Authors: Lesley Choyce
Yeah, We Needed to Talk
Can we go outside? he said.
I know you have a free period now.
So I followed him outside into some drizzling rain.
Dogs were barking somewhere.
There was a lot of litter on the sidewalk.
Why me? I asked.
Old Man said you'd help.
I laughed. Of course. What did he do, Google you?
Something like that, Jenson Hayes said.
He's very cool.
My grandfather invented cool.
Does Caitlan know
that you are around?
Not yet. But I saw you two
talking in Fred's closet.
You saw us? You were there?
Not exactly but ⦠you know.
I guess. Okay, so here you are.
Here I am and Old Man said
you'd be the one person
in the universe who would accept me
for who I am now
and not ask too many
bullshit questions.
I guess I could be that person.
But you really are â¦
well ... you know?
Yeah, he said, brushing the long hair
out of his eyes.
And in some ways it's all okay now,
but in other ways
it really sucks.
At least you don't have
to go to school, right, dude?
That's one of the perks.
But I miss a lot of things.
I miss being a vegan,
I miss trying to change the world,
and I even miss arguing with
greedy assholes.
I miss being who I was.
But at least you don't have to go to school
and you probably don't even have to
deal with assholes.
He nodded. True, but one more thing.
I miss Caitlan.
What Love Is
Love, Jenson said, stays with you even if you move on. Love takes up a whole lot more of who you are than most people realize. You think you are all about arms and legs and your big fat brain with ideas and all those opinionsâlet me tell you, I was the king of opinions. And you think some things are important: like what to eat and what you look like and what people think of you and how you are going to make it through life and what kind of grade you are going to get on the final exam.
But none of that is important.
Guess you're right on that, I added.
So when me and Caitlan had this thing going,
I was stronger than I'd ever been before.
I mean strong and in a good way.
Nobody could get to me
like they had all my life.
Not my asshole father.
Not the mean teachers.
Not the creeps at school.
But then we had this
little argument,
Caitlan and me.
And we stopped
talking.
And I got stubborn.
Felt isolated.
All alone
and
weak.
He smelled it.
He knew I was weak.
He pretended to
be my friend.
Told me things about Caitlan that were not true.
Who did?
Thomas Heaney.
Paper Clip, I said.
I call him Paper Clip.
He had some of his buddies
say all kinds of weird crap about me.
And Thomas
told Caitlan some stuff about me
that wasn't true.
I stopped going to school.
I should have been angry
and fought it.
Sometimes it's not that easy, I said.
Instead, I got weaker.
And then I got a text message
that came from
Caitlan.
At least it came from her phone
and it said
we were over
and she was going out with Thomas Heaney.
Fuckin' Paper Clip.
Just Standing Around in the Drizzle Talking to a Dead Dude
That pretty much sums up the situation
but I knew Jenson wasn't just here to shoot the shit.
So, Jenson, what now?
I need you to help set things straight with Caitlan.
She can't hear you
or see you
like me?
No. I tried. I really did.
She might not believe me.
She might think I'm damaged in the head.
Many people do. Lots of people.
But she likes you, Jeremy.
She's pretty intense.
That's one of the things I like about her.
Me too, I said,
although I realized now
that maybe he'd see
I really did “like”
her.
I guess you could
say I
had a
crush.
I was thinking
maybe I shouldn't
get involved
with this Jenson Hayes.
I guess Jenson saw the look on my face.
Jeremy, he said. Old Man told me
to tell you that you should
always drink
from the mountain stream
and not
city water.
Of course.
I knew what Old Man was saying.
Sometimes my grandfather
can be a pain in the ass.
But we really have to do something
about Thomas.
Revenge? I asked.
That didn't sound right.
My grandfather never
believed in revenge.
He never even spoke of getting revenge
against all the Europeans who stole our
land and fucked up
a sweet way of life.
No, dude. Not revenge.
We need to change him
so he can see
the light.
Back With the Living
Final period at school French class
I am wondering why I am learning French
and not the language of
my grandparents. Old Man
kept trying to explain to me when I was young
that what language you use shapes the way you think.
English, he said, is
a language of things. Every
thing
has to have a name.
Our old tongue
was better at showing relationships. Even people's identity
showed connections. Your name
in the old language would not be Jeremy Stone
but something else
and you would be
“Boy with strength and rock-hard courage
but kind heart.”
I thought he was goofing
but maybe not.
OM also told me
there were no curse words
in our old language.
When you wanted to curse someone
and say something really unkind, he said,
you had to use English 'cause
there are so many really unkind words
in that language.
Language expresses the heart and soul of a culture,
he lectured to me when I was young
but he could tell I wasn't paying good attention.
Funny to think that that was
way back when
my grandfather still had a body
to put clothes on each morning.
Someday, he'd say,
I'll have to give back this ole body you see here.
It's only borrowed, he said,
to trap my spirit for a little while
so I can walk upright
and give advice to my
grandson.
Thomas Heaney in French Class
I knew it was too soon to confront
Paper Clip. And I knew he'd be pissed
at me
for beating him fair and square in wrestling.
He saw me looking at him
and shot me
a really nasty look. Silently mouthed something that must have been Fuck You Indian.
Well, at least he didn't think I was Italian anymore.
Just then, Ms. Framboise
called on me
'cause I wasn't paying attention.
Monsieur Stone, she said, or perhaps you would be Monsieur Pierre, Oui?
Monsieur Jerome Pierre sounds like the name of a Parisian movie actor.
Paper Clip made a face and held his nose.
Ms. Framboise asked me a question in French.
I had
no clue
but I answered anyway
with something stuck in my head from a previous class.
I said, La neige est froide aujourd'hui.
Which she told me later meant:
The snow is cold today.
Which was not the answer to the question.
The class laughed.
Paper Clip, I think, nearly peed himself.
I did my usual:
turned to stone, me Jerome Pierre,
and that's when I saw
Jenson Hayes sitting in what had been an empty desk over on the side of the room near the windows.
He too was mouthing some words.
And then the words were clear as a bell in my head,
so I added,
Pardonnez moi, mademoiselle. Mon francaise est terrible. Excusez-moi.
And I could tell Ms. Framboise was impressed.
Jenson had given
me just the right thing to say
and everyone stopped laughing.
Hey, Jenson, I said silently in my head.
Will you be there for me on the final exam?
I could really use your help.
Jenson nodded but then I heard him say,
That's cheating, you know.
And I realized it was
but then having a dead dude give you answers for a final exam
seemed like
a cool way
to survive French.
The Troof
When I was young
the Th sound always came out like F.
I'm better now
but sometimes
I retreat and talk like I did
when I was
little.
But then, I still don't talk much;
mostly listen
and watch.
I don't know why
but I don't think I was ever capable of lying.
My mom
sometimes when she was high
in a weird way
(she wasn't always weird when high,
sometimes she was funny, sometimes nice)
but when it got ugly
she'd accuse me of stealing her smokes
or eating all the food in the fridge
Jeremy, come here, she'd screech
Did you do this?
No, Mom.
Are you lying to your mother?
No. I'm telling
the troof.
The troof.
But she didn't always believe me.
and she'd get weirder, angrier
and more and more not-my-mom.
So I'd go ahead and say,
Yeah, Mom. I ate the food in the fridge
(even though it was moldy sometimes
and green and smelled bad)
and I stole your smokes and sold them to kids
(which I would never do, believe me).
But my mom would hug me then
and cry and say, I love you, Jeremy
and I forgive you. I wish your father
was here.
So I guess I was lying about
saying I never lied.
But my mom settled down mostly and got rid of all the really bad addictions except smoking and drinking and sometimes thinking too much about men. And my dad was still Out West.
And me
I was sticking with
the troof as best I could.
I, Jeremy Stone, swear to say the troof, the whole troof and nothing but the troof, so help me God, which is why you have to believe me when I tell you about Old Man and about Jenson Hayes. I wouldn't, couldn't make something like that up.
Yeah,
so help me God.
And by the way, God
please help me figure out
how I'm supposed to help Jenson.