone who reads all the time would be able to outsmart a dinosaur, but I guess not.
Anyway, I found my way to the bookstore again and parked near my girlfriend with the flowery hair. The sign could really use a swarm of angry bees fighting over her. Unfortunately, I'd need a Sharpie or paintbrush to do the job well, and I didn't have either. Besides, I'm really not much of a vandal.
I opened the front door two or three times and really got the bells going. I wanted everyone to know I was there. I didn't really feel like wandering around the little maze today.
Someone tapped my shoulder and I almost swung a fist. It was Jimmy Flap.
“I'm going to sue you if I have a heart attack in your store,” I said.
“You won't get much,” Flap said. He was smiling again. Now I knew he was trying to pick me up.
“I can tell. Is Michael here, or do you have him chained up in the basement somewhere?”
“Didn't I see you yesterday?” Flap asked, smiling.
I nodded.
“Maybe you could tell me your name,” he said.
“Woodrow.”
“As in Woodrow Wilson?” he asked.
“Exactly.”
“Sorry, Woodyâ”
“Woodrow,” I said.
“Michael stepped out, Woodrow. Anything I can help you with?”
“So he's been here?”
Flap didn't respond.
“Are you guys in the middle of some big
Magic
tournament?”
“No, that's in August,” he said.
I checked his face, but it wasn't a joke.
“So does he sleep in an empty bookcase or something?”
“There's a futon in the back room,” he said.
“I bet there is,” I muttered.
“What's that?”
“Nothing.”
“Sounds like you're pretty concerned about him,” Jimmy Flap said, moving into a row of books.
“Very,” I said, following.
“That's funnyâMichael's never really mentioned you before,” he said, rearranging a pile of thick reference books that had fallen across the floor.
“Oh, we go way back,” I said.
“Which makes me wonder why he's never mentioned you.”
“I'm pretty sure he mentioned me yesterday,” I said, casually leaning against a shelf.
Flap looked up from the floor, but I just inspected my fingernails.
“That's interesting,” he said, returning to the books. “I thought you'd left.”
“I'm everywhere,” I said.
“Really?”
I nodded. “I'm all-knowing.”
“So you know about his mother?” Flap asked.
“Yep.”
“You know about the car accident?”
“Yeah,” I said, trying to frown.
“Then you know which arm she lost.”
“The right one,” I said. Fifty-fifty chance.
“She wasn't in a car accident,” Flap said, taking a couple of books from the pile and heading down the row.
It took me a few seconds to recover.
“I know about his violent dreams,” I tried, following.
“Do you?” he said, studying a shelf.
“Yep.”
“What was the last one about?” he asked, finding a spot for one of the books.
“Violence?”
He smiled and continued around the corner.
“So when he goes Columbine, I'll just tell the police to come see you about the dreams,” I said.
I turned the corner. Flap was standing in the aisle, studying the ground and stroking his beard.
“Do you have a special comb for that?” I asked.
He ignored me.
“You could mousse it into a point and carry a pitchfork. Girls like that kind of thingâguys, too.”
Still stroking his beard, Flap set the remaining books on the floor and wandered toward the back of the store. I followed, ready to repeat my last thought in case he hadn't heard. We took a couple of sharp turns and ended up by a half-door a little higher than my waist. Behind it was a small, crowded room about the size of an extra-wide closet.
There was a desk pushed against one wall. The surface was nearly covered with scraps of paper, disorderly files and of course, more books. In the center of the mess was a little adding machine as well as a phone.
On the floor and braced against the walls were stacks of books. Their heights varied. It reminded me of one of those aerial shots of the high-rises crowded around Central Park.
Facing the desk was a battered and faded leather office chair that Flap had obviously rescued from the dump. The seat had seen a lot of oversized asses in its time and looked ready to give out.
Flap opened the half-door and closed himself inside.
“Don't I get to come in?” I asked.
Flap didn't answer. He took out his wallet and sat down.
“You don't have to pay me for my time,” I said.
Flap found what he wanted: a little white business card.
“Who're you calling?”
“Hi, Suzi? It's Jim Murphy,” Flap began. “Is Dr. Evans available? Can you have him call me as soon as he's free? Well, it's not an emergency, but I need to speak with him today . . . No, I'm okay. It's about a friend of mine. Something we've discussed before. Can you tell him it's about Michael? He'll understand.”
What is he doing?
“Yep, I'll be around then. Great. Great. Thanks, Suzi. Oh, sure. It's 9-7-5 . . .”
Flap finished giving out his phone number, but I don't really hate Flap, so I'm not going to repeat it.
“Thanks again. Okay. You too. Bye.”
“Who did you call?” I said.
Flap leaned forward in his chair and shoved his wallet into his back pocket. It looked like a tight squeeze.
“Are you going to buy anything?” Flap asked.
“No.”
“Are you going to look for anything?”
“No.”
“Then why are you here?”
“I like your company.”
“Now I know you're lying,” he said with a laugh.
“Yeah, that's a good one, all right,” I said, imitating his laugh.
The “someone's here” bells suddenly came to life.
“I'll get it,” I said.
“Get back here,” Flap said.
Too bad he was behind his special little half-door. I wove my way through the aisles and almost slammed into Michael.
“Careful,” I said. “Your friend's calling people about you.”
“Huh?” As usual, Michael looked completely baffled.
“Some doctor. Sounds like he's going to have you committed.”
“That's enough,” said Flap, pulling up beside us.
What with the excitement of escaping from the room behind the half-door and having to hurry to the front of his store, he was a little out of breath, so his “firm tone of voice” wasn't very effective.
“Oh, so you didn't call?” I said.
“You need to mind your own business,” he snapped.
“What's going on?” Michael said.
“Michael, I need to talk to you . . . privately,” Flap said.
“Careful, Michael,” I said.
“Ignore him.”
“I'll help you, Michael,” I said.
“Michael, he's justâhey, hold on a second.”
Michael headed for the door.
“Michael, wait up!” I called.
Flap tried to grab my shoulder, but I slipped by him, caught the closing door, and squeezed out.
“Michael!” Flap called from the door.
Michael didn't look back.
“Call me later, okay?” Flap tried.
I trotted up behind Michael and put a hand on his shoulder. He shrugged it off.
“Come on, man,” I said. “Slow down.”
“Why?” he asked, turning to face me. “So it doesn't look like you're chasing me?”
“No.”
Actually, that was exactly it.
“Then why?”
“I have a bad ankle,” I said. “Football injury.”
Michael stared at me a moment. I bent forward and rubbed my left shin. He stared, then started walking again.
“Ow . . . ow!” I said, hobbling after him.
He stopped and watched me hobble forward.
“Why are you limping on the other one?” he asked.
Oops.
“I told you: bad ankles.”
“You said âankle.'”
“Whatever,” I said. “We need to talk.”
“That's your shin, by the way.”
“Quiet. We need to talk.”
“About what?”
“What do you think?”
We'd reached the congestion of the main road. I followed Michael as he headed down the sidewalk and away from his neighborhood.
“Tell me about your dreams,” I said.
“I don't know whatâ”
“La la la!” I put my fingers in my ears. “Tell me or I'm going to make a scene.”
He stopped and stared. The noise from several packed lanes of speeding traffic washed over us. I felt like a water rat standing at the edge of a flooded river. I wondered what the other rat was thinking. Then I wondered whether he was going to try and push me in.